Ask HN: What are my chances of getting accepted to YC?
I'm a designer working in the entertainment industry, but I've always been an entrepreneur at heart since I was a kid. Like most entrepreneurs, I'm really good at what I do, but I've always felt confined working for someone else on someone else's projects.
A couple years ago. I stumbled across an idea that I just couldn't resist passing on. With very little knowledge in hacking, I knew I couldn't do it myself and had to hire some help. Long story short, I took a good 2 months studying the structure and the knowledge I need to communicate with hackers and designers. After that, I went on to an outsourcing site and hired a phenomenal team to build my product together. It was a great experience, learning all aspects of the trade from doing the actual design to managing a small team of developers remotely. After months of development, we're almost ready to push the product out to closed beta, and I'm very excited with the work that I've done so far.
So I guess my question is, does YC accept founders with no programming / business background? What if I have a working prototype and a good profit model to prove that I can put a project together from start to finish?
I know eventually I will have to find a technical co-founder or hire a local hacker but that's really out of the question until i can secure more funding.
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[ 5.1 ms ] story [ 33.2 ms ] threadGet a technical co-founder lined up, this increases your odds of acceptance (and overall success) significantly.
Moral of the story? It's really hard to predict which startups will be accepted. You might as well apply; from what you've said there's certainly nothing which definitively rules you out.
I guess this could be analogous to applying for college. Everyone wants to know what their chances of getting in are, etc. The best thing to do is just apply and let things fall into place.
You never know, getting into Y Combinator could be the best thing that ever happened to you, but on the other hand, not getting in could lead you on a path that turns you into a billionaire. You never know.
I'm applying for this next round as well.
Clustrix, Heroku, Cloudant, RethinkDB, dotcloud...
Why do you think it's out of the question?
It sounds like you're making the assumption that a technical co-founder requires capital. In most cases, founders split equity and money doesn't enter the equation until you're funded. Have you attended local meetups (some communities have "co-founders wanted" gatherings) or gone to networking events to search for a founder?
Also take a look at this similar question that was asked on Quora: http://www.quora.com/How-important-is-it-to-have-a-technical...