Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | jeanaimarre's commentslogin

"You haven't raised a series-a yet". I am curious, can you elaborate on this one?


Probably a nice way of saying "You cannot afford to pay me well" . I am just guessing.


Or simply that one doesn't want to work for a company powered by hopes & dreams while praying for more cash. That early stage stock grant doesn't pay that SF rent.


That was my read too.

"I don't want to work for a place that's still super raw (best case) or a gigantic clusterfuck (worst case)."


Even with a raised round, the units that you are denominating the calculation is months. Months of life before your company dies (you can’t raise debt if you can’t raise equity, simplistically).

Depending on your risk appetite, family factors and time in life, it seems perfectly reasonable to signal a better value alignment. He/she could take a (let’s say gigantic) equity stake in a pre-seed entity and low cash, in which case it’s be an extremely expensive employee with no sensitivity around the round or stage of company.

Also, and sorry for belaboring this, but having a round starts the “clock”; personally that pressure to do X or raise Y or sell/IPO is not a feature but a bug, and for others that common goal orientation and team alignment might be really valued.

Just guessing :)


I’m looking for a startup that has de-risked their product and distribution. Series-A is usually a signal of that.


I don't know much about startups or how they are funded. Can you please elaborate it in simpler terms?


Seed funding: There is little to no revenue. There is no business model. The startup is trying lots of different things to see what sticks. Most of the work is building prototypes and throwing them away.

Series A: Startup is making money and has a repeatable and scalable business model. They may still be in the red with fixed costs, but every dollar spent on marketing returns more than $1 in income. The work is usually turning those hacky prototypes into stable code.


People don't usually want to invest in your wild idea or in the wrong team. If you've had a series A then someone has vetted your idea and your team.


Series A is the first round of investment meaning you've convinced someone other than yourself the product is useful/viable.


Things like protected bike lanes and bike only routes are essential if you want mass adoption. They cost more than paint and require political leadership that is currently lacking.


For a 14" display, I think that a 2k display is a better option.


That's only 1k in double-pixel remdering. Much less smooth.


Why would you get a 2k screen and then render a 1k image on it?


Your feedback would have more value if it was not presented in such a harsh form. fyi.


I love how the creator just rolls with the adverse-like feedback though! Seems like a cool dude!


Thank you for posting this. I read it a few years ago, loved it, and then was never able to retrieve it later on.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: