Inspirational Short Stories
7, Feb 2023
Startup Founder Inspirational Short Stories

Nothing beats a good origin story! If you’re a Startup Founder or contemplating taking the leap of faith and becoming one, I’ve gathered together some inspirational short stories that will make you smile, laugh and think.

Inspirational Short Stories From Founders You Know

Daphne Koller – Co-Founder at Coursera

The Spark

In 2012, Koller and Andrew Ng, both Computer Science professors at Stanford, had spearheaded an effort to offer three Stanford computer science courses for free online. The classes were interactive, with short video lectures, discussion forums, quizzes, and homework assignments that were graded by other students using a rubric provided by professors. Even though students didn’t earn academic credit for it, the courses were a hit. “With no marketing, each of those courses had more than 100,000 learners,” Koller says. “It was a wake-up call about the demand for this type of education around the world.”‍
 

The Rise

In the space of a few months, she and Ng persuaded the universities of Princeton, Penn and Michigan to sign on. They wanted to leverage not only the best that Stanford had to offer, but the offerings from other colleges as well. Though Coursera had no monetisation plan, investors jumped on board.

This was because they felt Coursera had the right ingredients to be successful. “Higher education costs too much, and it’s not available to enough people”, says John Doerr, a lead investor at the time. Doerr recommended Koller and Ng consult with Rick Levin, an economist who had served as the president of Yale for 20 years. In 2014, Levin joined as CEO, after which Coursera began charging $30 to $70 to students who wanted course completion certificates. This was when they started making revenue.‍

Battering Through

In 2012, MOOCs were all the rage, which saw Coursera’s popularity surge with it. But a couple of years later, the narrative had completely shifted due to the seemingly low course engagement and completion rates. The Coursera team ignored the chatter. When Levin turned the company over to incoming CEO Jeff Maggioncalda, it was on an upswing. Its enterprise business was taking off, and it had tripled its revenue that year.

Ben Silbermann – Co-Founder and CEO at Pinterest

The Background

Coming from a family of doctors, Ben Silbermann was on track to become one himself at Yale, until he realised it wasn’t his calling. Silbermann would then go on to work in financial consulting at CEB and later in customer support at Google over the next 5 years, before finally quitting his job at Google to startup with his college-mate Paul Sciarra. Together, Silbermann and Sciarra built Tote – an app for online shopping.‍

The Spark

After it flopped, they decided to pivot to Pinterest, a platform for ‘collecting things’ –  something that Ben Silbermann had held a passion for since childhood. The app was to provide a platform to showcase photo collections. Soon after, Silbermann met Evan Sharp, a talented architect and thus their team grew to 3. “It was like he was the only who understands what [I] was saying”, Silbermann said of the time when he met his third co-founder. Sharp created the iconic ‘Grid’ layout that has become synonymous with the app ever since.‍

The Long Road

Growth began slowly, and Ben Silbermann personally wrote to the first 5,000 users. After 9 months, they still had less than 10,000 users – but slow and steady growth, and belief in their product kept them going. They focused on the small group of fanatical users they had accumulated, and built around them – also gaining popularity for their ‘fan meetups’. “That was the moment where I was like, ‘We’ve got it.'” Silbermann says, after the first meetup. Eventually, Pinterest got some traction and that’s when the tech blogs started paying attention. Their iPhone app, launched in 2011, did surprisingly well, and got more downloads than anticipated. They’ve gone from strength to strength ever since.

Inspirational Short Stories From Founders Who Failed And Then Succeeded

Reid Hoffmann, Co-Founder of LinkedIn

SocialNet was the first company founded by Reid Hoffman in 1997. It focused “on online dating and matching up people with similar interests, like golfers looking for partners in their neighbourhood”.  Like many other social networking platforms in the 90s, it didn’t seem like a promising venture. 

The major reasons SocialNet failed were: Nobody really knew what it was, the public wasn’t ready for what it had to offer, and the platform lacked a clear purpose. It felt like an idea scattered all around.

While building SocialNet, he joined the board of directors during the founding of PayPal and in 2000, Reid left SocialNet to become the COO for PayPal.  His stay was a definitive one as he became an expert at competing effectively in an extremely competitive environment because for Paypal to survive, it had to compete fiercely for every advantage and opportunity it got.

When Paypal got acquired by eBay in 2002, he had learnt a whole lot and he was ready to do SocialNet again, only this time better.

In 2002, he founded Linkedin – an online social network for business professionals to network – with his former colleagues. LinkedIn officially launched in May 2003 which was a huge success and by 2014, the platform already had over 332 million members and today it has over 260million monthly users. It has become the most advantageous networking tool for job seekers and business professionals. Today, Reid Hoffman is described as one of Silicon Valley’s most prolific and successful angel investors with an incredible network of entrepreneurs and executives in tech.

Here are the major lessons from his failure and growth: 

Inspirational Short Stories From Founders Like You And Me

13 Years Of Hustle

Jay Winder built the only company in Japan backed by Angel list.

Life is good for Jay Winder in 2015. His second company – a fintech firm called MakeLeaps – is integrated with Evernote, serves prominent Japanese clients like Rakuten and Voyage Group, and is on track to becoming profitable. He is a familiar face in Tokyo’s startup scene, where his natural friendliness and fluent Japanese wins him plenty of fans. He is even entering the year with some nice momentum, only a few months removed from a US$750,000 funding round that included AngelList founder Naval Ravikant and 500 Startups founder Dave McClure. The signs are all pointing up, but journey did not happen overnight. For Winder, it has been a story 13 years in the making.

$7,000.00 In Credit Card Debt

Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar started Atlassian with $7,000.00 withdrawn from a credit card in 2002, while still at University.

“We built the first version of our product while working in the garage before we even had our first office,” admits Farquhar.

The pair were 22 years old at the time and their mission was to earn the equivalent of their friends who were working for major consulting firms. Fast forward to 2022 and the Australian tech giant has a market cap of more than US$100 billion.

Key Factors That Drove Success

 

With a focus on building a portfolio of reputable and affordable products that could sell themselves, their budget for marketing and sales is less than 20 per cent.

Today, Atlassian’s customer base includes Microsoft, Oracle, Toyota, Amazon and Shell, enabling these businesses to manage tasks, collaborate and track bugs.

The Takeaways

You don’t need an MBA from a top business school or a lot of experience or money to start a company that can eventually become a market leader, and be worth billions of dollars.

Success never happens “overnight”.

Startups are a Marathon, not a sprint.

You need grit and determination, i.e. the kind of mental toughness and resilience that few people ever have.

About The Author:

James Spurway is an Angel Investor, Mentor, Advisor, Speaker, former Commercial Pilot, and Author specialising in raising debt and equity capital. He strives to model diversity, equity, and inclusion in the founders he agrees to invest and work with. He has paused his angel investing activity to focus on raising his first US$ 50M venture capital fund, which will invest in startups that can accelerate the achievement of net zero emissions. James spent the past 33 years living in Hong Kong, Vietnam, Germany, Switzerland, Monaco, the USA, Thailand, the Philippines, Singapore, and Australia, his country of birth. In that time, he started 10 businesses, exited from seven, shut down two, and kept one. He has invested in a total of 50 startups since 2001 and had six successful exits.

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