• On CBS.com: Sexy women of CBS
October 13, 2008 10:00 AM PDT

Entrepreneurs are worried, but some are not worried enough

Posted by Rafe Needleman
  • Font size
  • Print

Webware survey, 491 respondents.

On the one hand, I agree with Dave McClure and his bombastic post, Fear is the Mind Killer. He's right. Start-ups are by nature risky. Even in good times, when venture capitalists are spreading money on entrepreneurs like farmers spread manure, they expect only a few roses to bloom. The rest of you? Weeds. You're going to get lopped off--by competitors, your investors, or your own incompetence. That's part of the fun.

But a healthy amount of fear is a good motivator, and I have to part with McClure on one thing: there are some entrepreneurs out there who aren't afraid enough. And I have numbers.

In a quick and admittedly unscientific poll on Webware, I asked entrepreneurs to answer two questions. The practical question: "How long will your cash last?" The state of mind question: "How freaked out are you?"

If we accept that the economic downturn we're in now is going to last a year or more, then the numbers don't add up in all the start-ups' favor. Only 30 percent of 491 respondents (as of noon on October 11) said that they have two or more years of money in the bank or are cash-flow positive; 49 percent checked off either the six months or the three months-or-less box. That's a problem.

Webware survey, 524 respondents.

And here's the kicker: Only 33 percent of the 524 respondents to the state of mind question indicated they are "worrying about revenue and payroll." Thirty percent are "looking forward to grabbing share while other companies falter." That's my kind of entrepreneur, provided they have the powder to fight that war. According to this poll, most of them don't.

It's the group that has six months of money or less and that isn't freaking out that is in real trouble. We are heading in to a stalled economy. It will take time to get the engines turned back on and running again. Companies can survive, of course. People will still be buying food and gas and sending their kids to school and investing in their homes. They'll still work and play.

But CEOs who didn't prepare for this downturn, and who have only six months of financial runway ahead of them, should be worried. Or maybe not worried; that's just an emotion. But at least working on a different operational tactic than they have been, and certainly not "confident they are on the right track," as 33 percent of the respondents said they were. There is a degree of uncertainty about when and how the downturn will hit Web companies, though. One CEO I talked with is preparing for the worst. As he said to me last week, when we were talking about his revenue projections and his customers' outlooks, "The fact that we haven't heard a lot of bad news yet doesn't give me comfort."

Some start-ups, like Seesmic, are announcing cuts now, and we'll be hearing a lot more stories like that in coming weeks. A little later on, hopefully, we'll also start to hear the stories from companies that have changed their businesses to do the real work of servicing the needs of their customers that are working through this new reality, and that are doing more than just hunkering down for the long winter. They are always opportunities, and there is always room for aggressive business. But a little more fear might help more start-ups survive.

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
Recent posts from Webware
New Firefox extension turns Amazon.com into illegal free-for-all
Google, Hallmark Channel team up for TV ads
Tech layoffs: The scorecard
Boarding helps you find other stranded travelers
Flickr adds a credit system for tags
Amazon Mobile now ringing up sales on iPhone
Streaming-music recorder in murky legal waters
Wikipedia gets $890,000 for the Luddites
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
by onlyauser October 13, 2008 10:31 AM PDT
So we should just curl up in a little ball and BE AFRAID, VERY AFRAID. IDIOTIC ARTICLE!!! Knowing the risk is one thing but FEAR is another and FEAR is only useless. Nothing is wrong with feeling energized or confident regarding established businesses or start-ups --- EVER. Failure is ALWAYs in the cards (duh) but FEAR only has a place with cowards. BUSINESS MUST GO ON. Entrepreneurs that are not full of FEAR are the people that will drag us out of the economic dump. Idiotic article. How do you live with your frightened little self Rafe Needleman?
Reply to this comment
by youmon October 13, 2008 11:16 AM PDT
Most entrepreneurs I know do not fold their cards very easily. So your survey results are not surprising. In fact, they are reassuring since you want the entrepreneurs of the world to move mountains. And we certainly have mountains to move.

In reality, entrepreneurs feel both energized and scared (if the survey allowed multiple choices, it would have probably shown it). Our optimistic and determined side says "Onward." Our pragmatic side causes us to count our pennies.
Reply to this comment
by davemc500hats October 15, 2008 8:09 PM PDT
good followup rafe... i wasn't trying to say startups shouldn't have SOME fear & concern, just that the recent posts by VCs are a little too self-serving (aka 30% prudent caution, 70% *NEGOTIATION* for the next slate of startups they talk to).

i'd agree that 6 months of cash ain't much, particularly if you're a later stage startup that hasn't figured out a business model.

on the other hand, if you're a brand-spanking new startup, 6 months of funding may be all you have raised... and if you don't come up with something interesting, well hey -- thanks for playing and please get your ass to the back of the line.

entrepreneurs are by nature risk-takers. the current environment is a LITTLE more risky than it was 30 days ago, but not THAT much more risky... unless of course, you're a company with more than 15-25 employees who hasn't figured out a biz model. and that my friend, is a dicey company to be in no matter what kind of market we're experiencing.

all other issues aside -- the basics remain the same:

1) build a good / useful / unique product
2) go get some customers (who stick)
3) figure out how to make money

SSDD.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

In the news now

Confessions of a man who does the layoffs

It's easy to vilify the guy who hands out the pink slips. But contrary to popular notions, these aren't decisions that are taken lightly, at least with the executive we interviewed.


Dell racks up Microsoft as data center customer

After finding itself on the losing end of a number of deals, Dell creates a special unit aimed at getting its gear inside the world's largest data centers.


advertisement
Click Here

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right