ASK HN: Do I have to be in America to make success?
I am from Egypt, and I had an American friend who supported the website.. by paying for it's hosting and all other related fees...
Around a year ago, I totally stopped working on it, and even it's shut down now.. My main problem was getting into America..
Whatever, I want to re-start this startup again.. but of course it's kind of impossible for a young Arab Muslim to travel to America (This is the truth regardless what you hear in your American media).. so I wonder.. is it possible to make a successful American startup, even if you are not in America? And is it possible to get acquired later by an American enterprise?
What gave me some hope again.. that recently an Arabian social network was acquired by Yahoo!.. which is maktoob.com website.. and that refreshed my dreams for making something successful..
What do you think? It's very frustrating to be stopped.. just based on your religion!
[+] [-] csomar|15 years ago|reply
So the first thing is: It's not about who you are. It's about how much money you have.
You said your startup is a website (probably a kind of SaaS). If it's successful why not charge your users. Get paid via FastSpring (they take a fee, but deliver money to your card, bank, paypal... and manage your subscription). You don't need access to the USA. You only need to form a company in Egypt, declare your revenue, pay your taxes, pay hosting with your card (provided by Fast Spring). Hire programmers in Egypt (they are cheap) and get yourself off the ground.
Your main problem is getting into the US. But why do you want to get their? You actually don't, it actually add expenses and Visa problems. And with only thousands of users, you can live like a Prince in Egypt.
[+] [-] donohoe|15 years ago|reply
The USCIS, formerly called the BSCIS, formally called the INS is tough to go through for everyone. You need to understand that this is not becuase of your religion or whatever - its becuase you are not American like the rest of the world (be it Irish, French, SOuth African, Egyptian etc...)
They are equally unhelpful and incompetent to people of all nations.
[+] [-] ahmedaly|15 years ago|reply
I am talking about entering America, regardless the purpose of travel!
[+] [-] kloncks|15 years ago|reply
The one thing that I absolutely will say is better in the United States than other places is funding. The idea of Venture Capital (and the sheer amount of investors) is found more here than anywhere else. A good network of capable engineers is nice but honestly you can find that in a lot of places.
To this day, the idea of starting a startup, getting funding, being an entrepreneur, and possibly failing is very American. To this day, the simple idea of "failing is okay" is more concentrated here. But other than that, you can be successful anywhere, really. The odds might be harder but not necessarily so much harder that it would be deemed impossible. Just my two cents.
Feel free to contact me, btw. I'd love to help any way I can. Email's in profile.
[+] [-] ahmedaly|15 years ago|reply
For example.. if I want to charge my users, it's very hard to do that, because PayPal is NOT available for Egyptians. Also it's NOT easy to setup an international merchant account, to accept payments on the internet.
There are very critical challenges, which makes it much harder to make any success... not to mention that it's impossible indeed to get funding opportunity in Egypt, as you know... we don't have this culture here yet..
[+] [-] Towle_|15 years ago|reply
Nonsense. I personally live in an area with a large immigrant Muslim population, both from the Middle East and from Africa. (This is the truth regardless of what you hear in your Egyptian media.)
[+] [-] ahmedaly|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hasenj|15 years ago|reply
I've seen a lot of people in this state of mind, and it seems to me that wanting something desperately makes it hard to actually get it (it puts you in the wrong state of mind).
Focus on building a great product and don't think about being acquired. Make something people want, get users to love your product. Find ways to monetize the wealth you created.
It seems like what you're really asking is "I want to get into the U.S., can I do that by making a website and hoping to get acquired?".
I think the answer to that is "not likely".
[+] [-] petervandijck|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] flarson77|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] petercooper|15 years ago|reply
Further, even if you don't live in the US, your sites can target US users just as any US site can. If you need to charge money, you'll need to figure out a billing system to accept $, but there are few compelling reasons to be in the US merely to serve users there (though depending on how you do it, the IRS may think otherwise).
All that said, if you look at and learn from American businesses and you have a good feel for your local market (or the Arabic market in general), you might even have a position most of us would envy! You can more easily "take" ideas that have been proven in the West and do an Arabic twist on them (I don't know about the Arabic world, but this tactic is common in non English speaking European countries).
[+] [-] jlgosse|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] TheSmoke|15 years ago|reply
I have a suggestion, not about entering USA.
From what I have observed, many of non-US based successful start-ups are domestic projects and then a big company comes and buys them, as in your example. My suggestion here is, you can target the arab world. As this has enough people, I can also suggest you targeting the muslim world which consists of 1.5 billion people. By doing so, you'd not have to leave your country or deal with the crap.
[+] [-] kranner|15 years ago|reply
Do that, and I'm pretty sure those American investors will find you.
[+] [-] ahmedaly|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jibjab|15 years ago|reply
1) You don't need an 'American friend' to pay for hosting, all you need is a creditcard.
2) You'll need to properly setup a company. Given your circumstances, I would look at the free zones in the UAE. There you'll find the most business friendly places of the whole (Arab) Middle East. No corruption and bureaucracy there. Second, given the focus you put on being a young Muslim Arab, I'm sure you'll find your way in the UAE, just a short flight from Egypt.
You can find more info on UAE free zones at
http://www.dubaiinternetcity.com/ (the Dubai Free Zone for IT companies)
http://www.rakftz.com/ (the (cheaper) Free Zone of Ras al Khaimah (another emirate of the UAE).
[+] [-] richardw|15 years ago|reply
In fact, your costs are much lower outside the developed world, reducing your risk and how much money you have to find to start your business (if anything). Your customers can be anywhere. Spend low, earn high. And I'm willing to bet that the competition is much lower because The Valley isn't even aware you exist, or that your town or city exist. You could be super-successful and still be under their radar.
Turn what you consider your weakness, into your strength.
[+] [-] semanticist|15 years ago|reply
Alternatively, develop a model that doesn't require external funding, at least until you've got demonstrable traction. You can create a US company even without being in the US and it can sell shares as normal.
I know there's this huge pressure to get to San Francisco, but it's really not the only place in the world where you can succeed.
[+] [-] Alex3917|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] idiopathic|15 years ago|reply
Please note that the problems are 1) you have to do this when your competitors do not, and 2) your explanations have to go though a government official, ie you will waste many years and the process has nothing to do with logic or facts.
I say this as someone who left the USA even after my employer and my wife's both offered to convert our H1B visas to greencards. But I decided that 6 years (our H1B time in the USA) was already too long that I delayed my startup, and waiting for the green card again was not worth it.
I think your real problem is not that you are not in the USA, it is that you are in Egypt. Bahrain, my country, has problems, but Egypt is something else.
So I think you should really go to Dubai. (I want to say Bahrain, but Dubia is our Silicon Valley, so go there my friend.)
Also, while in Egypt, or Dubai, or anywhere else in the Arab world... apply to Seedcamp. In my year, Talasim from Jordan won, as did my own company, although I applied from Cambridge, UK. But now I am in the Gulf, pursuing clients, and I can tell you that I have access to some here who are more sophisticated than any I saw in the USA. So use what have, go where you can work quickly, because that is what you need for success, not being in the USA.
[+] [-] jacquesm|15 years ago|reply
No reason to move to the other side of the world.
[+] [-] Locke1689|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] BigZaphod|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] igorgue|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] allend|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] c00p3r|15 years ago|reply
Try Bangalore, India or China. Try to find a niche for your startup around your home (which means find a people with a task/problem and money and turn it into your next startup. Usually that is some internet service for an non-IT established business).
And it is also possible, but really difficult, to bootstrap yourself, if your startup idea is really innovative. Technology is very cheap nowadays.
And the last but not the least - try to find people in situation like your and cooperate and collaborate with them.
I'm personally think that geo-dispersed teams, like that one which develops FreeBSD or Webkit or Go are the answer to the problem. Communication is the key, not a connectivity.
[+] [-] ahoyhere|15 years ago|reply