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The Road to Reinvention: Mark Pydynowski

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Manage episode 340998776 series 2934504
Content provided by Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Turns out, it’s hard to differentiate one cow from another—harder than you might have thought, in any case. And that idea was at the core of the company Mark Pydynowski formed, and the technology his firm was developing.

Investors seemed excited about his cow-identifying technology. Government regulators seemed excited. Then, some of the reality started to set in. The tech was reliable in a lab, but not in the field. The cattle industry was decidedly not excited about it. Narrow margins in the food industry didn’t favor the cost of the technology.

And suddenly, investors weren’t excited.

Their venture capital investor pushed back its closing date for a funding round — and the layoffs began. Then, Pydynowski’s firm had to pivot: As it turns out, it’s harder to identify one mouse from another than you might think. A new business plan emerged with upsides exactly where the cow-identifying version of the technology had downsides.

Mice are used in drug development where margins are bigger and budgets are huge. Mice have to be tracked properly to track the data, so the industry needed this tech. Working in cleanrooms and laboratory environments, the tech was more reliable. Plus, the tech was transferable—for tracking fish, artwork, inmates, for example.

“Every day I'm saying if we're not dead, we're still alive,” said Pydynowski, BSBA ’04. And now he has to re-sell everyone involved in the mouse version of the technology. And while that work was underway, the firm had difficulties with manufacturing the mouse ID hardware, requiring a 100% recall. Revenue was delayed, again. Pydynowski was fired.

How do you decide how to move forward after you’re fired? Do you make it easy or hard? Do you help the company and move on? What did Pydynowski learn along this bumpy road? How has he used it going forward?

RELATED LINKS

CREDITS

This podcast is a production of Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis. Contributors include:

  • Katie Wools, Cathy Myrick, Judy Milanovits and Lesley Liesman, creative assistance
  • Jill Young Miller, fact checking and creative assistance
  • Hayden Molinarolo, original music and sound design
  • Mike Martin Media, editing
  • Sophia Passantino, social media
  • Lexie O'Brien and Erik Buschardt, website support
  • Paula Crews, creative vision and strategic support

Special thanks to Ray Irving and his team at WashU Olin’s Center for Digital Education, including our audio engineer, Austin Alred.

  continue reading

45 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 340998776 series 2934504
Content provided by Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Turns out, it’s hard to differentiate one cow from another—harder than you might have thought, in any case. And that idea was at the core of the company Mark Pydynowski formed, and the technology his firm was developing.

Investors seemed excited about his cow-identifying technology. Government regulators seemed excited. Then, some of the reality started to set in. The tech was reliable in a lab, but not in the field. The cattle industry was decidedly not excited about it. Narrow margins in the food industry didn’t favor the cost of the technology.

And suddenly, investors weren’t excited.

Their venture capital investor pushed back its closing date for a funding round — and the layoffs began. Then, Pydynowski’s firm had to pivot: As it turns out, it’s harder to identify one mouse from another than you might think. A new business plan emerged with upsides exactly where the cow-identifying version of the technology had downsides.

Mice are used in drug development where margins are bigger and budgets are huge. Mice have to be tracked properly to track the data, so the industry needed this tech. Working in cleanrooms and laboratory environments, the tech was more reliable. Plus, the tech was transferable—for tracking fish, artwork, inmates, for example.

“Every day I'm saying if we're not dead, we're still alive,” said Pydynowski, BSBA ’04. And now he has to re-sell everyone involved in the mouse version of the technology. And while that work was underway, the firm had difficulties with manufacturing the mouse ID hardware, requiring a 100% recall. Revenue was delayed, again. Pydynowski was fired.

How do you decide how to move forward after you’re fired? Do you make it easy or hard? Do you help the company and move on? What did Pydynowski learn along this bumpy road? How has he used it going forward?

RELATED LINKS

CREDITS

This podcast is a production of Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis. Contributors include:

  • Katie Wools, Cathy Myrick, Judy Milanovits and Lesley Liesman, creative assistance
  • Jill Young Miller, fact checking and creative assistance
  • Hayden Molinarolo, original music and sound design
  • Mike Martin Media, editing
  • Sophia Passantino, social media
  • Lexie O'Brien and Erik Buschardt, website support
  • Paula Crews, creative vision and strategic support

Special thanks to Ray Irving and his team at WashU Olin’s Center for Digital Education, including our audio engineer, Austin Alred.

  continue reading

45 episodes

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