AO OnDemand 2014: Kevin Longa
by KG Charles-HarrisAs I was entering AO OnDemand 2014 and moving toward the main conference auditorium, I ran into Kevin Longa, a young entrepreneur I had met two years ago at a Hackers & Founders meetup. We got to talking and I found him very pleasant; having just graduated from UCLA he was on a search for what next he wanted to do. Keving found that deciding on whether to join a startup, go traveling to experience more of his Asian roots (he’s mixed) or continue his education was challenging and in some ways confusing.
Well, whenever I meet young people at that stage in life I believe it’s important to impress upon them that taking some time up-front to experience life in other parts of the world and with other people than usual is often a good way to get perspective and get started on the next stage of life. I believe it’s important to actually take some time to experience life, before being continually caught up in the hustle and bustle of one of the most stressful cultures on earth—American society.
To my surprise he listened attentively to my pontification and later embarked upon a long trip to Asia while also shooting a documentary series encompassing the four passions of his life – food, entrepreneurship, travel and film. He has now reached the point where he is in post-production with some of the work he has created and is continuously adding to his body of work. And above all—he seems happy.
Encountering him now, two years later, was a great experience for me. After his travels he received a scholarship to Draper University where he further immersed himself in the art and craft of entrepreneurship. His greatest takeaway was how to think about problem solving, team building, adversity and loneliness as an entrepreneur, rather than hard skills such as law, market research or accounting.
There is no doubt in my mind that Kevin will be successful. He has an ability to learn and to adapt to new situations in a way that’s unusual for a lot of people. In addition, he has that quality that is absolutely necessary in an entrepreneur: tenacity.
I’ve seen so many get out of the game just as they were about to break through. The level of determination and sacrifice necessary to succeed is rarely stressed enough, but anyone who has succeeded knows that success would often elude us, without “stick-to-itiveness” and an almost masochistic ability to increase commitment when others would judge it hopeless.
This is true regardless of industry and calling—the cost of entrepreneurship is high and fraught with failure. People like Kevin will succeed because he works tirelessly, learning and pushing forward even when things are difficult.