Founder's Mentality Blog
Founders and the Economics of Mountaineering
Founders and the Economics of Mountaineering
The best founders manage their P&Ls to maintain momentum.
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Founder's Mentality Blog
The best founders manage their P&Ls to maintain momentum.
On a trip to Switzerland recently, I had the great pleasure of hearing famed mountaineer Reinhold Messner speak at a corporate event. He was handing out copies of his latest book, My Life at the Limit, and I snatched one up to read on my plane ride home. Messner was the first climber to conquer all 14 of the world’s 8,000-meter peaks, the first to summit Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen, and has been to both poles and crossed the Gobi Desert. I’ll admit it’s far less glamorous, but his story also has parallels with how founders manage their profit and loss statements so effectively. Let me explain.
One of Messner’s many contributions to the world of climbing was that he helped pioneer the “alpine style” of mountaineering, in which climbers carry everything they need with them rather than establishing a fixed line of stocked camps. Alpine style is an alternative to “expedition style,” the traditional mountaineering strategy used by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay when they were the first to conquer Everest in 1953. At that time, success required a massive effort to escort two climbers and their equipment (including heavy oxygen canisters) very close to the summit. This meant three climbers had to lead them to the final camp carrying 40 pounds of equipment each—the culmination of an expedition that required over 400 people and 10,000 pounds of baggage.
Messner recognized that you could radically alter the economics of mountaineering if you changed two major assumptions—the need for supplemental oxygen and the need to climb up and down the mountain to stock a line of ever-higher camps with supplies. Going up the mountain once with all your food and equipment would radically reduce duration risk—the risk that builds when a vast number of people in a single expedition are deployed on the mountain for extended periods of time. But it would also radically increase the acute safety risk faced by a smaller team with fewer supplies and less back-up.
The three elements of the Founder's Mentality help companies sustain performance while avoiding the inevitable crises of growth.
As Howard E. McCurdy, a professor at American University who has studied the economics of mountaineering notes, Messner “found the bottom of the cost curve.” But because he left himself no margin for error, “most people would not want to join him there.” Interestingly, McCurdy also found that modern climbers don’t really have to. He documented that mountaineering has undergone a form of continuous improvement that has opened it up to recreational participants (albeit highly skilled ones). After an exhaustive study of 25 climb attempts over 92 years, McCurdy concludes that the cost of climbing Everest has dropped tenfold with corresponding increases in safety and speed. He writes, “Commercial operators and modern climbers made simultaneous improvements in cost, risk and time. They did not need to trade risk for cost or cost for time.”
So what does all this have to do with a founder’s P&L?
For a founder-led company, reaching the summit is all about maintaining growth while constantly reducing costs using whatever means possible. Founders understand both the risks and the power of radical innovation but are also constantly hammering away for continuous improvement. Incumbents, by contrast, tend to lose faith over time in both forms of cost control. Instead of lowering sales, general & administrative (SG&A) costs as a percentage of sales, for instance, they are content to allow them to grow at the rate of sales growth. This ignores the value of continuously improving costs and passing the benefit along to customers.
These five points summarize how founders manage their P&Ls to maintain momentum:
As we explore in these blog posts how incumbents can revive their Founder’s Mentality, it is illustrative to see how differently they view (and manage) their P&Ls:
The economics of mountaineering are the economics of efficiency, and the most efficient are those who reach the summit. As incumbents ponder why they’ve stalled out short of their full potential, they might take a hard look at whether they’re still focused on climbing.