All Content from Business Insider 09月30日
塞雷娜·威廉姆斯:企业家精神与社会影响力投资
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网球巨星塞雷娜·威廉姆斯现担任Reckitt Catalyst的“驻场企业家”,指导专注于社会影响的初创公司创始人。她分享了自己早期创立风险投资公司Serena Ventures的经验,并强调了导师的重要性。威廉姆斯认为,创业者应关注市场需求,讲述引人入胜的故事,并优先建立人际关系。她还从网球生涯中学到了韧性,并致力于支持女性创始人,推动她们在投资领域取得成功。

🌟 导师与早期经验:塞雷娜·威廉姆斯在创立自己的风险投资公司Serena Ventures十余年后,反思了早期缺乏导师指导的经历,并认为学习他人的经验能避免不必要的弯路。她现担任Reckitt Catalyst的“驻场企业家”,致力于指导早期风险投资的创始人,特别是那些专注于社会影响力的创业者。

💡 寻找真实需求与故事:威廉姆斯在评估投资项目时,首要关注的是市场是否存在真实需求。她认为,一个伟大的想法或创始人固然重要,但如果产品或服务无法满足市场需求,就难以成功。她特别欣赏那些能讲述引人入胜故事、并对产品有深厚情感连接的创始人,例如那些致力于解决水资源短缺等社会问题的女性创始人。

🤝 关系至上与建立连接:威廉姆斯强调,在风险投资领域,人际关系与想法本身同等重要。她认为,创始人需要具备良好的人际交往能力,能够与潜在投资者建立有意义的联系。她指出,即使是看似不起眼的社交场合,也可能为创业者带来宝贵的合作机会,因为“连接是关键”。

💪 韧性与克服挑战:借鉴其辉煌的网球生涯,威廉姆斯认为韧性是创业成功的关键要素,尤其是在早期风险投资领域,许多公司最终未能成功。她将体育生涯培养的心理素质视为一种“作弊码”,帮助她在创业过程中理解“万事开头难”的道理,并从挫折中寻找机会。

💖 支持女性创始人:威廉姆斯积极支持女性创始人,她的公司Serena Ventures投资的公司中,超过一半的创始人是女性。她指出,女性在创业时需要付出更多努力,但当获得机会时,她们往往会全力以赴,这种驱动力有助于她们的企业在长期内取得成功。

Serena Williams is the "entrepreneur-in-residence" at Reckitt Catalyst, mentoring founders focused on social impact.

Despite building a $111 million VC fund, backing 16 unicorn companies, and being married to a successful cofounder and investor, Serena Williams wishes she had more guidance when she launched her VC firm, Serena Ventures, over a decade ago.

"In hindsight, I feel like I should have had more mentors," Williams, 44, told Business Insider.

While the tennis superstar said the mistakes she made were important for her to grow, she still asked herself: "Why learn them when you can learn them from someone else?"

It's a good question from Williams, who, over the summer, became an "entrepreneur-in-residence" at Reckitt Catalyst.

Reckitt, a British hygiene company known for its health and cleaning products, including Lysol, has a social impact investment program aimed at delivering "health and hygiene solutions to 5 million people worldwide by 2030," according to the company's press release.

Catalyst recently expanded to the US, with Williams now mentoring US-based founders, including Erik Cárdenas, a founding member of Amazon Care (previously ranked on Business Insider's 30-under-40 list in 2020), who started Zócalo Health to help Medicaid families in underserved communities.

"I feel like you learn something new every single day," Williams said of joining the initiative. "I loved school, and I feel like I'm in school all day."

Putting Williams in the professor role, Business Insider asked Williams to share the advice she learned from her investing experience, from refining an idea to dealing with setbacks.

Find the story, not the 'white space'

Like most investors, when deciding whether to invest in a company, Williams first asks herself if there's a true marketplace for the idea. "The founder can be amazing and smart and super likable, but if it's not needed in the market, then it doesn't fit," she said.

If there is a market for the product or idea, she looks for the story the founder is telling. She cited some Catalyst-supported companies, such as the Tayaba Organisation and Nazava, both of which are led by female founders and address issues like water scarcity and water purification.

The Tayaba Organisation recently pitched H2O Air, a device that converts air humidity into drinkable water, on Pakistan's "Shark Tank."

"These women, they're literally saving the lives of women and children, which truly will give you chills to hear some of these stories," Williams said.

The key, Williams said, is for entrepreneurs to be passionate about their products, rather than just looking to fill a gap. "If they have a true connection to it, the businesses tend to do better," she added, "as opposed to 'Oh, there's a white space, so we're going to do it.'"

Prioritize relationships as much as the idea

If there's one lesson Williams learned over the years, it's that so much depends on the face of the company.

"You're only as good as your founder," she said. "If someone is not a salesperson, they can have a great product, but they can't sell it."

Founders should be able to meaningfully connect with potential investors, Williams advised, rather than just relying on the idea being strong enough on its own.

"Access is key in VC," she said. "When you're doing business as an entrepreneur, it's basically relationships."

Williams was recently featured in Skims' Nike collaboration. Serena Ventures also backs Khloud by Khloé Kardashian.

She said connections you've met forever ago might be a perfect fit as investors or collaborators later on. Even a boring event to some can be very interesting to entrepreneurs who are truly open to meeting new people.

"When I think about what mentorship means and what I've learned, it's really just about connections and unlocking how to get people to know about your product," she said.

Build up your resilience

Drawing from her successful tennis career, where she won 23 Grand Slam titles and is widely considered the best female tennis player of all time, Williams said resilience is crucial — especially in early-stage VC, when many companies don't work out in the long run.

"Sport really provides you with this mental fortitude that makes you understand that nothing happens overnight," she said, whether you're an athlete or a CEO.

It's a great cheat code to understand when you're launching businesses like Williams. In addition to Serena Ventures, which has backed brands like Esusu and Calico, she's also launched Wyn Beauty, the topical pain-relief brand Will Perform, her clothing line S by Serena, Serena Williams Jewelry, and her production company Nine Two Six.

Williams said she learned investing skills like discipline and resilience from her tennis career.

Sometimes, resilience looks like finding the opportunity in obstacles.

Over half of the founders backed by Williams' firm are women, historically a vastly underrepresented group in the VC world. According to data from the Founders Forum Group, in 2024, only 2.3% of venture capital funding globally went to all-female leadership teams, while mixed-gender teams accounted for 14.1% of spending.

"As a woman, when you start a business, you have to succeed because you have to work so much harder," she said. In her experience of being a founder herself and working with female founders, "when we get an opportunity, we go out — we don't know when our next opportunity to be."

Often, she said, that drive helps the company succeed in the long run. "Whenever we are able to get a check, it tends to do well," she said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Serena Williams Reckitt Catalyst Venture Capital Social Impact Entrepreneurship Mentorship Female Founders Investment Resilience 塞雷娜·威廉姆斯 风险投资 社会影响力 创业 导师 女性创始人
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