Fluidinfo

May 24, 2010

Anatomy of a funding

Filed under: Essence,Happiness — Terry Jones @ 11:43 am

Yes!! Fluidinfo is finally funded. Getting there took a while, and wasn’t easy. In fact, it was the most difficult thing I’ve ever done. Below are a few loosely related comments on how it all went down. I hope this will be of interest to people who are specifically interested in the progress of Fluidinfo, and also to other entrepreneurs. I’ve been waiting years to write it. Predictably, now that I’m in a position to do so, I don’t really have time to do a decent job.

There was a lot of rejection along the way. I blogged about expecting and embracing startup rejection in Nov 2008. We had to ignore all that, and take heart from the strong support of a few people. More on them later.

We were even called "unfundable" (and “world-changing”) in a generous article by Robert Scoble, who is a very careful listener and much smarter than people seem to realize. I was of course determined to change that.

Tim O’Reilly uttered the most memorable fund-raising related sentence along the way: “This could take over the world…. but I don’t see how we could fund you.” Argh! Best, clearest, and most useful advice came from Jeff Bezos who simply said “Never give up”. Most haunting startup article: Avoiding the Cargo Cult by Roman Stanek. Most inspiring and favorite other entrepreneur met along the way: Jason Calacanis.

Several times we could have been funded if I’d accepted very low valuations. I said no to deals that didn’t feel right. I said no, and we pushed on to a release living on fumes, when people told me Fluidinfo was just ideas – as if the years of coding counted for nothing. I even said no to a couple of informal offers to acquire Fluidinfo.

Several times we could have been funded if we’d agreed to just build some kind of application, instead of insisting on working on Fluidinfo as a general storage architecture. I was never willing to give up or even relegate the importance and value of getting the right architecture in place. I think many startups have powerful general ideas but get diverted along the way into building something more specific. They have the intention of getting back to the more general and broadly applicable vision, but they never do. There are many reasons why that happens, among them the fact that once low-level engineering (programming) decisions are baked in, they are very hard to revisit.

So you could say I wasn’t willing to compromise on the vision – to get funded earlier in order to do less. And I felt compelled to push back on the elevator pitch, a posting through which I met Andy Weissman. I don’t think entrepreneurs should obediently infantilize their grand visions just so someone who’s probably not going to fund you can perhaps understand what you’re doing. Sure, if you have a compact idea that you can package up into a tiny pitch, go for it. If after trying to do that, you don’t, go find some potential investors with the patience to listen to you. The Betaworks guys told me after we’d first met that they’d blocked off 3 hours to talk to me – they knew it might take some time to see the scope of what we were attempting, to ask about it and consider it, to let it sink in, to hear why it might work, etc. (It didn’t take 3 hours, BTW, but they were prepared.)

I spent a lot of time pondering the link between obviousness, the creation of value, and passion. I often try to get people to read that article.

I’ve been introduced to many people along the way. A couple of years ago, in order to avoid real work, I started drawing a graph of the introductions I could remember. I filled my entire 3 meter whiteboard. So I wrote a small program to generate input for Graphviz and fed it all the information. You can see the result here. The colors are for people I’ve only talked to on the phone (light green), only emailed (orange), or was introduced to but never got a reply back from (yellow). All the rest (darker green) I met in person. I had to force myself to meet people, at first just telling myself it was part of my job and that if I didn’t do it Fluidinfo would simply cease to exist at some point, and in the end actually coming to enjoy it.

If you know your way around the seed and venture world, you’ll recognize many names in that graph. You can infer that they all – one way or another – found a way to say no, with the exception of Esther Dyson (who is a saint) and the investors who have just funded us. Many never actually bothered to say no, and several simply stopped replying to email. (See also: Pond Scum.) As an entrepreneur without a lot of outside support, it’s good to have things to keep you going. Planning to have the last laugh is sometimes all it takes. ๐Ÿ™‚

Quality I most enjoyed running into while meeting all those people: intellectual generosity. One thing I learned to stop doing: taking other people’s time and attention for granted.

The total money we spent on hardware over the last 4 years is $2000. That was one laptop, a couple of sticks of RAM, a USB memory, a couple of external hard drives, and a printer. The whole of Fluidinfo was written on two 15″ laptops, with no external monitors.

I can’t stand entrepreneurial cliches. They drive me nuts. There are so many people out there pontificating about startups, funding, VCs and entrepreneurs. If you spend any amount of time in that world you’re going to hear the same old tired cliches over and over and over. Standout exceptions: Chris Dixon, Scott Rafer, Nivi and Naval at Venture Hacks, and Paul Graham. Yes, there’s a bunch of other good stuff out there too.

I made the mistake of talking to VCs too early (see the post on rejection mentioned above). I should have been talking to earlier stage funders, but I was so sure the VCs would find Fluidinfo irresistible, and I wanted a bigger amount of money, that I neglected to talk to the only people (with money) who could really appreciate what we were trying to build.

John Borthwick and Andy Weissman, the founders of Betaworks, are fantastic. Betaworks are changing early-stage financing in New York (and beyond). Look at the intro graph: John is very easy to find. Those are almost all introductions he was making long before they funded us. They invited me to speak at their monthly brown bag lunch. They’ve had us in their office for a couple of months this year, given us keys, let us come to their weekly company-wide meetings, taken me into confidence multiple times, let me be present when sensitive things were discussed, created opportunities, pulled the funding round together, been generous and accommodating on the terms of the deal, and more. Spending time with the other small startups in and around the Betaworks office has been great – there’s a lot of very smart people there, and they’re working hard (while having fun) building all sorts of things. John is very good at his job. Keep your eye on Betaworks.

And never give up ๐Ÿ™‚

50 Comments »

  1. Awesome news! Congrats and glad you didn't listen to the naysayers, including me.

    Comment by Scobleizer — May 24, 2010 @ 3:57 pm

  2. Congrats again! You've built an amazing service that I'm sure is only going to get better (I'm working on my own post about my newbie experiences implementing FluidDB)…but you continue to go beyond by being this open and encouraging (I think ultimately this trait is why you continue to succeed regardless of how the dice lay).

    Keep up the great work and best of luck building out the team over the next few months!

    Comment by Kevin Marshall — May 24, 2010 @ 4:38 pm

  3. Congrats. So psyched for anyone who “never gives up.”

    Comment by reecepacheco — May 24, 2010 @ 5:21 pm

  4. Well done! Great news. When can I buy stock?

    Comment by Nick Martin — May 24, 2010 @ 5:36 pm

  5. Thanks everyone!

    Comment by terrycojones — May 24, 2010 @ 5:54 pm

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  8. […] that experience comes quite a number of useful insights that Jones shares in a blog post today called “Anatomy of a […]

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  11. […] that experience comes quite a number of useful insights that Jones shares in a blog post today called "Anatomy of a […]

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  12. […] that experience comes quite a number of useful insights that Jones shares in a blog post today called "Anatomy of a […]

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  13. […] that experience comes quite a number of useful insights that Jones shares in a blog post today called “Anatomy of a […]

    Pingback by the hive » “Finally Funded” - Lessons Learned from FluidInfo Founder Terry Jones — May 24, 2010 @ 8:09 pm

  14. You really packed a lot into this post. It is great to see you are funded. Based on my personal experience the post funded create the product and business is the most thrilling and hardest part of the entrepreneurs gig. Never give up, drink plenty of water and be kind to your team.

    Comment by Anthony Batt — May 24, 2010 @ 7:24 pm

  15. This is one of the best pieces of news I've heard this year. Congratulations to you, your team, and your investors!

    Comment by Mayson — May 24, 2010 @ 9:27 pm

  16. Does this provide a no-questions-asked writable social object to no-questions-asked represent writable social objects?

    Comment by Please enter a name to comment — May 24, 2010 @ 10:03 pm

  17. […] FluidDB ยป Blog Archive ยป Anatomy of a funding […]

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  18. It seems a key Takeaway is:
    Believe in yourself (probably based on one's past performance including academic and work experience) …

    Thanks for sharing.

    Comment by knowledgenotebook — May 24, 2010 @ 11:18 pm

  19. I've been trying to get a project funded for 9 years and your post makes me so glad that I haven't given up. Congratulations!

    Comment by Craig — May 25, 2010 @ 12:27 am

  20. Very inspiring post, and great advice. I am commonly faced with all of these sentiments. What a great story and advice for anyone struggling to make it. Hope we can meet in person sometime.

    Comment by Service Tattler — May 25, 2010 @ 12:54 am

  21. […] that experience comes quite a number of useful insights that Jones shares in a blog post today called “Anatomy of a […]

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  22. […] With that experience comes quite a number of useful insights that Jones shares in a blog post today called “Anatomy of a […]

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  23. […] Read more here > […]

    Pingback by Anatomy of a funding - :Parth Suthar's journal — May 25, 2010 @ 10:15 am

  24. Hi Terry – thrilled for you. Great news.

    Comment by Nic Brisbourne — May 25, 2010 @ 11:20 am

  25. And me! Thanks for the shout out above; very kind of you.

    Comment by rafer — May 25, 2010 @ 1:37 pm

  26. BRAVO! Thanks for the words of encouragement by sharing your experiences. Totally awesome! Best of luck to you!

    Comment by Beth Carls — May 25, 2010 @ 5:10 pm

  27. congrats! and thanks for sharing the journey/experience!

    Comment by rachnaspace — May 25, 2010 @ 6:01 pm

  28. […] that experience comes quite a number of useful insights that Jones shares in a blog post today called “Anatomy of a […]

    Pingback by ArticleSave :: Uncategorized :: "Finally Funded" – Lessons Learned from FluidInfo Founder Terry Jones — May 26, 2010 @ 2:17 am

  29. Extremely proud of you, honored to have covered it, and not surprised it's finally come!

    Comment by Marina Zaliznyak — May 28, 2010 @ 8:02 pm

  30. Congrats, and maybe we'll get you to come to pgCon again to give us a status update next year. ๐Ÿ™‚

    Comment by Selena Deckelmann — May 29, 2010 @ 12:53 am

  31. Thanks Robert! I didn't consider you a naysayer at all – but you did put a little extra fuel in my tank (thanks!).

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:35 am

  32. And thanks to you for time, patience, good & frank advice (e.g., “you know XXXX is full of shit, right?”) and intros. BTW, regards from Joshua Reich, who was singing your praises a few weeks back over coffee.

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:36 am

  33. Thanks Selena, that'd be great. But I'm way out of my depth in talking to anyone who knows anything about databases! ๐Ÿ™‚

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:37 am

  34. Thanks a lot Marina – hope to meet you in Barcelona one of these days.

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:37 am

  35. Hi Nic – thank you! And thanks for your help & encouragement.

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:38 am

  36. Hi Craig – sounds like you're on a mission too… good luck. Send mail if you feel like it.

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:39 am

  37. Thanks a lot Mayson!

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:39 am

  38. Thanks Kevin. See you in NYC again soon.

    Comment by terrycojones — May 29, 2010 @ 1:39 am

  39. Just read the article in NYT. Congratulations on the funding! Great to hear you're going to open source the code too ๐Ÿ™‚

    Comment by Ed Daniel — May 30, 2010 @ 11:19 am

  40. Jones got funded!? No way! The man couldn't code his way out of a for loop …

    Kidding aside .. nicely done. Congratulations!

    Comment by Lindsay — June 1, 2010 @ 4:44 pm

  41. Ha! Very funny ๐Ÿ™‚ Thanks. How are you?

    Comment by terrycojones — June 1, 2010 @ 4:46 pm

  42. Congratulations. There's nothing quite like the sweet smell of vindication, ripened by persistence and iteration.

    The father of hockey great Wayne Gretzky had a quote which I believe applies to you perfectly: “Skate where the puck's going, not where it's been.” Most cognitive frameworks are based on where the puck is right now…too few can see where the puck will be, and fewer still can explain the second- and third-degree derivatives of what that all means. I'm looking forward to getting my hands dirty with FluidDB.

    Comment by connectme360 — June 2, 2010 @ 7:16 pm

  43. Hi – thanks for the generous comparison ๐Ÿ™‚ I do think we're heading to where the puck will be – i.e., that the world is becoming more writable in some general sense – we just have to make sure we don't get there too early! Fortunately, being funded gives us more scope to affect things. We'll see!

    Comment by terrycojones — June 3, 2010 @ 7:55 am

  44. Hi Scott- I don’t get it. Did I miss a comment of yours? I don’t see anything in the Disqus spam area or any comments not approved. Let me know what I’ve missed – “censor” is not in my dictionary (I cut it out).

    Comment by Terry — June 4, 2010 @ 3:55 pm

  45. You censored my adjudication! No fair. </pout>

    Comment by rafer — June 4, 2010 @ 7:46 pm

  46. Hi Scott

    I don't understand. There's some aspects of Disqus that aren't intuitive to me… yesterday I replied to your comment above (I said censor is not in my dictionary – I tore it out), and that comment was visible here. Now it's gone. Did you get it in mail?

    I also went to look to see if there was any comment from you that hadn't posted, and Disqus showed 15 comments that were all already posted here. Just to be sure, I approved them all (that's when my yesterday reply disappeared). I looked in the spam comments and there's nothing there from you either.

    So I've missed something, but I don't know what. In any case, I certainly didn't censor anything. Can you try re-posting it (I'm assuming by adjudication you mean you posted another comment? If not, I have even less idea what you mean!)

    Comment by terrycojones — June 5, 2010 @ 9:18 am

  47. I'd hoped the </pout> would make you realize I was kidding. I was just
    wondering the identity of “XXXX” and teasing you for saving me by omitting
    the name.

    Comment by rafer — June 5, 2010 @ 1:28 pm

  48. Ah… got it. Sorry, I'm just a humor-impaired Australian. I'll remind you of the identity of XXXX next time I see you.

    Comment by terrycojones — June 5, 2010 @ 3:12 pm

  49. Living in Barcelona may not have helped. Those Catalans are SOOO funny.
    </sarcasm>

    Comment by rafer — June 5, 2010 @ 3:45 pm

  50. well, i look this site and so many people visit here!

    Comment by zixmail — June 18, 2010 @ 10:01 am

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