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Micah Rosenbloom, Managing Partner
Thereâs no good way to tell your board that youâve blown a quarter, or your superstar head of data science is jumping ship to Google. Still, breaking bad news is a key skill for founders and delivering it well is often what keeps a company alive.
Oddly enough, itâs gotten harder to be the bearer of bad news because of the surplus of capital in the venture market. Why share concerns about upside-down unit economics when it could jeopardize a future funding round? No one wants the music to stop, and itâs often rational, in the short term, to focus on the positive.
But startups need to avoid the plague of rationalization. If those closest to the business arenât focused on things that arenât working, they canât help fix them. Shoving small bits of bad news under the rug may work temporarily, but when the team or board finally see a peculiar pattern emerge, they may lose faith immediately. When asked how things are going, the best founders usually respond with one positive fact and one challenging data point.
Iâm not advocating radical candor on all things. Teams and investors need the context around problems, but they need frequent and honest communication. Here are some suggestions:
What to Say and Do if YouâŠ
Missed Plan
Your board should never find out that youâve missed plan the morning of the board meeting. Even worse, is re-writing the plan every board meeting or every month. Many of my previous board members took copious notes and would quickly detect a change in revenue or cost forecasts. Donât try to pull the wool. Instead, have an action plan at the ready.
â Figure out why sales have fallen. E.g. If its a drop-off in Facebook ad efficacy, have a plan to diversify channels.
â A good move here is to set up a call with each board member individually, walk them through the issue, your plan, and solicit their advice BEFORE the board meeting. No surprises.
â By the time the BOD meeting rolls around, you should have some data from your remediation plan and be able to discuss future steps.
Lost a Key Employee
Youâre going to lose people. Itâs inevitable, but why they leave is crucially important. Founders tend to glorify the newest hires. We used to joke that all new hires were handed the âMessiah T-shirt,â meaning that the newest employee was going to fix all the problems facing the company. When they left, I remember saying to my investors that they âwere never a good fit.â This excuse may work once or twice, but if its a pattern, you have a problem.
I always used board meetings as an opportunity to talk about recruiting, attrition and culture. Donât save the âsoft stuffâ for the HR exec. While you may think board members just want to hear about the numbers, the more you socialize them to the realities of the people issues, the better prepared theyâll be when your former messiah walks out the door. A few questions your investors will probably have:
â Did the former employee exercise their options? Talented people leaving ostensible value on the table is a terrible signal about the startup.
â Why did the person depart? Some investors will talk to execs upon their exit to see if their story and the CEOâs jibe.
â How many people have you lost? A single job-hopper wonât shake investor confidence, but a steady trickle of regrettable losses is a troubling sign.
Lose a contested deal
There are few things more deflating than spending weeks or months trying to land a deal and seeing it go to one of your competitors. Iâve seen many founders create lengthy sales funnel spreadsheets filled with high confidence percentages. The hardest thing to explain is when a deal that you thought had a 90% chance of closing lands in the hands of your competitor. When theoretically high confidence sales fall through, investors will ask, âWhat else is the founding team overconfident about?â
â Try to figure out why you lost: Donât be shy about asking your potential client why they chose your competitor. Was it a lack of functionality, better pricing, or client services? Bring that feedback to the Board and investor group. The anecdotal quotes matter because youâre trying to bring the flavor of the customer objections to the investors.
How you break the bad news matters. AÂ lot.
Donât go dark: If youâve got bad news to share, be proactive. If youâre usually someone who responds to emails quickly, donât let them lag. If youâre typically not very responsive, work a little harder during times of bad news. Itâll signal that youâre aware of the gravity of the situation and are acting appropriately, despite a more laissez-faire personality.
Donât use email: If youâve got really bad news, donât email or textâcall. It might be uncomfortable and time-consuming, but youâll also be able to answer questions immediately, project confidence with your voice, and avoid any miscues that crop up in digital communication.
Control the story: Part of the reason to be proactive is to control the story. One of the worst things a founder can do is let a board member hear bad news from a 3rd party. If an investor hears troubling things through the grapevine, before they hear it from the founder, concerns will be raised.
Donât downplay bad news: Thereâs a natural reflex to downplay bad news. âLanding that deal would have given us huge exposure, but hurt our margins,â or âHe wasnât the right person to head product anyway.â Avoid this temptation. If you suffer a regrettable loss, own up to it. If youâre getting out hustled by a competitor, you should formulate a strategy to correct the problem.
Communicate regularly: The best way to share bad news is to do it regularly and interspersed with good news. I had a standing monthly breakfast with one of my investors. That gave me the chance to report the good and the bad. If you get in the habit of sending an investor update on a monthly basis, youâll have a chance to share the ups and downs of the business. Hereâs a template to make the process easier.
Best Practices for Avoiding Bad News
A little sandbagging goes a long way: Sandbagging got a bad rap and taken to its extreme, itâs counterproductive, but good CEOs master the art of under promising and over delivering. Whether itâs a new hire, a new product, or a new marketing channel, be circumspect in your claims.
Keep a full pipeline: youâre going to lose deals. Itâs just the nature of sales. But itâs a lot easier to update your board about a lost sale when you can immediately provide a positive update about two other potential clients in the process. Likewise, if a product rollout flops, be ready to move onto the next experiment after incorporating data from your recent failure.
Communicate with your team
All of this advice applies to communicating with the team, as well. As a CEO, your job isnât to subject the team to all of the ups and downs you internalize. Engineers need to focus on engineering, sales on sales, etc. But at the same time, the team deserves the truth. As CEO, an authentic talk about the news is critical. Typically the CEO doesnât need to get into every detailâââif the board deck was 30 slides, pick the five that conveys the challenge but not necessarily a blow by blow account of the challenge and share those with the team on a regular basis.
If you miss a major sales goal, the team should know. But such news should always be accompanied with a game plan to fix it.
Companies come and go. Reputations are forever
Sometimes the truth is hard, but deceit always catches up with usâââin a personal or business context. Youâll be surprised all the stuff that the board has seenâââlikely a lot worse. More than anything, theyâre there to be helpful, and they can often help you through it.
How to Break Bad News to Investors was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.