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Home  » Get Ahead » How to build a billion dollar business

How to build a billion dollar business

By Alok Soni, Yourstory.com
October 17, 2014 08:46 IST
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Follow these three simple rules in life and become a billionaire.

How to be a billionaireWhen Survey Monkey acquired the Florida-based online form maker Wufoo for $35 million, the angel investor in the company, Paul Bucheit, made a 29,561 per cent return on his investment.

That’s an incomparable figure against the average of 676 per cent return by a start-up in the US.

The 10-member team and the leader of Wufoo must have done something right to reach there.

The founder of this Y Combinator-backed company, Kevin Hale, later on joined the start-up incubator as a partner.

The man himself was in Seoul a few weeks ago and shared the recipe of building a billion dollar business.

There's no secret sauce but definitely certain key elements and few processes to make the path easy.

Over the years, Y Combinator has nurtured 1400 founders, including successes like Airbnb and Dropbox.

As a partner at Y Combinator and a successful entrepreneur himself, Kevin knew the dos and don’ts to carve out one’s way to the billion dollar club.

Here are three most important things start-ups need to work on if they’re chasing the billion dollar dream:

Clarity of idea

On the demo day of Y Combinator, 75 participating start-ups get only two minutes and 30 seconds each to present.

Only with a clear picture in mind about the business, a start-up can present in that period effectively.

This quality is built in the teams (founders) by the following exercises:

Group office hours 

Many start-ups (~10-20) are seated in a room where everyone tells about his/her start-up.

After this, people are asked about what the first start-up does and similarly about others as well.

It is obvious that if someone lacks clarity of his idea, it will be tough for him/her to make others understand and remember, and vice-versa.

This exercise is repeated till everyone gets what everyone else does.

This ensures that in the future, everyone, including the investors, users, employees, and shareholders, get the idea correctly.

Weekly dinners

This gets entrepreneurs answer some of the most important questions about their start-up like 'What is it', 'How it works', 'Where/When/Who are going to be part of journey', and 'Why it will become big'.

It's crucial to lead with 'What' and not 'Why'.

Answers should be concise and conversational, and exclude any jargon or preamble.

Remember that a clear idea is the foundation for growth.

Focus on numbers

These are not just any numbers but the Key Point Indicators (KPIs).

Build stuff and talk to users.

Also, focus on one of the KPIs and target a 10 per cent weekly growth.

An entrepreneur should also know the exact numbers to the following questions all the time:

  • How much money do you have in bank?
  • What is your revenue?
  • How fast is the revenue growing?
  • How much are you spending (the burn rate)?
  • How much runway is left?
  • Once the number is known, the focus can be shifted to work on how big it can get.

Big Vision 

Only one thing can be predicted about an idea and for that it has to be taken to the extremes.

Once tested, one can say if the path taken is right or an adjustment is required.

Regular interactions with inspiring people (the success stories you look up to) teaches to dream big.

The definition of big has to be ambitious and aspirational enough to change the way an industry is looked upon.

For example, how Facebook has redefined the social media and the way brands look at customers, or what Airbnb did to the travelling and accommodations market.

Kevin signed off with the signature statement emphasising on the power of saying no.

You have to say 'NO' many a times to get to a billion dollars.

Of the above three, how many have you got right?

Image courtesy: Chris Potter/Creative Commons

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Alok Soni, Yourstory.com