What would you rather do, work a 9-5 job with a decent salary for 40 years or work nonstop for 2-4 years forming a startup?
The regular job is consistent and predictable. There isn’t as much
pressure and there isn’t nearly as much risk. The job is the safe way to
go.
On the other hand, the potential payout from a startup is enormous.
If you succeed, you can basically do what you want for the rest of your
life. There are other benefits: freedom, control, fame, and the chance
to make your vision a reality. Everyone wants to be the next tech
sensation, and everyone knows the chances of making it are slim.
Startups are intriguing, but the details behind them are a bit of a mystery.
What type of people are qualified to form a startup?
Where, when, and how do they do it?
How and from where do startups get funding?
How many have a chance to succeed?
I wanted answers to these questions so I decided to do some digging.
Luckily, I found everything I could hope for in Paul Graham’s essay, How to Start a Startup.
If you’re even remotely interested in startups, I recommend reading
the entire piece. Graham was a founder of a startup, Viaweb, that was
bought by Yahoo. In the essay he details the entire process and throws
in his own thoughts on what works, what doesn’t, and what it takes to be
successful.
My key takeaways from the essay:
- You don’t need a brilliant idea to form a startup. What matters isn’t ideas, but the people who have them.
- Ideally you want between two and four founders. One is no good because there is too much work for one person. Anymore than four and it becomes impossible to make quick decisions.
- The prime candidates to form a startup are 23-38 years old. Any younger and you won’t be taken seriously. Any older and you might not have the time or energy to work until 3 a.m. every night.
- Funding usually starts with an ‘angel’ who invests $10,000-30,000 to cover expenses while the company gets on its feet. Later on venture capitalists come in with the big money. All these investors receive ownership in the company in return.
- The best place for an office is an apartment in a good neighborhood. This is much cheaper and than renting commercial space and more enjoyable than a corporate park that becomes a ghost town after 6 p.m.
- Startups usually fail because they run out of money. If you want to make it, you need to spend as little as possible. Avoid hiring people and spending lavishly. There is no reason to try to get big fast.
- Forming a startup means you decide to compress your work life into 4 years or so. This means for those for years you won’t have to time to do anything but work. This isn’t for everyone.
There are too many insights to list them all. If you’re interested,
you need to read the whole essay. It’s long, but well worth the time.
I also found a two other great resources.
Getting Real
by the 37 Signals team contains a new perspective on what makes a great
application and the best way to do it. The basic message is to stay
flexible and focus on creating simple, elegant tools that customers want
to use.
This interview with Joel Spolsky, founder of Fog Creek Software, also describes the startup process. It ends with a memorable quote:
Don’t start a company unless you can convince one other person to go along with you. If you don’t have two people (or I would even say three) that you’ve convinced to devote their lives to doing this, it’s just going to be a different thing. There are a lot of programmers that are very tentative about starting their own companies. There are a lot of working programmers doing something they hate, with some company that they hate, but they need money to pay the mortgage. So they figure, “I’ll develop something in my spare time. I’ll put in 1 hour every night and 2 hours on the weekends and I’ll start selling it by downloads.” And you say to them, “Who’s your cofounder?” And they say, “My significant other—husband or wife. My cat.”
But because they never really take the leap and quit their job, they can give up their dream at any time. And 99.9 percent of them will actually give up their dream. If they take the leap, quit their job, go do it full-time—no matter how much it sucks—and convince one other person to do the same thing with them, they’re going to have a much, much higher chance of actually getting somewhere. Because they either have to succeed or get a job. Sometimes “succeed” seems like the easier path than actually getting a job, which is depressing.
So there you have it. If you want to form a startup, try convincing
someone else that your great idea is worth quitting their job over.
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