Thursday, October 23, 2008

Founders at Work - Part 2

I have finished the book. I skipped some chapters that I didn't find interesting.

I had this belief before, but it was confirmed in the book. Most of successful startups are childrent of acccidental success. Most founders didn't set out to build these big empires. Most of them were quite surprised at their own success. How amazing.

There is also something that I can't let go. It's the role of chances and luck. In any given circumstances, we can make any number of decisions. I remember Sliding Doors, less well known movie with Gwyneth Paltrow. It was a sappy movie about fate of love. The movie diverges when Gwyneth misses a train and when she catches the same train. It comes together in a hospital, where two parallel universes converge.

Anyhow, right now where I am is the result of sequence of decisions I had made. Some major, some very minor. We make decision all the time. I am writing this essay instead of getting ready for bed. There are external factors that affect me, and I may or may not have caused it.... Also a decision I make would affect others. I wonder what may have happened if admission committee of University of Pennsylvania rejected and I had gone to Virginia Tech instead. Or if I decided to stick around at Topspin instead of going to Korea and working for Samsung. Or more recently I put off looking for a job to help the bank sell assets and IP of the last company - GigaFin Networks - so that the business would continue. And now I find myself in worst time to be without a job. I made the decision not knowing what would lay ahead. Is it just bad luck? What about writing this essay at this moment? Would someone read it just by chance that may cause whole different chain of actions tomorrow and in the future?

Bottom line is that you don't know. Just like many of the founders said that the reason why they were successful was because they didn't know any better. They were too naive to know how hard running a startup would be. And they didn't give up when perhaps they should have. Sometimes is ignorance is indeed bliss. You can't be paralyzed by past and what-ifs. Make whatever best decision you can make at the moment, and go for it!

"A good plan, violently executed now, is better than a perfect plan next week."

2 comments:

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  2. Wow. I am new to Blogging.com account. I just try to leave a "." and deleted it, but it left my traces!

    I think no one can ever have a perfect plan 'cos the plan cannot take account of changes of circumstances (e.g. competitions) in the future!

    However, I think there can be a great plan which can ignore most of changes of circumstances. Of course, you can never predict how your competitors will react to your plan, and that's why doing a business is fun and so dynamic. :)

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