Sign In

Wan-Chien Kao

Marketer, Entrepreneur, and Advisor

Wan-Chien Kao is a co-founder of Maven, a platform that specializes in cohort-based courses, which are designed to facilitate live learning experiences. Maven was established to address the challenges faced by course creators in building engaging and effective online courses. Under Kao's leadership, the platform has seen significant success, with over 20,000 professionals participating in its courses and instructors earning more than $14 million in teaching revenue.1

Kao's background includes co-founding the altMBA, a program developed in collaboration with bestselling author Seth Godin, which also focuses on cohort-based learning. This initiative grew rapidly, attracting thousands of students across multiple countries.1

In addition to her entrepreneurial endeavors, Wan-Chien Kao has experience in digital marketing and project management, having worked in various roles that emphasize strategic communication and operational excellence.1

Highlights

May 7 · twitter

Getting buy-in 101:

🚫 "Trust me. I've done this many times."

✅ "I'm recommending X because [evidence, data points, thought process]. I saw something similar play out with [previous example], so I believe we need to be mindful of Y. This matters because Z."

I used to assume my colleagues should trust me because I was the subject matter expert, and my conclusions felt obvious to me.

Instead, I would get push back, lots of questions, and skeptical comments.

I realized what was obvious to me, was often extremely non-obvious to people outside my own head.

Now, my default is to spend a few seconds to share my logic:

-> Share what's informing my recommendation -> Share how I arrived at my conclusion -> Share why I picked X over other alternatives

I became a lot more compelling once I realized it was my responsibility to help others understand why X was the best path forward.

This doesn't have to be intense. It's as simple as sharing your recommendation, then adding a "because."

It takes an extra 15 seconds to explain your rationale. It can save you hours of friction from avoidable back-and-forth and misunderstandings.

Apr 4 · twitter

IMO When folks have trouble being concise, the problem isn't usually the delivery.

The problem is you actually don't know your idea as well as you think you do.

Words are the final expression and the way you communicate with others, but the problem isn't the words--the problem is words represent ideas, arguments, decisions, and thinking.

If you aren't sure what you think, it's hard to describe it clearly to someone else.

Therefore, the solution isn't surface-level wordsmithing.

The solution is getting clear on your main point.

When you are clear on your main point, expressing it concisely becomes much easier.

Chien-Min Kao | Profiles RNS - The University of Chicago

Related Questions

What inspired Wes Kao to co-found Maven?
How did Wes Kao's experience with altMBA influence Maven?
What are some key achievements of Maven under Wes Kao's leadership?
What is Wes Kao's next project after leaving Maven?
How did Wes Kao's background in marketing impact his approach to education?
Wan-Chien Kao
Wan-Chien Kao, photo 1
Wan-Chien Kao, photo 2
Add to my network

Experience

Writing at newsletter.weskao.com since October 2023
Co-founder of Maven from September 2020 to August 2023

Education

B.S. Business Administration, Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley

Location

Taipei City, Taiwan