'Is it too late for me to start my own business?', and other sheepish questions (part 1 of 3)

This is part one of a three-part series on entrepreneurship. The parts:

  1. 'Is it too late for me to start my own business?', and other sheepish questions
  2. Who this new generation of aspiring entrepreneurs are and the new Golden Age of tech (Lucky7 post)
  3. How I define the soul of entrepreneurs: you change the world (Lucky7 post)

Part One

It's March of 2013 and I'm at Wharton serving as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence when I get a question that baffles me. I'm speaking at the Penn Founders' Club, where all University of Pennsylvania students are welcome as long as they are fervently working on a real business while they are in school. I've just wrapped up my opening comments and it is time for Q&A. The baffling question: "Have all of the really big ideas already been thought of?". I couldn't believe it when I could see the student was being serious and not just pulling my leg, and I was fired up. I passionately describe how the world always needs entrepreneurs to drive it forward, and there are always ideas - everywhere - if you just look hard to find them. I talk about how I just read the book Abundance, wrote the longest book review of my life on it at Lucky7, and there are thousands of great ideas in the book for entrepreneurs to solve the world's biggest problems. A few months later, Waze gets bought for $966 million by Google. A few months after that, Snapchat gets a rumored $3 billion offer from Facebook, which I wrote about in this Lucky7 post on valuations. And then almost a year after receiving that question at Penn, WhatsApp gets a firm acquisition offer of $19 billion from Facebook, one month after Google buys Nest for $3.2 billion.

Fast forward to a month ago and I see a question on Quora that catches my eye - Life: I am 35 and I have not achieved much in life. Is it too late?. The top two answers out of 176 and counting have a combined 4,900 "upvotes". I especially found this graphic compelling:

And then you have the Values.com billboards, of which this one caught my eye years ago. Henry Ford failed miserably with his first startup, the Detroit Automobile Company, which he started at age 36 but then... at the age of 38 he founded his second venture...:

You can see most of the billboards here.

And in Austin, we have an entrepreneur (Cotter Cunningham) that started his first venture at the age of 46, which failed, but then on his second...! I wrote about Cotter and did my best to motivate entrepreneurs to keep going - try again - in this Lucky7 post. I was fortune enough to interview Cotter while I was the Entrepreneur-in-Residence at McCombs (U.T. Austin), and you can watch the interview below:

And then today I wake up to reading this WSJ article about our own Evan Beahr and Will Davis in Austin, who pivoted from their failed venture Outbox, which was very ambitious, to a new venture, Able Lending, which is even more ambitious and I believe has much greater potential and certainly less friction. I also love thier blog post announcing the pivot, which they've been working on for the past eight months. I was fortunate enough to see their pitch for Outbox while I was at Austin Ventures and it was one of the best I've ever seen. This time around, they are that much wiser... and I'm hoping it will be a home-run for them and the Austin startup community. It is awesome to see Mike Maples, Jr. and Peter Thiel stay the course to support them. Reading that article led me to this one on Medium by Nikki Durkin of 99Dresses, which I had queued up and I wasn't sure I was going to ever read (I don't read everything on my reading list, but I do read very often). It is gut-wrenching, and that almost happened to me at Coremetrics. Keep walking, Nikki. Stay in the arena.

So I have a call to action for you today. Get in the arena. We need more brave people to change the world for the better. Stop asking your sheepish questions and let's get going. Debra and I are having a lot of fun doing our part to help with Hurt Family Investments, and you can see some of the entrepreneurs that we feel fortune enough to help on our portfolio page. We've been collaborating with others that are dedicated to helping in Austin too, including Austin Ventures, Silverton Partners, LiveOak Venture Partners, Capital Factory, TechStars Austin, Incubation Station, and over a hundred other individual investors and family offices that we know.

I would love to hear your stories in the comments below, and I look forward to writing part two of this series.

One more thing, I've heard from several serious entrepreneur friends this is a great new book on the subject although I haven't read it yet: The Hard Thing About Hard Things: Building a Business When There Are No Easy Answers by Ben Horowitz. I just ordered it on my Kindle.