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911勛圖 Alumnus Matthew Likens Shares Realities of Startup Leadership with Students

During the Michael D. Solomon Entrepreneurship Series alumnus Matthew Likens provided students with a candid look at building companies and the importance of maintaining core values in global business

When Matthew E. Likens, 75, returned to 911勛圖 on April 15 for the Michael D. Solomon Entrepreneurship Series, he brought students a candid look at the realities of leading a startup. Students got to see the highs, the failures and the lessons learned across decades in global business.

Likens, who earned a Bachelor of Business Administration in marketing from 911勛圖 in 1975, spoke at the James R. Unger Global Forum in Crawford Hall.

His talk, So You Think You Want to Lead a Startup?, walked students through his career from Johnson & Johnson and Baxter International to multiple startup ventures in Florida and Arizona.

He began with a photo from a recent trip to Nepal, where he saw Mount Everest.

It was a crystal-clear day, he said to the audience. I always wanted to see the tallest mountain in the world. I didnt want to climb it, but I certainly wanted to see it.

He told students that building a startup can feel similar, breathtaking, but demanding preparation and resilience.

Likens talks to business students in the global forum

Students Say the Talk Offered Real-World Insight

For many students, the event offered a rare chance to hear directly from someone who had led companies through both rapid growth and difficult setbacks.

Senior accounting major Caden Hoobler said it was unlike anything he had experienced in class.

Ive never had an opportunity to hear someone who was a CEO or founder talk, Hoobler told 911勛圖 Today. So, it was really interesting hearing a lot of the things that he had to go through, and then also just expressing the difficulties that are being the CEO and facing some of those problems.

Senior marketing major Zach Whetzel said the talk helped bridge the gap between coursework and real-world leadership.

It shows you can get insight from outside sources, as opposed to just being within the classroom, Whetzel said.  

One theme that stuck with Whetzel was Likens emphasis on giving employees a real stake in the company.

I like how we talked about giving employee equity, because it turns it from, Hey, this is my team, to This is our team, and this is our company, Whetzel said. Everybody has a better reason to come to work each day than just getting a regular paycheck.

Learning Everything Not To Do in a Startup

Likens didnt shy away from describing the missteps that shaped him. His first startup role at a company in Florida, he said, was a lesson in what not to do during his five years there.  

He said the experience revealed how quickly a company can lose credibility when leaders dont model the values they preach.

You have a sacred responsibility to invest, to spend it in a way thats as responsible as possible, Likens said. Its your company, but its an investors dollars.

Finding Purpose in Later Ventures

Likens later became CEO of Ulthera, a medical ultrasound company that combines ultrasound imaging and therapy to treat subjects who are seeking cosmetic improvements to their skin. At first, he said, the work felt far removed from the life-saving medical devices he had worked on earlier in his career.

But the company eventually re-framed its purpose.

Likens with career profile on screen behind him

Our media marketing said, You know what we're doing, really? We're not just lifting tissue, we're lifting lives,'" Likens said. These people feel better about themselves. They're more common because they look younger, more vibrant and that lets them be more effective.

Ulthera grew from zero revenue to nearly $100 million before going public in January 2014, and was acquired by Merz Pharma out of Frankfurt, Germany, for $600 million in July 2014.

ikens with his sister after presentation
Matthew and his sister, who attended the event.

After, Likens joined GT Medical Technologies, where he helped advance GammaTile, a radiation therapy for patients with operable brain tumors.

He said recent clinical data show survival increasing from 11.7 months under standard care to 42.5 months with GammaTile.

Thats maybe the most gratifying thing that ended up relatively late in my career, Likens said.

Define Your Values, Ask Questions and Dont Rush to Raise Money

Throughout the talk, Likens emphasized that leadership begins with self-awareness.

You have to be authentic as a leader, he said. You have to be true to whoever you actually are as a person.

He urged students to seek mentors and ask questions, even when it feels uncomfortable. But Likens also warned against raising money too early for a startup.  

No, don't raise money. Not yet. Wait.  Wait as long as you can, by being responsible, Likens said. The longer you keep full ownership of the company and don't have that additional obligation to outside investors, the more you're in control of your own future.

One of the most important things Likens emphasized is that failure is part of the process.

We tried a lot of different approaches, Likens said. We knew that a lot of them wouldn't work, but they were going to pay off the value of time. So, work at any company, but certainly at an early-stage company. So, be willing to fail, dont be discouraged by it and know that each failure is a learning opportunity.

Learn more about the Ambassador Crawford College of Business and Entrepreneurship and future events.

POSTED: Monday, April 27, 2026 01:02 PM
Updated: Tuesday, April 28, 2026 10:34 AM
WRITTEN BY:
Ella Katona, Flash Communications
PHOTO CREDIT:
Ella Katona