“Spend every dollar as if it were your last.”

– Sequoia Capital

“A business plan that doesn’t require a wonderful economic environment in order to succeed… is a good idea all the time.”

Marc Andreessen

Summary: In good times and bad, startups should be asking themselves the same questions: (1) What’s our runway? (2) What experiments are we running to extend our runway? (3) How long will we try the experiments before we switch to plan B? and (4) What’s plan B? Startups that survived the last downturn didn’t take life-threatening risks with their runway—survival mattered more than market domination.

If you haven’t seen Sequoia’s presentation on the downturn, R.I.P. Good Times, watch it now and read the meeting notes from GigaOM and Silicon Alley Insider.

(If you don’t see the presentation embedded above, watch it on SlideShare: R.I.P. Good Times)

Sequoia’s presentation offers a lot of good advice with typical insight, simplicity, and clarity. Here are a couple thoughts on their presentation.

1. The future ain’t what it used to be.

Don’t take Sequoia’s (or anyone’s) predictions about the future too seriously. If they’re smart enough to predict the future, they should have done it before the downturn.

2. Sequoia’s advice is good advice anytime.

In good times and bad, startups should be asking themselves the same questions:

  1. What’s our runway?
  2. What experiments are we running to extend our runway? (e.g. chasing revenue, raising capital, taking debt, writing grant proposals, cutting burn, grabbing market share in the hopes that it will help us raise capital later, et cetera)
  3. How long will we try the experiments before we switch to plan B?
  4. What’s plan B?

Good times

When it seems easy to extend your runway (good times), companies operate with shorter runways, they run experiments that are less likely to work, that have higher value outcomes when they do work, and they run them longer:

Let’s chase market share until we have 3 months of cash left so we can raise money at a high valuation and let’s hope capital will be available then.

Bad times

When it seems hard to extend your runway (bad times), companies operate with longer runways, they run experiments that are more likely to work, that have lower value outcomes when they do work, and they run them for shorter periods of time:

Let’s raise money right now even though our valuation won’t be optimal, and if that doesn’t close in 2 months, let’s cut our burn and chase customers.

Good times, Bad times

Here’s a table that summarizes the difference between good times and bad times:

Good Times Bad Times
Seems easy to extend runway Seems hard to extend runway
Short runways Long runways
Long experiments Short experiments
Low-probability experiments High-probability experiments
High-value experiments Low-value experiments

What’s your runway plan?

For some, Sequoia’s advice is good advice anytime. These people like to run their business as if it’s always hard to extend their runway.

Others (contrarians) will ignore Sequoia’s advice. They will take big risks and run their business as if it’s easy to extend their runway.

There’s nothing inherently right or wrong with either approach. Choosing a runway strategy is part of the CEO’s job description.

But our observations match Sequoia’s advice: startups that survived the last downturn ended up doing OK. They didn’t take life-threatening risks with their runway—survival mattered more than market domination.

Topics Downturn · Plans

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