Looking for a Technical Co-Founder
Here is a little about me: -I have graduated from one of the top undergraduate business school in the US.
-I am willing to work my ass including weeknights, weekends, or whatever it takes. I am willing to work 24/7 on this and give up everything else in my life to work on this.
-I am really good at people's skills, presenting, networking, and business development. I am also an extrovert and pretty easy to get along with.
-I am well read. I love reading and have read books in many different fields including: management, psychology, philosophy, start-ups, and etc. I have also read the Lean Startup.
-I am currently learning Ruby on Rails and know bit of PHP and Python. I have taken several computer science classes in college and know the foundational of programming. I am learning programming non-stop for now until I can find someone technical to join me. Learning more programming can never hurt.
If you feel like working with someone who is willing to work his ass off and put his 110% on something then please contact me. I am very driven, have a sickening work ethic, and have hunger to build something that one day millions of people will use.
Please feel free to reach out to me at: matt.gerboth at gmail dot com (there is a dot betweem matt and gerboth)
Thanks and look forward to hearing from you.
14 comments
[ 168 ms ] story [ 1315 ms ] threadI am not a technical person, but I am exactly at the same place you are right now;- looking for a tech co-founder.
I just wanted to say that this is a very well written post (just my opinion, I am a newbie too). I would use this as a template when I am looking for a technical co-founder.
Good luck!
I liked the post as well, I might even consider being his technical co-founder, but I'm too busy building my own startup ;-)
Just curious if this idea has been validated yet. Three months is quite a lot of time to spend on research - I'm curious if you have validated that people would use it.
I'd be interested in hearing about the research. The question I have is, why did you compile so much information? You mentioned 130 pages... that just seems like a lot for someone familiar with "Lean Startup" methodology.
Also, what is the idea? I don't need all the details, but I hope you can disclose the basic premise.
Also, in your research have you spoken directly to potential customers/users?
I'm a technical founder seeking co-founders as well.
You show a lot of drive and dedication. Best of luck!
If you are interested then please email me and I will share with you the documents that lay everything out.
Are you looking for technical co-founders. I am also open to joining someone else whose idea I believe in. Email me and we can talk more.
Three months of paperwork is great, but if the answer to the above two questions is no, said paperwork is sorta useless.
I believe my idea does solve a problem but the only true way to test my assumption is to build out something simple to see if people need something like this. I would be truly willing to pay for something that I want to build.
1. The dot isn't required, your email will still work without it
2. I'd imagine people would be more appreciative if you actually pitched your idea. I know you responded below but more details in the original post is better. As well as more info about you i.e. what is the mystery school, what your background is before this, did anything else, where are you even located, etc...
3. I saw your response to another commentator and I don't agree that you need to build something to see if people will use it. Part of doing business is to go out, and get committed users who are interested in the idea. 130 pages is obsessive and it sounds like none of which included actual customers committed to the idea and feedback. 130 solid leads would be better than 130 pages at this point.
Yeah I definitely should've said where I was located.
Also I would suggest look in your inner circle ( friends / friends of friends ) which work because you guys need to get together.
Good Luck for your startup !