充满增值意义的废话
Being full of value‑added shit

原始链接: https://feld.com/archives/2025/06/being-full-of-value%e2%80%91added-shit/

这篇文章讲述了作者在科技和风险投资领域观察到的一种现象:人们倾向于使用一些“表演性”形容词来形容自己,例如“真诚”、“透明”或“增值”,但这却让作者感到怀疑。 这种怀疑在作者观看一位风险投资人访谈后得到了加强。该风险投资人在访谈中声称自己与创业者打交道时非常透明和真诚。但作者联系了一位曾与这位风险投资人合作过的创业者,这位创业者却描述了完全不同的经历,认为这位风险投资人具有操纵性和欺骗性,其行为与“透明”完全相反。 作者认为,行动胜于言语,与其夸夸其谈,不如真正做到真诚、透明和增值。时间会检验一个人的真实品格。

这篇 Hacker News 的讨论串围绕一篇文章展开,该文章探讨了夸夸其谈和自我推销的普遍性,尤其是在商业领域。许多评论者认为,那些不断吹嘘自己优点的人往往是在弥补自身的不足。 讨论涉及各种例子,从汽车经销商自称“诚实埃德”到国名中带有“民主”的国家。评论者认为,真正的优点通常是不言自明的,不需要不断地宣传。一些人提到了达克效应(Dunning-Kruger effect),即能力不足的人往往高估自己的能力。过度宣传的电影和普遍存在的自我推销也是讨论的话题。一位评论者批评原文博客文章没有明确指出它提到的“有精神病倾向的风投”,认为这种含糊其辞的批评毫无意义。总的来说,该讨论串探讨了自我标榜的优点的可信度以及过度自我推销背后的动机。
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原文

My morning started early with a 6:30 a.m. drive to Denver to give a talk about Give First: The Power of Mentorship, which Erik Mitisek had organized for a group of Denver-area founders.

In it, one of Erik’s questions caused me to go off on a riff about authenticity, which led me to one of the Techstars Mentor Manifesto items titled Be Authentic—Practice: What You Preach and a section in the book titled Nonsense Phrases Such as “I’m Value Added”. I gave the example in the section Being Full of Value‑Added Shit and explained that when I hear someone say “I’m an (adjective) (noun)” I insert (in my brain) the word “not” after the word “I’m.” From the book:

I’m amused when someone says, “I’m authentic,” “I’m transparent,” “I’m founder-friendly,” or “I’m a value-added investor.” Whenever I hear something like that, I automatically insert the word “not” between “I’m” and the rest of the phrase.

I’m suspicious whenever someone says, “I’m an (adjective) (noun).” Why did you need to say, “I’m a great tennis player,” “I’m a deep thinker,” or “I’m a generous person”? Instead, why not simply play tennis, regardless of how great you are? Or think as deeply as you want? Or be generous?

I’ve followed it up with two more Techstars-related talks, where I used this example again. In the last talk, I said, “I think I’ll make that today’s blog.” So – here’s the story.


“Hmm,” I thought to myself.

I had just watched a video interview with a famous VC. Although I didn’t know him, I was friendly with several founders who had worked with him and knew of at least one of the situations he had described.

The VC’s verbal fillers took up the first 30 minutes of the interview. There were plenty of “Honestly” and “To tell you the truth” woven in between “I’ll be transparent about what happened” and “The best
founders are authentic to their true selves.”

One of his stories, which I was familiar with, didn’t feel right. I knew the founder/CEO of the company he described and thought she’d had a particularly rough time with this VC. However, the VC’s preamble was, “In difficult situations, I’m always transparent about what will happen with the founder. That way, they have an opportunity to challenge or correct me.”

I emailed my founder-CEO friend to ask about the situation. I told her I’d just seen an interview with the VC in which he discussed her company. Had she seen the interview? Did she agree with what
the VC said?

“He’s full of shit,” said my friend. “That guy is a manipulative psychopath. Before we even talked about the situation, he’d gone around me to everyone on my management team and planted seeds of doubt with them. He told different things to each team member, lied about our situation, and attributed things to me that hadn’t happened at all.”

“So, he wasn’t transparent with you?”

“Are you kidding me? I have no idea why anyone takes this guy seriously.”

“Did you when you first met him?”

“Well, yes, of course. He was charismatic, had a lot of capital, talked a good game, and had a lot of people who said great things about him.”

“What do you think happened?”

“I think he’s a manipulative, misogynistic, ego-challenged person who is deeply deceitful. Well, maybe he’s not misogynistic, but all the people who liked him were men, and I’ve subsequently met a few other female founders who had similar experiences to mine.”

The VC was neither transparent nor authentic. As is often the case, his reputation eventually caught up with him.

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