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Tag: founders

  • Box CEO: I’m A Pretty Annoying Founder

    Box CEO: I’m A Pretty Annoying Founder

    Box co-founder and CEO Aaron Levie recently appeared on the Jason Calacanis podcast, This Week In Startups, where he talked about being annoying and stubborn:

    I’m a pretty annoying founder. I’m very stubborn and very steadfast. Sort of this is my very strongly held opinion and belief and I’m gonna run into a wall to prove it out. That has certain characteristics that can be annoying at times I’m sure both at the investor level as well as for anybody that is working with me. I’ve been able to tone it down over the years and control it more and contain it. I think it’s not causing probably as much annoyance.

    You have to be stubborn and right is the key. Stubborn and wrong means new job. There’s a Venn diagram of stubborn and right and you want to be right in that target zone. I look back when when I was 20, 21, or 22 and learning this trade and there were plenty of times where I was stubborn and wrong where maybe I took too long to pivot.

    My co-founder was telling me we’ve got to go enterprise probably for three to six months earlier than we actually did. What are three to six months in compounding terms? I don’t know. Maybe we’d be 20 percent bigger now as a result of if I had not been so stubborn at that stage and not seeing the information in the way that he was? That can just be sometimes an annoying pattern that people run into.

    Box CEO: I’m A Pretty Annoying Founder
  • Michael Arrington Sues Rape Accuser Jenn Allen

    Jenn Allen, an ex-girlfriend of Techcrunch/Crunchfund Founder Michael Arrington, recently took to Facebook to make abuse allegations against him. While rape was not mentioned in the initial post, she later brought that up in comments on a Gawker article about her first post. Arrington, who has strongly denied any abuse or rape, has now filed a suit against Allen.

    Here’s what Allen said in her initial post:

    Last post on someone i’m completely over. I’ve never been lonelier in my entire life. To all my friends who loved me for who I am – thank you. Power hungry people, I loved Michael Arrington for 8+ years starting when i implemented Eurekster search at the time on Techcrunch in 2006 and throughout the years i didn’t know he cheated on me multiple times, then tells people it was me immediately after he did it. It hurts when you love someone borderline and they can’t feel anything at all for you, and threaten to murder you if you told anyone about the physical abuse – all for keeping his reputation. The emotional abuse was equally bad. On a positive note, it can’t get any worse than this and I can’t get myself of this bed.

    And here’s what she said in the comments on the Gawker article:

    I’ve looked inward and outward long enough to finally say something and know exactly why I had to say it. His lies, abuse, threats and what he did to a friend of mine 5 months ago was unforgivable as well. He raped her, and she told me in person he called her to confirm he did it after the fact. I’ll leave it up to her if she ever wants to report it or say anything. This madness needs to stop, or he needs to start controlling his rage and rape ‘disorder.’

    Arrington remained quiet for a period, while others rushed to throw in their judgments of his character, until finally, he put out a statement saying:

    There have been some extremely serious and criminal allegations against me over the last week. All of the allegations are completely untrue, and I’ve hired a law firm to represent me in the legal actions against the offending parties.

    I know this isn’t, for now, much information. I will have a full and complete response to these allegations sometime later this week. My goal will be to direct as much sunlight as possible on the issues so that the absolute truth can be known and I can begin to put my life back together.

    I’ve also asked my attorneys to contact appropriate law enforcement agencies about these false allegations. Given the gravity of the claims, I think it’s important that the police be involved in this now.

    The whole thing had largely been ignored by the media and blogs other than a select few, until Arrington’s statement, then everyone started covering it. Likewise when former TechCrunch CEO Heather Harde jumped to Arrington’s defense. She wrote:

    During my five years at TechCrunch, there were no complaints or cases of sexual harassment or misconduct against Michael Arrington. If there had been any rumors of misconduct from staff or other third parties, I would have taken the matters seriously and investigated them. Many people, including Michael’s friends and girlfriends, sought me out as a confidante for disagreements or challenges they faced with Michael, so I would have been aware of rumored bad behavior.

    You can read her full post here.

    About a month ago, Arrington posted a detailed letter refuting the allegations. Here’s that letter:

    Demand Letter to Jennifer Allen

    And now this week, the lawsuit has been filed. In it, Arrington alleges that Allen felt “betrayed and slighted,” and aimed to “destroy his reputation and to deter third persons from associating with him.” The suit includes a demand for jury trial, and seeks $75,000 in damages.

    Here’s the court document:

    Arrington

  • Twitter Co-Founder Jack Dorsey Is Only Spending One Day A Week At The Company

    Twitter Co-Founder Jack Dorsey Is Only Spending One Day A Week At The Company

    The New York Times ran a piece this week about Twitter, saying that CEO Dick Costolo is “essentially running the business alone,” and that co-founder Jack Dorsey, who returned to the company last year after leaving in 2008, has assumed a reduced role at the company “after employees complained that he was difficult to work with and repeatedly changed his mind about product directions.”

    The report indicated that Dorsey no longer has anyone reporting to him directly, but that he is still involved in strategic decisions.

    Today, Dorsey took to Tumblr to address the piece and his role with the company, indicating that he is basically checking in with Twitter once a week, and dedicating most of his time to Square, his other company. Dorsey wrote:

    There was a great profile in the New York Times about Twitter’s CEO, Dick Costolo, which mentioned my work at the company. It’s not a common arrangement, so I’d like to clarify a few points.

    In Spring of 2011, Dick asked me to take an operational role overseeing product, design, and brand. Our shared goal was to get those organizations back under him as soon as possible, simply because it was the right thing to do for the company. We moved all of my reports back under him in January of this year after leadership was firmly in place. This allowed me to focus on refining our brand and logo, to work more with Dick and the leadership team on our direction forward, and ultimately return the majority of my time to Square, where I’m CEO. I’m back to going to Twitter on Tuesday afternoons, something I started before taking the interim operational role.

    We haven’t talked about this publicly because it’s not what people using Twitter every day care about.

    I’m fortunate in life to be a part of two foundational and mission-driven organizations, and I’m always going fight like hell to make them thrive. And they are! Now back to our work.

    Twitter began to see a great deal of change almost immediately as Dorsey returned in early 2011 with a new focus on getting people to understand what Twitter is and making Twitter usability less reliant on third party apps.

    Meanwhile Square has made a number of major announcements, including funding, Square Card Case, and a partnership with Starbucks. In June, Square hit the two million user mark.

  • The Bill Gates Comic You’ve Been Waiting For Is Now Available (Google, Dorsey Comics On The Way)

    Bluewater Productions announced that its new Bill Gates comic, ““Bill Gates: Co-Founder of Microsoft,” is now available in stores and online. The description says:

    He has been called the sultan of software and the master of the modern PC. Follow the life of William Gates from his early days writing basic code, through the rise of Microsoft, to his current humanitarian works. See what has driven this amazing man to become an architect of the future in “Bill Gates: Co-Founder of Microsoft,” in stores now.

    Bluewater has previously put out comics about Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg.

    The Gates comic was written by journalist Martin Pierro and drawn by artist Zach Bassett.

    Print copies can be found for $7.99 at your local comic book store or at bookstores, the company says. It’s also available for Kindle, Nook and iPad.

    Here’s the cover:

    Bill Gates Comic

    Bluewater Productions also has comics about Google co-founders Larry Page & Sergey Brin and Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey on the way. Here are the covers for those:

    Google comic

    Jack Dorsey Comic

    The Google comic, titled “Sergey Brin and Larry Page: The Creators of Google,” is available for pre-order, and will be out this summer.

    Jack Dorsey: Co-Founder of Twitter” will be out at the end of the year.

  • Jerry Yang: What Yahoo Employees Have Said About Him

    As you may know, Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang has resigned from all positions at the company. Glassdoor has taken the opportunity to share what some Yahoo employees have said in reviews on the site (dating back to 2008).

    “Jerry Yang continues to be Chief Yahoo and his role has always been dubious. It appears that Jerry wants to have the cake and eat it too. It is time that senior leadership develops some spine to tell Jerry that it is time for him to let go.” – Yahoo Employee (Sunnyvale, CA)

    “You should get rid of people higher up who have ego problems. They only got to their spots because they started out early during the tech boom.” – Yahoo Employee (location n/a)

    “Jerry Yang was an inefficient CEO but at least he really cared about technology.” – Yahoo Search Editor (Sunnyvale, CA)

    “Jerry Yang should never have been made CEO.” – Yahoo Product Manager (Sunnyvale, CA)

    Glassdoor provides the following chart on approval rating among employees (for Yang and recently ousted Carol Bartz):

    Jerry Yang vs. Carol Bartz approval rating

    Here’s what a few employees have said about what could be improved about the company today:

    “Multiple re-orgs can be tiring, but hopefully that’s behind Y! with the new CEO as of early 2012.” – Yahoo Employee (Sunnyvale, CA)

    “No room to grow, company is shrinking and directors and vps have been there forever. Constant reorgs” – Yahoo Product Manager (Sunnyvale, CA)

    “Constant reorganization. Lack of clarity in company’s objectives. Selfish senior management (VP and up). Highly political.” – Yahoo Human Resources (Sunnyvale, CA)

    At least some employees have apparently been impressed with new CEO Scott Thompson so far, but others are fearing layoffs.