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The Essential Re-Education of the Smartest People on Earth

By David Anthony, 21Ventures
June 23, 2010   |   18 Comments

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18 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 18
June 23, 2010
The scientists and engineers who invent new products are not the only ones with a blind spot for marketing. Too many venture capitalists (David Anthony obviously not being one of them, of course) are obsessed with only funding proprietary technology which they believe can disrupt established paradigms, yet most of those investments fail in the marketplace. If you read this website regularly you see that the established paradigm for residential PV -- selling custom-designed systems to homeowners -- is being disrupted by the introduction of pay-as-you-go models such as PPAs and solar leases. As a result, the residential PV marketplace is on the verge of exploding, yet with no breakthroughs in the underlying technology. When those come along, as they surely will, all the better. But it is a new sales model which is the driver in this space. The long-term winners will be those companies which succeed in executing and excel at marketing to build consumer brands and capture market share, tapping the pent-up demand of millions of homeowners who want to go solar.
Comment
2 of 18
June 23, 2010
Hi David - very interesting article! As an executive search consultant in the clean energy space, I can attest to several of your comments.

As VC/PE folks are well-aware, it's a lot of work to attract and secure world-class executive talent. In any emerging industry (cleantech no exception) executive leaders must also be sourced from various industries where that talent should exist. The actual competencies and experiences needed in individuals no doubt will vary significantly and is dependant on numerous factors - apparent to some and not so apparent to others!

Dawn Dzurilla, Founder & Managing Partner, Gaia Human Capital Consultants
Comment
3 of 18
June 25, 2010
Hi David,
The JPI Fuel had develop option fuel to totally replace coal . It is a biomass base purely of organic waste with everlasting supply when process form a solid firewood fuel of any size to energize all of the worlds direct burning heavy industries like cement plant and thermal power plant up to 1,200 or more MW capacity.It emits neutral CO2 and has a by product of fertilizer and biofuel.Raw materials grows by its own and no cutting of trees.All nations tried but all failed due to production technique and technology secret.I had used this during my stay at a logging company and used it to a thermal power plants.My knowledge to this is based on my personal experience. Our company is still on its infancy stage but we are in negotiation to deliver 1,100 metric tons daily to Switzerland base cement manufacturer operating in our country that stop operation for more than a year now due to the high cost of coal. Due to the magnitude and the essential usage world wide we our inviting Venture Capitalist to join the company. Almost all of the companies here have stop operation with the same faith.Our country is in needs 20 million metric tons yearly, we can produce 120 million metric tons and it is exportable. World wide demand is 13 billion metric ton yearly(China alone needs 6 billion metric tons yearly),the world can produce 100 billion metric tons yearly that stay rotten and burn.Further this is the only real solution to prevent climate change. Please help us and introduce our company to your contacts, lets get this opportunity the incentive of the Copenhagen Accord on the carbon credit.For now we have small rivalry the woods pellets and the saw dust brequites and its not sustainable and not for heavy industries .

Best Regards,
Jaime P. Imbat
JPI Fuel Industry
President, Ceo
#65 Cablong, Pozorrubio,Pangasinan,Philippines
Tel. 011-63-75-5664747,5664221,5664182
e-mail jaimeimbat@yahoo.com
Comment
4 of 18
June 25, 2010
THE ESSENTIAL RE-EDUCATION OF VC'S.

David,

Many of your points are sound. Cleantech, moreso than many other industries, is pioneered by people who are not motivated by money. Hence many cleantech ideas crash and burn.

However, if COMPETITIVE technology is developed, marketing acumen isn't needed. A 5-year old child would have no problem contracting a very profitable deal if he could produce carbon-neutral gasoline for $1.50/gallon. Yet in our search for interested VC's we get more questions about business management and business training than we do about technology. We don't anticipate having any trouble marketing extremely clean carbon-neutral fuels production with a co-product of medical grade liquid oxygen and bi-products of regional grid stability for high-wind regions and emissions scrubbing from fossil power plants...

(For those interested in the future of clean energy, go to www.WindFuels.com)

Yet more of these supposedly brilliant VC's are concerned with whether our CEO knows the jargon of business school (he's certainly learned a lot of it) than they are concerned with the technological risks and the certainty of the scale-up models.

It is literally an equivalent to an investor refusing to invest in Thomas Edison's light bulb, because the guy didn't have a business degree.


Meanwhile, this very magazine was celebrating Sapphire - who is getting plenty of VC love - for getting the license to begin a multi-hundred dollar "commercial" demonstration of algal fuels which will cost more than $100/gallon. That's at least 40 times what would be necessary to even consider the project to be competitive, and nearly 100 times our projected costs... But hey! they CEO of Sapphire is an MBA, so that makes them "reassuring".

It is about the technology. The technology either competes or it doesn't.

If there's a good technology, you can always require the company hire an MBA as a stipulation in the investor contract. MBA's aren't special. Innovation is.
Comment
5 of 18
June 25, 2010
Instead of MBA and VC rejecting PhD for lack of CEO skills, they should seek inventors and supply CEO support.
Comment
6 of 18
June 25, 2010
Glen-Doty-175949 for President!! Go Glen! Go WindFuels - whoever you are.
Comment
7 of 18
June 25, 2010
This is a common theme with any intelligence-based industry. It's like the old adage as to why medical doctors always have accountants. The docs may may be great at slicing up a liver, but they suck at math.
Comment
8 of 18
June 25, 2010
Glenn - By the way, I want to meet that 5-year-old kid. I'm still having trouble with my VCR. Ha!
Comment
9 of 18
June 25, 2010
I can't help wondering if Jobs, Gates, Dell and few others would agree with you....
Comment
10 of 18
June 26, 2010
Milwaukee Wisconsin is attempting to create one of these clusters for the solar thermal industry. http://www.ci.mil.wi.us/milwaukeeshines/AboutUs/SolarHotWaterBusinessCouncil.htm
They have a good base started, but are attempting to attract a couple of additional manufacturers.
Comment
11 of 18
June 27, 2010
A great article. It reminds me that Peter Drucker once said only two activities create customers--innovation and marketing.
Comment
12 of 18
June 27, 2010
New York is finally building a silicon valley model around the nanotech center in Albany.
No image available
Comment
13 of 18
Anonymous
June 29, 2010
David Anthony, here's the Secret History behind the development of Silicon Valley (GoogleTalks) which underscores why bringing bright people together to form a cluster is still inadequate for VCs and investors: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFSPHfZQpIQ

Let's face it. VCs and investors want to ride along with someone else's big pockets.

Either VC's and investors have to step outside their traditional comfort zones by doing more thorough, practical, due diligence, or government and multinational corporations will have to step in --which is way to slow..

Humans are not winning the game of planetary dominance: Humans 1, Human Waste: 10.
Comment
14 of 18
June 29, 2010
Many of the comments made here are illustrative of a decent counter-argument to your article. My experience with this website over the last 3 years seems to demonstrate a virtual "cluster" with one crucial piece lacking: a method of combining all of the products, concepts, opinions and stories into "stuff" people can use. Let's build 4 walls and a loading dock out of RE World and hang out a unified shingle.
The problem with crossing business people with creative people is that they answer to different calls: economics and altruism.
Economists will caution against the production, and purchase of a large scale deployment of wind turbines and solar panels or electric cars because they see no profitable cause for saving the integrity of our natural environment for people that have yet to be born.
Scientists and inventors simply work to make things better. I was listening to a story about Tesla motor's IPO and the only thing the commentator had to talk about was that the company was not profitable, and had not been profitable in their history. The fact that they could smoke a Corvette without a tailpipe was not mentioned.
Comment
15 of 18
June 30, 2010
It is not unusual for specialists to have blind spots when it comes to other areas of knowledge. That's why they are specialists. As a technician, I worked between specialities, touching on several areas, but having discrete knowledge in none of them. They knew everything about nothing, we knew nothing about everything.

Especially with technology that runs counter to ingrained status, getting all the needed specialists together is crucial.

We are talking, after all, about supplanting the politically and psychologically entrenched bulwarks of the last century - gasoline cars and coal - fired electric plants.

Marketing, PR, and winning minds over are all part of the job, too.
Forget politics, the political solutions will fall under their own weight. Forget the market, on the macro scale it is run by politics now.

Get the minds of the people. Rather than disparage the GOP and the political right, remind the people that oil is not their friend, oil is feeding from the political pork trough, oil makes all our traffic, all our shipping, dependent on foreign powers and foreign interests.\

Remind them that yes, we have a lot of coal, and we should find the best ways of preserving that hydrocarbon resource for the future so we never end up depending on others for our electricity, too.

Remind them that we have some of the best drinking water in the world on tap, and many of the new technologies actually clean water up in the process - both biodiesel and ethanol processing can have cleaner water coming out than going in.

Smarter grids and diverse energy sources mean Independence and Security - compared to brownouts and brown water.

The majority fear change - the only way they bought "Hope and Change" was through constant remembrance of the economic slump, and the "Hope" that "Change" could give us 1950's morality with 1960's social awareness and 1980's economic growth.

Don't tell them that is a bad thing, tell them we can do it. Put the other guy on defense.
Comment
16 of 18
July 1, 2010
Thank you, David Anthony, for starting this conversation with such a spot-on post. Your experience as an investor mirrors what we see as a PR firm focused on scaling cleantech businesses. The issue-isolated have a steeper challenge because they don't have the readily available best practices access that clusters provide.

We envy those commenting here with "marketing doesn't matter" assertions – they are operating in meritocracies we haven't found yet.
Comment
17 of 18
July 2, 2010
Mike Casey,

Marketing matters for most alternative energy because it is not viable. You have to work very hard to convince a person that they should pay MORE for your energy than for the other person's (in some cases much more).

If, however, the technology allowed for LESS EXPENSIVE (aka market viable) energy... then no marketing is needed. If BP is selling gasoline at 3.00/gallon, and you can make it at 1.80/gallon... you win, and you will be able to sell your gasoline.

Again, if the potential investor is worried about it, there's no reason that staffing requirements cannot be included in the investment contract.

Essentially this is a problem with a bunch of MBA's drastically over-valuing their field and ignoring the very real value that comes from true innovation.
Comment
18 of 18
July 21, 2010
Silicon Valley already has multiple green solar companies like Sol Focus (www.solfocus.com), Sunpower (www.sunpowercorp.com) and lots of smaller start ups ( www.sol-solution.net) along with many strong VCs. It has good universities in the area (Stanford, Berkeley. Almost all clusters have one or more top notch universities. There is already an "Environmental Business Cluster" in San Jose.
http://www.environmentalcluster.org/about.html
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David Anthony

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About: David Anthony is the Managing Partner of 21Ventures, LLC, a VC management firm that has provided seed, growth, and bridge capital to over 40 technology ventures... more »

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