Do not agree with Paul Graham on finding cofounder
I don't 100% agree with PG, I believe friendship can also be built via start-up. Besides, how, or how many years you know each other doesn't necessarily mean how the chemistry is.
If someone in my team is not aspired by our team goal, he should leave; if someone doesn't put his heart on the project, i will ask him to leave the project no matter how many years we have known each other.
I think a major responsibility of a core founder is to manage the team morale and make sure everybody in the team consistently love the team goal. if there is a point that everybody feels doomed to fail, it's the time to reset the direction and recharge the team. The core founder shall have the passion, persistence and ability to drive the team forward.
Friendship drives entrepreneurship and vice versa.
3 comments
[ 5.5 ms ] story [ 21.7 ms ] threadYou say you will ask [someone] to leave no matter how many years you've known each other, but you're missing the point. The goal is to not let any of your team leave the startup. That's how startups fail.
That's why you need to have built a pre-existing relationship. Sure, there's still a chance your co-founder (who's your friend) just won't mesh with you, but it's much less likely than if you just start working with a complete stranger.
in this extreme case, you have to take eaction to avoid a deterioration within the team even if he is your friend in years.
of course, you guys might still be friends in life, life is not just about start-ups anyway.