Interview with A Founder: Conor McLaughlin (Co-founder of 99.co)
By David Wu (AppWorks Associate)
Conor McLaughlin was previously the Co-founder and CTO of 99.co, the real estate marketplace in Singapore and Indonesia. He spent six and a half years at the startup, whose backers include Sequoia Capital, 500 Startups, and Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin, helping to grow it into a $100 million company. As a member of AppWorks Accelerator #21, he is currently working on his next big project, a yet-to-be-named language learning startup.
【What advice do you have for first-time founders?】
First, you need to decide: do I want to run a sprint or a marathon? For a sprint, you may be open to acquisition from the beginning, delay non-startup aspects of your life, give yourself two years where you drop everything to test an idea, choose to raise more money earlier on and thus be more diluted, or do anything else that implies a shorter time horizon. Typically 1-5 years - this can lead to a major boon in a short period of time if executed well. If you decide you are in the sprinting business, you will most likely be pushed toward binary outcomes because of how many investors and employees you have on your cap table. As a first-time founder, you need to be clear with yourself on what you are willing to put on the line. As Reid Hoffman says, it’s like jumping off a cliff and building a plane on the way down… hopefully you build a plane in time.
If you are running a marathon, you are deciding that your competitive advantage is consistency over intensity. You are in this for 10, 15 years. With this time horizon, you will realize you need ways to metabolize stress and maintain emotional, spiritual, and mental health. You need to maintain relationships with friends, family, and romantic partners. When you are looking at this 10 year period, you realize the people around you can only put up with so much. Unfortunately, while work is something people can generally bounce back from, there are many things in life where you cannot - an example is your relationship with your partner. If you’re going to run a marathon, you need to be clear with yourself about what time you have for other aspects of your life and what time you have for your company. Eventually you need to learn what the right speed is where you can run as long as possible. It’s amazing how often it is that those people that keep going, assuming you have chosen the right problem to solve, eventually find daylight. Part of that is just lasting long enough.
Second, you need to revisit and continually ask yourself: should I still be running a sprint or a marathon? Circumstances change. Maybe you sprinted for the first two years to secure interesting results and funding; now it's time to transition to a marathon and clean up the life debt a bit. Or inversely, maybe you're finally leaving the trough of sorrow and it's time to sprint for a bit. Most founders will be in a long distance race with periodic sprinting. From my observation, founders most often stop because of two reasons: They either A) run out of money or B) run out of energy. There’s plenty of advice out there for scenario A (hint: don’t). But in my experience, scenario B is far more pernicious and dangerous to would-be successful founders. If you are in a marathon but fail to pace yourself and run it like one long sprint, you are unlikely to make it to the end.
Much founder advice speaks to this: Don’t let your startup make you fat. Exercise 5-10% of the time. Pick up a hobby outside of your startup. Go home for holidays. All of it leads back to one thing: You need to take care of yourself. Because injury will be far worse for your progress than being a little slower. “Slow is smooth, smooth is fast”, as the US Navy Seals say. This is surprisingly difficult advice for intrinsically motivated founders to follow, because in the event of failure, it makes them vulnerable to the thought, “Well, you didn’t work hard enough.” But for those that already have the hustle, your job is to avoid the moment of epiphany where you look in the mirror and think, “This isn’t worth it.”
All founders will have to sacrifice some things. The point is to not sacrifice everything. It will make you more resilient. Not less. It will give you the space to see situations more objectively and make better decisions. And most importantly, it will let you love what you do because it will remind you that the work isn’t just in service of yourself, it’s in the service of others. I do not think you can judge hard work over a day, or even a year, but I do think you can judge hard work over 5-10 years. Hard work is not just about the next 1-2 months. There will be times when you need to run as fast as possible, but if that is happening all the time you are probably not being smart about the situation. So don’t hurt yourself, be consistent, keep disciplined, and keep going.
Lastly, focus on your metaskills. Public speaking, reading, writing - skills applied in every aspect of your life. Generally what they reflect is learning how to think better. As a founder you need to think about - how can I think more clearly, be more creative, rigorous, analytical? As Warren Buffett and others have said: I have never seen a successful person that did not read as often as they could. Actual books and long form scare a lot of people. That’s your competitive advantage. Read blog posts from smart people, follow smart people on Twitter, listen to podcasts. Always be focused on how you can develop yourself to think better. Fostering the habit of improving your thinking will foster discipline in yourself. And discipline will let you turn that rigorous thinking into action.
【I imagine running the “race” has been especially tough this year. How have you gotten through 2020?】
I have leaned on routine and community. I’ve spent a lot of time trying to foster discipline in myself. I make my bed every morning, meditate every morning, make sure that I go to the gym 3-4 times a week. There’s so much uncertainty in both the world and the entrepreneurial space. Keeping certain things consistent gives me a spine to my life that I can fall back on. If I’m not feeling well, my discipline takes over and I’ll go to the gym. That helps me relieve stress - falling back to routine and having some mainstays of consistency and structure.
And community - it’s been the big mental health zeitgeist of this year. Everyone is recognizing that without the people around us, our mental health diminishes. Joining AppWorks was very intentional so I could surround myself with like-minded people who could question me, hold me accountable, and inspire me. And also just forming personal connections where I felt that I was still taking care of my mental health by connecting with others. Being a founder is an incredibly lonely journey. In the early days, there’s not a lot of people around. Later, when you do hire lots of people, you need to be the boss, the leader - for certain things, you can’t tell the employees everything, and even if you do, there will always be a bit of distance. You need people to relate to - people want to be seen for who they are, and appreciated for what they give. When you are a founder, sometimes it’s hard to feel that you are seen. So I intentionally put myself in situations where I can be inspired, be held accountable, and more importantly connect with others, and feel that I’m not alone. And that me and my co-founders are part of a communal journey with those around us.
【When you talk about how to run the race, I get the sense that you’re drawing from previous experiences and, perhaps, mistakes. What are the mistakes you’ve made in your founder journey and the takeaways?】
I think you could take a calendar, point to a random week, and we could list out all the mistakes from that week (laughs). I do subscribe to Steve Jobs’ philosophy: mistakes will happen, but mistakes happening means we are making decisions. Not making decisions is perhaps the biggest mistake. It’s often the reason for frustration, loss of speed, loss of momentum - so many of the issues you encounter in startups. Not making enough mistakes is probably the #1 mistake that I’ve made.
Second, going back to my advice to first-time founders, is not understanding what game I’m playing. Not understanding that all the money in the world is not going to be worth it if your spouse or partner decides to leave you because you have relegated them to a second-class citizen in your life. I think I forgot that at points. There is more to life than just the company.
Third, be careful about who you choose to work with. At minimum, if you’re doing a standard 8-9 hours at the office five times a week, that’s a lot of time with those people. You want to like the people that you work with - you want to know they’re high integrity, you want to respect their values, and you want to have common values. Choosing the right people that give you energy rather than take it away just makes running the marathon so much easier.
【We welcome all AI, Blockchain, or Southeast Asia founders to join AppWorks Accelerator: https://bit.ly/3r4lLR8 】
同時也有10000部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過2,910的網紅コバにゃんチャンネル,也在其Youtube影片中提到,...
「reading two books a week」的推薦目錄:
- 關於reading two books a week 在 AppWorks Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於reading two books a week 在 A Happy Mum Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於reading two books a week 在 Yilianboy Facebook 的最佳解答
- 關於reading two books a week 在 コバにゃんチャンネル Youtube 的最佳貼文
- 關於reading two books a week 在 大象中醫 Youtube 的最讚貼文
- 關於reading two books a week 在 大象中醫 Youtube 的精選貼文
reading two books a week 在 A Happy Mum Facebook 的精選貼文
The kids said "Mama, it's a good thing we went for our cruise at the end of last year!" Yup, I think we were indeed very lucky in terms of timing and we thoroughly loved every bit of our first mum-and-kids cruise on board Quantum of the Seas.
It might be a couple of years, or perhaps even more, before we will think of going for our next cruise. Yup, so these pictures we took on board are definitely some precious moments that I cherish deeply. The kids always like to rewatch their video too so that we can think back and reminisce the fun experiences we had. We might miss travelling but it's much, much more important to stay safe and be socially responsible. So we are contented to stay on our shores for as long as we can and in the meantime find other ways to broaden our horizons, like watching documentaries or reading books from Lonely Planet.
Anyway, I thought of posting this because we just watched Titanic a couple of days ago. The girls had been asking me for a long time to let them watch the show as they heard about it from their friends and the big girl even learnt some facts about the ship in school. Well, thanks to the long weekend, we finally found time to do.
It was my nth time watching it yet I still thoroughly enjoyed and was touched by many scenes from this classic movie. One of the kids kept tearing, one was very 感动 while one had a million questions to ask. Haha. I was just pretty amazed that we sat through the over 3-hour long movie together, though we did have snack breaks and toilet breaks in between.
Vacations and movie nights are two of the family bonding activities we love. So now that we can't enjoy the former, I think we will look forward to the latter even more. We do watch the news, documentaries, variety shows and cartoons from time to time too, but nothing beats a good movie with an engaging plot that keeps us glued to our seats. In thise sense, I am actually happy to let my kids be my best movie kakis since they were young.
Happy Hump Day, people! It's gonna be an exciting week ahead for all of us for sure!
#ahappymum #mumandkidscruise #royalcaribbean #quantumoftheseas #itmighttakealongtimebutwewillbeback #noholidayfornow #butitsok
reading two books a week 在 Yilianboy Facebook 的最佳解答
隨時準備好 隨時都尚在準備中
Have myself well-prepared anytime
Preparing for better always
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拍攝這張照片的一週前我才收到邀約
剛好有空 也剛好體態維持尚可
才能抓住機會 與兩位模特 攝影師 編輯 化妝師 服裝造型師 有一次愉快的合作經驗
.
持續提升自己的內外條件
才能在機會來臨時從容應對
而不是請機會稍等 我還需要一點時間調整體態
或是還需要一點時間練樂器 學語言 多看書 等等
也請時時調整心態 提升修養 圓潤脾氣
才能跟生命遭遇的每一個難得的人相處而無憾
.
我們不一定能成功獲取所有機會
但我們能問心無愧
因為已經在休息之外的時間全力以赴了 不是嗎
接著我會繼續提升內外條件 靜候下一次機會
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然而這樣的等待並不艱辛
因為我們所投入的是自己熱愛的事物
即便沒有伯樂 依然自得其樂
.
An invitation was received a week before the photoshoot
Luckily I was free and in shape to seize this fabulous cooperation opportunity with two other models, photographer, editor, make-up artist and stylist
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We can only seize the opportunity when it comes if we keep striving for better inside and out.
Opportunity waits for no one.
Keep improving by getting in a better shape, practising music instrument, learning languages, reading books etc.
Mentality is as important as your practical skills. Have kindness in heart and keep your temper in check.
This way, we can present the best version of ourselves and enjoy each other’s company with every unique encounter we have in our lives.
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Being well-prepared doesn’t always mean we will be successful.
However, we can accept any circumstances without regrets because we know we have done our best, don’t we?
If we didn’t succeed this time, work harder and invest more in ourselves and try again when next opportunity comes.
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It’s not a suffering to wait because we take advantage of this time and immerse ourselves in what we love.
Even if no one appreciates us yet, the sense of self-fulfilment is an enjoyment itself.
.
desnudomagazine #𝐝𝐞𝐬𝐧𝐮𝐝𝐨𝐦𝐚𝐠𝐚𝐳𝐢𝐧𝐞
𝐄𝐃𝐈𝐓𝐎𝐑-𝐈𝐍-𝐂𝐇𝐈𝐄𝐅: @oh_dii
Model @taihualiu29 & @ethanzhang190 @yilianboy
creative director by 楊岳 @charliecreep Shot by @djangotsaiphotographer
Styled by @mengchu.y
Grooming by @chiu_hsin_ying