Slideshow transcript
Slide 2: Techies are from Venus, Salespeople are from Mars: Strategies for effective communication in a start-up environment Lance Laking, CEO April 3, 2008
Slide 3: Outline Set the stage - the BTI context Culture & communication style Fostering teamwork Challenges Compensation / incentive programs Q&A 3
Slide 4: Introduction Mission: A leading global supplier of Packet Optical Edge solutions for service provider & corporate networks Gigabit Services for 4G Wireless, HD Video & Business Services Packet + Optical + Edge Technology Metro Acces Core Carrier Class quality and performance s 90 customers Strategic partnership with Fujitsu Packet Optical Edge for Tier 1 Carriers Global OEMs relationships Global addressable market growing to $3.5B+ by 2010 180+ employees: Canada, US and Europe 4
Slide 5: A Gigabit World Driven By Growth in Video 10000 20 min video Mb Data 1000 HD 30 fps 180 Mb Transport Movie 3min Vcast 6 Gb 15 fps Log Scale 100 10.8Mb iTunes 15 s Video 10 feature msg 15 fps movie iTunes 1500 Mb 0.9 Mb 3 min 1 Video MP3 38 Mb Photo 3 Mb share 0.1 30 Kb 0.01 Wireline Apps Wireless Apps Wireline Apps Wireless Apps Online Video: 7% traffic in 2005 18% in 2007 Metro IP Traffic Growth Forecast: 400% 2006 2011* *Source: Cisco Systems Global IP Traffic Forecast - 2007 5
Slide 6: BTI Systems’ Leadership Team & Investors Gregory Koss Exec Chairman (BTI 2007) • CEO of Internet Photonics sold to CIENA in 2004 • CEO of Sonoma Systems sold to Nortel in 2000 Lance Laking (BTI 2001) President & CEO HUBER+SUHNER, Dynasty Components Franca Marinelli (BTI 2007) VP Organizational Development Catena / DRS / Spar Aerospace John Haydon (BTI 2008) Paul Harrison (BTI 2005) SVP Global Operations VP Global Sales - Dallas Breconridge, President &COO Ekinops, Xtera, Nortel, Chief Procurement Alcatel US, Italy, Marconi UK Officer Glenn Thurston (BTI 2004) Jon Boocock (BTI 2007) VP Marketing VP Engineering Nortel (VP Global Alliances) VP/Co-Founder Catena (Ciena) VP Cadence 6
Slide 7: Service Delivery Platform Mobile Video Business Wholesale Enterprise Internet Consumer Services Services Networks Services Extensive Protocol Suite to Deliver Today’s Services & Applications Data Storage SONET/SDH Video Full Packet + Optical Flexibility for Metro/Edge Applications 7
Slide 8: The take-away: our playing field: A very technical product A technical sales process A long, complex, B2B sales cycle High growth market dynamics Very much a David & Goliath landscape 8
Slide 9: Functional view: 125% headcount growth 8 2007: 80 employees 29 28 4 9 16 6 6 45 109 Sales & Marketing Product Marketing 2008: 180 employees Development Mfg & Ops Finance, IT & HR 9
Slide 10: Venus & Mars Software Engineers + Sales & Marketing + Photonics research = ??? 10
Slide 11: Motivation & drive: different strokes for different folks Peer recognition Papers published, patent “coin operated” applications “show me the Speaking at industry money” forums Technical challenge 11
Slide 12: But wait a minute: we’re not that different Everyone needs recognition - the “feeling” that you are important, that you are contributing to the success of the business, and that your efforts are respected and appreciated by fellow employees On budget / On time Cracking a new customer Selling on value Customer testimonials – helping solve real problems Technical teams want to work on a successful products. Sales teams want to sell winning products. The common metric is real customers and market share. 12
Slide 13: Culture Every company has a culture, every company has politics • Perception is reality • Work with it Observations / my sandbox • Significant company restructuring in 2002 • Culture changes with company lifecycle: ― The $1M, 5M, 10M, 25M, 50M, 100M barriers • We’re trés multinational • Recruiting push to capture expanding market 13
Slide 14: Communication style • Not your `typical` Tech CEO • Be OPEN, honest, straightforward • Try to tie in the remote teams • Set 3, clear over-arching objectives, & repeat • Share the numbers, the good, the bad & the ugly • Regular informal updates • Semi-annual formal update • No problem with mistakes (but not repeat mistakes) 14
Slide 15: Challenges The VC influence • The same vested interest or ?? • An exit and minimum 20% IRR is natural As the company grows up… • Start-up excuses go away • Employment / HR expectations expand • Balancing formal (employee handbook) with informal (“just do it”) gets harder • Act BIG, be small gets harder 15
Slide 16: Fostering teamwork Trade notes • Technical teams are starved for customer feedback • Sales teams are starved to technical innovation / uniqueness Push decisions to where the expertise resides Product marketing / product line management is the key linkage On occasion…take a ‘software geek’ to a customer, and bring a ‘sales puke’ into the lab 16
Slide 17: Fostering teamwork – have fun If a man insisted always on being serious, and never allowed himself a bit of fun and relaxation, he would go mad or become unstable without knowing it Herodotus 17
Slide 18: Fostering teamwork – have fun Organize events at least quarterly • beach volleyball • yoga • Skating on the canal, • curling (yes, curling) • picnics, ziplines, whatever • at least one party with spouses / guests The leader sets the tone, but the activities are best when event coordination is spread around 18
Slide 19: Compensation & Incentives Fair, transparent and equitable • People talk, especially engineers Salaries (the “start-up” factor) • You have to be competitive – but not the highest • You have to pay a premium for “A” players – but it’s worth it • Challenge, responsibility, recognition and reward trump pure $$$ 19
Slide 20: Compensation & Incentives Company-wide incentive plan • 10% “at plan” , 20% stretch • Metrics must be aggressive, but realistic • Combination of financial / market / product milestones • Always drive home the capital efficiency message (Cash Flow Positive…) Stock Options • Still in vogue, but not Holy Grail “Fun” and other rewards work • Create a friendly competition / bragging rights • Does not require big bags of $$$ • Examples: IP², a goofy award, employee referral bonus 20
Slide 21: Closing comments - Marrying Teams: Set a tone that is open, based on mutual respect, and interactive Don’t play favourites Communicate frequently – informally and formally Tie in customer and market touch wherever and whenever you can Structure rewards and incentives to reinforce the behaviour and culture that you are looking for 21
Slide 22: Thank-you 22



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