Therese Tucker, CEO and founder of BlackLine
43 Minuten
Podcast
Podcaster
Beschreibung
vor 5 Jahren
Today we’re here with the one and only Therese Tucker — she’s the
CEO and founder of BlackLine, the enterprise SaaS company that
helps businesses, like Coca Cola, EBay, Nasdaq and more, automate
accounting. Blackline was a leader in the first wave of the cloud
movement, founded in 2001, and went public in 2016.
Key takeaways from this episode include:
The problems money can’t solve when creating a new
market: “The reality is that creating a new market is
a fairly slow process, no matter how much money you take and
throw at it,” Therese said. “Getting people aware, doing the
education piece, getting through sort of a process and seeing
that develop does not happen overnight. I still get frustrated
because we have over 3,000 customers and I’m like, ‘Why don’t
we have 30,000?’ And so much of that is because of our market,
and because our buyer is risk-averse and moves slowly.”
Advice for solo founders wondering if they should seek
co-founders: “Someone once told me that it’s very hard
to get things done by committee. But at the end of the day, the
buck stops with one person, not a committee. Even among the
companies that have co-founders there is still the lead who
makes the hard decisions,” Therese said. “Unfortunately, I’ve
also seen companies where some of the co-founders are not true
co-founders. The moment it gets difficult, they become
employees. Honestly, I think having a co-founder adds
complexity; the minute you disagree, you’ve got a very
difficult situation. And the minute you run out of money,
you’ll see very quickly who’s actually willing to go without
their salary to make it successful and who’s in it because
they’re sort of riding along.”
Characteristics to look for in employee number
one: “You need to find the kind of people that don’t
fit well in a corporate structure. And frankly, sometimes
that’s because they’re just too bright. They don’t have a
tolerance for bureaucracy, for BS, and they want freedom to get
things done. And those are the type of people that you look for
in a startup,” Therese said. “And you know what? Those people
are really fun to work with. The other thing that you can do in
the early days is you can offer people flexibility. One of my
early programmers was a musician, and he toured three months
out of the year. He’s an excellent programmer. I was able to
hire him for a fraction of what I would have paid somebody who
got three weeks’ vacation. Because he had a life, he had a
full-time steady job when he wasn’t touring. And then he got to
tour with his band for three months out of the year.
Flexibility. It was beautiful. We just worked with it.”
How founders should lead differently in 2020 and
beyond: “I think that we are all learning, that no
matter where we are at, we still have some pretty deeply
ingrained beliefs that are probably wrong,” Therese said. “The
built-in advantage of diversity is that people from diverse
backgrounds do think differently. And so you get the advantage
of just a lot of different types of thinking about problems and
a lot of different ways to approach problem-solving. You end up
with a stronger company and a stronger product set because of
that inherent diversity.”
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