April 12, 2024

Lessons - Becoming A Successful Entrepreneur | Jared Yellin - CEO & Co-Founder of 10X Incubator

Lessons - Becoming A Successful Entrepreneur | Jared Yellin - CEO & Co-Founder of 10X Incubator
Success Story with Scott Clary
Lessons - Becoming A Successful Entrepreneur | Jared Yellin - CEO & Co-Founder of 10X Incubator
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In this "Lessons" episode, Jared Yellin, CEO & Co-Founder of 10X Incubator, explores the core principles of successful tech entrepreneurship. From zero investment to scaling ventures to thousands of paying users, Jared shares invaluable insights on navigating the entrepreneurial landscape.


Thriving as an Entrepreneur: The right person for the job possesses the qualities to handle success and navigate challenges.


Adapting Your Idea: Great business ideas are constantly refined based on market feedback. Embrace agility and be open to iterating on your concept.


Co-founder Strength: A strong co-founder relationship is essential. Shared commitment and long-term vision fuel innovation and growth.


Entrepreneurial Essentials: Clarity and foresight are crucial. Don't outsource critical decisions. A co-founder can be your partner in navigating challenges.


➡️ Show Links

https://successstorypodcast.com

YouTube: https://youtu.be/_SVhO1rNPX0?si=iilAF8LsrUfogQIJ

Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jared-yellin-founder-of-10x-incubator-launching-10/id1484783544?i=1000549362110

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2LEByzVInlfytuzhje7IrJ?si=1c40cf49c0364a3b


➡️ Watch the Podcast On Youtube

https://www.youtube.com/c/scottdclary




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Transcript

So I think that this is a smart way to do it. Now, I want to unpack because you said you had four things. So right person, right, right, market, right, business model. I want to dive into those for somebody who wants to start something. They're going to be like, well, how do I become the right person? So how do we can also do the right idea, right, market, right, business model? So how do you make a great entrepreneur? What's the mindset you should be? So we actually have had a number of situations where when people are going through the process with us, their idea is like mediocre, but they're so right. And we still move forward because we know that we can make, like with an extraordinary person, we can make a mediocre idea extraordinary. We've also at the opposite Scott where we've had these like freaking home run ideas, but like kind of mediocre people and we're like, ah, I don't know how to make a mediocre person great. Like that, I don't know how to do. So they need to get there and then we can start having a conversation. But what we look forward to this and we've now done this now for enough time to know exactly what we need in our idea co-founder. We need a voice for the company. We need someone that can handle the spotlight. Grant Cardone is an extraordinary promoter. Like what he's able to do from a promotional perspective is like, on day, zero, you're like on year seven, like from just like exposure and relationship catwalk. It's really, it's just, it's magical to see. And I'm not that bad myself too. So the combination of us means that we're going to shine like the moon on you and you're going to have this like spotlight and you have to just handle it. Like you have to handle the fact that you're going to get tons of press. You're going to get invited to be on podcast that would never have reached out to you. You need to handle the meetings are going to be set up with your ideal candidates, the structured joint ventures. You need a handle going to one of the events that we host. And there's a thousand people or 10,000 people there. And we decided last minute to call you up and you're pitching like, you need to handle the spotlight. If that makes you queasy, we might still work with you as long as you're willing to learn because that's a very important skill or we have to find somebody else to partner with you to be in that seat. Because what we can't do is follow ourselves. Like we can't shine the moon on ourselves. We have to shine on somebody else. And this is everything like when we go and we fundraise. Like we're shining the spotlight on you. Like any of the investors, they know where I'm involved. They know I'm involved, but they want to know who's like who's the voice. And we want to make sure that we're putting in this effort to shine the spotlight get meetings that most likely would never happen for you on your own. And if it would happen, you have to have a lot more track record to make it happen. Immediately, you just need to show up. Like you need to show up as someone that they feel that they can trust with their investment. Because they know they can trust us. Like they know that's not their issue. They just want to know that you can. That's the key. You have to handle the spotlight, you have to want it. You have to be willing to learn. The other thing too is like we have only of the 70 plus companies. I want to say maybe three of them. The idea they came with is actually what we built. And those were three like industry technologies. So we really didn't know any better. Like these are things that like we've never experienced. Like we're building a software for the public adjusting industry. I didn't even know what that was. Like and now we're building a software for it. So I can't say that like the workflows right or wrong. Like but the person that we're building it with has been in the industry for 20 plus years. And he's really successful in the industry. So besides those like three business tech products that we just would not have enough knowledge. Truly influence besides like the user experience where we had a lot of say. Everything else has been an ideation process and some of them. What they came with is what we're building is so radically different that you wouldn't even notice it anymore. So outside handling the spotlight, it's opening your mind to the fact that you might be right with your idea. You might not be the same way that we might not be right or we might be like. It's the same concept we have to ideate and we will not write one line of code until we are crystal clear on what is the minimum bot and what is the economic model. And if we're not clear on these, we will not progress because that's where you start burning through capital software development firms. They're going to start the moment you write them a check because they don't care. Like they don't care. They don't care. Over a lack of clarity makes them more money. Like they they like people that aren't clear because as a result, like they're going to keep on building and then over time like you're not clear. So you're going to get clear one day and they're not clear the next and they're just Cody and Cody and Cody and all of a sudden, what you thought was going to be $750,000 and of being two years and two million dollars and then you have to scrap the whole part, which was my story, right? So like that's the difference. We're partners and one of the thing too, we have people that come to us and they try to compare like what we're doing to incubators because there's a lot of incubators out there. And the other day I was talking to this young entrepreneur and he was like, yeah, I'm just deciding between what you're doing at 10X and there's this thin tech incubator that is interested in me. They didn't give it off for you, but interesting. I'm like, cool, like what are they going to offer you? And so they're going to offer me a little bit of money, tell me, validate the idea and a few connections and some mentorship over the six month experience working with them. I'm like, that's cool. Mike, I have a question. On year six, when you decide to sell your fintech product to QuickBooks, are they going to sit in the meeting to negotiate the deal? And they're like, no, no, it's just this six month experience. Mike, okay, cool. I'm like, and in year three when you realize like you have to kind of re-engineer some of the software to scale, like, are they going to be sitting in those meetings with you and deploying resources to like re-engineer that software? He goes, no, Jared, I told you, it's just this six month thing. I'm like, here's a difference. The word incubator is the wrong word for us. Like, we're not an incubator. It should be called 10X co-foundership because we're co-founders. And we go from the day zero when we start until we sell that company. Like, we are on that journey. So like, when we need to like re-engineer something because we, we guest wrong collectively or we just need to in order to scale further or we got a great recommendation for like a new feature. Like, that's us with you, right? When we're going to sell the company in 18 months or 24 months or in five years and we're going to negotiate the optimal outcome, we're in it because like someone's going to say it, like, it's just going to happen. Like, where in it? Like, we're in it. And that's a distinction to build a tech company on an island by yourself and think that a software development firm is going to be there to help you with all these major guarantee milestones or that the incubator who's going to help you validate a concept is going to be there on the journey with you. They're just not the only thing that will be on the journey with you is co-foundership. So either you need to go out and build your own team, which is very time consuming, very expensive. And I'm going to say very risky because you don't know what you don't know. So you hire this wonderful CTO who's a really good engineer. But the dude can't or do that can't lead. So you have just a really good engineer that can't build a team around them and there's no way you're going to reach your optimal potential. So that's the difference. It is co-foundership and that's the non-negotiable.