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Editor's Note: The 20 Questions Project is Entrepreneur.com's new Q&A interview column that taps into the minds of some of the most fascinating and influential entrepreneurs of our time.The first in a new series.
It could be argued that Ben Huh, 35, has changed the lexicon of the internet.
The founder and CEO of Cheezburger acquired the I Can Has Cheezburger? site in 2007 and has transformed it into a media company that now includes more than 50 online humor sites, including FAIL Blog, The Daily What and Cheezburger, that generate more than 400 million page views every month. The Cheezburger brand has also released five books and was the focus of Bravo's 2012 LOLwork reality television series. Huh is also a co-founder of Circa, on online journalism startup.
Huh has been credited with bringing making the meme mainstream, has been featured in The New York Times, Wired and Time and has addressed crowds at South by Southwest and the Web 2.0 Summit. But it hasn't been all smooth sailing for the internet culture king; Huh cut about 35 percent of its staff (24 employees) earlier this year amid lagging ad revenue as audiences have begun to favor mobile over desktop.
Related: How to Harness the Power of Internet Memes for Your Business (Infographic)
We asked Huh a series of 20 questions ranging from silly to serious in an effort to provide greater insight into the creative mind of this innovative and interesting entrepreneur. What follows is an edited version of the interview.
1. When you were a kid what did you want to be when you
grew up?
When I was a little kid, younger than 10 years old, I wanted to
be an architect. I wanted to make buildings.
2. What was your first business idea and what did you do
with it?
When I was 14, I advertised a typing service around the apartment
complex I was living in. I had one very nice gentleman who took
me up on the offer and tipped me very generously; he owed me less
than $10 and he gave me a $20 bill.
3. What do you wish you knew before you started your
first business?
My first actual money-earning business was when I was in college
in Chicago in 1997. I was 19 and I created a front-end web
development company. I sent out an email to every one of the
department heads at Northwestern University and said "I don't
think that your website is all that great -- let me fix it." I
basically started with an insult, even though I didn't mean it
that way, but I ended up winning over two clients.
I didn't know this, but polarizing marketing creates strong responses good or bad and you can actually use that to your advantage. I wish I knew how to put myself in the shoes of my customers -- the first thing you do as a bad marketer is say here's who I am and what I can do. I got lucky.
4. What did you learn from your biggest
failure?
That it's OK to fail. I had a startup in 2000 and it folded 18
months later. It was a train wreck; it was the worst time of my
life. It's a pretty difficult road back. The thing that needed to
be repaired the most wasn't my finances – even though they were
pretty terrible -- it was my self-confidence. During that time I
struggled with thoughts of suicide and I didn't leave my house
for two weeks. It was a pretty terrible moment. It starts with
having something to live for; I needed someone who depended on me
to do something.
Related: How 5 Successful Entrepreneurs Bounced Back After Failure
5. What did you learn from the worst boss you ever
had?
I had a terrible boss that was phenomenally good at recruiting
talented people, but he was a tyrant -- he would storm in your
office and scream at you. He paid generously for the right to be
an asshole, so people put up with him, but it didn't last.
I learned that that's one way to run a business, but there is a cost to being an asshole, and it's not just financial. The costs were so culturally terrifying for the company -- no one respected him or trusted him.
6. What is the strangest or most unexpected marketing experiment you ever did? For South by Southwest in 2011, we partnered with Friskies. They flew out a master cheese carver from Wisconsin, and he carved several life-sized LOLcats out of cheese. It's really hard to get noticed at South by Southwest because it's so big, but we broke into the top 20 most mentioned brands because of this one event. People were lining up to take photos.
7. How do you know you've found a star
hire?
A lot of reference checks. A lot of smart people know how they
appear and they know how to sell themselves, so using reference
checks and people that you know in common and asking them for an
honest confidential opinion is a super good way to know how
someone will perform.
8. How do you use social media (how much, what sites, on
what devices)?
Social media is like salt: you have to use a little bit on
everything. It's become a fabric of how the internet works – it
is everything that we do. I'm constantly on; I mostly use
Twitter. I try to think my audience and that we are giving them
what they would find fascinating. Eighty percent is for your
audience and 20 percent for yourself.
9. What do you admire most about your mom or
dad?
My mom who has a high school education has always been tenacious.
She never gives up, she will suffer through whatever needs to get
done. She has an amazing work ethic.
10. What's your favorite book and why do you love
it?
It changes all the time, but I try to read fiction. Being in
business you get a lot of business book recommendations, but
fiction gives you a clear sense of what the future could be
instead of what has happened in the past.
11. How do you find inspiration?
By talking to other really smart people who have personal views
on my industry or something related to my industry, or even
something totally different -- and it's like "holy crap -- this
is a side of the universe that I've never seen before."
12. What was the best piece of advice you ever
received?
I can't remember who told me this, but I think it's a
paraphrasing of a quote: "You are never as good as you think you
are, and you are never as bad as people say you are." For someone
who is out in the public a lot, that phase is something that I
think about all the time. It means, keep your ego in check, and
it's easy to tear someone down without even thinking about it.
13. What's your productivity secret?
It's about doing the important, not the urgent, which was advice
from Stephen Covey's 7 Habits of Highly Effective
People. I think writing it down helps you see what's
important.
14. How do you cope with nerves before public
speaking?
I don't think about of who the audience is, I treat every
audience exactly the same. I don't care if it's the president or
a class of kindergarteners -- the level of importance does not
matter. It makes every situation normal. I once had to present in
front of a bunch of investors who had just heard from a Nobel
Laureate who was trying to cure cancer, and I was up next talking
about funny things on the internet. But if you think about that
stuff it will trick you. I tell myself this is normal, you are
just telling a story – and if you are telling a story about
something you care about you'll do a good job.
15. What's your favorite quote?
Fred Wilson, co-founder of Union Square Ventures, a New York
City-based venture capital firm, wrote a blog post on what it
takes to be a great CEO, and he talks about the core three things
you have to do well:
1. Recruit and retain the best people.
2. Make sure you never run out of money.
3. Make sure you have a clear vision that you articulate to all
the stakeholders.
16. What is your biggest pet peeve?
When I was younger I had more pet peeves, but as I get older I'm
more tolerant. I don't have many now. Those things don't really
matter -- that person, who you find annoying, is just trying to
accomplish things, they have complex needs and challenges, and
there is probably stuff that's going on in their lives that you
can't see that's causing them to act that way, and that's OK.
17. What's your favorite vacation spot?
Hawaii. I know it's kind of cheesy because it's so popular, and I
didn't know what the big deal was before I went, but it is
paradise.
18. What do you think is the most important innovation of
your lifetime?
It has to be the internet -- the ability to connect every human
brain with every other human brain.
Related: Grumpy Cat and the Thriving Cat Meme Marketplace
19. Who would you most like to have dinner
with?
People might say Warren Buffett, but I'm a foodie, so David Chang
-- he's the chef and founder of chef/founder of Momofuku. I think
chefs are artists, and dining with a chef would be a rare moment
where you would get to see an artist in action. He lives in New
York, so there's a chance he'll read this and invite me to
dinner.
20. What was your favorite class in college/high
school?
The most useful class is an accounting class I took in high
school. It's been phenomenally helpful in business.
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