Xconomist Phil Libin, the CEO of Mountain View, CA-based Evernote, is a little unusual among his Silicon Valley brethren. He’s on the record as saying that the online notekeeping startup doesn’t want to be acquired. “There has never been an exit strategy at Evernote,” he wrote in an FAQ-style blog post after Evernote raised $50 million in a round led by Sequoia Capital and Morgenthaler Ventures this July. “We don’t want to exit, we want to build a permanently great company.”
But if you don’t exit, how do your backers ever see a return on their investment? The trick, as it turns out, is to keep raising venture money forever—or at least, for a very long time. Some of Sequoia and Morgenthaler’s $50 million went into the pockets of Evernote’s early investors rather than into the company’s coffers. And in the future, perhaps other investors will pay off Sequoia and Morgenthaler. This kind of so-called “secondary market” trading is becoming more and more common in Silicon Valley, and Libin’s point is that it opens up an entirely new strategy for startups: focus on growing, rather than getting acquired or going public.
“The goal is to build a profitable, permanently great company,” says Libin. “Probably a public company eventually, though there’s no rush for that and an IPO is not an exit, just another in the long string of partial liquidity events where some investors leave and some come in. Multiple private rounds and secondaries is a great tool to reach that goal.”
I talked with Libin this week about his “100 year” plan for Evernote and the progress the company has made so far. The truth is that Evernote, more than most other companies, needs to survive in some form for 100 years or longer, since its whole pitch is that it will store user’ personal notes—text, photos, audio, Web pages, e-mails, you name it—forever.
That’s a pretty big promise. But the three-year-old freemium service has become so popular—with more than 11 million users and more than 10,000 outside developers writing apps that connect to Evernote’s services—that it seems likely to stay around, at least for a while. Here’s an edited writeup of my conversation with Libin.
Xconomy: You’ve talked about wanting Evernote to be a “100 year company.” What does that mean in practical terms, and how is the way you’re running Evernote different from the way you ran your first two startups, Engine 5 and Corestreet?
Phil Libin: I think the difference between Evernote and both of my previous startups is that the first two times around, we took this question quite seriously of “What is our exit strategy?” That question permeated the company culture. But it’s not a particularly natural question. It presupposes a lot of things.
I think what was happening for many years was that liquidity and exits were tied together in the VCs’ minds, and therefore in the entrepreneurs’ minds. So if the business model demands some kind of liquidity, sooner or later the investors want their money back, on a finite time scale. I think what’s happening now, just in the past couple of years, is that a bunch of the better startup companies are really not thinking about exits at all, so they are free to think about how do you build a good company and get a good return for your investors. That’s a much nicer, more natural way to think.
X: What has changed?
PL: Starting with Facebook, liquidity and exits were totally decoupled. You don’t need to exit for your investors to get their money back. It’s the decoupling of liquidity and exits that is probably the most underappreciated change going on in Silicon Valley, because once you separate liquidity and exits, you can incent entrepreneurs to build truly great companies, without having to take shortcuts.
X: But to a large extent, the trend you’re talking about comes down to one person and one fund—Yuri Milner at Digital Sky Technologies, who has invested large amounts in Facebook, Twitter, Zynga, and other companies, and provided liquidity to a lot of early shareholders in the process. Not every startup has a Yuri Milner or a Sequoia Capital willing to buy out early shareholders. So how broad-based is this phenomenon?
PL: I think Yuri was definitely the guy who got it started, or at least gave it enough mass to get started. But at this point it is powering itself. In hindsight, it looks like the obvious thing to do. But part of Yuri’s genius is seeing that which, in hindsight, is obvious. It’s not like he had