4 of 5 of the biggest tech company founders were in their early 20s. So the biggest ideas clearly slanted towards young visionary founders, but the statistics do skew back towards older founders for all but the largest companies.
One also expects the most variance at the tail-end of the success curve, because the sample size is so small. Give it a few centuries and we'll have some data about that part of the spectrum of success stories.
This seems to redefine the question away from "what does a successful entrepreneur look like" in an attempt to maintain the narrative that "young visionaries" are the most successful.
That is only if you think only 'tech' companies are big and they are the biggest ideas and they are the majority in Fortune 2000, but it's not. There are lot of companies that have much smarter ideas and are clearly big enough to be considered as 'successful', they are mostly skewed towards older founders.
Apple's true success came with Second Steve i.e. mature Steve, not first Steve. Amazon, Oracle, Intel founders weren't in their 20s.
Microsoft, Google, and Facebook indeed were started by young founders. Twenty years later Google might be the only meaningful one standing. Time will tell.
As I mentioned elsewhere, Bezos was 29 when he quit his full time job and 30 when he wrote up the business plan for Amazon. I think that's close enough for this argument.
I think this is very important, basically that if you look at the data by something like market cap it would probably skew very young. E.g. AirBnB and Dropbox are (IIRC, may have changed by now) the majority of total valuation for ycom, and those companies were both started by early 20-somethings.
YC itself skews young, at least in part I'd say because the sort of help it provides is something that is more needed the younger you are. It's vanishingly unlikely that I will need YC's money, connections, or imprimatur for a startup at this stage in my life. When I was 24 starting a company, it would have been hugely helpful.
jknoepfler|8 years ago
johnny313|8 years ago
sv12l|8 years ago
nunya213|8 years ago
dkural|8 years ago
Microsoft, Google, and Facebook indeed were started by young founders. Twenty years later Google might be the only meaningful one standing. Time will tell.
s2g|8 years ago
It's been more than 20 years and Microsoft is still right there.
Infernal|8 years ago
unknown|8 years ago
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unknown|8 years ago
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hn_throwaway_99|8 years ago
sulam|8 years ago
mcbreezy|8 years ago
EDIT: Page was 25 and Brin was 24: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Page