Chapters (Powered by ChapterMe) - 00:00 - Coming Up 00:17 - Bootstrap or VC? 00:31 - Lopsided Issue 00:51 - Most Businesses Should Not Raise Venture Capital. 01:19 - Lot Of Shark Tank Stuff Are Not Venture Capital Back-able. 01:49 - You Don't Have to Raise Venture Capital. 03:31 - Whole Argument is Fake News. 04:04 - A Bad Plan: Most People Who Are Rich Did Not Raise Venture Capital. 04:26 - Many Paths. 05:14 - About Trillion Dollar Software Companies. 06:25 - You Have Won Even If You Are Bootstrapped. 07:46 - Who Is Stirring The Pot? 08:37 - Why Seek VC? Why Should You Apply To YC? 10:06 - It's A Business Transaction And Not Personal 11:00 - Stoke Outrage: What About ____ ? 12:36 - Play A Simple Game 13:40 - Outro
@AnthonySistilli10 ай бұрын
You know it's gunna be a good day when you get that notification that a new Dalton + Michael drops
@friedpizza26210 ай бұрын
fr
@uzorthelma988110 ай бұрын
These guys are so good. I love them.
@carlatashkadeh589010 ай бұрын
It’s been too long without our drug
@rrrotic10 ай бұрын
@AnthonySistilli Stop listening to podcasts, do your thing finally
@Haliotro9 ай бұрын
Strange because I found them obnoxious
@TheJordanLeopold10 ай бұрын
Great perspective! I would also add a hybrid approach - bootstrap, find product market fit, then ask for VC money to scale. Most VCs want some form of traction to begin with. So if you caaaan, start your business, achieve clear success, have a vision for mass scale, and then pursue VC dollars. But if your company isn’t a potential unicorn that can return 100x return to your investors, then stick with the small software approach Michael and Dalton mentioned. The money is still good!
@DrewLytle10 ай бұрын
Liked the measured approach, but took issue with a couple points. The first one being that there is *definitely* a moral debate around whether to go VC backed. There are many perverse incentives that exist for VC backed companies and founders that just don't occur if you bootstrap. Second, the idea that "there are many paths" and "no one is pressuring you to start a VC backed company" is just not true. For many would-be tech entrepreneurs, the media landscape promotes and glorifies raising venture capital far more than it does bootstrapping or engaging with alternative models like starting a cooperative.
@peterboyd347010 ай бұрын
True but remember that VC's are businesses that want to expand and attract talent. They are mostly funding the narrative via expensive press releases in order to market themselves.
@dklskateboarding10 ай бұрын
I agree. If you bootstrap, you do need an extra type of grit because you're not perceived as successful until you're actually successful. Whereas being VC backed, there's an immediate validation and perception of success. This isn't an internal struggle, but unfortunately something you feel from your peers and non-peers. I'd also add that there are certain disruptive companies that are more readily bootstrapped because they create a new market VS disrupting an existing market. If you disrupt an existing market, somebody with a lot of money to lose will be fighting you with a packed deck. You can definitely win, but the amount of mistakes you can make is limited. VC backed you can make a lot of mistakes.
@dmiradakis10 ай бұрын
Can confirm, 1.5+ years into a micro SaaS with a day job, solo, no co founders or team, no money. Grit is great word for it. It’s freaking hard.
@GabrielSestrem10 ай бұрын
Try to use your own money. I sold my house and put into the company. That skin in the game made me work long nights for two years. This will give you leverage. Secondly, being anonymous and not being noticed it’s good. There won’t be many people copying your product nor competitors attacking your infrastructure. Try not to be noticed as long as you can.
@-blackcat-474910 ай бұрын
Other expected experience. 📁 A day like any other
@GabrielSestrem10 ай бұрын
@@-blackcat-4749 We did not grew like a VC backed company, but we are currently with 700 paying customers and USD 70k in MRR. We grew 8x in 2023.
@TheEsotericProgrammer10 ай бұрын
I don't have any money
@reprovedcandy10 ай бұрын
What? My current startup is tiny and has been quiet as can be and we've been ripped off 3 times that I'm aware of, one of which was by a YC backed company who pivoted and changed their entire product direction to compete directly against us. We've barely been around 5 months. Note: I always have to explain this after an ignorant comment saying "BuT How Do YoU KnoW TheY CoPiEd YoU?" ... Because we're a browser extension with a custom oauth system that runs on install and uses their session tokens for the platforms we're built to sit on top of to automatically create an account for them with our app. This means we have the emails of everyone who installs our extension including the founders who went on to rip us off.
@jonassteinberg37796 ай бұрын
@reprovedcandy what advice do you have for not being ripped off? My idea is pretty good, but can also be ripped off. I am an engineering domain expert in my startup's market.
@amorosogombe965010 ай бұрын
I love these talks. Clear up so many cobwebs. I think another thing is the "VC" validation syndrome. "If I make it into YC, I'm a success".
@calvinaranha600210 ай бұрын
The probability is better.
@SenthilPremraj10 ай бұрын
VC money is the closest to a forgivable loan for early stage startups. If founders had access to other forms of forgivable loans for taking risk then VC will just be some niche field. There is also discontent that certain "elites" get access to other ppl money and pick winners and losers and get the upside but don't face downside risk. It creates a sense of haves and have nots.
@bblatnick110 ай бұрын
5:35 Not true. Microsoft did not need VC money. Gates famously is quoted as saying he only took a VC check to get a VC on the board. The money wasn’t needed and just sat in a bank account.
@dhootparm10 ай бұрын
I have a hardware /software startup, I wish there was a middle ground like a VC lite that invested in companies that have a higher chance of success but promise only a 10x to 100x chance of return. Anyone know anything like that?
@chan90s10 ай бұрын
Private equity? And series A funds ?
@nic.frasca10 ай бұрын
I think a big point missed or understated was owner’s freedom. If you get an investor based on an ambitious business plan you got yourself a boss. In my case I would avoid it as much as possible, otherwise being a founder would be too similar to being an employee
@hustlin_heev10 ай бұрын
The real issue is being VC backed is seen as "success", so founders spend all their time pitching VC's and trying to raise, instead of talking to customers and building their start up. All the pro-bootstrapper guys couldnt handle the grind of pitching 100 VCs and getting rejected 99x so they hate on it saying "bootstrap or bust, VC sucks" 🤣
@Mark-fo6ij10 ай бұрын
Out of curiosity, where do angel investors fall in this?
@firasali333410 ай бұрын
Angel investors are not all the same, they come with different intentions depending on how deep their pockets are & what type of businesses they want to involve themselves in. Some focus on VC backable companies at the very early stages with high potential, others support shark tank level companies or even small businesses. Know your investor and the businesses they’re interested in to assess whether they are a great fit. Also I found angel investors to be much nicer to work with than most VCs.
@momofomomofo10 ай бұрын
"No other mechanism exists" we used to have public markets fund early-stage companies. Maybe if VCs hadn't privatized the funding market while they actively kill companies that aren't immediately 100-baggers (the misery isn't equal btw - founders bear by far the brunt of it), this topic wouldn't be so controversial.
@floor-seats10 ай бұрын
& there’s the “VC x 100” blah blah vs. bootstrap. There’s barely anything in between…
@Eltonlin199810 ай бұрын
What’s the history behind public market funds? Does it actually work reliably for founders to acquire capital?
@kangaroomax819810 ай бұрын
This is just plain false. VCs didn't 'privatize' the funding market - businesses went to wealthy venture capitalists because they couldn't get funding from public markets not the other way around. VCs don't actively kill companies, the companies just don't receive any additional funding.
@gimmick20610 ай бұрын
VC make it more efficient. Business that doesnt show growth at early stage doesnt deserve continuous funding. You might say, oh they have potential, they might not now, but in the future it will be when it take off. But, no one can predict that and no one buy into "potential". Growth is easier to measure. even more so in capital market, even a quarter of bad performance can drain your funding.
@Joshbelieveit9 ай бұрын
Having been involved in the Portland start up ecosystem, I think it's very location dependant on the debate or not. Certain markets have different VC companies and different experiences than others. I would also say many boot strapped founders are very proud of not having outside support. This is a great talk breaking some of the outside noise that happens. ❤❤❤
@mikerossvisuals10 ай бұрын
shoutout to Michael Seibel! We've missed your unique laugh, homie!
@david-n8b10 ай бұрын
Amen to that
@KaFeCocoa10 ай бұрын
10:55 How on earth did WeWork get funded? It was nothing but a real estate rental biz, masquerading as a tech company. Thumbs up - If you want to hear Dalton and Michael's breakdown on a future video.
@michaelkariv8 ай бұрын
My definition of a great podcast is when hosts laugh more than they talk, and 100000 people still want to watch it
@beasttech369410 ай бұрын
i was Very Confused about this Thank you so much for Clearing My Doubts, these two guys helping me build my Startup Thank you YC ❤
@rahulnath965510 ай бұрын
as a bootstrapped founder, you should definitely raise capital
@keithmedia10 ай бұрын
7:51 is that DHH?
@bbsara014619 күн бұрын
Only criticism I have of this take is that YC invests in primarily B2B and B2C SAAS companies that require very little capital. you are not investing in nuclear power plants that costs billions to construct. so you are essentially selecting a very narrow band of potential companies that fit the tech startup mold
@ReflectionOcean10 ай бұрын
Understand that the vast majority of businesses should not raise venture capital and that venture capital is not interested in investing in the vast majority of businesses. 0:54 Recognize that most businesses started each year are not venture-funded, making VC-funded businesses a rarity. 2:18 Acknowledge that venture capital is designed for investments that can potentially return 100 to 1000 times more, and putting 'jet fuel' into something that cannot grow significantly is detrimental for everyone involved. 2:50 Realize that becoming rich or successful does not necessarily require raising venture capital, as many wealthy individuals have achieved their status through various means other than VC. 4:29 Know that if your startup does not need venture capital upfront, you should not pursue it just for the sake of it; venture capital should be sought if there is a clear need for significant investment to achieve business goals. 8:57 Remember that raising venture capital involves a business transaction where you must convince investors of a potential significant return on their investment. 10:11 Avoid falling for engagement bait online that tries to incite outrage by comparing your startup to seemingly unworthy ventures that received funding; stay focused on your business fundamentals. 11:35
@_chris_gonzales6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the insight on both sides! Notifications on!
@damienrhughes10 ай бұрын
I get so much from their chats. They should most definitely do a Netflix series!
@bhavikpatel5765 ай бұрын
Well not sure if all of that is true. Was Epic bootstrapped? Don’t think that could happen today but that’s some of the most successful software companies in America
@gabo184199710 ай бұрын
It sounds like it all comes down to the unit economics and scale your Startup can provide long-term (assuming the product is good and in demand).
@jonjeskie523410 ай бұрын
Scalability > everything. Many companies get Venture backed even with flawed unit economics. But unit economics matter a lot for bootstrapping.
@RemotHuman10 ай бұрын
How much of the advice on this channel also applies to non VC-backed startups?
@ycombinator10 ай бұрын
Launch early, talk to your customers, and build something people want applies to all startups
@Nnqe-v4o10 ай бұрын
For the context, Twitch isn't a profitable company. So the guy on the right did the exact opposite of what he suggests. Be wary of what people claim; it's often not that simple.
@ekoolguy10 ай бұрын
But twitch brings in a consistent user base with strong engagement and both current and potential advertisement dollars. It also builds network effects for Amazon. It’s not just about profit if other parts of the business can produce incremental value for the acquirer.
@jorgemonasterio83619 ай бұрын
Twitch not profitable, but someone paid $40b for it, so valuable
@jonassteinberg37796 ай бұрын
Being the CEO of Twitch is nothing to casually dismiss.
@halnineooo1369 ай бұрын
YC is like an HR outsource for VCs. Take all with a grain of salt
@taylor-johnston72 ай бұрын
What do you see as the main advantages of bootstrapping a startup compared to seeking venture capital?
@andy_ppp10 ай бұрын
"I'm not going to name any names..." okay I will, it's 37signals 😂 I thought this was an excellent discussion by the way.
@titusandronicus84326 ай бұрын
Small nitpick on the the fact that all trillion dollar companies are VC funded: Microsoft did receive 1 mio from TVI, their only investor , but never touched a cent of it. Realistically they werent "funded" by anyone, it was just part of the deal to get TVI on board
@mlntdtechbae10 ай бұрын
I thoroughly enjoy this series!
@Septumsempra881810 ай бұрын
In 🇿🇦 Private Equity has consumed all the capital and atrophied VC. Bootstrap or die.
@ajaykumaryadav108310 ай бұрын
bro speaking facts ! Thanks Dalton & Michael
@levelupai10 ай бұрын
Thank you for yet another informative discussion! 🤔Hmm -- social network for dogs?
@apprehensivetoe98115 ай бұрын
😊 these guys have too much fun together
@EC-dc1rp10 ай бұрын
Another great video, thank you guys!
@david-n8b10 ай бұрын
Always delivers great content. I love em so much
@uzorthelma988110 ай бұрын
Me too!
@arvindeashwar5765Ай бұрын
Microsoft was as good as bootstrapped. They raised a small round just to get Dave Marquardt on the board. However, they never used that money. (Source: Acquired Podcast on Microsoft).
@TheMobile1x10 ай бұрын
Thank you for the advice @YC
@JasonBauder-ki9ji10 ай бұрын
If I would have wasted all my time pitching an idea, I would have nothing. I bootstraped my video Chat marketplace with profits from my plumbing company.
@Bikameral10 ай бұрын
Such a great duo !!!
@AdamGordon110 ай бұрын
These captions are wild. Some of them read the absolute opposite of the point being made!
@michaeltucker76086 ай бұрын
Guess I won't be making a social network for dogs...
@sdemockinterview3228 ай бұрын
Michael I have two questions for you. Please make a video on this. 1. English is not everyone's first language, if the Founder and CEO is not fluent in English, will that be an issue to raise funds? Given the fact that you guys only allow 10-15 mins interview, what if the founder's idea is good and his execution capability is also good, but he can't express everything during the meeting? 2. Whats your view when a startup wants to serve both B2B and B2C? For example, lets say someone wants build project management tool and lets name this company XYZ. Now, business like this could have market on both B2B and B2C side. Individual can join in XYZ and use it for their own personal project. Same way, big corporation could signup in XYZ and use it for their day to day work. For a startup like this what should they highlight most?
@tinytroll161Ай бұрын
Lmao “they live all around the world, I live in the world” 😂😂
@mohamadmusa397810 ай бұрын
Michael and dalton videos are so amazing and make sense
@jaa92810 ай бұрын
Thank you for another insightful conversation. The discussion touched on the concept that VCs are looking for a return of some particular multiple on their investment. Have you considered a video or discussion about finding that "sweet spot" where founders and VCs find the most mutual benefit?
@AstroRockit10 ай бұрын
Some of the best content on KZbin
@One_Ashrujeet_Only10 ай бұрын
Very Informative
@Therealbrez8 ай бұрын
I think Micheal might be on to something when he says social network for dogs
@camerondean35568 ай бұрын
Gradually raises voice: "But WHY won't they fund my social network for DOGS?!? 😡💨💨"
@jackwang788510 ай бұрын
Bitcoin is $1T "startup". No VC fund raised. Ethereum was $570B "startup". No VC fund raised.
@cryptonative10 ай бұрын
Ethereum was funded by its founders for ~1m and they also ICO for ~20m.
@JasonLee-fc2ot6 ай бұрын
Loved the Freudian slip at 8:40. Why should I apply for YC, when he meant why should I apply for VC
@peterthedecent10 ай бұрын
tfw you went on shark tank and then raised money and then learned this lesson the hard way
@lucaslopatin10 ай бұрын
Microsoft is a trillion dollar company that was basically bootstrapped. Only raised $1mm in 1981 ($3.16 in today's money), 5 years after founding, without needing the money ONLY to get access to an advisor.
@el007-i1k10 ай бұрын
Thank you for advices😊
@chessmaster200010 ай бұрын
I love how this video fails to cover the pros and cons of VC - and conveniently hides the fact that VC can easily steal the soul of your company from you 🐉
@bericadori10 ай бұрын
I like the VW...
@VideosOfSumit10 ай бұрын
I’ll make this short: you should bootstrap. The vast majority of you, should bootstrap. Period.
@samedaycyborg10 ай бұрын
Was that a DHH reference? I am sure there are others, but he seems **really good** at getting people agitated (see typescript)
@razabadass2 ай бұрын
Thanks :)
@redeniousmusic755110 ай бұрын
>social network for dogs hey guys I have a good idea for a business
@fayazmaihandost10 ай бұрын
I got great ideas love to apply for YC can someone help me to do it. I mean someone that did it.
@brandont.397810 ай бұрын
These guys are doing the classic take away. " you don't need VC funding. In fact I don't recommend it!" Lol 😂
@kyleschutter10 ай бұрын
Microsoft was essentially bootstrapped. So there's one $1T biz that was bootstrapped.
@avinash462510 ай бұрын
"Hi Y Combinator, I really enjoy your videos and appreciate the effort you put into your content. I wanted to suggest considering the addition of multiple audio tracks in your videos. This could provide viewers with more flexibility in choosing their preferred audio options, enhancing the overall viewing experience. I've noticed other creators implementing this successfully, and I believe it could be a valuable addition to your already fantastic content. Keep up the great work!"
@louis319510 ай бұрын
Am I too young, old, or stupid that I don't know what is shark tank?
@jdray8 ай бұрын
What are the lower bounds of what's considered "Venture Capital"? I'm trying to bootstrap a SaaS company. I don't have the cash in the bank to make it successful, but don't think it takes much to get there. We're approaching having a demonstrable (not quite launchable) product. Once we have it in "show me" state, I plan to start hunting for $100-200K, the amount of money I think it's going to take to get us to first-paying-customer usability. But based on what I read and see on KZbin, it sounds like the term "Venture Capital" is more in the megabucks realm, and what I'm searching for might be perceived as "too small to bother with". Is that the case?
@MonkeyDo-bg7of10 ай бұрын
These guys are so full of themselves and patronising.
@AM-sd3rh10 ай бұрын
Even if the number is 1% , it is quite impressive, as it means that if we divide all businesses in a group of 100 , we can bet on the chance of getting one vc backed startup from each group.
@StrandedKnight8410 ай бұрын
I could watch these guys talk about anything. Such a cool vibe to this series. That they talk about startups is just a bonus.
@rishavsarkar772910 ай бұрын
Love them❤
@ibrand2310 ай бұрын
Does Bootstraping = Operating Default Alive?
@Septumsempra881810 ай бұрын
No. At least not in my case.
@exerscreen252510 ай бұрын
It means you get to decide what “alive” means. 😅
@yamilletrivas804110 ай бұрын
Someone please fund the social network for dogs!!! Ha! Please!!!!
@cryptoph1l_MT10 ай бұрын
Who are those guys? They’re awesome!!
@bluesque96876 ай бұрын
The awkward laughing twin heads are at it again! Thanks!
@harrys39210 ай бұрын
I'd fund your social network for dogs Dalton, the big VC's just don't get it smh
@peterwolftips9 ай бұрын
Luckily I've started thinking about VC business ideas before KZbin even existed, so at least the "had been convinced by youtubers" weight is off my shoulders 😅
@george_davituri10 ай бұрын
it was funny great speech, describing all insight
@andytoh-toh648810 ай бұрын
Hello from Singapore.
@notforengineers92854 ай бұрын
hard to watch guys, you keep giggling nonstop, its like you have tourette
@andreslaley10 ай бұрын
Microsoft was bootstraped
@ycombinator10 ай бұрын
Microsoft raised $1M from TVI back in 1981
@geofreymutabazi88534 ай бұрын
At a valuation of US$19M and annual revenue of US$17M. Seems they were doing well financially even before the round.
@inflectioncommunity10 ай бұрын
Great take! Check us out if you want to hear some more stories from self funded founders :)
@floor-seats10 ай бұрын
Not even a serious conversation. Not helpful.
@StreamAgency10 ай бұрын
Jet fuel for the win!
@purawalker253710 ай бұрын
My app idea will cost 100k to set up, all I wanted was an MVP. Still hustling
@sdemockinterview3228 ай бұрын
Can we talk about this ?
@rkulsari10 ай бұрын
❤
@OmarJazeem10 ай бұрын
♥️
@naromsky10 ай бұрын
Vaportalk
@mostafabauomi8 ай бұрын
hahahaha
@stinger471210 ай бұрын
I'm amazed that people don't get this intuitively.
@marionogueiraramos94889 ай бұрын
this video is so smug, so disingenuous and so bad it hurts my head...