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typeliftr | 7 years ago
I work in a company that has 5-10 employees, nobody is working their ass off and there’s steady income and gradual growth. Our CEO is not a millionaire, but he enjoys his work and the company he works for. There is no plans for fast growth or VC funding.
Can anyone explain to me where does this obsession with VC funding and huge growth come from? I feel like if you grow your company by more then 50% YOY you will end up with a totally different company culture, and you might end up hating your own company.
askafriend|7 years ago
What did you expect? Us all talking about the successful McDonald’s franchisee in Wichita, Kansas?
You’re consuming news from a portion of the overall economy where there are high stakes, big bets and a lot of money involved. Outsized, massive multi-billion dollar outcomes are the name of the entire game.
That’s why you get that feeling.
onion2k|7 years ago
john_moscow|7 years ago
jackgolding|7 years ago
And even if you fail you write some blog posts, do the speaking circuit and end up with another high paying role in a startup, VC or a services company (Government, Co-working space, law firm...)
cncrnd|7 years ago
kasnaka|7 years ago
double0jimb0|7 years ago
TwelveNights|7 years ago
TheOtherHobbes|7 years ago
Long hours, millions or billions in cash, high risk, high reward - it's so much more exciting than building a steady business that pays its way and keeps some number of people gainfully employed while providing a genuinely useful product/service.
denverkarma|7 years ago
lordnacho|7 years ago
On HN "startup" means the kind of business whose ambition is to be a household name, used by millions of people if it's in the consumer space, or all the major customers if it's in B2B.
That kind of thing tends to require a business that grows a lot while generally not making free cash, which is why it needs outside investors. Those investors see a lot of these firms and this is one take on the accumulated learnings.
Nokinside|7 years ago
Startup is not same as new company or new tech company.
http://www.paulgraham.com/growth.html
> A startup is a company designed to grow fast. Being newly founded does not in itself make a company a startup. Nor is it necessary for a startup to work on technology, or take venture funding, or have some sort of "exit." The only essential thing is growth. Everything else we associate with startups follows from growth.
smt88|7 years ago
Venture capital is high-risk and high-reward, and investors won't gamble millions without a chance for a massive return.
Massive returns usually happen at large scale.
If you want more companies like yours and fewer like, say, Twitter, then venture capital would need to be a charity.
ganeshkrishnan|7 years ago
Gavin Belson is not a fictitious character; he is literally the snapshot of a typical investor.
rglover|7 years ago
It's a real shame that building a company has become about racing to the cash (with very little conscious reasoning as to why) and not about building meaningful products, services, and teams that will be around for the long-term.
As a guy running a "tiny" company that just did a little over 100K in revenue its first year, I couldn't be happier. There's only three of us (two of which are contractors) and the current goal is to intentionally limit our team size to no more than 20 over the next few years.
ilangorajagopal|7 years ago
There also companies/people who think they need an exit strategy, rapidly iterate and grow, get multiple rounds of funding from VCs or angels, then sell it to one of the bigger tech companies. There are so many examples of these types of companies. You only need to visit Techcrunch or one of many tech news sites.
There are other types too. The company I work at, we do put in great work, have steady growth. We did get funding from VCs but working towards self-sufficiency. Funding was necessary to keep the company alive, while delivering great value to our customers. In the end it comes down to what kind of a culture you want to set for the company and what you think will be good for the company and the employees.
paraschopra|7 years ago
Contrary to many responses, the drive for growth is a consequence of human psychology and hence how things evolve in business. Humans are fundamentally dissatisfied creatures, and this translates into ever-increasing hunger for profit in businesses.
As a business owner, you cannot decide in isolation that you want to not grow because that decision is impacted by your competitors and customers. If your competitors decide to grow really big, your small business will get threatened. This is exactly what's happening with Amazon. A mom-and-pop shop may be happy not growing, but it's at the risk of not existing at all.
Earlier I had similar thoughts of "why grow", but now I understand better. I wrote about this in a blog post: https://growth.wingify.com/startup-complacency-the-flip-side...
TheOtherHobbes|7 years ago
It's true that a certain kind of business culture encourages this thinking and disparages slow growth or - worse - static but healthy profits.
But that's propaganda, not reality, and the economy is the worse for it. Steady businesses contribute far more in jobs, personal freedom, and social opportunity than unicorns do.
mcculley|7 years ago
I have successfully run a consultancy for fourteen years. This is very bootstrappable, but does not scale well. Conversely, one cannot make the next Tesla using one's own capital.
mathattack|7 years ago
I thought, “The dry cleaner down the street he a competitor advantage by memorizing the face and account number of every customer. Even if they don’t scale beyond one shop, they’re an entrepreneur”
Single proprietor businesses generally don’t hire PR firms to hype themselves up. That’s why it’s not in the press.
philbo|7 years ago
JonoBB|7 years ago
Don't let the hype/marketing make you think otherwise.
subashp|7 years ago
To answer your question, you have to understand how VCs operate. How they raise money from other institutional investors, rich folks etc and how they need to return that money in a finite time (4-5 years) Everything comes down to money for that reason.
madsvj|7 years ago
thirdsun|7 years ago
(I'm not affiliated with them in any way, just a fan of the product and someone who sympathizes and agrees with their views.)
kulu2002|7 years ago
xstartup|7 years ago
Startups need an exit strategy.
Employees want to work 5-10 years max and end up with millions to retire peacefully while working in an intense environment which serves as the story of their accomplishment for the lifetime.
Then they plan to follow their other life goals like going on a world tour with the family or watch their kids growing up or creating their own small lifestyle business. It can be anything.
The key realization is that most employees do not want to work for you just because they have found themselves in such place.
When I was new in the industry, I put a lot of blood/sweat into building a company. Today, I can't force myself to put the same amount of efforts even if I want to.
The idea is to raise money fast, hire experienced people for ancillary services and develop the application in a way so that it is able to hold up till IPO. Defer all costs (application maintenance, vendor lockins, IP infringement risks) for post IPO. Create the Hype around the product which gets you eyeballs, subscriptions, MAU and other metrics which translates into the valuation. Once you've caught market attention, the solution can always get more love post IPO.
The market pressure to produce returns post IPO results in the broad application of the company's IP, resources, and talent. This might spin up new industries.
Once the employees have cashed their equity, it's up to them to stay (if they are enjoying the position) or leave (if they've other life goals).
A lifestyle business, won't be able to achieve this for each of their employees. Even very few startups achieve this for most of their employees.
siddharthdeswal|7 years ago
Nopes, founders want millions by (ideally) using technology to disrupt a market and gaining from the windfall.
VC want millions/billions by betting money on such founders.
They both agree to buy talent by promising employees a share of the windfall.
Employees don't start out thinking "hey I want millions, let me join this unknown company".
They usually start out "I need a good, well paying job where I do interesting work."
Edit: spelling
grosjona|7 years ago
This sounds like either it is an extremely unrealistic expectation or it's extremely unfair.
I know lots of smart people who worked for at least 10 years in very intense startup environments and got essentially nothing out of it. Often, they have to fallback on a life of contract work for huge boring corporations.
majani|7 years ago
dfee|7 years ago
kulu2002|7 years ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17446121
jakoblorz|7 years ago
DavidHm|7 years ago
Numberwang|7 years ago