Kanwal Rekhi
- MS Electrical Engineering 1969
- Honorary PhD Engineering 0
Maybe he should have been a professor instead of a successful entrepreneur who was
part of the first Indian-owned company to go public in the US and the visionary who
has helped numerous start-ups succeed around the globe.
Kanwal Rekhi '69 was comfortable and engaging as he spoke to a packed ATDC Wednesday
as student, faculty and community members learned about entrepreneurship and more.
Rekhi speaks from what he knows. He was brave enough to quit a safe, corporate job
(after being laid off three times) and start his own company, with support from his
wife, Ann, first and foremost.
He started his own company, Excelan, with two partners. In 1982, they began manufacturing
Ethernet cards to connect PCs to something called the Internet. Excelan was also instrumental
in the TCP/IP Internet protocol. Excelan would go on to merge with Novell, and Rekhi
became executive vice president, leading product development and technology strategies.
Rekhi drew parallels between the high unemployment of the early 1980s and today, and
said both were good times to become an entrepreneur.
"The best times are the hard times," he said. "Jobs are not plentiful, so there are
resources available: laid-off people, rent is low, competition is not as tough, and
you have time to get your service or product up to speed."
Entrepreneurs create new wealth, he said, and, of course, it is hard.
"Ninety percent of people don't have the entrepreneur gene and won't try it," Rekhi
said. "So the odds of the percent who do try are ten times better! The first step
is the hardest, into the valley of death. The first couple of years, it is just you,
not even your wife or husband. Nobody outside."
The downside to doing your own thing is that it is very difficult, he said. The upside
is that there is unlimited potential for success, "but you have to find out if you
have that entrepreneur gene. You have to try it."
Becoming an entrepreneur in tough economics times has an additional upside: "You learn
discipline early. You learn the value of money early. In boom times, they don't have
discipline, so when the market takes a downturn, they don't do well. I discovered
a new me."
Fielding questions from the audience, he said money for start-ups is always available.
And he identified some strengths as personality traits, within the entrepreneur gene,
for start-ups: having intellectual honesty, working harder than the other guy, holding
yourself accountable, having a fair sense of value, knowing your domain, possessing
leadership skills to pull everyone up, and not needing accolades from the outside.
"You'll get daily satisfaction from the inside."
Today, as a leader of TiE, a nonprofit that fosters entrepreneurship with 50 chapters
in 11 countries, Rekhi focuses on the South Asian business community and has ties
all over Silicon Valley.
Sometimes those beginners talk to him about how hard it is starting out.
"From India, I was dropped off a bus at Michigan Tech in 1967," he says. "I could
do it, why not you?"
Rekhi received the Distinguished Alumni Award in 2000.
Excerpted from Tech Today (3-06-09)
From 2000 Induction to the Department of Electrical Engineering Academy