Last updated on June 13th, 2023

400 Quotes to Focus and Motivate SaaS Companies

Pardeep Kullar
Pardeep Kullar
400 Quotes to Focus and Motivate SaaS Companies

We need to sharpen the brain to make the most of the time we have and a simple quote can change the year. Here are 400 unique quotes from successful entrepreneurs that will focus your mind.

Also read: 25 companies show you their best SaaS pricing models as examples


When was the last time you woke up and said “today I’m going to buy some software/consulting/services/apps/etc?”.

Seriously, when was it?

No One Gives A Sh*t About Your Product.

They want to buy a specific RESULT your product gives them.

Spanx sells undergarments, but is in the RESULTS business of helping women appear slimmer immediately, without having to lose weight.

BeachBody sells workout programs, but is in the RESULTS business of helping you get in shape without having to leave your house.
Mitchell Harper, Founder of BigCommerce


I know most people are looking for our “one top tip” or the magical “hack” that got us customers, there really isn’t any one thing. We grew email by email, Skype by Skype, webinar by webinar, and looking back I can’t distill it down to any one thing.

Des Traynor, Co-founder Intercom, link


Products tend to succeed thanks to a single core use case that really mattered to users
Othman Laraki, Co-founded Mixer Labs link


Keep track of how many times you say ‘if’ when you explain how you’ll be successful
Othman Laraki, Co-founded Mixer Labs link


I’ll assert that market is the most important factor in a startup’s success or failure
Marc Andreessen, Co-founded Netscape, VC link


Each time I have built a team, personal traits — not professional skills — have been what propelled the company forward
David Cancel, Founded Compete link


The single best decision we ever made was to make customer service everyone’s job
David Cancel, Founded Compete


People not caring enough about your product is your true competition, not some other startup
David Cancel, Founded Compete link


Warning signs that your product sucks: “I’m really busy right now but I’ll start using your app soon.”
David Cancel, Founded Compete


The startup “valley of death” lies in between startup success and startup failure and it’s the worst place to get stuck
David Cancel, Founded Compete


The four most powerful words coming from a new hire are: “I’ll figure it out.”
David Cancel, Founded Compete link


The second biggest cause of startup failure: the cost of acquiring customers
David Skok, Serial entrepreneur, VC link


In the startup world, if your primary focus is on making money, you usually won’t make money
David Skok, Serial entrepreneur, VC link


The most important factor to increasing growth is not the Viral Coefficient, but the Viral Cycle Time
David Skok, Serial entrepreneur, VC link


Let’s drop the farce, ok? Even when you had to work eighty hours, you didn’t, really
Naval, Founder & CEO, AngelList link


Keep the team small. All doers, no talkers. Absolutely no middle managers
Naval, Founder & CEO, AngelList link


There isn’t a shortage of developers and designers. There’s a surplus of founders
Naval, Founder & CEO, AngelList link


No, people aren’t getting any smarter or harder-working. But the amount of leverage is obscene
Naval, Founder & CEO, AngelList link


All sorts of businesses are being built by violating assumptions about the privacy of data
Naval, Founder & CEO, AngelList link


The 5 main qualities of an ‘exceptional startup’. 1. Traction
Naval, Founder & CEO, AngelList link


You just have to throw away much of your guilt and self-doubt
Erica Douglass, Serial Entrepreneur link


You can’t “success” your way out of comparing yourself to others
Erica Douglass, Serial Entrepreneur link


Too many entrepreneurs go after tiny markets and then charge too little to really make a difference
Erica Douglass, Serial Entrepreneur link


When you look at your competitors, remember that everything looks perfect at a distance
Bob Parsons, Founder, GoDaddy link


Most people don’t know why they’re doing what they’re doing. They imitate others, go with the flow, follow paths without making their own
Derek Sivers, Founder, CD Baby


You can’t please everyone, so proudly exclude people
Derek Sivers, Founder, CD Baby link


If you’re not saying “HELL YEAH!” about something, then say no
Derek Sivers, Founder of CD Baby link


Smart people don’t think others are stupid
Derek Sivers, Founder of CD Baby link


Shut up! Announcing your plans makes you less motivated to accomplish them
Derek Sivers, Founder of CD Baby link


I’m (almost) always encouraged when I hear people complain about the service, because it means that people care
Daniel Ek, Co-founder, Spotify link


Avoid letting raising money distract you from what really matters — building a great product and delighting your users
Ian Hogarth, Co-founder, SongKick link


Forget startup orthodoxy. Just do it! Practical action is the antidote to anxieties about your skills deficiencies
Michelle You, Co-founder, SongKick link


Our overnight success took 1000 days
Brian Chesky, Co-founder, Airbnb


One reason you need resilience in a startup is that you are going to get rejected a lot
Jessica Livingstone, FoundersAtWork link


This is one of the biggest things the rest of the world doesn’t understand about hackers. They simply enjoy building things
Jessica Livingstone, FoundersAtWork link


The only products we make at Evernote, we make for ourselves. We are the customers.
Phil Libin, Founder & CEO, Evernote link


Everyone else is your boss — all of your employees, customers, partners, users, media are your boss.
Phil Libin, Founder & CEO, Evernote link


Observe the world around you — everything you do, and especially everything you hate to do
Aaron Patzer, Founder, Mint.com link


I’m not that good at changing the world through art, and should stick to what I know: science.
Max Levchin, Co-founded Paypal link


The path forward for me is to seek that balance of hard, valuable and fun in every project I start
Max Levchin, Co-founded Paypal link


If you aren’t willing to take a shot by going full time it tells investors you aren’t confident enough in the idea or in yourself
Mark Suster, Entrepreneur, VC link


Entrepreneurs don’t “noodle,” they “do.” This is what separates entrepreneurs from big executives, consultants and investors
Mark Suster, Entrepreneur, VC link


Your founding team should never have more than 2 people total (including you)
Mark Suster, Entrepreneur, VC link


The degree to which a company can utilize habit-forming technologies will increasingly decide which products succeed
Nir eyal, Writer, TC, Forbes, NirandFar link


People ask me who inspires me. I have been inspired in my work by stuff that people make
Caterina Fake, Co-founded Flickr, Hunch link


The best time to start a company is always two years ago, and the next best time is now
Caterina Fake, Co-founded Flickr, Hunch link


Ask yourself the question: what do you wish someone would make for you?
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


Determination. This has turned out to be the most important quality in startup founders
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


You need persistence because everything takes longer than you expect
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


To make a startup recession-proof is to do exactly what you should do anyway: run it as cheaply as possible
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


You can only avoid competition by avoiding good ideas.
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


Founders are more motivated by the fear of looking bad than by the hope of getting millions of dollars
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


I noticed a pattern in the least successful startups we’d funded: they all seemed hard to talk to
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


The people who started using it used it the way we had hoped. I think those few people kept Pinterest going
Ben Silbermann, Co-founder, Pinterest link


The few people who used it, myself among them, really loved it. Instead of changing it, we’d find more people like me
Ben Silbermann, Co-founder, Pinterest link


A modern productive worker is someone who does a great job in figuring out what to do next
Seth Godin, Entrepreneur, Author link


Persistence isn’t using the same tactics over and over. Persistence is having the same goal over and over.
Seth Godin, Entrepreneur, Author link


You can’t have good ideas unless you’re willing to generate a lot of bad ones
Seth Godin, Entrepreneur, Author link


The more aggressively you redefine the problem, the more likely it is you’re going to solve it
Seth Godin, Entrepreneur, Author link


This is not checkers; this is mutherfuckin’ chess — Technology businesses tend to be extremely complex
Ben Horowitz, Entrepreneur, VC link


CEOs often either: 1. take things too personally 2. Do not take things personally enough
Ben Horowitz, Entrepreneur, VC link


It generally takes years for a founder to develop the CEO skill set
Ben Horowitz, Entrepreneur, VC link


My single biggest personal improvement as CEO occurred on the day when I stopped being too positive
Ben Horowitz, Entrepreneur, VC link


Early in a startup, product decisions should be hunch driven. Later on, product decisions should be data driven
Fred Wilson, VC, Union Square link


Ideas that most people derided as ridiculous have produced the best outcomes. Don’t do the obvious thing
Fred Wilson, VC, Union Square link


I’d rather have conviction and be wrong than have doubts and be right
Fred Wilson, VC, Union Square link


“Fail!” is the cry of someone who doesn’t create, doesn’t ship, doesn’t launch, who doesn’t make things
Anil Dash, Serial Entrepreneur, Writer link


Sometimes if you do something very difficult, and you do it really well, the end result is that your achievement becomes completely invisible
Anil Dash, Serial Entrepreneur, Writer link


When you operate believing you’re the best person, or the only person to do specific task, you undermine the confidence of your employees
Mike Michalowicz, CEO, Provendus link


Under Promise, Over Deliver
Mike Michalowicz, CEO, Provendus link


Startups are not about working on a great idea — they are the relentless pursuit of doing stuff for customers
Elad Gil, Co-founded MIxer Labs link


4 Ways Startups Fail. 1. Run out of money
Elad Gil, Co-founded MIxer Labs link


If your startup needs multiple miracles to succeed, you need to go back to the drawing board
Elad Gil, Co-founded MIxer Labs link


Avoiding perpetual “try not to die mode” is the only way to rediscover the ambition and drive to shoot really big
Elad Gil, Co-founded MIxer Labs link


Many startups fail because the founding team thinks ‘too big’ from day one
Elad Gil, Co-founded MIxer Labs link


A key job of the founder is to identify the single binding constraint for the startup at any given time
Albert Wenger, VC, Entrepreneur link


Offense is the best defense for startups… As a startup you don’t really have anything to defend yet
Albert Wenger, VC, Entrepreneur link


As soon as your new startup has some actual end users a fear of changes sets in
Albert Wenger, VC, Entrepreneur link


First-time entrepreneurs often fail to realize that when you build something new, no one will care
Chris Dixon, Entrepreneur, Investor link


There’s great stuff between failure and Facebook
Chris Dixon, Entrepreneur, Investor link


The next big thing always starts out being dismissed as a ‘toy’
Chris Dixon, Entrepreneur, Investor link


Startups are primarly competing against indifference, lack of awareness, and lack of understanding — not other startups
Chris Dixon, Entrepreneur, Investor link


Everyone should have vesting. If you have a lawyer who tells you otherwise, get a new lawyer
Chris Dixon, Entrepreneur, Investor link


You must confirm the marketing ahead of time: blogs, twitterers, ad buys, etc… Don’t leave it up to chance.
Noah Kagan, Chief Sumo, AppSumo link


Instant Value. This is easily the most important thing.
Noah Kagan, Chief Sumo, AppSumo link


You should always try to have at least six people interview each candidate that gets hired
Joel, Co-founder, Fog Creek link


A new business is like a shortwave radio. You have to fiddle patiently with all the dials until you get the reception you want
Joel, Co-founder, Fog Creek link


Single worst strategic mistake that any software company can make: Re-write from scratch
Joel, Co-founder, Fog Creek link


Customers Don’t Know What They Want. Stop Expecting Customers to Know What They Want.
Joel, Co-founder, Fog Creek link


Surprisingly few companies take the basic step of attempting to learn about their customers
Eric Ries, Lean Startup Legend link


In an early-stage startup especially, revenue is not an important goal in and of itself
Eric Ries, Lean Startup Legend link


Vanity metrics: numbers that give the illusion of progress but often mask the true relationship between cause and effect
Eric Ries, Lean Startup Legend link


The difference between companies that fail and those that succeed is “the ability to defer gratification.”
Marc Andreessen, VC, Co-founded Netscape link


Entrepreneurs measure progress by “accomplishing their goals”
Steve Blank, Mr.Customer Development link


The founders that make a dent in the universe are dissidents. They are not afraid to tell their bosses they are idiots
Steve Blank, Mr.Customer Development link


A Pivot should not be an excuse for a lack of a coherent strategy or a lack of impulse control
Steve Blank, Mr.Customer Development link


Does anybody really care, or are they giving you polite nods and little more
Steve Blank, Mr.Customer Development link


For startups, the product is the entire startup, not just the product that’s sold
David Cummings, CEO of Pardot link


If you build it and users come and say “this is great!” almost from day one, then the idea is good
James Altucher, Investor, Entrepreneur link


The most common startup mistake is being afraid to make mistakes
James Altucher, Investor, Entrepreneur link


To sell your company, start getting in front of your acquirers a year in advance
James Altucher, Investor, Entrepreneur link


Don’t buy into the 20 hours a day entrepreneur myth. You need to sleep 8 hours a day to have a focused mind
James Altucher, Investor, Entrepreneur link


The MOST IMPORTANT RULE: Have a customer before you start your business
James Altucher, Investor, Entrepreneur link


One trend I noticed between successful startups and failures, is that the failures made a lot of marketing mistakes
Neil Patel , Co-founder Kissmetrics link


Show passion, not perfection
Neil Patel , Co-founder Kissmetrics link


Not one of the successful entrepreneurs I know started as an expert
Jason Cohen, Founder, WP, Smart Bear link


Features, messaging, the path to customers, your competitive edge, your pricing model — all this gets figured out as you go
Jason Cohen, Founder, WP, Smart Bear link


The fallacy is that you’re searching for a theory in a pile of data, rather than forming a theory and running an experiment
Jason Cohen, Founder, WP, Smart Bear link


It’s not your purpose to “beat” another company. It’s your purpose to define yourself on your own terms
Jason Cohen, Founder, WP, Smart Bear link


Impostor syndrome: 40% of successful people consider themselves frauds
Jason Cohen, Founder, WP, Smart Bear link


Do you want to be different from 99% of other companies? Be honest. Be genuine
Jason Cohen, Founder, WP, Smart Bear link


Even a $500 million market is too small for a mega-corporation to attack
Jason Cohen, Founder, WP, Smart Bear link


If you don’t have passion for your code/product/startup everyone will know
Rob Walling, Serial solo entrepreneur link


Your market is most likely not the people who read Digg. Nor the people who read TechCrunch
Rob Walling, Serial solo entrepreneur link


How do we make our customers smile? Every single decision we make comes down to that
Jason Goldberg, Co-founder, Fab link


Mature, but don’t grow up
Jason Goldberg, Co-founder, Fab link


People will do great things for you because they want to, not because they have to
Jason Goldberg, Co-founder, Fab link


The CEO of a startup must, must, must be the product manager. He/she must own the functional user experience
Jason Goldberg, Co-founder, Fab link


Be technical. You don’t have to write code but you do have to understand how it is built and how it works
Jason Goldberg, Co-founder, Fab link


Customers cannot tell you what they need
Guy Kawasaki, Co-founder, Alltop link


Changing your mind is a sign of intelligence
Guy Kawasaki, Co-founder, Alltop link


Experts — journalists, analysts, consultants, bankers, and gurus can’t “do” so they “advise.”
Guy Kawasaki, Co-founder, Alltop link


Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs: 1. “Our projections are conservative.”
Guy Kawasaki, Co-founder, Alltop link


Innovation — the internet and digital kind — are rarely the result of the work of a task force
Rex Hammock, CEO, Hammock link


“kick your own ass” before someone else does
Mark Cuban, Entrepreneur link


What a bunch of BS. ”Follow Your Passion” is easily the worst advice you could ever give or get
Mark Cuban, Entrepreneur link


Every no gets me closer to a yes
Mark Cuban, Entrepreneur link


If someone else makes their product easier to buy or use than you, that is when you lose customers the fastest
Mark Cuban, Entrepreneur link


There are no shortcuts. NONE
Mark Cuban, Entrepreneur link


In a recession, the use of Facebook, Linked In, eCommerce, blogs will increase
George Colony, CEO, Forrester Research link


Until you have 10,000 folks a day coming directly to your domain name, you’re not a brand
Jason Calacanis, Entrepreneur, Investor link


If this was Hollywood, the folks who pay to present to investors are ugly, unpopular and lack talent
Jason Calacanis, Entrepreneur, Investor link


Go to each of your vendors every 6–9 months and ask for 10–30% off
Jason Calacanis, Entrepreneur, Investor link


You don’t need a PR firm, you don’t need an in-house PR person and you don’t need to spend ANY money to get amazing PR
Jason Calacanis, Entrepreneur, Investor link


Buy second monitors for everyone, they will save at least 30 minutes a day, which is 100 hours a year
Jason Calacanis, Entrepreneur, Investor link


if you’re not hearing no a lot (from people or the market) you’re not trying hard enough
Gabriel Weinberg, Founder DuckDuckGo link


Mentors are there to call you on all your bullshit
Gabriel Weinberg, Founder DuckDuckGo link


An ambitious startup idea with just a little bit of traction attracts all the right body parts
Gabriel Weinberg, Founder DuckDuckGo link


5 startup Traction mistakes: 1. They don’t pursue traction in parallel with product development
Gabriel Weinberg, Founder DuckDuckGo link


We’re not competing for attention but for memory
Gabriel Weinberg, Founder DuckDuckGo link


At Balsamiq, we don’t have deadlines. Ever.
Peldi, Founder & CEO, Balsamiq link


song: “Work like you don’t need the money, love like you’ve never been hurt, dance like nobody’s watching”
Peldi, Founder & CEO, Balsamiq link


The middle stage between startup and established business is the hardest in an organization’s growth
Alex Payne, Programmer, Writer, Investor link


The reason a person is critical of a thing is because he is passionate about that thing
Alex Payne, Programmer, Writer, Investor link


We chase patterns that aren’t there and miss eager markets right in front of us
Alex Payne, Programmer, Writer, Investor link


The team should own the vision and direction for the part of your product that it works on
Adam Wiggins, Co-founder, Heroku link


Listen to your customers, but don’t let them tell you what to do
Tom Preston-Werner, GitHub Co-founder link


When I’m old and dying, I plan to look back on my life and say “wow, that was an adventure,” not “wow, I sure felt safe.”
Tom Preston-Werner, GitHub Co-founder link


Truly good decisions are forged from the furnace of argument
Tom Preston-Werner, GitHub Co-founder link


99.5 percent of the people that walk around and say they are a social media expert or guru are clowns
Gary Vaynerchuck, Entrepreneur link


People are the people that can help you. Be completely transparent
Gary Vaynerchuck, Entrepreneur link


I encourage you to reconsider the word “user” and what you call the people who love what you’ve created
Jack Dorsey, Twitter creator link


Our single greatest innovation however, was recognizing that they (people) could do a better job innovating than us
Jack Dorsey, Twitter creator link


I started eBay as an experiment, as a side hobby basically, while I had my day job,
Pierre Omidyar, Founder, Ebay link


Once people are connected… they’re discovering that they can contribute to a community, which is an empowering experience
Pierre Omidyar, Founder, Ebay link


Technology always changes, but people always stay the same
Andrew Chen, Entrepreneur, Former VC link


When’s the last time you spoke to your target customer? If it’s been more than a month, then shame on you!
Andrew Chen, Entrepreneur, Former VC link


You should give people valves to tell you “I hate this!” so that you can learn more faster
Andrew Chen, Entrepreneur, Former VC link


You need a central design vision — there’s no way around that
Andrew Chen, Entrepreneur, Former VC link


When you have a small dataset and lots of variables, you can’t predict shit
Andrew Chen, Entrepreneur, Former VC link


Business models are a commodity now, so “how will they make money?” isn’t an interesting question
Andrew Chen, Entrepreneur, Former VC link


Users aren’t customers, and brand doesn’t equal sales
Erin Bury, Managing Editor, BetaKit link


Suggestions on Interacting with VCs: 1. Be human; be yourself
John Lilly, Former Mozilla CEO, VC link


Data: It’s what turns designers from artists into the most important decision makers in a company
John Lilly, Former Mozilla CEO, VC link


That’s the biggest message from Jobs’ life. Don’t try to be like Steve. Don’t try to be like anyone
John Lilly, Former Mozilla CEO, VC link


Being a good leader: People I’ve worked with know that I really want to help them win
John Lilly, Former Mozilla CEO, VC link


Our most successful companies are led by entrepreneurs who have a unique talent — they are heat seeking missiles
Josh Kopelman, Entrepreneur, VC link


There is a huge burden to getting a consumer to pay anything — and entrepreneurs underestimate the level of effort
Josh Kopelman, Entrepreneur, VC link


Business plan: The moment an entrepreneur hits “save” or “print” the plan is out of date
Josh Kopelman, Entrepreneur, VC link


Deliver different messages to different users based on where they are in their lifecycle
Josh Kopelman, Entrepreneur, VC link


A company’s risk-tolerance level is set by a leader’s reaction to failure
Josh Kopelman, Entrepreneur, VC link


Your friends and family won’t understand what you do
Jason Baptiste, CEO, Onswipe link


Your long term vision and the path that gets you there cannot be stolen
Jason Baptiste, CEO, Onswipe link


If your goal has primarily monetary motivations, look at the unsexy
Jason Baptiste, CEO, Onswipe link


DON’T BREAK WHEN BROKEN
Jason Baptiste, CEO, Onswipe link


We did a lot of things that went against the DNA of our product
Kevin Rose, Founder of Digg link


A lot of what we then considered “working hard” was actually “freaking out”
Caterina Fake, Co-founded Flickr & Hunch link


Address bad news, develop methods to accelerate your personal recovery time, and then quickly take steps to right the ship
Jordan Cooper, Entrepreneur, Investor link


In long term vision, metrics and heuristics cross the chasm from logical to spiritual
Jordan Cooper, Entrepreneur, Investor link


Hire and promote first on the basis of integrity, second, motivation…
Jay Meattle, Doer, Shareaholic link


Raising “too much” capital for an idea is poison
Jay Meattle, Doer, Shareaholic link


When you are working on something that has to ship in two weeks, you realize how much stuff is trying to get your attention that isn’t a priority
Brad Feld, MD, Foundry Group link


Have every employee do customer support for 2 weeks
Brad Feld, MD, Foundry Group link


When you accept the complete and total unimportance of suffering, you can actually enjoy The Struggle
Brad Feld, MD, Foundry Group link


People who get stuff done strive for “good enough.”
Ben Casnocha, Entrepreneur, Author link


How to get useful feedback on your projects: Avoid Like/Dislike
Ben Casnocha, Entrepreneur, Author link


Most eureka moments happen iteratively; that is, one small creative burst leads to another which leads to another
Ben Casnocha, Entrepreneur, Author link


Probability of a deal ever closing declines by 10% each day it doesn’t close
Mike Cassidy, Serial Entrepreneur link


Speed in hiring: Have an offer letter ready before interviewee arrives
Mike Cassidy, Serial Entrepreneur link


“What did you do to build such a strong community on reddit?” We gave a damn
Alexis Ohanian, Reddit link


You don’t find a technical cofounder, you earn one
Jason Freedman, 42Floors link


Too many MBAs think that their education in business can be applied directly to startups
Jason Freedman, 42Floors link


Figure out exactly what you need and just ask for it. Don’t play games, don’t posture, don’t hint
Jason Freedman, 42Floors link


Be yourself. Abnormal people create abnormal returns
Jason Freedman, 42Floors link


We don’t ever engage in some interview question process that has nothing to do with what it’s really like to work with us
Jason Freedman, 42Floors link


Good Design = Elicits the Desired “Feeling/Motivation”
Tony Wright, Entrepreneur, Designer link


Can you tell a story about the product that would make a blogger say, “Holy crap”
Tony Wright, Entrepreneur, Designer link


Fabulous storytelling solves 75% of your PR problems
Tony Wright, Entrepreneur, Designer link


The thing that can pull a team through these rough spots is belief in SOMETHING
Tony Wright, Entrepreneur, Designer link


It doesn’t matter a damn bit what you’re saying, it matters what’s being heard
Tony Wright, Entrepreneur, Designer link


Too few startups these days are genuinely solving super painful problems
Ben Yoskovitz, Founded Standout Jobs link


A product manager is a CEO without all the “other crap” you have to deal with in running a business
Ben Yoskovitz, Founded Standout Jobs link


Product Managers are “NO” people, not “YES” people
Ben Yoskovitz, Founded Standout Jobs link


The Hustler learns the rules quickly — breaks those he needs to — and dances around those he shouldn’t
Ben Yoskovitz, Founded Standout Jobs link


You learn more than you ever could, you can build an incredible network, and you’ll have radically new experiences
Ben Yoskovitz, Founded Standout Jobs link


Technology seems simple if the design is great
Don Dodge, Entrepreneur (AltaVista) link


Don’t pay crazy amounts of money for a domain name. Make your name mean something with good branding and marketing
Don Dodge, Entrepreneur (AltaVista) link


Never start a business focused on solving a big company’s problem. They don’t know they have a problem
Don Dodge, Entrepreneur (AltaVista) link


In big companies: Markets that don’t exist can’t be analyzed or justified
Don Dodge, Entrepreneur (AltaVista) link


How can you get noticed? Don’t expect to tell the whole story, just enough to get them curious and wanting to know more
Don Dodge, Entrepreneur (AltaVista) link


You’re not innovating if: You are always worrying about what other companies are doing
Quintin Adamis, Entrepreneur, VC link


Cliche as it may sound, Knowledge is Power. It allows you to price your products how you like…
Quintin Adamis, Entrepreneur, VC link


Customers are giving us hints. Repeated hints are patterns. Repeating patterns are preferences
Robert Stephens, Founder, Geek Squad link


The publishing industry has been evolving the design of images and text for centuries. Tablet and touch allows it to come together
Robert Stephens, Founder, Geek Squad link


Money is not the motivator of employees. Development, knowledge and passion is
Manish Soni, Some random optician


A good idea is worthless without impeccable execution and a commitment to iterate
Zach Klein, Co-founded Vimeo link


The first question a user has of your site: “Why should I care about this?”
Bob Walsh, Entrepreneur, Writer link


It may not be in their job descriptions, but everyone in a startup should be selling
Martin Zwilling, Startup Professionals link


First take the time to understand what drives you and why
David Lerner, Entrepreneur, Investor link


There was something about the idea that I might have died in a grey train full of grey commuters, having not truly lived, that I could not stand
Daniel Tenner, Co-founder, Woobius link


Don’t worry about age. Great entrepreneurs can get started at any age
Daniel Tenner, Co-founder, Woobius link


We all have beliefs that are holding us back. Sometimes we’re aware of them, sometimes not
Daniel Tenner, Co-founder, Woobius link


Unless you have something practical that you need to do, reading about startups, business, and so on, is a waste of time
Daniel Tenner, Co-founder, Woobius link


Networking to find a cofounder is like going to a party to find a wife
Daniel Tenner, Co-founder, Woobius link


I’ve personally made the mistake of trying to jump to “big” too soon many times before
Joel Gascoigne, Founder, Buffer link


Disengaging is probably one of the most challenging aspects of running a startup
Joel Gascoigne, Founder, Buffer link


Trust that you will learn everything you need to know
Joel Gascoigne, Founder, Buffer link


Embrace feeling uncomfortable
Joel Gascoigne, Founder, Buffer link


The only way to be able to work full-time on a startup was to build a product which generated revenue early
Joel Gascoigne, Founder, Buffer link


How to start your startup in 4 steps. 1. Have an idea. 2. Cut it down
Joel Gascoigne, Founder, Buffer link


The coffeeshop fallacy is a mismatch between the work one imagines to be involved in a pursuit and the actual day-to-day labour
Rob Fitzpatrick, Founder, Dex.io link


Code is to tech startups what staff is to real-world service businesses. A big fixed cost that you want to delay
Rob Fitzpatrick, Founder, Dex.io link


The riskiest part of the company is going to be what you, personally, as an individual, are worst at
Rob Fitzpatrick, Founder, Dex.io link


Until you’ve passed a thousand signups, the CEO should be personally emailing every new user
Rob Fitzpatrick, Founder, Dex.io link


Important doesn’t mean hard and striving isn’t progress
Rob Fitzpatrick, Founder, Dex.io link


The top cause of startup death is trying to grow before the foundation is solid
Rob Fitzpatrick, Founder, Dex.io link


If you are constantly looking at why something will fail you are going to go out of business pretty quickly
David Alison, Entrepreneur, Blogger link


Nothing gets VCs to move faster than traction
Mark MacLeod, Advisor, Seed investor link


You cannot (usually) raise $ for a services business. Why? Hard to scale without adding lots of bodies
Mark MacLeod, Advisor and seed investor link


Questions co-founders need to ask each other before starting: “Can you fire me? Can I fire you?”
Charlie O’Donnell, VC, Brooklyn Bridge link


If you reduce a big opportunity into a simple solution and be amazing at it, you’ll do quite well
Charlie O’Donnell, VC, Brooklyn Bridge link


The problem with startup advice: We remember ourselves as being smarter than we really are
Charlie O’Donnell, VC, Brooklyn Bridge link


Need a Technical Co-founder? Hire a Product Design Lead First
Charlie O’Donnell, VC, Brooklyn Bridge link


Startups are the natural evolutionary answer to this new environment
Fred Destin, VC at Atlas link


The classic mistake is to confuse a few early adopters with a market
Fred Destin, VC at Atlas link


If you nail a large category in a local market, you can certainly build a company worth $300M or more
Fred Destin, VC at Atlas link


If you don’t have something that turns your customers into fans, then you’re sunk
Hiten Shah, Co-founder of Kissmetrics link


If you miss the chance to make the best of every moment, what kind of future will you create?
Hiten Shah, Co-founder of Kissmetrics link


If you’re an entrepreneur, rules aren’t your friend
Hiten Shah, Co-founder of Kissmetrics link


Don’t take this shit for granted! If someone helps you out — be really appreciative of it
Howard Kingston, Future Ad Labs link


Nobody owes you anything and your college degree means nothing
Howard Kingston, Future Ad Labs link


Just take action — good things that you can never foresee will come from it
Howard Kingston, Future Ad Labs link


Often, people’s “needs” are much more flexible than they think
Marco Arment, Founder, Instapaper link


Starting makes things real. Starting builds momentum. Starting gets you excited. Starting eliminates all your excuses
Bill D’Alessandroh, Partner, Skyway link


The market does not care how long you worked on something
Carson McComas, Co-founder, DownDetect link


Success almost never comes from a mind-blowing idea, so sitting around trying to find one is a waste of time
Ramit Sethi, Co-founded PBwiki link


“We don’t know anything until we launch” is completely false
Joshua Porter, Co-founded Performable link


Interface Design is Copywriting. Designing an interface is largely an exercise in choosing the right words
Joshua Porter, Co-founded Performable link


When designs fail to provide an appropriate next step for users it stops them in their tracks
Joshua Porter, Co-founded Performable link


Humans are hard-wired for attention
Joshua Porter, Co-founded Performable link


Your job as designer is to pull your clients, despite their protests, kicking and screaming into the future
Joshua Porter, Co-founded Performable link


Don’t worry about stating the obvious…the obvious almost never is
Joshua Porter, Co-founded Performable link


A lack of commitment to one thing is just as productive as doing nothing at all
Andrew Dumont, BD SEOmoz link


I came into the interview ready to react. I had an answer for everything, but no real story that I was going to tell
Andrew Peek, Founder, Rocketr link


The most destructive thing smart people do is spend their lives waiting
Dustin Curtis, Creator, Svbtle link


Optimism, pessimism, fuck that; we’re going to make it happen
Elon Musk, Tesla, SpaceX link


Simplicity isn’t enough — clarity is where it’s at
Dan Martell, Founder of Clarity link


For the things in my life that actually mattered, I’ve never needed any to-do list to tell me to do them
Jeff Atwood, Co-founder, StackOverflow link


The moment you get paid for your product, is the moment you emerge from the warm, caring Silicon Valley cocoon into the real world
Ilya Lichtenstein, Co-founder, Mixrank link


Talking constantly to other entrepreneurs may cause “collaborative fixation”. Everyone will end up thinking of the same stuff
Noah Smith, Half-Elven Finance Prof link


(on A/B testing): It’s incredibly easy to interpret data in a way that suits your needs and justifies your conclusions
josh brewer, Principal Designer at Twitter link


Startups are coached to death when it comes to their demo day pitch. The pitch has become so formulaic, it’s almost laughable
Kate Hough, Co-founder, Huedio link


(VC) If they don’t want to lie, they just don’t respond
Josh Breinlinger, VC, Entrepreneur link


Just about every startup is for sale
Dan shapiro, Entrepreneur link


Why I sold my startup: “When I start my next company, I can swing for the fences”
Dan shapiro, Entrepreneur link


If two people work on a task, it takes twice as long
Dan shapiro, Entrepreneur link


Chopping features is hard but a simple first step is just “Who’ll use this, and how often?”
Des Traynor, COO, Intercom link


You can’t judge the market for a five star hotel by building a seedy motel
Des Traynor, COO, Intercom link


If you join a startup early, you’re a shoe-in for executive positions. Nope
Michael O.Church, Entrepreneur link


When you manage people like children, that’s what they become
Michael O.Church, Entrepreneur link


No! Try not. Do, or do not. There is no try
Yoda, Jedi inc


On Failure: It’s about understanding, and accepting our limitations
Micah Baldwin, Founder, Graphicly link


Things don’t have to be in balance to be in balance. You can work 16 hours a day and be in balance
Micah Baldwin, Founder, Graphicly link


You should recruit people that give you an unfair advantage. You should try to win the game before it starts
Chris Dixon, Founder, Investor link


Divine inspiration fallacy: You think that the product spec comes from the mouth of God directly to your mind
Justin Kan, Founder, Justin.tv link


When you look for reasons not to do something, you will always find them
Justin Kan, Founder, Justin.tv link


Empowerment doesn’t mean letting everyone do whatever the fuck they want
Justin Kan, Founder, Justin.tv link


My experience with the press has taught me to be careful, be focused and be strategic
Rand Fiskin, CEO & Founder, SEOmoz link


Those who think very highly of themselves tend to make for poor employees, partners, service providers…
Rand Fiskin, CEO & Founder, SEOmoz link


Take 1,000 “brilliant jerk” founders and I’d bet that less than 2 will have enough brilliance to overcome the jerkiness
Rand Fiskiny, CEO & Founder, SEOmoz link


I’m going to tell you a dirty little secret — investors think valuations are bullshit too
Joe Stump, Founded SimpleGeo link


On being acquired: “Selling out isn’t a dirty choice”
Matt Gemmell, UX Designer, Writer link


I believe that the top creative people are at their peak when they see something for the first time
Paul English, CTO & Co-founder, Kayak link


Website visitors don’t seem to care how long the trial period is
Duane Jackson, Founder, KashFlow link


Standout by putting your company’s value proposition (not logo) on a t-shirt
Alex Debelov, Co-Founder, Virool


Realize the daily highs and lows are what actually make your life meaningful
Ryan Carson, Founder, Treehouse link


3 mistakes I made as a young entrepreneur. 1. Treating employees like friends
Ryan Carson, Founder, Treehouse link


Define the simplest “productised” derivation of the Grand Vision that generates value
Jason Winder, Co-founder, MakeLeaps link


Stop being an emotionally distant founder. You made a commitment to this startup
Wesley Tansey, Co-founder, Curvio


Startups are not engineered. They’re hacked, scrapped for parts, and reassembled endlessly until something sticks
Wesley Tansey, Co-founder, Curvio link


What matters is “Return on Luck” or how you take advantage of good luck and avoid choking
Jason Shen, Co-founder, Ridejoy link


Don’t ask customers what they’ll pay. Tell them
Ash Maurya, Founder Spark59 link


The right response to an unacceptable offer is a counter-offer
Jacques Mattheij, Coder, Entrepreneur link


The single most important aspect of Silicon Valley is that it’s where many great people choose to live
Patrick Collison, Stripe, Co-founder link


Opportunity is all around us, but we have beliefs and habits that block it
Paul Buchheit, Creator of Gmail link


Pick three key features, get those things very, very right, and then forget about everything else
Paul Buchheit, Creator of Gmail link


Prediction made in 2000 for 2010: Google will be a big success, possibly as big as Yahoo
Paul Buchheit, Creator of Gmail link


Instead of asking, “What’s the most likely outcome?”, I like to ask “What’s the worst that could happen?” and “Could it be awesome?”
Paul Buchheit, Creator of Gmail link


If you’re starting something new, expect a long journey. That’s no excuse to move slow though
Paul Buchheit, Creator of Gmail link


Lose your technical and design snobbery. Whatever works, works
Paul Buchheit, Creator of Gmail link


Surely if you’re building software, it is the ultimate in swapping between analytic and empathetic
Garry Tan, Co-founded Posterous link


On leadership: If you want others to follow, learn to be alone with your thoughts
— William Deresiewicz, Writer, Literary Critic link


Motivating the tech co-founder: Anytime my cofounder needed a push — I’d bring in loads more signups
FindTheTechGuy, Blog link


Pretty much everything you’re working on is critical to the product, which isn’t true at large companies
Jean Hsu, Graduate, ObviousCorp link


The idea is typically worth anywhere between 10%-30% of a bump in equity
Manu Kumar, Entrepreneur, Investor link


The best work, IMHO, gets done when the core tech team is within shouting distance of each other
Manu Kumar, Entrepreneur, Investor link


A lifestyle business’s job is to provide a great quality of life to its owners
Corbett Barr, Founder, Think Traffic link


Overly networked individuals suffer from a lack of honest feedback
Chris Savage, Co-founder & CEO, Wistia link


Products best path: The fastest way your product solves your own problem
Chris Savage, Co-founder & CEO, Wistia link


Frequency of execution is perhaps more important than the duration of execution
Jocelyn K. Glei, Editor-in-Chief of 99u link


A small success for your startup is probably 80% of the way to a huge success
Andy Swan, Serial Entrepreneur link


When you have a well-defined core, YOU will be 90% of the feedback that you need
Andy Swan, Serial Entrepreneur link


(on some entrepreneurs): They’re chasing results. Chasing trends. Following. They have no core.
Andy Swan, Serial Entrepreneur link


I want to ride with people that will find a way over the concrete wall, not “pivot”
Andy Swan, Serial Entrepreneur link


Force yourself to innovate through voluntary restriction
Andy Swang, Serial Entrepreneur link


When a VC tells you what’s good for you, check your wallet, then count your fingers
Jamie Zawinski, Co-founder, Netscape link


I prefer great vision and bad execution to bad vision and great execution
Vinod Khosla, VC, Co-founded Sun link


Apparently $50 million is the new $100 million and I never got the memo
Rob Hayes, VC, First Round link


“Letting go” is uncomfortable enough for normal folks; for entrepreneurs it can be terrifying
Rob Hayes, VC, First Round link


Instead of a one-size-fits-all product, you often end up with a one-size-fits-none product
Sahil Lavingia, Founder, Gumroad link


Leverage is what gets people excited… the ability for the seed of an idea to turn into a game-changer.
Sahil Lavingia, Founder, Gumroad link


People run the fastest they’ve ever run when death is right behind them
Sahil Lavingia, Founder, Gumroad link


You are the least responsible for your success and failure. So just, do
Sahil Lavingia, Founder, Gumroad link


Aim for the experience that is most useful rather than the simplest
Sahil Lavingia, Founder, Gumroad link


Startup mistake: They focus their networking on the top instead of the middle
Adam Rodnitzky, Co-founder, Favo.rs link


Most people like to build and grow things. You can chalk the psychology up to our agrarian past
Brad Hargreaves, Co-founder, GA link


The winners of a unit economics contest would be more likely to build successful companies
Brad Hargreaves, Co-founder, GA link


Martyrs inspire guilt, and guilt is a terrible emotion to inspire in a group
Brad Hargreaves, Co-founder, GA link


The scene will kill you and your company
Brad Hargreaves, Co-founder, GA link


(getting funded) It’s a guaranteed lifetime addiction to entrepreneurship
Brad Hargreaves, Co-founder, GA link


A TechCrunch article is no way for your users to hear news about your company
Brian Bailey, Author, Team Gowalla link


The key to staying sane at a startup is hanging out with a different social circle (non-tech)
Paul Stamatiou, Co-founder, Picplum link


Once you have around 1000 users, shift all your energy to engaging/understanding them
Sean Ellis, CEO/Founder Qualaroo link


Areas that prevent creative problem solving. 1. Too much focus on financial rewards
Sean Ellis, CEO/Founder Qualaroo link


Take the time to build relationships with potential acquirers. You never know when you may need them
John O’Farrell, Partner, Andreessen Horowitz link


I think of bootstrapping as a very slow form of raising money
Tony Stubblebine, CEO, Lift link


Startup years are like dog years — One year at a startup is like seven anywhere else
Eric Stromberg, Co-founder, Oyster link


I believe strongly that these “20 seconds of interaction” will be increasingly important
Eric Stromberg, Co-founder, Oyster link


The lower the CEO salary, the more likely it is to succeed
Peter Thiel, Co-founded Paypal, Investor link


I believe in market-first approach. Any sufficiently big market will give you tons of interesting ideas
Paras Chopra, CEO, Wingify link


You hear just how screwed up most of these successful startups were on the way up
Paul Graham, Co-founder, Y-combinator link


Let’s stop giving lying on stage and vanity metrics a free pass
Eric Ries, Lean startup legend link


Never let a line of communication go cold with a potential acquirer
Jason Roberts, Founder AnyFu, AppIgnite link


Revenue first is key when you don’t have a cofounder
Tracy Osborn, CEO, WeddingLovely link


Everything Apple develops today is tied back into their operating system — the trunk
Spencer Fry, Co-founder, Uncover link


You will not be very helpful if you cannot code pre product market fit
Ching Naiyun, Turned hacker aged 27 link


If you’re only getting “That’s cool”, then it’s time to worry. You need to get to “Oh my god”
James Yu, Co-founder, Parse link


I argue that along with hard work, you need to know when to double down
James Yu, Co-founder, Parse link


An inward-facing thought process is exactly what you don’t want
James Yu, Co-founder, Parse link


Problems that Introverts Have with Networking. 1. Making small talk
Nathan Hurst, Founder, Ohours, Hirelite link


It took us almost three years to know what exactly we had to do during those three days
Vinicius Vacanti, Co-Founder & CEO, Yipit link


Put headphones on, people distract you less. Listen to foreign music, it distracts you less
Andy Crump, Co-Founder, Bluefields link


Investors: They hate MBA speak, they find it pretentious and boring
Jacob Brody, Startup/VC Stuff at MESA+ link


Don’t get lost in the feedback maze. Everyone on the planet loves to give feedback…
Jesse Middleton, Head of Biz Dev, Jirafe link


Don’t fear the no-man’s land between early adopters and mainstream. Use the Chasm Shield
Nikhil Kalghatgi, VC, Gangnam Style link


For an idea to replicate it has to be simple enough for a friend to talk about it at a party
Jonah Peretti, Co-Founder, BuzzFeed link


You Have To Grit Your Teeth, Be A Warrior, Or Do Something Less Disruptive
Travis Kalanick, CEO, Uber link


(with acquirers) Just avoid dropping your pants completely until you get the ballpark offer
David Cohen, Founder/CEO, TechStars link


I created more fear of not starting than the fear of starting
Amir Khella, Creator of Keynotopia link


Diversity of channels actually increases your risk that you never find a scalable channel at all
Brian Balfour, Co-founded 4 companies link


No matter which chicken or the egg problem you are solving for, don’t be afraid of brute force
Brian Balfour, Co-founded 4 companies link


Yes,” means no. “Where can I buy that?” means maybe. “Here’s $20 dollars,” means yes.
Tristan Kromer, Grasshopper herder link


Three elements must converge for a behaviour to occur: Motivation, Ability and Trigger
BJ Fogg, Innovator, Psychologist link


If you don’t excite people first, no one will bother to spend time understanding your website
Josh Liu, Co-founder/Product Acrossio link


Something people seldom talk about with entrepreneurship is how corrosive it can be to relationships
Pete Warden, Founder, Jetpac link


It’s paramount to at least be open about messing up
Kyle Bragger, Makes things (Forrst) link


You can’t 80/20 everything. There are some things that you have to go beyond that and be the best in the world at
Mark Zuckerberg, Co-founder, Facebook link


Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works
— Steve Jobs, Apple link


(web) It bypasses all middlemen. And, it turns out, there are a lot of middlepersons in this society
— Steve Jobs, Apple link


What people mention far less often is that entrepreneurship is also tedious
Alison Johnston, Co-founder, InstaEDU link


Trouble usually arises when, under the guise of efficiency, people stop talking and just start doing
Bryce Roberts, VC (OATV) link


Do you want to build an institution fit for a future worth fighting for?
Umair Haque, Author, Economist link

Pardeep Kullar
Pardeep Kullar

Pardeep overlooks growth at Upscope and loves writing about SaaS companies, customer success and customer experience.