Acquired - Adapting Episode 2: Sequoia’s Black Swan Memo (with Roelof Botha)
Episode Date: March 31, 2020On March 5th 2020, Sequoia Capital published a Medium post entitled ‘Coronavirus: The Black Swan of 2020’. The memo minces no words, admonishing founders & CEOs to “question every a...ssumption about your business”, and portends that “as Darwin surmised, those who [will] survive ‘are not the strongest or the most intelligent, but the most adaptable to change.’” We’re joined by longtime Sequoia partner and head of the firm’s US business Roelof Botha to discuss on what Sequoia saw leading up to the memo and why they decided to publish it, how they and their portfolio companies are adapting to the new world it warned of, and what lasting changes might come to Sequoia itself from this moment. For anyone facing hard decisions and/or looking for ways to think about opportunity, this is not one to miss. Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Links:The Black Swan Memo: https://medium.com/sequoia-capital/coronavirus-the-black-swan-of-2020-7c72bdeb9753 The COVID-19 Decision Matrix: https://medium.com/sequoia-capital/the-matrix-for-covid-19-c25bd5195f46
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It was pretty good.
It was...
Yes, it was pretty good.
Don't doubt your vibe.
For not being his full-time gig, it was pretty good.
Emoji Records.
Welcome to episode two of Adapting by Acquired.
Hey, now you got it.
Yeah, well, I rehearsed.
Or for those keeping track at home, season six, episode five.
We are continuing our series to bring you the stories of great companies and great leaders
who are adapting to a world that's changing in real time.
Today, we are covering the story behind the memo read around the world, Sequoia Capital's
Black Swan Memo, amazingly published only 20 days ago as we record this.
Man, feels like 20 lifetimes ago.
I know.
I know.
Well, we are joined by the best person in the world to tell us about it, longtime Sequoia
partner, Rulof Bota.
Today's episode is different than last week's episode with Canlis.
We are going much closer to Acquired's bread and butter of technology and venture capital.
This conversation is particularly interesting not just to hear the story behind the Black Swan memo,
but also to get a real-time look at how Sequoia themselves are thinking about adapting
during this time, along with their portfolio companies. Before we jump in, if you haven't
already, we want to strongly encourage you to join the Acquired Slack community. I honestly think at
this point, it's probably the best community on the internet for people focused on building and
investing in great companies. We really mean that. And that's a testament to you all
and the quality of people that listen to this show.
It's been pretty awesome,
especially over the last week or so,
just seeing how we're all supporting each other in there
and helping everybody get through this time.
So you can find a link on our website to get an invite.
You should definitely sign up.
The other thing we want to tell you about
is as we announced on the last episode, we're adding something big to the limited partner program that we're really excited about.
We're going to be hosting monthly calls on Zoom for all LPs, which we're calling, appropriately enough, LP calls.
Very original, David.
Yeah, super original.
We're big into branding here at acquired. So when you sign up
for the limited partner program, you get both all our LP episodes, which go deeper on nitty gritty
company building topics, and access to the monthly LP calls with both of us. You can sign up by
clicking the link in the show notes or going to glow.fm slash acquired. Okay, listeners,
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servicenow.com slash AI dash agents. And with that, David, we will dive into our interview
with Rulof. We are super lucky to have Rulof with us today. Rulof has been a partner at Sequoia
since 2003 and led early investments in some of the most important companies that we've covered
on this show, companies like Instagram, YouTube, and Square. He currently leads the firm's U.S.
business as one of Sequoia's three stewards, along with Doug Leone and Neil Shen. And prior to joining Sequoia, Ruloff was the CFO
of PayPal, which is particularly relevant to our conversation today, having helped navigate them
through the dot-com crash, their subsequent IPO, and ultimately their sale to eBay for one and a
half billion dollars. Welcome, Ruloff, and thanks for joining us in these interesting times.
Thank you. I wish the circumstances were different, but I'm glad to be here.
Us too, and we're glad to have you. Let's jump right into it. On March 5th, you guys did something
that now seems obvious in hindsight, but definitely did not seem obvious on March 5th, which was...
Yeah, I think March 5th, that was like two years ago at this point.
It feels like there's that Lennon quote, right, that people have been saying about some decades
nothing happens and some weeks decades happen. It's been about two decades. You guys released
publicly, both simultaneously emailed all your portfolio CEOs and posted on Medium what you
call the Black Swan Memo. I'm sure most of our listeners have read it
probably multiple times at this point. You know, I just want to point out, I want to highlight one
kind of quote from it that again, probably everyone's read, but it's such a stark difference
between what you guys said and what so many other investors and people were saying at the moment.
You say, having weathered every business downturn for nearly 50 years, we've learned an important
lesson.
Nobody ever regrets making fast and decisive adjustments to changing circumstances.
In downturns, revenue and cash levels always fall faster than expenses. In some ways,
business mirrors biology. As Darwin surmised, those who survive are not the strongest or the most intelligent, but the most adaptable to change. Can you walk us through as you were
writing this and getting ready to hit publish? What were you feeling internally?
The sense of nervousness that the world wasn't really paying attention to the reality that we
were facing. We have the benefit of being a global partnership. So we were seeing what was happening
in China with our business and with our partners and what it was like to be under a lockdown.
We've been through many business cycles that took away. We've been around for 48 years.
We've been through so many of these cycles, and we've seen this movie before.
And our sense was that people hadn't quite realized what was about to happen. It was like
watching an accident happen in slow motion. You could just see it. And we felt a duty and
obligation to do something about it.
Well, let's set the stage for folks. This was six days before the NBA announcement came out. So it was sort of a week before the general American consciousness woke up and said, Oh my God,
this is a huge deal. Did you worry at all that you were jumping the gun? And as a related question, I mean, Sequoia is such a force in our ecosystem.
Did you think about the risk of, gosh, do we incite something by releasing something like this?
We do, which is why we do this very infrequently.
The last time we did something comparable was at the end of 2008 with the Rest in Peace Good Times memo, which wasn't intended to be published.
It was really intended just for our founders
because we wanted them to understand what was happening.
And it comes at a risk.
I mean, even there, I heard from people back in 2008
that we were the reason the crash happened,
as if we had that kind of power.
And similarly here, I heard people complain,
we're being alarmist and things like that.
But we really felt a duty that, you know, maybe people are going to be uncomfortable with us saying these sort of things.
But we have an obligation to tell people what we see coming around the corner.
Someone challenged me and said, well, what if it doesn't turn out to be that bad?
And I said, if that's the case, I'd be so thankful.
I'd be so thankful.
And I will eat humble pie for having published this.
It is so much more important for us to put the word of warning out.
Often when you're in the trenches as a company, you have a slightly different perspective
on things, especially if you haven't been through previous cycles.
And I remember when I was there at PayPal, I joined in March of 2000, the Nasdaq started
its slide in April.
And I remember being at a board meeting with Mike Moritz from Sequoia in June.
And he told us, he warned us, focus on runway
because the financing environment has changed forever.
And I think honestly, for all of us as first timers,
if you will, in the company,
we didn't quite fathom that.
We thought that what we'd experienced
for the last two years would continue.
And he really rung the bell and we paid attention.
And that month, we really started to sharpen our pencils to make sure that we had enough runway to
make it to the other side. I'm super curious. You've talked about this a bunch. And obviously,
as CFO, you were right there at the helm doing this. What were the things you did? I mean,
you were, I believe, the first technology company to go public after the crash, then
had this wonderful exit.
What were the actual things that you did to save the company and to stay on a growth trajectory
even through all this carnage?
First, it's obviously a team effort, right?
I mean, I was one of many people of the company that rallied together.
And I think that's one of the things that you see in this unfortunate humanitarian crisis. I mean, I think the thing that's different about this,
by the way, is it's a health crisis in addition to an economic crisis at a global scale. I mean,
that makes it so different from any of these other incidents we've seen. And that's awful
on many levels, but I do think it's very different from what we had back then. But we rallied as a
team and we looked through the P&L.
I mean, I remember literally going through line by line on every single thing on which we were
spending money to figure out what was truly essential to helping us build a successful
business on the expense side, the things that you can control. We tried feverishly to raise
more money to extend our runway. And we got religion about our business model. I mean,
up until I think
June 10 or June 20, 2000, PayPal didn't charge for its service. And at that point, we realized
if we wanted to keep going, we had to figure out a business model and make it a great business
model. And that's exactly the kind of focus that we got because the external environment changed
so dramatically. Constraints enable you to come up with creative new solutions.
And so I think you're going to find an incredible array of entrepreneurs coming up with wonderful solutions in the midst of this terrible crisis.
To go back for a sec to the Black Swan memo, can you talk a little bit about what it was over the preceding weeks before March 5th that you were seeing in China and
obviously through your unique perspective that kind of gave you confidence that,
hey, this is a lot more serious than people are realizing in the US and elsewhere?
I think we saw how our team in China immediately had to go into a full lockdown. Just sort of a
dramatic change at a national level with over a billion people, and not just in the province that
was affected, but everywhere, that they were taking it seriously. So clearly, the people at
the front lines had seen that this was a virus, unlike others, that was spreading a lot faster
and had higher mortality rate than a typical seasonal flu. So that just felt very, very
different. And I think it was pretty obvious that by then there were cases showing up in the US, even though there was a travel ban at one point, it was just too porous.
People could have come here from mainland China, they could have gone to other parts of the world
and coming into the US. And so it was quite likely that there's a bigger problem today in the US than
we realize. And this is the unfortunate thing about the absence of testing infrastructure right
now in the country. I have a friend in New York who had it for 11 days before he was confirmed positive last week.
My brother in San Francisco, I think, has it, but he can't get tested.
He literally can't get tested because he's not in a high-risk group.
So I think we just had a sense that the problem was actually a lot bigger.
You know, there's the parable of the wheat or the rice in the chessboard, you know, where the person wants to get compensated one, two, four, et cetera. And it's obviously a great thing for people who study
computer science, but, you know, two to the power N becomes a very large number as N grows.
And things that grow exponentially, we just don't understand it. Something that looked trivial 12
days ago, but is doubling every six days, suddenly looks dramatically different just two weeks later.
And so I think we saw that this was
at the cusp of happening in America.
And so we felt this obligation,
like I said earlier,
to make sure that people paid attention
and acted now.
That's a great lead-in to something
that David and I talk about a lot.
And David, I don't think I have shared this with you,
but I look up to you a lot
in the way that you think about
playing defense and playing offense
and being very careful about
when is a time for defense and when is a time for offense. You know, doing both at the same time,
you have to be careful what actions are for which thing. And Rulof, I want to dive in on defense
right now. You guys have been putting out a reasonable amount of content compared to sort
of Sequoia of old. And one of the pieces that you publish for entrepreneurs is this decision matrix.
And I would sort of think about this as defense.
How should entrepreneurs use that?
And then I'm curious to ask you some questions about offense.
So I want to give credit to one of our CFOs in the portfolio.
He doesn't want to be singled out to name, but he developed this for a portfolio company
where I happen to be on the board for Sequoia.
And I thought it was an incredible structure. In that case, the company had sort of seven main scenarios with a couple
of sub scenarios. And I just thought it's a wonderful framework to address the challenge
you face because we don't know the state of the world, right? There's so much uncertainty right
now, but you know, are we actually going to reopen in three weeks, four weeks, 10 weeks?
Is it going to be a second wave? Are there going to be five waves? Is the world going to be in? We don't know. So I thought it was a wonderful
way to think about what are the various scenarios that may play out? What are the strategies you
could pursue? And what does it do for your resulting cash balance at some future date
that is important and your end is as good as any, I guess, at this point? Because companies need to
survive. Cash is the most important thing companies have guess, at this point. Because companies need to survive.
Cash is the most important thing companies have to focus on right now.
Because if you don't survive, obviously, there's no chance for you to build an enduring business.
And so that's the reason I thought it was a fabulous framework.
And again, we felt we wanted to share it with as many people as possible.
And we did actually on Friday, we had a Q&A session with over 100 portfolio companies.
Several of our partners hosted this call, and we shared it with those companies, and
we just felt then that we wanted to share it with everybody.
Now to ask the question on offense, this time is incredibly challenging for a lot of people,
and we should in no way gloss over that.
I'm sure it's challenging for you.
It's challenging for me.
Yet you can sort of squint and find ways
to actually turn it into something positive and find perhaps a dislocation in a market
or an opportunity that's emerged that was never a need from people before.
And I'd just love to get your perspective on how can people be proactive and turn this into a
positive? Well, there are a couple of companies, obviously, that benefit from us all
having to work from home and things like that. So the product we're using, Zoom, is obviously
benefiting. There are companies like Loom in our portfolio that are benefiting. The delivery
companies are an essential service in my mind to make sure that we get food and get delivery of
basic necessities. There's a class of companies that are benefiting. You may not be one of those companies, so that doesn't really help you. The thing that I think really everybody
can focus on in this time is product development. Keep on investing in your product. Sales and
marketing, by definition, are going to be challenged over the next few months because
people are going to shift their consumption behavior. Face-to-face selling, if you're an
enterprise company, is going to be hampered.
Marketing channels maybe are flooded by other things,
and it may seem insensitive, candidly,
for you to peddle certain types of products right now.
It's just not the right time.
Hunker down and focus on product development.
Build that truly differentiated product
that, if you can survive, gives you a huge advantage
when you come out the other side.
Because part of what happens here, and I'll use the analogy of our namesake sequoia tree,
like forest fires have been a part of the landscape in the US for a long time, and it'll
often clear the brush.
And the sequoia trees that survive end up thriving disproportionately once the fire
has cleared, right?
Because there's more sunlight and there's more space for those that survive. And so, you know, you've got to wait your time out and make sure that you can pounce
with a truly differentiated product because the competitive landscape is probably going to be
clear for you after that. I think the other thing to do, just David, before that is to look for
a community. So, you know, it's a lot of what we've been doing, trying to get our founders
together, not only with the sort of weekly call that we're doing now, but getting founder to founder communities together.
And there's so much ingenuity and so much good advice and tips that they can share with each other and also just kindred spirits where they can share some of the suffering candidly that's happening right now.
So lean into community, lean into your product.
I know you guys have done some innovative things, creating spaces right now
for portfolio companies. How are you doing that? And how are you interacting with them and them
with each other? Well, I think at an individual level, obviously, board members are in frequent
contact with the companies as we try to share best practices. In addition to the matrix, which
we shared publicly, there are a couple of other things that we've prepared for companies, you know,
for the unfortunate company that may need to go through a reduction in force, for example.
We've actually prepared some best practices that we've seen so we can share people and just help arm them for some of the challenges that lie ahead.
We've created the Q&A with us as a group.
So we get over 100 companies get together with Sequoia partners and we have a few prepared remarks, things that we're seeing, and we open it up for questions. We're arranging founder to founder sessions, no Sequoia
person present, where they can just, industries that are relevant, where they can share best
practices. We're also doing that for CFOs, because I think a lot of the CFOs across the portfolio
are dealing with similar challenges. What do they do about potential rent abatement? What are they
doing to renegotiate debt? What happened to that financing that was supposed to close?
Things like that, where they can also get together and help each other.
If anything, this has also accelerated our desire to build even more digital products
around our community.
We've prided ourselves in the sort of community things we do with activities like Basecamp
and AMP and other programs we have.
Obviously, those are halted right now.
And what can we do to
recreate as much of that as possible online is something we're working on.
Can we circle back real quick before we get off of playing offense for portfolio companies? I want
to come back to your time at PayPal. It struck me that I didn't realize that PayPal didn't have a
business model or at least a viable business model until after the
crash. As I kind of think about like the hierarchy of impacts of change you can have as a startup,
you know, there's sort of like at the bottom is like sales and marketing and then nothing at sales
marketing. And then at the mid-level is product. But actually the highest level I always think is
changing a business model. Now is kind of a really good opportunity to do that.
How did you guys think about,
there was the necessity of,
okay, you need to make revenue now,
but how did you figure out that business model
so quickly during that time at PayPal?
Necessity is the mother of invention.
I don't think it was that difficult to figure out
that as a payments company,
there were so many precedents of charging transaction-based fees. I think there were
some other nuances where we figured out how to get bank account funding so that we had a much
higher gross margin than traditional credit card processors did. So there's some other things we
did. We also had to figure out solutions to online fraud, which took down many of our competitors and
was a very expensive thing for us as well.
We lost millions of dollars in 2000 to scalable online fraud.
Part of what we talked about at the company was, at the end of the day, if we can't keep the company alive because people are willing to pay for the service we provide, we don't really have a reason to exist. We need to deliver enough value so that whatever we charge leaves enough of
a gap of value capture to the customer where they're happy to pay for the service we have.
And I think many companies may face that type of a crucible moment over the next six months if
they've been free services or if their business model hasn't really been refined properly.
But it's clarifying at some level. Yeah, where you're really forced to show up in a way that says, hey, I am delivering enough value here to charge for it.
What's the quote about?
Is it a Warren Buffett quote?
You know who has their shorts on when the tide goes out?
Man, we're treading out all these quotes.
I think it might be Howard Marks, actually.
Is it? Okay. Well, I'll give you another one that we used actually this week in a partnership, which is
Calm Seas Never Made a Good Sailor.
Yeah. And we've had a long period of Calm Seas.
We have. And this is going to be a time where I think you're really going to see people
differentiate themselves and how they deal with a crisis. You know, who steps up, who provides leadership, who reminds a company of the mission of the company,
the purpose that they have beyond just, you know, delivering a product.
Those are the sort of companies that I think can really excel in a time of crisis.
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What does the Sequoia war room of March 2020 look like, especially as you literally can't
be in a war room?
The virtual war room.
The other thing which is challenging is we have our biannual LP meeting next week.
Just for context, it was originally supposed to be in India.
And then in January, we started to worry,
given what we were seeing in China.
So we actually moved it in January from India to California
because we thought there were going to be issues
in this early April, late March timeframe.
I mean, just concretely, we took action.
And then obviously, having it in
California started to not look feasible. So we've moved it to a virtual LP meeting. So in the midst
of preparing for a very important event for us, I mean, our LPs are our customers, and we want to
have a great show for them in some sense and provide candid feedback and reporting on our
funds. At the same time, we're running around like crazy looking after our portfolio
companies.
The most important thing we focused on over the last two weeks is our companies.
You know, Sequoia as a business, we've been around almost five decades.
We're not in a tough spot, fortunately, but some of our companies really do face challenges.
And so we've really oriented everything towards what is best for our companies.
We've built a bunch of online tools. So we have resources where we can all look at things. We have daily standups using Zoom so that everybody can stay in touch. We
understand what the prioritization is. We're using many more. And that's among the partnership?
Within the partnership, yes. So as a team, since we, you know, what do you do to mimic the effect
of being in the office together so that we just stay in touch a little bit more frequently. And we've created these online
resources. And probably the most important thing we've done is to do a very thorough analysis of
the portfolio health. So literally company by company across every single company in the US,
we've gone down to figure out, okay, at your end in December, what was the expected runway based on cash and burn then?
What do we think it is now, given the changed circumstances? And which are the
two, three dozen companies where we really need to spend most of our attention?
Some companies are early stage, six people, product development. I mean, in some sense,
they're unaffected. They're just building the product and hope to launch next year.
And then there are other companies that are really affected significantly.
And so as a team, we try to figure out how do we rally around them and how do we bring
resources to bear to help them navigate through this tricky period.
As you sort of frame that up around the portfolio companies, you know, it sounds obvious that,
of course, you would spend time with your portfolio companies.
What are the things that you're not doing as much of that you would normally be spending your your days doing um and how has sort of this time forced you to change that
seems like we're doing more of everything
honestly no no less of that too i mean interviews are still going on we're just doing them all as
virtual interviews i do think there are probably one or two hires somewhere where you're going to wait to meet the person in person before you make a formal final hiring decision. But for us,
we're onboarding people remotely. We did this on Monday. We had a person who joined who,
you know, first virtual onboarding for us as our portfolio companies are doing. I was on a call
earlier today with a company and they onboarded 21 people on Monday remotely. And people are going to keep
hiring, they're going to keep building products. So I think a lot of those things stay the same.
We continue to make investments. We formally approved two new Series A investments last week.
And those meetings were virtual meetings. So business continues.
Has something changed in what you look for in companies compared to, call it, two, three months ago?
In some sense, not.
I mean, certainly not at the Series A stage because I think that, you know, those companies, they're at such an early stage.
Their product needs to be so differentiated and really solve the problem that would transcend the current market.
I mean, obviously, if the U.S. is shut down indefinitely, that's a different situation.
But, you know, these companies all have a sound value proposition. And once things are a little bit more normal,
even if the economy goes through a recession, we believe in these businesses because they're
really solving really important problems. And so we have confidence in them. We have asked people
how they plan to respond to a changing circumstance, a little bit of a test on whether they're nimble,
are they flexible, or are they just tone deaf to the reality of the world we're in right now? So that clearly is a
question we're asking that's different. And then we're also spending time thinking about what new
categories may be unfairly favored sort of post-coronacopulapse. Do you end up with digital
health companies, online education?
A bunch of things may change.
And are we forced into a behavior change through this environment we're in now that sticks?
I think it's a really interesting question.
A lot of people are thinking about this.
I think it's a really interesting thing to try to conjecture.
That's the perfect transition to kind of the topic we wanted to wrap up with you on.
I was thinking about it when you mentioned your LP meeting next week,
which, man, I feel for you.
I know how important those are,
having done them, attended them and everything.
And it was interesting, just yesterday,
I attended one virtually,
and it was amazing that it was actually better.
You know, these tend to be pretty dry affairs.
This is a small example,
but either through the
LP meeting or more broadly, have you guys started to think about what kind of permanent changes to
Sequoia might come out of this? I think we're going to be, we'd already seen a trend where
companies are becoming more distributed, partly because of the cost of living in the Bay Area
is so high. And the cost of hiring engineers is just so high.
We've already seen a trend where companies are willing to tolerate
remote work by individuals or multiple remote development offices.
I think that trend is going to gather steam.
I think you're going to run this experiment that's actually measurable
on how people perform in this kind of an environment.
So I think that just objectively is gonna change the debate
because I think it's so easy.
As humans, we resist behavior change whenever we can,
and this is forcing behavior change.
So I think tolerating businesses that are distributor,
learning how to work effectively with distributed teams.
I think we're likely to see people start companies
in many more places.
And again, that's a trend that had already started.
You know, Silicon Valley doesn't have a monopoly on idea generation.
And I think many more people will start companies elsewhere.
So we probably need to be more willing to fly or if not fly, given health issues, do online assessments of companies.
So I think those are clear permanent changes.
You know, you all are organized, or at least have been to this point geographically,
for a company, and I think there can be a lot more of these like Zapier, right? Like we had
Wade on the show. They have no office. How are you going to think about a company like that in
the future? Is that a US investment? Is that a global investment? Who needs them?
Well, you know, honestly, so we've run into a couple of conflicts like this,
but I don't actually think of them as conflicts.
Our team in India is an investor
in a fabulous company called Freshworks.
Most of Freshworks customers
are in the developed world, including the US.
So, you know, my guess is the majority
of the revenue comes from the US,
but it was an investment out of our India office
because that's where the company is based.
And they have a presence in the US too, but we help them. We're one partnership globally. We've done some really clever things
behind the scenes to make sure that we feel like a single partnership and how we share knowledge and
share compensation and things like that in a way that makes it feel good. And I'd rather have more
of those. I mean, that's a great problem to have, honestly. There's a lot of folks talking about the
sheer amount of dry powder that has been committed
to venture firms in this climate.
So they're saying, you know, the funding won't slow down because, oh my gosh, there's
this just billions and billions and billions that's been promised to venture firms.
So therefore, deployment should continue at the exact same pace.
How do you think about that?
And it's probably too early to tell, but have you thought about should we slow deployment? Should we change when we want to raise certain funds? Should we change the mix of initial capital deployment versus follow-ons? Does a climate affect something like that for you guys? what's the LP behavior and the other one is what's our behavior. And so the interesting thing in 2008,
maybe not because we had a crystal ball,
just because we felt things were a little frothy.
Our investment pace had actually slowed down in the first half of 2008 before
Lehman happened.
And then we accelerated in 2009.
So I don't know if you've ever done a driving course,
but I went to one once on a formula one racing track.
And the thing that they taught me is you,
you break as hard as you can while the car is going straight before you get
to the corner.
And then you have to figure out how to accelerate at the right point of the
apex out of the corners so that you can sprint ahead.
And this is exactly the analogy that we want to apply for our companies and
for ourselves.
You know,
we slowed down in 2019,
not because we had some crystal ball again
that this was going to happen,
but we just, things didn't quite feel right.
If anything, I want to accelerate out of this.
I think there are going to be fabulous investment opportunities
and great companies to be built.
So that's what we plan to do.
For our LPs, you know,
our clients are almost exclusively
these endowments, foundations, and nonprofits.
And we're really proud of the great causes represented by our LPs.
We actually got an email earlier this week that about 10 of our LPs, people like the
Cleveland Clinic, Johns Hopkins University, the Wellcome Trust, Stanford, MIT, are all
working on either better diagnostics, potential treatments, or vaccines for coronavirus.
So we love the fact that our clients are doing these things. So when we generate profits, it helps them do these sort
of things. I think our clients are relatively well protected. But if you talk about the industry at
large, I suspect some LPs are going to end up with cash flow issues, just like there are many
other businesses that are going to end up with cash flow issues. And that may at the margin,
you know, lower the amount of venture capital being deployed
over the next year or two.
But that's total speculation.
I don't know.
Well, LPs had already,
allocations to venture and private companies broadly
had already gone up so much for LPs
just with the bull run in valuations
on the private markets
and lack of liquidity over the last 10
years. Now with public markets dropping so much, you can get into a situation as an LP where you
aim to have, say, 15% of your assets in private markets total, and now you have 40% of your
assets in private markets. And that can be a scary position. Well, there's that. I mean, LPs may also end up
with cash flow issues on their own, right? So part of what we saw in 2008, 2009, some LPs
have ongoing commitments. They have outflow commitments. If you're an endowment at a
university, you probably represent more than half the expenditure at the university. And it may be
that donations dry up, right? So philanthropy shrinks in an environment
like this. And so they're even more dependent on the endowments being able to continue to pay for
teachers and, you know, keeping the school hospital going and things like that. So,
so the bunch of cashflow issues that may also then drive people to pull back from venture capital.
But, you know, it's so early to tell. I mean, you know,
I look at the gyrations every day in the stock market and it's like flip a coin. Is it plus 10,
minus 10 today? Like, I have no idea. And so it's so hard to figure out, you know, where things land.
As we're recording this, it's only been 20 days since you wrote the memo. And again,
it feels like 20 years. We want to thank our longtime friend of the show, Vanta, the leading trust management platform.
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vanta.com slash acquired. Well, Rulof, I know this is adapting and not acquired, but we have
one bonus question that we decided if we ever had you on the show after doing our deep dive on
Square and doing the Square IPO, we had to ask you, you know, what was it like navigating the challenging Square IPO and the months afterwards?
Sort of knowing what a predictable and good business it was, but just seeing what happened in the public markets after it IPO'd.
This was like a key moment in Acquired's history. We can look back and kind of to the pre-Square IPO episode and the post-Square IPO episode,
because it was just such a stark story to us of a company that was a great company that
had just, even in the bull market run that we were in when they went public, was so misjudged.
It was really difficult.
And in the run-up to the IPO, because you have this quiet period,. It was really difficult. And I, you know, in the run up to the IPO,
because you have this quiet period, we couldn't really respond. And I felt as often happens with
these IPOs that, you know, people just keep on on this negative vicious cycle of negative press.
And so it was really painful to deal with that. And then you see the IPO price at $9. And, you
know, I was arguing the night before
that we should price a little bit higher at least
so we have more in the balance sheet.
And then to see the way that it popped in the first day,
I mean, it was still not a great outcome
even at the close price at the first day.
But I felt that we left so much money on the table.
So the way to react in my mind was to rally the team
and to talk about just, you know,
we can't control our stock price,
what we can control is our execution. And I think the management team did an incredible job of
saying, look, it is what it is, we got through it, let's hunker down and let's just build a great
business. And they did that. And then what we did as an investor is we were patient. So we didn't
distribute a single square share until four years after the IPO.
Four years.
And so that meant that we distributed,
and we still haven't fully distributed, by the way,
because I have so much faith in this company.
You're still on the board, correct?
I'm still on the board.
I love working with the team.
I love working with Jack.
I love the mission of the company around financial empowerment and the fact that we're able to do that now, not only for small businesses, but also for consumers with the Square Cash app.
I think it's a fabulous company to be associated with from a mission point of view and actual financial results.
And my partners and myself, we were just really patient.
And so the fact that it was $9 a share IPO didn't matter because we distributed shares when it got to 80 and so
so at the end of the day we made a much better return for our limited partners by being patient
and i think the team also appreciated us as a really patient investor that's great thank you
for sharing and that's a a good note to end on with um this moment in time too right like uh
you know for for great companies they're gonna survive to survive, they're going to hunker
down, and now is not the time to liquidate your shares. Yeah, I think it's focused on the long
term. Solve real problems. Yeah. Well, on that note, Rulof, where can our listeners get in touch
with you, with Sequoia? My first name, Rulof, at sequoiacap.com. Great.
And are you on Twitter?
Yes, at Rulof Guerta.
Signed up in 2007.
Nice.
I've been a user for a long, long time.
That's awesome.
Well, thank you for joining us, listeners.
We hope you enjoyed this episode of Adapting.
Please send us feedback, acquiredfm at gmail.com or join our Slack, and we'd love to talk to you there.
Rulof, thanks again. Thank you, Ben. Thank you, David.