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