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shrimpx | 2 years ago
The YC application is a sales pitch, and you're not selling your idea, you're primarily selling your charisma and capacity to spin vision and sell. Second, you're selling your chemistry with your cofounders and stability of your relationship. Third, you're selling your capacity to build, at least some usable prototype, but this a low bar.
At no point are you actually selling the concrete idea, unless you're doing something extremely specific that seems valuable and you're one of the few who can build it. For the rest, the idea is a rhetorical vehicle to sell the other things.
stefandxm|2 years ago
If however, you have a very narrow window to be able to launch properly, or if your product is mostly visionary you need investors asap. Just don't expect to come out with a Zuckerberg deal, expect 1-2% of the company in the end and make sure you cash out during the entire road.
leetrout|2 years ago
ultrasaurus|2 years ago
Don't let your school hold you back from applying :)
stn8188|2 years ago
joey_bob|2 years ago
from-nibly|2 years ago
There is no, no. They tell everyone "maybe next time."
sangnoir|2 years ago
1. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38677251
unknown|2 years ago
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pas|2 years ago
echelon|2 years ago
YC is late to the early alpha and is betting on talent/leadership to soak up.
Then again, first movers don't always win.
unknown|2 years ago
[deleted]
neilv|2 years ago
You're getting recurring meetings with them (which have significant opportunity cost for them), so it's not just the usual startup investor unwillingness to say "no" with finality?
kilroy123|2 years ago
plondon514|2 years ago
rogerkirkness|2 years ago
echelon|2 years ago
Gen AI two years ago was a toy that fit "somewhere" into the "creator economy", which seemed dead.
Now try and you'll get a completely different reception.