The Future of Work w/ Roy Bahat. VC Firms Going Public. Thumbs Up/Down. Unlocked Archives.
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The Agenda š* Laetitia spoke with Bloomberg Betaās Roy Bahat about everything future of workĀ š§* My latest column in Sifted is about publicly traded VC firms in Europe* Thumbs up/down for last week* Recently unlocked essays from the European Straits archiveFor the latest episode of the Building Bridges podcast, Laetitia interviewed our friend Roy Bahat, an SF-based venture capitalist with Bloomberg Beta and an inspiring leader on the future of work. Hereās what she wrote about their conversation:For this new episodeĀ of theĀ Building BridgesĀ podcast, Iām excited to share my interview with Roy Bahat, who as the Head of Bloomberg Beta has been āobsessed with how we make workāthe thing we do with more waking hours than any otherābetterā. Heās been an inspiration for me at least since I watched this video in which he speaks about two key drivers for workers: āStability and dignityā.Roy is used to making short, insightful and actionable pieces of content about work, careers, entrepreneurship and personal development. I recommend his series of to-the-point #thisisnotadvice interviews which you can watch on Twitter. They cover a wide range of topics like āShould I mentor someone and, if so, how do I do it?āor āHow can I be the type of founders that VCs want to fund?ā. But I confess I wanted more time with him. I wanted to hear him in a longer format so he could tell his career story, what it means to be a VC specialised in the future of work and so weād still have time left to speak about the future of work and how we can prepare for it. Iām so grateful he accepted!As he explains in this podcast, he hadnāt planned to become a VC, let alone one who focuses on the future of work! But after doing tons of reading, talked to thousands of people and given the subject a lot of thought, you could say heās become quite the expert. (More exactly, heās reached that level of expertise where you become humble again. Itās a bit like Japanese martial arts: when you reach the highest level, you can wear a white belt again like a beginner!) I simply love how he adresses the most simple yet profound questions. Hereās how he sums it all up neatly on his LinkedIn profile:I've had a messy, hand-wringy career (in non-profit, professional services, city government, big media, video games, academia, day-zero startup, investing), where I was never hired for any job for which I was qualified (including starting a company, where I guess I sort of co-hired myself and was still unqualified). Only later did I realize the one thread that tied it all together -- making work better.In 2013, Bloomberg L.P. gave me the opportunity to turn my obsession with the future of work into my job when we created Bloomberg Beta. I believe the fastest way to make change is to build extraordinary technology companies (and, these days, machine intelligence companies in particular).We talked about a lot of things, including feminism and why itās important to embrace it. Among the many themes covered were also the skills of the future. How do you make yourself āfutureproofā in a fast-changing world? I asked him because in his book Futureproof, NYT journalistKevin Roose thanks Roy profusely for the inspiring conversations he had with him. (Check out this article I wrote about the book.) Hereās Royās conclusion:How do we prepare? Most of the past thinking about preparation for the future that I learned growing up what āpoint preparationāāāhereās what the worldās going to be like: prepare yourself for itā (ā¦) But if you believe that the pace of change is going to be more rapid, then learning is the most essential skill, rapid reinvention⦠In the tech world, I call this being the CIO of your own life⦠constantly looking for new tools and trying to integrate them and experiment with them. Another one is setting your own priorities. We donāt learn in school that this is a skill. The third one is the scientific method applied to everything around us. If the world is going to keep changing, scientific method is our best way of understanding how.š Listen to Laetitiaās conversation with Roy Bahat in the latest episode of the Building Bridges podcast using the player above š or on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.Normally when we talk about startups and IPOs, itās in the context of which VC firms have won a big payday after making a bet on a company that grew large enough to go public. In my Sifted column this week, I look at a situation that reverses the roles a bit: VC firms that themselves go public, raising money from public markets and thus giving access to VC performance to a wider swath of investors. While itās still a relatively rare occurrence, I believe weāll see it happening more and more, all part of venture capital taking a more central role in the financial services industry.š Read more in Startups IPO. Why shouldnāt VCs?š Lots of interesting discussions recently over turning traditional companies into tech companies. Itās a topic Iāve covered a lot (see All About Shifting Patterns Across Industries). More recently I was interested in Dealroomās report about Corporate Innovation in the Entrepreneurial Age and the latest episode of Another Podcast w/ Toni Cowan-Brown & Benedict Evans, about digital transformation š§š A while ago I wrote about the opportunities that European founders should pursue in Asia: read Should European Founders Look to the East?, as well as Martin Pasquierās reaction in Another Round on Expanding in Asia (both unlocked). It turns out one of our portfolio companies, WeMaintain, just applied the playbook: Are Asian markets the secret to European proptech success?š Lego is one of the most fascinating companies aroundāespecially from a European perspective! Last year I contributed to covering it with my 11 Notes on Lego. More recently, there were lots of echoes in the media about their move to recycle plastic and turn the legendary bricks into more environmentally-friendly stuff. See Lego's lesson in innovation (Financial Times).š I didnāt comment much on the Chinese Communist Party celebrating its 100th anniversary, but you can definitely find many pieces of background history. Here are some that are worth your attention: Chinaās Leaders ā from Mao to now (The Guardian); The Chinese Communist party: 100 years that shook the world (The Guardian); and my own Primer on the Chinese Communist Party (unlocked) šØš³Ā š Andy Jassy has now succeeded Jeff Bezos as Amazonās CEO. You can read related articles in the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and Bloomberg, as well as my own 11 Notes on Jeff Bezos (unlocked). Also read this illuminating blog by Steve Blank about what happens when the visionary founder passes the baton: Why Tim Cook is Steve Ballmer and Why He Still Has His Job at Apple.Ā š Maybe itās simply me succumbing to the gloom that accompanies the never-ending COVID-19 pandemic, but I find that the awareness of climate change and its catastrophic consequences has gone up to eleven, and itās definitely affecting everyoneās morale. Have a look at this in the FT: How to cope with the climate apocalypse. And this, by the ever-gloomier Umair Haque. And this about Europe.Ā š Since the paid version of European Straits has been discontinued, Iām gradually unlocking the entire archive so that everyone can read and share. Itās not systematic in any way, but rather I unlock essays when theyāre relevant and I want to quote them either here or on social media.Here are the ones that you can now discover if you werenāt previously a paying subscriber:š¬š§ Notes on Britain in the Entrepreneurial Age (June 2020)Ā š° Notes on Revenue-Based Financing (July 2020)Ā šØš³ A Primer on the Chinese Communist Party (September 2020)š Should European Founders Look to the East? (October 2020)Ā šØš³ Industrial Policy: China Gets It, We Don't (October 2020)Ā š Why Software Has a Hard Time Eating Construction (October 2020)Ā šŖšŗ European Tech's Forgotten Stories (November 2020)š Another Round on Expanding in Asia (November 2020)Ā šŗ Business Strategy at a Small Scale (January 2021)š®š³ A Great Writeup About India's Startup Scene (January 2021)Ā Ā šØš»āš¦² 11 Notes on Jeff Bezos (February 2021)Ā š° "Be Patient" | A Conversation About Angel Investing w/ Pascal Levy-Garboua (Part 1 & Part 2) (February 2021)Ā Sign up to European Straits if you donāt want to miss the next issues š¤(Credit: Franz Liszt, Angelus ! PriĆØre Aux Anges Gardiensāextrait du disque Miroirs de Jonas Vitaud, NoMadMusic.)From Munich, Germany š©šŖĀ Nicolas This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.driftsignal.com