Take a look at Steve Blanks’ story about being an apprentice!
“We are all apprentices in a craft where no one ever becomes a master.”
— Ernest Hemingway
Silicon Valley is built on simple myths — one of the most pervasive is that all winning startups are founded straight out of school by 20-year-olds from Stanford or Harvard. The reality is these are the exceptions not the rule.
Too Old at 30?
I was having coffee with an ex-student at the ranch, watching our bobcat hunt in the front lawn. This student had called and said he had to meet. “I’m having a career crisis” was how he described it. I invited him to make the drive down.
As the story unfolded, it turned out that he just turned 30 and realized that he hadn’t founded a company yet.
“Everyone now starts a company out of school. All my classmates who were interested in entrepreneurship have started their own companies. I’ve just been working my way up the ladder.”
He explained that he had a progressively set of better jobs at companies that were in the “build” phase. These ex-startups had found a repeatable business model and were putting the processes in place to grow into a large company. They had hired operating executives and were starting to scale.
“Well what’s wrong with what you’ve been doing?” I asked.
“Oh, I’ve learned a ton,” he replied. “If I had started a company out of school, I would have made all kind of stupid mistakes.”
OK, I wondered, the problem is what?
“So how have your friends done?”
We watched as the bobcat patiently stalked a gopher. “Hmm,” he said. “A few did OK, but most of them cratered their startups. For the amount of money they made most of them would have been better off working at Walmart.”
Slow Learner
I told him he wasn’t alone. Early in my career I apprenticed at companies that had recently been startups, hadn’t yet gone public and were still innovative. My career was a slow 20-year progression from training instructor to product marketing manager to VP of Marketing. It wasn’t until my seventh startup that I was a CEO in a startup I co-founded (and its failure left a crater so deep it had its own Iridium layer).
Perhaps the most important part of this non-metoric career trajectory was thementoring I received. I managed to work for, with, and around people who were truly skilled at what they did. Some of them consciously taught and shared their skills. For others I tried my best to suck out every bit of what they knew and emulate the best of their skills. (At times the learning was painful, but it was never forgotten.)
While the Silicon Valley myth is that all winning startups are founded straight out of school, it’s just not true.
No Longer a Startup
In raw numbers, most engineers and MBAs aren’t founding companies — they’re going to work for others who have: Facebook, Google, Zynga, Foursquare, Twitter, etc. While the jobs at these companies are still incredibly challenging, and passion and innovation may still pervade their company cultures, the startup risk (“Will we run out of money before we find our customers?”) is gone. As great as these companies may be, they are no longer startups. (A startup is a temporary organization searching for a repeatable and scalable business model.)
But employees in these ex-startups are getting the best hands-on education for entrepreneurship there is — as apprentices.
Apprentice
As we watched the bobcat make a meal out of the gopher, I offered that his career was proceeding just fine. Someday, he’ll hear a calling, pull his head out of his computer, look around and say, “I can do this myself.”
And the cycle of creative destruction will begin anew.
Lessons Learned
Read more Steve Blank posts at www.steveblank.com