First Tuesday Lady - Spiked Online
3 May
2001
by Sandy Starr
'I think for the rest of my life I will be talking about First Tuesday.'
Julie Meyer is founder of three companies, one of the world's 20 most
important women according to Management Today (1), and chief executive of
Ariadne Capital (2). But she is still best known for her previous company,
First Tuesday (3).
First Tuesday started life as a meeting of 80 people in a Soho bar in
London in October 1998 and by July 2000 had become an international network
of over 250,000 people in 100 cities worldwide. Today, it is the best-known
networking brand in the IT world.
So what did Meyer learn from the experience? 'I learned the lessons that
you learn when you're in the trenches building a company', she says. 'There
were a lot of odds that I overcame in terms of building a globally
recognised internet brand and network.' The aim of First Tuesday was to
open up the previously guarded clique of technology entrepreneurs to a
broader community. 'First Tuesday was founded on the idea that you didn't
have to be in Silicon Valley', says Meyer. 'If you're hard-working, know
how to hustle, have a good idea, know how to inform yourself, that should
count.'
The ethos of the entrepreneur is a preoccupation of Meyer's. 'They don't
even teach you how to raise money in business school, and I've been there,
but you can learn, and you can learn enough about technology, if you're
interested.' And Meyer hopes that First Tuesday's legacy will be a 'belief
in the individual and seeing the individual as an agent of change. It's not
the family and it's not the corporate and it's not the government, but you
and I create our own futures'.
Meyer seems to associate business with the individual entrepreneur rather
than the faceless multitude. At First Tuesday events the world of the
entrepreneur comes across as a democratic one where everybody can achieve
their potential. But she points out that being an entrepreneur can be a
risky business: 'You don't get to predict the outcome. All you get to do is
to work hard. Sometimes I feel a little responsible for this
entrepreneurial craze that has gone on. Not everybody's meant to be an
entrepreneur.'
What does Meyer think of the shift in how entrepreneurs are viewed? In the
1980s their dominant stereotype was materialistic and greedy, whereas in
the late 1990s they came to be seen as adventurous achievers. 'It just
touched so many people across society', she says. 'The majority of people
wanted to be entrepreneurs, because they wanted to have an impact, because
they wanted to make money, because they wanted to be in control of their
own destiny. There weren't enough people to talk disparagingly about
entrepreneurship because all of your friends were entrepreneurs.'
Europe.com: 'It's kind of crystal vague'
But the sense of adventure behind entrepreneurship didn't last very long.
The high-profile collapse of boo.com in May 2000 initiated a spate of
dotcom nosedives. Now the technology sector is pervaded with gloom, and
yesterday's most confident companies are obsessed with caution and
cutbacks. 'We all learned that the internet is a channel to your customer,
it's not a business model', says Meyer.
So is the sense of gloom really justified? 'That's just life', says Meyer.
'Whether it's justified or not, we got through it, and there's a shakeout,
and if you can prove your business model in this environment, you can damn
well prove it in any environment. There's going to be a lot of my friends
and yours whose businesses are not going to survive. It'll be tough.'
Refreshingly though, she is on the outlook for positive trends. 'I don't
want to wallow in the technology gloom. I'm looking right now for areas
which some of the best VC firms are interested in investing in, and believe
me, they are.'
Whether speaking, writing or chatting, Meyer takes every opportunity to use
the term 'Europe.com'. Indeed, Ariadne Capital's mission statement is 'to
support the European entrepreneurial spirit by leveraging and extending our
existing networks, and to build the infrastructure of Europe.com by
providing relationship-driven connectivity between entrepreneurs, managers,
corporate partners and investors' (4). Which all sounds very grand, but it
doesn't give many clues as to what 'Europe.com' actually means.
'I think it's sufficiently precise and vague', she laughs. 'It's kind of
crystal vague.'
'Crystal vague' could be used to describe a lot of New Economy buzzwords,
including 'New Economy' itself - words that embody aspirations and a great
sense of change, without being tied to any specific meaning (5). Meyer
elaborates on Europe.com: 'Europe.com is just a reference to what I hope
I'm contributing a little piece towards, by building human networks. The
increased knowledge and internet penetration and usage, all that's creating
Europe.com.'
Meyer's vision of Europe.com emphasises collaboration and harmony in the
business community. 'When I was building the First Tuesday network', she
recalls, 'I'd run into people in Copenhagen. I'd say "Why aren't you
building up First Tuesday in Denmark?", and they'd say "Because I don't
want those damn Greeks that keep on buying our web design agencies here",
and the French hated the Germans, and I'd just say "Leave it at the door,
guys". I kept on saying "Think Europe, think about what it's going to take
to make the whole thing rise off the ground".'
'What am I going to spend my time doing - shopping in Harrods?'
Meyer's is a dream of business without backstabbing, of capitalism with the
'cut-throat' taken out. This is also the case at many of today's IT
networking events, where the emphasis is on community as opposed to
competition - the very premise of networking is collaborative. But isn't
this avoidance of competition a symptom of today's risk adversity - where
businesses would rather be friends than fight it out over market share and
profits? Meyer reckons business should be about more than money. 'The
capital is the commodity', she says. 'The people aren't.'
In recent years, when politics has become lacklustre and people have lost
faith in much of modern life, the world of business can appear the most
natural place to pursue philanthropic interests and try to change the
world. Is this Meyer's aim? 'I just want to make a difference', she says.
'What am I going to spend my time doing - going shopping in Harrods? I'd
rather at the end of the day say "Hey, I did something to make it a little
bit easier for other people, who are in many cases far smarter than me, to
get great businesses off the ground which contribute to us all living
better".'
So she's not in it for the money? 'No, not at all. I won't even tell you
how close I've flown to the wind in terms of not having money. In the face
of First Tuesday going into liquidation, with founders who were actively
trying to sabotage the business, let me tell you, it was rough. It's been a
rough ride to Ariadne.'
Ah yes, Ariadne. Ariadne Capital is named after a character in Greek
mythology who helped Theseus to slay the Minotaur, by providing a reel of
golden thread that allowed Theseus to escape from the Minotaur's labyrinth
(6). The metaphor, illustrated by the golden thread in Ariadne Capital's
logo, is a potent one: the company will help to lead plucky start-up
companies through the labyrinth of the market. Ariadne, the mythical
character, also bears a resemblance to Meyer, the entrepreneur icon: a
confident, charitable figure who dispels gloom.
What are Meyer's hopes for Ariadne Capital? 'I want to prove that you can
be very successful, you can create a very valuable company, without
treating people badly and looking to make money off the back of other
people.' And she hopes the people who work for her company share this
vision. 'We get people right now who are turning down some of the biggest
VC firms in the world. I think it's because at a certain point, 45 years
old, you've done five companies, you've had three companies go public on
Nasdaq, and you say "What's left? What else do I do, now that I have so
much money?" You say, "How about building a new model, how about trying to
do it a little bit differently?".'
Meyer embodies much that is particular to business in the twenty-first
century. She wants to change the world, she sees business as the most
natural place to do it, and she sees being an entrepreneur as a worthwhile
thing in itself, independent of making money. This is all very idealistic -
but maybe that is no bad thing in today's pessimistic business climate.
Does Meyer have any parting words of advice for spiked, a dotcom with big
ideas that relies on unpaid contributors for its depth and quality of
content? 'All of a sudden you're going to have spiked version 2', she says,
'or somebody's going to be coming out of the woodwork and doing the same
thing as you, and you're going to say, "Hey, wait a sec, you're taking our
space", and you won't feel as hip and as cool as you did eight months ago.'
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