Is your team in the zone? The 5 ways a CEO can know.

After years of leading teams and then, at Greylock, watching some of the best startup CEOs in the world, I’ve learned that the most important metrics are often ones you never read about on the income statement or in the financial press.

“If you can measure it, you can manage it” is a business saying that goes way back. Maybe it was Henry Ford who said that, or Peter Drucker? Regardless, most managers only measure outputs, not inputs, which is like telling a Little League team to score more runs, rather than actually explaining how to swing a bat and make contact with the ball. Similarly, most companies measure traffic, revenue or earnings, without considering how to improve the company at an atomic level: how to make a meeting better, or an engineer more productive.

Here are five metrics that great teams should measure:

Metric 1: Flow State Percentage

Jobs that require a lot of brainpower—software programming for instance—also demand deep concentration.  You know that feeling when you’re “in the zone,” cranking on something. That is flow.  Unfortunately, most of us are constantly interrupted during the day with meetings, emails, texts, or colleagues who want to talk about stuff.  These interruptions that move us out of “flow state” increase R&D cycle times and costs dramatically. Studies have shown that each time flow state is disrupted it takes fifteen minutes to get back into flow, if you can get back at all.  And programmers who work in the top quartile of proper (ie uninterrupted) work environments are several times more productive than those who don’t.

Ideally programmers and other knowledge workers can spend 30% – 50% of their day in uninterrupted concentration. Most office environments don’t even come close.  To get started, ask your engineers to track for a few days their personal flow state percentages: how many hours each day are they in flow, divided by the number of total hours they’re at the office.  And then brainstorm ways that the team can move this number up. For example, perhaps there’s a little paper sign at each person’s desk that says “Go Away, I’m Cranking.” Or maybe you have a day where no meetings are allowed. Tom Demarco has written insightfully on the topic of flow.

Metric 2: The Anxiety-Boredom Continuum

Years ago, back when I was younger and cooler, I took a salsa class with my wife-to-be where the instructor said something that really stuck with me. He said that his goal was to keep all of his students in the pocket between boredom and anxiety – but closer to anxiety. In other words, we shouldn’t be so overwhelmed that we break down and give up, but we also shouldn’t be coasting either. He kept the rhythm fast enough so that we were challenged, but not so difficult that we lost the steps completely.  And he kept tuning the difficulty level of the class to stretch but not break us.

This same anxiety-to-boredom continuum also applies to managing people. Star performers can get bored easily, and often function best when they’re expected to rise to great challenges. You want expectations to be high, but not completely overwhelming. With this in mind, check in with your employees periodically about where they are on this continuum, while also keeping an eye out for signs of where they stand. If they have low energy, or are showing up late and leaving early, they may be bored. If they’re responding to small setbacks with anger or frustration, or getting sick a lot, they may be pushing too hard.

Metric 3: Meeting Promoter Score

Most meetings suck. And they’re expensive: a one-hour meeting of six software engineers costs $1,000 at least. People who don’t have the authority to buy paperclips are allowed to call meetings every day that cost far more than that. Nobody tracks whether meetings are useful, or how they could get better. And all you have to do is ask.

In the last minute of a meeting, ask the participants to each rate from 1 to 10 how effective the meeting was, with one suggestion for making the meeting better. It can be on a scrap of paper, or a simple web form.  Verne Harnish has some good ideas about running better meetings.

Metric 4: Compound Weekly Learning Rate

My three year old son just asked me what the word “expert” means.  When I answered, he nodded and asked “so am I an expert about superheroes yet?” The best leaders hold on to this relentless curiosity. Joi Ito wrote recently about “neotony”, the retention of childlike attributes in adulthood. This ability to learn is like the compounding interest on an investment: after two or three years, a relentless learner stands head and shoulders above his peers. Jeff Weiner, the CEO of LinkedIn, referred me to Joi’s posting. Jeff is one of the most relentless learners I know, and this quality is an essential element of his success and the success of his teams. So try asking your team this question: how did you get 1% better this week? Did you learn something valuable from our customers, or make a change to our product that drove better results? As your team gets into a learning rhythm, you can review this as a group. 1% per week adds up.

Metric 5: Positive Feedback Ratio

You can learn as much from John Gottman as you can from John Kennedy about being a great communicator.  Gottman, a psychologist, is the author of “Why Marriages Succeed or Fail”.

In his research, he found that marriages that succeed tend to have five times as many positive interactions as negative ones. And when a couple falls below that ratio, their relationship falls down too.

The same is true at the office, where you’re often connected for years in relationships with people who can either become wary of your criticisms or eager to give you their best effort. Catch people doing good things. Never miss a chance to say something nice, even if you feel a little silly. Then when you have feedback on areas to improve, they‘ll really listen.  It may be hard to manage to the 5:1 ratio at the office, but you should be mindful of the balance.

So, there you have it, 5 metrics that will never show up in the best companies’ financial statements or a Wall Street Journal article, but are the kinds of reasons those companies succeed. Tracking these five metrics isn’t glamorous. But it’s something everyone can do. And it really works.

-James Slavet


  
James Slavet is a Partner at Greylock Partners

Greylock Builds Talent Team

People are what make companies successful.  Easy to say and surprisingly does not always receive the focus it should.  We’ve recently invested in putting together a talent team to help our portfolio companies identify the right people, at every level, recruit them effectively and succeed in the battle for talent.  Here’s a bit more information about our team.

Jeff Markowitz joined our Menlo Park Office as a Talent Partner focused on executive level talent, Dan Portillo has started as our VP of Talent focused on product and engineering.  As we’ve built out the team, our vision has focused on three key areas:

  • Providing value to the best talent, at all levels, in consumer and enterprise software
  • Exposing our portfolio companies to the best talent in the marketplace
  • Helping build HR/Talent skills across our portfolio.

Jeff joins us from Heidrick & Struggles, where he was the Managing Director of the Venture Capital Practice.  Jeff will be working side by side with Mike Ahearn, our Recruiting Partner since 2004 who will be retiring in 2012, to continue to optimize our executive talent capabilities.  In the past year, under Jeff’s leadership, Heidrick’s venture practice has grown substantially –demonstrating his operating talents both as a recruiter and as a leader.  Jeff will bring his executive search experience to our portfolio companies as well as help Greylock build our network of executive talent.  We’ve been fortunate enough to work with Jeff over many years, helping us recruit the management teams for our portfolio companies. We believe that we can fundamentally change the value we provide to both our portfolio and to the many talented executives in and outside of our network.

Dan will be helping our portfolio companies win the battle for product, engineering, and recruiting talent. Dan has been recruiting in venture backed start-ups since 2000 and joins us from Rypple, where he was the VP of Customer Success and will continue to be an advisor.  Previous to that, he was the VP of Organizational Development at Mozilla, where he worked closely with John Lilly, a Partner here at Greylock and Mozilla’s former CEO.  His operating background is a perfect fit for Greylock – all of our partners and all of our operating staff are operators first and foremost.  We believe this background allows us to understand our entrepreneurs and find the best ways to help them succeed, without adding overhead.

Some of the initiatives Dan and Jeff are working on:

  • Build recruiting skills and processes, where needed, in our portfolio.  Our first sourcing summit will take place in October (portfolio companies, look for an invite soon).
  • Connecting portfolio recruiting teams to share ideas, information, and talent – we now have a Linkedin Group for our portfolio companies to get ideas from the team as well as share ideas.
  • Help us all organize, expand, and leverage our network for great talent.
  • Place top recruiters in portfolio companies to support ongoing sourcing and recruiting as well as connect to the best recruiting resources.

There is plenty more on the way as the team ramps up.  If you are already in Greylock’s portfolio, get ready – you’ll be hearing from them.

Tom Frangione

Tom Frangione is Greylock’s COO.

Sanjay Raman Joins Greylock Consumer Team

In the past month, we’ve announced that Josh Elman (http://www.linkedin.com/in/joshe) and Adam Nash (http://www.linkedin.com/in/adamnash) both joined Greylock. We’re very excited today to welcome one more great addition to the team, Sanjay Raman (http://www.linkedin.com/in/sanjayraman, Twitter @sanjayraman).

Sanjay is joining us as a Senior Associate on our consumer team.

We strive to hire people on our investing team who have strong product and operating backgrounds, and have worked in the trenches in both early stage companies as well as businesses at scale. We think this is the ideal background for partnering with entrepreneurs to help scale businesses. Sanjay comes to us most recently from Howcast (http://www.howcast.com), an online video startup where he was a co-founder and chief product officer. He previously worked in product management at Google, on both Google Apps/Enterprise and Google Video. Sanjay also has a master’s in computer science and engineering from M.I.T.

Given Sanjay’s experiences building and sharing how-to knowledge at Howcast, we anticipate that he’ll be the MacGyver of Greylock. Sanjay has already been teaching people about Greylock companies, for example, How to Let People Reply on Tumblr: and How to Set Up a Profile on Facebook. But there’s also other essential stuff that Sanjay learned at Howcast, like How to Build a Shelter in the Forest and How to Survive While Lost on a Mysterious Island. To quote our friends at IMDB, “Drawing on a vast practical knowledge of science, MacGyver is able to make use of any mundane materials around him to create unorthodox solutions to any problem he faces.”

Welcome Sanjay! We’re very excited to continue to learn and build together, and we know that you will help us and Greylock-backed entrepreneurs with many unorthodox solutions:)

-James Slavet


  
James Slavet is a Partner at Greylock Partners

Announcing Greylock’s Investment in ClearSlide

We’re very happy to be new investors in ClearSlide, a company that builds tools for sales & marketing professionals to communicate — it’s radically simpler than the cumbersome conference tools we use today, and blends synchronous and asynchronous tools to make it easier than ever for sales people to close business. They’ve been flying under the radar since starting a couple of years ago — except with their amazing & rapidly growing customer list, full of raving fans who say they can’t live without it now. This morning they’ve launched more publicly with a new site and an announcement of new funding led by us and Aydin Senkut from Felicis, who led their initial funding.

What’s special about their products today is how simple they are to operate: you can get on the phone and do a product demo or share slides in under a minute. It’s trivially easy to send information around to customers and be able to understand what they viewed themselves or forwarded along. And it closes the loop by allowing easy sharing of all materials and insight with your coworkers.

And it all works in a web browser, with just a URL. No special installs, no plug-ins needed. I’m not talking about just modern browsers, either: any browser, even including IE6. (I’ll wait for your gasps of amazement to die down on that one. Also, it’s the last time I’ll ever mention IE6 on my blog. :-) )

They’ve really thought hard about how to build great tools for sales and marketing people, and it shows.

It was a very quick decision for us — at Greylock, we talk a lot about “our kind of founders” — and Al and Jim are definitely that. Here’s what I mean.

We’ve known Al for some time — he was the founding CTO of Evite — it’s a little hard to remember, at this distance, what a revelation that product was, but it changed everything — it let us interact with each other and collaborate in ways that had just been way too painful previously. And it’s influenced too many startups to count since then.

Well, he and Jim came in to give a presentation to us about they’d done, they jumped right into how their customers love it, how sales are rocketing up, what’s next — and slowly it dawned on me that they were using their own service to present! So I opened up my laptop to type in the URL & access code and bam!, I could see their slides — took maybe 3 seconds. I got sort of excited so pulled out my iPhone, then my iPad — everything just worked. And to Al & Jim’s credit, none of my futzing around with various electronics fazed them one bit. They just kept moving, unsurprised that there were no glitches in what they’d built.

And that’s part of what we mean when we say “our kind of founders” — they’re strong product and operating founders, who after changing the world once with Evite, just put their heads down and did the hard work of building something from scratch these past two years. No hype, no fanfare, just customers that love their products and working with them.

So we’re very excited to get involved in the next phase of their growth, and couldn’t be happier to be leading their funding round. Take a look.

http://john.jubjubs.net/2011/09/28/announcing-greylocks-investment-in-clearslide/

John Lilly is a partner at Greylock Partners and former CEO of Mozilla.

One Kings Lane Raises $40 million

Congrats to Doug Mack, Susan Feldman, Alison Pincus, and the entire One Kings Lane team on today’s announcement of a $40 million round of financing, led by Tiger Global (http://tcrn.ch/pzEvbn).
Doug, Susan and Ali are the foundation of a special team that is absolutely cranking.

At the time of our investment, I wrote a blog posting called “How Ecommerce Got Its Groove Back” (http://greylockvc.com/2011/02/11/how-e-commerce-got-its-groove-back/). That posting focused on how One Kings Lane was at the forefront of a new wave of e-commerce companies with fundamentally better business models. I wrote then about three factors that stood out for us about the company. First, a team that is a unique blend of right and left brain talent. Second, a growing customer base of addicts and evangelists. And third, a huge market for home décor that lacked an existing dominant online brand.

My excitement about the business continues to grow, just as the stack of fresh One Kings Lane delivery boxes continues to pile up in the front hallway of our house. The One Kings Lane team has continued to get deeper and stronger, the customer base has dramatically expanded yet has also remained highly engaged, and the business is on track to exceed $100 million in revenue this year. Pretty amazing progress for a company that is not yet three years old! There’s still no dominant online brand in the market for home décor. But I think the One Kings Lane team has the passion, talent and resources to change that.

It’s been a great pleasure working with you. Keep on jamming!

-James Slavet
James Slavet is a partner on the consumer technology team at Greylock Partners. James’ investments include Auditude, Groupon, High Gear Media, One Kings Lane, Redfin, Revision3 and TellApart.

Welcome Josh Elman

I’m very happy to announce here that Josh Elman (http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=40349, @joshelman) is joining Greylock Partners as a Principal starting Monday. We’re super excited that he’s joining, because he both fits so well into the team and values that we have here, but also for the new qualities that he’s bringing to the team.

Josh is a product thinker first and foremost, even back to his time at Stanford in Symbolic Systems. He’s had an astonishing run of finding incredibly interesting social Internet products and working on them; his track record includes RealNetworks, Zazzle, LinkedIn, Facebook & Twitter — a run of amazing products and companies that I think is unmatched. Along the way, he’s been a developer, manager & product manager, and has run programs related to LinkedIn Jobs, Facebook Connect, Twitter Growth and more — and like a number of us at Greylock, Josh has already been integral in working on products used by hundreds of millions of people around the world.

So please welcome Josh to Greylock, where we’ll continue to build our culture of product oriented, operators who can help evolve the venture capital business and continue Greylock’s long history of finding and funding category leaders and great entrepreneurs. I’m really looking forward to working with Josh and learning from him in the coming years.

- John

John Lilly is a partner at Greylock Partners and former CEO of Mozilla.

 

Pure Storage Launches

Today marks the launch of Pure Storage, one of the most exciting enterprise companies in the Greylock portfolio.  Founded by John Colgrove (better known as “Coz”) and John Hayes, Pure has assembled a world class team of product innovators that is setting out to disrupt the world of enterprise storage.  How you might ask?  By delivering the world’s first all-Flash Enterprise Array. 

While flash technology has been around for some time, it’s been mostly viewed as a consumer electronics technology, commonly used in smartphones and tablets.  But in recent times, flash has emerged as THE technology of the future for enterprise storage as the existing, 50 year old (!) hard disk platforms are quickly running out of steam.   Specifically, trends such as virtualization and data consolidation are increasing the demand for random input/output (I/O) well beyond the capabilities of hard disk technology.    While other startups and incumbents have begun to embrace flash technology, most are doing so in an evolutionary way:  introducing flash as a new tier into their current lineup of hard disk-based arrays.  While this tactic may work in the short term, history has shown that the winning formula for embracing new disruptive technologies usually requires a “clean sheet of paper” approach like the one that Pure is taking.

Greylock led the series B round in Pure in July 2010 and participated in the most recent $30 Million series C round.  Our good friends at Sutter Hill Ventures had incubated the company and led the series A investment.  At the time of our original investment, we were attracted to the combination that all venture firms are looking for:  1) world class team, 2) HUGE market and 3) disruptive technology.  As easy a formula as it might seem, finding all 3 in one company is a rare occurrence.   Soon after making the investment, we worked actively with the team and board to recruit Scott Dietzen as CEO.  Known to many as “Dietz”, Scott was the perfect choice for CEO:  a brilliant entrepreneur (BEA/Weblogic, Zimbra) who brought strong technology and go-to-market talents.  And he was a great cultural fit:  along with the founders, Scott wanted to create a strong culture and build a company for the long term.

Pure Storage is the latest example in Greylock’s long history of investing in the storage industry.  We have been fortunate to be a part of storage leaders such as Data Domain, Legato, Decru, Polyserve and Data Robotics.  Please join us in wishing the Pure Storage team the best of luck in creating the next great storage company.

Sincerely

The Greylock Partners

Greylock Partners Welcomes Data Wizard DJ Patil

I am happy to announce that DJ Patil has joined Greylock Partners as Data Scientist in Residence from Color, where he was Chief Product Officer.

DJ Patil

DJ and I have been working together to solve data problems for years. DJ led the build out of the data and analytics group at LinkedIn. Indeed, our many conversations about data led me to my “Data is Web 3.0″ thesis, which I presented at South by Southwest this past March. In short, the idea is that people generate a massive amount of data when they use Web 2.0 applications. Creative companies and organizations can use that data as a foundation for a new set of unique and innovative products and services. DJ’s team proved this thesis at LinkedIn by building some of the most highly trafficked applications at LinkedIn, including People You May Know, Who’s Viewed My Profile, Career Explorer and Skills.

We at Greylock believe that data strategy will be a key ingredient to the success of most high-growth tech companies today—especially those building products and services in software, Internet and mobile. Now is the time to leverage data in new ways to create useful, fun and engaging experiences. Many of the companies we support have built data functions into their organizations. My partner James and I wrote a blog post in January about the Power of Data as a way to explain why we invested in Groupon.

The more we talked about this theme internally at Greylock, the more our conversations turned to how we can use it to help our companies. A few months ago we pulled together a hands-on data summit for our companies and other friends, which we held at LinkedIn. Speakers and attendees included data, product and engineering talent from Cloudera, Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, One Kings Lane, Pandora, Redfin, Rich Relevance and Zynga. DJ gave a talk on “data jujitsu” and helped us think through the right content that would make for a compelling and useful workshop.

The summit was a hit, and showed us that our companies have strong appetites to learn more ways to leverage data as a competitive tool. Finally, we realized we needed an in-house expert. DJ had already demonstrated his abilities in building new and innovative data practices at LinkedIn and it was clear to us that he was the right person to help us with this on a full-time basis.

DJ is the natural entrepreneurial leader for this work, as he has built new groups around his ideas and worked with start-ups in multiple capacities. At LinkedIn he worked closely with Greylock-backed Cloudera to implement Hadoop and sponsor technologies like Voldemort, Askaban and Kafka. He has held roles at Skype,PayPal and eBay. As LinkedIn’s Chief Security Officer he partnered with Facebook, Google, Twitter, Zynga and others to take on hackers, spammers and fraudsters. He has also done strategic advisory work for the U.S. Department of Defense, the Department of Energy and Civilian Research and Development Foundation.

In his new role DJ will help Greylock-backed start-ups to learn the art of data jujitsu. Together they will build core competencies and teams around data, conceive new data strategies to optimize decision-making and create new user-facing products.

At LinkedIn, DJ's team came up with multiple ideas of how to visualize and make use of data, including network maps, like this one. Make your own map here: http://inmaps.linkedinlabs.com/

I’m looking forward to partnering with DJ again. Welcome, DJ!

–Reid

Reid Hoffman is Co-Founder and Chairman at LinkedIn and a partner at Greylock Partners. He is a member of the founding team at PayPal and has been an angel investor and adviser to dozens of organizations including Facebook, Zynga, Flickr and Last.FM. Reid is a board observer at AirbnbGowalla, and Swipely, an advisor to Groupon and a director at Zynga, Mozilla Corp., Six Apart, Shopkick, and Kiva.org. His complete profile can be found here.

Welcoming Mark McLaughlin to Palo Alto Networks

I’m thrilled to announce that today we are announcing Mark McLaughlin as Palo Alto Network’s new President and CEO.

Mark joins Palo Alto Networks from VeriSign (VRSN) where he has been President and CEO since 2009. We selected Mark for his exceptional leadership capabilities, his intensity and commitment, his passion for innovation, strong cultural fit with the Palo Alto Networks team and prior experience in the security sector. A West Point graduate, Mark began his career as an attack helicopter pilot. He has held business development and sales leadership positions earlier in his career and held increasingly senior leadership positions at VeriSign over the last decade (including ownership for all products and marketing). He is also an insider in Internet infrastructure and serves on President Obama’s national security telecommunications advisory committee.

Palo Alto Networks is a once-in-a-decade company. PAN just completed a record quarter, has an installed base of over 4,500 customers and is at a bookings run rate of over $200 million. The company is in the midst of rapid growth and expansion — PAN recently moved into new corporate headquarters in the bay area and expects to hire more than 300 new employees in the coming year. PAN has been on a very strong sales growth curve since inception and is one of the fastest growing companies in the enterprise IT sector.

Nir Zuk founded PAN in early 2005 with an initial seed round from Greylock Partners and Sequoia Capital, and worked out of Greylock’s offices during 2005. After multiple brainstorming sessions and customer visits together, Nir had the bold vision and ambition to re-enter the mainstream network security market with a disruptive next-generation firewall approach. Nir was joined by Rajiv Batra (a world-class engineering leader) and began shipping product in the summer of 2007.

We’re looking forward to the start of the next chapter in the company’s history as Mark helps Palo Alto Networks scale and grow into the industry’s largest independent network security company.

Welcome Mark!

–Asheem

Asheem Chandna is a partner at Greylock Partners, where he is focused on helping founders and management teams initiate and build industry-leading companies selling new technologies to enterprise buyers. His current company boards and investments include AppDynamics, Aquantia, Delphix, Imperva, Palo Alto Networks, Sumo Logic, TechProcess and Xsigo. Follow on Twitter, Quora and LinkedIn.

Announcing Citrus Lane

I’ve been at Greylock 6 months now, and have a bunch of learnings and observations I’ll start sharing on the blog soon!

But in this post I’m really happy to share that the first investment that I’ve led is in Citrus Lane — an investment we made a few months ago.

 

Citrus Lane is a modern subscription e-commerce company that’s focused on getting awesome, healthy, useful & delightful products to young families. They launched their site and products last week. :-)

I’m really, really excited to be involved with the company.

I’m exited about the category: subscription commerce is coming like a freight train; we’re in a period where the way we buy products and services is changing dramatically and quickly. The comprehensiveness of Amazon’s offerings and the ubiquity of the modern logistics chain have paved the way for more thoughtful, curated, unique offerings to consumers, highly targeted by interest, lifestyle and personal tastes.

I’m excited about the particular sector: as a family with a kindergartner, I’m acutely aware of how you go from month to month never knowing whether you should be doing better taking care of your children, thinking there must be better ways to do things and better products. It’s obvious to me that we’ve made product and process decisions that will last for years. And it’s super obvious that young parents, and especially moms, control trillions of dollars of product decisions.

And I’m particularly excited to work with the CEO & Founder, Mauria Finley. I’ve known Mauria for more than 15 years — she’s a Stanford-trained Computer Scientist with a particular expertise in product design, and has held product leadership roles at Ebay, PayPal, Good, AOL and elsewhere. She’s fantastic, and a highly motivated first time CEO. She’s been great to work with so far and I think will continue to be tops.

She’s putting together a very interesting team that includes Claire Hough, her co-founder & CTO — previously of NexTag, Blue Martini, Netscape, Napster and more.

So they’re launched! Go take a look and see what you think. Watch this space (and follow them on Twitter!). :-)

[PS -- I've done several other investments, but they've been from our Discovery Fund, which we typically don't announce publicly unless the companies really want us to. This is somewhat different in that I'm on the board of directors and it's a more significant level of investment.]

–John

  John Lilly is a partner at Greylock Partners and former CEO of Mozilla.

 

 

 

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