I recently walked away from a potential startup because my non-technical partner (MBA ideas guy) wanted an 80/20 equity split in his favor. I was the first to broach the discussion and proposed 50/50. It was a severe misalignment in expectations, and this was after 3 months of meeting regularly to refine the idea and build out prototypes (read: I was building the prototypes).
My advice is to have this conversation with a potential business co-founder as early as possible to avoid wasted time. I could have saved myself months.
Look out for business guys who severely discount your value as a technical founder. Not saying they're all like this, but a really skewed equity split is typically a red flag.
I’m running a business that’s currently doing around 32k a month at ~85% margin after 2 years in operations, no funds raised to far. I have a friend who is an MBA and only held corporate roles up until now. I’ve been running companies my entire life, and had one exit that was 42.5M US.
We discussed partnering up, and when i mentioned a buy in or 10% equity split (with no buy in) or some combo of the two, he backed off pretty quick.
Turns out he expected something around 40%-50% with no buy in. To me this is just unintelligent? Especially from an MBA.
From what i'm reading, you seem like you need employees or outsourcing, not partners. Why would you even bother with this person, their incentives seem all misaligned.
Not sure if they approached you, or vice versa -- but people often approach with deals like this because they are trying to find suckers who they can dupe. And sadly, they find them.
Totally agree. To be honest, I think a 10% offer here would kind of lead to the worst of all worlds: too high for the person to be considered an employee, but too low for the person to really be considered a partner.
I've seen a case where a company was started by a very small, relatively inexperienced team, and then had 2 much more experienced "business people" join later. These 2 business people were actually given "founder" credit and equal equity stakes, because it was clear these folks would be integral to the success of the business (and, indeed, in retrospect, they were, and the business became quite successful). I point this out because it's an example were the addition of some later stage business people does deserve large equity stakes. But given the original commenters history (e.g a previous large exit), it doesn't appear that's the case here, so it doesn't look like he needs a partner to begin with.
Agree on your case also. Business folks can add tremendous value. But especially late-joiners as, in your case, the better setup is to set some success criteria, hurdles, and reward accordingly. Win-win.
I have no idea what they teach in MBA programs these days - I'm many years removed from the age that most people get theirs.
My dad got his MBA in 1959. When I was younger and considering one (I moved out of day to day tech work a long time ago because I wanted to "fix" the business problems I kept encountering because of their negative impact on the tech work), we reviewed curricula for several programs.
My dad was pretty astounded that in the wake of globalism and technology, they were still teaching the same tired-ass theories that he was taught in the 50's. Note that this conversation wasn't all that long ago in the grand scheme of things.
I get that this is a vulture capital site but all one has to do is look at what is happening in the world (Bain capital et al) and you see that all they are really teaching/practicing is wealth extraction, not wealth building.
Edit: sorry, my dad got his BS in 1959, his MBA in 1962.
I would say that MBA means nothing by itself. It's 100% about their social network. MBAs were a great way to network as a lot of elite kids got MBAs. An MBA is just a proxy for something else which isn't necessarily there...
When we hire MBAs it means nothing except a minimum standard of work ethic and communication skills and usually (but not always) ability to grasp and breakdown problems. What they usually lack is expertise/applicable experience, we know this when we hire them, but any non-MBA candidate with relevant experience is preferred to an MBA. Like I said we don't expect fresh MBAs to know deeply about software but you do get pompous types who don't have the humility to realise they are out of their depth
He discussed partnering up on your current business or were you talking about a new and different startup? I think you mean the first one, but that seems shocking to me.
Well no, I don't know how startups work, having never been a founder or an investor, but my understanding is that startups are valued at a few multiples of ARR, 10x if there's major growth, for which in almost all cases you'll need VC money (which they don't have).
I'm going to assume that either A) there is no growth without this partnership, so the startup is maybe worth up to 1M, in which case getting up to 40% over 4 years with work and targets makes sense, or B) the original founder is expecting significant growth even without the partnership, in which case he needs an employee and not a partner (and he should pay him as such).
He’s could be taking a significant pay cut and only assigns a moderate future value to the stock, eg, 1% of 50M exit and 10% of 5M exit with 50% ownership is only $500k expected value. Amortized across several years of pay cut (eg, 5 years to exit) you’re looking at $100k/yr “bonus” on $160k for effective $260k/yr. (And that’s assuming no dilution events!)
I agree expectations were misaligned so a bad partnership — but the ask doesn’t seem particularly crazy.
If your assumptions here are correct, he's just not a good candidate for being a founder. If you see earning 163k/year a hardship and don't value 10% equity in a high margin business doing > 30k MMR, then you should try to become an employee at a big company.
Very typical. I've run into cases where an "idea guy" basically says "you do all the product and tech half, I'll do marketing and strategy." Which is dumb, because sometimes I'm legitimately better at the strategy half too. Generally these people want ridiculous equity splits of that nature.
It's worth anyone technical's time to build skills in strategy, marketing, finance, etc. The technical co-founder always gets screwed and suffers from a general lack of respect. In my opinion, it's usually unwise to take positions where you're strictly the technical co-founder, or where you're marketed as the same.
> Which is dumb, because sometimes I'm legitimately better at the strategy half too
A semi-related thought I've had recently:
I've run into a number of non-technical product people that say that they're primary skill is that they have a great "product sensibility" that engineers lack so they need to step in and provide guidance. It's true that many engineer-designed products are terrible, but I'd argue that most engineers have pretty good product sense.
The problem is that engineers have a conflict of interest that leads to them making sub-optimal product decisions. A non-technical product person gets the "luxury" of only thinking "what is the best product for the user?", so they end up with a good design. But an engineer can't help but also factor in "i'm the one that has to build this, so how much extra work am i giving myself?" so they're design will be a compromise of what's good for the user and what can be built easily.
this can have big consequences for how an org should divide work. If somebody has a broad set of responsibilities, they can't help but make tradeoffs (that they might not even be cognizant of) because they're weighing multiple objective functions.
So, when it comes time for figuring out who should be in charge of strategy, it might not just be an issue of "who's better" but more an issue of "who has the least conflict of interest"
Every feature, design decision, and iota of technical debt are money and time. Either that's raised and spent up front, eating at equity, or it is deferred until a point where revenue pays for it, it is redundant due to a pivot, or becomes so essential that new funding is raised (possibly from a pool that doesn't dilute so much value).
Presenting an accurate and fair cost / benefit analysis of these tradeoffs (at least on the technical side) is the main purpose of a technical lead. Non-technical business people can't get that information on their own. They should have a say in the decision if it materially affects the product's launch, but that's the normal give and take.
>> But an engineer can't help but also factor in "i'm the one that has to build this, so how much extra work am i giving myself?" so they're design will be a compromise of what's good for the user and what can be built easily.
The PM/Strat component is like a fifth or tenth of the tech work, typically. Every product design decision often has a magnitude more of associated implementation work. The only way i'd go with this setup is if the PM/Strat person if one of these things:
- PM/Strat person already has customers lined up
- PM/Strat person has paying partners lined up
- PM/Strat person has had exits with associated aura
- PM/Strat person puts in upfront $ to compensate the tech person
> But an engineer can't help but also factor in "i'm the one that has to build this, so how much extra work am i giving myself?
I wonder how many startups have failed because the tech has been too much of a pain in the ass to maintain and the technical staff burns out and leaves, with more and more expensive developers postponing leaving till as late as possible and doing as little as possible
Start ups that choose things like Azure are a red flag for me. Churn is really problematic. Learning a code base by having to poke and grok takes a lot longer than being able to fire off a few questions.
yeah azure has come a long way since 2016. id say it has devex ~amazon, better than gcp. but to his point the startup picking azure is a bit of a red flag, though it's not the best example of a red flag, imo.
What about "what role needs to be done the most at the time?"
>sometimes I'm legitimately better at the strategy half too
Technical people should be eager for more business responsibilities than ever before starting a business.
If it's an "engineering company" ideally you would have two founders each having outstanding technical abilities, and far exceeding anything a non-technical alternative could bring to the table from a business or sales aspect. To begin with if you want to start a business, you need to be the kind of engineer that wants to build sales in some way or another. On the front lines and/or in the background.
And to be real one of you is going to have to go full-time into sales & marketing to pursue some type of cash flow until things get rolling in some way. At least.
Then you can more sensibly consider having the non-tech MBA type come in under the top engineer who has been successfully selling already. And that's the beginning of a chain-of-command where an "engineer" is never hired or fired by anything other than an "engineer". And there's always an engineer (sharp in business, not lacking anything needed) at the top of any non-tech hierarchy by design.
Non-engineering companies where the non-tech-types dominate the hierarchy, can still have decent opportunities for the engineers they hire to work on projects under them. But there may not be as much room for upward movement or appreciation for outstanding skill up and down the line. Might also be more often found involved with financial irregularity, or more commonly non-fair dealing even with some of their own people sometimes.
The blue-sky utopian version of this for the Business side is a company shaped like a big Inside Sales Funnel, with all Engineering work implemented in off-shored cost-centres paid piecemeal at contract rates.
Steam had a flat-management structure and Engineering driven leadership from its outset. I'm not sure there's many other that can survive the VC landscape where customer focused design is seen as something between over-engineering and altruism.
Conflict of interest is exactly how I term it as well. Tech people with good product sense have to work very hard to override their engineering instincts or they’ll handicap the product.
I’m guilty of it all the time. What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture. Nobody. It really doesn’t matter. They just want an awesome product.
(Which isn’t to say none of that matters, because it does. We are engineers and know the consequences of shitty technical decisions… it’s just that you have to pull yourself out of that mode when thinking of what needs to be built)
> What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture. Nobody.
If there is no competition, money is nearly free, and you have all the time in the world, sure. If any of those isn't true, you probably want a reasonably well architected codebase so you're not spending 3X the salaries and 3X the time to build things as you would've with a well designed codebase.
> What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture. Nobody.
We could easily say the same about anything. Nobody cares about the engine in their car either. Except they do, because it affects things like whether they can get from point A to B, which is what they really care about.
Same with code and architecture. It "doesn't matter" but it does, because it takes you from A to B at a particular speed and cost.
> What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture
The programmer on call at wee hours in the morning gives a shit. Good news though, that programmer will not be a problem soon enough. You can hire your way out of this problem after they quit.
It’s funny how many people think their ideas are truly brilliant and warrant a massive amount of respect.
Anyone who’s worked as an engineer for awhile knows that ideas are a dime a dozen, they are rarely unique, and are about a millionth of what needs to be done to succeed
EDIT: I say this as an engineer who is putting his notice in tomorrow to found a startup
EDIT EDIT: Thanks guy, this is along the lines I'm thinking. I'll be competing with companies like Asana, Monday.com, and ClickUp. I worked in a consulting environment for two years and these tools could never be adopted despite the org size growing to 1000+ people in my larger team. It was a big pain point and I think I've built a solution that will help big time.
A good biz guy can be worth his weight in gold. It's harder than people think to get it right: to figure out the right markets to address first and how to tweak/target your product to do so, when, how, and from whom to raise capital, at what rate to expand the team, sales and marketing stuff, etc. Doubly so if the technical co-founder isn't as good at these. It's not worth 80% of equity against 20%, but it is worth a reasonably fair share.
For an engineer, sure. But for a business guy, it might be a bit tricky. Though I'd say a good business guy probably has a bunch of engineering contacts.
Demonstrate traction. The idea person should have at least an audience for the problem space. If not, they are Field of Dreams - build it and they will come. That doesn't work.
You didn't ask me, and I don't have a complete answer, but here's a starting point. Consider what's required for a patent: Novelty, usefulness, and reduction to practice. The latter step often changes the first two, for instance by uncovering problems, or even improving the overall quality of the idea.
Of course a lot of things need to right, beyond that point. I use the patent rule as a guide to make sure that the right people get credit where credit is due, when an idea reaches the market successfully.
We don’t need to go that far. I am “just” a developer but I have been in meetings where developers like me had much better ideas and suggestions on product, strategy etc than the suits. I remember being urgently called into a meeting with a big client to explain how a part of our application worked and why it worked that way, when the product owner/designer could not.
People often complain about developer salaries. I wonder how they can justify suits’ salaries
I don't know that I understand this, typically I structure the shareholder agreement (when I can) to be such that I have clout because I own or control a significant percentage of the shares, not because of my "title".
> worth anyone technical's time to build skills in strategy, marketing, finance, etc.
This leads to jack-of-all-trades types. Good non-technical folk exist. They’re just not easy to find for obvious reasons (same as good technical founders who can see the forest for the trees).
A good technical founder dilutes their comparative advantage e.g. negotiating with suppliers and prioritising payments ahead of a close.
It can, to be sure, and it's not ideal. But the perception that technical co-founders typically get gypped hard is very warranted. This is a thing where you can often still get a reasonably good result with a technical co-founder, not as good as were he solely focused on product/tech stuff, but enough that his individual outcome may be higher than letting the biz guys run it.
Obviously good biz guys somewhat mitigate this but finding those is easier said than done.
>> I recently walked away from a potential startup because my non-technical partner (MBA ideas guy) wanted an 80/20 equity split in his favor. I was the first to broach the discussion and proposed 50/50.
I'm constantly approached by "business guy" with deals like this. Here is the truth -- even 50/50 isnt enough because technically, the tech-co-founder is often doing all the upfront work and taking all the upfront risk. The business-co-founder gets a free option to do work (or not) afterwards. All upside and little downside.
IMHO good business co-founders are worth gold and make their worth obvious. They already have POs lined up, they have partnership agreements already in the works, they have VCs willing to invest based on past performance. Perhaps they already tried the business with some overseas teams doing POCs. Perhaps the business co-founder already has exits or a successful business and is willing to pay the tech-co-founder some nominal amount to show skin in the game. Those are all good signs.
If those arent the case, and the "business-co-founder" is sitting back while the other is hard at work coding a prototype -- you dont need a co-founder. Just be the CTO+CEO and hire the "business" work yourself!
In the absolute worst case, i've seen a "business-co-founder" continue to push the definition of MVP more and more and the "tech-co-founder" seeing the sunk-cost of the work they have put in, continues to ever-expand the MVP. Meanwhile the "business-co-founder" gets months or a year of free labour with a free option to participate -- or not.
Because you framed it as a Technical Partner needing a 'Business Guy' and approached someone from the post-2000 Cohort who uses the Wozniak/Gates power-dynamic as a best-practice case study (or RIM's example of Mike Lazaridis/Jim Balsillie).
The fact that you spent months refining the idea and building out prototypes is irrelevant or even detrimental to your position. In fact it may have represented a delivery anti-pattern depending on how far along you were to realising your value proposition as a product. Engineers to build MVPs are a dime a dozen. Why were you wasting time as an individual contributor when positioning yourself as a (co)-founder? Why would a prospective C-Level Business Strategy Leader see you as anything other than an Engineer with a MVP and no GTM, previous exits aside?
This is a common scenario for those who frame themselves as 'Technical Founders' - they end up being perceived as a cost-centre incapable of realising any sort of a GTM strategy, and as such are equity-weighted accordingly.
Good you walked away. In my experience, the heavy lifting in a tech start up is, by definition, the tech. The "idea guys" rarely understand that it's the execution that makes an idea valuable.
Sales are important, but are a bit of a crapshoot. You can't consistently sell trash, no matter how good a salesperson you are. The guy was happy to roll the dice, while using your mental energy. Great deal for him, but not so good for you. You risk the burnout, stress and pressure, while he feeds you requirements and deadlines, and essentially becomes your manager.
In my younger days I got a lot of similar proposals, but thankfully could see right through them from day one. Bootstrapping as a solo founder was the harder, but ultimately more rewarding route for me.
The business side needs to have subject matter expertise in the market, running an org, fundraising, marketing, etc. 'ideas guys' are pretty worthless without that.
80/20 is an insane proposal; 50/50 feels reasonable, but I 100% agree with you that the technical side is way more crucial than the business side, since under $10m in ARR your biggest issue will be making the tech work well enough to attract customers.
Yeah, but that rarely lasts (I am assuming the absence of corruption etc etc). If you set the bar so low with your product that it's easy to outperform by a 10x margin, then you present your customers with a huge incentive to move away.
>> I had this exact scenario happen on the ycombinator cofounder matching of all places. Except the other cofounder (non-technical) wanted it 95/5.
I've gone to some of these just out of curiosity and it seems like people on the hunt for suckers. Having been thru this myself and seen the drama play out with friends from back in the dot-com days to now --
CO-FOUNDING IS LIKE MARRIAGE You cannot just match to someone. There has to be a low-stakes dating period, an engagement period, and then "marriage". You have to be able to walk away early on w/o extensive entanglement. The best co-founder is someone you've known for a long time in various semi-tense scenarios, where you can evaluate their ethics under pressure. This ideally means having worked together or done many projects together.
They may be a little surprised how much that costs. And then the running of it and the bug fixing and the feature expansion. It may be a little… “surprising”. My advice is to get idea guy to price it out haha.
Yeah never take anything less than a 50/50 split. During the initial fundraising rounds (seed, Series A and maybe even into B) you're also going to be doing just as much lifting trying to get a deal done while also doing your regular day-to-day engineering responsibilities. Maybe in a world where it's 3 founders you can side-step this responsibility but at point you're not just the CTO you're also the de facto COO while your partners are trying to get a deal done.
Fairness of the equity split aside, it also indicates he doesn’t see you as an equal partner. Rather you are seen more as an employee that is going to be working essentially for free. So he probably also won’t value your input and contributions in the venture either.
Unless someone is putting cash on the table, or one partner is full time and the other is not, there is zero reason not to split founder interests equitably. (Even in the cash state, the better play is vesting, not an unequal split out of the gate.)
If you want an unequitable split, hire an employee. If you can’t (or won’t), you’re not the hot shit you think you are.
> Unless someone is putting cash on the table, or one partner is full time and the other is not, there is zero reason not to split founder interests equitably.
When he asked why I thought 50/50 was fair, this pretty much sums up what I said. I'd be happy to take an 80/20 split with an industry insider or celebrity, someone who's guaranteed to attract buzz and attention. But he wasn't that guy.
But beyond that, a good partner might be one where you can first successfully try to come up with an arrangement that you would each be delighted with at the 50/50 point.
Without any adversarial attitude, what can really work is that kind of baseline, which can be negotiated away from, but also returned to without disdain.
There has to be a sense that each person at the baseline would generously actually be putting in 60% for the foreseeable future and love it because it was still an equal partnership and you were getting 120% accomplished consistently. Ideally you want to build consensus not by trying to limit contributions to keep from putting in too much, nor valuing other contributions for less than they are. When it is 50/50 it's more likely to be harmonious when both partners step up to the plate simultaneously and try to put in more than their fair share when needed, and see the other partner as an over-contributor just like themself.
Like what if somebody thinks they're hot and can raise a million within one year, or less if you have something tech ready to deploy? Or they say they can sell your product through the roof. You could make that a contingency they would be proud to achieve or they would have to understandably not be up to their share. If you came to a tentative agreement like that, that you were both very happy with at 50/50, all you would be doing next is planning to "start your engines" soon.
If the potential partner comes back a couple days later with a $4 million commitment within a month by selling some property or something, and it's for real, you will probably re-negotiate. The contingency would be over in a month then, and you would be flying. This wouldn't be too bad if it was non-adversarial from the get-go. You could end up at something way different that's quite fair anyway.
Remember each engineer is worth a million in the right situation, now with their $4 million it's a 4:1 imbalance, so 80/20 might be easy to migrate toward then so you can still go forward.
should just ask him: what do you think stops me from taking your idea and implementing it myself? I will hire another MBA type of guy for 20% equity to do the work you wanted to do and keep the 80% to myself.
He’s already showed his cards. Partnerships are based on trust, not (explicit) threats. If you’re both approaching the dais locked and loaded, call off the wedding.
From my experience, about 1-2 in 10 co-founders are like that. They bring negotiation and networking to the table and demand compensation that no hardworking and honest co-founder would ever ask.
I think Sturgeons law applies to co-founders, and if you haven't spoken to at least 20, you are likely talking to the crap ones. Not all crap ones demand excessive compensation, there are other types of crap. But there is a huge difference between the ones that will be good for business and the others.
Hmm, if it were me, I would have asked how his 80% share would have made my 20% a good investment [than all the other options].
It's all about what each of you are bring to the table. It's possible he priced the tech side perfectly AND being the best option available to make you better off.
There’s zero chance this would ever be a fair split.
They know nothing about building technology so are never in the right. This happens often enough that most startup accelerators pre-flag it as criteria to not invest in founders (with an out of balance equity split).
Then why do they need to give the technical co-founder 20%, or even make him a co-founder at all? They either have enough privilege and connection that they can bring in serious funding from investors, future clients, or friends/family/fools, - or they don't and their privilege and connections aren't really worth that much. If they did, they'd much rather give them a few percentage points and pay them a salary, capturing all the upside.
It's a broad over-generalization but it's a good rule of thumb. They must have access to demonstrable money and/or power before they're worth an 80/20 split, well above what most random business guys can bring in from even elite universities.
Edit: A decent somewhat recent example is Theranos. No biotech VC would touch them because they do due diligence on the basic scientific viability of their investments, but Holmes and her cofounder were able to bring in huge tech investors from family connection and even get people like Henry Kissinger on their board, who also helped them get more investors. That's the kind of connections that might be worth an uneven split.
They need to pay for the tech then. Hire an engineer and design team. If they don’t have the access to that sort of immediate funding, then I’d struggle to imagine what sort of in-the-bag contacts they could bring to justify such an uneven split.
And that type of person quite often turns out to be a huge over-privileged narcissist who's never had to work hard a day in their life, because of their family and frat-bro connections, and who will gladly fuck you over without a second thought.
> They know nothing about building technology so are never in the right
I’ve easily seen more start-ups fail because the technical co-founder got pedantic about something with zero commercial relevance than I have where the non-technical founder rolled over their tech team. Mostly because the latter fail early while the former can sort of look like it’s not a trash fire for a little bit longer.
As you say, the unequal split is a red flag. Not the direction it leans.
> I’ve easily seen more start-ups fail because the technical co-founder got pedantic about something with zero commercial relevance than I have where the non-technical founder rolled over their tech team.
Can you think of examples of the opposite? There are a few variables here for technical/business/commercial and fail/succeed so I won’t write them all out, just curious what you have seen to be honest.
It makes sense to walk away even in the game theoretic sense. Many people think in terms of prisoner's dilemma, when it is actually iterated prisoner's dilemma.
Its true in a game-theoretic sense, but I'm actually talking about being honest (and rational) with yourself and what you're able to contribute. There's many other factors that have been mentioned by other people here.
If that person was someone like Warren Buffet, e.g. with a massive track of success behind them, then why not. 20 per cent of a billion is a lot more than 50 per cent of a million.
But for random nobodies who think high of themselves, hell no.
Partnerships should be about leveraging opportunity in the market, not partners leveraging each other.
With business idea guys, the tech guy could own 100% of the shares until business founder shows up with paying demand and repeatable and scalable demand.
The technical founder invariably builds and creates value in working software. It's tangible.
If the business / "idea" person over values their share it's likely due to knowing the mismatch to begin with.
Technical co-founders are perfectly capable of learning all aspects of business. Plenty of good books and resources out there at present.
>Technical co-founders are perfectly capable of learning all aspects of business.
If you assume the technical co-founder doesn't need to sleep or has a magical source of extra time, sure. But in the real world, failing to bring a product or service to market at the appropriate time can be the difference between failure and success. I certainly agree that a technical co-founder's knowledge is harder to replicate in the abstract (OP's story about a co-founder suggesting an 80:20 split is nuts) but trying to be a jack of all trades can leave you a master of none.
The ignorance comes from lack of experience and it happens often on both sides.
Engineers think they deserve a big equity package for writing CRUD apps.
“Businesspeople” with no startup experience, never raised money and never worked in sales think they have value.
If both co-founders have no prior startup experience then they both need to put in the same amount of money and split equity 51/49 or 60/40 (while considering dilution).
No once can build a meaningful company alone so you need to have a team and that team must have a servant leader willing to break ties.
It’s only inexperienced people that don’t know / understand this.
>have this conversation [...] as early as possible
Yes, it could be one of the things you bring up on the very first talk you get around this, and it's much easier to do it early than anytime later.
"Hey, this thing you're telling me about, do you want my opinion or are you telling me because you want me to be a part of it?"
(if: want to be part of it)
"Nice, have you thought about how much each one of us will get? I always prefer to do equal splits."
If equal splits or very close to that I might do it. If not, the deal would have to be exceptionally good from the start, e.g. "we'll give you 10% of a post Series A company that is already valued at XX million".
Ok, but technical co-founders in tech startups are also less valuable than they think (as this blog post shows).
In reality there are four critical skillsets (outside fundraising) for a new tech venture: Operations, Sales, Product, and Engineering.
I've seen plenty of startups with a heavy focus on product and engineering flail about because they suck at operations, product, or sales. The harsh truth is your CEO better be excellent at one of Operations, Sales, or Product, and your CTO better be excellent at one of Sales, Product, or Engineering. And if your CEO isn't competent at operations, you're going to need someone who is. Dealing with HR, accountants, investor relations, lawyers, contracts, HR, and all that stuff is a big job that's hard to completely outsource.
Overall, if your founding team isn't at least competent in all four areas, you've got a gap that will be difficult to fill unless one of the founding team is willing to step up and learn that area fast. Sales (or marketing, for consumer apps) might be the exception, because in my experience everyone on the founding team will wind up needing to learn it early on.
I don't agree at all. Not even with the premise that "there are significantly more business guys looking for tech guys than the reverse".
There are a lot of business and tech guys and most of all of them are pretty clueless when you randomly meet them in "gatherings".
But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
There's little point in arguing who is "more" valuable -- the business side or the tech side. They're both critical to have.
For some reason, this post equates the "business side" to the person with the "idea". But that's a strawman. Having an idea doesn't make you a "business" co-founder. Being a business cofounder means having a experience and talent on the business side of things. And a good business co-founder generally doesn't have a lot of trouble finding good tech people, because that's one of those business skills that they're good at...
>But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
Yep.
I tried doing startups with a few ideas. I can easily code all day. But then, when it comes to doing all the secondary stuff, like filing paperwork for an LLC, marketing, networking, and so on, that stuff was "painful" to me, as it took some of the fun out of the whole making things work.
You could have a good idea, but without a strategy to let people know about it, even if you build it, it may never get used.
Hey, OP here. I view it like this: if you were to take all technical people on the market for launching a startup and plot them on a distribution to find the "valuable in early stage" subset, you would find that 35% are good enough to get a startup off the ground. They don't need to be extraordinary programmers, just good enough but with a lot of drive.*
However, for non-technical folks that are on the market, the distribution is worse. Only the top 10% ~ 15% actually have sufficient abilities to pull it off. The remaining fall into the archetype I wrote about here.
The caliber for what's in the market is skewed thus the technical person has to be a whole lot more picky than the other way around to avoid ending up with a dead weight.
[*]: This excludes specialized skills like Deep Learning or chemical bio-engineering, etc...
If you're taking a fail fast type approach, the business guys fail faster when they can't get a tech co-founder to rally around their ideas. If you can't do that, you probably can't sell the MVP either. On flipside, the tech guys will spend month and even years polishing their 'product' without ever actually launching it with actual attempts to sale it. So they fail slowly after sinking tons of time. They'll talk about it as a side-project to minimize the appearance of failure but if they put all that work in they really do want it to succeed. They just get to the point where code is good enough and can't force themselves to transition to marketing/sales/etc.
If I had to re-summarize your point, I'd put it this way:
1. Success is very little on the idea, almost entirely on the execution
2. Execution has both a technical side and a business side, and can fail from a poor execution either way.
How this applies to your target audience:
You have an idea for a business? Nice -- that's almost worthless (1). You can't influence execution on the technical side, so you need to bring execution from the business side (2).
I like the numbers -- "a waitlist of 1000 people or LOI from 20 businesses" gives a better idea what kind of execution a non-technical co-founder should be capable of.
These discussions also get wrapped up in what "non-technical" means.
It can mean management skillset.
It can mean people-networking and sales skillset.
For an early-stage startup, the former doesn't bring much value (management value literally scales with employee count) while the latter absolutely does.
This list is a pure fallacy of statistical understanding. Skewed data and cherry-picking while also being strengthened by our subjective biases. I would appreciate the list way more if it also included founders who applied but were rejected, or for any other reason were not invested in.
For stuff like this I recommend the book, May Contain Lies by Alex Edmans, he does a fantastic job explaining how most of the time we seek data to confirm our hypotheses, instead of seeking a hypotheses that confirms our data.
> But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
A valuable technical cofounder brings the skills to literally create what you're trying to sell. Otherwise, have fun selling dust. Or networking to sell nothing.
The "0 to 1" here isn't "no management to management" it's "not having a product built to having a product built".
Selling dust is the job of the business co founder before the product is built. This is how you verify there is customer demand before wasting everyone’s time. It’s surprisingly easy if you’re solving a real need. It’s also how you can demonstrate meaningful value to your technical cofounder.
There's no point having the skills to build a product if you can't fundraise to build a team, market, sell, refine to find product-market fit, etc. etc.
You’re saying that there’s no point in having the skills to actually do something (building a product), unless you have someone derivative skills as well (all the business things you state).
That really comes off as trying to justify the business cofounder. I can build independently. You can’t build a team (which I can do), market (which I can do), sell (which I can do), or refine (which I can do) independently.
>> You’re saying that there’s no point in having the skills to actually do something (building a product), unless you have someone derivative skills as well (all the business things you state).
yes, with the proviso that the "someone" might include yourself.
>> You can’t build a team (which I can do), market (which I can do), sell (which I can do), or refine (which I can do) independently.
If you can do those things, then great, you have the "someone" you need.
But, it's fair to say that most techies do not have those necessary skills. As evidence see the endless stream of question in the "Ask" section of HN trying to get advice on those activities after the product is built.
So the point is not "There's no need for a business founder". The point is that to have a business all the bases must be covered, and you need as many people as you need to cover those bases. Sometimes it's 1. Sometimes it's 2. Sometimes it's 5.
The most common successes have 2 or 3 founders, but that don't make the other numbers impossible, it's just a trend. Which makes sense - the more hats you wear, then less time you have to devote to each of them.
I think that comment is saying that there is a difference between building a project and building a feasible company that productizes the project. There are many other aspects of company building that purely technical folks often trivialize as unimportant.
One can have 3 technical cofounders but the paperwork still needs to be done and someone has to do it.
>But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
I've found across industries that the technical guys typically have more domain expertise given equal time spent in that industry with way too many examples to throw in here down to entire factories being known better from just about every angle (bar the nuts and bolts) by a single senior tech guy than the actual owners and sub domain mangers.
Just because he and many other technical guys in the other examples had to understand the problems in depth to develop for them and abstract them away for the managers, accountants, ppl running the machines, etc
The sales skills can matter a lot especially for b2b but it's not a given that these (along other people skills) aren't possessed by the dev.
I tagged along trough a ton of the studies of my girlfriend as she studied international business management... and as far as practically useful stuff goes it honestly didn't go that far beyond what we got taught in our company management course when studying compsci.(other than things like statistics with spss and the like which they seemed to almost collectively suck at.)
All it gave me was a sense of wonder at the amount of buzzwords and cargoculting in that sphere outside of the usefull stuff.
Don't get me wrong. There's technical guys that are bad at these 'people skills' and/or have no sense of popular aesthetics that makes their ads entirely ineffective or can't manage themselves so even your mentioned "management skills" would be usefull in a 2 people team, etc.
But if a technical guy is somewhat naturally competent on these fronts... or where they're lacking they could have a technical cofounder that completes them and they both keep eachother accountable...
Well then i'd put my money on them rather than a technical/mba cofounder couple.
You can build a product and sell it without business guy but you can't have a product without the tech guy. One definitely is more valuable than the other.
Either I have a talent for the business aspect or I am just a tech guy with a lot of luck, but I invest time into my products not marketing and still get what I want.
>> You can build a product and sell it without business guy but you can't have a product without the tech guy.
I'd argue that you need both guys. But that both guys can be the same person. It's just uncommon that they are the same person. If you have both sets of skills, then you can do it alone.
A tech guy, with little to no business acumen will fail just as easily as a business guy with no technical acumen.
There's {set of things that need to happen for startup to be successful}, then {set of skills required to effect those outcomes}, and then {set of individuals who possess those skills}.
Whatever labels those individuals have isn't generalizable enough to form into "thou shalt"s.
And as the article put it
>> equal partners who trust and respect each other deeply
is probably the key.
Is everyone bringing valuable skills to the table (that others aren't) and does everyone respect and value what their co-founders / counterparts are doing?
Well, pretty much everyone is less valuable than they think!
I've bootstrapped and sold two startups, first time with 5 (!) equal cofounders and second time with 3. I've learned a lot along the way, obviously some of that through mistakes of my own. Have my cofounders been perfect? Heck no -- one lacks the same level of drive, the other is less trustworthy (always multiple irons in the fire kinda guy). But we all have strengths, are all generally better off together, and have the combined skill set to run super lean. Even if you think you can do some things better alone, you can never do it all, and that grind will take quite a toll.
Related: over the years the topic of going into business with some of my best friends has come up, and I always say I would never do that. Running a fast-moving, high stakes business with multiple founders involves a lot of tough conversations and occasional relationship strain. My business partners are business partners first, friends second, and I think that's important to consider if you really value a friendship.
You don't want clean separation between co-founders. They should overlap in skills and be multi disciplinary.
Having a tech founder that can't talk to customers or a business person that doesn't understand what the company makes or sells is not a great recipe for success. That's two people that probably can't even talk to each other. That's not a team.
I've learned the hard way that being a CTO means I need to talk to customers and it's one of the more important things I do. There's nobody more qualified in the company to explain what we do and how we do it than me. I don't initiate the meetings and I don't close the deals but having access to me is an important part of the process. It reassures the other side that we are bona-fide, can actually solve their problem, and they'll often do the same and bring in operational people on their side in follow up meetings. Once you have direct lines of communication like that, it becomes a lot easier to close the deal.
Also, being exposed to that means I learn what customers need, want and expect. No ivory tower is going to produce that kind of insight. It allows me to adapt to what is needed rather than me trying to imaging what it is they might need based on whatever filtered down version I might get from a business person. There is no substitute for first hand information.
And that works both ways. Business people without a connection to the product aren't very useful. They'll try to sell stuff that isn't there and they'll undersell stuff they don't even know is there. I've seen both happen. If you sell something that isn't there, you set up a deal for failure. You are misrepresenting the product and that's going to cause disappointment. If you don't sell what's there, you shoot yourself in the foot. Especially if it's something the customer would have liked to have. But business people are great for validating product ideas and trying to imagine how the business side would work early on is a good idea.
It really baffles me that people here don't realize that co-founders should be multi-disciplinary, so all should be able to do some kind of (!) business and/or tech part at least. A clear separation of skills would be a red flag for me that this team operates in an outdated mode. It's not 1990 anymore. If you're the business guy but don't value enough or even hate the tech work, I wouldn't believe in the company.
The ideal business co-founder has to be strong in distribution AND eliciting product feedback. This is why the “MBA types” and ex-McKinsey consultants fare so poorly - they’re used to companies spending loads of money to hear what they think. As an early-stage startup founder, nobody gives a shit about your product and no one wants to hear what you think. Your job is to identify where demand is highest in the market and then turn that demand into dollars. They also need to be excellent communicators who understand or at least appreciate how much goes into building products.
For those reasons, the best business cofounders in my experience, are former salespeople (for b2b startups), demand generation marketers (for b2c), and product managers.
The article reads… interesting. A business depends on its demand, competition, scale, operation costs and numerous other factors. If the product is a tech, a technical founder can have immense impact on future success but marketing, customer acquisition, sales, networking, fund raising and other huge headaches are often burdens carried by non-technical counter part.
Of course, the person building something from a vague idea to life wields magical power, but the other aspects of business are more so important.
As an engineer myself, I can see 500 ways I can improve things at my employer’s business, but while I have a technical vision, the non-technical founders of the business has broader picture and what I may wish to spend time optimizing might just be a pocket change issue not worth solving.
We technical folks undermine the mountain of difficulties of marketing and sales as well as interacting with people to convince them to part with their money. Of course, I have seen a fair share of over confident wanna-be founder who would just be next trillionaire if someone would build the 10000th Airbnb clone but for pets so they could sell it and give 5% equity to the builder because their idea was the main thing, but in broad sense of things, tech is just a means to an end for a successful business and simply building is not the 100% of execution step.
One thing I've wondered about for awhile: How do you find a business co-founder you can trust?
For one example, the article says that some of the best value that a business co-founder can contribute is disproportionately building the relationships. But those relationships can be more connected to the business cofounder themself, than to the company.
It's a bit different for the technical co-founder, since your perceptible contribution is usually IP expressed in in artifacts like code that is owned by the company, and can't legally be taken with you.
There's also the perception of the value of that IP: much like a novice programmer might think that most of the value is in their own software/knowhow/grind/brilliance, the novice business person might think most of the value is in their own ideas/leadership/network/hustle/brilliance.
The business person might also perceive the technical contribution as being commodity skills, and ones that can increasingly be done by "AI" robo-plagiarism for $20.
So, if the business person is, say, having second thoughts about the 50/50 split, they can make a backroom deal with investors to cut out the technical cofounder, or bring their new relationships with investors and/or customers with them to a different (or 'different') startup.
Obviously, one defense is for the technical co-founder to somehow be a superhumanly valuable non-commodity, and to make sure that the business co-founder understands that.
But, realistically, doesn't the technical co-founder probably need a lot of trust in their character and commitment of the business co-founder? Maybe even more than vice versa?
If you get a list of all the startups that got acquired or IPO in the last 10 years, you will find it's extremely rare the technical co-founder is still around. The staying rate for CEO is like 99% while the staying rate for CTO is more like 50% (making up numbers here but this is directionally right).
With enough scale, a great CTO can be hired for the right salary. The way I answer this for myself is two-fold:
1. I've vowed I will never be the second chair guy because I don't wanna get pushed out.
2. It's important to up-skill yourself so you can contribute more value than a glorified engineering manager by driving vision, being a headhunter of superstar engineers, among others high-value skills
This is something you learn when you actually raise venture and meet peers that have raised capital. Beyond the very early stages, the CTO can easily be replaced, the CEO is the face of the business.
Maybe, although students in the dotcom boom was a different situation than now.
(Source: Was one. Many people were trying to fund you, sometimes without you even asking. And you couldn't go to a student party without some Sloan or HBS student zeroing in on you, and wanting to talk with you.)
>One thing I've wondered about for awhile: How do you find a business co-founder you can trust?
You can only look at past actions. Even the self-proclaimed "most ethical" people change the moment there is money on the table and their hired professionals are telling them to take as much of it as they can get away with.
If you are the technical co-founder who is writing code you should ensure you have legal protections before anyone else has access to what you have written.
This can be a legal agreement or built in protections via copyright law.
Same as any author who produces work that others can profit off of in perpetuity, don't sign your built in protections away.
In the example I'm giving, code IP isn't very relevant to a business cofounder screwing, because the (real or perceived) value of the code IP is less than the relationships that may be tied to the business cofounder.
All the code IP protections mean, in this regard, is that the technical cofounder has less value comparably tied to them personally.
> some of the best value that a business co-founder can contribute is disproportionately building the relationships.
The other subtle thing I take issue with on this is: What relationships, exactly? Most of the time I've seen this surface as a few early customers you might not have otherwise gotten, which is great and necessary, but IME that well runs dry pretty quick, and those customers oftentimes don't stick as well as ones that were found on merit. A better relationship with vendors? Again, weird, merit should trump that personal relationship.
If you're building a business that relies on a small number of very high value contracts, I think I could see a world where having a foot in the door on those high value customers is worthy of elevating the body that foot is attached to toward Founder. That isn't, generally, how most software companies sell software though.
The point I maybe did not stress enough on is the relationship aspect is two folds:
- Have ability to gain hard-to-obtain relationships in the beginning
- Have ability to grow the pace at which you gain those over time
It the beginning it will give you the money to play the game long enough (ie: customers and angel investors). In the short term it help tremendously in deal-making, fundraising, enterprise sales, hiring superstar employee. In the long term, you can broker insane deals like OpenAI convincing Microsoft to invest $10B and bet their AI future on you or get acquired.
PS: Microsoft is now backtracking out of that situation, but Altman convincing them to get in bed in the first place is very impressive.
Last summer I met two cofounders to take the leap as a potential founder. I wanted an equal equity split among the founders. They wanted to split the equity like 40/40/20. That 20 would have been me, the only technical founder building the entire product.
Having seen plenty of businesses throughout my life, both successful ones and less successful ones I'd say the most important traits are:
- the ability to execute
- having drive, focus and flexibility to adapt
- being able to manage a team and keep it focused, motivated and on track
this is valid for both the technical founder and the business founder alike.
In a perfect team the business founder has a very good understanding of the tech side and the technical founder a good understanding of the business and marketing side. Product is nothing without sales and sales nothing without product. Despite this being obvious I have seen several companies fail on this.
Last not least it depends on the product. The more complex the tech is the higher the share of the technical partner should be and vice versa the more specialist business domain knowledge is needed, the higher the business partner's shares are.
I was one of the "business guys" at DigitalOcean from very tiny to big. Execution looked like: 20% of the time in meetings discussing what the next period of time without seeing each other was going to look like and 80% of the time on flights and in hotels. My mantra was always "be directionally correct, go to market as hard as I can every single day, and fully trust the engineers building the products around me".
If your "business cofounders" aren't closing deals and landing sales they're useless. So if you're going to join a "non-technical founder" they must both have the contacts or a in in the industry you'll be trying to join and must be a great salesman.
If they don't have that, walk away, this person has no value.
The ability to execute means to deliver timely and on budget.
I have seen people who would not be able to set up and manage a hot dog stand and yet they were trying to run a business with 50 employees. The only result was burning money like there was no tomorrow.
This post is hilarious and details exactly why so many startups die in infancy. Yes yes, engineers are brilliant and without them nothing ever gets built.
And even still, sometimes things get built and never turn into a real business precisely because of this hubris. And 99.9% of the time, the ones that DO grow over time would have grown much much faster if "the business guy" had been there all along.
This is true! I argue here that the right business co-founder who drives long term financial success to the company is super rare and super valuable. The problem is the average one you'll run into at a networking event cannot deliver on that.
They are much more "I give the ideas and I want to keep 90% equity and you shut up and listen to me because I'm the CEO" guys.
The reality that I've experienced is: Most any function in a software company can be learned to an effective degree by anyone, if you take the discipline seriously, have the right mentors, and dedicate time to do so. Engineers can learn to be good founders and salespeople. Marketers and managers can learn how to commit code.
The reason, I tend to think, why business-focused co-founders might be less valuable than tech-focused co-founders in a tech company is, in my experience, that all founders surface their own biases in how their companies are designed based on the comfortable experiences of their past; and you need those biases to lean toward the tech in tech companies, because tech can automate anything per the previous paragraph.
I've seen this surface subtly: "Yeah, Stripe integration to take money makes sense, but its just not a priority right now. Sales can handle invoicing." (it never becomes a priority because once you give DepartmentX that responsibility they'll fight to defend their turf).
I've also seen it surface less subtly: A VC-backed software startup with mid-eight figures of funding, all the investors thought the company was selling software, but it turns out the salespeople were never trained on that, and were instead told to only sell white-glove services, using the software, from another department. "Bigger contracts" etc. Engineering leadership was oblivious to this happening for at least two quarters, because who knows, users were still signing up, "sales handles the invoicing", they weren't tracking the right things, maybe some layer of intentional deception. Chicken & egg "the software doesn't sell" "you weren't even trying to sell it". Engineers are expensive -> Engineering layoffs. They're now a zombified services company, who took on 70 mil in venture capital to sell software, with zero full-time software engineers. The CEO's professional work history? Selling services of this exact kind for some provider for twenty years. They took rocket fuel to start a bonfire, and it blew up the block.
I’m not sure it’s fair to say Zuckerberg’s only advantage over the Winklevoss brothers was his engineering skills. I think he quickly understood the whole dynamics of that potential business and had a more clear vision. Being able to digest a lot of seemingly disparate information (e.g. how college students responded to the “hot or not” prank) and create a compelling vision along with a path to get there, that’s both very hard and very valuable.
But I do agree with the overall sentiment that these ex-McKinsey “business co-founders” often lack the most valuable skills. I’d even go as far as saying they are generally quite bad “idea guys”, in the sense that they are more Winklevoss than Zuckerberg.
I even have a sneaking suspicion that Europe is so far behind the US in the startup game partly because the “ex-McKinsey guy on top” anti-pattern is the social norm here.
In reality, it should flipped! The technical person is the one who breathes life into an idea and should get the lion’s share
Then you want an employer/employee relationship, not a cofounder relationship. I would run, not walk, from a company with a founder arrangement where some subset got "the lion's share" for reasons like this.
As a business guy, getting “it should be flipped” wrong and going to print / ready for audience viewing only emphasizes the importance of being able to meet certain expectations such as basic communication when wanting to be taken seriously. This is not a unique instance I have observed. It is not directed specifically at this writer, it is using this writer as an example of hypocrisy in self-serving pleadings.
If you’re going to de-value the role of somebody who can do what you can’t, be prepared to get called out on it or brushed aside without explanation because you blew it. Harsh but true. I know this because I worked sales support with technical people and not technical people in high stakes business relationships.
This is why startups don’t hire people like me because they don’t value what I do and frankly I’m okay with this mutually dismissive relationship. This forum is a frequent reminder of why so many startups are unsuccessful.
I'm actually not making a case for business cofounders being undervalued. Maybe they are maybe they aren't. But if you think they're overvalued, put up or shut up: hire them instead of partnering with them. That doesn't happen because strong business cofounders won't accept those terms, which to me is a pretty clear indication that "it should be flipped" is false.
Having started businesses with the explicit lack of biz-co-founders I beck to differ. That is of course unless your da Vinci-like super modal capabilities allows you to feel unlimited joy when doing business plans, taxes & marketing alongside your (hopefully) core competency of product development.
I do actually know a few people who are like me and really enjoy both doing the biz plan/strategy half, and the marketing work, and product/tech. It's not as common but I enjoy working with them a whole lot more. We almost always create better results when the tech people are also biz people who understand how what we build needs to fit into the market. It's also super helpful to have some personnel fungibility when you have a small team where you're shelling out 5-20% equity for new members.
In my ideal world basically everyone is like this and the walls between "idea guy" and "tech guy" are knocked down. I've heard a lot of folks get cynical about sharp technical types who get hired by big 3 mgmt consultancies, but ime they're often great places to find those who are both technically sharp and can make a killer deck.
I discovered I liked business planning, strategy, and marketing pretty early in my technical career.
I also discovered that one of the thing business people bring to a company are connections, especially if they have already worked in a vertical, and few people want to talk to a bright kid about their problems.
The entire article can be boiled down into: a "business" co-founder is someone who brings in business. Otherwise they're the "idea guy" and idea guys are worthless.
This is crazy. I’m a technical cofounder of two businesses and in both cases the product would be completely dead on arrival if it wasn’t for the business cofounder. They intimately understand the business landscape and have all the contacts and context required to find customers.
My first and second "start ups" (90s) were peopled by very technical people and no "professional class" (e.g., HR, BizDev/Sales, etc.) beyond finance. I joined a third as an executive and it, too was missing HR and Sales.
We added sales (later HR, sigh) and it was (eventually) transformative.
My point is that you can have the greatest technical team and lack of sales and shitty toxic culture will mean no growth/stagnation/running out of cash.
You can also be (this is probably the default state) a pure MBA-play where you are a "sales driven organization" that has shitty product and shitty technical culture.
You can rarely have a successful business (unless you are large enough!) without some degree of both. So stating that "business cofounders" or "technical cofounders" are less valuable/overrated reads like low effort click bait that resonates with really inexperienced "professionals".
> As you can imagine, this is highly unattractive to skilled engineers who know their worth. No one sane wants to leave a high-paying cushy job to work for (not with) a bossy guy while battling the already intense stressors of Entrepreneurship.
I can relate to that. I am creating a small product and more than the salary, I want to escape 9-5 because I want to exercise product and technical agency that I do not have in my current job, and going from that to not have an increased level of agency working for someone, especially for a co-founder.
The value of a business co-founder lies in their ability to build business relationships and extract value from them.
The value of one founder to another lies in complementary skills and perspectives engaging start-up issues in a productive way, which usually means deep levels of mutual understanding and trust -- which can be antithetical to business relationships and personal comfort. So: hard.
The CEO/COO split reflects the difficulty of scaling this.
Is the solution to talk early? Maybe, or maybe that interferes with trust-building. The key thing I believe (here and elsewhere) is to avoid projecting what you want or fear into what you have. If it's important to success, validate it. For that, it helps to have people willing and able to be honest and truthful, particularly about unknown unknowns -- even if it is otherwise their mandate and mission to project confidence and gain trust.
As is the case with most complex problems like this, the correct answer is: it depends.
In this case, it depends on what the crux of your business is. Sometimes the crux is building world-class technology. Sometimes the crux is customer acquisition.
If the crux of your business is customer acquisition, then an exceptional business co-founder will actually be the most important ingredient to long-term success.
This is one of the biggest weaknesses I've noticed in YC's mantra. In most industries, just building something people want doesn't lead to success - you have to excel at customer acquisition also. And, in these industries, as you business matures, you realize that customer acquisition, at scale, is actually the hardest problem to solve.
I think you've just argued yourself out of a position of "it depends." This is one of the few areas where there's no wiggle room. A worthy business co-founder MUST be able to bring something practical to the table, and in my experience as it also seems to be yours, there's only really two ways they can do so:
- Be great at customer acquisition (or at least as the original article says, bring in a "customer waitlist")
- Have or bring in actual funding
If the business co-founder can't even bring one of these two things to the table, there is no justification whatsoever for them to hold a meaningful share of the startup's ownership.
The real problem with most "business co-founders" is that they are lazy and don't put in effort. Full-stop. I've seen this happen with enough of my peers that a "business co-founder" is never called a "business co-founder", but rather an operator or salesperson.
Somebody has to manage the business relationships and go out and sell. Somebody has to be in charge of marketing, payroll, and PR. Somebody has to be the public face of the company, out networking and attending trade shows. If you’re a technical founder and all this sounds like fun to you, then yeah, a non-technical cofounder would not offer much. But there’s something to be said for having more time to put your head down and build.
Well said. If the company is built around a certain specialism, the specialist will want to spend most of your time there, because that is where most value is created per hour. But many of the other things are critical, but happen to be very time-consuming. Such as traveling around. So in some teams you end up having one person do this specialist work while the other can focus on the more time-consuming things. I think you worded it much more elegantly, I'm just repeating what you said.
I realize this is all subjective, but the hardest problem in every startup is solving a real customer problem. I’ve never been part of a startup where the engineering was the hardest part, and I’ve been part of very high-tech companies.
An accountant maybe doesn’t add much, but a business major who deeply understands a customers need can be more valuable than any engineer.
The difficulty with the business person is identifying actual skill. I've seen way to many startups where the business side was basically floundering, and the end result was technical firings and business hires, but no acknowledgement or punishment for the existing product and business staff.
The places I've seen with actual success involved at least one founder capable of both, and that therefore had the taste to to realize when people coming up with ideas and taking meetings were just not meeting the high bar required. Because having ideas that don't work is easy, and so is having meetings that don't get you close to making sales. It looks like work is being done, but, if anything, it's making sure the company is spending time building the wrong things.
I'd much rather work with business aware developers, who are interested in knowing more about the business, than with total business specialists. Finding business-only people that have interest in learning how things would get done, and therefore have any idea of how difficult their ideas are to implement, is in my experience way too hard, as the barrier of peering into code is way too high.
This presupposes a business major is any better at understanding customer needs than an engineer. Given that most startups fail, I'd be willing to infer that neither the typical non-technical founder nor the typical technical founder is particularly good at this.
I would argue that it’s not just about solving a customer problem, it’s solving it at a cost enough customers are willing to pay for.
There’s lots of solutions in the market for problems I have, but most are above the cost I’m willing to pay for. As long as you have a large enough market willing to pay you can sustain it but often the solutions are just too costly in general to be sustainable.
And that critical part of bringing a useful solution at a cost the market will bear to sustain is the hard engineering part. I find problems people have daily that I can think of solutions to, but they’re often going to be too costly to be of any value to create a solution for and I often find them too unique for scaling to help any. I work in research environments, so YMMV.
In the past I worked with an ideas person, but their ideas were often quickly discounted by some basic engineering thoughts about how reasonable solutions could be built. If you have an engineering background and ideas, you can often iterate through viable ideas much faster, quickly discounting unviable ideas vs the other way around (having to do a lot of practical homework to explore practicality of an idea is more time costly).
There is absolutely domain value in understanding unique problems and seeing opportunity, no doubt, but viable solutions need to exist. If you think you’re the first person who saw and identified an opportunity, it’s a great time to look and ask around because chances are you’re often not the first to market. Often solutions or businesses don’t exist for the very point I raise: people couldn’t find cost effective solutions to make it worth pursuing.
Some valuable customer problems turn out to be very tricky to solve, even when you understand exactly the requirements.
Or as Henry Ford said, "if I'd asked people what they wanted, they would have told me unlimited clean energy, teleportation, immortality, and affordable housing."
In my experience, engineering CAN be the hard part, but almost always in situations where the business requirement is unclear or non-sensical to begin with.
For example, business ideas in the form of: "Use {X} to solve {Problem that literally can NOT be solved with X}"
> An accountant maybe doesn’t add much, but a business major who deeply understands a customers need can be more valuable than any engineer.
1000%. I'm a solo tech founder and raised $3M. There isn't a day where I wished I didn't have a business or growth person with me on this journey. The tech pieces are easy.
This article seems AI generated, at least in part.
The opening image incorrectly refers to Erlich Bachman from Silicon Valley as "Erik."
OP goes on to claim:
>Paul Graham wrote in 2008 that Sam Altman was the best fundraiser he’s ever seen in his 30+ years in the valley. Sam was just 23 years old at that time!
That's not what the linked article says. That post has a single paragraph about Sam Altman that says he's good at fundraising but never says he's the best pg has ever seen[0]:
>Sam Altman has it. You could parachute him into an island full of cannibals and come back in 5 years and he'd be the king. If you're Sam Altman, you don't have to be profitable to convey to investors that you'll succeed with or without them. (He wasn't, and he did.) Not everyone has Sam's deal-making ability. I myself don't. But if you don't, you can let the numbers speak for you.
Also, Graham was 43 when he wrote that essay, so he hadn't spent 30 years in Silicon Valley. Viaweb was based in Cambridge and Graham lived in Cambridge at the start of YC. I don't think Graham even moved to Silicon Valley until 2009, five months after the post OP claimed was based on his 30 year tenure there.[1]
These errors are either due to AI hallucinations or lazy writing.
I think the better article on this topic is Jeff Atwood's "Cultivate Teams Not Ideas."[2]
For B2B, it generally makes sense to have one person whose job it is find and talk with customers while the other can focus on building/iterating the product. It helps to be technical for this but they have to actually like talking to people and ideally have a decent network for what you're selling. This isn't exactly sales but it's closer to 'sales' than it is engineering and so generally benefits from that background/skillset.
So in theory it makes more sense to team up with someone with that skillset than partner with another engineer but then one of you has to give up on the thing you're good at to do founding sales which you may-or-may-not be inclined to do.
I don't man, I am fairly technical and have failed solo startups several times because I'm not good at the selling part (and I guess by extension build what people want). So in my limited experience, a co-founder that can sell well is really valuable.
IMO you want a business cofounder who has a tech background, but they have to be a sharp dollars person. Somebody has got to close deals, negotiate hard with suppliers, and keep the lights on. All things that engineers often don’t do so well.
I made an observation that, as a company grows, there are more opportunities for increasing revenue from the business side than from the technical side.
Technical is important, but just saying that it is easier for the business side to toot their horn.
A business cofounder who actually goes out selling and puts in the same effort and time the tech people do is worth a lot. Unfortunately not many business guys are like that. It seems that they get taught in business school that they are the leaders and the tech stuff is just secondary.
Living in NYC, I have been around a TON of venture backed startups with the classic non technical CEO, technical CTO. Some HUGE percentage of startups see the CTO fired once the tech stack and revenue are stabilized.
The incentive from the CEOs perspective to remove a contender as well as claw back the equity is huge. Early stage the CTO is the most critical, but after real traction they can be replaced far easier than most want to admit.
My advice for technical founders is to always place themselves first, from a legal and organizational perspective. For a technical founder with social skills, a non technical founder brings very little value relative to their vesting in the early stage.
>> If the technical founder can be replaced so easily, how does it follow that the non-technical founder is less valuable?
Because at that point, you can raise VC cash and hire for the job instead. The idea has been vetted. You can theoretically even rebuild the entire codebase from scratch just looking at the existing app. The CTO should maintain equal voting rights for as long as possible
Once the business hits a certain level of revenue, the mvp is finished etc, whoever is the face of the company, I.e. CEO has way more power. CTO if they have shipped a complete product that’s getting paying customers can be replaced with an engineering manager. But not before
Getting the product to some level of completion is a monumental lift
Cofounders are not great anyways of either type. If you are a business person, learn the tech stuff you need. It's easier today than ever. If you are a tech founder, it's even easier to pick up business stuff than tech stuff.
Investors always encourage it because it reduces their risk... One of you can be fired and they still have the backup. But when it is all on you there is no passing the buck.
Source: solo bootstrapped founder of a company earning $1,200,000 a month for the last sixteen years.
> Investors always encourage it because it reduces their risk... One of you can be fired and they still have the backup. But when it is all on you there is no passing the buck.
The reason is reduces their risk isn’t firing 1 cofounder, it’s that “When you want to go fast, go alone, when you go far, go together”. Building a business is tough. Most early stage startups fail because the founders simply burn out and give up. Having a buddy you can lean on helps. It also makes it easier to realize when you’re digging down the wrong hole and need to change strategy.
CoalitionTechnologies.com. We do services like web design and SEO. I personally built massive Laravel applications for recruiting and training and for running the business.
In the B2B case, if the co-founder knows the industry and has connections to potential customers, that is very valuable. A business degree per se is not.
how timely. a few days ago I had a meeting with two non-technical founders wanting to make some cloud based finance software.
The double whammy, is that with the powers of ChatGPT on their side, they honestly thought they figured out the big architecture problems and were very unhappy at me pushing back at their design decisions. They wanted me to validate their ideas, not ask what the core user scenarios were (to figure out what tech was needed for an MVP)
Absolutely agree with this article!
My startup days are more than a decade ago but even then it was already well known - hence why tech founders with a bit of experience stay far away from these people.
The best part of the article:
> [...] you should demonstrate it in one of two ways that are relevant to your venture:
> Generate a big waitlist (> 1,000) for B2C play
> Get > 20 businesses to sign an LOI for B2B play
Ideas are cheap.
This is the business MVP worth spending 50% equity on and worth investing your time to build the tech prototype.
My best tip to handle business guys pestering you with ideas is to say "Great idea, bring me some clients and I will build the solution, then we can revenue share".
The most numerous kind of people there, are nontechnical people who think they are technical, and nonbusiness people thinking they are business. Sometimes both at same time. Clowns. When you do custom development, these make up the majority of clients and they are the best clients to work for.
A non-tech co-founder can bring value in two ways; their social networks and deep market domain knowledge.
Finding a good niche and refining a concept to find market fit isn't easy. As a tech guy, it's often not clear where the business value is.
I recently implemented a feature for which I didn't see the full value initially. Once it was done, my co-founder said something like "This feature will make our target audience's eyes pop out of their heads." I can actually see it now but it wasn't clear to me before, yet it was always crystal clear to him as he himself fits within the target market.
Anyway we'll see where this goes, there are a lot of factors at play but in any case, it's nice to have that degree of certainty that yes, we're addressing a genuine need.
If your co-founder isn't within the target market then you're basically just guessing what users want and that's a bad approach.
Sometimes it's more complicated than that though, and that's when you need social networks. For exampls, I've built solutions in pure tech (dev tools) but it's very different. Dev tools is a weird market because it's heavily monopolized by big tech and the target audience (developers) have little say over what tools they get to use on the job. So the fact that I'm in the target market doesn't actually add much value there. Even if the target audience loves something, it doesn't necessarily translate to sales. You have to have experience with developer tools from both a corporate and non-corporate perspective to understand that.
It feels like the business layer has always successfully commodified the developer layer, but developers don't seem to have any desire to commodify the business layer. It seems like the developer layer naturally wants to eliminate the business layer entirely. It is basically extinction if you let developers sit on the other side of the coin, so I suspect anyone on the business side of things will have to be a cut-throat survivalist (there's no other way).
Though I had to roll my eyes at the “inventing AGI” part.
Also it’s Steve Glass not Steve Grass and when a word ends in an s sound you don’t have to add another s after the ‘ when making it possessive. So it would be “Steve Glass’ idea” instead of “Steve Glass’s idea”
Very pro-labor/anti-capitalist take. Not that it's wrong!
> In reality, it should flipped! The technical person is the one who breathes life into an idea and should get the lion’s share.... The riches are in the execution. The work done.
Labor is what makes capital useful. Otherwise it's just a pile of money sitting there.
I recently walked away from a potential startup because my non-technical partner (MBA ideas guy) wanted an 80/20 equity split in his favor. I was the first to broach the discussion and proposed 50/50. It was a severe misalignment in expectations, and this was after 3 months of meeting regularly to refine the idea and build out prototypes (read: I was building the prototypes).
My advice is to have this conversation with a potential business co-founder as early as possible to avoid wasted time. I could have saved myself months.
Look out for business guys who severely discount your value as a technical founder. Not saying they're all like this, but a really skewed equity split is typically a red flag.
I’m running a business that’s currently doing around 32k a month at ~85% margin after 2 years in operations, no funds raised to far. I have a friend who is an MBA and only held corporate roles up until now. I’ve been running companies my entire life, and had one exit that was 42.5M US.
We discussed partnering up, and when i mentioned a buy in or 10% equity split (with no buy in) or some combo of the two, he backed off pretty quick.
Turns out he expected something around 40%-50% with no buy in. To me this is just unintelligent? Especially from an MBA.
From what i'm reading, you seem like you need employees or outsourcing, not partners. Why would you even bother with this person, their incentives seem all misaligned.
Not sure if they approached you, or vice versa -- but people often approach with deals like this because they are trying to find suckers who they can dupe. And sadly, they find them.
Totally agree. To be honest, I think a 10% offer here would kind of lead to the worst of all worlds: too high for the person to be considered an employee, but too low for the person to really be considered a partner.
I've seen a case where a company was started by a very small, relatively inexperienced team, and then had 2 much more experienced "business people" join later. These 2 business people were actually given "founder" credit and equal equity stakes, because it was clear these folks would be integral to the success of the business (and, indeed, in retrospect, they were, and the business became quite successful). I point this out because it's an example were the addition of some later stage business people does deserve large equity stakes. But given the original commenters history (e.g a previous large exit), it doesn't appear that's the case here, so it doesn't look like he needs a partner to begin with.
Agree on your case also. Business folks can add tremendous value. But especially late-joiners as, in your case, the better setup is to set some success criteria, hurdles, and reward accordingly. Win-win.
MBA doesn't mean that much by itself.
MBA is a red flag.
I have no idea what they teach in MBA programs these days - I'm many years removed from the age that most people get theirs.
My dad got his MBA in 1959. When I was younger and considering one (I moved out of day to day tech work a long time ago because I wanted to "fix" the business problems I kept encountering because of their negative impact on the tech work), we reviewed curricula for several programs.
My dad was pretty astounded that in the wake of globalism and technology, they were still teaching the same tired-ass theories that he was taught in the 50's. Note that this conversation wasn't all that long ago in the grand scheme of things.
I get that this is a vulture capital site but all one has to do is look at what is happening in the world (Bain capital et al) and you see that all they are really teaching/practicing is wealth extraction, not wealth building.
Edit: sorry, my dad got his BS in 1959, his MBA in 1962.
I think one fundamental thing to understand is that an MBA is an indoctrination process into capitalist ideology, not a science.
Previous discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6662847 :-D
I would say that MBA means nothing by itself. It's 100% about their social network. MBAs were a great way to network as a lot of elite kids got MBAs. An MBA is just a proxy for something else which isn't necessarily there...
When we hire MBAs it means nothing except a minimum standard of work ethic and communication skills and usually (but not always) ability to grasp and breakdown problems. What they usually lack is expertise/applicable experience, we know this when we hire them, but any non-MBA candidate with relevant experience is preferred to an MBA. Like I said we don't expect fresh MBAs to know deeply about software but you do get pompous types who don't have the humility to realise they are out of their depth
He discussed partnering up on your current business or were you talking about a new and different startup? I think you mean the first one, but that seems shocking to me.
>To me this is just unintelligent?
You would know better than us, but I dont think of 10% as a partnership. Maybe they just thought they were going to get a killer deal.
10% sounds like an employee with a decent lottery ticket to me. Maybe that's unfair.
Why is that so crazy?
85% margin gives $27k a month or $326k a year before taxes.
Was he going to work on this full time? How does he replace a reasonable salary otherwise?
Of course, I would expect this to be over time (say, linearly over 3 years) and subject to hitting growth targets.
It's crazy if you know how startups work, and you're not valuing it at all how investors value startups.
Well no, I don't know how startups work, having never been a founder or an investor, but my understanding is that startups are valued at a few multiples of ARR, 10x if there's major growth, for which in almost all cases you'll need VC money (which they don't have).
I'm going to assume that either A) there is no growth without this partnership, so the startup is maybe worth up to 1M, in which case getting up to 40% over 4 years with work and targets makes sense, or B) the original founder is expecting significant growth even without the partnership, in which case he needs an employee and not a partner (and he should pay him as such).
Just to further that:
50% margin share would be $163k/yr pre-tax.
He’s could be taking a significant pay cut and only assigns a moderate future value to the stock, eg, 1% of 50M exit and 10% of 5M exit with 50% ownership is only $500k expected value. Amortized across several years of pay cut (eg, 5 years to exit) you’re looking at $100k/yr “bonus” on $160k for effective $260k/yr. (And that’s assuming no dilution events!)
I agree expectations were misaligned so a bad partnership — but the ask doesn’t seem particularly crazy.
If your assumptions here are correct, he's just not a good candidate for being a founder. If you see earning 163k/year a hardship and don't value 10% equity in a high margin business doing > 30k MMR, then you should try to become an employee at a big company.
Very typical. I've run into cases where an "idea guy" basically says "you do all the product and tech half, I'll do marketing and strategy." Which is dumb, because sometimes I'm legitimately better at the strategy half too. Generally these people want ridiculous equity splits of that nature.
It's worth anyone technical's time to build skills in strategy, marketing, finance, etc. The technical co-founder always gets screwed and suffers from a general lack of respect. In my opinion, it's usually unwise to take positions where you're strictly the technical co-founder, or where you're marketed as the same.
> Which is dumb, because sometimes I'm legitimately better at the strategy half too
A semi-related thought I've had recently:
I've run into a number of non-technical product people that say that they're primary skill is that they have a great "product sensibility" that engineers lack so they need to step in and provide guidance. It's true that many engineer-designed products are terrible, but I'd argue that most engineers have pretty good product sense.
The problem is that engineers have a conflict of interest that leads to them making sub-optimal product decisions. A non-technical product person gets the "luxury" of only thinking "what is the best product for the user?", so they end up with a good design. But an engineer can't help but also factor in "i'm the one that has to build this, so how much extra work am i giving myself?" so they're design will be a compromise of what's good for the user and what can be built easily.
this can have big consequences for how an org should divide work. If somebody has a broad set of responsibilities, they can't help but make tradeoffs (that they might not even be cognizant of) because they're weighing multiple objective functions.
So, when it comes time for figuring out who should be in charge of strategy, it might not just be an issue of "who's better" but more an issue of "who has the least conflict of interest"
I don't think this is a conflict of interest.
Every feature, design decision, and iota of technical debt are money and time. Either that's raised and spent up front, eating at equity, or it is deferred until a point where revenue pays for it, it is redundant due to a pivot, or becomes so essential that new funding is raised (possibly from a pool that doesn't dilute so much value).
Presenting an accurate and fair cost / benefit analysis of these tradeoffs (at least on the technical side) is the main purpose of a technical lead. Non-technical business people can't get that information on their own. They should have a say in the decision if it materially affects the product's launch, but that's the normal give and take.
>> But an engineer can't help but also factor in "i'm the one that has to build this, so how much extra work am i giving myself?" so they're design will be a compromise of what's good for the user and what can be built easily.
The PM/Strat component is like a fifth or tenth of the tech work, typically. Every product design decision often has a magnitude more of associated implementation work. The only way i'd go with this setup is if the PM/Strat person if one of these things:
- PM/Strat person already has customers lined up
- PM/Strat person has paying partners lined up
- PM/Strat person has had exits with associated aura
- PM/Strat person puts in upfront $ to compensate the tech person
- PM/Strat person takes a way lower equity
> But an engineer can't help but also factor in "i'm the one that has to build this, so how much extra work am i giving myself?
I wonder how many startups have failed because the tech has been too much of a pain in the ass to maintain and the technical staff burns out and leaves, with more and more expensive developers postponing leaving till as late as possible and doing as little as possible
Start ups that choose things like Azure are a red flag for me. Churn is really problematic. Learning a code base by having to poke and grok takes a lot longer than being able to fire off a few questions.
Not sure why Azure matters in terms of infra (it's... fine) but if it means dealing with MS Teams that's a big negative.
I don't understand why Europe loves MS so much. Teams as far as the eye can see....
yeah azure has come a long way since 2016. id say it has devex ~amazon, better than gcp. but to his point the startup picking azure is a bit of a red flag, though it's not the best example of a red flag, imo.
What does Azure have to do with understanding a codebase? Azure is just a way to host an app.
>"who has the least conflict of interest"
What about "what role needs to be done the most at the time?"
>sometimes I'm legitimately better at the strategy half too
Technical people should be eager for more business responsibilities than ever before starting a business.
If it's an "engineering company" ideally you would have two founders each having outstanding technical abilities, and far exceeding anything a non-technical alternative could bring to the table from a business or sales aspect. To begin with if you want to start a business, you need to be the kind of engineer that wants to build sales in some way or another. On the front lines and/or in the background.
And to be real one of you is going to have to go full-time into sales & marketing to pursue some type of cash flow until things get rolling in some way. At least.
Then you can more sensibly consider having the non-tech MBA type come in under the top engineer who has been successfully selling already. And that's the beginning of a chain-of-command where an "engineer" is never hired or fired by anything other than an "engineer". And there's always an engineer (sharp in business, not lacking anything needed) at the top of any non-tech hierarchy by design.
Non-engineering companies where the non-tech-types dominate the hierarchy, can still have decent opportunities for the engineers they hire to work on projects under them. But there may not be as much room for upward movement or appreciation for outstanding skill up and down the line. Might also be more often found involved with financial irregularity, or more commonly non-fair dealing even with some of their own people sometimes.
The blue-sky utopian version of this for the Business side is a company shaped like a big Inside Sales Funnel, with all Engineering work implemented in off-shored cost-centres paid piecemeal at contract rates.
Steam had a flat-management structure and Engineering driven leadership from its outset. I'm not sure there's many other that can survive the VC landscape where customer focused design is seen as something between over-engineering and altruism.
> It's true that many engineer-designed products are terrible
Selection bias from there being too many avg UI open source tools?
Engineer-designed = low budget = no expertise on UX etc.. but product fulfills their purpose.
Open source tools have bad UX because great products require coherence and you can't get coherence out of democracies.
I notice that the only truly great open source products all have some kind of benevolent dictator at their helm
>> they're primary skill is that they have a great "product sensibility" that engineers lack
Sounds a lot like what comes up when you google "Rick Rubin meme"
OTOH, I regularly come across great engineers who seem bad at picking projects, and who don't seem to get any better at this over time.
Conflict of interest is exactly how I term it as well. Tech people with good product sense have to work very hard to override their engineering instincts or they’ll handicap the product.
I’m guilty of it all the time. What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture. Nobody. It really doesn’t matter. They just want an awesome product.
(Which isn’t to say none of that matters, because it does. We are engineers and know the consequences of shitty technical decisions… it’s just that you have to pull yourself out of that mode when thinking of what needs to be built)
> What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture. Nobody.
If there is no competition, money is nearly free, and you have all the time in the world, sure. If any of those isn't true, you probably want a reasonably well architected codebase so you're not spending 3X the salaries and 3X the time to build things as you would've with a well designed codebase.
> What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture. Nobody.
We could easily say the same about anything. Nobody cares about the engine in their car either. Except they do, because it affects things like whether they can get from point A to B, which is what they really care about.
Same with code and architecture. It "doesn't matter" but it does, because it takes you from A to B at a particular speed and cost.
> What helps is remembering that absolutely nobody gives a shit about the code or the architecture
The programmer on call at wee hours in the morning gives a shit. Good news though, that programmer will not be a problem soon enough. You can hire your way out of this problem after they quit.
It’s funny how many people think their ideas are truly brilliant and warrant a massive amount of respect.
Anyone who’s worked as an engineer for awhile knows that ideas are a dime a dozen, they are rarely unique, and are about a millionth of what needs to be done to succeed
What is needed in your opinion?
EDIT: I say this as an engineer who is putting his notice in tomorrow to found a startup
EDIT EDIT: Thanks guy, this is along the lines I'm thinking. I'll be competing with companies like Asana, Monday.com, and ClickUp. I worked in a consulting environment for two years and these tools could never be adopted despite the org size growing to 1000+ people in my larger team. It was a big pain point and I think I've built a solution that will help big time.
A good biz guy can be worth his weight in gold. It's harder than people think to get it right: to figure out the right markets to address first and how to tweak/target your product to do so, when, how, and from whom to raise capital, at what rate to expand the team, sales and marketing stuff, etc. Doubly so if the technical co-founder isn't as good at these. It's not worth 80% of equity against 20%, but it is worth a reasonably fair share.
Agreed. The tough thing, though, is that it's (generally) a lot easier to spot a bad engineer than a bs "ideas guy".
Not for a business guy it’s not. Both sides have a hard time evaluating each other.
For an engineer, sure. But for a business guy, it might be a bit tricky. Though I'd say a good business guy probably has a bunch of engineering contacts.
It behooves everyone to be able to spot a narcissist, and that eliminates a huge swath of bad "idea guys" and bad MBAs.
Demonstrate traction. The idea person should have at least an audience for the problem space. If not, they are Field of Dreams - build it and they will come. That doesn't work.
> Field of Dreams
This movie probably caused double or triple digit millions of wasted investments by small business owners when it put the wrong idea in to their head.
Solid advice. Too many people think build it and sell it. When if you did a few interviews and market research you’d realize it might be a flop.
Ability to execute. That normally means build, take to market, measure, adjust, repeat.
You didn't ask me, and I don't have a complete answer, but here's a starting point. Consider what's required for a patent: Novelty, usefulness, and reduction to practice. The latter step often changes the first two, for instance by uncovering problems, or even improving the overall quality of the idea.
Of course a lot of things need to right, beyond that point. I use the patent rule as a guide to make sure that the right people get credit where credit is due, when an idea reaches the market successfully.
We don’t need to go that far. I am “just” a developer but I have been in meetings where developers like me had much better ideas and suggestions on product, strategy etc than the suits. I remember being urgently called into a meeting with a big client to explain how a part of our application worked and why it worked that way, when the product owner/designer could not.
People often complain about developer salaries. I wonder how they can justify suits’ salaries
I don't know that I understand this, typically I structure the shareholder agreement (when I can) to be such that I have clout because I own or control a significant percentage of the shares, not because of my "title".
> worth anyone technical's time to build skills in strategy, marketing, finance, etc.
This leads to jack-of-all-trades types. Good non-technical folk exist. They’re just not easy to find for obvious reasons (same as good technical founders who can see the forest for the trees).
A good technical founder dilutes their comparative advantage e.g. negotiating with suppliers and prioritising payments ahead of a close.
It can, to be sure, and it's not ideal. But the perception that technical co-founders typically get gypped hard is very warranted. This is a thing where you can often still get a reasonably good result with a technical co-founder, not as good as were he solely focused on product/tech stuff, but enough that his individual outcome may be higher than letting the biz guys run it.
Obviously good biz guys somewhat mitigate this but finding those is easier said than done.
> the perception that technical co-founders typically get gypped hard is very warranted
I’d love to see the data. Most start-ups fail. For any given category of founder, there are therefore more stories of disasters than successes.
I don't think there are any good data on this, just my observations. Not everything has to be derived from data, though.
I mean YC literally has a video on how not to get screwed as a technical founder
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcfVjd_oV1I
“Jack of all trades, master of none, is usually better than master of one”
Sort of the dividing line between small business and a startup.
>> I recently walked away from a potential startup because my non-technical partner (MBA ideas guy) wanted an 80/20 equity split in his favor. I was the first to broach the discussion and proposed 50/50.
I'm constantly approached by "business guy" with deals like this. Here is the truth -- even 50/50 isnt enough because technically, the tech-co-founder is often doing all the upfront work and taking all the upfront risk. The business-co-founder gets a free option to do work (or not) afterwards. All upside and little downside.
IMHO good business co-founders are worth gold and make their worth obvious. They already have POs lined up, they have partnership agreements already in the works, they have VCs willing to invest based on past performance. Perhaps they already tried the business with some overseas teams doing POCs. Perhaps the business co-founder already has exits or a successful business and is willing to pay the tech-co-founder some nominal amount to show skin in the game. Those are all good signs.
If those arent the case, and the "business-co-founder" is sitting back while the other is hard at work coding a prototype -- you dont need a co-founder. Just be the CTO+CEO and hire the "business" work yourself!
In the absolute worst case, i've seen a "business-co-founder" continue to push the definition of MVP more and more and the "tech-co-founder" seeing the sunk-cost of the work they have put in, continues to ever-expand the MVP. Meanwhile the "business-co-founder" gets months or a year of free labour with a free option to participate -- or not.
Because you framed it as a Technical Partner needing a 'Business Guy' and approached someone from the post-2000 Cohort who uses the Wozniak/Gates power-dynamic as a best-practice case study (or RIM's example of Mike Lazaridis/Jim Balsillie).
The fact that you spent months refining the idea and building out prototypes is irrelevant or even detrimental to your position. In fact it may have represented a delivery anti-pattern depending on how far along you were to realising your value proposition as a product. Engineers to build MVPs are a dime a dozen. Why were you wasting time as an individual contributor when positioning yourself as a (co)-founder? Why would a prospective C-Level Business Strategy Leader see you as anything other than an Engineer with a MVP and no GTM, previous exits aside?
This is a common scenario for those who frame themselves as 'Technical Founders' - they end up being perceived as a cost-centre incapable of realising any sort of a GTM strategy, and as such are equity-weighted accordingly.
Good you walked away. In my experience, the heavy lifting in a tech start up is, by definition, the tech. The "idea guys" rarely understand that it's the execution that makes an idea valuable.
Sales are important, but are a bit of a crapshoot. You can't consistently sell trash, no matter how good a salesperson you are. The guy was happy to roll the dice, while using your mental energy. Great deal for him, but not so good for you. You risk the burnout, stress and pressure, while he feeds you requirements and deadlines, and essentially becomes your manager.
In my younger days I got a lot of similar proposals, but thankfully could see right through them from day one. Bootstrapping as a solo founder was the harder, but ultimately more rewarding route for me.
The business side needs to have subject matter expertise in the market, running an org, fundraising, marketing, etc. 'ideas guys' are pretty worthless without that.
80/20 is an insane proposal; 50/50 feels reasonable, but I 100% agree with you that the technical side is way more crucial than the business side, since under $10m in ARR your biggest issue will be making the tech work well enough to attract customers.
You can consistently sell trash, you just need a captured market.
Yeah, but that rarely lasts (I am assuming the absence of corruption etc etc). If you set the bar so low with your product that it's easy to outperform by a 10x margin, then you present your customers with a huge incentive to move away.
I had this exact scenario happen on the ycombinator cofounder matching of all places. Except the other cofounder (non-technical) wanted it 95/5.
Yeah, I stopped all contact that same day. That project never got launched.
>> I had this exact scenario happen on the ycombinator cofounder matching of all places. Except the other cofounder (non-technical) wanted it 95/5.
I've gone to some of these just out of curiosity and it seems like people on the hunt for suckers. Having been thru this myself and seen the drama play out with friends from back in the dot-com days to now --
CO-FOUNDING IS LIKE MARRIAGE You cannot just match to someone. There has to be a low-stakes dating period, an engagement period, and then "marriage". You have to be able to walk away early on w/o extensive entanglement. The best co-founder is someone you've known for a long time in various semi-tense scenarios, where you can evaluate their ethics under pressure. This ideally means having worked together or done many projects together.
You should have countered with 95/5 in reverse, because if you can't code, nothing is getting done anyways.
Maybe, if only for the schadenfreude. But the initial offer was so bad I immediately no longer trusted them and no longer wanted to work with them.
> wanted an 80/20 equity split in his favor.
If they're so confident in their value they should just find some money and pay for the development of the product to a freelancer or employee.
They may be a little surprised how much that costs. And then the running of it and the bug fixing and the feature expansion. It may be a little… “surprising”. My advice is to get idea guy to price it out haha.
they are so confident they are offering to pay with 20% of equity (basically vapor), instead of hard cash.
imagine the chutzpah
Yeah never take anything less than a 50/50 split. During the initial fundraising rounds (seed, Series A and maybe even into B) you're also going to be doing just as much lifting trying to get a deal done while also doing your regular day-to-day engineering responsibilities. Maybe in a world where it's 3 founders you can side-step this responsibility but at point you're not just the CTO you're also the de facto COO while your partners are trying to get a deal done.
> wanted an 80/20 equity split in his favor
I would have been tempted to take the idea, partner with someone else and run hard with it in spite.
I can't stand people with this mindset, and it's fair game if that's the cards they want to play.
Fairness of the equity split aside, it also indicates he doesn’t see you as an equal partner. Rather you are seen more as an employee that is going to be working essentially for free. So he probably also won’t value your input and contributions in the venture either.
You made the right call. I would never invest in this company, and neither would YCombinator [1]
[1] https://www.ycombinator.com/library/5x-how-to-split-equity-a...
Why don't you start the idea on your own now? Or find another co-founder? You owe each other nothing.
You've gotten good at telling the machine what to do. He's gotten good at telling people what to do.
The latter turns out to be a much more effective way to build power and influence.
The point is he's not, as he can't prove.
>He's gotten good at telling people what to do.
Not in this case as it seems he didn't get the outcome he expected.
Unless someone is putting cash on the table, or one partner is full time and the other is not, there is zero reason not to split founder interests equitably. (Even in the cash state, the better play is vesting, not an unequal split out of the gate.)
If you want an unequitable split, hire an employee. If you can’t (or won’t), you’re not the hot shit you think you are.
> Unless someone is putting cash on the table, or one partner is full time and the other is not, there is zero reason not to split founder interests equitably.
When he asked why I thought 50/50 was fair, this pretty much sums up what I said. I'd be happy to take an 80/20 split with an industry insider or celebrity, someone who's guaranteed to attract buzz and attention. But he wasn't that guy.
> with an industry insider or celebrity, someone who's guaranteed to attract buzz and attention
Even then, I’d argue no. 50/50 to start. Performance-based options that get them to 80 if they deliver on certain things.
Trust is important.
But beyond that, a good partner might be one where you can first successfully try to come up with an arrangement that you would each be delighted with at the 50/50 point.
Without any adversarial attitude, what can really work is that kind of baseline, which can be negotiated away from, but also returned to without disdain.
There has to be a sense that each person at the baseline would generously actually be putting in 60% for the foreseeable future and love it because it was still an equal partnership and you were getting 120% accomplished consistently. Ideally you want to build consensus not by trying to limit contributions to keep from putting in too much, nor valuing other contributions for less than they are. When it is 50/50 it's more likely to be harmonious when both partners step up to the plate simultaneously and try to put in more than their fair share when needed, and see the other partner as an over-contributor just like themself.
Like what if somebody thinks they're hot and can raise a million within one year, or less if you have something tech ready to deploy? Or they say they can sell your product through the roof. You could make that a contingency they would be proud to achieve or they would have to understandably not be up to their share. If you came to a tentative agreement like that, that you were both very happy with at 50/50, all you would be doing next is planning to "start your engines" soon.
If the potential partner comes back a couple days later with a $4 million commitment within a month by selling some property or something, and it's for real, you will probably re-negotiate. The contingency would be over in a month then, and you would be flying. This wouldn't be too bad if it was non-adversarial from the get-go. You could end up at something way different that's quite fair anyway.
Remember each engineer is worth a million in the right situation, now with their $4 million it's a 4:1 imbalance, so 80/20 might be easy to migrate toward then so you can still go forward.
should just ask him: what do you think stops me from taking your idea and implementing it myself? I will hire another MBA type of guy for 20% equity to do the work you wanted to do and keep the 80% to myself.
flip the negotiating table
He’s already showed his cards. Partnerships are based on trust, not (explicit) threats. If you’re both approaching the dais locked and loaded, call off the wedding.
From my experience, about 1-2 in 10 co-founders are like that. They bring negotiation and networking to the table and demand compensation that no hardworking and honest co-founder would ever ask.
I think Sturgeons law applies to co-founders, and if you haven't spoken to at least 20, you are likely talking to the crap ones. Not all crap ones demand excessive compensation, there are other types of crap. But there is a huge difference between the ones that will be good for business and the others.
Hmm, if it were me, I would have asked how his 80% share would have made my 20% a good investment [than all the other options].
It's all about what each of you are bring to the table. It's possible he priced the tech side perfectly AND being the best option available to make you better off.
There’s zero chance this would ever be a fair split.
They know nothing about building technology so are never in the right. This happens often enough that most startup accelerators pre-flag it as criteria to not invest in founders (with an out of balance equity split).
Maybe he has privilege and lots of connections? Some people have doors open for them just because of who they are and there is value in that.
Then why do they need to give the technical co-founder 20%, or even make him a co-founder at all? They either have enough privilege and connection that they can bring in serious funding from investors, future clients, or friends/family/fools, - or they don't and their privilege and connections aren't really worth that much. If they did, they'd much rather give them a few percentage points and pay them a salary, capturing all the upside.
It's a broad over-generalization but it's a good rule of thumb. They must have access to demonstrable money and/or power before they're worth an 80/20 split, well above what most random business guys can bring in from even elite universities.
Edit: A decent somewhat recent example is Theranos. No biotech VC would touch them because they do due diligence on the basic scientific viability of their investments, but Holmes and her cofounder were able to bring in huge tech investors from family connection and even get people like Henry Kissinger on their board, who also helped them get more investors. That's the kind of connections that might be worth an uneven split.
They need to pay for the tech then. Hire an engineer and design team. If they don’t have the access to that sort of immediate funding, then I’d struggle to imagine what sort of in-the-bag contacts they could bring to justify such an uneven split.
And that type of person quite often turns out to be a huge over-privileged narcissist who's never had to work hard a day in their life, because of their family and frat-bro connections, and who will gladly fuck you over without a second thought.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43815768
>Agreed. The tough thing, though, is that it's (generally) a lot easier to spot a bad engineer than a bs "ideas guy".
>>It behooves everyone to be able to spot a narcissist, and that eliminates a huge swath of bad "idea guys" and bad MBAs.
> They know nothing about building technology so are never in the right
I’ve easily seen more start-ups fail because the technical co-founder got pedantic about something with zero commercial relevance than I have where the non-technical founder rolled over their tech team. Mostly because the latter fail early while the former can sort of look like it’s not a trash fire for a little bit longer.
As you say, the unequal split is a red flag. Not the direction it leans.
> I’ve easily seen more start-ups fail because the technical co-founder got pedantic about something with zero commercial relevance than I have where the non-technical founder rolled over their tech team.
Can you think of examples of the opposite? There are a few variables here for technical/business/commercial and fail/succeed so I won’t write them all out, just curious what you have seen to be honest.
If he's really that good at business, he probably wouldn't have let GP walk away without successfully persuading them it was a good deal.
You're of course right in a game-theoretic sense but I would never start a business with somebody who thinks like this.
It makes sense to walk away even in the game theoretic sense. Many people think in terms of prisoner's dilemma, when it is actually iterated prisoner's dilemma.
Its true in a game-theoretic sense, but I'm actually talking about being honest (and rational) with yourself and what you're able to contribute. There's many other factors that have been mentioned by other people here.
If that person was someone like Warren Buffet, e.g. with a massive track of success behind them, then why not. 20 per cent of a billion is a lot more than 50 per cent of a million.
But for random nobodies who think high of themselves, hell no.
Partnerships should be about leveraging opportunity in the market, not partners leveraging each other.
With business idea guys, the tech guy could own 100% of the shares until business founder shows up with paying demand and repeatable and scalable demand.
The technical founder invariably builds and creates value in working software. It's tangible.
If the business / "idea" person over values their share it's likely due to knowing the mismatch to begin with.
Technical co-founders are perfectly capable of learning all aspects of business. Plenty of good books and resources out there at present.
>Technical co-founders are perfectly capable of learning all aspects of business.
If you assume the technical co-founder doesn't need to sleep or has a magical source of extra time, sure. But in the real world, failing to bring a product or service to market at the appropriate time can be the difference between failure and success. I certainly agree that a technical co-founder's knowledge is harder to replicate in the abstract (OP's story about a co-founder suggesting an 80:20 split is nuts) but trying to be a jack of all trades can leave you a master of none.
I assume neither, and have business skills to found and scale business and architecture as a technical cofounder.
It's just that thing - getting the reps in to learn.
Not just a function of time, but picking the things that have a greater chance of helping you grow.
Depending on who you ask, one mark of a CEO is to be a generalist to keep everything moving, guided, supported, looking ahead.
The age of the specialist went away before covid. Now the generalists see patterns and connections between different arenas in similar ways.
In his mind he was being generous since chatgpt could do your work for free.
I guarantee you this was his rationale.
Yeah.
The ignorance comes from lack of experience and it happens often on both sides.
Engineers think they deserve a big equity package for writing CRUD apps.
“Businesspeople” with no startup experience, never raised money and never worked in sales think they have value.
If both co-founders have no prior startup experience then they both need to put in the same amount of money and split equity 51/49 or 60/40 (while considering dilution).
No once can build a meaningful company alone so you need to have a team and that team must have a servant leader willing to break ties.
It’s only inexperienced people that don’t know / understand this.
>have this conversation [...] as early as possible
Yes, it could be one of the things you bring up on the very first talk you get around this, and it's much easier to do it early than anytime later.
"Hey, this thing you're telling me about, do you want my opinion or are you telling me because you want me to be a part of it?"
(if: want to be part of it) "Nice, have you thought about how much each one of us will get? I always prefer to do equal splits."
If equal splits or very close to that I might do it. If not, the deal would have to be exceptionally good from the start, e.g. "we'll give you 10% of a post Series A company that is already valued at XX million".
Ok, but technical co-founders in tech startups are also less valuable than they think (as this blog post shows).
In reality there are four critical skillsets (outside fundraising) for a new tech venture: Operations, Sales, Product, and Engineering.
I've seen plenty of startups with a heavy focus on product and engineering flail about because they suck at operations, product, or sales. The harsh truth is your CEO better be excellent at one of Operations, Sales, or Product, and your CTO better be excellent at one of Sales, Product, or Engineering. And if your CEO isn't competent at operations, you're going to need someone who is. Dealing with HR, accountants, investor relations, lawyers, contracts, HR, and all that stuff is a big job that's hard to completely outsource.
Overall, if your founding team isn't at least competent in all four areas, you've got a gap that will be difficult to fill unless one of the founding team is willing to step up and learn that area fast. Sales (or marketing, for consumer apps) might be the exception, because in my experience everyone on the founding team will wind up needing to learn it early on.
I don't agree at all. Not even with the premise that "there are significantly more business guys looking for tech guys than the reverse".
There are a lot of business and tech guys and most of all of them are pretty clueless when you randomly meet them in "gatherings".
But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
There's little point in arguing who is "more" valuable -- the business side or the tech side. They're both critical to have.
For some reason, this post equates the "business side" to the person with the "idea". But that's a strawman. Having an idea doesn't make you a "business" co-founder. Being a business cofounder means having a experience and talent on the business side of things. And a good business co-founder generally doesn't have a lot of trouble finding good tech people, because that's one of those business skills that they're good at...
>But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
Yep.
I tried doing startups with a few ideas. I can easily code all day. But then, when it comes to doing all the secondary stuff, like filing paperwork for an LLC, marketing, networking, and so on, that stuff was "painful" to me, as it took some of the fun out of the whole making things work.
You could have a good idea, but without a strategy to let people know about it, even if you build it, it may never get used.
Hey, OP here. I view it like this: if you were to take all technical people on the market for launching a startup and plot them on a distribution to find the "valuable in early stage" subset, you would find that 35% are good enough to get a startup off the ground. They don't need to be extraordinary programmers, just good enough but with a lot of drive.*
However, for non-technical folks that are on the market, the distribution is worse. Only the top 10% ~ 15% actually have sufficient abilities to pull it off. The remaining fall into the archetype I wrote about here.
The caliber for what's in the market is skewed thus the technical person has to be a whole lot more picky than the other way around to avoid ending up with a dead weight.
[*]: This excludes specialized skills like Deep Learning or chemical bio-engineering, etc...
If you're taking a fail fast type approach, the business guys fail faster when they can't get a tech co-founder to rally around their ideas. If you can't do that, you probably can't sell the MVP either. On flipside, the tech guys will spend month and even years polishing their 'product' without ever actually launching it with actual attempts to sale it. So they fail slowly after sinking tons of time. They'll talk about it as a side-project to minimize the appearance of failure but if they put all that work in they really do want it to succeed. They just get to the point where code is good enough and can't force themselves to transition to marketing/sales/etc.
Well said!
Skipping directly to step 3 and ignoring the others is an open source hobby, not a business.If I had to re-summarize your point, I'd put it this way:
1. Success is very little on the idea, almost entirely on the execution
2. Execution has both a technical side and a business side, and can fail from a poor execution either way.
How this applies to your target audience:
You have an idea for a business? Nice -- that's almost worthless (1). You can't influence execution on the technical side, so you need to bring execution from the business side (2).
I like the numbers -- "a waitlist of 1000 people or LOI from 20 businesses" gives a better idea what kind of execution a non-technical co-founder should be capable of.
These discussions also get wrapped up in what "non-technical" means.
It can mean management skillset.
It can mean people-networking and sales skillset.
For an early-stage startup, the former doesn't bring much value (management value literally scales with employee count) while the latter absolutely does.
Solo founders do worse and teams with a technical founder do better particularly in enterprise. So it seems your best chance is one of each.
https://10years.firstround.com/
This list is a pure fallacy of statistical understanding. Skewed data and cherry-picking while also being strengthened by our subjective biases. I would appreciate the list way more if it also included founders who applied but were rejected, or for any other reason were not invested in.
For stuff like this I recommend the book, May Contain Lies by Alex Edmans, he does a fantastic job explaining how most of the time we seek data to confirm our hypotheses, instead of seeking a hypotheses that confirms our data.
> But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
A valuable technical cofounder brings the skills to literally create what you're trying to sell. Otherwise, have fun selling dust. Or networking to sell nothing.
The "0 to 1" here isn't "no management to management" it's "not having a product built to having a product built".
Selling dust is the job of the business co founder before the product is built. This is how you verify there is customer demand before wasting everyone’s time. It’s surprisingly easy if you’re solving a real need. It’s also how you can demonstrate meaningful value to your technical cofounder.
There's no point having the skills to build a product if you can't fundraise to build a team, market, sell, refine to find product-market fit, etc. etc.
I’m not sure if this is a joke.
You’re saying that there’s no point in having the skills to actually do something (building a product), unless you have someone derivative skills as well (all the business things you state).
That really comes off as trying to justify the business cofounder. I can build independently. You can’t build a team (which I can do), market (which I can do), sell (which I can do), or refine (which I can do) independently.
I think perhaps you misread it?
>> You’re saying that there’s no point in having the skills to actually do something (building a product), unless you have someone derivative skills as well (all the business things you state).
yes, with the proviso that the "someone" might include yourself.
>> You can’t build a team (which I can do), market (which I can do), sell (which I can do), or refine (which I can do) independently.
If you can do those things, then great, you have the "someone" you need.
But, it's fair to say that most techies do not have those necessary skills. As evidence see the endless stream of question in the "Ask" section of HN trying to get advice on those activities after the product is built.
So the point is not "There's no need for a business founder". The point is that to have a business all the bases must be covered, and you need as many people as you need to cover those bases. Sometimes it's 1. Sometimes it's 2. Sometimes it's 5.
The most common successes have 2 or 3 founders, but that don't make the other numbers impossible, it's just a trend. Which makes sense - the more hats you wear, then less time you have to devote to each of them.
I think that comment is saying that there is a difference between building a project and building a feasible company that productizes the project. There are many other aspects of company building that purely technical folks often trivialize as unimportant.
One can have 3 technical cofounders but the paperwork still needs to be done and someone has to do it.
>But a valuable business co-founder brings extensive domain expertise, a network of people, sales skills, management skills, and fund-raising talent.
I've found across industries that the technical guys typically have more domain expertise given equal time spent in that industry with way too many examples to throw in here down to entire factories being known better from just about every angle (bar the nuts and bolts) by a single senior tech guy than the actual owners and sub domain mangers. Just because he and many other technical guys in the other examples had to understand the problems in depth to develop for them and abstract them away for the managers, accountants, ppl running the machines, etc
The sales skills can matter a lot especially for b2b but it's not a given that these (along other people skills) aren't possessed by the dev. I tagged along trough a ton of the studies of my girlfriend as she studied international business management... and as far as practically useful stuff goes it honestly didn't go that far beyond what we got taught in our company management course when studying compsci.(other than things like statistics with spss and the like which they seemed to almost collectively suck at.) All it gave me was a sense of wonder at the amount of buzzwords and cargoculting in that sphere outside of the usefull stuff.
Don't get me wrong. There's technical guys that are bad at these 'people skills' and/or have no sense of popular aesthetics that makes their ads entirely ineffective or can't manage themselves so even your mentioned "management skills" would be usefull in a 2 people team, etc.
But if a technical guy is somewhat naturally competent on these fronts... or where they're lacking they could have a technical cofounder that completes them and they both keep eachother accountable... Well then i'd put my money on them rather than a technical/mba cofounder couple.
To be honest, it sounds like you’re one of the business people.
Everyone on the tech side has this experience. “I just need you to build the software”
You can build a product and sell it without business guy but you can't have a product without the tech guy. One definitely is more valuable than the other.
Either I have a talent for the business aspect or I am just a tech guy with a lot of luck, but I invest time into my products not marketing and still get what I want.
>> You can build a product and sell it without business guy but you can't have a product without the tech guy.
I'd argue that you need both guys. But that both guys can be the same person. It's just uncommon that they are the same person. If you have both sets of skills, then you can do it alone.
A tech guy, with little to no business acumen will fail just as easily as a business guy with no technical acumen.
There's {set of things that need to happen for startup to be successful}, then {set of skills required to effect those outcomes}, and then {set of individuals who possess those skills}.
Whatever labels those individuals have isn't generalizable enough to form into "thou shalt"s.
And as the article put it
>> equal partners who trust and respect each other deeply
is probably the key.
Is everyone bringing valuable skills to the table (that others aren't) and does everyone respect and value what their co-founders / counterparts are doing?
Well, pretty much everyone is less valuable than they think!
I've bootstrapped and sold two startups, first time with 5 (!) equal cofounders and second time with 3. I've learned a lot along the way, obviously some of that through mistakes of my own. Have my cofounders been perfect? Heck no -- one lacks the same level of drive, the other is less trustworthy (always multiple irons in the fire kinda guy). But we all have strengths, are all generally better off together, and have the combined skill set to run super lean. Even if you think you can do some things better alone, you can never do it all, and that grind will take quite a toll.
Related: over the years the topic of going into business with some of my best friends has come up, and I always say I would never do that. Running a fast-moving, high stakes business with multiple founders involves a lot of tough conversations and occasional relationship strain. My business partners are business partners first, friends second, and I think that's important to consider if you really value a friendship.
You don't want clean separation between co-founders. They should overlap in skills and be multi disciplinary.
Having a tech founder that can't talk to customers or a business person that doesn't understand what the company makes or sells is not a great recipe for success. That's two people that probably can't even talk to each other. That's not a team.
I've learned the hard way that being a CTO means I need to talk to customers and it's one of the more important things I do. There's nobody more qualified in the company to explain what we do and how we do it than me. I don't initiate the meetings and I don't close the deals but having access to me is an important part of the process. It reassures the other side that we are bona-fide, can actually solve their problem, and they'll often do the same and bring in operational people on their side in follow up meetings. Once you have direct lines of communication like that, it becomes a lot easier to close the deal.
Also, being exposed to that means I learn what customers need, want and expect. No ivory tower is going to produce that kind of insight. It allows me to adapt to what is needed rather than me trying to imaging what it is they might need based on whatever filtered down version I might get from a business person. There is no substitute for first hand information.
And that works both ways. Business people without a connection to the product aren't very useful. They'll try to sell stuff that isn't there and they'll undersell stuff they don't even know is there. I've seen both happen. If you sell something that isn't there, you set up a deal for failure. You are misrepresenting the product and that's going to cause disappointment. If you don't sell what's there, you shoot yourself in the foot. Especially if it's something the customer would have liked to have. But business people are great for validating product ideas and trying to imagine how the business side would work early on is a good idea.
It really baffles me that people here don't realize that co-founders should be multi-disciplinary, so all should be able to do some kind of (!) business and/or tech part at least. A clear separation of skills would be a red flag for me that this team operates in an outdated mode. It's not 1990 anymore. If you're the business guy but don't value enough or even hate the tech work, I wouldn't believe in the company.
The ideal business co-founder has to be strong in distribution AND eliciting product feedback. This is why the “MBA types” and ex-McKinsey consultants fare so poorly - they’re used to companies spending loads of money to hear what they think. As an early-stage startup founder, nobody gives a shit about your product and no one wants to hear what you think. Your job is to identify where demand is highest in the market and then turn that demand into dollars. They also need to be excellent communicators who understand or at least appreciate how much goes into building products.
For those reasons, the best business cofounders in my experience, are former salespeople (for b2b startups), demand generation marketers (for b2c), and product managers.
The article reads… interesting. A business depends on its demand, competition, scale, operation costs and numerous other factors. If the product is a tech, a technical founder can have immense impact on future success but marketing, customer acquisition, sales, networking, fund raising and other huge headaches are often burdens carried by non-technical counter part.
Of course, the person building something from a vague idea to life wields magical power, but the other aspects of business are more so important.
As an engineer myself, I can see 500 ways I can improve things at my employer’s business, but while I have a technical vision, the non-technical founders of the business has broader picture and what I may wish to spend time optimizing might just be a pocket change issue not worth solving.
We technical folks undermine the mountain of difficulties of marketing and sales as well as interacting with people to convince them to part with their money. Of course, I have seen a fair share of over confident wanna-be founder who would just be next trillionaire if someone would build the 10000th Airbnb clone but for pets so they could sell it and give 5% equity to the builder because their idea was the main thing, but in broad sense of things, tech is just a means to an end for a successful business and simply building is not the 100% of execution step.
Great points. Good founders are on both sides of selling and building. If you don't believe in sellers, you've never worked with good ones.
One thing I've wondered about for awhile: How do you find a business co-founder you can trust?
For one example, the article says that some of the best value that a business co-founder can contribute is disproportionately building the relationships. But those relationships can be more connected to the business cofounder themself, than to the company.
It's a bit different for the technical co-founder, since your perceptible contribution is usually IP expressed in in artifacts like code that is owned by the company, and can't legally be taken with you.
There's also the perception of the value of that IP: much like a novice programmer might think that most of the value is in their own software/knowhow/grind/brilliance, the novice business person might think most of the value is in their own ideas/leadership/network/hustle/brilliance.
The business person might also perceive the technical contribution as being commodity skills, and ones that can increasingly be done by "AI" robo-plagiarism for $20.
So, if the business person is, say, having second thoughts about the 50/50 split, they can make a backroom deal with investors to cut out the technical cofounder, or bring their new relationships with investors and/or customers with them to a different (or 'different') startup.
Obviously, one defense is for the technical co-founder to somehow be a superhumanly valuable non-commodity, and to make sure that the business co-founder understands that.
But, realistically, doesn't the technical co-founder probably need a lot of trust in their character and commitment of the business co-founder? Maybe even more than vice versa?
Hey, OP here. I agree.
If you get a list of all the startups that got acquired or IPO in the last 10 years, you will find it's extremely rare the technical co-founder is still around. The staying rate for CEO is like 99% while the staying rate for CTO is more like 50% (making up numbers here but this is directionally right).
With enough scale, a great CTO can be hired for the right salary. The way I answer this for myself is two-fold:
1. I've vowed I will never be the second chair guy because I don't wanna get pushed out.
2. It's important to up-skill yourself so you can contribute more value than a glorified engineering manager by driving vision, being a headhunter of superstar engineers, among others high-value skills
This is something you learn when you actually raise venture and meet peers that have raised capital. Beyond the very early stages, the CTO can easily be replaced, the CEO is the face of the business.
Anyone can do a back room deal to screw their partners. Mark Zuckerberg was a technical founder, for example.
Maybe, although students in the dotcom boom was a different situation than now.
(Source: Was one. Many people were trying to fund you, sometimes without you even asking. And you couldn't go to a student party without some Sloan or HBS student zeroing in on you, and wanting to talk with you.)
>One thing I've wondered about for awhile: How do you find a business co-founder you can trust?
You can only look at past actions. Even the self-proclaimed "most ethical" people change the moment there is money on the table and their hired professionals are telling them to take as much of it as they can get away with.
If you are the technical co-founder who is writing code you should ensure you have legal protections before anyone else has access to what you have written.
This can be a legal agreement or built in protections via copyright law.
Same as any author who produces work that others can profit off of in perpetuity, don't sign your built in protections away.
In the example I'm giving, code IP isn't very relevant to a business cofounder screwing, because the (real or perceived) value of the code IP is less than the relationships that may be tied to the business cofounder.
All the code IP protections mean, in this regard, is that the technical cofounder has less value comparably tied to them personally.
> some of the best value that a business co-founder can contribute is disproportionately building the relationships.
The other subtle thing I take issue with on this is: What relationships, exactly? Most of the time I've seen this surface as a few early customers you might not have otherwise gotten, which is great and necessary, but IME that well runs dry pretty quick, and those customers oftentimes don't stick as well as ones that were found on merit. A better relationship with vendors? Again, weird, merit should trump that personal relationship.
If you're building a business that relies on a small number of very high value contracts, I think I could see a world where having a foot in the door on those high value customers is worthy of elevating the body that foot is attached to toward Founder. That isn't, generally, how most software companies sell software though.
The point I maybe did not stress enough on is the relationship aspect is two folds:
- Have ability to gain hard-to-obtain relationships in the beginning
- Have ability to grow the pace at which you gain those over time
It the beginning it will give you the money to play the game long enough (ie: customers and angel investors). In the short term it help tremendously in deal-making, fundraising, enterprise sales, hiring superstar employee. In the long term, you can broker insane deals like OpenAI convincing Microsoft to invest $10B and bet their AI future on you or get acquired.
PS: Microsoft is now backtracking out of that situation, but Altman convincing them to get in bed in the first place is very impressive.
Last summer I met two cofounders to take the leap as a potential founder. I wanted an equal equity split among the founders. They wanted to split the equity like 40/40/20. That 20 would have been me, the only technical founder building the entire product.
I walked away.
Having seen plenty of businesses throughout my life, both successful ones and less successful ones I'd say the most important traits are:
this is valid for both the technical founder and the business founder alike.In a perfect team the business founder has a very good understanding of the tech side and the technical founder a good understanding of the business and marketing side. Product is nothing without sales and sales nothing without product. Despite this being obvious I have seen several companies fail on this.
Last not least it depends on the product. The more complex the tech is the higher the share of the technical partner should be and vice versa the more specialist business domain knowledge is needed, the higher the business partner's shares are.
> ability to execute
How do we define what execution looks like?
As a general rule we must be wary of “business cofounders” who sell pontification as execution.
I was one of the "business guys" at DigitalOcean from very tiny to big. Execution looked like: 20% of the time in meetings discussing what the next period of time without seeing each other was going to look like and 80% of the time on flights and in hotels. My mantra was always "be directionally correct, go to market as hard as I can every single day, and fully trust the engineers building the products around me".
If your "business cofounders" aren't closing deals and landing sales they're useless. So if you're going to join a "non-technical founder" they must both have the contacts or a in in the industry you'll be trying to join and must be a great salesman.
If they don't have that, walk away, this person has no value.
>How do we define what execution looks like?
- Previous exits
- Previous successful business
- Bringing 1-3 potential buyers to the table who can define what is needed and what they would pay, ideally clear "if X then i pay Y"
The ability to execute means to deliver timely and on budget.
I have seen people who would not be able to set up and manage a hot dog stand and yet they were trying to run a business with 50 employees. The only result was burning money like there was no tomorrow.
This post is hilarious and details exactly why so many startups die in infancy. Yes yes, engineers are brilliant and without them nothing ever gets built.
And even still, sometimes things get built and never turn into a real business precisely because of this hubris. And 99.9% of the time, the ones that DO grow over time would have grown much much faster if "the business guy" had been there all along.
This is true! I argue here that the right business co-founder who drives long term financial success to the company is super rare and super valuable. The problem is the average one you'll run into at a networking event cannot deliver on that.
They are much more "I give the ideas and I want to keep 90% equity and you shut up and listen to me because I'm the CEO" guys.
Absolutely. Idea guys are the worst.
And a good business person is worth their fair share of equity in a SU environment
The reality that I've experienced is: Most any function in a software company can be learned to an effective degree by anyone, if you take the discipline seriously, have the right mentors, and dedicate time to do so. Engineers can learn to be good founders and salespeople. Marketers and managers can learn how to commit code.
The reason, I tend to think, why business-focused co-founders might be less valuable than tech-focused co-founders in a tech company is, in my experience, that all founders surface their own biases in how their companies are designed based on the comfortable experiences of their past; and you need those biases to lean toward the tech in tech companies, because tech can automate anything per the previous paragraph.
I've seen this surface subtly: "Yeah, Stripe integration to take money makes sense, but its just not a priority right now. Sales can handle invoicing." (it never becomes a priority because once you give DepartmentX that responsibility they'll fight to defend their turf).
I've also seen it surface less subtly: A VC-backed software startup with mid-eight figures of funding, all the investors thought the company was selling software, but it turns out the salespeople were never trained on that, and were instead told to only sell white-glove services, using the software, from another department. "Bigger contracts" etc. Engineering leadership was oblivious to this happening for at least two quarters, because who knows, users were still signing up, "sales handles the invoicing", they weren't tracking the right things, maybe some layer of intentional deception. Chicken & egg "the software doesn't sell" "you weren't even trying to sell it". Engineers are expensive -> Engineering layoffs. They're now a zombified services company, who took on 70 mil in venture capital to sell software, with zero full-time software engineers. The CEO's professional work history? Selling services of this exact kind for some provider for twenty years. They took rocket fuel to start a bonfire, and it blew up the block.
I’m not sure it’s fair to say Zuckerberg’s only advantage over the Winklevoss brothers was his engineering skills. I think he quickly understood the whole dynamics of that potential business and had a more clear vision. Being able to digest a lot of seemingly disparate information (e.g. how college students responded to the “hot or not” prank) and create a compelling vision along with a path to get there, that’s both very hard and very valuable.
But I do agree with the overall sentiment that these ex-McKinsey “business co-founders” often lack the most valuable skills. I’d even go as far as saying they are generally quite bad “idea guys”, in the sense that they are more Winklevoss than Zuckerberg.
I even have a sneaking suspicion that Europe is so far behind the US in the startup game partly because the “ex-McKinsey guy on top” anti-pattern is the social norm here.
In reality, it should flipped! The technical person is the one who breathes life into an idea and should get the lion’s share
Then you want an employer/employee relationship, not a cofounder relationship. I would run, not walk, from a company with a founder arrangement where some subset got "the lion's share" for reasons like this.
As a business guy, getting “it should be flipped” wrong and going to print / ready for audience viewing only emphasizes the importance of being able to meet certain expectations such as basic communication when wanting to be taken seriously. This is not a unique instance I have observed. It is not directed specifically at this writer, it is using this writer as an example of hypocrisy in self-serving pleadings.
If you’re going to de-value the role of somebody who can do what you can’t, be prepared to get called out on it or brushed aside without explanation because you blew it. Harsh but true. I know this because I worked sales support with technical people and not technical people in high stakes business relationships.
This is why startups don’t hire people like me because they don’t value what I do and frankly I’m okay with this mutually dismissive relationship. This forum is a frequent reminder of why so many startups are unsuccessful.
I'm actually not making a case for business cofounders being undervalued. Maybe they are maybe they aren't. But if you think they're overvalued, put up or shut up: hire them instead of partnering with them. That doesn't happen because strong business cofounders won't accept those terms, which to me is a pretty clear indication that "it should be flipped" is false.
Having started businesses with the explicit lack of biz-co-founders I beck to differ. That is of course unless your da Vinci-like super modal capabilities allows you to feel unlimited joy when doing business plans, taxes & marketing alongside your (hopefully) core competency of product development.
I also agree based on several failed startups I've been a part of and a few successful startups.
The business side is the difference between side project and successful venture.
I do actually know a few people who are like me and really enjoy both doing the biz plan/strategy half, and the marketing work, and product/tech. It's not as common but I enjoy working with them a whole lot more. We almost always create better results when the tech people are also biz people who understand how what we build needs to fit into the market. It's also super helpful to have some personnel fungibility when you have a small team where you're shelling out 5-20% equity for new members.
In my ideal world basically everyone is like this and the walls between "idea guy" and "tech guy" are knocked down. I've heard a lot of folks get cynical about sharp technical types who get hired by big 3 mgmt consultancies, but ime they're often great places to find those who are both technically sharp and can make a killer deck.
I discovered I liked business planning, strategy, and marketing pretty early in my technical career.
I also discovered that one of the thing business people bring to a company are connections, especially if they have already worked in a vertical, and few people want to talk to a bright kid about their problems.
The entire article can be boiled down into: a "business" co-founder is someone who brings in business. Otherwise they're the "idea guy" and idea guys are worthless.
This is crazy. I’m a technical cofounder of two businesses and in both cases the product would be completely dead on arrival if it wasn’t for the business cofounder. They intimately understand the business landscape and have all the contacts and context required to find customers.
My first and second "start ups" (90s) were peopled by very technical people and no "professional class" (e.g., HR, BizDev/Sales, etc.) beyond finance. I joined a third as an executive and it, too was missing HR and Sales.
We added sales (later HR, sigh) and it was (eventually) transformative.
My point is that you can have the greatest technical team and lack of sales and shitty toxic culture will mean no growth/stagnation/running out of cash.
You can also be (this is probably the default state) a pure MBA-play where you are a "sales driven organization" that has shitty product and shitty technical culture.
You can rarely have a successful business (unless you are large enough!) without some degree of both. So stating that "business cofounders" or "technical cofounders" are less valuable/overrated reads like low effort click bait that resonates with really inexperienced "professionals".
> As you can imagine, this is highly unattractive to skilled engineers who know their worth. No one sane wants to leave a high-paying cushy job to work for (not with) a bossy guy while battling the already intense stressors of Entrepreneurship.
I can relate to that. I am creating a small product and more than the salary, I want to escape 9-5 because I want to exercise product and technical agency that I do not have in my current job, and going from that to not have an increased level of agency working for someone, especially for a co-founder.
The value of a business co-founder lies in their ability to build business relationships and extract value from them.
The value of one founder to another lies in complementary skills and perspectives engaging start-up issues in a productive way, which usually means deep levels of mutual understanding and trust -- which can be antithetical to business relationships and personal comfort. So: hard.
The CEO/COO split reflects the difficulty of scaling this.
Is the solution to talk early? Maybe, or maybe that interferes with trust-building. The key thing I believe (here and elsewhere) is to avoid projecting what you want or fear into what you have. If it's important to success, validate it. For that, it helps to have people willing and able to be honest and truthful, particularly about unknown unknowns -- even if it is otherwise their mandate and mission to project confidence and gain trust.
As is the case with most complex problems like this, the correct answer is: it depends.
In this case, it depends on what the crux of your business is. Sometimes the crux is building world-class technology. Sometimes the crux is customer acquisition.
If the crux of your business is customer acquisition, then an exceptional business co-founder will actually be the most important ingredient to long-term success.
This is one of the biggest weaknesses I've noticed in YC's mantra. In most industries, just building something people want doesn't lead to success - you have to excel at customer acquisition also. And, in these industries, as you business matures, you realize that customer acquisition, at scale, is actually the hardest problem to solve.
I think you've just argued yourself out of a position of "it depends." This is one of the few areas where there's no wiggle room. A worthy business co-founder MUST be able to bring something practical to the table, and in my experience as it also seems to be yours, there's only really two ways they can do so:
- Be great at customer acquisition (or at least as the original article says, bring in a "customer waitlist")
- Have or bring in actual funding
If the business co-founder can't even bring one of these two things to the table, there is no justification whatsoever for them to hold a meaningful share of the startup's ownership.
The real problem with most "business co-founders" is that they are lazy and don't put in effort. Full-stop. I've seen this happen with enough of my peers that a "business co-founder" is never called a "business co-founder", but rather an operator or salesperson.
Somebody has to manage the business relationships and go out and sell. Somebody has to be in charge of marketing, payroll, and PR. Somebody has to be the public face of the company, out networking and attending trade shows. If you’re a technical founder and all this sounds like fun to you, then yeah, a non-technical cofounder would not offer much. But there’s something to be said for having more time to put your head down and build.
Well said. If the company is built around a certain specialism, the specialist will want to spend most of your time there, because that is where most value is created per hour. But many of the other things are critical, but happen to be very time-consuming. Such as traveling around. So in some teams you end up having one person do this specialist work while the other can focus on the more time-consuming things. I think you worded it much more elegantly, I'm just repeating what you said.
I realize this is all subjective, but the hardest problem in every startup is solving a real customer problem. I’ve never been part of a startup where the engineering was the hardest part, and I’ve been part of very high-tech companies.
An accountant maybe doesn’t add much, but a business major who deeply understands a customers need can be more valuable than any engineer.
The difficulty with the business person is identifying actual skill. I've seen way to many startups where the business side was basically floundering, and the end result was technical firings and business hires, but no acknowledgement or punishment for the existing product and business staff.
The places I've seen with actual success involved at least one founder capable of both, and that therefore had the taste to to realize when people coming up with ideas and taking meetings were just not meeting the high bar required. Because having ideas that don't work is easy, and so is having meetings that don't get you close to making sales. It looks like work is being done, but, if anything, it's making sure the company is spending time building the wrong things.
I'd much rather work with business aware developers, who are interested in knowing more about the business, than with total business specialists. Finding business-only people that have interest in learning how things would get done, and therefore have any idea of how difficult their ideas are to implement, is in my experience way too hard, as the barrier of peering into code is way too high.
This presupposes a business major is any better at understanding customer needs than an engineer. Given that most startups fail, I'd be willing to infer that neither the typical non-technical founder nor the typical technical founder is particularly good at this.
it's not "a business major", but "a business major who deeply understands a customers need". just any old business major won't do.
> This presupposes a business major is any better at understanding customer needs than an engineer.
You can still derive advantage from specialization even if one party has an absolute advantage in both activities.
I would argue that it’s not just about solving a customer problem, it’s solving it at a cost enough customers are willing to pay for.
There’s lots of solutions in the market for problems I have, but most are above the cost I’m willing to pay for. As long as you have a large enough market willing to pay you can sustain it but often the solutions are just too costly in general to be sustainable.
And that critical part of bringing a useful solution at a cost the market will bear to sustain is the hard engineering part. I find problems people have daily that I can think of solutions to, but they’re often going to be too costly to be of any value to create a solution for and I often find them too unique for scaling to help any. I work in research environments, so YMMV.
In the past I worked with an ideas person, but their ideas were often quickly discounted by some basic engineering thoughts about how reasonable solutions could be built. If you have an engineering background and ideas, you can often iterate through viable ideas much faster, quickly discounting unviable ideas vs the other way around (having to do a lot of practical homework to explore practicality of an idea is more time costly).
There is absolutely domain value in understanding unique problems and seeing opportunity, no doubt, but viable solutions need to exist. If you think you’re the first person who saw and identified an opportunity, it’s a great time to look and ask around because chances are you’re often not the first to market. Often solutions or businesses don’t exist for the very point I raise: people couldn’t find cost effective solutions to make it worth pursuing.
Some valuable customer problems turn out to be very tricky to solve, even when you understand exactly the requirements.
Or as Henry Ford said, "if I'd asked people what they wanted, they would have told me unlimited clean energy, teleportation, immortality, and affordable housing."
In my experience, engineering CAN be the hard part, but almost always in situations where the business requirement is unclear or non-sensical to begin with.
For example, business ideas in the form of: "Use {X} to solve {Problem that literally can NOT be solved with X}"
And yet the saying goes 'Ideas are cheap, execution is everything.'
> An accountant maybe doesn’t add much, but a business major who deeply understands a customers need can be more valuable than any engineer.
1000%. I'm a solo tech founder and raised $3M. There isn't a day where I wished I didn't have a business or growth person with me on this journey. The tech pieces are easy.
This article seems AI generated, at least in part.
The opening image incorrectly refers to Erlich Bachman from Silicon Valley as "Erik."
OP goes on to claim:
>Paul Graham wrote in 2008 that Sam Altman was the best fundraiser he’s ever seen in his 30+ years in the valley. Sam was just 23 years old at that time!
That's not what the linked article says. That post has a single paragraph about Sam Altman that says he's good at fundraising but never says he's the best pg has ever seen[0]:
>Sam Altman has it. You could parachute him into an island full of cannibals and come back in 5 years and he'd be the king. If you're Sam Altman, you don't have to be profitable to convey to investors that you'll succeed with or without them. (He wasn't, and he did.) Not everyone has Sam's deal-making ability. I myself don't. But if you don't, you can let the numbers speak for you.
Also, Graham was 43 when he wrote that essay, so he hadn't spent 30 years in Silicon Valley. Viaweb was based in Cambridge and Graham lived in Cambridge at the start of YC. I don't think Graham even moved to Silicon Valley until 2009, five months after the post OP claimed was based on his 30 year tenure there.[1]
These errors are either due to AI hallucinations or lazy writing.
I think the better article on this topic is Jeff Atwood's "Cultivate Teams Not Ideas."[2]
[0] https://www.paulgraham.com/fundraising.html
[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20170306095108/http://old.ycombi...
[2] https://blog.codinghorror.com/cultivate-teams-not-ideas/
>Sam Altman has it. You could parachute him into an island full of cannibals and come back in 5 years and he'd be the king.
The eating human flesh part rings true.
For B2B, it generally makes sense to have one person whose job it is find and talk with customers while the other can focus on building/iterating the product. It helps to be technical for this but they have to actually like talking to people and ideally have a decent network for what you're selling. This isn't exactly sales but it's closer to 'sales' than it is engineering and so generally benefits from that background/skillset.
So in theory it makes more sense to team up with someone with that skillset than partner with another engineer but then one of you has to give up on the thing you're good at to do founding sales which you may-or-may-not be inclined to do.
I don't man, I am fairly technical and have failed solo startups several times because I'm not good at the selling part (and I guess by extension build what people want). So in my limited experience, a co-founder that can sell well is really valuable.
That's exactly what the author was trying to convey...
IMO you want a business cofounder who has a tech background, but they have to be a sharp dollars person. Somebody has got to close deals, negotiate hard with suppliers, and keep the lights on. All things that engineers often don’t do so well.
Your solution to bad business co-founders is for them to become sales people?
The traits and failures you are describing could be attributed to anyone including an engineer.
A good business person moves mountains while keeping builders free to build.
Business founders have to bring the distribution, technical founders bring the product.
Require both.
The technical cofounder becomes less important as the company grows through.
Can you say a bit more here, genuinely curious as to why.
I made an observation that, as a company grows, there are more opportunities for increasing revenue from the business side than from the technical side.
Technical is important, but just saying that it is easier for the business side to toot their horn.
Doesn't that make them less important? Just hire people to do that, it is possible to hire business people.
For example if you want to sell to X market, hire a person from those companies, that isn't rocket science.
No idea why this is downvoted, its completely true. Only inexperienced people think otherwise
Depends who's wanting that look.
Technology doesn't stop scaling in complexity the larger you get, or the business hits a ceiling on what it can hit in revenue and growth.
It's cool if b-school teaches other wise :)
Both the business founder and technical founder has to grow.
Which one can learn to scale to the moon easier?
I wish all my friends well on any side of co-founding.
The thing that doesn't work is trying to grift someone else's hard work and leverage them.
Builders build.. sellers sell.
Learn to deliver and ship consistently or someone will.
A business cofounder who actually goes out selling and puts in the same effort and time the tech people do is worth a lot. Unfortunately not many business guys are like that. It seems that they get taught in business school that they are the leaders and the tech stuff is just secondary.
Living in NYC, I have been around a TON of venture backed startups with the classic non technical CEO, technical CTO. Some HUGE percentage of startups see the CTO fired once the tech stack and revenue are stabilized.
The incentive from the CEOs perspective to remove a contender as well as claw back the equity is huge. Early stage the CTO is the most critical, but after real traction they can be replaced far easier than most want to admit.
My advice for technical founders is to always place themselves first, from a legal and organizational perspective. For a technical founder with social skills, a non technical founder brings very little value relative to their vesting in the early stage.
> Some HUGE percentage of startups see the CTO fired once the tech stack and revenue are stabilized.
If you know about more to read about that, it'd be interesting
> Early stage the CTO is the most critical, but after real traction they can be replaced far easier than most want to admit.
If the technical founder can be replaced so easily, how does it follow that the non-technical founder is less valuable?
>> If the technical founder can be replaced so easily, how does it follow that the non-technical founder is less valuable?
Because at that point, you can raise VC cash and hire for the job instead. The idea has been vetted. You can theoretically even rebuild the entire codebase from scratch just looking at the existing app. The CTO should maintain equal voting rights for as long as possible
Once the business hits a certain level of revenue, the mvp is finished etc, whoever is the face of the company, I.e. CEO has way more power. CTO if they have shipped a complete product that’s getting paying customers can be replaced with an engineering manager. But not before
Getting the product to some level of completion is a monumental lift
Cofounders are not great anyways of either type. If you are a business person, learn the tech stuff you need. It's easier today than ever. If you are a tech founder, it's even easier to pick up business stuff than tech stuff.
Investors always encourage it because it reduces their risk... One of you can be fired and they still have the backup. But when it is all on you there is no passing the buck.
Source: solo bootstrapped founder of a company earning $1,200,000 a month for the last sixteen years.
> Investors always encourage it because it reduces their risk... One of you can be fired and they still have the backup. But when it is all on you there is no passing the buck.
The reason is reduces their risk isn’t firing 1 cofounder, it’s that “When you want to go fast, go alone, when you go far, go together”. Building a business is tough. Most early stage startups fail because the founders simply burn out and give up. Having a buddy you can lean on helps. It also makes it easier to realize when you’re digging down the wrong hole and need to change strategy.
What's your product? :)
CoalitionTechnologies.com. We do services like web design and SEO. I personally built massive Laravel applications for recruiting and training and for running the business.
Cool, thanks :)
Better to go learn how they did it than the product.
In the B2B case, if the co-founder knows the industry and has connections to potential customers, that is very valuable. A business degree per se is not.
True but lions share requires teeth
A good rule of thumb I picked to from Founders at Work is that the idea person gets a 5% bump on equity, but no more than that.
how timely. a few days ago I had a meeting with two non-technical founders wanting to make some cloud based finance software.
The double whammy, is that with the powers of ChatGPT on their side, they honestly thought they figured out the big architecture problems and were very unhappy at me pushing back at their design decisions. They wanted me to validate their ideas, not ask what the core user scenarios were (to figure out what tech was needed for an MVP)
Really, the business side is responsible for sales, investment, and maybe product.
But if the business side can't sell or raise money then they're worth;ess
"Idea co-founders" are less valuable than they think.
Unless they are carrying a number (funding, sales, users etc.) they aren't even doing "business"
I'd love to build something from scratch but don't have a lot of ideas, where do you find a business co-founder?
At networking events.
I’d say, what’s most important is to find someone who has opposite strengthens.
If you aren’t strong in marketing or design, it’d be ideal if your cofounder was … etc.
Everyone is less valuable than they think, especially in a tech startup
Very true, unless they're growing as fast as needed, and in advance of need.
If you have a shred of your own morals you’re less likely to have to compromise on those with an MBA who’s guaranteed not to have any.
Absolutely agree with this article! My startup days are more than a decade ago but even then it was already well known - hence why tech founders with a bit of experience stay far away from these people.
The best part of the article: > [...] you should demonstrate it in one of two ways that are relevant to your venture:
> Generate a big waitlist (> 1,000) for B2C play > Get > 20 businesses to sign an LOI for B2B play
Ideas are cheap.
This is the business MVP worth spending 50% equity on and worth investing your time to build the tech prototype.
My best tip to handle business guys pestering you with ideas is to say "Great idea, bring me some clients and I will build the solution, then we can revenue share".
I usually never hear from them after this.
The most numerous kind of people there, are nontechnical people who think they are technical, and nonbusiness people thinking they are business. Sometimes both at same time. Clowns. When you do custom development, these make up the majority of clients and they are the best clients to work for.
See also https://www.breakneck.dev/blog/no-tech-cofounder and related HN discussion https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39902372
Sweeping statements in HN posts are less valuable than they think.
A non-tech co-founder can bring value in two ways; their social networks and deep market domain knowledge.
Finding a good niche and refining a concept to find market fit isn't easy. As a tech guy, it's often not clear where the business value is.
I recently implemented a feature for which I didn't see the full value initially. Once it was done, my co-founder said something like "This feature will make our target audience's eyes pop out of their heads." I can actually see it now but it wasn't clear to me before, yet it was always crystal clear to him as he himself fits within the target market.
Anyway we'll see where this goes, there are a lot of factors at play but in any case, it's nice to have that degree of certainty that yes, we're addressing a genuine need.
If your co-founder isn't within the target market then you're basically just guessing what users want and that's a bad approach.
Sometimes it's more complicated than that though, and that's when you need social networks. For exampls, I've built solutions in pure tech (dev tools) but it's very different. Dev tools is a weird market because it's heavily monopolized by big tech and the target audience (developers) have little say over what tools they get to use on the job. So the fact that I'm in the target market doesn't actually add much value there. Even if the target audience loves something, it doesn't necessarily translate to sales. You have to have experience with developer tools from both a corporate and non-corporate perspective to understand that.
It feels like the business layer has always successfully commodified the developer layer, but developers don't seem to have any desire to commodify the business layer. It seems like the developer layer naturally wants to eliminate the business layer entirely. It is basically extinction if you let developers sit on the other side of the coin, so I suspect anyone on the business side of things will have to be a cut-throat survivalist (there's no other way).
Being on the business side, you can just retain your equity and pay to build a prototype, instead of trying to get people to work for free.
And even less than that
Great blogpost with some nice insights.
Though I had to roll my eyes at the “inventing AGI” part.
Also it’s Steve Glass not Steve Grass and when a word ends in an s sound you don’t have to add another s after the ‘ when making it possessive. So it would be “Steve Glass’ idea” instead of “Steve Glass’s idea”
Very pro-labor/anti-capitalist take. Not that it's wrong!
> In reality, it should flipped! The technical person is the one who breathes life into an idea and should get the lion’s share.... The riches are in the execution. The work done.
Labor is what makes capital useful. Otherwise it's just a pile of money sitting there.
You're thinking of VC vs startup, not business skills cofounder vs tech skills cofounder.
To be sure, I'm applying one dynamic's description to another dynamic.
besides speaking good english, what else do non-technical folks bring? maybe a good family name? /s
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