Silicon Valley Meet Achill Island
SILICON VALLEY meets ACHILL
ISLAND
The Irish fear of failure is holding us back, say tech entrepreneurs, who rarely invest in people who have always succeede.
Irish Times, Saturday, 16 Nov, 2013
‘So, we should exchange details,’ says
Aaron Gershenberg, founder of Silicon Valley Bank’s $1.7 billion capital fund.
‘Are you on LinkedIn?’ I’m not. ‘How about Facebook?’ No. ‘What’s your Twitter
handle?’
I knew then I had no business being at
this kite-surfing and cycling weekend in Achill for specially selected
attendees of the Dublin Web Summit. Gershenberg
waited patiently as I pulled out my business cards, but they were utterly
sodden from Achill’s relentless rain. I tried my phone, but it too was
struggling with the ceaseless multidirectional wetness and no amount of
stroking or prodding would coax it into life.
Gershenberg smiled
indulgently, though I knew he had a flight to India to catch. Every moment of
his time in Ireland was precious; he had been on the RTÉ News the evening before in relation to the $100
million that his SVB Capital fund plans to invest here over the next few years,
saying, ‘A weekend like this gives us an opportunity to connect with local
people in a way that we otherwise couldn’t.’
My opportunity to connect was withering
fast. I was still recovering from an incident earlier that morning when I had spotted some elite venture capitalists and tech cognoscenti in the hot-tub at around 2am and
decided to join them. I had a split second to decide quite how naked they were
under the Jacuzzi bubbles as I felt it important that The Irish Times fit in as well as possible with these free-wheeling
San Franciscans. I stripped off completely and jumped into the pool; only to
find when the bubbles died down that The
Irish Times was the only one naked.
Things had started off more promisingly
when the entrepreneurs and venture capitalists drove out across Achill Sound
from the mainland into wild Atlantic skies that poured celestial colours across
the verdant mountains and the lapping waters of Keel Lake. Even the feral sheep
blocking the roads seemed less menacing than usual. These invite-only attendees
had come straight from two days of frenetic networking and deal-making at the
Web Summit and their sudden teleportation to Pure Magic, an outdoor adventure
lodge beneath Sliabh Mór, was a disorientating experience.
They gathered around the bar introducing
themselves and chirping elevator pitches at one another. The passion with which
they described their ventures only added to their indecipherability: phrases
like ‘leveraging real-world context for democratizing creation’ and
‘open-syndication survey monkeys for HIPAA-Compliant platforms’ left me clueless.
I had come because of some intriguing
ideas about failure that the event’s organiser, Philip McNamara, had spoken of.
‘There’s a taboo in Ireland around failure that doesn’t exist in the Bay Area,’
McNamara had told me on the phone from Silicon Valley the week before. ‘Trying
something, failing and trying again is the norm here. Many venture capitalists
will only fund those who have failed big and often. Some of the guys you’ll
meet in Achill are investing in up to 40 start-ups and probably will end up
losing 75% or 85% of their investment.’
I was intrigued to meet these highly
successful, failure-lovers. They are, after all, moulding our futures; building
a socially connected world where all information is accessible and
intelligible. It has always been thought that if everyone could speak to
everyone else there could be no secrets. These are the people now creating this
dream, banishing the darkness of
disconnection … while also designing sinister ways to manipulate us into buying
useless tat and violent video games.
Once the attendees in Achill had
exchanged names and pitches they began sharing their ‘kitemares’ – perilous
kitesurfing incidents. This extreme sport has spread like a Trojan virus
through the tech community. It uses a vast kite attached to a tiny surfboard
with a 75-foot-long tether to create the ride of a lifetime. Kitesurfing
ability was not a prerequisite to attending the weekend, but the most dynamic
and successful attendees were all proficient.
Khris Loux, CEO and co-founder of Echo,
the world’s largest real-time web platform and founder of security software
firm, Securix, which was sold for $115M, told of a friend being dragged across
the sand and having her face torn open. An analyst from Price Waterhouse Cooper
(PWC) tried to match the story, but both were trumped by Simon Dunlap, a CEO of
Dream Industries in Moscow who told of being choked by his kite strings and
having to cut them to save his life.
The infectiousness of kitesurfing among
tech pioneers is thought to arise from its riskiness and the fact that it is as
far from the old businessman’s disease of golf as one can imagine.
‘Failure also connects the two,’
McNamara tells me. ‘Just as most start-ups fail, kitesurfers fail the whole
time too. It’s one of the hardest sports to learn. You get thrown around,
dragged onto the beach and pulled under water.’
There is also the fact that it is
collaborative, like tech programming. Having someone to help launch and land
the kite makes it infinitely easier and safer. It fosters collegiality. At the
main kitesurfing beach near Silicon Valley you’ll encounter the likes of Google founders,
Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Second Life's Philip Rosedale or the
legendry venture capitalist, Bill Tai, helping you launch or asking for help to
land.
In fact, Bill
Tai’s MaiTai kitesurfing event on the
island of Maui was the inspiration for the Achill weekend. McNamara had been
invited to attend it three years ago and met Aaron Gershenberg there (the man
still patiently waiting for my contact details). It was Gershenberg who first
introduced Tai to kitesurfing in 2000. Millions of dollars of investment are
sealed annually at MaiTai and now Tai reckons that about 70% of his investments
are in companies with kitesurfing founders.
‘Anyone willing to kite is likely going to be
high energy, confident about their ability to handle complex environments, and
not afraid to take calculated risks,’ Tai told Kiteboarder Magazine in 2009.
‘If they have been kiteboarding for a while, they are, likely, folks that are
well balanced and have learned not to take stupid risks either, as we all know
what happens when you do that!’
Gershenberg said something similar on
the RTÉ News when he explained the reason for this Achill event: ‘Entrepreneurs
who are successful are ones who are willing to take risks. They take risks in
their business lives and in their weekends. They are adventurers. Those are the
type of people we want to know about and to build a personal relationship
with.’
Basically, he’s saying if you want a
slice of the $100 million he plans to invest in Ireland consider swapping your
golf clubs for a kite board. Already, some of the $22 million he has poured in
here has gone to kitesufers.
Over dinner it was hard not to think
about the inevitable failure awaiting at least 75% of the attendees. Their long
months or years of effort and expense would be wasted. The only people
guaranteed to benefit were the lawyers, accountants and consultants who, like
shovel sellers in a gold rush, profit either way. It was fitting that the weekend
was being paid for by them: by Beauchamps Solicitors, PWC, Silicon Valley Bank and the IDA.
Looking around I tried to guess which of
the ventures might thrive. Beside me was Kelly Neary from Nest.com which gives
savant-like intelligence to unloved household items like smoke detectors,
sitting opposite was Simon Dunlap from Dream Industries which is developing
technology to wrestle financial control from publishing conglomerates and
return it to musicians and writers. There was girl with a language learning app
called Smidgen and a former special-ops soldier with something he described as
AirBnB for the hospitality industry.
All of them seemed like grand ideas, but
what would I know? My ears-pricked up when Khris Loux (whose first company was
sold for $115M) began tweeting madly: “Love @tweekaboo a great way for families
to capture the life moments of their children.” He was referring to an app
developed by the man sitting beside him, Eugene Murphy, a father from Cork who
grew frustrated at missing out on the everyday moments of his children's lives
and created Tweekaboo.com to collate the myriad texts, voicemails, photos, and videos of them on his
phone.
The
entrepreneurs were admirably encouraging of each other despite the fact that
they were fishing for the attention of the same big investors, most especially
the rather reserved Konstantin Othmer, an early investor in Tesla Motors, and
founder of CloudCar, Speechpad, Core
Mobility and SpeechInk. But next morning on the 50km bike ride the competitive
streak came out. Turas Bikes, a maker
of carbon-fibre road bikes from Ballinasloe, had brought 20 samples along and
within minutes the cool techie t-shirts were exchanged for serious racing
attire. The elite investors tore off into a raging Atlantic storm with 80kph
gusts, while the entrepreneurs chased frantically after them, The Irish Times puffing valiantly along
behind.
It became suddenly clear which of the
entrepreneurs had the resilience to bring a project to fruition: I had
dismissed Gillian Morris’ Hitlist app which tells you the cheapest time to fly
somewhere, but once she raced ahead through the howling gale, wearing nothing
but running socks, I realised this was the woman to bet on, not the unfortunate
French-Brazilian whose brilliant social media spying programme now seemed as
weakened as he himself was, collapsed with near-hypothermia behind a bungalow
wall.
When a taxi had to go fetch him and a
van was sent to collect his bike, I thought about how humiliating failure seems
no matter how positively it’s painted. A loser, is really just a loser. But
then he appeared back among us with a sheen of pure ebullience in his eyes,
talking of how he had cherished every single moment of the trip; the knife-edge
precariousness of battling his body against the elements was the highlight of
his entire time in Ireland. The fact of having to admit defeat only intensified
his hunger to keep striving, in work, in play, in life.
That night we all went for a music
session in Lynott’s and the Valley House bar and when the venture capitalists began
singing old Bob Dylan songs, I just waited for that line “She knows there's no
success like failure, and that failure's no success at all.”
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