Steph Curry on Creating Winning Teams

Originally published by John Battelle on LinkedIn: Steph Curry on Creating Winning Teams

"You Win When Everyone Touches the Ball”

The Golden State Warriors are a team full of superstars, with some of the best individual talent in the NBA. Much of the Warriors success, though, is due to their relentless focus on putting personal glory aside and working together as a team. Here’s the proof: they have led the NBA in assists the past three years by a significant margin, showing their ability to create opportunities as a team, not just as individual talents. The formula is working — it led the Warriors to a historic 73-win season in 2016, and an NBA championship in 2015.

Steph Curry, as point guard and reigning league MVP, is the chief evangelist of the team-first focus. He’s changing how basketball players are viewed on and off the court, especially given that there’s another side to him that you might not be familiar with: he’s also an avid entrepreneur, investor, and philanthropist, and is actively involved in the startup world. He spoke about his recent success on and off the court during the NewCo Shift Forum. Below is the full video interview, along with a transcript, edited for clarity.

This is the second of many candid interviews held at the first annual NewCo Shift Forum (see our first, with John Podesta, here). Stay tuned for more from Michael Dubin, Robert Reich, Jennifer Aaker, and dozens of leaders from politics, entertainment, and technology.


John Battelle: When I told people that you were coming, many were like, “But you’re doing a business conference. Why? He’s a sports icon.” Look, I like basketball. We’re going to talk about it a little bit. But what I found extraordinary is when the team gelled a few years ago. It struck me that there was a different approach, a changing of the culture, a changing of the core KPIs that mattered inside the team.

What was it? Your first couple of years was OK, but then something happened. Was there a moment, a decision that changed the course of the team?

Steph Curry: It’s funny because there’s a lot of storylines that merge at the same time. It was the perfect storm of new ownership that came in and wanted to really invest time, money, a vision, and a perspective of how to make a great NBA organization from top to bottom.

A coaching decision that really helped us develop an identity on the court of how we were supposed to play and what it meant to win, the perspective we needed to have in that regard. It’s not about individual awards. It’s not about All‑Star appearances. It’s about winning a championship and doing anything you can to get to that level.