Entrepreneurship for Lawyers

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I was recently reading some old posts on Venture Blog and couldn't believe how short they were. One might call them pithy. Or one might also call them lazy. Either way, they were short. I should really try that again.

I have been teaching a class at Harvard Law School this winter semester called Venture Capital and the Technology Start-up with John Palfrey, the Executive Director of the Berkman Center. It is really fun to be back at the law school and working with John. I have been blown away by the energy that the law students are bringing to the topic of Entrepreneurship and Venture Capital. Sadly, I never had a VC or Entrepreneurship class in law school. Lets see, I had torts, contracts, criminal law, federal courts, administrative law, property, intellectual property, corporations, securities regulation, constitutional law . . . but no entrepreneurship. Then again, I don't know that I would have had the sense to actually take a VC or Entrepreneurship class back then. So its presence would have been wasted on me.

Today my students had to actually pitch business ideas to real live VCs from the Boston area. And they did a great job. As I was discussing with them how to think about company building and pitching, it struck me that much like the law, building great companies is all about applying precedent. Only, instead of the applicable precedent being case law in this instance, the applicable precedent is a business case. Pitching your business is all about finding the right business analogs and describing how they apply to the company you're building (e.g., "we're the Amazon.com of funeral supplies."). That isn't so different from finding the right case analogs and describing how they apply to the lawsuit you're defending. So there may be hope that we lawyers are able to figure out this entrepreneurship stuff yet.

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2 Comments

dougchartier.myopenid.com Author Profile Page said:

Sounds like a great class, David. I would've loved to taken something like that in law school. Another close legal analog to entrepreneurship would be the use of precedent deals in transactional legal work (i.e., this deal is similar to that one, so it should be structured similarly).

While the analytical side of entrepreneurship might be similar to parts of legal practice, I wonder if you had any thoughts on common weaknesses that lawyers have in building businesses. I know several people who have worked with lawyers who have moved into non-legal careers (e.g., management consulting), and their common complaints were these people were often overly detail-oriented, had trouble focusing on the big picture, or were overly risk averse. Of course, everyone is different -- I'm sure you would've had serious trouble moving into the VC industry if you suffered from those problems. But what have been your general experiences working with practicing lawyers or former lawyers who take on non-legal roles?

Don Author Profile Page said:

Wow - 'interdisciplinary' studies - there is hope in the youth of America yet...and for venture capital!

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This page contains a single entry by David Hornik published on January 11, 2008 8:31 PM.

Venture Capital in China was the previous entry in this blog.

Pitching a VC -- The Basics Revisited is the next entry in this blog.

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