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Click	
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An Executive Summary of
ZERO TO ONE	
  	
  by	
  Peter	
  Thiel	
  
	
  
Who	
  is	
  Peter	
  Thiel	
  
Peter	
  is	
  a	
  German-­‐American	
  entrepreneur	
  and	
  billionaire	
  that	
  co-­‐founded	
  PayPal.	
  	
  He	
  also	
  Co-­‐Founded	
  the	
  Billion-­‐
dollar	
  company,	
  Palantir,	
  and	
  was	
  a	
  large	
  initial	
  investor	
  of	
  Facebook	
  (10.2%	
  stake).	
  	
  Peter	
  was	
  providing	
  lectures	
  to	
  
students	
  at	
  Stanford	
  University	
  and	
  one	
  of	
  the	
  students,	
  Blake	
  Masters,	
  turned	
  his	
  notes	
  into	
  this	
  book:	
  Zero	
  to	
  One.	
  
Preston	
  and	
  Stig’s	
  General	
  Thoughts	
  on	
  the	
  Book	
  	
  
This	
  was	
  a	
  fantastic	
  book	
  for	
  entrepreneurs.	
  For	
  anyone	
  trying	
  to	
  start	
  their	
  own	
  business	
  and	
  explore	
  new	
  ways	
  to	
  
create	
  a	
  product	
  or	
  service,	
  this	
  book	
  will	
  give	
  you	
  plenty	
  to	
  think	
  about.	
  Peter	
  is	
  a	
  powerful	
  thinker	
  and	
  some	
  of	
  the	
  
ideas	
  expressed	
  in	
  this	
  book	
  demonstrate	
  his	
  ability	
  to	
  see	
  things	
  from	
  the	
  inverse	
  perspective.	
  	
  The	
  main	
  theme	
  of	
  
this	
  book	
  reminded	
  us	
  a	
  lot	
  of	
  the	
  Blue	
  Ocean	
  Strategy	
  and	
  The	
  Science	
  of	
  Getting	
  Rich.	
  Both	
  of	
  those	
  books	
  are	
  
dedicated	
   to	
   the	
   same	
   idea	
   Peter	
   imparts	
   in	
   this	
   book:	
   enormous	
   value	
   can	
   be	
   created	
   when	
   a	
   business	
   creates	
  
something	
  fresh	
  and	
  new.	
  It	
  can	
  also	
  be	
  implied	
  that	
  when	
  a	
  company	
  slightly	
  improves	
  and	
  competes	
  with	
  existing	
  
products	
  or	
  services,	
  little	
  relative	
  value	
  is	
  created	
  for	
  that	
  business.	
  Click	
  here	
  to	
  read	
  3
rd
	
  Party	
  reviews	
  of	
  Peter’s	
  
book.	
  
Preface	
  	
  
The	
   next	
   Bill	
   Gates	
   will	
   not	
   build	
   an	
   operating	
   system	
   and	
   the	
   next	
   Mark	
   Zuckerberg	
   will	
   not	
   create	
   a	
   new	
   social	
  
network.	
  You	
  won’t	
  learn	
  anything	
  new	
  if	
  you	
  just	
  copy	
  those	
  that	
  have	
  succeeded.	
  You	
  might	
  go	
  from	
  A-­‐N,	
  but	
  not	
  
from	
  Zero	
  to	
  One.	
  	
  If	
  American	
  companies	
  do	
  not	
  realize	
  this,	
  they	
  will	
  fail	
  in	
  the	
  future.	
  Companies	
  should	
  not	
  fine	
  
tune	
  best	
  practices,	
  but	
  find	
  new	
  and	
  untraveled	
  paths.	
  
Chapter	
  1:	
  The	
  Challenge	
  of	
  the	
  Future	
  
When	
  Peter	
  Theil	
  interviews	
  people,	
  he	
  likes	
  to	
  ask	
  them	
  what	
  unique	
  truth	
  they	
  know	
  that	
  very	
  few	
  people	
  agree	
  
upon.	
  It	
  is	
  a	
  hard	
  question	
  because	
  the	
  American	
  education	
  system	
  is	
  flawed.	
  When	
  we	
  have	
  learned	
  something	
  to	
  be	
  
true,	
  it	
  is	
  also	
  something	
  that	
  a	
  majority	
  of	
  people	
  have	
  agreed	
  upon.	
  
Horizontal	
  progress	
  is	
  easy	
  to	
  imagine.	
  That	
  is	
  when	
  you	
  improve	
  something	
  that	
  you	
  already	
  know	
  works.	
  That	
  will	
  
take	
  you	
  from	
  A-­‐Z.	
  Vertical	
  progress	
  is	
  harder	
  because	
  you	
  need	
  to	
  do	
  something	
  that	
  has	
  never	
  been	
  done	
  before.	
  
That	
  will	
  take	
  you	
  from	
  Zero	
  to	
  One.	
  China	
  is	
  prospering	
  by	
  horizontal	
  progress.	
  Globalization	
  has	
  allowed	
  this	
  to	
  
happen.	
  By	
  copying	
  or	
  improving	
  something	
  that	
  already	
  exist,	
  you	
  will	
  not	
  get	
  ahead.	
  	
  Technology	
  is	
  what	
  has	
  taken	
  
you	
  from	
  Zero	
  to	
  One.	
  You	
  can	
  have	
  both	
  horizontal	
  and	
  vertical	
  progress,	
  one	
  at	
  a	
  time,	
  or	
  neither.	
  Right	
  now,	
  we	
  
experience	
   globalization,	
   but	
   limited	
   technology	
   progress.	
   The	
   progress	
   has	
   mainly	
   been	
   made	
   in	
   IT.	
   The	
   future	
  
depends	
  on	
  technology	
  –	
  not	
  on	
  globalization.	
  	
  
Click	
  here	
  to	
  be	
  a	
  member	
  of	
  our	
  exclusive	
  mailing	
  list	
  (We	
  send	
  free	
  bi-­‐monthly	
  book	
  summaries	
  for	
  Executives).	
  
It	
  is	
  almost	
  implied	
  that	
  the	
  developed	
  countries	
  are	
  leading,	
  and	
  other	
  countries	
  should	
  aim	
  to	
  keep-­‐up.	
  	
  Peter	
  Thiel	
  
does	
  not	
  agree.	
  If	
  China	
  and	
  India	
  for	
  example	
  double	
  their	
  energy	
  consumption	
  it	
  would	
  be	
  a	
  catastrophic	
  pollution	
  
disaster	
  using	
  the	
  practices	
  from	
  today.	
  Globalization	
  without	
  technology	
  is	
  not	
  sustainable.	
  	
  	
  
Chapter	
  2:	
  Party	
  Like	
  it’s	
  1999	
  
The	
  1990’s	
  had	
  a	
  good	
  image	
  until	
  the	
  Dotcom	
  bubble	
  burst.	
  Peter	
  Theil	
  himself	
  was	
  scared	
  about	
  a	
  crash	
  in	
  the	
  
technology	
  market	
  while	
  he	
  was	
  running	
  PayPal.	
  It	
  was	
  not	
  that	
  he	
  didn’t	
  believe	
  in	
  his	
  own	
  company,	
  but	
  people	
  
around	
  him	
  were	
  acting	
  crazy.	
  No	
  one	
  believed	
  that	
  the	
  anti-­‐business	
  model	
  of	
  growing,	
  while	
  losing	
  money,	
  would	
  be	
  
sustainable.	
  Peter	
  had	
  an	
  acquaintance	
  that	
  had	
  planned	
  an	
  IPO	
  before	
  he	
  had	
  incorporated	
  his	
  company.	
  	
  
PayPal	
  was	
  considered	
  grandiose	
  and	
  even	
  voted	
  one	
  of	
  the	
  ten	
  worst	
  business	
  ideas	
  of	
  1999	
  by	
  a	
  journalist.	
  For	
  
PayPal	
   to	
   work	
   they	
   needed	
   1	
   million	
   customers	
   as	
   a	
   critical	
   mass.	
   After	
   early	
   struggles,	
   the	
   growth	
   rate	
   became	
  
exponential	
  when	
  the	
  company	
  introduced	
  a	
  campaign	
  where	
  new	
  customers	
  were	
  awarded	
  $10	
  for	
  each	
  account	
  
established.	
  The	
  campaign	
  was	
  as	
  effective	
  as	
  it	
  was	
  unsustainable,	
  but	
  the	
  strategy	
  worked,	
  and	
  it	
  attracted	
  plenty	
  of	
  
investors.	
  That	
  capital	
  was	
  enough	
  to	
  buy	
  PayPal	
  time	
  to	
  make	
  it	
  a	
  success	
  before	
  the	
  bubble	
  burst.	
  At	
  the	
  end	
  of	
  the	
  
bubble,	
  Peter	
  develops	
  lessons	
  learned	
  that	
  contradict	
  conventional	
  Silicon	
  Valley	
  wisdom:	
  
• It	
  is	
  better	
  to	
  risk	
  boldness	
  than	
  triviality.	
  
• A	
  bad	
  plan	
  is	
  better	
  than	
  no	
  plan.	
  	
  
• Competitive	
  markets	
  destroy	
  profits.	
  
• Sales	
  matter	
  just	
  as	
  much	
  as	
  product.	
  
Chapter	
  3:	
  All	
  Happy	
  Companies	
  Are	
  Different	
  
Consider	
  the	
  airline	
  industry	
  which	
  has	
  created	
  a	
  lot	
  of	
  value,	
  but	
  few	
  companies	
  can	
  make	
  a	
  profit.	
  Compare	
  this	
  to	
  
Google	
  that	
  is	
  creating	
  less	
  value,	
  but	
  is	
  keeping	
  the	
  profits.	
  Google	
  makes	
  so	
  much	
  money,	
  that	
  it	
  is	
  worth	
  more	
  than	
  
3	
  times	
  the	
  value	
  of	
  all	
  American	
  airlines	
  combined.	
  	
  
Economists	
  explain	
  this	
  by	
  categorizing	
  Google	
  as	
  a	
  monopoly.	
  	
  The	
  high	
  profit	
  is	
  made	
  as	
  consumers	
  would	
  have	
  to	
  
pay	
  a	
  higher	
  price	
  for	
  goods	
  and	
  services.	
  Compare	
  this	
  to	
  the	
  airlines	
  industry,	
  which	
  Peter	
  described	
  as	
  “Perfect	
  
Competition”.	
  Most	
  profit	
  is	
  washed	
  away	
  by	
  fierce	
  competition	
  by	
  rivals	
  in	
  the	
  market.	
  	
  	
  
Peter	
  Theil	
  likes	
  the	
  idea	
  of	
  a	
  monopoly.	
  Consider	
  Google,	
  dependent	
  on	
  your	
  definition,	
  it	
  has	
  a	
  monopoly	
  for	
  search	
  
engines.	
  Google	
  does	
  not	
  have	
  to	
  constantly	
  focus	
  on	
  competition,	
  but	
  can	
  focus	
  on	
  innovation.	
  The	
  lesson	
  is	
  clear:	
  If	
  
you	
  want	
  to	
  keep	
  the	
  profit	
  and	
  progress	
  you	
  should	
  build	
  a	
  business	
  that	
  has	
  a	
  very	
  unique	
  competitive	
  advantage	
  
where	
  rivals	
  can’t	
  enter.	
  	
  
Chapter	
  4:	
  The	
  Ideology	
  of	
  Competition	
  	
  
Competition	
  means	
  no	
  profit	
  for	
  anyone	
  (from	
  a	
  pure	
  theory	
  position).	
  So	
  why	
  do	
  so	
  many	
  people	
  like	
  the	
  idea	
  of	
  
competition?	
  It	
  is	
  an	
  ideology	
  that	
  our	
  education	
  system	
  preaches	
  more	
  than	
  anything	
  else.	
  The	
  best	
  students	
  get	
  
good	
   grades	
   and	
   prestige	
   if	
   they	
   solve	
   the	
   same	
   assignment	
   as	
   everybody	
   else	
   –	
   just	
   marginally	
   better.	
   The	
  
competition	
   continues	
   and	
   becomes	
   even	
   fiercer	
   in	
   higher	
   education.	
   The	
   best	
   of	
   the	
   best	
   students	
   are	
   typically	
  
rewarded	
  with	
  conventional	
  and	
  non-­‐innovative	
  jobs	
  in	
  law	
  or	
  management	
  consulting.	
  	
  The	
  opportunity	
  costs	
  for	
  
society	
  are	
  enormous	
  –	
  everyone	
  is	
  thinking	
  alike.	
  	
  
Click	
  here	
  to	
  be	
  a	
  member	
  of	
  our	
  exclusive	
  mailing	
  list	
  (We	
  send	
  free	
  bi-­‐monthly	
  book	
  summaries	
  for	
  Executives).	
  
Chapter	
  5:	
  Last	
  Mover	
  Advantage	
  
The	
  value	
  of	
  a	
  business	
  today	
  is	
  all	
  the	
  future	
  cash	
  flows	
  from	
  that	
  company	
  after	
  being	
  discounted	
  at	
  an	
  appropriate	
  
rate.	
  An	
  old,	
  low-­‐growth	
  company,	
  like	
  a	
  newspaper,	
  might	
  hold	
  its	
  value	
  if	
  it	
  can	
  sustain	
  the	
  current	
  cash	
  flows	
  for	
  5-­‐6	
  
year.	
   But,	
   often,	
   the	
   value	
   of	
   the	
   company	
   dwindles	
   as	
   customers	
   move	
   over	
   to	
   alternative	
   products.	
   Growth	
  
companies	
  have	
  the	
  opposite	
  trajectory.	
  Some	
  high	
  growth	
  companies	
  might	
  be	
  losing	
  money	
  in	
  the	
  early	
  years,	
  and	
  
have	
  the	
  potential	
  for	
  significant	
  cash	
  flows	
  in	
  the	
  next	
  10-­‐15	
  years	
  ahead.	
  PayPal	
  and	
  LinkedIn	
  are	
  examples	
  of	
  this.	
  
(By	
  the	
  way,	
  The	
  Investors	
  are	
  a	
  little	
  skeptical	
  of	
  Peter’s	
  enthusiasm	
  for	
  some	
  growth	
  companies	
  and	
  his	
  earnings	
  
forecasts.	
  	
  This	
  seems	
  very	
  speculative	
  from	
  our	
  position)	
  
For	
  a	
  company	
  to	
  be	
  valuable	
  it	
  must	
  both	
  grow	
  and	
  endure.	
  He	
  suggests	
  focusing	
  on	
  short	
  term	
  growth	
  because	
  it	
  is	
  
easy	
   to	
   measure.	
   These	
   companies	
   focus	
   on	
   monthly	
   revenue	
   charts	
   and	
   quarterly	
   earnings	
   reports.	
   The	
   most	
  
important	
  question	
  to	
  ask	
  is:	
  Will	
  this	
  business	
  still	
  be	
  around	
  a	
  decade	
  from	
  now?	
  Numbers	
  alone	
  will	
  not	
  give	
  you	
  
the	
  answer.	
  You	
  must	
  critically	
  think	
  about	
  qualitative	
  characteristic.	
  	
  
Chapter	
  6:	
  You	
  Are	
  Not	
  a	
  Lottery	
  Ticket	
  
Many	
  celebrities	
  including	
  Bill	
  Gates	
  and	
  Warren	
  Buffett	
  argue	
  that	
  luck	
  has	
  a	
  big	
  influence	
  on	
  their	
  success.	
  Peter	
  
Theil	
  argues	
  that	
  we	
  might	
  be	
  too	
  quick	
  to	
  dismiss	
  anyone	
  who	
  succeeded	
  according	
  to	
  plan.	
  While	
  this	
  can’t	
  be	
  
objectively	
  tested,	
  as	
  the	
  sample	
  size	
  of	
  the	
  single	
  person’s	
  success	
  is	
  always	
  one,	
  the	
  reader	
  of	
  the	
  book	
  must	
  have	
  
the	
  same	
  opinion.	
  Why	
  else	
  would	
  he	
  or	
  she	
  read	
  this	
  book	
  if	
  success	
  was	
  something	
  completely	
  random.	
  	
  Perhaps	
  
Steve	
  Jobs	
  is	
  the	
  proof	
  that	
  you	
  create	
  your	
  own	
  success.	
  He	
  did	
  not	
  ask	
  for	
  the	
  opinion	
  of	
  focus	
  groups.	
  He	
  designed	
  
for	
  perfection,	
  and	
  he	
  knew	
  what	
  he	
  wanted.	
  The	
  main	
  lesson	
  to	
  learn	
  from	
  Steve	
  Jobs	
  was	
  he	
  envisioned	
  and	
  
executed	
  long	
  term	
  plans	
  to	
  distribute	
  innovative	
  products.	
  Steven	
  Jobs	
  changed	
  the	
  world	
  by	
  careful,	
  backwards,	
  
planning.	
  	
  
Chapter	
  7:	
  Follow	
  the	
  Money	
  
In	
  1906	
  the	
  Italian	
  Economist	
  Wilfredo	
  Pareto	
  discovered	
  what	
  would	
  be	
  known	
  as	
  the	
  “Pareto	
  Principle”.	
  He	
  realized	
  
that	
  20%	
  of	
  the	
  people	
  owned	
  80%	
  of	
  the	
  land	
  in	
  Italy.	
  	
  It	
  was	
  a	
  concept,	
  known	
  as	
  the	
  80-­‐20	
  rule,	
  which	
  he	
  found	
  all	
  
throughout	
  nature.	
  The	
  biggest	
  cities	
  dwarf	
  the	
  surrounding	
  smaller	
  cities.	
  Monopolies	
  grasp	
  more	
  profit	
  than	
  
combining	
  a	
  majority	
  of	
  competitors.	
  Money	
  follows	
  the	
  same	
  pattern.	
  As	
  an	
  investor	
  in	
  venture	
  capital,	
  you	
  should	
  
not	
  over	
  diversify	
  as	
  the	
  returns	
  are	
  not	
  normally	
  distributed.	
  	
  For	
  example,	
  some	
  companies	
  will	
  fail,	
  more	
  companies	
  
will	
  stay	
  flat,	
  and	
  a	
  few	
  superior	
  companies	
  will	
  potentially	
  return	
  10x	
  there	
  initial	
  investment.	
  	
  If	
  graphed,	
  it	
  might	
  
look	
  like	
  an	
  inverse	
  probability	
  plot.	
  
In	
  reality,	
  the	
  investor	
  should	
  focus	
  on	
  the	
  few	
  superior	
  companies	
  that	
  get	
  exponential	
  results.	
  Peter	
  Thiel’s	
  
investment	
  in	
  Facebook	
  vastly	
  outperformed	
  the	
  combined	
  return	
  of	
  all	
  the	
  other	
  investments	
  in	
  his	
  fund.	
  Palantir,	
  
the	
  second	
  best	
  investment,	
  is	
  set	
  to	
  make	
  a	
  higher	
  return	
  than	
  all	
  the	
  other	
  investments	
  combined	
  –	
  aside	
  from	
  
Facebook.	
  	
  
Chapter	
  8:	
  Secrets	
  
Why	
  do	
  so	
  many	
  people	
  believe	
  that	
  there	
  are	
  not	
  secret	
  to	
  be	
  revealed	
  anymore	
  in	
  the	
  world?	
  It	
  might	
  start	
  with	
  
geography.	
  Just	
  150	
  years	
  ago	
  a	
  lot	
  of	
  the	
  world	
  had	
  not	
  revealed	
  itself	
  to	
  anyone.	
  Today	
  just	
  by	
  watching	
  the	
  
discovery	
  channel	
  everybody	
  in	
  the	
  western	
  world	
  can	
  see	
  even	
  the	
  most	
  remote	
  locations	
  from	
  their	
  coach.	
  There	
  
are	
  plenty	
  of	
  secrets	
  to	
  be	
  revealed,	
  but	
  if	
  you	
  don’t	
  believe	
  you	
  can	
  find	
  secrets,	
  you	
  will	
  never	
  find	
  them.	
  We	
  see	
  it	
  in	
  
the	
  stock	
  market	
  where	
  the	
  common	
  true	
  is	
  that	
  you	
  as	
  individual	
  investors	
  can’t	
  know	
  more	
  than	
  the	
  combined	
  
Click	
  here	
  to	
  be	
  a	
  member	
  of	
  our	
  exclusive	
  mailing	
  list	
  (We	
  send	
  free	
  bi-­‐monthly	
  book	
  summaries	
  for	
  Executives).	
  
market.	
  	
  In	
  all	
  social	
  setting	
  there	
  are	
  the	
  prospects	
  that	
  you	
  might	
  be	
  right,	
  but	
  unless	
  the	
  truth	
  has	
  been	
  vetted	
  as	
  
conventional	
  wisdom,	
  few	
  people	
  will	
  take	
  the	
  chance	
  and	
  perhaps	
  be	
  left	
  alone.	
  	
  	
  
Chapter	
  9:	
  Foundations	
  
Founding	
  a	
  company	
  is	
  just	
  like	
  building	
  a	
  house.	
  You	
  can’t	
  build	
  it	
  on	
  a	
  flawed	
  foundation.	
  The	
  first	
  critical	
  decision	
  
when	
  building	
  a	
  company	
  is	
  whom	
  you	
  start	
  it	
  with.	
  Choosing	
  a	
  co-­‐founder	
  is	
  like	
  getting	
  married,	
  and	
  founder	
  conflict	
  
is	
  just	
  as	
  ugly	
  as	
  a	
  divorce.	
  No	
  one	
  wants	
  to	
  think	
  about	
  what	
  will	
  happen	
  if	
  it	
  goes	
  wrong,	
  and	
  thereby	
  they	
  don’t	
  do	
  
it.	
  When	
  investing	
  in	
  a	
  company	
  you	
  should	
  consider	
  the	
  founding	
  team.	
  Technical	
  skills	
  matter,	
  but	
  how	
  the	
  
founders’	
  work	
  together	
  is	
  just	
  as	
  important.	
  
In	
  start-­‐up	
  companies	
  there	
  is	
  a	
  potential	
  for	
  conflict	
  when	
  ownership	
  and	
  control	
  changes.	
  This	
  typically	
  happens	
  
between	
  the	
  founder	
  and	
  his	
  investors.	
  A	
  classic	
  example	
  could	
  be	
  the	
  founder	
  wanting	
  to	
  grow	
  the	
  company	
  and	
  
keep	
  it	
  private,	
  while	
  the	
  investor	
  would	
  like	
  to	
  cash	
  out	
  through	
  an	
  IPO.	
  	
  The	
  board	
  is	
  very	
  important.	
  As	
  a	
  founder,	
  as	
  
well	
  as	
  an	
  investor,	
  you	
  should	
  strive	
  for	
  small	
  boards	
  of	
  3-­‐5	
  people.	
  Smaller	
  board	
  ensures	
  execution	
  and	
  
effectiveness.	
  	
  	
  
As	
  a	
  founder	
  you	
  should	
  look	
  to	
  employ	
  people	
  to	
  have	
  equity	
  or	
  a	
  regular	
  full	
  time	
  salary	
  from	
  your	
  company.	
  There	
  
is	
  an	
  exception	
  for	
  lawyers	
  and	
  accountants,	
  however,	
  everyone	
  that	
  does	
  not	
  own	
  stock	
  options	
  or	
  draws	
  a	
  full-­‐time	
  
salary	
  is	
  fundamentally	
  misalign.	
  They	
  are	
  biased	
  to	
  claim	
  value	
  in	
  the	
  short	
  term,	
  and	
  not	
  create	
  value	
  for	
  the	
  future.	
  
That	
  is	
  why	
  part	
  time	
  employees	
  and	
  consultant	
  don’t	
  work	
  well.	
  	
  You	
  are	
  either	
  on	
  the	
  bus	
  or	
  off	
  the	
  bus.	
  	
  
Chapter	
  10:	
  The	
  Mechanic	
  of	
  Mafia	
  
The	
  first	
  team	
  Peter	
  Theil	
  built	
  has	
  been	
  known	
  as	
  the	
  “PayPal	
  mafia”.	
  The	
  reason	
  is	
  that	
  so	
  many	
  of	
  his	
  previous	
  
colleagues	
  have	
  later	
  helped	
  each	
  other	
  with	
  the	
  foundation	
  of	
  a	
  variety	
  of	
  great	
  companies	
  including:	
  Tesla,	
  LinkedIn,	
  
and	
  YouTube.	
  The	
  strong	
  culture	
  that	
  originally	
  shaped	
  PayPal	
  was	
  not	
  assembled	
  by	
  hiring	
  the	
  most	
  talented	
  people	
  
from	
  a	
  pile	
  of	
  applicants.	
  Instead	
  it	
  was	
  assembled	
  by	
  people	
  of	
  similar	
  interests	
  and	
  work	
  ethics	
  and	
  they	
  had	
  a	
  very	
  
common	
  goal	
  they	
  were	
  working	
  towards.	
  
Recruiting	
  should	
  never	
  been	
  outsourced.	
  As	
  an	
  employer	
  in	
  a	
  start-­‐up	
  company,	
  you	
  should	
  know	
  the	
  answer	
  to	
  the	
  
following	
  question:	
  Why	
  should	
  the	
  20
th
	
  employee	
  work	
  for	
  you?	
  Talented	
  people	
  do	
  not	
  need	
  to	
  work	
  for	
  you.	
  They	
  
have	
  plenty	
  of	
  options	
  and	
  could	
  likely	
  work	
  for	
  a	
  higher	
  pay	
  in	
  a	
  more	
  prestigious	
  company	
  elsewhere.	
  The	
  right	
  
answer	
  is	
  specific	
  to	
  your	
  company	
  and	
  relates	
  to	
  the	
  mission	
  and	
  the	
  team	
  of	
  the	
  company.	
  If	
  you	
  don’t	
  know	
  that	
  
reason,	
  the	
  importance	
  will	
  not	
  be	
  unique,	
  and	
  you	
  won’t	
  get	
  the	
  right	
  talent.	
  	
  
Chapter	
  11:	
  If	
  you	
  Build	
  it,	
  Will	
  They	
  Come?	
  	
  
In	
  Silicon	
  Valley,	
  people	
  are	
  skeptical	
  about	
  advertising.	
  They	
  shouldn’t	
  be.	
  Advertising	
  works	
  on	
  everybody,	
  and	
  if	
  you	
  
don’t	
  acknowledge	
  it,	
  you’re	
  deceiving	
  yourself.	
  Advertising	
  is	
  not	
  necessarily	
  the	
  obvious	
  sales	
  you	
  see	
  on	
  TV	
  to	
  buy	
  a	
  
product	
  right	
  now.	
  As	
  a	
  matter	
  of	
  fact,	
  sales	
  work	
  best	
  when	
  it	
  is	
  hidden.	
  Consider	
  people	
  that	
  sell	
  companies,	
  they	
  
are	
  called	
  Investment	
  Bankers,	
  while	
  people	
  that	
  sell	
  themselves	
  are	
  called	
  Politicians.	
  	
  
Start-­‐up	
  companies	
  should	
  resist	
  the	
  temptation	
  to	
  compete	
  with	
  conventional	
  companies	
  for	
  elaborate	
  PR-­‐stunt.	
  
Instead	
  they	
  should	
  focus	
  on	
  viral	
  marketing	
  that	
  can	
  lead	
  to	
  exponential	
  growth.	
  	
  	
  
Click	
  here	
  to	
  be	
  a	
  member	
  of	
  our	
  exclusive	
  mailing	
  list	
  (We	
  send	
  free	
  bi-­‐monthly	
  book	
  summaries	
  for	
  Executives).	
  
Chapter	
  12:	
  Man	
  and	
  Machine	
  
Many	
  people	
  are	
  concerned	
  that	
  machines	
  will	
  replace	
  them	
  in	
  the	
  future.	
  Self-­‐driven	
  cars,	
  for	
  example,	
  may	
  replace	
  
taxi	
  drivers.	
  In	
  general	
  it	
  is	
  not	
  that	
  simple.	
  Computers	
  and	
  machines	
  are	
  not	
  good	
  at	
  the	
  same	
  things.	
  Computers	
  can	
  
scan	
  and	
  filter	
  large	
  amount	
  of	
  data,	
  but	
  contrary	
  to	
  people,	
  computers	
  have	
  difficulty	
  with	
  holistic	
  judgments.	
  When	
  
you	
  combine	
  the	
  strengths	
  of	
  machines	
  with	
  the	
  strengths	
  of	
  people	
  you	
  will	
  end	
  up	
  with	
  something	
  great.	
  Machines	
  
and	
  people	
  are	
  not	
  rivals	
  and	
  they	
  don’t	
  compete	
  nor	
  replace	
  each	
  other	
  like	
  globalization.	
  In	
  the	
  future,	
  the	
  
successful	
  companies	
  will	
  recognize	
  the	
  strength	
  of	
  using	
  computers	
  and	
  people	
  to	
  supplement	
  each	
  other.	
  	
  	
  In	
  this	
  
chapter,	
  Peter	
  lists	
  seven	
  questions	
  every	
  founder	
  should	
  answer	
  before	
  starting	
  a	
  business:	
  1)	
  Can	
  you	
  create	
  a	
  
breakthrough	
  technology?	
  2)	
  Is	
  it	
  the	
  right	
  time?	
  3)	
  Are	
  you	
  starting	
  with	
  a	
  big	
  share	
  of	
  a	
  small	
  segment/market?	
  4)	
  Do	
  
you	
  have	
  the	
  right	
  team?	
  5)	
  Do	
  you	
  have	
  a	
  way	
  to	
  deliver	
  the	
  product?	
  6)	
  Will	
  your	
  market	
  position	
  be	
  defensible	
  10	
  
to	
  20	
  years	
  from	
  now?	
  7)	
  Have	
  you	
  identified	
  a	
  unique	
  opportunity	
  that	
  others	
  don’t	
  see?	
  
Chapter	
  13:	
  Seeing	
  Green	
  
At	
  the	
  start	
  of	
  the	
  21
st
	
  century,	
  everyone	
  looked	
  to	
  green	
  technology.	
  Politicians	
  were	
  mobilizing	
  the	
  population	
  of	
  
investors	
  to	
  pour	
  billions	
  of	
  dollars	
  into	
  the	
  new	
  world	
  of	
  clean	
  energy.	
  It	
  all	
  turned	
  out	
  to	
  be	
  a	
  bubble	
  due	
  to	
  gross	
  
government	
  intervention	
  and	
  the	
  supply	
  of	
  capital	
  ahead	
  of	
  technology	
  maturation.	
  	
  
Companies	
  forgot	
  how	
  competitive	
  the	
  energy	
  market	
  was.	
  They	
  looked	
  at	
  the	
  overall	
  market	
  and	
  thought	
  they	
  could	
  
strike	
  gold	
  if	
  they	
  capture	
  a	
  fraction	
  of	
  the	
  market.	
  Being	
  a	
  small	
  fish	
  in	
  the	
  big	
  seas	
  is	
  not	
  a	
  good	
  approach.	
  The	
  most	
  
successful	
  companies	
  start	
  with	
  the	
  goal	
  to	
  dominate	
  their	
  niche	
  before	
  entering	
  into	
  harder	
  and	
  larger	
  markets.	
  Just	
  
think	
  of	
  Facebook	
  that	
  started	
  up	
  as	
  a	
  network	
  just	
  for	
  a	
  single	
  campus.	
  Another	
  mistake	
  is	
  to	
  be	
  careful	
  of	
  simply	
  
investing	
  in	
  a	
  market	
  with	
  huge	
  potential	
  alone.	
  	
  	
  Simply	
  being	
  a	
  part	
  of	
  an	
  industry	
  that	
  is	
  bound	
  to	
  grow,	
  does	
  not	
  
create	
  any	
  prosperity	
  for	
  the	
  investors	
  by	
  definition.	
  Companies	
  cannot	
  operate	
  on	
  macroeconomic	
  trends	
  alone;	
  we	
  
saw	
  the	
  same	
  mistake	
  as	
  IT	
  companies	
  permeated	
  the	
  tech	
  market	
  in	
  the	
  late	
  1990’s.	
  	
  All	
  individual	
  companies	
  must	
  
have	
  a	
  plan	
  and	
  product/service	
  to	
  support	
  the	
  value	
  they	
  will	
  actually	
  add	
  to	
  the	
  emerging	
  industry.	
  	
  
Chapter	
  14:	
  The	
  Founder’s	
  Paradox	
  
Founders’	
  traits	
  are	
  often	
  extreme.	
  They	
  do	
  not	
  follow	
  the	
  normal	
  distribution.	
  Perhaps	
  they	
  are	
  closer	
  to	
  being	
  
inversely	
  distributed.	
  Think	
  about	
  a	
  founder	
  that	
  is	
  cash	
  poor,	
  but	
  rich	
  in	
  terms	
  of	
  the	
  equity	
  in	
  his	
  company.	
  Or	
  think	
  
about	
  how	
  many	
  charismatic	
  founders	
  are	
  both	
  insiders	
  and	
  outsiders	
  of	
  their	
  business.	
  	
  Peter	
  contemplates	
  the	
  ago-­‐
old	
  idea	
  of	
  whether	
  leaders	
  are	
  born	
  this	
  way	
  or	
  if	
  there	
  environment	
  has	
  shaped	
  their	
  behavior.	
  Perhaps	
  we	
  all	
  need	
  
a	
  king	
  that	
  we	
  can	
  idolize,	
  when	
  things	
  are	
  good,	
  and	
  a	
  scapegoat	
  that	
  we	
  can	
  cast	
  away,	
  when	
  we	
  don’t	
  like	
  them	
  any	
  
longer.	
  	
  	
  
Conclusion:	
  Stagnation	
  or	
  Singularity?	
  
It	
  is	
  hard	
  to	
  say	
  what	
  the	
  future	
  will	
  look	
  like	
  when	
  even	
  the	
  most	
  farsighted	
  founders	
  can’t	
  look	
  more	
  than	
  20-­‐30	
  
years	
  ahead.	
  We	
  can’t	
  take	
  for	
  granted	
  that	
  the	
  future	
  will	
  be	
  better,	
  and	
  it	
  means	
  that	
  we	
  need	
  to	
  start	
  changing	
  that	
  
today.	
  Everything	
  important	
  to	
  us	
  is	
  singular.	
  Our	
  task	
  today	
  is	
  to	
  find	
  singular	
  ways	
  to	
  create	
  new	
  things	
  that	
  make	
  
the	
  future	
  not	
  only	
  different,	
  but	
  better	
  by	
  looking	
  at	
  everything	
  as	
  if	
  it	
  were	
  new.	
  	
  We	
  need	
  to	
  go	
  from	
  zero	
  to	
  one.	
  	
  
	
  
	
  
Click	
  here	
  to	
  be	
  a	
  member	
  of	
  our	
  exclusive	
  mailing	
  list	
  (We	
  send	
  free	
  bi-­‐monthly	
  book	
  summaries	
  for	
  Executives).	
  
	
  
	
  
	
  
Read Reviews for
ZERO TO ONE
on Amazon
	
  	
  	
  
	
  
Sign-up for our mailing list of
Executive summaries	
  
	
  	
  	
  	
  www.TheInvestorsPodcast.com/Sign-­‐Up	
  
Free

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the summary of Zero to One book

  • 1. Click  here  to  be  a  member  of  our  exclusive  mailing  list  (We  send  free  bi-­‐monthly  book  summaries  for  Executives).       An Executive Summary of ZERO TO ONE    by  Peter  Thiel     Who  is  Peter  Thiel   Peter  is  a  German-­‐American  entrepreneur  and  billionaire  that  co-­‐founded  PayPal.    He  also  Co-­‐Founded  the  Billion-­‐ dollar  company,  Palantir,  and  was  a  large  initial  investor  of  Facebook  (10.2%  stake).    Peter  was  providing  lectures  to   students  at  Stanford  University  and  one  of  the  students,  Blake  Masters,  turned  his  notes  into  this  book:  Zero  to  One.   Preston  and  Stig’s  General  Thoughts  on  the  Book     This  was  a  fantastic  book  for  entrepreneurs.  For  anyone  trying  to  start  their  own  business  and  explore  new  ways  to   create  a  product  or  service,  this  book  will  give  you  plenty  to  think  about.  Peter  is  a  powerful  thinker  and  some  of  the   ideas  expressed  in  this  book  demonstrate  his  ability  to  see  things  from  the  inverse  perspective.    The  main  theme  of   this  book  reminded  us  a  lot  of  the  Blue  Ocean  Strategy  and  The  Science  of  Getting  Rich.  Both  of  those  books  are   dedicated   to   the   same   idea   Peter   imparts   in   this   book:   enormous   value   can   be   created   when   a   business   creates   something  fresh  and  new.  It  can  also  be  implied  that  when  a  company  slightly  improves  and  competes  with  existing   products  or  services,  little  relative  value  is  created  for  that  business.  Click  here  to  read  3 rd  Party  reviews  of  Peter’s   book.   Preface     The   next   Bill   Gates   will   not   build   an   operating   system   and   the   next   Mark   Zuckerberg   will   not   create   a   new   social   network.  You  won’t  learn  anything  new  if  you  just  copy  those  that  have  succeeded.  You  might  go  from  A-­‐N,  but  not   from  Zero  to  One.    If  American  companies  do  not  realize  this,  they  will  fail  in  the  future.  Companies  should  not  fine   tune  best  practices,  but  find  new  and  untraveled  paths.   Chapter  1:  The  Challenge  of  the  Future   When  Peter  Theil  interviews  people,  he  likes  to  ask  them  what  unique  truth  they  know  that  very  few  people  agree   upon.  It  is  a  hard  question  because  the  American  education  system  is  flawed.  When  we  have  learned  something  to  be   true,  it  is  also  something  that  a  majority  of  people  have  agreed  upon.   Horizontal  progress  is  easy  to  imagine.  That  is  when  you  improve  something  that  you  already  know  works.  That  will   take  you  from  A-­‐Z.  Vertical  progress  is  harder  because  you  need  to  do  something  that  has  never  been  done  before.   That  will  take  you  from  Zero  to  One.  China  is  prospering  by  horizontal  progress.  Globalization  has  allowed  this  to   happen.  By  copying  or  improving  something  that  already  exist,  you  will  not  get  ahead.    Technology  is  what  has  taken   you  from  Zero  to  One.  You  can  have  both  horizontal  and  vertical  progress,  one  at  a  time,  or  neither.  Right  now,  we   experience   globalization,   but   limited   technology   progress.   The   progress   has   mainly   been   made   in   IT.   The   future   depends  on  technology  –  not  on  globalization.    
  • 2. Click  here  to  be  a  member  of  our  exclusive  mailing  list  (We  send  free  bi-­‐monthly  book  summaries  for  Executives).   It  is  almost  implied  that  the  developed  countries  are  leading,  and  other  countries  should  aim  to  keep-­‐up.    Peter  Thiel   does  not  agree.  If  China  and  India  for  example  double  their  energy  consumption  it  would  be  a  catastrophic  pollution   disaster  using  the  practices  from  today.  Globalization  without  technology  is  not  sustainable.       Chapter  2:  Party  Like  it’s  1999   The  1990’s  had  a  good  image  until  the  Dotcom  bubble  burst.  Peter  Theil  himself  was  scared  about  a  crash  in  the   technology  market  while  he  was  running  PayPal.  It  was  not  that  he  didn’t  believe  in  his  own  company,  but  people   around  him  were  acting  crazy.  No  one  believed  that  the  anti-­‐business  model  of  growing,  while  losing  money,  would  be   sustainable.  Peter  had  an  acquaintance  that  had  planned  an  IPO  before  he  had  incorporated  his  company.     PayPal  was  considered  grandiose  and  even  voted  one  of  the  ten  worst  business  ideas  of  1999  by  a  journalist.  For   PayPal   to   work   they   needed   1   million   customers   as   a   critical   mass.   After   early   struggles,   the   growth   rate   became   exponential  when  the  company  introduced  a  campaign  where  new  customers  were  awarded  $10  for  each  account   established.  The  campaign  was  as  effective  as  it  was  unsustainable,  but  the  strategy  worked,  and  it  attracted  plenty  of   investors.  That  capital  was  enough  to  buy  PayPal  time  to  make  it  a  success  before  the  bubble  burst.  At  the  end  of  the   bubble,  Peter  develops  lessons  learned  that  contradict  conventional  Silicon  Valley  wisdom:   • It  is  better  to  risk  boldness  than  triviality.   • A  bad  plan  is  better  than  no  plan.     • Competitive  markets  destroy  profits.   • Sales  matter  just  as  much  as  product.   Chapter  3:  All  Happy  Companies  Are  Different   Consider  the  airline  industry  which  has  created  a  lot  of  value,  but  few  companies  can  make  a  profit.  Compare  this  to   Google  that  is  creating  less  value,  but  is  keeping  the  profits.  Google  makes  so  much  money,  that  it  is  worth  more  than   3  times  the  value  of  all  American  airlines  combined.     Economists  explain  this  by  categorizing  Google  as  a  monopoly.    The  high  profit  is  made  as  consumers  would  have  to   pay  a  higher  price  for  goods  and  services.  Compare  this  to  the  airlines  industry,  which  Peter  described  as  “Perfect   Competition”.  Most  profit  is  washed  away  by  fierce  competition  by  rivals  in  the  market.       Peter  Theil  likes  the  idea  of  a  monopoly.  Consider  Google,  dependent  on  your  definition,  it  has  a  monopoly  for  search   engines.  Google  does  not  have  to  constantly  focus  on  competition,  but  can  focus  on  innovation.  The  lesson  is  clear:  If   you  want  to  keep  the  profit  and  progress  you  should  build  a  business  that  has  a  very  unique  competitive  advantage   where  rivals  can’t  enter.     Chapter  4:  The  Ideology  of  Competition     Competition  means  no  profit  for  anyone  (from  a  pure  theory  position).  So  why  do  so  many  people  like  the  idea  of   competition?  It  is  an  ideology  that  our  education  system  preaches  more  than  anything  else.  The  best  students  get   good   grades   and   prestige   if   they   solve   the   same   assignment   as   everybody   else   –   just   marginally   better.   The   competition   continues   and   becomes   even   fiercer   in   higher   education.   The   best   of   the   best   students   are   typically   rewarded  with  conventional  and  non-­‐innovative  jobs  in  law  or  management  consulting.    The  opportunity  costs  for   society  are  enormous  –  everyone  is  thinking  alike.    
  • 3. Click  here  to  be  a  member  of  our  exclusive  mailing  list  (We  send  free  bi-­‐monthly  book  summaries  for  Executives).   Chapter  5:  Last  Mover  Advantage   The  value  of  a  business  today  is  all  the  future  cash  flows  from  that  company  after  being  discounted  at  an  appropriate   rate.  An  old,  low-­‐growth  company,  like  a  newspaper,  might  hold  its  value  if  it  can  sustain  the  current  cash  flows  for  5-­‐6   year.   But,   often,   the   value   of   the   company   dwindles   as   customers   move   over   to   alternative   products.   Growth   companies  have  the  opposite  trajectory.  Some  high  growth  companies  might  be  losing  money  in  the  early  years,  and   have  the  potential  for  significant  cash  flows  in  the  next  10-­‐15  years  ahead.  PayPal  and  LinkedIn  are  examples  of  this.   (By  the  way,  The  Investors  are  a  little  skeptical  of  Peter’s  enthusiasm  for  some  growth  companies  and  his  earnings   forecasts.    This  seems  very  speculative  from  our  position)   For  a  company  to  be  valuable  it  must  both  grow  and  endure.  He  suggests  focusing  on  short  term  growth  because  it  is   easy   to   measure.   These   companies   focus   on   monthly   revenue   charts   and   quarterly   earnings   reports.   The   most   important  question  to  ask  is:  Will  this  business  still  be  around  a  decade  from  now?  Numbers  alone  will  not  give  you   the  answer.  You  must  critically  think  about  qualitative  characteristic.     Chapter  6:  You  Are  Not  a  Lottery  Ticket   Many  celebrities  including  Bill  Gates  and  Warren  Buffett  argue  that  luck  has  a  big  influence  on  their  success.  Peter   Theil  argues  that  we  might  be  too  quick  to  dismiss  anyone  who  succeeded  according  to  plan.  While  this  can’t  be   objectively  tested,  as  the  sample  size  of  the  single  person’s  success  is  always  one,  the  reader  of  the  book  must  have   the  same  opinion.  Why  else  would  he  or  she  read  this  book  if  success  was  something  completely  random.    Perhaps   Steve  Jobs  is  the  proof  that  you  create  your  own  success.  He  did  not  ask  for  the  opinion  of  focus  groups.  He  designed   for  perfection,  and  he  knew  what  he  wanted.  The  main  lesson  to  learn  from  Steve  Jobs  was  he  envisioned  and   executed  long  term  plans  to  distribute  innovative  products.  Steven  Jobs  changed  the  world  by  careful,  backwards,   planning.     Chapter  7:  Follow  the  Money   In  1906  the  Italian  Economist  Wilfredo  Pareto  discovered  what  would  be  known  as  the  “Pareto  Principle”.  He  realized   that  20%  of  the  people  owned  80%  of  the  land  in  Italy.    It  was  a  concept,  known  as  the  80-­‐20  rule,  which  he  found  all   throughout  nature.  The  biggest  cities  dwarf  the  surrounding  smaller  cities.  Monopolies  grasp  more  profit  than   combining  a  majority  of  competitors.  Money  follows  the  same  pattern.  As  an  investor  in  venture  capital,  you  should   not  over  diversify  as  the  returns  are  not  normally  distributed.    For  example,  some  companies  will  fail,  more  companies   will  stay  flat,  and  a  few  superior  companies  will  potentially  return  10x  there  initial  investment.    If  graphed,  it  might   look  like  an  inverse  probability  plot.   In  reality,  the  investor  should  focus  on  the  few  superior  companies  that  get  exponential  results.  Peter  Thiel’s   investment  in  Facebook  vastly  outperformed  the  combined  return  of  all  the  other  investments  in  his  fund.  Palantir,   the  second  best  investment,  is  set  to  make  a  higher  return  than  all  the  other  investments  combined  –  aside  from   Facebook.     Chapter  8:  Secrets   Why  do  so  many  people  believe  that  there  are  not  secret  to  be  revealed  anymore  in  the  world?  It  might  start  with   geography.  Just  150  years  ago  a  lot  of  the  world  had  not  revealed  itself  to  anyone.  Today  just  by  watching  the   discovery  channel  everybody  in  the  western  world  can  see  even  the  most  remote  locations  from  their  coach.  There   are  plenty  of  secrets  to  be  revealed,  but  if  you  don’t  believe  you  can  find  secrets,  you  will  never  find  them.  We  see  it  in   the  stock  market  where  the  common  true  is  that  you  as  individual  investors  can’t  know  more  than  the  combined  
  • 4. Click  here  to  be  a  member  of  our  exclusive  mailing  list  (We  send  free  bi-­‐monthly  book  summaries  for  Executives).   market.    In  all  social  setting  there  are  the  prospects  that  you  might  be  right,  but  unless  the  truth  has  been  vetted  as   conventional  wisdom,  few  people  will  take  the  chance  and  perhaps  be  left  alone.       Chapter  9:  Foundations   Founding  a  company  is  just  like  building  a  house.  You  can’t  build  it  on  a  flawed  foundation.  The  first  critical  decision   when  building  a  company  is  whom  you  start  it  with.  Choosing  a  co-­‐founder  is  like  getting  married,  and  founder  conflict   is  just  as  ugly  as  a  divorce.  No  one  wants  to  think  about  what  will  happen  if  it  goes  wrong,  and  thereby  they  don’t  do   it.  When  investing  in  a  company  you  should  consider  the  founding  team.  Technical  skills  matter,  but  how  the   founders’  work  together  is  just  as  important.   In  start-­‐up  companies  there  is  a  potential  for  conflict  when  ownership  and  control  changes.  This  typically  happens   between  the  founder  and  his  investors.  A  classic  example  could  be  the  founder  wanting  to  grow  the  company  and   keep  it  private,  while  the  investor  would  like  to  cash  out  through  an  IPO.    The  board  is  very  important.  As  a  founder,  as   well  as  an  investor,  you  should  strive  for  small  boards  of  3-­‐5  people.  Smaller  board  ensures  execution  and   effectiveness.       As  a  founder  you  should  look  to  employ  people  to  have  equity  or  a  regular  full  time  salary  from  your  company.  There   is  an  exception  for  lawyers  and  accountants,  however,  everyone  that  does  not  own  stock  options  or  draws  a  full-­‐time   salary  is  fundamentally  misalign.  They  are  biased  to  claim  value  in  the  short  term,  and  not  create  value  for  the  future.   That  is  why  part  time  employees  and  consultant  don’t  work  well.    You  are  either  on  the  bus  or  off  the  bus.     Chapter  10:  The  Mechanic  of  Mafia   The  first  team  Peter  Theil  built  has  been  known  as  the  “PayPal  mafia”.  The  reason  is  that  so  many  of  his  previous   colleagues  have  later  helped  each  other  with  the  foundation  of  a  variety  of  great  companies  including:  Tesla,  LinkedIn,   and  YouTube.  The  strong  culture  that  originally  shaped  PayPal  was  not  assembled  by  hiring  the  most  talented  people   from  a  pile  of  applicants.  Instead  it  was  assembled  by  people  of  similar  interests  and  work  ethics  and  they  had  a  very   common  goal  they  were  working  towards.   Recruiting  should  never  been  outsourced.  As  an  employer  in  a  start-­‐up  company,  you  should  know  the  answer  to  the   following  question:  Why  should  the  20 th  employee  work  for  you?  Talented  people  do  not  need  to  work  for  you.  They   have  plenty  of  options  and  could  likely  work  for  a  higher  pay  in  a  more  prestigious  company  elsewhere.  The  right   answer  is  specific  to  your  company  and  relates  to  the  mission  and  the  team  of  the  company.  If  you  don’t  know  that   reason,  the  importance  will  not  be  unique,  and  you  won’t  get  the  right  talent.     Chapter  11:  If  you  Build  it,  Will  They  Come?     In  Silicon  Valley,  people  are  skeptical  about  advertising.  They  shouldn’t  be.  Advertising  works  on  everybody,  and  if  you   don’t  acknowledge  it,  you’re  deceiving  yourself.  Advertising  is  not  necessarily  the  obvious  sales  you  see  on  TV  to  buy  a   product  right  now.  As  a  matter  of  fact,  sales  work  best  when  it  is  hidden.  Consider  people  that  sell  companies,  they   are  called  Investment  Bankers,  while  people  that  sell  themselves  are  called  Politicians.     Start-­‐up  companies  should  resist  the  temptation  to  compete  with  conventional  companies  for  elaborate  PR-­‐stunt.   Instead  they  should  focus  on  viral  marketing  that  can  lead  to  exponential  growth.      
  • 5. Click  here  to  be  a  member  of  our  exclusive  mailing  list  (We  send  free  bi-­‐monthly  book  summaries  for  Executives).   Chapter  12:  Man  and  Machine   Many  people  are  concerned  that  machines  will  replace  them  in  the  future.  Self-­‐driven  cars,  for  example,  may  replace   taxi  drivers.  In  general  it  is  not  that  simple.  Computers  and  machines  are  not  good  at  the  same  things.  Computers  can   scan  and  filter  large  amount  of  data,  but  contrary  to  people,  computers  have  difficulty  with  holistic  judgments.  When   you  combine  the  strengths  of  machines  with  the  strengths  of  people  you  will  end  up  with  something  great.  Machines   and  people  are  not  rivals  and  they  don’t  compete  nor  replace  each  other  like  globalization.  In  the  future,  the   successful  companies  will  recognize  the  strength  of  using  computers  and  people  to  supplement  each  other.      In  this   chapter,  Peter  lists  seven  questions  every  founder  should  answer  before  starting  a  business:  1)  Can  you  create  a   breakthrough  technology?  2)  Is  it  the  right  time?  3)  Are  you  starting  with  a  big  share  of  a  small  segment/market?  4)  Do   you  have  the  right  team?  5)  Do  you  have  a  way  to  deliver  the  product?  6)  Will  your  market  position  be  defensible  10   to  20  years  from  now?  7)  Have  you  identified  a  unique  opportunity  that  others  don’t  see?   Chapter  13:  Seeing  Green   At  the  start  of  the  21 st  century,  everyone  looked  to  green  technology.  Politicians  were  mobilizing  the  population  of   investors  to  pour  billions  of  dollars  into  the  new  world  of  clean  energy.  It  all  turned  out  to  be  a  bubble  due  to  gross   government  intervention  and  the  supply  of  capital  ahead  of  technology  maturation.     Companies  forgot  how  competitive  the  energy  market  was.  They  looked  at  the  overall  market  and  thought  they  could   strike  gold  if  they  capture  a  fraction  of  the  market.  Being  a  small  fish  in  the  big  seas  is  not  a  good  approach.  The  most   successful  companies  start  with  the  goal  to  dominate  their  niche  before  entering  into  harder  and  larger  markets.  Just   think  of  Facebook  that  started  up  as  a  network  just  for  a  single  campus.  Another  mistake  is  to  be  careful  of  simply   investing  in  a  market  with  huge  potential  alone.      Simply  being  a  part  of  an  industry  that  is  bound  to  grow,  does  not   create  any  prosperity  for  the  investors  by  definition.  Companies  cannot  operate  on  macroeconomic  trends  alone;  we   saw  the  same  mistake  as  IT  companies  permeated  the  tech  market  in  the  late  1990’s.    All  individual  companies  must   have  a  plan  and  product/service  to  support  the  value  they  will  actually  add  to  the  emerging  industry.     Chapter  14:  The  Founder’s  Paradox   Founders’  traits  are  often  extreme.  They  do  not  follow  the  normal  distribution.  Perhaps  they  are  closer  to  being   inversely  distributed.  Think  about  a  founder  that  is  cash  poor,  but  rich  in  terms  of  the  equity  in  his  company.  Or  think   about  how  many  charismatic  founders  are  both  insiders  and  outsiders  of  their  business.    Peter  contemplates  the  ago-­‐ old  idea  of  whether  leaders  are  born  this  way  or  if  there  environment  has  shaped  their  behavior.  Perhaps  we  all  need   a  king  that  we  can  idolize,  when  things  are  good,  and  a  scapegoat  that  we  can  cast  away,  when  we  don’t  like  them  any   longer.       Conclusion:  Stagnation  or  Singularity?   It  is  hard  to  say  what  the  future  will  look  like  when  even  the  most  farsighted  founders  can’t  look  more  than  20-­‐30   years  ahead.  We  can’t  take  for  granted  that  the  future  will  be  better,  and  it  means  that  we  need  to  start  changing  that   today.  Everything  important  to  us  is  singular.  Our  task  today  is  to  find  singular  ways  to  create  new  things  that  make   the  future  not  only  different,  but  better  by  looking  at  everything  as  if  it  were  new.    We  need  to  go  from  zero  to  one.        
  • 6. Click  here  to  be  a  member  of  our  exclusive  mailing  list  (We  send  free  bi-­‐monthly  book  summaries  for  Executives).         Read Reviews for ZERO TO ONE on Amazon         Sign-up for our mailing list of Executive summaries          www.TheInvestorsPodcast.com/Sign-­‐Up   Free