Comment by matt-p
5 months ago
Sure, but in some cases it's also a great way to become very very wealthy.
It entirely depends on your personality and circumstances, it's certainly not for everyone.
5 months ago
Sure, but in some cases it's also a great way to become very very wealthy.
It entirely depends on your personality and circumstances, it's certainly not for everyone.
> Sure, but in some cases it's also a great way to become very very wealthy.
In very very very few cases, sure. Also, the wealth isn't the only or at least not the biggest motivator for many people trying to build their startups. But I get it - my money my rules disguised under show me how motivated you are to carry this through.
Sure, agreed though a larger percentage of VC funded startups exit than you probably think. Those "90% fail" stats are made up mostly by people who got traditional angel investment or no investment at all.
I'm just saying there's two sides to the coin, that's all.
I think there's a very genuine element of 'show me how motivated you are' you also cannot expect to get a normal standard rate company salary when you own most of the equity and aren't profitable. I think it's reasonable on balance.
No, that's only about the leverage - a perfect instrument to create even more pressure. Everything else I call a BS, sorry. Aren't founders already taking a huge leap by admitting themselves to work probably as much as ~10x more, with of course reciprocal amount of stress, and then you say it's reasonable that founders wouldn't be motivated enough unless they did all of that but for under the market rate? They left their job, they have the idea, they have the people, they have the drive ... and they want to execute it. I just hope not all investments work this way - this would be really sad.
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