Ask HN:Anyone here not want an exit?
This question determines whether I want to raise money since VCs / angels always ask, "What's your exit strategy?".
So you have to balance between two views:
a.) Raise money, allowing your operation to possibly grow more because of this, a broader network through the investors for partnerships/advice, and coming to grips with the fact that you will have to sell or your investors will push you for it. Understand that if you are acquired (low chances, but just saying), you will have to work for a behemoth company, and judging from the amount of founders that leave a short while after being acquired, being an employee of one of those companies can hardly be described as exhilarating. Also understand that if you were bought out, you will have more cash in the next 5 years (if you did nothing with it) than if you were to stay at your start-up providing yourself a salary for the next 5 years, even taking into account increased salary from growing the company (without VC money) during those years.
b.) Don't raise money, keep living off your salary (if any), reduce the direct and indirect transaction costs of having investors, and possibly lower growth opportunities (no money to hire more staff, etc..).
So anybody here not looking forward for an exit?
[+] [-] spiralganglion|15 years ago|reply
As for why, it is because the work we're doing (a particular style of video game) is unproven in the market, and we need to be able to take substantial risks, again and again, where we stand to lose a lot of money. We can't afford to have any external interests guiding these decisions. We're doing this work for love of the work, so an exit would be ridiculous.
[+] [-] frederickcook|15 years ago|reply
SecondMarket creates liquidity for investors, founders, and employees while allowing the company to still maintain some control of how many investors they have.
At NextGenConf a few weeks ago, Peter Thiel specifically said Clarium prefers to invest in companies that can be successful without any exit. [Can't find a ref here, taken from my notes.]
[1] http://ecorner.stanford.edu/authorMaterialInfo.html?mid=2311
[+] [-] talbina|15 years ago|reply
I'm thinking more along the lines of successful and likely profitable start-ups like Weebly, Justin.tv...but again, these companies already raised money.
[+] [-] talbina|15 years ago|reply
So how does he get his return? By selling his shares to others?
[+] [-] switch|15 years ago|reply
Make a ton of money. Stay private.
There's some sort of mind-brainwash that the only way to build a company is to get funding by giving some middle aged man who doesn't have the balls to take big risks himself a large share of your company.
It's the Internet. You don't need a lot of capital.
[+] [-] btilly|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rst|15 years ago|reply
Different but related: founders (Page, Brin, Jobs, Ellison) who stayed involved after IPO. The VCs have an exit in those cases, but the founders stick around.
[+] [-] talbina|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pgroves|15 years ago|reply
If I was a V.C., I would dismiss any founder that answered the "what is your exit strategy?" question with anything other than a middle finger. A good V.C. would see it as the V.C.'s job to convince the founder to sell at the right time.
[+] [-] keiferski|15 years ago|reply