I came across Ninite today and saw that they had 2 employees and was a YC company. It felt quite interesting. They didn't fit the framework of "break things, do stuff" strategy of blitzscaling.
I tried to use "5+ years" as a proxy for survival, but that is a very weak metric as many companies are inactive, had dead domains or the cofounder LinkedIn showing a different story. But the "5+ years" does remove fund raising companies.
Most folks in HN dream of having a solo business with them being the owner-operator. This list provides an interesting database of things that spans from "Boeing for electric planes" to essentially job-boards or newsletters.
I have the same question. Atleast a few companies here should be running on a profitable level, because of low overhead costs and smaller scope. But YC did raise the seed round for them and could have even brought in a few seed/angel investors. My assumption is that, these investors are either pressuring them to raise more funds or look for a way to be acquired. But VCs do operate on shorter timelines. I am pretty confused on what the arrangement is.
I would absolutely love to hear what the conversation is between YC and these founders.
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[ 4.9 ms ] story [ 22.4 ms ] threadI tried to use "5+ years" as a proxy for survival, but that is a very weak metric as many companies are inactive, had dead domains or the cofounder LinkedIn showing a different story. But the "5+ years" does remove fund raising companies.
Most folks in HN dream of having a solo business with them being the owner-operator. This list provides an interesting database of things that spans from "Boeing for electric planes" to essentially job-boards or newsletters.
I would absolutely love to hear what the conversation is between YC and these founders.