Entrepreneurs usually make decisions with incomplete information, in disciplines where we lack expertise, and where time is vital. How, then, can we be expected to make decisions that lead to our success, and how can other people judge our startups on our potential value? And even if there are heuristics for startup value, how can they cross fields?
The answer, to me, comes from a generalizable system for improvement and growth that has proven itself– the blind watchmaker of evolution. In this, the crucial method by which genes promulgate themselves is not by predicting their environments, but by promiscuity and opportunism in a random, dog-eat-dog-world. By this, I mean that successful genes free-ride on or resonate with other genes that promote reproductive success (promiscuity) and select winning strategies by experimenting in the environment and letting reality be the determinant of what gene-pairings to try more often (opportunism). Strategies that are either robust or anti-fragile usually outperform fragile and deleterious strategies, and strategies that exist within an evolutionary framework that enables rapid testing, learning, mixing, and sharing (such as sexual reproduction or lateral gene transfer paired with fast generations) outperform those that do not (such as cloning), as shown by the Red Queen hypothesis.
OK, so startups are survival/reproductive vehicles and startup traits/methods are genes (or memes, in the Selfish Gene paradigm). With analogies, we should throw out what is different and keep what is useful, so what do we need from evolution?
First, one quick note: we can’t borrow the payout calculator exactly. Reproductive success is where a gene makes more of itself, but startups dont make more of themselves. For startups the best metric is probably money. Other than that, what adaptations are best to adopt? Or, in the evolutionary frame, what memes should we imbue in our survival vehicles?
Traits to borrow:
- Short lives: long generations mean the time between trial and error is too long. Short projects, short-term goals, and concrete exits.
- Laziness: energy efficiency is far more important than #5 on your priority list.
- Optionality: when all things are equal, more choices = more chances at success.
- Evolutionarily Stable Strategies: also called “don’t be a sucker.”
- React, don’t plan: prediction is difficult or even impossible, but being quick to jump into the breach has the same outcome. Could also be called “prepare, but don’t predict.”
- Small and many: big investments take a lot of energy and effectively become walking targets. Make small and many bets on try-outs and then feed those that get traction. Note– this is also how to run a military!
- Auftragstaktik: should be obvious, central planning never works. Entrepreneurs should probably not make any more decisions than they have to.
- Resonance: I used to call this “endogenous positive feedback loops,” but that doesn’t roll off the tongue. In short, pick traits that make your other traits more powerful–and even better if all of your central traits magnify your other actions.
- Taking is better than inventing: Its not a better startup if its all yours. Its a better startup if you ruthlessly pick the best idea.
- Pareto distributions (or really, power laws): Most things don’t really matter. Things that matter, matter a lot.
- Finite downside, infinite upside: Taleb calls this “convexity”. Whenever presented with a choice that has one finite and one infinite potential, forget about predicting what will happen– focus on the impact’s upper bound in both directions. It goes without saying– avoid infinite downsides!
- Don’t fall behind (debt): The economy is a Red Queen, anyone carrying anything heavy will continually fall behind. Debt is also the most likely way companies die.
- Pay it forward to your future self: squirrels bury nuts; you should build generic resources as well.
- Don’t change things: Intervening takes energy and hurts diversity.
- Survive: You can’t win if you’re not in the game. More important than being successful is being not-dead.
When following these guidelines, there are two other differences between entrepreneurs and genes: One, genes largely exist in an amoral state, whereas your business is vital to your own life, and if you picked a worthwhile idea, society. Two, unlike evolution, you actually have goals and are trying to achieve something beyond replication, beyond even money. Therefore, you do not need to take your values from evolution. However, if you ignore its lessons, you close your eyes to reality and are truly blind.
Our “blind” entrepreneur, then, can still pick goals and construct what she sees as her utility. But to achieve the highest utility, once defined, she will create unknowable and unpredictable risk of her idea’s demise if she does not learn to grow the way that the blind watchmaker does.
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Well written and wonderful article full of information. Thanks for sharing such a great article with us.
Of course! Evolutionary biology is my independent passion and entrepreneurship is literally my life– so I love connecting them!
Shout out to Rick Weber’s great follow-up to my blog– I think I got the “microcosm” right but his macro-view on this topic is even better: https://notesonliberty.com/2020/08/29/the-blind-invisible-hand/
There are several very interesting points here! I’ll leave this tab open to have a look at it later again, and maybe steal some of your thoughts 😉 (“Its not a better [thought] if its all yours. Its a better [thought] if you ruthlessly pick the best [one]”, haha).
This was one of the great and informative articles I have read after a long time. Thank you for sharing 🙂
This is so well written and so wonderful. Thank you so much for this.
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🙋 Thanks for sharing such a great article with us. I find There are several very interesting points here! This is well written and so wonderful.