women in tech: how to build a human company

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LUMINARY LABS WWW.LUMINARY-LABS.COM @LUMINARYLABS WED, FEB 10 AT 7:00 PM, NEW YORK, NY Women in Tech: How to Build A Human Company Sara Holoubek, CEO of Luminary Labs By: The New York Code + Design Academy

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Page 1: Women in Tech: How to Build A Human Company

LUMINARY LABS WWW.LUMINARY-LABS.COM @LUMINARYLABS

WED, FEB 10 AT 7:00 PM, NEW YORK, NY

Women in Tech: How to Build A Human CompanySara Holoubek, CEO of Luminary LabsBy: The New York Code + Design Academy

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Hello!

I am @sarita, CEO of @luminarylabs.

I like big, messy industries.

And startups.

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Point of View

I have worked at 3 venture-backed companies.

• One had an IPO. (2000)

• One flopped. (2002)

• One was acquired for $325 million. (2010)

I have also worked at a small revenue-funded company.

My company is 6 years old, profitable, and has no investors.

I angel invest in early stage companies.

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To What End,

An Entrepreneur?

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You want to change the world.

And so you start a company.

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What is the purpose of the

corporation?

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Shareholder value?

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“There is one and only one social responsibility of

business – to use its resources and engage in

activities designed to increase profits…” Doing

anything else is “unadulterated socialism.”

- Friedman

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Quaker Oats president Kenneth Mason, writing in Business Week, declared Friedman's profits-are-everything philosophy, “A dreary and demeaning view of the role of business and business leaders in our society."

Wrote Mason: "Making a profit is no more the purpose of a corporation than getting enough to eat is the purpose of life. Getting enough to eat is a requirement of life; life's purpose, one would hope, is somewhat broader and more challenging. Likewise with business and profit."

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A company's primary responsibility is to serve its customers. Profit is not the primary goal, but rather an essential condition for the company's continued existence and sustainability.

“A company's primary responsibility is to serve its customers. Profit is not the primary goal, but rather an essential condition for the company's continued existence and sustainability.”

- Drucker

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So who won?

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Until this happened.

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The 21st CenturyBusiness Imperative

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Following the Industrial Revolution, we collectively decided that slavery, child labor, and inequity were not acceptable.

What will no longer be acceptable following the Digital Revolution?

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“We've sort of destroyed business after business in this country by looking at spreadsheets with numbers we call truth.”

Mark Bertolini, CEO, Aetna

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Major global companies could save $19 billion a

year in recruiting and training costs by adopting

16 weeks of fully paid maternity leave.

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“If you feel, respectfully, that you can get a higher return than the 38 percent you got last year, it’s a free country. You can sell your shares of Starbucks and buy shares in another company. Thank you very much.”

Howard SchultzCEO, Starbucks

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“You can't go to work and think that business should just be about financial profits, because you'd be serving only a very one-sided view of what it means to be a human on the planet.

And we live on the planet.”

-Rose MercurioCEO, Patagonia

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"He's out there singing, 'Who's going to save the

world?' and those messages are right, you

need to pay attention to the environment and

education," he says.

"I'm just adding, integrate your economic engine."

(Photo: Jakub Mosur, Jakub Mosur Photography)

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But What About Startups?

Small Businesses?

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We’re Also Pretty Good at Making Excuses

It’s badass to work 16-hour days.

There are no qualified, diverse candidates for the job.

The people value kegs over a 401k.

We can’t afford to cover healthcare.

Our company is in a unique stage.

That’s nice for a “lifestyle” company.

Power through it, because we’ll all be so rich we’ll never have to think about money again.

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The Startup Play-by-Play

1. You start a company.

2. You raise capital.

3. Your company proceeds to:a) Flop early. 80% of companies fail in first year.

b) Flop late. Shuts down or is acquired for less than capital raised.

c) Do “ok.” Reaches profitability or sells for an acceptable sum.

d) Become a wild success. Is acquired for favorable terms or becomes sustainable (reaches profitability, could be privately or publicly traded.)

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Who Really Wins? Who loses?

Flops Early

Flops Late

Does “ok”

Wild Success

Investor • Still flies private• Kids go to college of choice• Has health insurance• Life is good

Founder • Gets experience

• Writes a Medium post on failure

• Takes money off the table• Keeps the Porsche• Makes keynote speeches• Raises capital for next venture

• Never has to think about money again

Staff • Loses job• Still doesn’t

have decent health care

• Gains experience• May lose job• May actually lose money

• Receives a small to medium check

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Your product alone is not going to change the world.

Your long-term, sustainable company will change the world, if you design it well.

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Fooseball?

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Or Family Leave?

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It’s just a decision.

But a decision that will dictate who wants to work for you, your company, and your industry — in the long run.

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The Human Company Playbook

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Problem: There was no playbook

for small and growth businesses

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How The Playbook Came to Be

In 2015, we convened a broad cross-section of founders, thinkers, and doers to curate examples of new and creative business imperatives, and together, started writing a guide for the more human company.

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Compensation Health

Allowing for Life Trajectory

Four Themes Emerged

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Excerpts from The Human Company

Playbook

The complete Human Company Playbook can be found here: http://bit.ly/HumanCompanyPlaybook

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Plated: Equity for AllTHE COMPANY: 400 of employees; founded in 2012

THE POLICY: Plated offers full-time, non-exempt, hourly employees working in their fulfillment centers the opportunity to participate in an Equity Options program, at no cost to them, subject to a minimum eligibility period.

HOW THEY DO IT:Plated administers this plan themselves, manually rather than outsourcing services. They believe it's important to provide a tailored approach to educating all employees on how the Equity Option Plan is structured, managed, and its potential value.

“Every employee is an integral part of the Plated Team… we believe our non-exempt, hourly fulfillment center Team Members are our most important resource, as they are the closest to our customer…they are the back-bone of our company.”

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Pinterest: Options for your OptionsTHE COMPANY: 700 employees, founded in 2010

THE POLICY: People who have worked at Pinterest for at least 2 years and decide to leave for any reason are given 7 years to exercise their options instead of the usual 90 days.

HOW THEY DO IT:Pinterest started by gaining alignment on their philosophy around retention and equity. They offer some questions other companies should ask themselves: Do you believe that equity is part of annual compensation and that your team should have access to it early? Or do you believe that it's intended to be a reward only if and when the company goes public or gets acquired? This philosophy will drive the decision.

“We’ve just made it much easier for team members to leave in one of the most competitive recruiting environments of all time. But that’s a trade-off we got comfortable with.

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General Assembly: We Have You CoveredTHE COMPANY: 400 employees, founded in 2011

THE POLICY: General Assembly covers 90% of health insurance premium costs for every one of its U.S. employees.

HOW THEY DO IT:GA was an early adopter of Sherpaa, the medical concierge service that acts as an insurance broker and provides employees with a dashboard through which they access physicians, insurance information, and more.

This has given the company access to better rates (and reduced employee contributions), and also means GA employees have in-a-moment access to medical advice and resources.

“Ping pong tables and beer kegs can be fun, but we’ve found candidates and employees most appreciate practical considerations like affordable monthly health benefits costs, eliminating their monthly phone bill, and the ability to take our classes for free.”

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The Muse: Taking the PulseTHE COMPANY: 51 employees, founded in 2011

THE POLICY: The Muse covers 100% of medical insurance and 80% of dental insurance for our employees.

HOW THEY DO IT:The Muse regularly surveys its employees to understand what benefits, social activities, and ideas matter most to our team. It's important to them that the team have a voice in decisions that impact them, and every time they’re asked, they give great feedback that allows the Muse to keep improving.

“It's important for us as a company that our team is healthy and has good coverage; we certainly don't want them opting out of insurance because it's expensive

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Change.org: Leave When You Need ItTHE COMPANY: 300 employees, founded in 2007

THE POLICY: Change.org provides 18 weeks of fully paid parental leave for every new parent globally — regardless of gender, or whether the child is biological or adopted. Leave can be taken non-consecutively, within one year of the child’s arrival.

HOW THEY DO IT:Change.org conducted a robust cost-benefit analysis. They believe building the right culture of support, and attracting and retaining top talent, far exceeds the policy’s cost.

“Generous, paid parental leave eliminates the financial hardship of unpaid leave and ensures that all families are able to spend important time with new children. The result is that employees are less stressed, more engaged, and more productive when they come back to work.

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Chartbeat: It Takes a VillageTHE COMPANY: 98 employees, founded in 2009

THE POLICY: Chartbeat provides primary caregivers with 12 weeks of paid maternal or paternal leave, plus 4 weeks of transitional flex time at 100% salary. Secondary caregivers are eligible for 6 weeks paid leave at 100% salary.

HOW THEY DO IT:Chartbeat suggests other small companies survey teams to ask them to prioritize benefits and perks. Employee opinions matter and it's up to leadership teams to craft a policy, like maternal and paternal leave, that makes sense for their company culture.

“Chartbeat genuinely believes in creating an inclusive workplace, and that means building a company with policies that cater to everyone from our interns to seasoned employees.

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360i: Doubling Down on ReviewsTHE COMPANY: 800 employees, founded in 2004

THE POLICY: Rather than annual performance reviews, 360i employees conduct two self-reviews a year focused on what they want to be working on, where they want to go in the coming years, and how current assignments contribute to these goals. The company also ensures cross-functional knowledge sharing at acapabilities day where teams teach oneanother.

WHY THEY DO IT:Instead of top-down management, 306i uses a “team of teams” approach. Aligning on goals on the individual and team levels provides the accountability and business context for 360i to thrive.

“Our guiding principle is simple. we believe that alignment is the most important thing:

What do employees want? What does company need?What do our clients need

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Social Code: Learn the CodeTHE COMPANY: 196 employees, founded 2010

THE POLICY: Every 8 weeks, SocialCode requires all new employees to attend a 3-day training that delves into the ins and outs of the company and industry. Each cohort graduates from the program with an understanding of how they fit into the big picture. The session culminates in a “forget the code” happy hour with the local office so new employees get to know their hosting office as well.

WHY THEY DO IT:The program is led by SocialCode’s training team. Their advice: don’t aim to make your grassroots training program perfect, get it started and iterate. Employees are hungry and engaged, so feed them with your mission, vision and know-how.

“This program gives employees the landscape to understand the impact they can and will have at the larger company and team level. Its larger reason for being is that we are a learning culture and this program is all about offering an open book to understanding SocialCode.

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Bonus Points

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