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Kleiner Perkins: Bit by the Entrepreneurship Bug Course

Kleiner Perkins: Bit by the Entrepreneurship Bug

Vinod Khosla
Stanford

Course Description

Lectures

  1. Bit by the Entrepreneurship Bug Lecture favorites

    Lecture 1 - Bit by the Entrepreneurship Bug

    Vinod Khosla, partner at Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers, was bitten by the entrepreneurship bug early in life when he heard about Intel starting up. He was enamored by the idea of being able to start your own company. Intel served as as a great role model, he says.

  2. Career: Learning from Failure Early On Lecture favorites

    Lecture 2 - Career: Learning from Failure Early On

    Khosla talks about his early career development. He first tried to do a company in India based on milk from soybeans. He travelled to Carnegie Mellon, and then to Stanford University. He describes why persistence and evangelism are important. Although he was not admitted to Stanford at first, saught more real-world experience, and was not admitted again, through persuasion and persistence, he was finally accepted.

  3. Taking Risks Lecture favorites

    Lecture 3 - Taking Risks

    Launching a start-up is not a rational act.  And Vinod Khosla, a partner in Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers and former Sun Microsystems CEO, believes that success only comes from those who are foolish enough to think unreasonably.  Entrepreneurs need to stretch themselves beyond convention and constraint to reach something extraordinary.

  4. Build a Company to Change the World Lecture favorites

    Lecture 4 - Build a Company to Change the World

    Khosla never intended to be a venture capitalist and still doesn't consider himself as one. He considers himself a venture assistant who has little interest in business other than its necessity for economics and its power to change the world. Khosla loves technology and believes that it drives most of the change that happen in the world.

  5. Company Building to Change the World Lecture favorites

    Lecture 5 - Company Building to Change the World

    Entrepreneurs are far less successful when they are trying to make money--they are much more successful when they have a mission to change the world. No matter what you do, Khosla says, you have to be foolish to do what an entrepreneur attempts. Whatever your value proposition is, it should have the goal of making the world a better place and you should feel passionately about your contribution. If you don't have this and you run into an obstacle, you get stuck. If you are passionate about your product and your message, you can power through problems more easily.

  6. Role of VC in Valuation Lecture favorites

    Lecture 6 - Role of VC in Valuation

    Things aren't ever as good or as bad as we think. Today (2002) is one of the best environments to be an investor. The last three or four years were not a lot of fun--if Khosla went to someone to build a reasonable business, the response he would get was that another company was willing to give more money for less work. He would have to explain that the role of a VC was to help companies develop a real economic model and to give an honest valuation.

  7. When You Don't Know What You Don't Know Lecture favorites

    Lecture 7 - When You Don't Know What You Don't Know

    Where most entrepreneurs fail is on the things they don't know, Khosla says. The biggest problem is when you don't know what you don't know!

  8. Vinod Khosla: Envisioning the Future Lecture favorites

    Lecture 8 - Vinod Khosla: Envisioning the Future

    When things are hot, that's not the area to invest, Khosla cautions. There is a surprise element always present where the biggest opportunities lie. Khosla highlights his interests in biology, genetics, nanotechnology and optical technology.

  9. Any Big Problem is a Big Opportunity Lecture favorites

    Lecture 9 - Any Big Problem is a Big Opportunity

    Khosla states that any big problem is a big opportunity. If there is no problem, there is no solution, and no reason for a company to exist. No one will pay you to solve a a problem that doesn't exist, he explains.

  10. Think Big and Act Small Lecture favorites

    Lecture 10 - Think Big and Act Small

    Khosla explains how to think big and act small. He reminds us that part of that process must be done on a belief system. Without a mission or belief system about how to change the world, one will not be successful.

  11. Technology as Driver of Change Lecture favorites

    Lecture 11 - Technology as Driver of Change

    Khosla shares his view on technology-driven entrepreneurship and predicts the growing impact of technology on life, society, and the economy.

  12. Social Entrepreneurship Lecture favorites

    Lecture 12 - Social Entrepreneurship

    In Kleiner Perkins perspective, Khosla argues, the traditional model of giving is broken. Social entrepreneurship and ways to leverage money are very important. Although there is not enough money in the world to solve the world's problems, if you apply and multiply, there are, in fact, solutions to some of these problems. Examples of companies providing these solutions include Gramine Bank and Aprotech.

  13. Strength of a Team Lecture favorites

    Lecture 13 - Strength of a Team

    Khosla states that it is the team that make the company. At Kleiner Perkins, he notes that everyone has learned much from each other. Personalities and approaches are diverse and combined to create great strength.

  14. Juniper Systems: Customer Feedback Lecture favorites

    Lecture 14 - Juniper Systems: Customer Feedback

    Khosla talks about how Juniper Systems started, and the role of customer feedback in the product development. There was not one vendor thinking of building an OC48 router for the internet. Juniper perservered and took a risk in the technology, despite the majority of customer feedback.

  15. Entrepreneurship is the Driving Engine of the Economy Lecture favorites

    Lecture 15 - Entrepreneurship is the Driving Engine of the Economy

    Khosla believes that entrepreneurship is the driving engine of the economy. Don't give up on your dream, he says, -entrepreneurship is a passion. Follow your passions and interests!

  16. Cycles of Fear and Greed Lecture favorites

    Lecture 16 - Cycles of Fear and Greed

    Khosla claims that investors only have two emotions: fear and greed. He has seen the trend of investing, which bounces between cycles of fear and cycles of greed.

  17. Career Development: Go Deep Lecture favorites

    Lecture 17 - Career Development: Go Deep

    It is important to use time to get deep expertise, Khosla notes. You need to go much deeper in understanding technology--a bachelor's degree is not enough and will be irrelevant in another 10 years. If you have a goal of entrepreneurship in mind, you must go deep in an expertise in order to advance your career.

  18. Right Time to Build the Team Lecture favorites

    Lecture 18 - Right Time to Build the Team

    From an entrepreneurs point of view, it is a great time (2002) to assemble a team that isn't distracted by money, and is interested in building a real team, and developing a solid business plan.

  19. Great CEOs Build Great Teams Lecture favorites

    Lecture 19 - Great CEOs Build Great Teams

    Great CEOs are people who put great teams together. Scott Kriens at Juniper is one of the best CEOs Khosla has ever worked with, as well as Bill Campbell. There isn't always one definition of a CEO, Khosla notes, each situation requires a different kind of leader, and each stage of a company has different needs for that leader.

  20. To Get an MBA, or Not? Lecture favorites

    Lecture 20 - To Get an MBA, or Not?

    Khosla feels that an MBA is not the only way to gain experience, it is a way to gain perspective. Real-world experience provides the depth of knowledge you need in a company.