20VC: Wolt CEO, Miki Kuusi on Leadership Lessons Scaling to a Reported $8.1BN Exit to Doordash, Building Teams not Families, The Difference Between Trust and Safety Within Companies, How To Use Compensation to Create Culture & Why You Should Not Be Lookin

20VC: Wolt CEO, Miki Kuusi on Leadership Lessons Scaling to a Reported $8.1BN Exit to Doordash, Building Teams not Families, The Difference Between Trust and Safety Within Companies, How To Use Compensation to Create Culture & Why You Should Not Be Lookin

Miki Kuusi is the CEO of Wolt and Head of DoorDash International. In 2014 Miki founded Wolt with a mission to turn the smartphone into a remote controller for life, starting with delivering your favorite restaurant food, to you at home. Today Wolt operates in 23 countries, across several different categories, has over 4,000 employees, and last year, Doordash made the move to join forces with Wolt in a deal worth a reported $8.1BN. Previously, Miki was the CEO of Slush, one of the leading tech and investor events in the world attended by more than 25,000 people annually.

In Today's Discussion with Miki Kuusi:

1.) Founding Slush and Wolt: An Entry into Startups:

  • How did Miki come to found Wolt? What was that a-ha moment?
  • Did Wolt have product-market-fit from Day 1? What was the turning point when they did?
  • What does Miki know now that he wishes he had known when he started Wolt on Day 1?

2.) The Makings of a Truly Great Leader:

  • How does Miki define "high performance" today in leadership?
  • How does Miki think about what focus means in leadership? What is the hardest decision Miki has had to make when it comes to focusing the company? What did he learn from Ilkka @ Supercell?
  • What does Miki believe is the KPI of success as the CEO? How does it change?
  • What does Miki believe is the difference between good vs great leadership?
  • What does Miki believe is the biggest sacrifice he has made as the CEO?

3.) Hiring a Team to Compete on a Global Stage:

  • How does Miki use compensation to create a culture of ownership and accountability?
  • Does Miki start from a position of trust and it is there to be lost or no trust and it is there to be gained?
  • What is the difference between a team and a family in company building?
  • What is the core difference between trust and safety in company building? Why does Miki always want to have trust but not want to have safety?
  • What are the single biggest hiring mistakes that Miki has made? How has he learned from them?
  • Why does Miki believe you do not want to hire people that have done it before but hire the people who have seen those people do it before?
  • Why does Miki believe most companies are merely glorified recruiting operations?
  • Does Miki believe that companies need to be as big as they have grown into, headcount-wise?

4.) Miki Kuusi: The Personal Journey

  • What single day was the hardest day of the Wolt journey for Miki? How did it change him?
  • Why does Miki believe that for their Series B, all-bar one VC turned them down?
  • How does Miki assess his own relationship to risk and money today?
  • Why is Miki an advocate for founders taking secondaries along the journey?
  • What can Europe do to become a powerhouse in tech moving forward?
  • Why did Miki decide to sell the company to Doordash? What is he most excited to learn from Tony Xu, Doordash Founder and CEO?

Items Mentioned in Today's Episode:

Miki's Favourite Book: The Hard Thing About Hard Things: Building a Business When There Are No Easy Answers

Episoder(1389)

20 VC 077: Part 2: Kamal Ravikant: The Future Of Venture Capital

20 VC 077: Part 2: Kamal Ravikant: The Future Of Venture Capital

For your chance to win a signed copy of Venture Deals by previous guest and legend, Brad Feld all you have to do is click the Click To Tweet Link here: http://ctt.ec/Q41ZG Kamal Ravikant is an absolute hero to me after I read his incredible best selling book, Love Yourself Like Like Your Life Depends On It. As for an intro to Kamal, it goes without saying that he has worked with some of the best people in Silicon Valley and is a true tech and investing icon, but he has also trekked to one of the highest base camps in the Himalayas, meditated with Tibetan monks in the Dalai Lama's monastery, held the hands of dying patients, earned a US Army Infantry patch, walked 550 miles across Spain, been the only non-black, non-woman member of the Black Women's writers' group and written books including my favourite the previously mentioned, Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It. In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) Where does Kamal see the future of Venture Capital? 2.) What worries Kamal about the tech scene? 3.) How does Kamal sort the wood from the trees in the frothy market of tech startups? 4.) What are Kamal's must read books and blogs? 5.) Which leaders or figures is Kamal inspired by and why? Items Mentioned In Today's Show: My Fave Book: Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It by Kamal Ravikant Kamal's Fave Book: The Alchemist, The Great Work of Your Life by Stephen Cope Kamal's Fave Blog: James Altucher Kamal's Most Recent Investment: Bolt As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC and Kamal on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito session, you can follow Harry on Instagram here!

7 Okt 201520min

20 VC 077: PART 1: Kamal Ravikant: 'I'm Not Your Traditional VC'

20 VC 077: PART 1: Kamal Ravikant: 'I'm Not Your Traditional VC'

For your chance to win a signed copy of Venture Deals by previous guest and legend, Brad Feld all you have to do is click the Click To Tweet Link here: http://ctt.ec/Q41ZG Kamal Ravikant is an absolute hero to me after I read his incredible best selling book, Love Yourself Like Like Your Life Depends On It. As for an intro to Kamal, it goes without saying that he has worked with some of the best people in Silicon Valley and is a true tech and investing icon, but he has also trekked to one of the highest base camps in the Himalayas, meditated with Tibetan monks in the Dalai Lama's monastery, held the hands of dying patients, earned a US Army Infantry patch, walked 550 miles across Spain, been the only non-black, non-woman member of the Black Women's writers' group and written books including my favourite the previously mentioned, Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It. In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) How did Kamal make his way into the world of Venture Capital? 2.) What were Kamal's biggest takeaways from working as an entrepreneur? 3.) What really makes a great VC? How can VCs provide true and genuine value add? 4.) Why is now the best time to be an entrepreneur? What has changed? 5.) What would Kamal advise an entrepreneur looking to build a startup? .) Where does Kamal see the future of Venture Capital? 6.) What worries Kamal about the tech scene? 7.) How does Kamal sort the wood from the trees in the frothy market of tech startups? Items Mentioned In Today's Show: Kamal's Fave Book: The Alchemist, Hemingway, The Great Work of Stephen Cope, Kamal's Fave Blog: James Altucher Kamal's Most Recent Investment: Bolt As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC and Kamal on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito session, you can follow Harry on Instagram here!

5 Okt 201520min

FF 015: Y COMBINATOR WEEK: Eric Glyman, Co-Founder & CEO @ Paribus

FF 015: Y COMBINATOR WEEK: Eric Glyman, Co-Founder & CEO @ Paribus

Eric Glyman, Co-Founder and CEO @ Paribus (Y Combinator S15), the service which scans your inbox for receipts and automatically saves you money when the items you bought drop in price. Stores often guarantee that you will get the lowest prices. But they don’t follow through unless you work for it. Paribus does the work for you. In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) What was Eric's career before Paribus and what was his a-ha moment was for the idea? 2.) How did Eric do things differently from the typical startup? Was this effective or would it have been more productive to go full in? 3.) What were Paribus' testing hypotheses like? Does Eric prefer mass market testing or niche 100 person testing? 4.) How was the admissions process for YC, why did Eric choose YC and why were YC attracted to Paribus? 5.) What would Eric advise founders looking to get into YC? Is there anything they can do or know that will increase their chances of getting into YC? 6.) What were the breakthrough moments for Paribus? What were the most challenging elements and how did Eric overcome them? Items Mentioned In Today's Show: Eric's Fave Book: I, Robot Eric's Fave Blog: AppSumo by Noah Kagan As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC, Eric and Paribus on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito session, follow Harry on Instagram here!

2 Okt 201525min

20 VC 076: Y COMBINATOR WEEK: Aaron Harris, Partner @ YC

20 VC 076: Y COMBINATOR WEEK: Aaron Harris, Partner @ YC

Aaron Harris is a Partner at Y Combinator and also newly one of my favourite podcast hosts with his brilliant show, Startup School Radio, for all startup lovers it is a must listen. Prior to YC, Aaron was cofounder of Sequoia backed Tutorspree, which was funded by Y Combinator in 2011. Before Tutorspree he worked at Bridgewater Associates, where he managed product and operations for an analytics group. He also writes an awesome blog which can be found here! In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) How did Aaron make his move into the world of entrepreneurship with Tutorspree and then become a YC Partner? 2.) Why did Aaron join YC and why does he believe the biggest potential lies at this stage of the cycle? 3.) Now at YC, Aaron is a Partner, what does that entail, what level of interaction do you have with the founders, where does YC look to add serious value? 4.) With the mass of startups now in the 100s coming out of each YC demo day, how does YC assure the same quality and level of value add? 5.) With regards to testing what is YC’s opinion? How does YC assess whether a product does have product market fit? What are the YC requirements for growth whilst in YC? 6.) What happens after the YC experience, does YC maintain conversations and communication? How does YC try to maintain valuations at a reasonable level to stop YC price inflation? 7.) What is the future for YC? Are we going to see another funding round? Is the YC model scalable? Could we have a YC Europe? Items Mentioned In Today's Episode: Aaron & YC's Podcast: Startup School Radio Aaron's Fave Book: The Diving Bell and The Butterfly, Founder's At Work by Jessica Livingston As always you can follow Harry, Aaron, The Twenty Minute VC and YC on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito session, you can follow him on Instagram here!

30 Sep 201524min

20 VC 075: Y COMBINATOR WEEK: Kirsty Nathoo, CFO @ Y Combinator

20 VC 075: Y COMBINATOR WEEK: Kirsty Nathoo, CFO @ Y Combinator

Kirsty Nathoo is the CFO of Y Combinator. As CFO, she holds the keys to the kingdom – literally. Not only does she control and manage Y Combinator’s internal finances, from paying bills to helping organize demo days to actually making sure Y Combinator’s money is wired to startups from the proper accounts; but she helps YC startups coordinate outside financings, tax issues, incorporation and other fiscal matters. She’s the financial brains behind the entire operation, with YC partner Harj Taggar stating that ‘YC would cease to operate if Kirsty was not around’. In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) How Kirsty made her move from PWC in Cambridge to CFO at the World’s Most Successful Accelerator? 2.) Joining YC permanently in 2010, how has Kirsty seen it develop to today’s current state? What has been the key drivers to the success and growth of YC? 3.) As CFO Kirsty has developed a certain pattern recognition with regards to what investors and VCs like to see in the terms of startups. What are they? 4.) Kirsty has seen the progression of many startups, what are the most common problems startups face in the fundraising cycle? What are the commonalities in those that are successful? 5.) How does YC address the issue of potentially inflated valuations for their alum? 6.) What are some financials that all founders should know all the time? 7.) What is the future for YC? Are we going to see another funding round? Is the YC model scalable? Could we have a YC Europe? As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC and Y Combinator on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito session, you can follow him on Instagram here!

28 Sep 201527min

FF 014: Making Great Founders, Idea Creation and The First 100 Days Of A Startup with Alice Bentinck, Co-Founder @ Entrepreneur First

FF 014: Making Great Founders, Idea Creation and The First 100 Days Of A Startup with Alice Bentinck, Co-Founder @ Entrepreneur First

Alice Bentinck is Co-Founder at Entrepreneurs First, the accelerator program that puts founders first! Previously, Alice worked at prestigious consultancy firm McKinsey & Co, before turning down an offer from Google to found Entrepreneur First alongside Matt. She taught herself to code, and founded Code First Girls in 2013 to help more women get into tech. She sits on the board of Sherry Coutu's Founders4Schools, is on Imperial College London's Department of Computing Industrial Liaison Board, and acted as the Prime Minister's expert on startups at the Northern Future Forum. She has been recognised in Management Today’s 35 under 35 and the Evening Standard’s Top 1000 most influential Londoners. In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) How Alice came up with the idea for EF and why she decided to found the company? 2.) What would Alice recommend is the best way to build a company from scratch? EF is for technical individuals, what can non technical individuals do? 3.) What would Alice say makes a great founder? Has she seen any commonalities in the great founders that have exited EF? 4.) What is Alice's opinion on equity divisions within startups? What is the right way to approach the topic? 5.) What should teams focus on in the first 100 days of their startup? What is the 20% that produces 80% of the results? 6.) What has been the hardest aspect of growing the business and how did Alice overcome it? As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC and Alice on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry and many a mojito session, you can follow him on Instagram here!

25 Sep 201520min

20 VC 074: The Future of Healthcare with Bob Kocher, Partner @ Venrock

20 VC 074: The Future of Healthcare with Bob Kocher, Partner @ Venrock

Bob Kocher is a Partner at Venrock and focuses on healthcare IT and services investments. He currently serves on the Boards of Aledade and Jiff, and is a Board Observer at Grand Rounds and Doctor on Demand. Prior to Venrock, Bob served in the Obama Administration as Special Assistant to the President for Healthcare and Economic Policy on the National Economic Council. In the Obama Administration, Bob was one of the shapers of the Affordable Care Act. Before the White House, Bob was a Partner at McKinsey & Company where he led McKinsey Global Institute’s healthcare economics work and Center for United States Health System Reform. In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) How Bob made his way from The White House to Venrock as a VC? 2.) How did working at The White House prepare Bob for his career as a VC, where does Bob have the biggest opportunity to change the healthcare system? 3.) What are the barriers to entry that a preventing full scale innovation and business growth in the healthcare IT space? 4.) Why have we seen a large increase in healthcare startups? What more would you Bob like to see in the healthcare space, either from the side of the startups or VC’s? 5.) How does Bob perceive the integration of software and healthcare in the future? 6.) As a healthcare professional, what would Bob recommend an individual with a high powered, demanding job in order to lead a healthy lifestyle? Items Mentioned In Todays Episode: Bob's Fave Book: The System Bob's Most Recent Investment: Lyra Health As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC and Bob on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito night, you can follow him on Instagram here!

23 Sep 201519min

20 VC 073: Life Inside Accel Partners with Michael Treskow @ Accel

20 VC 073: Life Inside Accel Partners with Michael Treskow @ Accel

Michael Treskow is a VC @ Accel Partners, one of the world's most successful venture firms having funded the likes of Facebook, Dropbox, Spotify, Etsy and many more. At Accel, Michael is responsible for the firm’s investments in SpaceApe, a mobile games developer, and GoCardless, an online direct debt provider. Michael was also instrumental in Accel's investments and ongoing work with Funding Circle, Packlink, Qubit, Semmle, Trufa and WorldRemit. Prior to Accel, Michael focused on early-stage investments in technology companies at Warburg Pincus in San Francisco, invested in publicly traded technology companies at Highside Capital, and helped advise technology companies as part of Morgan Stanley's investment banking team in New York. In Today's Episode You Will Learn: 1.) How Michael made his way into the VC industry? Do you think it is very important for VCs to have entrepreneurial experience? 2.) How does Michael compare the investing environments between London and SF? What was his biggest takeaway from Warburg Pincus in SF? 3.) Accel is stage agnostic, why is that? What size market attracts Michael? How can Michael tell whether founders have the ability to exploit the market? 4.) What Michael believes are his key value adds? Have these changed over time? 5.) We often hear startups being described as ‘uber for’, ‘tinder for’. Do VCs like this simplification of business? How else would Michael suggest a complex concept can be broken down into something easily digestible? 6.) Does Michael still believe there is room for improvement in the consumerisation of enterprise software? Does Emergence Capital's pivot signal a turning tide? Items Mentioned In Todays Episode: Michael's Fave Book: The Innovator's Dilemma, Crossing The Chasm Michael Productivity Tools: Wunderlist Michael's Fave Blog or Newsletter: Dan Primack, Term Sheet Michael' Most Recent Investment: CartoDB As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC and Michael on Twitter here! If you would like to see a more colourful side to Harry with many a mojito night, you can follow him on Instagram here!

21 Sep 201523min

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