Flixster co-founder Joe Greenstein recently sold his
company to Time Warner for about $80 million, but he
doesn't anticipate any changes to his modest life, which
includes a Toyota Prius and a studio apartment he moved in
to 10 years. Photo by MCT.
Aaron Patzer lives in a 600-square-foot, one-bedroom
apartment in Palo Alto with an old couch and TV. His favorite
shoes are hand-me-down brown leather wingtips that, at 39, are
older than he is. He gets $12 haircuts.
He drove a 1996 Ford Contour until he ran it into the ground
at 150,000 miles. His new ride is a Subaru Outback that he
bought for $29,000.
You'd never know the 30-year-old entrepreneur sold his
internet startup for $170 million in 2009 or that he is now a
top executive at Intuit, the financial software company.
With a few notable exceptions, Silicon Valley's rising young
stars are rejecting the traditional symbols of status: fast
cars, yachts, luxury homes. To make their mark, they're
putting their wealth into social causes and start-up
ventures.
"Wealth needs a purpose greater than big houses and flashy
cars," said Patzer, founder of Mint.com, which helps people
manage their money.
It's more about creating technology that millions will use
than making millions of dollars, they say.
Their aim is to keep up with Steve Jobs, not the Joneses.
At 27, Dustin Moskovitz is the world's youngest billionaire,
according to Forbes. He was born eight days after his Harvard
College roommate Mark Zuckerberg, with whom he founded
Facebook.
Moskovitz could afford any home he wanted, but he chose an
$800,000 condo in San Francisco. He bikes to work at his tiny
start-up, Asana, which is making social networking tools for
businesses. He leaves his Volkswagen R32 hatchback in the
garage.
He says he flies coach, and he's socking away money to fund
his philanthropic foundation. Like Zuckerberg, he has pledged
to give away his wealth during his lifetime.
"Things can't bring you happiness," Moskovitz said. "I have
pictured myself owning expensive things and easily came to
the conclusion that I would not have a materially more
meaningful life because of them."
Zuckerberg is another billionaire living below his means. For
years, he crashed in a tiny apartment with a mattress on the
floor and dial-up Internet access. He recently bought his
first house in Palo Alto for $7 million, a fraction of what
he could afford.
Zuckerberg, who has listed "minimalism" and "eliminating
desire" as interests on his Facebook profile, drives an
Acura. His one major outlay? Last year he donated $100
million to help improve public schools in Newark, New Jersey,
among the country's worst-performing school systems.
Sceptics may wonder whether all this conspicuous self-denial
is scripted. Tech titans know they score public relations
points by showing a common touch - particularly in austere
times.
But the evidence suggests that it's not an act, according to
Alice Marwick, a researcher with Microsoft, whose New York
University doctoral dissertation in media studies was about
social status among the internet set.
It's not that this new generation of tech entrepreneurs
doesn't seek status, Marwick said.
They just seek it in different ways.
"This is not a community that values good looks, visible
wealth or having a hot body. Those are not the ways that they
distinguish high status from low status," Marwick said.
"Technology millionaires don't hobnob with celebrities or buy
a fancy car. They travel to Thailand, or they fund an
incubator. These things are just as expensive, but that's the
classic hacker ethos that prizes the mind, not materials."
The hacker ethos is also classically male.
"Being concerned with appearance, shopping for clothes and
decorating your house are feminine values. Tech millionaires
see that type of spending as silly and frivolous," Marwick
said.
Silicon Valley measures achievement by what entrepreneurs
build, not what they buy.
"You do not need to have an Aston Martin in the driveway,"
said Drew Houston, the 28-year-old chief executive and
co-founder of Dropbox, a San Francisco start-up that helps
its 25 million users worldwide store and share photos, videos
and documents.
"It's more important to have the freedom and the independence
to build something for a huge audience."
Wealth does have its privileges. Patzer may have a television
that is so old it can't stream Apple TV, a Christmas gift
that sits unopened on the floor.
But he did shell out $25,000 to spend a week celebrating his
30th birthday with friends aboard a catamaran yacht in the
British Virgin Islands, and he's paying for his younger
brother to get a degree in computer science.
Then there's Sean Parker, a driving force behind Napster and
Facebook. Most people know him as the fun-loving playboy
portrayed by Justin Timberlake in The Social Network
who delivers the priceless line: "A million dollars isn't
cool. You know what's cool? A billion dollars."
Parker, 31, co-founded Causes, a social networking service
that encourages people to donate millions to nonprofits. He
says it's his way of giving back.
At the same time, Parker has a closet filled with Tom Ford
suits, trots the globe in private jets and is known to have
dropped $13,000 on dinner and wine. He keeps a $100,000 Tesla
electric sports car in Los Angeles and an Audi S5 in San
Francisco.
He has a pad in San Francisco and a $20 million, six-floor
New York townhouse called the Bacchus House after the Roman
god of wine.
"In certain corners, you will find excess. There's nothing
wrong with people with money wanting to spend it," said Dave
McClure, a tech investor and former PayPal executive. "But
entrepreneurs are trying to be smarter and more frugal."
More typical, Silicon Valley insiders say, is Joe Greenstein,
who last month sold his San Francisco company Flixster to
Time Warner Inc. for about $80 million.
Greenstein says the windfall hasn't made "a single material
difference" in his lifestyle. The 33-year-old entrepreneur
pays $1000 a month for the same no-frills San Francisco
studio apartment he has rented for the past 10 years.
He says he feels fortunate not to have to live paycheck to
paycheck or worry about losing his job. And he gets to do
what he loves every day.
"I don't feel like I live a life of sacrifice," he said. "I
probably feel guilty that I don't sacrifice enough."
That was not the prevailing sentiment during the tech boom of
the '90s, which ushered in a period of conspicuous
indulgence. Instant millionaires bought Lamborghini sports
cars and tore down small houses to build mansions.
Today's entrepreneurs who grew up in the shadow of that
boom's collapse say they learned from it.
Kevin Hartz, 41, founder and chief executive of the online
ticketing company Eventbrite, says this time around,
entrepreneurs are taking a more sensible approach to managing
their businesses and their lives.
"It would be a contradiction for me to watch every penny at
my company and then turn around and buy a $5000 bottle of
wine," Hartz said.
One reason many tech prodigies avoid living large is that it
takes time to adjust to a sudden increase in wealth, said
Edward Wolff, an economics professor at New York University
who studies income and wealth.
The newly rich don't know how long their good fortune will
last, so they're cautious, he said.
Kevin Rose, founder of Digg, a service that helps users
discover and share content from across the Web, appeared on
the cover of BusinessWeek five years ago under the headline:
"How This Kid Made $60 Million in 18 Months."
Rose said he didn't end up making $60 million. That's just
what some estimated his shares were worth.
Rose, 34, said he never bought into the hype, though he did
buy a sports car (he won't say what kind) before realizing
that extravagant spending "leads nowhere."
He's now working on a start-up called Milk and investing in
what he hopes will be the next generation of hot companies.
He spends weekends watching sports and eating home-cooked
meals in his San Francisco condo with his girlfriend and
their dog, a Labradoodle named Toaster.
Rose is selling the sports car and now gets around in a Mini
Cooper.
"I know guys who have crazy boats and planes, and that's
maybe something you do when you retire. But I don't want to
retire," Rose said. "I don't feel like I have made it.
Internally, I feel I have much to prove."
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