VCs use a portfolio approach so that they balance the risk of losers with the upsides of winners. They are comfortable with the knowledge that many of the ideas they back will fail. They are also comfortable with quantity. They receive hundreds or thousands of business proposals every year from all sorts of diverse sources. Many of these have already been rejected by several other VCs but that does not matter. The VC sets his own criteria and selects several ideas to support and put into his portfolio. If the business plan then misses its targets or milestones or the customer reaction is poor or the technology fails to deliver then the VC is sanguine about pulling the plug on this investment. He wants to put more resources into the portfolio ideas that are working and he is quite relaxed about strangling the losers. If he can cut his losses and get out early he will.
Contrast this with a typical corporate environment where a small number of new business proposals are considered. A handful is eventually selected and then every effort is made to make them succeed. Failure is abhorred. Extra resources and efforts pour into the CEO's pet project even when the market is screaming that this one won't fly. Emotion and egos come to the fore.
Think like a VC and remember these key points:
* Quantity is good - we want lots of ideas.
* If an idea has been rejected before, we are happy to consider it again.
* We will select the most promising on objective criteria.
* We want a return on our innovation portfolio as a whole.
* We know that many of the more radical ideas will probably fail.
* We will focus our resources on the winners and cut resources on the losers.
Paul Sloane speaks on innovation and leadership.
Published by Paul Sloane
I am a Speaker & Author of books on lateral thinking puzzles, leadership & innovation. I help organisations to improve creativity and innovation. I give keynote talks and I facilitate brainstorms and worksh... View profile
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Post a CommentI wish so badly I could go back in time and invest in Google...