byosko's comments

byosko | 12 years ago | on: My First 9 Months as an Angel Investor

The recruiting space! Mostly because I spent 3 years banging my head against a wall in that space.

Generally, I get nervous in the consumer space, but I've made several consumer investments.

There are a couple spaces I'd like to do something in -- education, robots, anything kid-related (b/c I have two young boys).

byosko | 13 years ago | on: Analytics Lessons Learned

Not all of the companies are successful or have been successful. They were successful at a specific point in time, doing a specific thing (like getting through problem interviews, for example) but it doesn't mean they were big hits as companies.

And many of the cases studies are about companies that were struggling with problems and managed to improve. The e-book specifically (and Lean Analytics, the book) aren't about understanding why startups failed, they're about how to use analytics to minimize failure and iterate past it.

byosko | 13 years ago | on: Startup : There is no risk

Walking on the street is a risk.

Driving a car is a risk.

I get it -- everything is a risk. Even more reason to start a company and give it a shot. You may get struck by lightning tomorrow.

I'm not such a "ra ra" kind of guy to say, "everyone should go start a company tomorrow, and you'll all win." But on the flip side for those people that want to take a shot - it's the time to do it. The "risks" that you think exist, around money and failure aren't really risks. Even "lost time" isn't in my mind a risk. Don't get caught (as I mention in another comment) running a zombie company though...

byosko | 13 years ago | on: Startup : There is no risk

I wish I had "youthful naivete" ... although plenty of people have said I "act quite young." Does that count? :)

Sunk time is an issue. And I have also railed against what I describe as "zombie startups" that outlast their welcome or usefulness. I've been caught in those. And I lost a lot of time. There's a risk in knowing when NOT to quit...

byosko | 13 years ago | on: Startup : There is no risk

My post is definitely specific to tech startups, and particularly tech founders (developers.) Restaurant owners = completely different story, for which I have no experience. But I can imagine "getting a job in the restaurant biz" is considerably different than getting a job in the tech space.

The use of "no risk" is admittedly a bit over the top ... creative license if you will.

byosko | 14 years ago | on: The Future of Startup Accelerators

A business plan should not be a requirement for an accelerator, certainly not a traditional one. A Lean Canvas on the other hand would make perfect sense.

byosko | 16 years ago | on: Questions to Ask When Interviewing at a Startup

Yes, the questions are targeted to a specific type of startup, although not necessarily one with huge funding.

But the questions don't change drastically in other types of startup either. Maybe some of the financials do, but questions about founders, business fundamentals, metrics that are focused on, how employees are assessed, etc. remain true regardless of whether it's a funded startup, bootstrapped, revenue generating, profitable or otherwise.

byosko | 16 years ago | on: Questions to Ask When Interviewing at a Startup

The intention isn't to get detailed financials necessarily. "Profitable" is a pretty good indicator of some level of success. The issue is more with pre-revenue or pre-profit startups that are "burning cash" and have X amount of time to live. That's important data for an employee.

byosko | 17 years ago | on: Ask YC: What is the Best Website to find StartUp jobs?

Thanks for the mention of Standout Jobs, I appreciate it. Startup jobs isn't our focus necessarily, but we do have a lot of great startup companies using the product. And we're not a startup job board; we'd much prefer to turn every startup's career site into its own destination site.

byosko | 18 years ago | on: Does My Startup Idea Suck?

I apologize if the submission title is misleading but the message is still valuable. It's not dissimilar to Paul Graham's speech / essay, "How Not to Die."

His message, "You will doubt yourself. But don't give up."

I wasn't as eloquent or elaborate, but still a similar message. The intention wasn't to linkbait anyone with a misleading headline.

page 1