Chapters (Powered by ChapterMe) - 00:00 - Intro 00:24 - Why should you have a co-founder? 00:29 - Productivity 01:24 - Morale 02:03 - Pattern Matching 02:51 - Should you start a company without a co-founder? 03:10 - Exceptions 04:08 - Example: Successful startup with a single founder 04:37 - What should you look for in a potential co-founder? 04:43 - How do they handle stress? 06:11 - Do they have the same high-level goals? 07:28 - Don't overly focus on specific skills they have today 08:02 - Meta skill you should care about 08:23 - Where can you find co-founders? 11:21 - YC co-founder matching platform 12:06 - Examples 13:07 - How do you get started working together? 14:03 - Equity split 15:04 - Common reasons for co-founder breakups 15:08 - 1. They don't respect each other 16:01 - 2. Both want to be the CEO 16:54 - 3. Different work ethic expectations 17:55 - How do you avoid getting into a co-founder breakup? 19:10 - Tactical advice: Regular 1:1's 19:50 - Summary
Yep. Because it is advice that is not practical for most people. It’s hard enough to convince a person the your startup is worth their time, but how am i supposed to convince someone to spend a month on a temporary project thar is unpaid?
I've been trying for ages to find just the right cofounder, but most people have their own ideas or just don't seem to have the drive and ambition. Filtered through hundreds of people already.
I still think its better to hire the 10 best employees first than just searching for a co-founder, because the company will bring the right people and cofounders when its going good
Having different visions for success can lead to conflicts down the road so you should take the time to discuss what each of you hopes to achieve with the startup.
After building an MVP of my CRM and I agree doing it alone is hard. Not easy to find a complimentary co-founder in my current circle so I'll keep on building and marketing.
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other?
Thank you for this. Just broke up because of work ethic expectations as mentioned in the video. I learned a lot from this experience and wish everyone good luck on their journey 🙏
@@jupiterjones3789 I had no high expectations. But I'm more passionate than him in creating a successful company. He decided to have a different life, because there are things like friends and hobbies which are more important to him at the moment. And I respect that and we decided to split up. What I would do differently is, that I want to acknowledge the "fun" you have. Of course it's stressful, but I never lose the fun and excitement in creating something. It's not important to me how many hours you work, but I'd like to see the enjoyment in what you create. This makes all the upcoming challenges easier, because whatever happens you believe in it.
@@jupiterjones3789 No high expectations, but commitment is essential. However, we differed in our passion for building a successful company. What I would do differently is ensure the person genuinely enjoys solving the problem, as it makes everything easier.
Hi there, I'm currently working on a tech startup idea related to machine learning and AI. As I lack the technical skills to build this product myself, I'm looking for a highly driven and ambitious technical co-founder who can help me realise this idea. Let me know if this sounds like something for you. I'm based in Amsterdam; the closer the better, but no must ofc :)
Im in a weird spot. The people who would seem like a good early fit as a co-founder, just didnt have the passion for their own lives. Perfect stats in business, but their life is in shambles. Ill just keep on trucking for the right one. The bigger the vision, the longer these processes take.
I wonder if those cofounders from startup school started working on a concept or one party already started something. I think the latter will be how most of the confounding teams are formed because trying to start from scratch with a stranger might will be hard.
My problem is that the product I am building is in industry where coding skills are just useless. Having built a career over years in this industry, I do not get a chance to meet people who have strong technical skills. Whereas I consider myself a beginner/intermediate level programmer. But at this point, I managed to build a working prototype myself and have done the market research to see if there’s a need for such tools I'm building. For our business, these tools have become a necessity, and I want to continue building because I've been talking to potential users, and they all want to try. But I reached the point where I cannot build fast enough. So, I guess my question is how do I find a technical cofounder when I don't meet people in my cricles who I could trust would be a good business partner? I wouldn't consider myself a technical co-founder either, even though I am building it right now myself.
Harj did a great job explaining the process! However, please stop referring to a business that isn't a growth startup necessarily, a lifestyle business that can't get listed on the stock market
I need a co-founder and for him to be the president and handle the business side. Let me cook like Steve Jobs and be the creative force behind what we do. Let's work together and start building. I realize I cannot do it all alone.
@@dishankshah5080 that's what the paperwork says but it does not mean anything. anyone running a start up will tell you that. it's a status thing. If a worthy partner wants the title they can have it. When you start a company by yourself, Founder/CEO is what you are.
TLDR; I would rather solo than "need" a co-founder, it waste more time, morale and resources getting the wrong one. Long version: lots of them either want 100k salary or 50% equity but only want to spent 12 hours max per week during pre revenue. End of the day, advice is just an "advice". Nowadays, it's easier to start as solo indie hacker founder with AI tools everywhere. Hired some SE would be sufficient and focus more on customers.
I have been looking for a co-founder on YC for 3 years on YC co-founder matching platform. It feels like looking for a GF for who will never say yes no matter how good the idea is. And then the company never leaves the ground because you are searching for a co-founder who is either looking for you to pay them for their service or live next door to them. Even after you match, they treat you like you are a ghost because they feel they are doing you a favour. How do you manage this?
Any advice please? I have been working on my software product alone for over a year. I am a technical founder, father of 3, 09-17 job. I work on my idea daily from 20:00 to 24:00 sometimes later. I work on it after my kids go to bed. The people I know, technical friends I have are just not intrested in this sort of thing. Im not sure how to approach it. I feel motivated but it does get overwhelming.
Sell the vision to them. Explain the roles they would play to get the company to that vision. What their stakes will be and how they will benefit. What they will get in exchange for their time. You should be able to get one or two persons interested with that kind of speech
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other
I asked my friend to be my co-founder based on two criteria. First, does he have a skill set that I lack and that the company values? Second, would I be comfortable having him raise my children?
Finding a co-founder without technical skills is hard. It's harder when you're in 3rd world country. It's hardest when you're without technical skills, and outside first world country.
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech and has extensive experience in web/app development,project managemnet, scraping,automation ,integration and cloud. Looking to be a cofounder. Is there any specific sites to apply for this?
Hi there, I'm currently working on a tech startup idea related to machine learning and AI. As I lack the technical skills to build this product myself, I'm looking for a highly driven and ambitious technical co-founder who can help me realise this idea. Let me know if this sounds like something for you. I'm based in Amsterdam; the closer the better, but no must ofc :)
Finding good fit co founder is possible but it is not easy. It's all about mutual interest, communication, building relationship, responsibility. But also it should be ok being a solo founder and batch dude, geting fundraising, joining Bookface, hanging out in SF events in a free time and asking for advice on the way up. Hope in near future it wouldn't be an obstacle to shine like a star.
Senior Full stack developer here. I'm looking for a co-founder with any of the following combinations; - Finance professional - Business professional - Legal professional with business development experience. Product A decentralised/web3 SaaS for creating, launching and managing web3 programs and tokens. Alpha version is ready. Beta to be ready soon.
These days, any AI model could be a copartner. I am training mine with Chat GPT to make a Avatar K0nct which is a powerful AI-driven HR tool. If anyone is interested in co-creating, let me know
@@RD19902010 Training in the sense that I have one singular conversation about creating software for me - a veteran recruiter who has the domain, understands the technical part, and needs this AI to understand the problem I'm solving by making it and getting it to an MVP stage. It has become a deep collaboration between us. If you were to print this conversation, it’d be about 900 pages!
Let's see if the comment section on YC video on How To Find A Co-Founder is better than the actual website. I'm looking for a 3rd co-founder (I've spent a ton of time on the website looking for one and not only there). We are a team of 2 (tech and product), serial founders and from the Big Tech. Currently looking for a 3rd technical co-founder with a Computer Vision expertise. Ideally with hands-on experience with cloud-based solutions and real-time CV video analyses (YOLO, TensorFlow, OpenCV, Keras). Mobile dev experience would be a plus. It could be either native or React/Flutter etc.. Right now we are building the MVP. Drop a message or a comment and I'll reach out to you (I don't think I can post links here).
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other
I’m looking for a co-founder. 1. I have a specific idea and specialized background to make it. 2. I’m not an engineer, but I have the skills to build the MVP myself. Currently, I’ve got a friend acting as CTO but he’s FT at Amazon and isn’t putting in the time. He’s got young family.
It's always like that, same here. I am not a technical person but I am great at product marketing and management with no luck in getting a co-founder. I would advise you incentive your friend to put in the time by giving him some money as a form of encouragement. That's the only solution to your problem
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other
YC stresses finding a co-founder but I think it's assuming it's the founder's first startup or hasn't co-founded/solo-founded a successful startup prior. It's obvious YC has strong bias towards companies applying having multi co-founders but they never talk about when it makes sense to go solo or even mention examples of successful solo-founders.
If you’re looking for a sales/marketing/product/community growth cofounder please feel free to drop a comment or send me a message. Have worked on over 5+ personal projects, and have exited 2 of those projects (not large exits, or else I probably wouldn’t be here😂). Based in Texas. 25 years old. Currently working on niche automation products for industrial companies but open to a variety of problems that need solving.
Hi I'm Nilesh. I'm Technical. I'm currently writing a research paper on making Large Language Models safe and make them generate environmentally responsible outputs. I'm planning to apply for S24 winter batch my idea is in the field of synthetic data creation for LLMs or ReACT Agents. I'm actively looking for a co-founder. Let's chat and see how it goes. PS: I'm searching only for technical minds
3rd time YC applicant and solo founder here. Semi-technical myself. I understand frontend development. Currently learning how to code AI chatbots. Building a brain science based AI startup. Launched and have a waiting list of founders (including YC alums) and 1 paying customer. Looking for a technical co-founder to apply with for W25. Anyone looking to join forces?
Hi. I have around 8+ years in tech and experienced in web/app development, project management,scraping, automation, integration and cloud. We can connect if you are potentially looking for a co-founder. Let's connect and talk about what are we building.
@@JeffreyLAFTER I’m 19 years old, and I’ve dropped out of college, but my family doesn’t know about it. I’ve invested all my college fees into my ideas, even though those ideas failed, I haven’t lost hope. One day, I will definitely achieve something big.And till today, I haven’t filled out a resume or worked under anyone. I will work for those who truly need it, and I’m doing it purely to gain experience.
@@austineneanya4082 I am more inclined towards working as a co-founder. I enjoy the sense of ownership and collaboration that comes with building something from the ground up, rather than just being an early-stage employee.
It's funny to mention reasons why co-founders break up. Why require a founder to have a co-founder in the first place. In my humble opinion you should just give anyone their chance based on other stuff but not the co-founding aspect.
YC doesn't want to fund indie hackers trying to build lifestyle businesses, their advice is centered around that bias. Don't take that to be an indictment of what you're doing, it's just a statement of preference.
Of course I get that. But it's debatable. Things change and people aren't the same. Curious to see what stats would reveal if they allow solo founders. Sometimes it's just better to be alone than being with someone who'd make you give up.
Chapters (Powered by ChapterMe) -
00:00 - Intro
00:24 - Why should you have a co-founder?
00:29 - Productivity
01:24 - Morale
02:03 - Pattern Matching
02:51 - Should you start a company without a co-founder?
03:10 - Exceptions
04:08 - Example: Successful startup with a single founder
04:37 - What should you look for in a potential co-founder?
04:43 - How do they handle stress?
06:11 - Do they have the same high-level goals?
07:28 - Don't overly focus on specific skills they have today
08:02 - Meta skill you should care about
08:23 - Where can you find co-founders?
11:21 - YC co-founder matching platform
12:06 - Examples
13:07 - How do you get started working together?
14:03 - Equity split
15:04 - Common reasons for co-founder breakups
15:08 - 1. They don't respect each other
16:01 - 2. Both want to be the CEO
16:54 - 3. Different work ethic expectations
17:55 - How do you avoid getting into a co-founder breakup?
19:10 - Tactical advice: Regular 1:1's
19:50 - Summary
"Spend some time working on small projects with your new co-founder" is the great advice nobody will ever follow
Yep. Because it is advice that is not practical for most people. It’s hard enough to convince a person the your startup is worth their time, but how am i supposed to convince someone to spend a month on a temporary project thar is unpaid?
I've been trying for ages to find just the right cofounder, but most people have their own ideas or just don't seem to have the drive and ambition. Filtered through hundreds of people already.
One problem with matching website is being FREE. If they charged a little money ($10) it would weed out the slackers
I can help.
On point. Especially on drive and ambition.
@@depdep5584 👍👍👍
Same here. Stuck in the same loop for more than a year..
I still think its better to hire the 10 best employees first than just searching for a co-founder, because the company will bring the right people and cofounders when its going good
The right video at the right time❤ thank you Y combinator
Having different visions for success can lead to conflicts down the road so you should take the time to discuss what each of you hopes to achieve with the startup.
After building an MVP of my CRM and I agree doing it alone is hard. Not easy to find a complimentary co-founder in my current circle so I'll keep on building and marketing.
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other?
Thank you for this. Just broke up because of work ethic expectations as mentioned in the video. I learned a lot from this experience and wish everyone good luck on their journey 🙏
May I ask how Your work expectations were?
And what You would do differently?
@@jupiterjones3789 I had no high expectations. But I'm more passionate than him in creating a successful company. He decided to have a different life, because there are things like friends and hobbies which are more important to him at the moment. And I respect that and we decided to split up. What I would do differently is, that I want to acknowledge the "fun" you have. Of course it's stressful, but I never lose the fun and excitement in creating something. It's not important to me how many hours you work, but I'd like to see the enjoyment in what you create. This makes all the upcoming challenges easier, because whatever happens you believe in it.
@@jupiterjones3789 No high expectations, but commitment is essential. However, we differed in our passion for building a successful company. What I would do differently is ensure the person genuinely enjoys solving the problem, as it makes everything easier.
I'm actively looking for a co-founder.Applied for W25 .Didnt know hard and lonely it is to be a single founder with a pre product market fit.
People will jump in when they see you have traction. And will demand 50% equity and 100k salary 😂
@@Rami7605👌
What’s pre-product market fit?
Happened to me haha @@Rami7605
Hi there, I'm currently working on a tech startup idea related to machine learning and AI. As I lack the technical skills to build this product myself, I'm looking for a highly driven and ambitious technical co-founder who can help me realise this idea. Let me know if this sounds like something for you. I'm based in Amsterdam; the closer the better, but no must ofc :)
Why is YC cofounder match more like Tinder than Linkedin?
It's free !
@@Rami7605 It's free if you don't value your time.
I stopped looking for co-founder till I have a working MVP it will be easy to convince someone
Im in a weird spot. The people who would seem like a good early fit as a co-founder, just didnt have the passion for their own lives. Perfect stats in business, but their life is in shambles. Ill just keep on trucking for the right one. The bigger the vision, the longer these processes take.
Comment section has a selection bias for people that haven't found a co-founder.
Very informative!!
I wonder if those cofounders from startup school started working on a concept or one party already started something. I think the latter will be how most of the confounding teams are formed because trying to start from scratch with a stranger might will be hard.
You guys are killing it 🔥
My problem is that the product I am building is in industry where coding skills are just useless. Having built a career over years in this industry, I do not get a chance to meet people who have strong technical skills. Whereas I consider myself a beginner/intermediate level programmer. But at this point, I managed to build a working prototype myself and have done the market research to see if there’s a need for such tools I'm building. For our business, these tools have become a necessity, and I want to continue building because I've been talking to potential users, and they all want to try. But I reached the point where I cannot build fast enough.
So, I guess my question is how do I find a technical cofounder when I don't meet people in my cricles who I could trust would be a good business partner? I wouldn't consider myself a technical co-founder either, even though I am building it right now myself.
Hey, I’m a CTO with some startup exits in my portfolio. Looking to build something cool. Wanna talk? Let me know.
Harj did a great job explaining the process! However, please stop referring to a business that isn't a growth startup necessarily, a lifestyle business that can't get listed on the stock market
Yay! Thanks! Very well scripted, talking about a lot of topics.
I need a co-founder and for him to be the president and handle the business side. Let me cook like Steve Jobs and be the creative force behind what we do. Let's work together and start building. I realize I cannot do it all alone.
Wasn’t Steve jobs the business? Cause woz was def the brains…
@@jameslowman7975 Certainly but there were 2 kinds of brains. Jobs was also a visionary. Woz was for sure the brains but Jobs was the imagination.
What's ur bs?
you already make yourself CEO - at least in username!!!
@@dishankshah5080 that's what the paperwork says but it does not mean anything. anyone running a start up will tell you that. it's a status thing. If a worthy partner wants the title they can have it. When you start a company by yourself, Founder/CEO is what you are.
TLDR; I would rather solo than "need" a co-founder, it waste more time, morale and resources getting the wrong one.
Long version: lots of them either want 100k salary or 50% equity but only want to spent 12 hours max per week during pre revenue.
End of the day, advice is just an "advice". Nowadays, it's easier to start as solo indie hacker founder with AI tools everywhere. Hired some SE would be sufficient and focus more on customers.
Perfect timing thank you
Super helpful!
This is great advice, Haarj! Thanks.
Thanks.Radhe Radhe
I have been looking for a co-founder on YC for 3 years on YC co-founder matching platform. It feels like looking for a GF for who will never say yes no matter how good the idea is. And then the company never leaves the ground because you are searching for a co-founder who is either looking for you to pay them for their service or live next door to them. Even after you match, they treat you like you are a ghost because they feel they are doing you a favour. How do you manage this?
Any advice please?
I have been working on my software product alone for over a year. I am a technical founder, father of 3, 09-17 job.
I work on my idea daily from 20:00 to 24:00 sometimes later. I work on it after my kids go to bed.
The people I know, technical friends I have are just not intrested in this sort of thing. Im not sure how to approach it.
I feel motivated but it does get overwhelming.
@@darkyec Not sure what is the problem exactly? Do you need a co-founder? A technical one or handling the business side of things?
Sell the vision to them. Explain the roles they would play to get the company to that vision. What their stakes will be and how they will benefit. What they will get in exchange for their time. You should be able to get one or two persons interested with that kind of speech
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other
I asked my friend to be my co-founder based on two criteria.
First, does he have a skill set that I lack and that the company values?
Second, would I be comfortable having him raise my children?
Finding a co-founder without technical skills is hard. It's harder when you're in 3rd world country. It's hardest when you're without technical skills, and outside first world country.
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech and has extensive experience in web/app development,project managemnet, scraping,automation ,integration and cloud. Looking to be a cofounder. Is there any specific sites to apply for this?
Are you working somewhere and have you developed any app ?
@@fUrrsafar Yes currently working (notice period). Developed many apps/websites.
Hi there, I'm currently working on a tech startup idea related to machine learning and AI. As I lack the technical skills to build this product myself, I'm looking for a highly driven and ambitious technical co-founder who can help me realise this idea. Let me know if this sounds like something for you. I'm based in Amsterdam; the closer the better, but no must ofc :)
@@MatsVisser-h6t hey that sounds awesome! Can we connect by any chance. Discord? Any other way
Since cofounder disagreements are the no.1 reason for startup failure, I'd rather just start the company alone.
It's very useful MAN!!
I found my technical co-founder via the YC cofounding matching so thanks so much!
Finding good fit co founder is possible but it is not easy. It's all about mutual interest, communication, building relationship, responsibility. But also it should be ok being a solo founder and batch dude, geting fundraising, joining Bookface, hanging out in SF events in a free time and asking for advice on the way up. Hope in near future it wouldn't be an obstacle to shine like a star.
Senior Full stack developer here.
I'm looking for a co-founder with any of the following combinations;
- Finance professional
- Business professional
- Legal professional with business development experience.
Product
A decentralised/web3 SaaS for creating, launching and managing web3 programs and tokens.
Alpha version is ready.
Beta to be ready soon.
I love YC
If the co founder isn't a technical co founder, still do I need to split the equity to 50/50?
Depends on progress so far
@solidfuel0 wdym?
@monec.11 if starting from zero then it's 50/50
These days, any AI model could be a copartner. I am training mine with Chat GPT to make a Avatar K0nct which is a powerful AI-driven HR tool. If anyone is interested in co-creating, let me know
training an AI with AI?
@@RD19902010 Training in the sense that I have one singular conversation about creating software for me - a veteran recruiter who has the domain, understands the technical part, and needs this AI to understand the problem I'm solving by making it and getting it to an MVP stage. It has become a deep collaboration between us. If you were to print this conversation, it’d be about 900 pages!
🎉
I'm interested!!
Let's see if the comment section on YC video on How To Find A Co-Founder is better than the actual website.
I'm looking for a 3rd co-founder (I've spent a ton of time on the website looking for one and not only there).
We are a team of 2 (tech and product), serial founders and from the Big Tech. Currently looking for a 3rd technical co-founder with a Computer Vision expertise. Ideally with hands-on experience with cloud-based solutions and real-time CV video analyses (YOLO, TensorFlow, OpenCV, Keras). Mobile dev experience would be a plus. It could be either native or React/Flutter etc..
Right now we are building the MVP.
Drop a message or a comment and I'll reach out to you (I don't think I can post links here).
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other
I’m looking for a co-founder.
1. I have a specific idea and specialized background to make it.
2. I’m not an engineer, but I have the skills to build the MVP myself.
Currently, I’ve got a friend acting as CTO but he’s FT at Amazon and isn’t putting in the time. He’s got young family.
It's always like that, same here. I am not a technical person but I am great at product marketing and management with no luck in getting a co-founder. I would advise you incentive your friend to put in the time by giving him some money as a form of encouragement. That's the only solution to your problem
Hi, i have around 8+ years of experience in tech with domains across pm, mobile/app development, scraping, Integration,cloud and automation. Looking to cofound a startup, can we connect and let us know each other
@@austineneanya4082 I can’t possibly match the $ Amazon pays him.
@@RohithS-ig4hl I should mention that I am in Vancouver, BC, Canada
@@brahmdorst5154 maybe we can just go remote? I'll be your remote cofounder?
YC stresses finding a co-founder but I think it's assuming it's the founder's first startup or hasn't co-founded/solo-founded a successful startup prior. It's obvious YC has strong bias towards companies applying having multi co-founders but they never talk about when it makes sense to go solo or even mention examples of successful solo-founders.
If you’re looking for a sales/marketing/product/community growth cofounder please feel free to drop a comment or send me a message.
Have worked on over 5+ personal projects, and have exited 2 of those projects (not large exits, or else I probably wouldn’t be here😂).
Based in Texas. 25 years old. Currently working on niche automation products for industrial companies but open to a variety of problems that need solving.
Hi I'm Nilesh. I'm Technical. I'm currently writing a research paper on making Large Language Models safe and make them generate environmentally responsible outputs. I'm planning to apply for S24 winter batch my idea is in the field of synthetic data creation for LLMs or ReACT Agents. I'm actively looking for a co-founder. Let's chat and see how it goes.
PS: I'm searching only for technical minds
Why only technical? You need someone to sell
Technical can sell too. Stop this stereotype
3rd time YC applicant and solo founder here. Semi-technical myself. I understand frontend development. Currently learning how to code AI chatbots.
Building a brain science based AI startup. Launched and have a waiting list of founders (including YC alums) and 1 paying customer.
Looking for a technical co-founder to apply with for W25. Anyone looking to join forces?
Hi. I have around 8+ years in tech and experienced in web/app development, project management,scraping, automation, integration and cloud. We can connect if you are potentially looking for a co-founder. Let's connect and talk about what are we building.
I am a front-end end developer i wanna work for startups for free
Free? ~_^ Why would you do that? Willing to have faith and work to make something great? Or are ya just in it to rack up resume filler/history?
@@JeffreyLAFTER I’m 19 years old, and I’ve dropped out of college, but my family doesn’t know about it. I’ve invested all my college fees into my ideas, even though those ideas failed, I haven’t lost hope. One day, I will definitely achieve something big.And till today, I haven’t filled out a resume or worked under anyone. I will work for those who truly need it, and I’m doing it purely to gain experience.
@Praveenverma001 the question is, are you looking to work as a co-founder or an early stage employee? Which one?
@@austineneanya4082
I am more inclined towards working as a co-founder. I enjoy the sense of ownership and collaboration that comes with building something from the ground up, rather than just being an early-stage employee.
Are you a web developer or mobile
I applied for fall 2024 late and they sent me an email they will move it to winter 2025 and my application looks promising
It's funny to mention reasons why co-founders break up. Why require a founder to have a co-founder in the first place. In my humble opinion you should just give anyone their chance based on other stuff but not the co-founding aspect.
YC doesn't want to fund indie hackers trying to build lifestyle businesses, their advice is centered around that bias. Don't take that to be an indictment of what you're doing, it's just a statement of preference.
Of course I get that. But it's debatable. Things change and people aren't the same. Curious to see what stats would reveal if they allow solo founders. Sometimes it's just better to be alone than being with someone who'd make you give up.
they allow solo founders, but odds for success are just lower then..
Dealing with non-performing co-founder who aren't motivated is harder. It's like marriage if you don't find the right compliment/compatibility
I'm finding co-founder for my Ed -tech startup if anybody interested comment on comment
hmu if you want to build cool af edtech
Just hire
co founders are a waste of time
if you are a tech. you don't need one. get an investor