Genuine VC: 

David Beisel’s Perspective on Digital Change

Knowing What You Don’t Know

Every entrepreneur is a first-time entrepreneur once.
How do VCs, then, evaluate first-time entrepreneurs? How can they garner the confidence to place both their money and time in someone who hasn’t started a company before?
Of course, investors can look at other past experiences as both a signal and substitute for an entrepreneurial endeavor. And strong domain expertise is always a plus, often a must-have.
A friend of mine at other firm told me that they also explicitly look for one intangible quality. For every entrepreneur who comes in to pitch they ask the question, “Does he know what he doesn’t know?
Yes, entrepreneurs know the information that they know. It is this experience and comprehension that guides them, and gives them inspiration. But what about the information that they don’t know? Are they aware of their lack of knowledge in a certain area? Or are they (blissfully) ignorant of it?
“Knowing what you don’t know” means understanding when to ask for help, guidance, and additional information when it is needed. It doesn’t preclude someone from being confident; quite the opposite, it demonstrates a self-assurance to ask for assistance when appropriate rather than act upon a loose foundation of information.
Venture capitalists want to be assured that their money is in knowledgeable hands. But they also want to know that those hands will look to others when they aren’t fully capable. It is much better to admit that one doesn’t know something than to act blindly without it. And it takes a special person to even realize and perceive when an area of understanding is lacking.
You know what you know, but do you know what you don’t know?

David Beisel
July 31, 2005 · < 1  min.

Every entrepreneur is a first-time entrepreneur once.

How do VCs, then, evaluate first-time entrepreneurs? How can they garner the confidence to place both their money and time in someone who hasn’t started a company before?

Of course, investors can look at other past experiences as both a signal and substitute for an entrepreneurial endeavor. And strong domain expertise is always a plus, often a must-have.

A friend of mine at other firm told me that they also explicitly look for one intangible quality. For every entrepreneur who comes in to pitch they ask the question, “Does he know what he doesn’t know?

Yes, entrepreneurs know the information that they know. It is this experience and comprehension that guides them, and gives them inspiration. But what about the information that they don’t know? Are they aware of their lack of knowledge in a certain area? Or are they (blissfully) ignorant of it?

“Knowing what you don’t know” means understanding when to ask for help, guidance, and additional information when it is needed. It doesn’t preclude someone from being confident; quite the opposite, it demonstrates a self-assurance to ask for assistance when appropriate rather than act upon a loose foundation of information.

Venture capitalists want to be assured that their money is in knowledgeable hands. But they also want to know that those hands will look to others when they aren’t fully capable. It is much better to admit that one doesn’t know something than to act blindly without it. And it takes a special person to even realize and perceive when an area of understanding is lacking.

You know what you know, but do you know what you don’t know?


David Beisel
Partner
I am a cofounder and Partner at NextView Ventures, a seed-stage venture capital firm championing founders who redesign the Everyday Economy.