This week, Elevate Toronto brought together thousands of members of Torontoâs tech community to learn and network. On day two of the festival, several tracks drilled down on different industries and topics, including FinTech and AI.
I was the emcee for Elevate Growth, which was held at the Toronto Board of Trade and focused on topics related to growing a company, including fundraising, international growth, and managing teams. The event featured a lineup of some of Canadaâs top entrepreneurs, including Wattpadâs Allen Lau, Globaliveâs Anthony Lacavera, and BlueCatâs Michael Hyatt. The event brought together over 200 entrepreneurs looking for advice on how to level up their business.
I chose to be involved with Elevate Growth because every entrepreneur needs to focus on growth, regardless of whether they have a services business like mine, a product business, or just an idea that theyâre working on bringing to market. Here are the top five takeaways from the dayâs packed agenda.
ABF: Always be fundraising
Lacavera, who has raised over $2 billion in capital over his career, talked about the need for entrepreneurs to always be fundraising.
He highlighted how most entrepreneurs will close a round of funding and then think theyâre done until just before their runway runs out. âMy biggest lesson in the career of raising money is you need to be raising capital at least one day a week every week,â he said, whether thatâs touching base with existing investors or connecting with new investors.
@AnthonyLacavera talking about growth and his strategy which I'm thankful I was able to see firsthand #HowWeCanWin #ElevateToronto pic.twitter.com/MRnUpfywlR
— Bhavin Shah (@sticksbs) September 13, 2017
Fundraising isnât a start-stop endeavour; itâs a consistent effort on the part of a founder. While other speakers like TouchBistroâs Alex Barrotti echoed that sentiment, speaker Michael Hyatt said fundraising isnât always something to celebrate. âYou just sold part of your company and now youâre on the clock,â he said, encouraging entrepreneurs to instead celebrate milestones like key hires or big sales.
Culture is not a ping pong table â but it is key to growth
Revenue may be key to growth, but so is building and scaling an excellent team. In fact, one thread that ran through almost every presentation was the need to build a great team, to nurture the culture, and to train great leaders and managers to scale that team as the company grows.
Johnathan and Melissa Nightingale, the founders of management training firm Raw Signal Group and authors of How F*cked Up Is Your Management, spoke with Borrowell COO Eva Wong about why culture is important.
They highlighted that culture isnât about ping pong tables or beer kegs on Fridays; rather, itâs about the expectations companies set out for how team members should relate to each other. The duo said itâs key to be loud about cultural violations, and to recognize that culture is like a river – it constantly changes and flows, so you canât be attached to the culture you had at 10 people.
Being a great leader makes growth that much easier
The Nightingales spoke about the concept of âloudershipâ – leading by being the loudest voice in the room.
âMany of us have been in the room where itâs not necessarily the best idea, but who pounds the loudest on the table,â Johnathan said. In an age where companies (and their leaders) are always being rated, being a great leader is the key to success.
Hyatt defined a great leader as someone who could walk across to the street to a different company, and people would follow. âShow me the people that would follow you and Iâll tell you what kind of person you are,â he said. Part of great leadership is showing that the company is about more than just the bottom line, which is why I moderated a conversation about giving back with TribalScale CEO Sheetal Jaitly and Two Small Fish Ventures co-founder Eva Lau.
Humbled to have these leaders share their thoughts on building giving back into their companies & partnering with Upside! #ElevateGrowth pic.twitter.com/0FEMb8DqnE
— Upside Foundation (@sharetheupside) September 13, 2017
Both Jaitly and Eva have pledged to donate one percent of their equity to charity through The Upside Foundation. They said that incorporating a giving back strategy into their leadership has helped motivate their teams, and attract new team members.
The three key ingredients to building winning teams
Another thread that tied the day together was that behind every founder, thereâs a great team â something Hyatt confirmed when he said every mistake he ever made was hiring, and every good thing he ever did was hiring.
Real Ventures partner Janet Bannister spoke about how to build winning teams, breaking it down to three key ingredients.
First, set out a clear and aspirational vision. Bannister spoke about how when she worked at eBay under then-CEO Meg Whitman, she constantly spoke about how eBay was changing peopleâs lives, and it made people feel like they were part of something bigger than themselves.
The second ingredient is diversity, which was a core theme at Elevate. Bannister highlighted that diversity is more than just gender, itâs about having a mix of introverts and extroverts, detail-oriented people and big picture thinkers. Itâs about diversity of thought, and bringing different perspectives together.
Finally, she said the third ingredient is how your team treats each other. She said creating a culture where people donât think about themselves first, but rather they think about the team â and they truly care about their team â is key.
Resilience is key to growth
The last key theme of the day was about how no company is an overnight success, and it can be a slow, steady, frustrating path to success. Hyatt, who has sold two businesses for a combined $500 million, said that heâs a 20-year overnight success, and that it doesnât take brilliance to be successful – it just requires showing up day after day.
.@Elevatetofest #ElevateToronto #ElevateGrowth rockstar founders Nancy Peterson @homestars wouldn't be here if took vc $ #MoveTheDial pic.twitter.com/4Ik3aLN1aI
— Jodi Kovitz (@jodilynnkovitz) September 13, 2017
âYouâre not going to land one big customer. Youâre not going to have one precipitous event thatâs going to make or break you,â he said. âGrowth and success is nothing more than a consistent 20-mile march.â He spoke about the aggregation of marginal gains, and how as a founder, you shouldnât be looking for huge wins, you should be looking for incremental gains. Several other founders, including Barrotti, spoke about how getting to that first customer or that first million in sales isnât easy, and it takes resilience to be able to grow a company.
Other speakers at Elevate Growth included Intelexâs Mark Jaine, Shopify Plusâ Hana Abaza, and Xtreme Labs founder Amar Varma.
Photo via Twitter