2016 Will be the Year Successful Startups Get Real

Growing up in the ’80s and ’90s, I got a front row seat to the explosion of pop-culture as entertainment. Not the least of which was MTV’s first season of The Real World. That show can be blamed for the proliferation of reality TV with its promise of high viewership, low production cost and questionable entertainment. It also created a pop-culture meme of its time with the tagline, in part, being “What happens when people stop being polite and start getting real?”

For years, it seems, we have collectively gone out of our way to be polite when discussing startups that have spent millions and returned little profits. We have excused companies who have clearly focused more on their planned exits than building an actual enterprise. Company perks like free food, ping-pong tables and dedicated napping stations were celebrated as signals of an organization’s greatness.

For those who work within or closely follow the startup community, you can see increasing calls for companies to get real. While startup companies still hold a highly desirable reputation among the media, venture capitalists and the millennial workforce, there were some warning signs that all was not well. We started to see some high-profile examples of how the promise and excitement of some companies may be more sizzle than steak.

Theranos was very publically lanced (pun intended) by the Wall Street Journal when it cited some research showing questionable reliability in the screening tech it promotes. It also cited what could be called revisionist story telling on the part of their founder Elizabeth Holmes. Both the WSJ and Theranos have doubled-down on their versions of the story.

Because Theranos is trying to make health care screening and monitoring less costly and more widely available, they have been appropriately celebrated for years. Unfortunately, the actual application of their efforts is drawing worthwhile scrutiny and the intoxication with their story is starting to transition into a nasty hangover.

Twitter laid off 336 people this year; about 8% of its workforce at that time. This number is dwarfed by the thousands of people laid off in heavy industries like steel production and coal mining but it sent shivers through the tech world as people realized even a brand behemoth like Twitter had to accept a certain level of financial and market reality.

Layoffs, in general, are on the rise among tech companies of all sizes. The number of people hired and fired in the same fiscal year is growing and those recently short-termed employees are less likely to accept tales of explosive growth and dedicated investors at face value when considering employment at that “next” startup.

Square has demonstrated the ability to lose hundreds of millions of dollars in the last few years as burn rates in the tech sector continue to expand even as investor money starts to tighten. I’m not intentionally targeting Jack Dorsey by using two of his companies as example in this article but Jack is now trying to perform two turnarounds simultaneously at companies that are supposed to be in growth mode, not survival mode. By all accounts, Jack is just as capable of pulling this off as anyone and is certainly showing the dedication needed to get it done.

There are currently 140 companies with a valuation of $1 billion or more. The key word here is valuation. The simple way of illustrating how ridiculous valuations have become is to remind everyone there are only 51 US companies currently listed by Inc Magazine generating $1 billion in annual revenue. Before you send me a bunch of hate mail for comparing revenue and valuation without considering exit values, assets or goodwill payments, recognize that valuations are largely a conspiracy between start-ups looking for cash and VCs looking to attract more Limited Partners. VCs with a paltry 10% success rate routinely attract more private money every year. Valuations are works of fiction.

Whether its inflated valuations or global instability in public markets, private investment money is drying up at a statistically-material rate. VCs saw a decline in funds raised by 34% in Q3 when compared to Q2 this year. It also represented the slowest period for raising money since 2013. IPOs also under-delivered in 2015. As published by the International Business Times, “According to PitchBook, this money (IPOs) amounted to about $64 billion on 860 deals during the first 11 months of this year and about $94 billion on 994 deals over all of last year.”

As we close out 2015, it has become increasingly important for the tech and startup communities to become more self-aware, transparent and start getting real with everyone. Whether those communities are willing to pull back the proverbial kimono or not, there will be a reckoning with investors, employees and customers if they continue to paint their worth in endless streams of run-rates and growth trajectories.

Employees who were once more attracted to the name or promise of a startup are now more inclined to consider how stable a company is and whether they will be back on the job market within a few months chasing the next unicorn-in-valuation-only. Many of the Twitter employees laid off were rehired within literal minutes of becoming unemployed but that not likely to happen in perpetuity.

Investors who became VC LPs because they were tired of the 7% – 8% annual return for their public stocks and equities are now reassessing their risk-tolerance as the public markets have fluctuated significantly in Q4. The play-money investors were spending on longshot startup seed investments just won’t be as plentiful in the next 18-24 months as most pundits believe we have passed the peak of private investing for the current cycle.

People have already started to stop being polite about the performance of startups and established tech companies. Questions about profitability and long term viability are being asked with less guarded phrasing and with expectations they can be credibly answered by founders who have taken millions in private funding.

The companies that get real and are willing to not only tell us about the warts in their startup business but actively work on solutions for those imperfections will stand out from the crowd and attract the best employees, most dedicated investors, highest-value board members and loyal customers. When they make a mistake, they will own it immediately and without equivocation. They will build a company more focused on growth and durability than maximizing its exit offers. In 2016, the companies that are willing to get real will win while their competitors hope everyone continues to be polite about their lack of success.

Who are you Rooting for in 2016?

Last year, I posed the same question for 2015 and the response was far greater than I expected, so I decided to do it again this year. After spending the last year with entrepreneurial companies all over the country, this list was hard to create. For the sake of brevity, I had to intentionally leave people out who should be celebrated here. Here is my very abbreviated list for 2016.

Jason Provonsha, Warble

Jason is a founding partner of Warble, a beacon technology start-up within the Lamppost Group of companies. Their tech allows marketers to reach audiences and engage them based on physical locations that range from several thousand feet to a single square foot. As marketers double down on the logic that where someone see your message is as important as how it’s seen, Warble is already on the leading edge of this tech.

Jason is as pragmatic as he is hard-working so he is easy to like immediately. He will describe the tick-tock he hears in his head as he focuses on generating revenue to replace the seed investment Warble received. This practicality, coupled with some very compelling usage cases, creates the sense that Warble is already started on the “I knew them when” trajectory. There are many challenges in front of them but when you spend time with Jason and his team, you feel their commitment to winning.

Adeeba Kahn and Jason Templin, Shu Shop

I had the pleasure to serve as Adeeba and Jason’s mentor during their recent entry in Rev Birmingham’s Big Pitch Competition. Their collaboration will create Birmingham’s first ramen shop and izakaya (Japanese-style pub) in the downtown theater district. Renovating a space that has been empty for more than 30 years and creating a concept that fosters regular patrons driving a sense of community in a once derelict part of town, the anticipation surrounding the opening of Shu Shop is incredible.

Adeeba does not currently possess a filter between her brain and her mouth in the most entertaining and endearing manner possible. Jason is chasing a dream and the passion he has for the food, the izakaya concept and creating a neighborhood space near the Alabama Theater comes across immediately. The difficulty of succeeding in the restaurant business is well-documented but they are tapping into an unmet need and creating a market in Birmingham. Their brilliance might be in the simplicity and sincerity of what Shu Shop will become.

Sam Eskildsen, Main Street Family Urgent Care

As private health care in the US becomes exceedingly challenging for providers and patients alike, there is a growing need for urgent care facilities. The concept of these purpose-built facilities is nothing new in urban and suburban areas but Sam is building a chain of Urgent Care facilities in rural markets. These areas have been underserved for decades and as rural private medical practices fold under the difficulty created by the Medicare/Medicaid and Affordable Health Care Acts, patients no longer have access to quality health care in these areas.

Make no mistake, Sam is a capitalist. The model he has created will generate some healthy returns and allow them to grow from the facilities they currently have into additional markets. Sam opted to go out and solicit his investors one by one without brokers or other institutional funders. He raised a significant amount of capital in 18 months based on the strength of the model. His tireless work ethic led to Main Street opening its first fully functional location within 2 years of creating his business plan draft. Public and private health care will continue to create a myriad of hurdles to overcome for Sam and his team but if there is anyone capable of pulling it off, its Sam.

Paul Hottle, Nature’s Art Studio

This mention has been in the making for at least 20 years. My father, who spent the better part of his professional career as an entrepreneur and organizational development professional, recently followed his heart and did something truly for himself. Dad started Nature’s Art Studio to combine his love for the natural world and carpentry. Taking discarded materials from sawmills and material suppliers and repurposing them into pieces that range from functional to why not, he creates things as he imagines them- without commercial concern for their ability to generate revenue. This near-blatant disregard of the economic viability of each piece is probably why most of them sell within hours of posting them to his own website or Etsy.

After years of supporting our family as an OD consultant and spending more time in hotels rooms and rental cars than in his own home, Dad finally gets to spend some time doing what he wants to do. He taught me and my brother that luck and fortune are a byproduct of hard work. Thinking of him finally enjoying the fruits of his labor drives me to succeed as an entrepreneur, dad and husband. This is my feeble attempt to recognize what he gave me over the years by saying that I’m rooting for him in 2016. The truth is, I’ve always rooted for him.

This is certainly a partial list and I’m not excited about having to exclude others- but now it’s your turn. Will you take the time to think about who you are rooting for in 2016? Will you tell them you are rooting for them?

Few things are more powerful than knowing someone is pulling for you simply because they appreciate who you are and what you are trying to accomplish. So, who are you rooting for in 2016?

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