blinkx
  • Lessons Learned: Raman Khanna on turning ideas into products

  • 00:06:13
  • Vator TV
    • Browse

Lessons Learned: Raman Khanna on turning ideas into products

As the former CTO of Stanford University, Raman Khanna of Onset Ventures spent more than a decade sifting through proposals from faculty members who hoped to commercialize their research. It was a perfect training ground for being a venture capitalist, says Khanna, who invested in many Stanford entrepreneurs after he left the university to found Diamondhead Ventures. At Diamondhead, which merged with Onset last year, Khanna worked with an ecosystem of faculty advisers and industry executives to help sift through the ideas. The most frequent fatal flaw? "About 90 percent of the ideas were too early," says Khanna, who in earlier Vator.tv interviews talked about investing in hardware, the online ad market, early-stage valuations and lessons he's learned as a VC. "These professors were often thinking five-to-ten years down the road," or long before the market their product was targeted at would arrive. Another problem were "professors who were used to being in charge," or who were perfectionists, and refused to either cede control of their company to a CEO with business experience or would delay the release of a product rather than launching it and letting customers provide early feedback. Read this article on Vator.tv

Vator TV | June 24, 2008Watch more videos from Vator TV

Tags:. .diamondhead. .cede. .perfectionists. .raman. .cto











Ad   Advisers   Arrive   Article   Capitalist   Cede   Ceo   Charge   Commercialize   Cto   Customers   Decade   Delay   Diamondhead   Earlier   Ecosystem   Either   Entrepreneurs   Executives   Faculty   Fatal   Feedback   Flaw   Frequent   Ground   Hardware   Invested   Investing   Khanna   Launching   Lessons   Merged   Often   Onset   Percent   Perfect   Perfectionists   Professors   Proposals   Raman   Rather   Refused   Research   Sifting   Spent   Stanford University   Targeted   Valuations   Vator   Vc   Ventures