Kathleen Eisenhardt, Stanford W. Ascherman M.D. Professor in Stanford Engineering, describes two important mindsets she sees in successful founders: the ability to see the industry as a whole and the ability to understand the business today while thinking ahead in time. On the other hand, she says, she hasn’t seen particular personality traits that define good founders.
Related
![Photo of Alexandra Zatarain](https://ecorner.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/05/Alexandra-Zatarain-600x600-1.png)
Alexandra Zatarain,
Eight Sleep
Getting to Product-Market Fit [Entire Talk]
Product-market fit is a journey. Knowing your audience and mission will help you on your way.
Video
50 minutes
Alexandra Zatarain,
Eight Sleep
Getting to Product-Market Fit [Entire Talk]
Product-market fit is a journey. Knowing your audience and mission will help you on your way.
![Photo of Maria Barrera](https://ecorner.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/04/Maria-Barrera-600x600-.png)
Maria Barrera,
Clayful
Mental Health Tech, Mentally Healthy Startups [Entire Talk]
Startups can address important mental health problems, but maintaining mental health in startup culture is challenging.
Video
49 minutes
Maria Barrera,
Clayful
Mental Health Tech, Mentally Healthy Startups [Entire Talk]
Startups can address important mental health problems, but maintaining mental health in startup culture is challenging.
![Photo of David Allemann](https://ecorner.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/03/David-Allemann-600x600-2.png)
David Allemann,
On
Exploration in Sports Technology [Entire Talk]
Taking a risk on an innovative idea can be the spark of a global company.
Video
50 minutes
David Allemann,
On
Exploration in Sports Technology [Entire Talk]
Taking a risk on an innovative idea can be the spark of a global company.