When I built my first company in the late 90s, this was the prevalent mantra: Get as many eyeballs (the 90s lingo for users) as quickly as possible. We didn’t worry about making money all that much or even figuring out a business model. Back then, the Internet was perceived as a land grab.

Alas, the land was often worth nothing. I find it interesting to see that history seems to repeat itself…

Figuring out how to make money and focusing on how to get to positive cash flow is the best strategy by far. Tweet This Quote

Fueled by a (very) few prominent businesses that are destined to scale at an exponential rate (or as the new word du jour has it: blitzscale), entrepreneurs around the globe seem to believe that it is a valid strategy to focus on building a product without a business model or path to profitability.

Sadly, the outcome of this strategy is nearly always a failed startup and burned out founders.

It might sound distinctly old school, but figuring out how to make money and focusing on how to get to positive cash flow is – for the vast majority of companies – the best strategy by far. Praying for a VC who will fund your company until you are “too big to fail” is not.

Praying for a VC who will fund your company until you are ‘too big to fail’ is not a good strategy. Tweet This Quote

With that, why not spend some cycles on refining your business model, pricing, customer acquisition strategy, and cashflow planning?

I know, it doesn’t sound sexy. But building a growing company that is kicking it for years to come is surely sexy as hell.


This originally published on Pascal’s blog.

Pascal Finette

Author Pascal Finette

Pascal is the Managing Director of Singularity University's Startup Lab. He is also an entrepreneur, coach, and speaker who has worked in Internet powerhouses, such as eBay, Mozilla, and Google, and Venture Capital—starting both a VC firm and accelerator program.

More by Pascal Finette