Orlando Bravo, Founder and Managing Partner of Thoma Bravo: Take the Risks Meant for You
By Stanford Graduate School of Business
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Embrace the equalizer of humility**: Tennis taught Orlando Bravo the importance of humility, realizing he wasn't the best player. This equalizer, where rankings don't matter on the court, translates to business: even with a strong team and past success, you must still strive to win each deal. [02:37] - **The American opportunity: Build with just money**: Bravo was struck by the American opportunity to buy a multinational corporation with just money, without owning a company or having a significant presence in the space. This impressed him as a 'ridiculous opportunity' to build something substantial. [05:33] - **One offer is enough if it's the right one**: After facing rejection and sending out 500 resumes, Bravo learned that you don't need many offers; you just need one, and it has to be the right one. Persistence paid off when Carl Icahn offered him a job just two weeks before graduation. [08:40] - **Don't take risks not meant for your firm**: After a disastrous first deal during the dot-com bubble burst, Bravo was given another chance by his mentor, Carl Icahn. Icahn advised him not to take risks that weren't aligned with the firm's private equity, buyout strategy, emphasizing the importance of calculated risks. [13:24] - **Focus on the business, not the noise**: Bravo advises focusing on the business and doing your own thing, rather than getting swayed by external opinions or market trends. He learned this by pursuing software buyouts when venture capitalists and large buyout firms considered it too risky, but his deep dive into the companies revealed their true potential. [29:30] - **Mentorship requires shared values and daily engagement**: True mentorship involves finding individuals who share your values and are actively engaged in your day-to-day work, not just ad-hoc calls. Bravo highlights how his mentors, Carl Icahn and Marcel Bernard, provided guidance rooted in shared principles and practical involvement. [16:44], [17:46]
Topics Covered
- Humility: The Constant Equalizer in Business and Life.
- Rejection is Redirection: Find Your 'Right One.'
- Mentors are Everywhere: Seek Those Who Share Your Values.
- Solving Community Problems with an Entrepreneurial Mindset.
- Ignore the Naysayers: Opportunity Hides in Plain Sight.
Full Transcript
[Music]
Orlando, welcome back to GSV.
>> Let's go.
>> Let's go,
man.
Look at all you guys out there. This
This is great. It reminds me of many,
many years ago when I was having so much
fun here. Made my best friends. Just
incredible to see all of you really. It
feels just like coming back home. and
we're so lucky to have you here who's
been in our shoes to come and join us
here for the first view from the top of
a year.
>> We wanted to start by bringing some of
the memories back from the time you were
a student here back in 97.
>> JJ, what did you do?
>> Charlotte,
>> who knew this guy would go and build one
of the most successful private equity
firms in the world?
Yeah, you know, it's it's this is funny.
That guy right there, Mason, um my best
friend from business school, one time we
were in Vegas, and I do believe that my
class started that Vegas tradition that
has become now super fancy. We when we
go in a small group, he was brushing his
teeth in the morning and goes, "Do you
think any of us would ever like start a
company or do something?" And he told me
the other day that we were one of them.
So, that's good.
>> Yeah.
>> I I'll take it.
>> I'll take it. Well, I think a lot of
students here today are going to relate
to your story, maybe even in ways they
don't expect. Here's something I relate
to. At 15, I moved to the US as an
international student. At 15, you moved
to Florida from a small coastal town in
Puerto Rico. What was that like for you?
>> Well, you're from Lithuania. You we
relate to that.
>> Yeah.
>> Um it was it was scary. Uh it it's not
only it's I'm I'm not only from Puerto
Rico, but I'm from a small town on the
west coast of Puerto Rico. So if you
want to do play tennis, uh look for a
better life, you have to drive four
hours just across the island to get to
San Juan. And then that's a that's a
city and you get that opportunity. But
but it was scary. My family, we were all
very very close. But it also was really
special. I thought I was being handed
like an opportunity of a lifetime. I was
just 15 playing tennis, but it was very
meaningful for me.
>> And in Florida, you went to Nick
Bullet's tennis academy. It's known to
be one of the most prestigious
tennismies in the world. What did tennis
teach you about life?
>> Humility. You talk about that tennis
academy and I found out pretty quickly
that I wasn't that good.
But I did private equity, so that's
okay. Uh, I'll take it. Uh, you know,
it's um that's really important an
important part of who I am.
>> Um, how I think about business, how how
I lead. Uh, for example, right in in
tennis, when you get on the court with
somebody,
it doesn't matter what your ranking is.
You could be ranked higher, you could be
ranked lower, the other player may have
more coaching, this or that, but you
have to try to figure out how to win
that match. And I had some of the most
amazing experiences when I was a little
kid being paid to go to Venezuela to
play in an international tournament in
Latin America. And you you notice that
you're as equally nervous as your
opponent. Uh you notice that you may
have the same style that you kind of
play in the same way. And that equalizer
is so so important. Like today we're
pretty big in tech, but we still need to
win that deal. even if we're much
bigger, even if we've had good returns
in the past, even if we have a great
team and that other competitor is equal
to us and that's great. And and also I
mentioned it's really humbling because
um there's always somebody better than
you and and it's okay not to always be
the best at everything and the best. You
just try your your hardest and you do
your own thing and and that really has
those two things have really stuck with
me.
You left the tennis court and joined
investment banking in the early 90s.
What surprised you the most about your
first few years on Wall Street?
>> The opportunity.
I was uh blown away and I think many of
you have done investment banking. You're
going into entrepreneurship or private
equity. But
I was going to go to Stanford Law
School. I was lucky to have gotten in
and because I really didn't know what I
wanted to do after undergrad and Morgan
Stanley gave me a job and Stanford was
the only school that deferred me which
was just incredible. I remember calling
Harvard because at the time that was my
first choice to go to law school and
they said ah you got to apply next year
you have to compare to the next class
and all this serious stuff and Stanford
when I called just admissions thank you
they said you're welcome to come here
anytime you want I was like wow west
coast that's that's so true right so
chill
and and I was like that's that's where I
want to go So, but but I wanted this
opportunity. I get to work in Wall
Street. This unbelievable. Really early
on, I noticed um and it was 1992, so it
was really early for private equity that
they put me on a deal. And um there was
this group trying to buy this company
that didn't own a company that didn't
have a big company in the space. They
didn't have anything. They just had
money. And I was incredibly impressed
about the American opportunity that
without anything, people will trust you,
give you money, and with that, you can
buy a multinational corporation. I
thought that was just the most
ridiculous opportunity there was. And
they seem to have a lot of money, too.
So, I said, "Ah, maybe I'll try that."
Um yeah.
>> You come to Stanford after two years at
Morgan Stanley, but not only to do JD,
also MBA.
Can you share more about what were your
biggest takeaways from the time you
spent on this campus?
>> Well, I was the luckiest. I I met
Gabrielle and she and I had Charlotte
who is here. Sorry to embarrass you. Uh
um my oldest. Charlotte's 23. She's a
senior at Stanford. So proud of you,
Charlotte. And without me being at
Stanford, I wouldn't have met Gabrielle.
So we had Charlotte and Xander and now
have other wonderful kids. uh met her,
met my best friends, had time to really
explore what I enjoyed and what I was
really like, was inspired by my
classmates, uh was really loved by my
classmates. You know, you saw the
pictures. Those are my best friends.
Still today, we've kind of traveled life
together, kids, challenges, work, um you
name it, right? That's kind of my my
support group. Um I don't know. It's
just it it was really what gave me the
true opportunity to to do what I do and
explore the world in the way I do it
now.
>> And your journey in private equity also
started here. You landed a summer
internship at a private equity firm
nearby here in Menlo Park. And for many
of us here, when we go on our summer
internships after the first year, we
hope that two things will happen. First,
we'll love their job and second, we'll
get the return offer to come back after
graduation.
What was that experience like for you?
>> Wow.
Nobody has asked me about that summer
job and not getting the return offer.
I thought you were going to jump to the
goat of private equity, Carl Toma, but
we'll we'll talk about that in a second.
Um, but that was a GSB alum. um Alex
Siver actually a very very good tennis
player an incredible investor he was
affiliated with TPG at the time right he
had he lived here in PaloAlto now he
lives in Connecticut kept in touch with
him and uh I didn't get a return offer I
don't know what I did
>> when you realize that
>> but you know what the truth is
>> is that then when Carl Toma gave me an
offer he gave me an offer
>> ah
>> and I didn't take it
>> but that time when you realized that the
offer wasn't coming.
What got you to the mindset to keep
going, to not give up on private equity?
>> I know.
>> And what would you say to someone in
this room who might be facing that kind
of rejection right now?
>> You got to do your thing. Um,
>> I sent out 500 random resumes and at the
time not a lot of people use the
internet, so you had to mail some of
them because they weren't, you know, up
to speed on this stuff. But I would send
them to random firms. I would cold call.
I would And you know, I think the the
lesson is
you don't need many offers. You just
need one and it has to be the right one.
And it wasn't until the end, I think I
had two weeks left in graduation that
Carl Toma decided to open up an office
in San Francisco. He was splitting from
GTCR, the firm he founded, and he
interviewed a few people and I and I got
that job. I just would say keep going.
Absolutely stay the course. It will
come. It may not come at this time. It
come a little later, but it will
absolutely be there.
>> So, let's go to that persistence and you
going to Chicago, meeting Carl and the
team, and the job is almost there. But
then comes San Francisco dinner that
almost cost you that job offer.
>> What happened?
This this is a joke. No wonder you're
GSB. All the studios. Nobody has asked
me that.
So Carl,
[Music]
does anybody here know Carl Toma?
Right. Of course, my my colleague, my
partner, Toma Bravo. You know Carl, he
kind of did the same thing to me that he
did to you when he was interviewing you.
Uh but Carl is GSB,
one of the greatest investors of all
time. Uh
has the highest ethical principles.
These old school values of who you
partner with, who you work with in
management. The the best thing that
happened to me is I was lucky that I had
him as a mentor and I never created
anything new. I just listened. Well, I
give my credit for listening. That
that's the key. So Carl comes to San
Francisco to close my offer. Uh we have
we're having this dinner and I said,
"You know what? I'm gonna I'm gonna ask
him for a carry. You know, this offer
just includes salary and bonus. I need
some carried interest. Isn't that what
private equity is about? Isn't there any
carry here?" So I I asked him, "Hey, you
know, how about a point of carry, half a
point of carry?" And he kind of
listened. He didn't say much. And he
called his colleague and said, "Withdraw
that offer." I don't want to I I don't
think I don't think um this is a good
fit. You know, you got to earn your way
through it. And I said, "No, no, I'll
take it." And I had like three sleepless
nights and and he did not withdraw the
offer. So that's what happened.
>> Luckily, you started in their San
Francisco office right after graduation,
but in the middle of a dot boom. Can you
share more about how did that go?
>> Not well. Um, and there may be parallels
now. You never know, maybe 50/50
um, at best. But Carl gave me a lot of
responsibility and authority early.
That's the way he leads and that's the
way he taught me how to lead. We do that
with our colleagues now. I love an
associate to call meet a company and try
to see if she or he can buy it. um and
learned the business by by or mentor by
doing the business and learning the
business and I started investing in IT
service companies that were providing
services to a lot of dotcom firms. That
was the hot thing at the time and I was
in San Francisco. I did three deals and
when the dotcom bubble burst, two out of
the three went to zero. We couldn't
recover any money and one we got like
50% of the money back. So it was an
absolute disaster and I thought you know
I had to work so hard. You you started
when I was 15 in tennis even before
right little by little trying to do
everything perfect and the school and
the thing just like all of you have
done. And I'm like now that I made it
into private equity I'm going to get
fired. And he in his 70th birthday Carl
said you know because I was there it was
a great event some years ago and and he
said remember I was about to fire you.
And I go I know I I can I could sense
it. I I knew that something like that
was coming and um what allowed me to
relax a little bit is I I had just had
Charlotte.
>> I spoke about that at commencement
>> and I was like, you know, in the grand
scheme of things, no nothing else
matters. So relax. Let's see what
happens. And Carl gave me another
chance.
>> He sat me down and said, I'm going to
give you one more chance. Just don't
take those types of risks. Those are not
the type of risks that our firm as a
private equity firm, as a buyout firm
takes. and you can make mistakes, but
don't make similar mistakes. And he gave
me a lot of rope to try again. And I
knew that was going to be my last chance
with him, but but at least it was one.
>> Well, most people who survive that
afterwards and that feedback would have
kept it safe, would not go and purchase
something new. Instead, you go back to
Carl and present him a new idea at that
time. Software buyouts. You were 30
years old. How did you have guts to do
that?
>> I had nothing else to do.
>> No, I mean nothing had worked. I had I
had to try something. It was a super
entrepreneurial firm. Um, and I always
for some reason wanted to always do
something a little different.
>> You know, one of the things about New
York, it's my favorite city in the
world. I love New York City, but one of
the things about that job is leaving the
job, I felt like I was walking with a
100,000 other people that were doing the
same thing dayto day. Still now I walk
into a lot of those offices because we
do business with many other groups and I
see these huge places with everybody
dressed the same way and doing the same
thing. So, I wanted I always wanted to
do something a little different. I
wasn't uh creative enough to be like 180
degree different. Uh but I thought look
software at the time our our viewpoint
was to Carl you can buy it super cheap.
He liked that
value investor. You could buy recurring
revenue and software less expensively
than every other category GTCR had done
and was successful at
>> outdoor advertising radio media a number
of them. The challenge was that no
company at the time really was making
money in software. Similar to now,
there's been no improvement in the
operating capability of those
businesses. I'm here with all the GSB
with the best of the best in leadership
and management. And in almost 30 years
in the software space, now a $ 1.3
trillion economy in revenue, the average
publicly traded software company loses
money just like it did when we started
in software. So, we kind of we were very
open with Carl that we have no expertise
in running one of these companies. We've
never done even done a deal, but he
allowed us to take the risk to do the
first one and try to see if we could
restructure the business to make it a
profitable buyout business. And he said,
"Go do it." And it was only a $50
million deal, so you got to start really
small. It's not like we were trying to
take the whole risk right there. And
then I met my second mentor
operationally, Marcel Bernard, who's the
best operator I'll ever meet in my whole
life. He ran Motorola, different
divisions of Motorola in the 70s when
that was an incredible school of
management.
>> And then he kind of taught us what to do
and and we followed him him him at it.
If that first deal wouldn't have worked,
right? That would have been over.
>> So a first deal allowed us to do a
second and a third and a fourth and and
so on.
You mentioned those two mentors, Carl
and Marcel, having a big influence on
how every the story played out.
For
the people in the room who also want to
attract that kind of mentorship, getting
people invest the time and energy in
them and their success or to make people
want to bet on their ideas.
What do you think they should be doing?
Mentors are all around you. And people
that have had success, it's because
somebody else taught him something.
Marcel Bernard had this great quote,
"Everybody needs somebody else to learn
from." That's why our model in private
equity was to work with existing
management. Restructure the company,
change the way it's being operated, but
actually do it with the existing people
um of of the business. So, anybody
that's self-aware
knows that the reason they've had luck
is because somebody brought them there.
Somebody took them to a place they
didn't know they could find or they they
could see. Now, you have to get that at
the job dayto day. Like I sometimes get
calls from talented young adults and
say, "Oh, can you mentor me on
something?" Of course I will. But it's
ad hoc. Ah, once a month I get a call. I
don't have enough context of what that
individual really wants to do and the
challenges day-to-day.
You have them all at at work at your
workplaces unless you're starting a
company from scratch. Maybe a board
member can be extremely helpful.
Engaging um day-to-day, but that those
people are all over. The key is also
finding somebody that shares your
values. I always thought that among
everybody in private equity, no, I want
to listen to that guy. I looked up to
Carl so much that it allowed me to
absorb more what he was saying.
>> And in 2005 at the age of 35, you became
a name partner. That's not just the
title. It's Carl saying, "I trust you
enough to share my name." What did that
mean to you?
>> Oh, it was incredible. In a five-year
turnaround from getting fired to
getting uh Okay, now they cannot fire
me.
That was that that was the key. Um that
was that was really you know incredible.
I don't think too much about the name of
our firm you know it was just the legacy
of how it was you know GTCR they named
it like that they named Tom Cresie like
that they they added me etc. But I
really we as partners I have many equal
partners in the firm and we run the
business as a partnership and as a
private partnership. And I don't think
anybody's too worried about that now but
for me it was great when it happened.
>> And a few years later the firm's name
changed again and became what it is
today Bravo. At that time you had around
1 billion in assets under management
and today it's closer to 200 billion.
That's 200x.
Through that period of such
extraordinary growth through those 17
years what changed the most for you
personally?
>> Not much.
Uh we we do you know that that example
that I gave you one deal at a time. Our
first deal was 50. Our second we bought
Vector SGI that was 75 million. Our
third deal we bought data for 250
million. A bit of a jump. That was a
great deal. Then we bought Sonic for 550
million. Our first cyber security buy
and a company here in Silicon Valley
which we hadn't done before. So we were
really afraid of turnover when we made
these changes and running. That was a
wonderful experience. Then we moved to
buying companies for a billion. We
bought three in a row, two of them here
in Silicon Valley. Uh, and those worked.
Then we bought Compware for 2.2. So it
was this trajectory.
We haven't changed that much. We still
have to get the money, win the deal, and
improve the deal. Just the numbers have
gotten bigger. And since we've done
okay, we have a bigger following of
people that now allows us to buy the
jewel.
See, now we're in a place we've never
been before. We can buy the number one
software company in so many different
areas. And the opportunity for that for
the next generation of Toma Bravo is
ridiculous because before we had to buy
a nichy player and try to make work of
it. Now we can maybe drive these
companies where close to it to 50%
margin and 20% growth and maybe create
the next 5075 billion market caps. It's
just amazing. But the the tactics and
the philosophy around it have remained
the same and we have remained with our
feet on the ground not levitating. I am
extremely hands-on like I was before. Um
you talk about mentorship. I love to get
a call from an associate to talk about
something or a deal and I reach out to
them. They're probably going, "What's
this guy calling me all the time? Does I
does he not have confidence?" you know,
all the people doing models at work, I
kind of creep behind them like a super.
You can see and I'm legitimately
interested in what they're looking at
and how they're thinking about the
business.
>> Well, without a doubt, you reached the
peak business-wise quite early in your
career, but personally, everything
changed for you in September 2017
when you got a call from Puerto Rico.
What happened? So, so I was traveling
with Jennifer James. Remember JJ? She's
our chief operating officer. We were
coming back from Tokyo.
Um, and Hurricane Maria had hit Puerto
Rico when we were leaving Tokyo. Uh,
when we land, I tried to call family and
friends and I could reach no one. And
it's like, this must be pretty bad. and
my brother who's very close to different
communities in the island uh a reporter
called him and said, "Hey, there's a
shelter next to my hometown with 35
people that have two day supply of food
and water."
>> This is unbelievable.
Sorry hos
>> I I get super emotional because he said
if
>> we don't do anything about it. That was
the feeling. Nobody's going to do
anything about it.
>> So we said, "Hey, we'll go there and and
we'll work it out. We'll see you in a
day." I told them, "We will leave and
we'll see you in a day. We'll land at
this airport really close to the place
and we will help you out." And we landed
and the people were there. They had
brought all these trucks. They got the
food, the water, whatever they needed to
hold them over for four or five more
days until we figured things out. And
that worked out. And then other
communities would come and we would do
the same. And then we started developing
all these distribution systems in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida because it was it
was manageable to do it from there. It
was much closer than coming from San
Francisco with a bunch of supplies. And
we started this huge relief operation
all over the island. Um, and FEMA didn't
get there till like two months till
after we were there. It was incredible.
And I always like thank the GSB for
>> that risk takingaking and and get out
there and do something different. I
didn't know anything about disaster
relief or hurricane relief or anything
like that. We just did it and and it
works. The nice thing is I did have a
background in entrepreneurship. You can
be entrepreneurial. Let's solve the
problem. Let's get it done. And I I
think in the process we were able to
hold together some communities that
otherwise would have been in trouble.
>> But you didn't stop just at really flat.
Uh release really
>> and Charlotte went with me on that first
trip. You remember that?
>> That was crazy. Okay.
>> You didn't stop just at the relief and
help. You kept going.
What was the intention behind the Brow
Family Foundation and to create the
opportunity in the island for the long
run? I was going to the island every
weekend, every four or five days,
whatever, working there with with
communities, and I met so many good
people. Like, it reminded me of the side
of Puerto Rico that is incredible. Uh
people that were educated, talented
salespeople, a lot of sales people that
couldn't work for months because they
didn't have any electricity, right? You
can't call customers and they're all
commission based 100%. So, they didn't
have any other any other income. And I
said, "That's that's isolating. That's
totally unfair." So, we started six
years ago the permanent programs that we
have in Puerto Rico. And the the center
of it is entrepreneurship is our rising
entrepreneurs program. We've now have
launched over 100 companies in Puerto
Rico. We have a bunch of people from
Tommo Bravo involved in those companies
and one-on-one mentorship. CEOs from our
companies go there. We give them free
capital, free education. We've taken all
the playbook from our firm and applied
it to how you build a business because
there they can't raise any outside
money. So, you got to get profitable
very quickly and do the kind of things
that we try to do with with bigger
companies. Leadership and that program,
I really really believe it's setting up
an ecosystem in Puerto Rico that will
entirely change the outcome for so many
young adults. We have paired up with a
high school program that we have where
we have now twothirds of the
municipalities in Puerto Rico, those
kids from public schools participate in
those programs. And the kind of hope
that I see and the kind of way that we
take those kids off the street, off of
just playing video games, now true
opportunity, they think about solving
problems of today, problems of their
communities. It's incredibly uplifting.
And you know, coming back, it's so tied
to what we do at Toma Bravo. We try to
help a really big company that's super
innovative and not making any money
become also a great business by doing it
with the existing people. When you see
when you try to help these entrepreneurs
that have very little resources,
>> you know, if you can do that, you can
certainly do it at a billion-dollar
company in Silicon Valley. This stuff is
easy. So, it gives you also a lot of
hope for your business. Well, it's
undeniable the impact you had on people
in Puerto Rico
multiplied because of that long-term
mindset. And I want to talk more about
that, but in the context of private
equity. I hear a lot of my classmates
here at GSB say that today proud equity
is too crowded, that the golden era is
over, and that is almost impossible to
build the next Tomama Bravo or become
the next Orlando Bravo. Where do you
think the critics are right? What's
generally harder today?
>> This is much easier today.
Well, I I I completely
I I believe some of you in this room
that will choose that industry as a
career, you stay with it. You will build
a firm much bigger than Toma Bravo and
better. The next generation is always
better. And you're some generations
below me, but it's always better than
the prior. It's it's not even close. The
industry is tiny. We feel ourselves that
we're just getting started.
I feel that I've been training with my
team of partners for 30 years to now get
the opportunity that I just spoke about.
This is new. This is tiny versus the
public market and other forms of
ownership. When I was interviewing for a
job, one of those many 500 jobs that I
did not get, I met the head of a private
equity firm, very large at the time, and
that person in that interview told me,
"Private equity is taken." And I've
mentioned that before in some other
conversations. Private equity is taken.
Uh there's not much for young people to
do in the business. That was 1997.
Come on.
>> Now our firm is much bigger than that
firm. I kind of look at that. It makes
me feel pretty good when I'm down and we
have a lot of portfolio problems. But
it's going to be the same thing. There
is no substitute for somebody being able
to buy a corporation, having full
control of it, partnering with great
leaders, solving problems. As Marcel
Bernard would say, every business
problem can be solved. Health is another
matter. And creating an entity that
people thought was impossible to create.
That opportunity for creativity, value
creation only exists when you can buy
the whole company. not a piece of paper,
not pieces of that company, not credit
in that company, not public stocks,
absolutely nothing else. So, I'm I'm a
firm believer it just requires people to
stay humble, keep their feet on the
ground, be practical, and focus on the
business, not on anything else. We would
not have gotten into software if we were
listening to the word at the time. uh
venture capitalists would say these
companies that you're addressing are too
old and new VC companies will put them
out of business for sure. That was a
scary comment from people that had done
really well in VC really good VCs that I
highly respect. The big buyout firms at
the time were saying you're crazy to get
into tech and software because that is
too risky. Both of those were extremely
general comments when we would go to
into a company and look at all their
files one by one. customer one, customer
two, customer three. When we would sit
there in their support center listening
to all the calls that were going, all
their salespeople that were working on
the system, we would say, "This is an
incredible business. What are what am I
missing? What are they talking about?"
Now, when you look at today with AI,
some people are doubting software. Of
course, you can read an article that
says, "Well, maybe the stack will do
this and that." Theoretically, that
makes sense. But when you go to a
corporate environment and know how
people work,
clearly it is a huge tailwind. But you
just have to do the work. You can't be
scared of it. You can't fall with
whatever else everybody's saying.
You have it's a place where you could do
your own thing. That's the key.
>> That's the key. Looking ahead, when you
think about the next generation of
investors, entrepreneurs, builders who
are with us here today in this room,
what's the one lesson you hope they take
away from your journey?
>> Can I give you two?
>> Go ahead.
>> Uh, do do your thing. Do do your own
thing. There's there's a lot of pressure
and we even face it now. We have all
this capital. Why don't we just go off
and build all these AI data centers
people are making money on that stuff or
do this do that? There's a lot of
pressure to do things where others that
you highly respect say, "Yeah, you're
doing the right thing." Or the the great
job to get or the type of company to
form now. Do the work. Focus on your
business. Focus on you and and do your
thing. That will pay huge huge
dividends. We'll make everything very
very clear. And the second piece is and
you spoke about it with challenges of
today. Look, it won't be linear. We just
walked through my good luck and how it
wasn't linear. It was terrible in in
some places. It won't be linear, but you
have to stay positive because all of you
if you apply to it and if you want to do
it, you will build things that were much
bigger and better than what anybody else
had done before. Just don't be
intimidated by it. If you look at the
end result, then you might not want to
focus on it. Just focus on step by step
and stay super positive in your in your
journey.
Orlando, we have a few students who
submitted a couple of questions. Let's
turn to them.
>> Hi Orlando. Uh thank you for being with
us here today. My name is Abdal Mutlik
and I'm an MBA too. You were actually
one of the reasons why I chose to come
to the GSB. Uh and you even made an
appearance in my why Stanford essay uh
based on a meeting we had in 21. My
question is about fundraising. Despite a
pretty challenging LB fundraising
environment, Toma Bravo has consistently
exceeded its fundraiser
performance and marktomarket figures are
difficult to trust. I'm curious if there
are any lessons or qualities to take
away from your time at the GSB that you
bring to your LP conversations that help
differentiate Toma Bravo further. So, so
Carl Carl Toma when we were starting um
Toma Bravo 1 which we called Toma Bravo
9 because we try to promote as much as
we could that we have been around for a
while. I was I
I was I was doing all these
presentations one PowerPoint after the
other. We're going to position ourselves
as this and this and that and that. And
he said Orlando stopped. He said in
private equity the only thing that
matters is returns.
investors have incredible choices of
where to put their money. I'm go,
"Okay." And we were getting turned down
a lot by LPs at the time and they were
giving us all kinds of different
excuses. One, I was walking down the
street in New York and I called him and
said, "Hey, when are you coming into the
fund?" He said, "We're not going to be
doing the fund." I said, "How come?" He
goes, "Because your numbers are not good
enough."
Wow. What a Okay. Note to self, my
numbers have to be good to get some
money. And and I promise you that that's
why we're step by step and deal by deal
right now. So we have had, you know,
good enough numbers to have our base of
customers
stay with us and and stay the course. So
you have to have a certain level um of
performance. And there are other great
performers out there. But then the
second thing and this is what Jennifer
James does so well is we really attend
to the customer
we know in our partner what they like
what they don't like how their family is
who makes the decision. How does that
organization make the decision? You got
to try to sell something. These one
person that decides two people. Is this
a group decision? Who who do we need to
talk to here? And we know which customer
do they buy from the top? Does private
equity buy here? And I see my peers
making a bunch of mistakes. Some people
go straight to the top because they have
that access. And then the person asked
the head of private equity, what do you
think of these guys? And they go, nah, I
have somebody else and that's us. Or we
try to do is at like that there is
getting the money that one-third I
saying private equity, get the money,
improve the deal, and sell the deal. But
getting the money is a really really
important skill of attention. Right.
Right after this, I'm headed out to Hong
Kong. See seeing some of our customers
there being very very close because
there are other ways that you can add
value to them. Co-invest when they have
an issue with AI. How quickly do you
have their back in front of their
boards? So many things. It's a kind of a
day-to-day thing. And finally, um Bird,
I have to give you a lot of credit and
please take this class if you haven't
done it. You know, communication. At
first, as we were getting a little
bigger, um, I I was imitating the goats
of private equity from the 70s and 80s.
Oh, this is the way you talk and that's
that's the way I have to seem and this
is what I have to pretend to be. And
Bert said, you you're funny. You're
Puerto Rican. You don't take yourself
seriously. Be yourself. And and I think
that allows me to connect pretty
decently and Jennifer James with other
people. one of the best hits of sales
that we've had at one of our companies
at Dinatrace. He said, "Remember, people
don't want to buy your product. People
want to buy from you." And that was very
consistent with what Bird was trying to
trying to have me understand.
Thank you.
>> Hi, my name is Owen, uh, class of 20 27.
Um, thank you for coming here. My
question is you guys have built Tomo
Bravo on the thesis that enterprise
software has durable modes but my
question is as generative AI decreases
the cost of software creation and some
say commoditizes it how is that
impacting your investment thesis moving
forward?
>> Yeah. Um
the software having a great that's a
phenomenal question that we're deep in
now and we've always been the fact that
software has a moat in general is not
really true
never been true especially in dynamic
spaces like cyber that's a third of our
investment infrastructure software
that's almost another third and all
these horizontals you face constant
changes competition and if you're not
growing bookings Even if you had a mode
around your customer base, if you're not
growing new bookings, nobody's going to
buy your company and you cannot take it
public. It might seem like a decent
financial investment if you got lucky on
the price or something else prior. So,
it's always been a fast evolving space.
Now, when we were doing our early deals
in software, we were buying what seemed
to be some old software companies with
legacy code, legacy architecture. That's
where venture capitalists would say new
companies are going to put you out of
business. a great engineer at Stanford
could have built a much better product,
faster, better code with newer
architecture than many of the companies
that we have bought in the past. No
offense to those development teams, but
those companies are about understanding
the customer's process and about
servicing that customer. The developing
of code is a very very small subset of
what that company does to deliver value
to that customer to give them that five
to one ROI over a year or that payback
period of nine months. You have to
really understand the function or the
vertical or the process or all of it and
be able to provide a custom solution.
not custom code, but you take this code
that you have and how do you figure out
the problem that the customer has, let
them know that they have a big problem,
allow them to re-engineer their
organization to absorb this way, this
better way of doing things. You you take
um Salesforce now 41 billion in revenues
and there's thought that oh they can get
commoditized.
Not at all. There's no way because if
you're a salesperson, you are you work
the way you get trained and the way you
work is in stage one, there's an
account. Stage two, they have money.
Stage three, they have a champion. Stage
four, I met with them. And that is the
process of getting somebody to close.
Now, if we get to a world where there's
no longer process, where there's no
longer uh organizational structures in a
company, oh maybe, you know, maybe maybe
way back in the in the future if
somebody invents a new way that we all
organize ourselves in a totally
different way, that could be a risk, but
not if we remain organized the way we
are. And I don't see that in the next 10
years. I really don't. I don't even know
how you train a new salesperson to do
their job. Oh, right. Um, AI can give
you more context on what accounts to go
sell than Salesforce can. Yeah. Because
it gets all this unstructured data. It
reads all the emails. It looks at the
customer buying activity. It looks at
their speed. It looks at much more rich
information and can give you a better
sense of of where to go. And and
Salesforce then just becomes one of
those pieces of information in the
system. But how do you train that person
of where to go and what to do and how to
move that account along? I don't I don't
think I don't think so. I think it's I
think it's still going to be okay. Same
thing happened with SAS um 10 years ago.
Of course, every change is different.
This could be more transformative, but I
think we'll be we'll be okay. At least I
hope so.
>> Uh thank you. Uh I am Dais
and I'm originally from the Japan
private equity. My question is about
global expansion and challenge. I think
uh you've built a strong franchise in
terms of the US software investment uh
with a repeatable playbook but as you
see in the global expansion next beyond
to the Europe
where do you think is most like a uh
good place uh to apply your playbook and
why and also I would like to ask what
kind of readership capability is
essential or required to achieve those
success in that challenge.
>> Thank you. Where could our playbook be
applied globally? What are the best
places for that? Everywhere.
>> Thank you. Look, it's it's um it's it's
more than a playbook, right? Of course,
we have by sales, support, uh customer
success, professional services, product.
We have an entire
playbook that we've built over buying
600 companies. So, we add to it from
people that we learn and Marcel Bernard
and and everything else, right? We can
tell you the number of reps per manager
and why and how many underperforming
reps can you have and quota and
territory. We we have all that all those
metrics um on some of the best ways.
Now, how do you apply so much to a
company? They cannot absorb all that.
You don't have time to do all that. As
Marcel would say, if you try to do it
all, you'll get to none. Come up with
the three biggest areas that will
completely change that business that are
also the easiest to do and give you the
most money. That kind of combination of
all that's tough to do. Then align
yourselves with management so that they
lead them so that they truly believe
that this can be done and so the CEO of
that company can can manage and lead her
or his direct reports to go into that.
That is about 80% of it and that
leadership place is the most difficult.
Now there are country differences,
regional differences, and whatever
differences around, but people are
people. And if you have leaders that
want to make money, that care about
numbers, and that are open-minded
enough,
this works. This is business 101 by far.
Now, we diligence that because we
usually start the deal by cost
reduction. Before people didn't like
that in Silicon Valley, now Elon Musk
has made that super popular. So now we
hear a bunch of people going, "Yeah, I
cut cost and everything else." But we we
start the deal um because they're
usually not very profitable companies by
cutting 15%.
Maybe 20%. Marcel would say if you try
to cut more than 20, you're going to
have to change the way that company
works. That's too risky. No matter how
unprofitable it is, but no matter how
profitable you are, you can always cut
10%.
And now the time to do that is when you
close the deal because people are
expecting that change. Don't go bother
all these great workers and employees
and colleagues and executives two years
into the mission because a board member
decided that you could be more
profitable. Do it now and then the CEO
as a leader can stand up and say this
this won't happen again but we needed to
do it once. From here we're going to
grow and do acquisitions. All that stuff
and all that model of turning a great
innovator into a great business applies
everywhere. You just have to adjust
yourselves to the local culture and the
local laws. In Europe, you can't do that
immediately, right? You have to go
through labor council on a long process.
And I'm I'm glad that you're from
private equity from Japan. I'm headed
there after Hong Kong. And Japan is an
unbelievable market. Just an
unbelievable private equity market right
now. Uh it's a that's another thing of
opportunity, right? What's what that's
an obvious one in software though it's a
bit small for us. So that may be a place
we get to in three years.
>> Thank you.
>> Thank you to the students and Orlando.
Before we wrap it up, we have to do our
view from the top tradition. A few rapid
fire questions.
>> Just what is this?
>> Just don't think too much. Say the first
thing that comes to your mind.
>> Okay. Really?
>> Okay. Now
>> cut it. Are you ready?
>> Yes.
>> Okay, let's go. San Francisco or Miami?
>> Miami?
>> I have to have the backs of my team.
Half of them moved there. I'm not going
to tell them I'm moving back.
>> Don't worry. I'm moving to Miami after
GSV as well.
>> Okay. Lithuania to Miami. We like that.
>> V-neck or crew neck?
>> What?
>> V-neck.
>> Oh, V.
>> Yeah, V. Oh, not too deep, but
It's like a Saturday life skit. I should
come back like that. Yeah.
>> Most overused word in private equity.
>> Escape velocity.
Gosh, I really don't like that word. Oh.
Yeah. Anyway,
>> Wimbledon or US Open?
>> Wimbledon.
>> And finally, the best business advice
you've ever received.
>> That's not a rapid fire question.
>> That's why it's the final one. That that
that's a really really deep question. I
I I was in a meeting once with Carl Toma
in Denver and um there was this um this
partner that was arguing with him about
a deal and he said, "Well, if you want
to make money, you have to take risk."
And Carl said, "Yes, but not that kind."
And it's what fits you. Like we take big
risk in turning around these companies
and what we buy. Sometimes we put these
equity checks that represent almost 20%
of the fund. We have to syndicate J.
Those those are huge risks that others
would perceive as enormous for us is
something that we we can do. So find the
ones that are meant for you to take but
not others.
>> And Orlando,
thank you very much.
>> Thank you.
[Applause]
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