Site icon Brent Ozar

How the Company-Startup Thing Worked Out For Me, Year 3

It’s time for my annual update on the wild ride. A brief recap of what’s happened so far:

When last we met

The company logo evolved to something we could actually trademark

As we finished up year 2, we started hitting our stride. Our new site made consulting sales much easier, we’d focused on a single consulting product, and we’d run our first training class.

In year 3, we wanted to focus on growing our in-person training class business. We’d decided to amp up to two class agendas held in three different cities, growing from 3 class-days total up to 15 class-days. That was a huge jump, and we had no idea if we’d be able to fill the seats.

We’d also planned on hiring one consultant per year, so we were already on the lookout for America’s Next Top Consultant.

So how’d it go? Well, aside from breaking my arm while carrying a monitor?

To make long term investments, I had to change my own consulting.

Oct 2013 Vegas – keeping up with the Joneses at é by josé andres

The way we set up the company, I didn’t take a salary – I just got a percentage of the income that I produced. If I billed $10k worth of revenue, I got a cut of that. (That isn’t how we treat employees, just to be clear.)

Therefore, if I was gonna do unpaid work to build out a future training income, one or more of these things had to happen:

Any of these answers are legit, but I went for the last one. I focused on doing high-value work like onsite training. In-person training is one of my biggest strengths – I enjoy it, and I seem to do a pretty good job of it – so I was able to charge a premium for that.

I still made time for blogging.

I published a lot of stuff that I’m proud of from that year, but two posts stand out:

SQL Server 2014 Standard Edition Sucks, and It’s All Your Fault – sometimes, you just gotta step out in the limelight and say the obvious in blunt language. I got a lot of off-the-record talks from Microsoft folks who thought I’d lose my MVP status for sure, and I even got attacked publicly with gems like “My only hope is that … you end up losing that income that supplies you with your fancy toys and vacations.” As it turned out, the memory limit for Standard Edition was raised, and I heard from more than a handful of Microsoft employees that the change was driven by my blog post. Awww yeah.

Did Microsoft Stop Releasing SQL Server Service Packs? – no, but maybe they should have.

I don’t regret those posts – they were popular, and I think they achieved the objectives I’d set out to accomplish – but then as year four started, things took a serious turn for the negative. More on that next year.

I had to let go of some clients.

2013 Oct – as close as it gets to a serious picture of me and Paul

The downside is that I had to let go of some long-term customers who’d been working with me for a couple of years. Thanks to the advice in a couple of consulting books, I was able to have good, fair conversations with them that basically went like this:

No, I didn’t win those clients over – and I didn’t expect to. They wanted to hire 2010 Brent, and I’m not 2010 Brent anymore. It was kinda tough because they were fun clients doing cool things with SQL Server, but looking at my task list, my personal budget, my family commitments, and my goals, I just couldn’t keep my $150/hour, a-couple-hour-per-week clients.

And it sounds odd to say we had to let go of clients when at the same time…

We expanded the consulting by hiring Doug Lane.

Feb 2014, Cabo – the company retreat, watching whales

Kendra announced our open position in the form of a Missed Connection: Employer Seeks Employee ad, and we had another killer turnout with dozens and dozens of really, really good responses. I know a lot of companies struggle to hire great SQL Server talent, but the combination of telecommuting and great benefits really opens up a company’s choices. Again this year, I wish we could have hired more than one person.

We hired @TheDougLane, a SQL Server professional in the Denver area who happened to have a passion for filmmaking. Before we hired Doug, I remember sitting in the very back row of his absolutely packed PASS Summit session about tuning SSRS. At one point, he got an audience question, and he prefixed the answer by saying, “Well, I know Brent Ozar is in the audience, and he isn’t going to like my answer, but I’m going to say it anyway.” First off, I don’t know how he even noticed I was in the room (it was a really big room), but I was so impressed with his answer AND his explanation of my viewpoint as well. (Not to mention how he handled a demo problem too.)

Even though we hired a new consultant, I still had to let go of my past clients because we wanted Doug to exclusively focus on our SQL Critical Care® process.

We focused the consulting big time.

At this point of our company history, the process had gotten decently refined, and it was selling really well with clients. We kept experimenting with slightly different ways of selling it (2/3/4 days, with videos or without, with labs or without) but the core product was pretty stable. We were proud of it.

I’m a huge believer in two Steve Jobs quotes: focus is about saying no, and get rid of the crappy stuff.

We had one awesome product – SQL Critical Care® – and we needed to build an awesome training product. To clear out enough time, we decided to let go of our not-so-awesome products, so we stopped offering Amazon cloud migrations, Hadoop projects, SAN design & implementation, and VMware implementations. We also steered clear of the remote DBA business – I still think there’s room for an attractive product there, but I haven’t seen a successful implementation where the customer, the remote DBA firm owner, and the remote DBA employees are all wildly happy. Yet.

We designed our training offerings.

April 2013 – Jeremiah and I swapping rental cars outside Vegas

We’d been invited to sell our training through a few companies, but we wanted to control our own distribution platform. We envisioned some long-term benefits:

However, there’s a big drawback to running your own online training delivery system: you actually have to pick it and run it. We had to make decisions about what features we wanted and what vendor could best deliver those features. We spent weeks researching, and settled on one. It wasn’t perfect, and it wasn’t cheap – we spent something like $50k USD on it the first year – but it had powerful features that justified the cost.

When it came time to launch our training, we looked at the market and saw:

We launched with two tiers of videos:

$29 for ~90 minutes of video. We weren’t really aiming at books per se, but aiming to hit an underserved $10-$100 market. If you wanted focused relief for one specific SQL Server pain, and you wanted it fast, the $29 market seemed like a tempting price point. There just wasn’t anything else in this market.

April 2013 – taking my favorite Stack Exchange guys through the now-closed WD-50 kitchen

$299 for 6 hours of in-depth video. These focused on a tougher pain point that takes longer to solve, like learning to manage SQL Server indexes. You got 18 months of access to the video, so you could continue to revisit it over time without worrying about a credit card charge every month.

Altogether, our training tiers were:

Implementing the store, recording videos, building training material for in-person classes – it was all a ton of work. Unpaid work, initially – a build-it-and-they-will-come gamble.

The training gamble paid off.

Oct 2013 – held a record-setting pre-con at the PASS Summit

In June 2013, we launched our online training video system and the passive income started up. The awesome thing about passive income is that it just comes in – it pays your bills while you focus on building more passive income sources, and it becomes a snowball that just propels your business forward.

In November 2013, we held our first Black Friday Sale just because we could – one of the fun benefits of running your own training sales platform. We learned that people love discount sales.

In February 2014, we held our first expanded one-week training classes in San Diego, and they were successfully profitable. Not wildly profitable – if you look at the unpaid work to integrate the e-commerce platform, market the classes, and build the training material, we probably only made minimum wage, hahaha – but most of that work was a one-time investment that we could repeatedly reuse over 2014.

As year 3 came to a close in April 2014, and we prepped for our nearly-sold-out (~40 students) training classes in Chicago in May, we were really sold on the whole training & passive income thing.

What I (not we) screwed up in year three

At the end of year two, I’d reviewed my year and realized I’d done too much travel and not balanced work/life time appropriately. I think I fixed that pretty well in year three. I had some great times with my friends and family, spent less time on the road, and unlocked levels 3 and 4 on my Epic Life Quest. However, while work/life was balanced, I didn’t do a good job of allocating my work time to the right tasks.

Sept 2013 – watched the America’s Cup races from a support boat

In years 1-3, I should have tracked and categorized my time so that I could recognize trends. As we built the company, I didn’t notice that some unpaid admin duties had crept up to being nearly full-time jobs. In October 2013, we hired Erika (my now-wife) part time as our admin assistant, and that certainly helped offload work, but there were still a large number of duties that each of us partners held on to.

I failed to recognize that the sales duties of keeping 4-5 consultants busy had become a significant job in and of itself, and I should have recommended that we hire a salesperson earlier. Jeremiah and Kendra were totally interested in hiring a salesperson, but I thought we didn’t need it because I really enjoyed the sales work. (It was really order-taking more than sales at that point, so it was fun.) Whether or not I enjoyed it shouldn’t have mattered – I should have recognized the amount of time it was taking, and that it wasn’t the right use of my time.

Was year three successful?

When Jeremiah, Kendra, and I first laid out our manifesto for the company, my own high-level goals looked like:

And yowza, we were actually on track! That’s kinda awesome.

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