As a serial entrepreneur who recently took LinkedIn through its initial public offering, Reid Hoffman knows investors and early employees have expectations around taking a company public. “When people invest in a company, they expect to have some liquidity in the stock, at some point,” says Hoffman. He discusses why any company that goes public must be able to show they have their house in order on a quarterly basis, and why its leaders must choose a time that is right for future growth.

Video clips from: Entrepreneurs Will Create the Future [Entire Talk]

3 minutes

When to Go Public

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3 minutes

Shaping Customer Experience on a Massive Scale

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2 minutes

Investing in Long Term Ideas

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4 minutes

Surviving the Pivot

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2 minutes

Start Local, Scale Global

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5 minutes

All Careers Will be Entrepreneurial

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12 minutes

Entrepreneurship Rules of Thumb

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3 minutes

Entrepreneurs are Modern Pioneers

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