VIDEO: Innovator F. Scott Moody Says ‘Never Give Up’

By  //  July 20, 2014

'You only fail if you give up'

ABOVE VIDEO: Speaking at the King Center for the Performing Arts in April, F. Scott Moody discussed his role in the newest model of the popular smartphone, the backbone of which was conceived by the Melbourne company Moody co-founded.

BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA – One of the innovators of the security wizardry behind Apple’s iPhone 5S shared his story with Eastern Florida State College faculty, staff and students last April as part of the Simpkins Business Seminar for Entrepreneurial Development.

Speaking at the King Center for the Performing Arts, F. Scott Moody discussed his role in the newest model of the popular smartphone, the backbone of which was conceived by the Melbourne company Moody co-founded. (EFSC image)
Speaking at the King Center for the Performing Arts, F. Scott Moody discussed his role in the newest model of the popular smartphone, the backbone of which was conceived by the Melbourne company Moody co-founded. (EFSC image)

Speaking at the King Center for the Performing Arts, F. Scott Moody discussed his role in the newest model of the popular smartphone, the backbone of which was conceived by the Melbourne company Moody co-founded.

The company developed the fingerprint sensor that is used to unlock the phone or make purchases online, making it an integral part in the lives of millions.

The idea allowed the former Harris Semiconductor executive to sell the fingerprint sensor company to Apple, turning Moody into another high-tech entrepreneur who hit pay dirt, this time to the tune of $365 million.

Moody began his career at Harris Semiconductor — now Intersil — in 1980, rising to become vice president of a $200 million division. He left Harris and co-founded AuthenTec in 1998 after engineers talked to him about creating a fingerprint sensor that could be applied to a variety of devices.

simpkins-moody-325
“I don’t believe in failure,” said F. Scott Moody. “They are not failures. They are experiences. You only fail if you give up. Start moving forward.” (EFSC image)

That took Moody down a road that included raising more than $70 million in venture capital and growing AuthenTec into a company with 300 employees and development centers in Melbourne, Florida, China and the Netherlands.

Moody, drawing deeply on personal experience that included struggles with finances and in the marketplace, urged potential entrepreneurs to boldly go forward and not fear failure.

“I don’t believe in failure,” he said. “They are not failures. They are experiences. You only fail if you give up. Start moving forward.”

He also counseled those in the audience to draw strength and inspiration from what he called their love of the game and offered tips to draw upon through what he called “a tremendous amount of hard work,” adding “the harder you work, the luckier you get.”

MOODY’S TIPS INCLUDED:

• Get your whys straight or why you are doing what you are doing,
• Find a co-founder for your venture, someone who brings different but necessary skills,
• Get a job, gain experience,
• Build a team.

Moody also read a letter that he read as the eulogy at his father’s funeral and related it to re-defining entrepreneurship. “It’s about making a difference,” he said. “What you do matters if you get your whys right.”

Now the Entrepreneur in Residence at Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network and the founder and director at First Talent Ventures, Moody was introduced by Eastern Florida President Dr. Jim Richey.

RICHEY-JIM-250-1“You may not know his name, but millions of people around the world are using his creation this very second: The fingerprint sensor on the Apple iPhone 5S,” Richey said of Moody.

“Scott took this good idea and ran with it, starting his own company and eventually selling it and the sensor technology to Apple. He is an entrepreneur in the classic sense of the word, and one of the digital visionaries who is remaking our world.”

Simpkins Scholarship recipient George Miller is shown with EFSC president Dr. Jim Richey, left, and Bernard Simpkins, right, who started the endowment that funds the lecture series and Entrepreneurial Scholarships.

SIMPKINS SEMINARS FEATURE NATION’S TOP BUSINESS LEADERS

The Simpkins Seminars are named after Bernard Simpkins, a former member of the Eastern Florida State College Board of Trustees and the current chair of the EFSC Foundation Board of Directors who established an endowment to create the sessions. Since they began in 2001, the popular seminars have brought some of the nation’s top businesses leaders to the college.

 Simpkins Scholarship recipient George Miller is shown with EFSC president Dr. Jim Richey, left, and Bernard Simpkins, right, who started the endowment that funds the lecture series and Entrepreneurial Scholarships. (EFSC image)
Simpkins Scholarship recipient George Miller is shown with EFSC president Dr. Jim Richey, left, and Bernard Simpkins, right, who started the endowment that funds the lecture series and Entrepreneurial Scholarships. (EFSC image)

The endowment also started the college’s Business Entrepreneurship Program, which was named the best emerging program in the nation in 2010 by the National Association for Community College Entrepreneurship.

As part of Thursday’s event Simpkins awarded a $1,000 scholarship to George Miller who graduated with a Certificate in Entrepreneurship Operations in December 2013 and is enrolled in the Associate in Arts degree program on the Melbourne Campus. Miller has a cumulative grade point average of 3.61.

Miller founded Miller Media Group in 2008, a non-profit television and video production company created for the advancement of Christian singer-songwriters and benefiting philanthropic organizations throughout the Space Coast.

ABOVE VIDEO: Bernie Simpkins has endowed the Entrepreneurship Program at Eastern Florida State College with a generous financial contribution of $1 million and sponsors the annual B.W. Simpkins Business Seminar series.