"How Mark Zuckerberg Hacked the Valley" (FB)
From BusinessWeek:
In 2006, when he was 22, Mark Zuckerberg gave up writing computer
code to focus on managing his rapidly growing startup. Like Jim Brown
retiring from football at 29 or E.M. Forster abandoning the novel in his
forties, the prodigy who programmed the very first version of Facebook
was walking away from his transcendent talent. Or so it seemed. A few
years later, Zuckerberg began setting annual tests of discipline for
himself, vowing to wear a tie to work every day in 2009, learn Mandarin
in 2010, and personally kill any animal he ate in 2011. Earlier this
year, unbeknown to all but a few friends and co-workers, he gave himself
a new challenge with unknown ramifications for what is soon to be
Silicon Valley’s newest public company. Mark Zuckerberg pledged to
return to his roots and spend time programming each day.
Zuckerberg’s true skill has always been a facility for hacking.
That’s a foundational verb at Facebook, to hack. In its offering
prospectus, Facebook repeatedly describes its corporate culture as “the
hacker way”; on its new campus, a 57-acre office park abutting San
Francisco Bay in Menlo Park, Calif., there’s a building with a big sign
that reads “The Hacker Company.” Those slogans don’t mean Facebook is
teaming up with Anonymous or breaking into NORAD. They’re talking about
achieving a goal in an unconventional way.
Zuckerberg and his crew have made a series of high-risk moves—five
hacks that have changed Silicon Valley forever—that were far more daring
than wearing a hoodie to an IPO roadshow. Instead of allowing himself
to be replaced by a more seasoned chief executive officer early on,
Zuckerberg consolidated his authority with bylaws that gave him an
incontestable voting majority on the company’s board. He preserved that
power by rebuffing repeated acquisition offers. Instead of rushing to go
public, Facebook delayed its offering well past the usual ripening date
of other successful startups. Even conventional hacking—manipulation of
computer code—is executed in an unusual way at Facebook.
Every Zuckerberg hack is in the service of an overarching vision:
that technology and online authenticity can bring people together. And
the easier it is for people to find one another, the more time they’ll
spend online, sharing photos of their kids, their moods, what they read,
who they date, and on and on with all the people they have met in their
life (or, if they neglect their privacy settings, with the whole
world). Neither Zuckerberg nor other Facebook executives would comment
for this story because of the quiet period mandated by the Securities
and Exchange Commission before going public. But just as Jobs
evangelized for simple, elegant devices, and Gates extolled the
productivity-enhancing power of software, Zuckerberg has long argued his
case to an often skeptical audience. “I think Mark Zuckerberg is ‘The
One,’ ” says Roger McNamee, a longtime Valley venture capitalist whose
firm, Elevation Partners, is an investor in Facebook. “Like Bill Gates
and Steve Jobs, he has set a tone that everyone else has lined up
behind.”
Hack #1
Friend the enemy of your enemy, even if that means hooking up with Microsoft
On
April 9, Facebook acquired the mobile-photography startup Instagram for
$1 billion in cash and stock. The acquisition, an attempt by the social
network to strengthen its presence on smartphones, was unusual for a
number of reasons, among them that it occurred during a quiet period. It
was also notable in that Zuckerberg conducted the negotiations himself
with Kevin Systrom, co-founder of the rapidly growing San Francisco
startup, before bringing the deal before the Facebook board.
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Systrom, a clever technologist who once worked at Google (GOOG),
sensibly took the payout while joining forces with his most powerful
competitor. Over the years, the founders of promising startups such as
Flickr and Skype have done the same. During Facebook’s formative stages,
Zuckerberg confronted a similar situation. Unlike Systrom, he refused
to sell.
In 2006, Yahoo! (YHOO)
was far more formidable than the wounded portal now churning through
CEOs, and early that summer it tempted several Facebook executives and
board members with a buyout proposal of the same amount: $1 billion.
Zuckerberg had rejected an earlier acquisition offer from Viacom (VIAB),
but he tentatively agreed to the Yahoo deal although he never gave his
final approval, according to several people at both companies who recall
the discussions. McNamee, the venture capitalist, remembers talking to
Zuckerberg at the time and seeing the anguish on his face as he worried
about contravening the wishes of several members of his board.
When Yahoo’s stock fell more than 20 percent after a disappointing
earnings report on July 19, Zuckerberg’s decision became easier. Terry
Semel, then Yahoo’s CEO, cut his offer to $850 million, according to
executives on both sides of the deal, yet tried to entice Zuckerberg
with a personal payout that remained the same as the earlier offer.
Facebook rejected the deal and Zuckerberg celebrated his renewed
independence by slapping high fives with colleagues, according to an
account in The Facebook Effect by David Kirkpatrick....MORE