Coffee With...Patrick McQuown
We chatted with TU鈥檚 executive director of entrepreneurship about his new role and starting a business, particularly during a pandemic.
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Q: How has your career journey led you here?
A: I鈥檓 a two-time entrepreneur. One of my companies did American Idol鈥檚 voting by text, which virtually everybody remembers and was the start of messaging [on reality shows]. I like to say I鈥ve done both Donald Trump鈥s texting and Obama鈥s presidential campaign texting, except I didn鈥t do Trump鈥s presidential texting, only the text voting for The Apprentice.
I sold both companies by the time I was in my 40s. In between them, I taught a course at Georgetown University as an adjunct. That鈥s where I fell in love with academia. After my second company, I thought, 鈥榳ell, what am I going to do?鈥
I was living in Connecticut, so I went to Yale University鈥檚 Entrepreneur Institute, helping students and faculty launch companies. From there I went to Brown then James Madison University. We got the largest naming gift in the history of JMU. In the end, I loved it, but Harrisonburg was not for me.
I wanted a school that was very much like TU. I wanted to be in the mid-Atlantic region, which I love. And Towson University fit the bill.
Q: How has your role at 快活视频changed from what you envisioned, due to the pandemic?
A: I would say that the strategy is still the same. We still have six ventures in our growth cohort. But the tactics have changed. We wanted to take residency in June. We couldn鈥檛 do that, so we鈥re taking residency in September. I doubt we鈥ll be able to do five days a week. We鈥re doing online gatherings to go over readings and things like that.
Q: What advantages and disadvantages are there to starting a business at such a disruptive time?
A: There鈥s a saying that entrepreneurs are okay with risk. That has a lot of merit to it. But I think what鈥s more important is entrepreneurs are okay with uncertainty.
I had to deal with 9/11, the D.C. sniper and the 2008 recession. I鈥m not saying those directly compare with what鈥s going on now, but you just have to learn to shift and adapt to what鈥s going on.
A lot of the assumptions we had going in are changing or are no longer the case, which means there are opportunities for people. It鈥s almost the time to double down on entrepreneurship, not pull away from it.
Certainly, deals that you've been working on tend to get thrown off, and you don鈥t know when they鈥re going to get back on track.
One of the ventures that we have [in the cohort] is a company that makes a game called Lockbox Adventures. He had problems at first with some of the suppliers and the supply chain and things like that. But when you鈥re lean and small, a good entrepreneur just takes advantage of the situation and does what they can.
I always like to point out that 2008 gave us some of the best companies that we know: Airbnb, Dropbox, Slack. The list goes on and on and on.
Q: What are some of the things that people don鈥t necessarily know are involved in starting your own business?
A: There鈥s really two big things I can tell you there. The first one is people like to say, 鈥榦h, go be your own boss.鈥 And there is nothing further from the truth. You have more bosses than you have working at a big company. At a big company, I only have one boss.
As an entrepreneur, my customers are my boss, my employees are my boss, my board of directors are my boss. The list goes on and on. You have a million people looking over you. And without those people, you're not going to get it done. So the notion to go be your own boss, that's not true at all.
Then the second one is you see all those things in the media about the highs. And trust me, they do happen. But successful entrepreneurs persist.
When I used to code and it didn鈥t work, I didn't sit there and think, 鈥榦h, I failed 1,000 times.鈥 I just said, 鈥榥o, it doesn鈥t work yet.鈥 I kept going, and I would try something else, and that didn鈥t work. And I kept going.
There鈥s almost nothing sexy about persistence. It鈥s frustrating, it鈥s boring, it鈥s tedious. And you鈥ve got to keep your head on straight and believe in what you鈥re doing until you figure it out.
Q: Baltimore has been called a hot region for startups and entrepreneurship. How do you see that growth continuing in the area?
A: The three years I was the executive director at JMU my students at 150 Accelerator raised $15 million in venture capital.
They went against schools like Georgetown and Princeton and just absolutely decimated them. I always love to say it鈥s the one meritocracy left. It doesn鈥t matter where you went to school; it matters what you do.
Baltimore has needed this [accelerator]. Obviously, Hopkins does exceedingly well in med tech. That's not our bailiwick. But this area and 快活视频as a school could absolutely use this. I鈥m very, very excited to be here doing it.
Read more: 快活视频names McQuown to head entrepreneurship