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Illustrations of Canadian entrepreneurs with their names written on it.

Inside Six Innovative Minds

Written by Mary Levitski | Published on February 6, 2020

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Entrepreneurs have a knack for seeing what others don't — because, well, it isn't there yet. Savvy investors often see what isn't there yet, too. But for all masters of agility, identifying potential opportunities is only the first step. How do they approach difficult questions and come up with the right answers? How do they look at failure? How do they go from ideation to innovation to sustained growth (in some cases, over and over again)? And, most pertinent for the rest of us, how can we apply some of these thought processes in our own day-to-day lives and maybe even in our approach to investing? We picked some of Canada's brilliant brains to find out.

Salad bowl with sticky notes.

MICHELE ROMANOW

Deconstruct Failure

Though she's widely known as a venture capitalist “Dragon” on CBC's Dragons' Den, Romanow is best described as a serial entrepreneur. Starting with a zero-consumer-waste coffee shop that she launched at Queen's University during her third year of engineering school, this powerhouse has gotten five businesses off the ground. In addition to Clearbanc, the AI-powered financing platform she cofounded in 2015, she's also a director on the boards of Whistler Blackcomb owner Vail Resorts and multinational restaurant chain Freshii. Oh, and that campus cafe still operates today.

On Inspiration

“I try to broaden my perspective. I listen to audiobooks. I think about the bigger trends in technology and how they're going to have big effects. And I cannot overestimate how much time I actually spend brainstorming. My favourite activity is to think about what companies and products the world needs. I spend dinners talking about this. I spend time at the bar talking about this. I spend my weekends thinking about this. But what's probably way more important than where you find ideas is really quickly executing on testing those ideas.”

"I prioritize ruthlessly. If I can only do three things today, which are the most important?" - Michele Romanow

On Taking a Leap

“No matter what, you always have to look at data. Because data will constantly surprise you. But the problem in a startup is that there's very little data. I always say, by the time McKinsey has written about an industry, the industry's been born. There are already multiple billion-dollar players. So when you enter a new space, you have to be willing to do that with extremely little data and pretty good gut intuition on what the future is going to be. And the most important thing when something doesn't feel right is not that you immediately U-turn; it's that you start pulling on those threads and asking a lot more questions to make sure that you're not being misled by your own data. Because if you're clever and you're smart, and if you're working with clever and smart people, you can make data tell almost any story you want.”

On Time Management

“I prioritize ruthlessly. When I'm overwhelmed, I sit at my desk with a sticky note and think, If I can only do three things today, which are the most important? And if you tell yourself you can only do three things, you'll actually do a lot more, but you'll really get the three hardest things, the three things that can actually move the needle, done.”

On Failure

“You need to deconstruct failure a little bit. Almost universally, it's not like everything doesn't work at once. And so what you're trying to figure out is what parts are working that you could double down or refocus on.”

Open book with a plant growing out of it.

IAN MEIER

Determine What's High Risk

Having been born and raised on a farm, Meier saw something no one else was talking about: The agricultural tech he had built and seen in the market was 20 years behind the latest consumer technology. Today, Meier and colleague Michael Lockerbie — both electrical engineers and computer scientists — are working to close that gap with their agtech brand, Agrimatics.

"I like to figure out what the highest-risk issues are. Where can this go wrong? What's the thing that we have the least comfort in being able to solve? Solve that first." - Ian Meier

On Problem Solving

“I like to figure out what the highest-risk issues are. Where can this go wrong? What's the thing that we have the least comfort in being able to solve? Solve that first. People often have a natural inclination to knock off a lot of the more straightforward things first because they feel like they're making progress. And they are making progress; however, it's all for naught if one of the critical issues is a no-go.”

On Keeping a Level Head

“I try to stay reasonably detached, on both the highs and the lows. When things are going really well, I try not to get carried away. I think about times that weren't as good to bring me back to earth. And when things aren't going well, I think about our wins, and that can help me feel less demoralized or despondent. Tomorrow is a new day, so I don't dwell on things too much. This way, I can be more objective.”

On Staying Sharp

“I read a lot. I'm a naturally curious person, so if something sounds interesting, I'll read up on how it works, whether it's related to our business or not. The side effect is that I might learn something that I can apply to the business, even though it seems completely unrelated. That's the interesting part of business: the multidisciplinary aspect, where ideas from all over the place can be combined in a new way.”

Robotic arm holding a glass of water.

CHARLES DEGUIRE

Learn How to Learn

Three of Deguire's uncles were living with muscular dystrophy, so mobility and quality of life were often on his mind when he was growing up. While studying electrical engineering, he developed the vision for Kinova, a groundbreaking robotics company that he co-founded with Louis-Joseph L'Ecuyer in Boisbriand, Que. Their first product was an assistive arm called JACO, and Kinova won a Governor General's Innovation Award in 2016.

"Once we realized that we could do it, there was no reason not to jump in." - Charles Deguire

On Getting Started

“During my engineering degree, we were working on robotic projects, sending robots to space. Yet, my uncles didn't have a viable option to help them drink a glass of water. We just took the challenge. In a weekend, we were able to come up with a mock-up and simulation of something that looked viable. Once we realized that we could do it, there was no reason not to jump in.”

On Learning to Learn

“I was lucky to have had some great teachers along the way. A professor once told us, 'The only thing you're really going to learn here is how to learn. If you succeed in doing that, everything else will follow.' So when we had to learn about electrical engineering or robotics, we learned it with a systematic approach and by working with experts. We then did the same thing with market development, international business development and contract negotiation.”

On Diversifying

“We robotize tasks. We did that for people using wheelchairs, expanding their reach. In surgery, we expand the capabilities of the surgeon. In hazardous material handling, we robotized the manipulation of toxic or nuclear waste. But it's always the same process, providing better tools to humans.”

On Problem Solving

“We move problems through a funnel. We start very wide, sort of chaotic. We look internally and externally, within our own industry and other industries, and ask, What process can I use to solve this? Once we've selected a few approaches that we believe have potential, we drill down and get really focused on executing each of them.”

Various packaging with the recycling symbol on it.

SARAH LANDSTREET

Solve Problems Not Everyone Would Know About

This queen of the pivot trained as a mechanical engineer, opened the first cupcake bakery in Northern Ireland, turned a profit and sold her business. Next, she got her MBA and founded Georgette Packaging, a carbon-neutral packaging firm in Kitchener, Ont., that's now among the fastest-growing businesses in Canada. And she did it all before her 30th birthday.

"I'm interested in problems that not everybody would necessarily know about. I like kind of unsexy industries." - Sarah Landstreet

On Identifying a Niche

“I'm interested in problems that not everybody would necessarily know about. I like kind of unsexy industries, I guess. Most people wouldn't know how tricky it is to buy packaging as a food business, for example, unless you happen to own a food business. But at that point, you're busy running your food business; you're not in the packaging industry.”

On Making Mistakes

“I think that business owners in general are not lacking intelligence, but they are often lacking in compassion for themselves. Because you'll never have enough information to know exactly what to do. You can't predict the future. I'm pretty good at rebounding from mistakes, not focusing on them too much, and doing what it takes to fix the situation. I feel like those skills are just as important. Mistakes let me flex my resourceful muscles.”

On Productivity Hacks

“I like putting systems in place that force me to change my behaviour. I was reading about how the founder of IKEA removed the snooze button from his alarm. I love that. I recently got a landline – a rotary phone, so it doesn't even have voice mail – to encourage me to use my cell phone less. I always feel like cell phones are like Tamagotchi. It's like a pet that just gives you so much work.”

Iceberg.

BRADEN REAM

Persist in Your Efforts

This young self-professed computer nerd is a business school dropout — and also the CEO of Voiceflow, a collaborative design platform for making voice apps. Ream and his co-founders (Andrew Lawrence, Michael Hood and Tyler Han) essentially built the tool they wished they'd had as app developers. Now, Voiceflow powers over 10 million conversations per month for users such as the New York Times.

On Decision-Making

“If you boil everything down, in every decision there's asymmetry. When it came to dropping out of school, there was actually not much of a downside. The downside was protected in that we could always go back. Inversely, the potential upside was unlimited.”

"If you look at an iceberg, the top 10 per cent is the tip that people see. There's an order of magnitude of time before people hear of that person, when they were just grinding away." - Braden Ream

On Success

“If you look at an iceberg, the top 10 per cent is the tip that people see. They see the funding headlines. They think the company's start date is when the entrepreneur started. Generally speaking, I think there's an order of magnitude of time before people ever hear of that person, when they were just grinding away, perfecting their craft.”

On Adaptability

“Entrepreneurship is about the persistence of effort, not persistence of ideas. At first, we were trying to build an entertainment app, but it was really expensive, and we were running out of money. We needed to scale the business, so we opened the tools that we had built internally to allow other people to build entertainment. But they weren't just building entertainment; these tools proved powerful enough for people to build anything they wanted. The light bulb went off: This business doesn't just have to be about entertainment. That shifted our whole mindset, allowing us to broaden our scope.”

Vision board with garbage bags in front of it.

BRIAN SCUDAMORE

Take Failure as a Gift

Vancouver-based Scudamore has been “failing upwards” for over 30 years on what he deems to be the roller coaster of trial and error of entrepreneurship. With 1-800-GOT-JUNK?, Scudamore got the formula right, and he's applied it to three more home-service brands under his banner company, O2E Brands.

On Failure

“I have story after story of failure: dropping out of high school, dropping out of college, telling my father — a liver transplant surgeon — that I was leaving school to become a full-time junk man. And I've made mistakes. I once hired the wrong COO, and we almost bankrupted the company. I once fired 11 employees, my entire staff, because I had hired the wrong people. Every single failure has become a gift. While it was a painful experience to go through, failure was the best education I could have. Even today, as a $345-million company, we have things that are not going to go as planned, but you tweak, you learn and continue to thrive.”

On Trusting Experts

“I love naysayers. I want to hear my staff say, 'No, Brian, this is crazy. This is not going to work. This is a bad idea.' Then I get to ask them questions. 'What would make it a good idea? How would you do it differently? What's missing? You're the expert.' Because I'm not the smartest person in the room. I never will be.”

"I started to understand the power of taking a picture from my mind and then sharing it with people around me." - Brian Scudamore

On Having a Vision

“Eight years into the business, I was having a bit of a doom loop in my life. I had gotten the business to $1 million. But I thought, Can it be bigger? I took out this one page, double-sided, and I started to write a letter to myself of what the future looked like for 1-800-GOT-JUNK?. I said we'd be on The Oprah Winfrey Show, we'd be the FedEx of junk removal, we'd be in the top 30 cities in North America. Within five years, all of those things happened. I started to understand the power of taking a picture from my mind, putting it into a document that isn't allowed to change, and then sharing it with people around me.”

Get more stories on entrepreneurship, leadership and digital technology in the RBC Disruptors Podcast.

This article was featured in our special issue, as seen in the Globe and Mail. Download the full magazine HERE.

 

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