
The Butter Thesis
At USV, we talk a lot about our investment thesis. The USV thesis is a set of ideas that has guided our investing over the years. It is a tool we u...
From Crypto-Native to Crypto-Enabled
I’m not one to make big annual predictions, but one thing that seems likely to me is that 2024 will mark the emergence of mainstream apps powered by ...
You Never Know When You've Had a Good Day
Many years ago, when I had just started working at USV, I remember there was kind of a complicated situation that unfolded in a seemingly bad way, and I'll never forget what Brad said in response. He said:you never know when you've had a good dayI didn't really understand what that meant, so he told me a story that went something like: back around the year 2000 at the height of the dot-com boom, there was a guy who was a senior exec at a successful startup. That person had a falling out with ...

The Butter Thesis
At USV, we talk a lot about our investment thesis. The USV thesis is a set of ideas that has guided our investing over the years. It is a tool we u...
From Crypto-Native to Crypto-Enabled
I’m not one to make big annual predictions, but one thing that seems likely to me is that 2024 will mark the emergence of mainstream apps powered by ...
You Never Know When You've Had a Good Day
Many years ago, when I had just started working at USV, I remember there was kind of a complicated situation that unfolded in a seemingly bad way, and I'll never forget what Brad said in response. He said:you never know when you've had a good dayI didn't really understand what that meant, so he told me a story that went something like: back around the year 2000 at the height of the dot-com boom, there was a guy who was a senior exec at a successful startup. That person had a falling out with ...
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Last night, Andy Murray won the US Open -- his first grand slam victory -- in an epic 5-set match (tied for the longest ever). I was on a train and missed the whole thing, unfortunately. But the story is great -- Murray won the first two sets, then dropped the second two, only to rally in the fifth to win. And more importantly, he has been a perennial runner-up -- always getting close, but never able to close (until now).
My favorite line from the HuffPo piece is this:
Just weeks after winning gold during the London Olympics, Murray has finally broken through in a Grand Slam. The perennial contender had consistently been held at bay by Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal in the sport's marquee events. After losing in the 2012 men's final at Wimbledon to Federer, an emotional Murray told the partisan crowd that he was "getting closer."
Getting closer.
I know that feeling -- working so hard at something, but not being there quite yet. Being so close you can taste it. Working, little by little, day by day, to get there. Keeping your eye on the prize but not getting distracted from the task at hand. Working with determination and quiet confidence.
Yesterday I wrote about how the mental roller coaster rides of tennis and entrepreneurship are similar. This story is a great follow up to that, and is one that makes me really happy -- that Andy was able to pull through, to conquer whatever demons were there from prior losses, and further, to come back from what must have felt like yet-another-disappointing-loss-in-the-making.
Pretty cool.
Last night, Andy Murray won the US Open -- his first grand slam victory -- in an epic 5-set match (tied for the longest ever). I was on a train and missed the whole thing, unfortunately. But the story is great -- Murray won the first two sets, then dropped the second two, only to rally in the fifth to win. And more importantly, he has been a perennial runner-up -- always getting close, but never able to close (until now).
My favorite line from the HuffPo piece is this:
Just weeks after winning gold during the London Olympics, Murray has finally broken through in a Grand Slam. The perennial contender had consistently been held at bay by Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal in the sport's marquee events. After losing in the 2012 men's final at Wimbledon to Federer, an emotional Murray told the partisan crowd that he was "getting closer."
Getting closer.
I know that feeling -- working so hard at something, but not being there quite yet. Being so close you can taste it. Working, little by little, day by day, to get there. Keeping your eye on the prize but not getting distracted from the task at hand. Working with determination and quiet confidence.
Yesterday I wrote about how the mental roller coaster rides of tennis and entrepreneurship are similar. This story is a great follow up to that, and is one that makes me really happy -- that Andy was able to pull through, to conquer whatever demons were there from prior losses, and further, to come back from what must have felt like yet-another-disappointing-loss-in-the-making.
Pretty cool.
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