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  1. Want to start a startup? Get funded by
  2. Y Combinator.
  3. October 2011If you look at a list of US cities sorted by population, the number
  4. of successful startups per capita varies by orders of magnitude.
  5. Somehow it's as if most places were sprayed with startupicide.I wondered about this for years. I could see the average town was
  6. like a roach motel for startup ambitions: smart, ambitious people
  7. went in, but no startups came out. But I was never able to figure
  8. out exactly what happened inside the motel—exactly what was
  9. killing all the potential startups.
  10. [1]A couple weeks ago I finally figured it out. I was framing the
  11. question wrong. The problem is not that most towns kill startups.
  12. It's that death is the default for startups,
  13. and most towns don't save them. Instead of thinking of most places
  14. as being sprayed with startupicide, it's more accurate to think of
  15. startups as all being poisoned, and a few places being sprayed with
  16. the antidote.Startups in other places are just doing what startups naturally do:
  17. fail. The real question is, what's saving startups in places
  18. like Silicon Valley?
  19. [2]EnvironmentI think there are two components to the antidote: being in a place
  20. where startups are the cool thing to do, and chance meetings with
  21. people who can help you. And what drives them both is the number
  22. of startup people around you.The first component is particularly helpful in the first stage of
  23. a startup's life, when you go from merely having an interest in
  24. starting a company to actually doing it. It's quite a leap to start
  25. a startup. It's an unusual thing to do. But in Silicon Valley it
  26. seems normal.
  27. [3]In most places, if you start a startup, people treat you as if
  28. you're unemployed. People in the Valley aren't automatically
  29. impressed with you just because you're starting a company, but they
  30. pay attention. Anyone who's been here any amount of time knows not
  31. to default to skepticism, no matter how inexperienced you seem or
  32. how unpromising your idea sounds at first, because they've all seen
  33. inexperienced founders with unpromising sounding ideas who a few
  34. years later were billionaires.Having people around you care about what you're doing is an
  35. extraordinarily powerful force. Even the
  36. most willful people are susceptible to it. About a year after we
  37. started Y Combinator I said something to a partner at a well known
  38. VC firm that gave him the (mistaken) impression I was considering
  39. starting another startup. He responded so eagerly that for about
  40. half a second I found myself considering doing it.In most other cities, the prospect of starting a startup just doesn't
  41. seem real. In the Valley it's not only real but fashionable. That
  42. no doubt causes a lot of people to start startups who shouldn't.
  43. But I think that's ok. Few people are suited to running a startup,
  44. and it's very hard to predict beforehand which are (as I know all
  45. too well from being in the business of trying to predict beforehand),
  46. so lots of people starting startups who shouldn't is probably the
  47. optimal state of affairs. As long as you're at a point in your
  48. life when you can bear the risk of failure, the best way to find
  49. out if you're suited to running a startup is to try
  50. it.ChanceThe second component of the antidote is chance meetings with people
  51. who can help you. This force works in both phases: both in the
  52. transition from the desire to start a startup to starting one, and
  53. the transition from starting a company to succeeding. The power
  54. of chance meetings is more variable than people around you caring
  55. about startups, which is like a sort of background radiation that
  56. affects everyone equally, but at its strongest it is far stronger.Chance meetings produce miracles to compensate for the disasters
  57. that characteristically befall startups. In the Valley, terrible
  58. things happen to startups all the time, just like they do to startups
  59. everywhere. The reason startups are more likely to make it here
  60. is that great things happen to them too. In the Valley, lightning
  61. has a sign bit.For example, you start a site for college students and you decide
  62. to move to the Valley for the summer to work on it. And then on a
  63. random suburban street in Palo Alto you happen to run into Sean
  64. Parker, who understands the domain really well because he started
  65. a similar startup himself, and also knows all the investors. And
  66. moreover has advanced views, for 2004, on founders retaining control of their companies.You can't say precisely what the miracle will be, or even for sure
  67. that one will happen. The best one can say is: if you're in a
  68. startup hub, unexpected good things will probably happen to you,
  69. especially if you deserve them.I bet this is true even for startups we fund. Even with us working
  70. to make things happen for them on purpose rather than by accident,
  71. the frequency of helpful chance meetings in the Valley is so high
  72. that it's still a significant increment on what we can deliver.Chance meetings play a role like the role relaxation plays in having
  73. ideas. Most people have had the experience of working hard on some
  74. problem, not being able to solve it, giving up and going to bed,
  75. and then thinking of the answer in the shower in the morning. What
  76. makes the answer appear is letting your thoughts drift a bit—and thus drift off the wrong
  77. path you'd been pursuing last night and onto the right one adjacent
  78. to it.Chance meetings let your acquaintance drift in the same way taking
  79. a shower lets your thoughts drift. The critical thing in both cases
  80. is that they drift just the right amount. The meeting between Larry
  81. Page and Sergey Brin was a good example. They let their acquaintance
  82. drift, but only a little; they were both meeting someone they had
  83. a lot in common with.For Larry Page the most important component of the antidote was
  84. Sergey Brin, and vice versa. The antidote is
  85. people. It's not the
  86. physical infrastructure of Silicon Valley that makes it work, or
  87. the weather, or anything like that. Those helped get it started,
  88. but now that the reaction is self-sustaining what drives it is the
  89. people.Many observers have noticed that one of the most distinctive things
  90. about startup hubs is the degree to which people help one another
  91. out, with no expectation of getting anything in return. I'm not
  92. sure why this is so. Perhaps it's because startups are less of a
  93. zero sum game than most types of business; they are rarely killed
  94. by competitors. Or perhaps it's because so many startup founders
  95. have backgrounds in the sciences, where collaboration is encouraged.A large part of YC's function is to accelerate that process. We're
  96. a sort of Valley within the Valley, where the density of people
  97. working on startups and their willingness to help one another are
  98. both artificially amplified.NumbersBoth components of the antidote—an environment that encourages
  99. startups, and chance meetings with people who help you—are
  100. driven by the same underlying cause: the number of startup people
  101. around you. To make a startup hub, you need a lot of people
  102. interested in startups.There are three reasons. The first, obviously, is that if you don't
  103. have enough density, the chance meetings don't happen.
  104. [4]
  105. The second is that different startups need such different things, so
  106. you need a lot of people to supply each startup with what they need
  107. most. Sean Parker was exactly what Facebook needed in 2004. Another
  108. startup might have needed a database guy, or someone with connections
  109. in the movie business.This is one of the reasons we fund such a large number of companies,
  110. incidentally. The bigger the community, the greater the chance it
  111. will contain the person who has that one thing you need most.The third reason you need a lot of people to make a startup hub is
  112. that once you have enough people interested in the same problem,
  113. they start to set the social norms. And it is a particularly
  114. valuable thing when the atmosphere around you encourages you to do
  115. something that would otherwise seem too ambitious. In most places
  116. the atmosphere pulls you back toward the mean.I flew into the Bay Area a few days ago. I notice this every time
  117. I fly over the Valley: somehow you can sense something is going on.
  118. Obviously you can sense prosperity in how well kept a
  119. place looks. But there are different kinds of prosperity. Silicon
  120. Valley doesn't look like Boston, or New York, or LA, or DC. I tried
  121. asking myself what word I'd use to describe the feeling the Valley
  122. radiated, and the word that came to mind was optimism.Notes[1]
  123. I'm not saying it's impossible to succeed in a city with few
  124. other startups, just harder. If you're sufficiently good at
  125. generating your own morale, you can survive without external
  126. encouragement. Wufoo was based in Tampa and they succeeded. But
  127. the Wufoos are exceptionally disciplined.[2]
  128. Incidentally, this phenomenon is not limited to startups. Most
  129. unusual ambitions fail, unless the person who has them manages to
  130. find the right sort of community.[3]
  131. Starting a company is common, but starting a startup is rare.
  132. I've talked about the distinction between the two elsewhere, but
  133. essentially a startup is a new business designed for scale. Most
  134. new businesses are service businesses and except in rare cases those
  135. don't scale.[4]
  136. As I was writing this, I had a demonstration of the density of
  137. startup people in the Valley. Jessica and I bicycled to University
  138. Ave in Palo Alto to have lunch at the fabulous Oren's Hummus. As
  139. we walked in, we met Charlie Cheever sitting near the door. Selina
  140. Tobaccowala stopped to say hello on her way out. Then Josh Wilson
  141. came in to pick up a take out order. After lunch we went to get
  142. frozen yogurt. On the way we met Rajat Suri. When we got to the
  143. yogurt place, we found Dave Shen there, and as we walked out we ran
  144. into Yuri Sagalov. We walked with him for a block or so and we ran
  145. into Muzzammil Zaveri, and then a block later we met Aydin Senkut.
  146. This is everyday life in Palo Alto. I wasn't trying to meet people;
  147. I was just having lunch. And I'm sure for every startup founder
  148. or investor I saw that I knew, there were 5 more I didn't. If Ron
  149. Conway had been with us he would have met 30 people he knew.Thanks to Sam Altman, Paul Buchheit, Jessica Livingston, and
  150. Harj Taggar for reading drafts of this.