Ask HN: Any advice for single founders applying for YC Summer '09 round?
I'm currently an undergrad graduating in December of this year, and I decided to apply for the YC summer round. Unfortunately, I'll be applying as a single founder as I've failed to convince my friends to renege on their full-time offers from Microsoft and other companies. They’re not willing to sacrifice the safety of a nice salary in this economy for my untested idea.
Google search results revealed that getting funded as a single founder is nearly impossible. With this in mind, is there any thing that we single founders can do to increase the probability of getting in the YC summer round? The only thing I can think of is having a working demo ready. I’m currently hacking out a demo before March 18 comes around, but I feel like that’s the only thing I can do. Am I just S.O.L.?
For the single founders that have been funded, could you provide us (single founders) with some advice on what you did?
EDIT: For clarification, I've been developing a demo for several weeks now and it's about 30% there, but I'm starting to ramp up and I'm trying and get as much functionality built before the due date.
10 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 37.6 ms ] threadWith that, that's a difficult story to tell if you're starting today--you may have to wait for the next round.
My personal opinion: Start by yourself, produce 2-3 iterations of your product, your friends will follow when they see the idea start to come to fruition. No way someone is going to deny you an opportunity with that much heart, a solid demo, and some early indicators of success. I think you have to gun it alone before you can really prove to them that you're not easily demoralized.
This is coming from someone who used to be a single founder himself, good luck--there's hope =)
People are more likely to feel like they are missing out when you're willing to do it with or without them. You have to sell yourself a bit not just the idea to instill a certain confidence in others.
The goal is value. I guess... build something to build it, get it launched, and try to build value (because you believe you can, not because you think you can convince someone to believe you can). Building something to reach an artificial deadline is probably not the shortest path to creating real value.