Winner's Curse: Why Losing A B-School Biz Plan Competition Is Better Than Winning
Vivek Wadhwa
Nov 28, 2009

Biz Plan

One of the best things about being an academic is being able to mold young minds and guide them to success. When one of my students, Andrew Leblanc told me he was entering the Duke Startup Challenge Elevator Pitch Competition, I told him to come and see me and do a practice run. After all, I had judged several of these contests at Duke and other universities. I thought I knew what worked.

After the eleventh iteration, Andrew got it right. He wasn’t trying to pack his presentation with unnecessary details. He had slowed down his pitch, added a personal touch and was now exuding confidence. Andrew even researched the background of the judges and tailored his message to their interests. So after two hours of intense preparation, I had little doubt that Andrew would win.

Andrew lost. I was surprised. But what I told him afterward is that it really doesn’t matter. Contrary to what the organizers of these competitions will tell you, university business plan contests don’t produce winning companies. Yes, a number of companies have emerged from business plan bake-offs that have been moderate or small successes. But not a single home-run has emerged from this now-omnipresent practice.

This is not to say that the contests are bad. Instead, they educate students in entrepreneurship and motivate them to come up with interesting ideas. But for all of you out there who think a biz plan victory is a ticket to the big time, think again. And for all the engineering students who think any outcome but victory is a waste of time, you also need to think again. Even though he lost, Andrew met a potential partner and also got to speak with Bill Maris of Google Ventures, a priceless encounter. (Bill promised to introduce Andrew to the Google Power Meter team. Don’t forget, Bill!).

In fact, let me throw out a radical thought. I submit that losing in a business plan contest is actually more beneficial than winning. There is a growing body of research that children who are praised too early and too easily end up under-performing peers who are not praised but are told, in constructive terms, they can do better. This is one of the core tenets of Po Bronson’s new book on parenting, “Nurture Shock.”

Extending this to the realm of entrepreneurship might be a leap (and it could be great fodder for a future PhD dissertation). But to me the outcomes don’t lie. Business plan competitions don’t breed winning businesses. Rather than winning a beauty contest, building a business is a marathon that requires steady and constant effort, surmounting regular difficulties, and living through emotional peaks and valleys.

The very roots of the current business plan craze go back to one of the periods that represents a low-point in sane business practices. The business plan competitions first started in the dotcom days. At that time, there was a frantic rush to start new companies. Entrepreneurs would create professional-looking, buzzword-laden business plans. Venture capitalists would then trip over each other to fund these plans, usually with way too much money. The prevailing theory was that a good business idea and enough money were enough to create the next hot IPO. B-schools readily jumped on the bandwagon and soon an arms race ensued to see which school could offer a bigger prize to winners.

With the bursting of the dotcom bubble, the tech world was reminded that even a great idea funded by venture capital didn’t necessarily produce business success. In hindsight everyone saw that it took more than a good idea. It took a thorough understanding of the market, excellent management, and the ability to navigate rough waters to build a thriving enterprise. Some of the biggest dotcom winners came from me-too ideas that were executed better than the originals.

Nor was this anomalous. Ask any seasoned entrepreneur in any industry, and he or she will likely tell you that his or her first business plan was probably the best work of fiction they ever created. A glimpse back through the big winners of the Dotcom Era also underscores the lack of impact business plan competitions actually had. Amazon, Google, Ebay, Yahoo—none of them won a business plan contest. In fact, not a single home run from that era won a business plan contest. And one of the biggest successes of its time,  Akamai Technologies, actually lost the M.I.T. $100K  contest.

After the great Internet Bubble burst, venture capitalists and entrepreneurs quickly adapted to the new reality and went back to basics. But no one told the b-schools. From Silicon Valley to Research Triangle Park to New Delhi and Shanghai, new contests are still sprouting. Only now, the prizes have gotten bigger and the competitions more serious. Yet real successes remains non-existent. (If I’m wrong in five years on this, then call me out). But failure is no surprise for these b-school business launches

Without a solid understanding of market needs and real-world validation of their ideas, few young entrepreneurs can achieve their business-plan projections. The hottest startup methodologies of today, built around ideas fostered by Y-Combinator and TechStars emphasize giving startups almost no money and encouraging them to get a product to market as quickly as possible in order to get real world validation. This is almost the exact opposite of the current business school competition ecosystem, where market validation is non-existent.

So realistically, few of the business school plan entrants can even understand whether their business plans even make sense. Business plan judges, for their part, are equally in the dark most times. Andrew’s plan involved utilities and power management, a topic I know virtually nothing about. B-school contest judges are usually generalists who have only superficial insights into the internal dynamics of the industries at which these plans are aimed. It would seem, then, that the insights of long-time experts in those industries would likely be far more valuable to a prospective entrepreneur.

Again, I am not at all saying that business school plans are inherently bad. To the contrary, Andrew learned an enormous amount about starting a business, the importance of understanding markets, utility and power management technologies, and team building. His plan to build software that would allow residents of college dorms to track their power usage through a visual interface and more easily understand the direct impact of their behaviors on electricity consumption was not a bad idea. In fact, it was a good enough idea that many others are currently attempting similar types of systems for various social settings and environments. My colleague, Lesa Mitchell at the Kauffman Foundation believes that these contests foster collaboration between business school students and engineers or scientists. This, she says, teaches valuable lessons about launching businesses to both potential inventors and would-be CEOs alike.

Finally, let’s not confuse failure to execute or unrealistic plan expectations with bad ideas. Young CEOs going into industries they barely know armed with b-school plan competition money are like lambs to the slaughter. But the core idea behind their plan may be quite innovative and powerful.

My takeaway from all this? If you want to be a successful entrepreneur, don’t win a business plan competition. If you do win, your first act might be to hire a CEO with industry experience. And win or lose, the most valuable lessons you’ll learn will come more from playing the game than from coming up with the best plan.

Editor’s note: Guest writer Vivek Wadhwa is an entrepreneur turned academic. He is a Visiting Scholar at UC-Berkeley, Senior Research Associate at Harvard Law School and Director of Research at the Center for Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization at Duke University. Follow him on Twitter at @vwadhwa.

Advertisement
Advertisement
  • http://www.ramanean.com Ramanean

    You got it right till the last sentence

    ButI disagree with your “If you do win, your first act might be to hire a CEO with industry experience.”

    A person (entrepreneur) himself may be a better CEO than the hired one..

    Always there is too much bragging about these B-schools.. It seems many have the notion that with out a B-School degree you can’t do anything is business which is completely wrong..

    There have been entrepreneur’s who have been more successful than their B-school counterparts..

  • http://www.lukeko.com sthapit

    great article but i think it’s mostly a statistical reason that more business plan losers than winners end up producing successful companies. if there are 1 in 20 plans that win a contest and the probability of success for the winner is 0.20 then the probability of success for the remaining 19 companies (even at 0.05) is 0.05*19 ~ 1.

    p.s. isn’t analysis spelled wrong in the jpeg on top of the article?

  • Anon

    To bulk up the blog, add a note about Fed Ex. Same story, different era.

  • Vikas Aditya

    Winning at b-school can make you a Consultant. You can work for the McKinsey’s and alike. It can’t produce entrepreneurs. Consultants deals and wants things in orderly way while entrepreneurs deals with uncertainties and chaos with no clear sign of outcome.

    Being the best academically doesn’t promise the business creation capabilities at all.

  • http://www.mobikwik.com Mr Mobi Singh

    We have paying customers, rave media reviews yet no business plan as of now and the last time I wrote one it got rejected at a popular Indian B-School called IIM…

    Products rule, Plans dont!

  • http://currentnewstrends.net/?p=10521 Why Losing A » Current News Trends

    [...] Trending Topic: Why Losing A [...]

  • IntellectGetOne

    +1

  • Graham

    Or, more simply, it’s just mean regression.

  • Dave Hanna

    What is truly evident is that the teachers (judges) for the most part and who have been academics most of their lives do not have a clue how to recognize, market or sell to the public at large.

    They are consumers and parroting what they have read in other text books and not from real life business experience- how sad a commentary is that for our students

  • http://popurls.com/pop === popurls.com === popular today

    === popurls.com === popular today…

    yeah! this story has entered the popular today section on popurls.com…

  • http://www.sunshineny.com Joseph Raby

    I’m the cofounder of a new york shared office space company called sunshine suites. Throughout the past 8 years, I’ve seen thousands of businesses and can say that its been my experience that a hired gun for ceo isn’t close to the entrepreneur himself as ceo. I agree with you 100% @ramanean.

  • http://www.twitlan.com Tweet in 81 different languages

    Exactly… These IIM’s are useful for nothing…

  • http://sco.tt/ Scott Yates

    I knew a writer who won a Pulitzer Prize, and the same set of columns was submitted to the New Jersey Press Association where he didn’t even win an honorable mention.

    There’s only one first prize in startups, and that’s selling your company to another company.

  • JJJ

    another article thats loaded with a bunch of opinions with false reasoning.

    -Amazon, Google, Ebay, Yahoo—none of them won a business plan contest.

    did they even enter into business plan contests?

    -university business plan contests don’t produce winning companies.

    then what does? (we can see that nothing does, but the learning experience, as you have suggested, helps?)

    -Contrary to what the organizers of these competitions will tell you, university business plan contests don’t produce winning companies.

    does any organizer explicitly state that winning the contest will result in a “winning” company?

    -If you want to be a successful entrepreneur, don’t win a business plan competition.

    so you suggest don’t even enter a business plan competition? but didnt you also say that it “starting a business, the importance of understanding markets, utility and power management technologies, and team building.”?

    anyways, i understand your gist that b-plan comps are the “end all, be all” but you gotta start somewhere and somehow.

  • Al Switzer

    Indeed, the law of large numbers says that while large companies can attract a winner, that person’s actual influence is diminished by the company’s size and the fact that only a so many products can be delivered (so this applies to Google and Microsoft in the tech business)

    Interestingly, when you compare business with sports teams, teams have a limited roster size, so stars have a greater impact.

    Your graphic brings up a few compelling points. There’s a link in the chain labeled “work” and you can’t possibly factor in execution in a competition. It’s overwhelmingly important.

    And analysis (sp). Analysis of a new idea or business plan is more a simulation than an analysis. In competition space, conditions are frozen, but in the real world, a plan’s a strategy that must adapt.

    There’s a saying that the best PhD’s apply the skills they’ve learned in writing their thesis to different problems, and bad PhD’s spend their careers defending their thesis. (like a frozen business plan)

  • VK

    Well not always true.

    I am not aware of all the big B-School Competitions. But my School ( Cass Business School) had a competition and the panel of judges had 8 members (2 strategy profs, 3 VCs/angels, 3 Entrepreneurs) . So I am not sure if your comment is entirely true.
    And as per what Mr Wadhwa has written about getting the market validation, thats exactly the advice we all got. If big – American B-School do not emphasize on market validation and just get impressed by the idea and throw millions, I ll be surprised. I believe the money ( only a small amount required) from the plan is more of a seed money to actually get the prototypes ready or even product ready for intial market testing and big bucks can follow later.

  • @ChicagoBooth

    Great article. And I agree with the gist of the article, but I think Vivek made the article a bit more controversial than it needed to be.

    “Yes, a number of companies have emerged from business plan bake-offs that have been moderate or small successes. But not a single home-run has emerged from this now-omnipresent practice.”

    That’s because of the simple statistical reason that sthapit gave.

    “I submit that losing in a business plan contest is actually more beneficial than winning.”

    I can understand that winning a plan may not mean much. But you will have a tough time convincing me that winning a plan is actually worse than losing.

    The primary goal of these business school competitions (that you didn’t highlight) is to help the students go through the due diligence process, help them learn to work on all aspects of a business (and business plan), and to be better prepared whenever they try to start a venture. The primary goal is not to create a company from the winners of the competition.

    I can give you my example at Chicago Booth’s New Venture Challenge. I am taking part in this competition next quarter. And I have already learned how I was too “product focused” before joining Booth. I was very sure that if I create an awesome product, the users will come. Whereas, now I spend a lot of time reaching out to my target market to ensure that what I am producing is not out of thin air. And I am spending a lot of time trying to sell the product. The New Venture Challenge already taught me that just as we need to deliver early and iterate, we also need to research and sell in the market early and iterate.

    These competitions (at least the New Venture Challenge in Chicago Booth) have all the judges from the investment or entrepreneurship background. Even the professors are previous Venture Capitalists or Serial Entrepreneurs. These are not traditional academic people judging your business plans.

    Anyway, my take from this article is — Going through the competition is the real value, not actually winning it.

  • @ChicagoBooth

    Oh and last year Bump won the business plan competition at Chicago Booth. And if Bump can really evolve into sharing photos/videos/songs and/or exchanging money, then I can see Bump becoming a huge success.

  • jz

    name a compnay that came from that?

  • jz

    if you can’t be the CEO of your own company, then dont build one

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Phineas_Barnes/520287035 Phineas Barnes

    Every year I see hundreds of plans and watch the entrepreneurs (funded or not) who achieve success do so by pivoting to the opportunity. I think the problem with the winners in a b-school competition is not that they win, but that they view the contest outcome as validation of the idea/business. MBA’s are trained to look for an answer and so “losing” a competition forces that search to continue, forces the entrepreneur to iterate and search for validation (maybe even from the market as novel as that concept may seem). For me, it is this continued search that is common among successful entrepreneurs — it is not about winning or losing the competition but about maintaining or losing your drive to iterate and improve your fit with the market

  • Shashi

    Tell me about it. Their servers crashed today while conducting online entrance test for the first time.

    There is a hell lot of a difference between theory and practice and most of these B school plan competitions are nothing but talking about theory.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Benjamin_Bakhshi/3600062 Benjamin Bakhshi
  • Rick R

    This might explain the number of trust fund people with exceptional vocabularies, ivy-league degrees and no ability to do anything other than talk about theory. They put on a good show, until you find out that they have nothing but failure behind them and all they want to do is hire people to work for them to compensate for their gross inadequacies. Then they go and buy a company (with dad’s money), blow it and then blame the founder who exited the deal.

    Disclaimer: One of those guys bought my company and caused it to fail years after I left!

  • http://fastignite.com Sim

    I’ve judged the MIT 100K for many years and am currently an EIR at the MIT E-Center. The biggest problem with business plan competitions is that they skew incentives. An entrepreneur’s incentive should be to build a winning business, not win a business competition. Conversely, good business plan competitions should aim to help build great companies.

    The benefit of business plan competitions is that they pace a team and force it to deliver on a schedule. Many teams benefit from that process and from the feedback they receive along the way.

    The biggest problem I’ve experienced as a judge is that there is no diligence process. Judges are supposed to pick winners based on the claims of the entrepreneurs alone (and a bit of face-to-face time). Without diligence, the teams have an incentive to exaggerate as there is no penalty for slight exaggeration. Judges can only react to gross exaggerations. Teams that are in touch with reality, customers and that understand the challenges involved in building successful businesses have a higher likelihood of being subtly penalized during judging when reviewed alongside folks more likely to over-promise. No, it’s not easy for judges to correct for this.

    The solution is to introduce diligence as an integral part of business plan competitions. The suggestion I made to the 100K was to organize a diligence team that runs alongside teams participating in the competition. The goal of the diligence team is not to poke holes at the entrepreneurs’ dreams. It is to make the teams and the companies they want to build stronger and more likely to survive in the real world. And, yes, in the end, hopefully more deserving companies would win and there will be a higher correlation over time between companies that win and companies that succeed. Wouldn’t that be nice?

    Alas, the student-organized MIT 100K competition is finding little interest inside the MIT and Sloan student bodies to participate in the diligence process.

    In the end, it is the entrepreneurs that lose.

  • areader

    When starting a business, who has time for silly competitions? I just don’t get it.

  • Tom

    The problem with business plan competitions is that they don’t separate the real risk takers from the rest of the students. While you’re in school, it’s easy to “dabble” in entrepreneurship by entering these competitions, especially when you get praise from older people and validation in the form of a prize. However, to make it in the real world, every day you have to invest thousands of your own dollars and years of your life into something that could fail in so many ways if you make a mistake.

    Most people don’t have the stomach for that kind of career risk. In deciding between starting a company and accepting a job offer where they earn a good salary, most non-adrenaline junkies allow themselves to gradually fade into more traditional careers.

    If you really have the confidence you need to start your own company, you just do it. You don’t need to waste a lot of time jumping through the artificial hoops and deadlines of a competition in the hopes that someone else will bless it. That’s the kind of mentality that makes for a great entrepreneur. It’s also something that business plan competitions can’t evaluate…

  • Rob Leclerc

    Adding two datapoints that I know about personally: The guys at http://www.indochino.com lost their schools b-plan competition in Canada, and they have been doing great. The guys at Lickityship won the b-plan competition and they are out of business.

  • Marcio von Muhlen

    I was co-lead organizer of the MIT Clean Energy Prize last year, a national biz plan competition with a $200k cash grand prize (and partner to the MIT 100K). We never thought ourselves capable of designing a competition where the winner was in any way assured of “making it”- the free market (ideally) is the only force capable of determining that. But that wasn’t the point; the author is correct that the perceived ancillary benefits of forming a strong team, making deadlines, and meeting/facing potential customers and investors turn out to be what make the whole thing worth it. The vast majority of the teams realize this too, and the ones who don’t are not the ones who go far. Winning the grand prize is basically a bonus for the the team who gets it, and in the case of MIT CEP if you think $200k and national exposure can’t help a business with zero previous funding then you don’t know how to spend $200k. We are also implementing a due diligence process as Sim suggests.

    Regarding judges, our entrepreneur/VC/faculty ratio is roughly 3:3:1, and the faculty are generally MIT profs who have started multiple companies themselves. At other schools, the relative number of faculty should probably be lower – having real entrepreneurial experience and investor perspective in the judging rooms is hugely important. All VCs is also bad; it’s easier to organize but then the judges are looking for deal flow more then donating expertise.

    Is a b.p. competition for everyone? Probably not, I’d take being a part of y-comb before winning the 100k. But it almost certainly does not hurt to apply, the paperwork is minimal and you never know who you might meet or impress.

    And a big success who actually won such a competition? How about EnerNOC, a $600M public co that won the Dartmouth competition in 2002.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Dean_Higginbotham/649448517 Dean Higginbotham

    +1

  • yeah

    i love the people at indochin. i have to agree with some of the other commenters in that statistically there are far more losers than winners at the end of the winner’s circle and that generally it’s probably true that more of these losers end up being bigger winners at the end of it all because they ended up doing it themselves, their way, and failed along the way. there’s a lot of benefits to failing sometimes.

  • yeah

    i think losing this type of contest can be one of the best things to happen to an entreprenuer or someone who wants to make it big and have an impact. of course being that type a personality it probably bugs them for a bit that they lost but they most likely don’t have time to dwell on their loss because their mind is already in high gear thinking of another plan, another venture, another company, another means. just thinking and then implementing all that stuff that’s in the thoughts. i think these type of competitions are good because they add a little finess to your creating game, and you learn what to do and what not to do. next time you’re pitching something to a potential investor you know to maybe expand on the points that you were critiqued/praised about.

  • http://www.eyeviewdigital.com/ Tal Riesenfeld

    Interesting article, and a few very good points.

    I am one of the founders of EyeView (http://www.eyeviewdigital.com/ ).We submitted our business plan for EyeView, with the idea of providing a complete solution for increasing website conversion through video. We competed with 80 teams and won first place in the Harvard Business School 2008 business plan competition.

    Since then we grew the company to over 20 employees with over 85 customers and are expanding rapidly month over month.

    I don’t feel that participating in the competition or winning it is what made us successful, BUT it certainly gave us good visibility in the VC world and helped us get a few term sheets on our table early on.

    I hope it will take us less than five years to call you out :)

  • http://heartcomealive.blogspot.com Jonathan

    very interesting article. somewhat controversial, but offers a fresh/different perspective. i like it. i was actually at the competition and my teams competed. i was disappointed we didn’t win, but it was a great experience for us nonetheless.

  • Steve

    Good entrepreneurs make order out of chaos. Then they dive into more chaos and make order out of that. Because businesses that are pure chaos are not businesses long.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Not all entrepreneurs make good CEO’s. Not all CEO’s are good entrepreneurs. It sometimes makes sense to bring in experienced people to lead the company to success.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Simeon, these are great observations and insights. I agree with what you wrote.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Yes, there is a lot of “noise” in the system and some of those with the most potential get “crowded out”.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Marcio, I’ve never heard of EnerNOC, but if it is as you say, it is the only significant success I’ve heard of since the dot com bust.

    I wonder if any other readers have information about this company.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    I look forward to being called out on this one! Wish you lots of success.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    There are hundreds of losers. But the point is that winning or losing the contest isn’t what make the difference in the long term. It’s all about building products which the market wants and executing with precision.

    I thought the graphic was cute (with the error).

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Yes, I am told that Fedex also lost. But look at them now,

  • http://techcrunchies.com Anand Srinivasan

    Plain truth : Participating in B-Plan competitions today are nothing but a means to spice up one’s resume..

  • Bill Aulet

    This is a great topic. Just to clarify a few things:

    1. EnerNOC (Tim Healy and David Brewster) did not win the Dartmouth Business Plan competition but entering definitely helped them.

    2. Sim’s comment about tech diligence above in the MIT business plan competition is correct in the past and has been identified. In fact with the MIT Clean Energy Prize, there is a strong tech due diligence process with some of the world leaders in the category the team is entered in when they get to the final 20. The $100K is looking at how to address this issue as well. There has to be an ability to get a read on whether the tech claims made are legit or not, otherwise it is an impossible task for judges in a short time frame to make credible decisions.
    3. That being said (and having been on a team that won the $100K competition and seen literally over hundred more, winning the competition is not the most important things at all. Wanting to win it is very important but coming out of the competition with a strong team, a deep belief to that team that the business will work and finally some good exposure (i.e., broadening of the network) is what is most valuable. The “internal momentum” for a team is more important than the “external momentum”.

    Congrats on a very good piece. The track record of “losers” in the competitions is in fact better than the track record of “winners” when you look over the longer term.

    Bill

  • Vikas Aditya

    yes Good entrepreneurs make order out of chaos..Then they dive into more chaos and make order out of that..once they are done converting chaos into orderliness..they become a businessman..for many entrepreneurs it will be a routine and soon they will start thinking of a new venture..afterall a chase is sweeter than a catch!

  • http://www.myzeo.com Ben Rubin

    This makes a great deal of sense. I co-founded Zeo (we make a home sleep monitor and coach) and we competed in a number of business plan competitions while we were students. At the Brown business plan competition we were the first place losers – the winner was a company called Firefly that was building an electronic pricing system for supermarkets. About 2 weeks after winning the competition a trip to a local grocery store revealed a new set of electronic pricing tags with the same bundle of features and benefits – already deployed!
    Some basic diligence would have revealed this. If this diligence was done alongside the Firefly team (ie. before the business plan competition) the feedback could have been integrated and a variant or new idea could have been generated that might have won in the real world.
    Sim – you mention the student body of MIT/Sloan as a diligence team – and their being little interest. Wouldn’t a diligence team of successful entrepreneurs and industry experts be more valuable to the teams? Not sure if there would be interest from that community but I would certainly help if asked.

    Ben

  • http://savemefrombschool.com/ Amanda Peyton

    Not sure how you define “home run” but the year that Akamai lost the MIT competition, 1998, the winner was a company called Direct Hit. They were acquired by Ask Jeeves in 2000 for $506 million. Here’s the original story from The Tech: http://tech.mit.edu/V118/N26/50k.26n.html

    There are many benefits to entering a business plan contest that have nothing to do with “winning.” I think of business plan contests as an extension of the Career Services office that educates students on how to be entrepreneurs. Whether entrepreneurship can be taught is another post entirely, but there are certain skills – how to raise money, how to do market research, how to find a team, how to price your product – that you can most certainly learn from entering and participating in these contests.

  • Sharon Gold

    Great point. I agree.

  • Sharon Gold

    Good points. The biggest problem is always the lack of due diligence. In the short time which competitors have, they could say practically anything and get away with it for new markets.

  • Sharon Gold

    Thousands of really smart students seem to. Go to any university event and you’ll see hundreds at every school competing.

  • Sharon Gold

    Professor, that’s an excellent point. I was one of them a few years ago. I had some great ideas but couldn’t be bothered about the MBA students I was up against.

  • Sharon Gold

    Professor, that is a very nice thing for you to say. I admire the way you look after your students. I wish I was one of them! Andrew has no idea how lucky he is to have a coach like you who goes to the extent of giving him encouragement in public.

  • Sharon Gold

    Professor, I’ve read this three times. I learned something every time. You write very deep, profound and meaningful posts. Thank you!!

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Again, I don’t know EnerNOC, but if it lost the MIT contest, it would be in the same league as Akamai, wouldn’t it?

    That’s the point…the losers win. You gain the most by playing the game.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Thank you, Sharon for your nice words.

  • Joester

    For me, this article brings into question the value of an MBA. Off the top of your head, can you think of any successful company (Internet or not) that was founded by an MBA?

    It always seemed odd to me that there are thousands graduating from top B-schools every year and yet you can count on one hand the number of Fortune 500 companies founded by MBAs.

  • yeah

    yeah thanks vivek. i feel like i’m getting a better insight in professions i might be interested in that are tech related but not necessairly hardcore tech, considering i am not a science or math student. i’ve been asking better questions from my teachers and figuring out if i’m cut out for business or not.

  • areader

    can you imagine if these thousands of really smart students were focusing on starting companies? Imagine the the great companies that would come from that? It is a shame they are so easily distracted.

  • http://tellmypolitican.com Tim

    Omniture, I would believe.

  • Tony Basham

    The professor is right, you do need to hire a CEO when you don’t have the experience and skills yourself. What does a kid out of school know about managing people and making payroll?

  • Tony Basham

    I meant to add that this was a really excellent article. Well above the quality of other posts I see here (not to say they aren’t great — just not of this quality).

  • Tony Basham

    Professor, this is a great article by the way. You nailed the issues!

  • Tony Basham

    I agree too!!

  • Tony Basham

    JJJ, it is clear that this stuff is over your head. I’ve lived this. He’s right. Are you a business plan organizer, by the way. you seem awful defensive!!

  • Tony Basham

    No, you always need to hire the best person for the job. If you’re fresh out of school, you probably don’t qualify for the job.

  • Tony Basham

    Good point. But they need to learn the basics and as this blog says, these are a start.

  • Tony Basham

    EnerNOC LOST!! That is the point this blog makes!!

  • Tony Basham

    No, they do much more than spice resumes. Is this how you “spiced” yours?

  • Tony Basham

    That was during the dot com days when everything was over-valued and silly companies did well.

  • Tony Basham

    Professor, thanks for taking the time to teach all of us budding entrepeneurs. This is great stuff.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Rob, that is the mail point I wanted to make — it’s not about winning, it’s about learning. I know many students who lost and got discouraged. They were actually smarter than some I knew who won the contests.

  • Monica Kate

    There are many great companies founded by MBA’s including the one I work at!

  • Monica Kate

    Prof. I agree with all the postive comments here. Great points you made!

  • Monica Kate

    Fedex lost and won in the end.

  • Monica Kate

    You’re right. It is all about pivoting the opportunity. I know my company’s CEO did just that.

  • Monica Kate

    I echo Sharon and Tony’s sentiments. This is really encouraging and positive and helpful. THANKS!!!!

  • http://techcrunchies.com Anand Srinivasan

    No., I never participated in any..

  • batman22

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: “a dog-and-pony show is a dog-and-pony-show is a dog-and-pony show”.

  • ScottH

    Here is another one:

    1-800-Contacts was a finalist at BYU’s business plan competition, but it lost (I’m not sure who won – I’ve heard it was a mobile snowcone retailer)

  • Monica

    What ever happened between Andrew and Bill Maris? Did he help Andrew with his venture, I wonder?

  • Monica

    Yes, that is often the case!!!

  • Monica

    Another comment loaded with stupidity. This is a blog, and blogs are always opinion, not scientific research!!

  • Monica

    Doesn’t that prove what the professor said, that the losers are more likely to win the big race?

  • Monica

    More proof of what I also believe — these competition’s aren’t what they are supposed to be.

  • Monica

    Not when the rewards are $100K and these are billed as future successes.

  • http://www.masshightech.com/blog/2009/11/30/winners-losers-in-business-plan-competitions/ Winners = losers in business plan competitions? « Mass High Tech Blog

    [...] judge Vivek Wadhwa weighs in at TechCrunch, suggesting that losing business plan competitions may be better for startups than winning. Wadhwa calls the competitions a relic of the dot-com era, and compares winners to [...]

  • adrian spindler

    Very good point. Fedex was a loser which won.

  • adrian spindler

    There are other first prizes — doing good for the world.

  • adrian spindler

    What ever happened with Google Ventures and Andrew. Prof. — I admire you for going all out for your students like this — including writing a really great article like this.

    I wish there were more professors like you who care so much!

  • adrian spindler

    I might know someone who knows Bill Maris from Google. Please post here if you need me to contact him for Andrew.

  • AS

    I’d also be very interested in reading about Andrew’s ideas. Maybe we get other colleges together to sponsor something like this?

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Paramendra_Kumar_Bhagat/621599484 Paramendra Kumar Bhagat

    You win some, you lose some, and then there is that little known category.

  • david

    Exactly. If you really have a sound plan, you won’t have time for classes, let alone a competition.

    And why would anyone want an MBA if your goal is to start a business? You get an MBA to work at Goldman Sachs not become independent.

  • http://www.wadhwa.com Vivek Wadhwa

    Adrian, thanks. Yes, Bill Maris did send an email this morning and introduced Andrew to the Google team.

  • furi

    You are funny!

  • batman22

    LOL!! Exactly.

    In case you’re not following (and I apologize if I’m sounding condescending), I just said, “A dog and pony show is a dog and pony show.”

    To which you replied, “Not when it’s a dog and pony show!”

  • http://timberry.bplans.com/2009/12/some-good-points-but-winning-a-business-plan-competition-is-still-better-than-losing-one.html Interesting Points, But Winning a Business Plan Competition is Still Better Than Losing One

    [...] Plan Contest, Venture Contests This morning I can’t resist writing about Vivek Wadhwa’s Winner’s Curse post on TechCrunch last weekend. Odd combination: it’s interesting, thoughtful, well-written, [...]

  • Shiraz

    Actually, there are different skills that are needed to start a company and then to run it. Both can be done by the same individual, sure, but it has been relatively consistent that startups that survive more than 5 years often have someone else come on board to take over the reigns, allowing the entrepreneur to sit back and watch his/her equity grow, or move to another new venture.

    Just some MBA thoughts :P

  • Chris

    We are in the process of updating more business plan competitions. If you know of any, please submit them. A huge competition coming up is the South Dakota with a $25k prize! More information here: http://www.businessplancompete.com/competitions/

  • rodrigo

    What exactly do you mean by “the losers win”?

    It seems to me that saying that losing is good is a flawed. I’m more inclined to believing that whether you win or lose, you take the same experience from participating at the competition, and that experience may (or may not) serve you well later on. So there’s little difference between a winning and a losing team, except some money and exposure. But there are 20 times more losing teams. Of course you’ll see many more “losers” make it, simply because there are more of them. This only comes to show that competitions aren’t very good at identifying the right winners, but that doesn’t mean that participating in them is useless either. It doesn’t prove the opposite though (i.e., that it’s good to participate in them). For that, we’d have to compare companies that did NOT participate in competitions against those who did (whether they won or lost) and see if there’s any measurable difference…

  • http://www.crashutah.com John Lynn

    Vivek,
    Well done article. I actually agree with you completely that the learning related to the business plan competition is great. I think to my first plan I wrote and I learned the most important lesson was having something that could scale.

    That said, Brigham Young University’s business plan competition has put out a couple big winners in http://www.1800contacts.com/ and a Mexico VoIP Company: http://www.alianza.com/ amongst other successful companies. I think those are the 2 BIG hits with http://propertysolutions.com/ being the next one with Calle after that: http://callerepublic.com/ I think the key for them is that they don’t require their companies to be pre-revenue. BYU also has an amazing group of advisors.

  • http://disruptivegrowth.wordpress.com/2010/01/21/thoughts-on-businessplan-competitions-both-as-a-juror-and-an-entrepreneur/ Thoughts on Businessplan Competitions–both as a juror and an entrepreneur « Disruptive Growth

    [...] that you will automatically receive funding is most likely not right. Sometimes it might be even better to lose a competition as most winners were not the most successful [...]

  • http://blog.shedd.us/are-we-actually-creating-startups-through-business-plan-competitions/ Are We Actually Creating Startups Through Business Plan Competitions? « Robert Shedd

    [...] Wadhwa has some very interesting commentary on the subject on TechCrunch from [...]

  • http://www.youngupstarts.com/2010/04/19/the-chupitos-bar-wins-an-ultimate-start-up-space/ The Chupitos Bar Wins An Ultimate Start-up Space | Young Upstarts

    [...] For the rest of the entries, losing may not be a bad thing either. [...]

blog comments powered by Disqus
Advertisement
Got a tip? Building a startup? Tell us