When Airbnb was first shopping its idea to investors five years ago,
it faced a lot of skepticism. Today, even as valuations of the
apartment-sharing company hover around $10 billion, Airbnb is still
pushing against a wall of naysayers. The San Francisco-based startup is
in the midst of legal battles with the State of New York and its CEO has recently had to answer for wild orgies happening in rented apartments.
If
Airbnb's founders had perfectly thought through every single scenario
and unintended consequence of having strangers rent accommodations from
each other, they probably wouldn't have entertained the business idea
for more than half a beer. But determination is what makes a successful
entrepreneur, above all else, says Airbnb co-founder Nathan Blecharczyk.
If you wait for perfection, you will miss some epic opportunities.
Success
as an entrepreneur is “less about the idea and more about the person,”
Blecharczyk told an audience at a conference on the sharing economy at
New York University’s Stern School of Business last week. “All along the
way, people said, ‘No, this isn’t going to work, don’t do this.’”
Some
investors that Blecharczyk and his partners Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia
approached in their early days walked out halfway through the meeting.
“I remember going to somebody who we respected, pitching them about what
we were doing, and he said, ‘Ah, I hope that’s not the only thing you
are working on.’”
Five years later, Airbnb – for all its
controversy – is seen as a missed opportunity by some investors. One of
the premier venture capital firms in the U.S., Union Square Ventures in
New York City, was approached by Airbnb when the founders had graduated
from the Y Combinator accelerator program. The founders had run short on
cash and were desperately searching for backers. Unable to come up with
any funds from investors, the Airbnb cofounders bought a bulk supply of
generic Cheerios, put the cereal in boxes labeled “Obama-Os” and “Cap’n
McCains” in honor of the presidential election happening at the time
and charged $40 a box. The Obama-Os were more popular and so the
co-founders ate the remaining Cap’n McCains to save on food money.
Fred
Wilson, co-founder of Union Square Ventures, still has a box of the
Obama-Os sitting on a mantle in his conference room. “We couldn't wrap
our heads around air mattresses on the living room floors as the next
hotel room and did not chase the deal. Others saw the amazing team that
we saw, funded them, and the rest is history,” wrote Wilson of his investing blunder.
“We missed Airbnb even though we loved the team. Big mistake. The
cereal box will remain in our conference room as a warning not to make
that mistake again.”
Wilson wasn’t the only investor to miss the Airbnb boat. Luke Williams,
the executive director at the Berkley Center for Entrepreneurship and
Innovation at NYU Stern, said that 15 A-list venture capitalists all
listened to Airbnb's pitch and declined to invest.
Since
those early days of constant rejection, Airbnb’s growth has been
exponential. In the first four years, Airbnb served 4 million guests. In
its fifth year alone, it served 7 million guests.
Still, despite
Airbnb’s international success, there are still loads of doubters and
countless hurdles for the company to navigate. Regulators struggle to
define how to classify Airbnb guests and income for tax and rental
purposes. Blecharczyk recognizes that there are issues to be worked out,
but says that if they had waited to have all of the pitfalls bridged
over before launch, a tremendous amount of benefit would have been
forfeited at the feet of hesitation.
“Sometimes there is an
expectation that all these problems should already be solved, and you
just can’t do everything at once. We are certainly very eager to address
them as quickly as possible,” said Blecharczyk.
Rather than a
“No, don’t do that” attitude, entrepreneurs need to have a “Yes, but
please come up with a solution” attitude, he says. And he argues that
regulators and city officials should, too. “We should be looking forward
and asking ourselves what kind of future do we want to create.”
Blecharczyk
is determined to create a future that he himself wants to live in. Even
as the co-founder of a company with a valuation in the billions, NYU's
staff was unable to convince Blecharczyk to let them book him a hotel
for the conference; he only makes arrangements through Airbnb. “I have
spent most nights this year living on Airbnb," he says.
Source: entrepreneur.com
Source: entrepreneur.com
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