Ask HN: "Y Combinator for people?"
In the last week I've been thinking about an idea that I'd like to share with you.
In one sentence: It's a fund which gives high-interest loans of about $100,000 to entrepreneurs.
Here's a rough sketch of how it will happen: (all numbers listed here are just suggestions and will probably vary)
The fund chooses people who will receive the loan, in a process similar to how YC chooses hackers. The goal is to choose people whose chances of becoming millionaires are as high as possible. Those people are then given the loan. The loan consists of $10,000 paid immediately, and $2,000 paid every month for five years. All money will be lent at an interest of 20% per year. The entrepreneur may pay off any portion of the loan at any time he wishes; Additionally, there will be a deadline, say 5 years, by which he will have to pay off the entire loan. Entrepreneurs are not expected to report to the fund about their progress, or to explain what they would do with the money.
Why is it good for the entrepreneurs?
It's a little superfluous to explain, but anyway: The entrepreneurs will not have to work for money. They could spend all their time studying or hacking or working on a start-up without any investment or whatever they want.
Why is it good for the fund and its investors?
The fund will make a return on the investments paid to it. Assuming the selection process is 85% successful, the total interest generated by the fund will be 5% per year. If entrepreneurs will be willing to take the loans at higher interest rates (I would personally agree to 30%,) the fund interest could exceed 10% per year.
(Note about this calculation: it turned out to be a much more complicated one than I thought. If you think I made a mistake and you have the correct result, please examine it very carefully before posting. As for my assumptions, I assumed successful entrepreneurs will pay off the loan after three years, and that unsuccessful ones will take all 5 years, and then only $10,000 will be scraped from the guarantors.)
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The trickiest part, of course, is choosing the entrepreneurs.
The goal is to choose people who have the highest probability of becoming rich in the allotted five years. If that can be done well enough, the fund can succeed. I think it can be done, and in a similar way to how YC selects hackers.
It should also be noted that even an entrepreneur who has failed to get rich by the end of the four year can resort to taking a job at a big company. One year of that will pay off most of the loan, and will allow him to take a separate loan from the bank to cover the rest. This means that a 85% successful selection process doesn't require that 85% will become millionaires: If 60% become millionaires, and 25% get a "good" job at a big company, then this will also work.
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I would say that this idea is sort of "Y Combinator for people", in contrast to the original Y Combinator which is targeted at companies. Actually it seems like a logical step: If the most important ingredient of a start-up is a determined entrepreneur, why not invest directly in the entrepreneur?
So I hope you have some constructive comments about this, and I hope even more that someone reading this will pick up the glove and do it.
42 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 85.3 ms ] thread- Jobs ar never guarateed. I know some excellent people who have struggled to find jobs. If they had to apply to a job after 5 yrs of being an entrpeneur I think they might struggle. "So what have you been up too prior to this?". "Oh, well someone gave me 5,000 a month for 5yrs and now I need to pay it off." Even with spin it doesnt sound too hot :)
- The current economy is shaky. This person has no guarantee for this high interest loan. If things go south there is no guarantee on the money. Yes the return is very good (well, sort of good) but the risk seems crazy high. Expecially as there is no feedback...
When YC funds hackers they choose projects that may or may not succeed - which is a risk. But there is a modicum of protection in the funds. They also take an involvement in the business and provide valuable advice that will help it get off the ground. In your scheme it is something of a fire and forget.
If I had 100,000 to invest/spend somewhere I would certainly play it on other risks (definitely trading 20% year on year for 10-15%) with more security.
(btw are you calculating interest year on year or per total exp? yoy your stats are ok, but per total your average is actually makign a loss of about 3% (ish)).
EDIT: I just realised you said $2000 a month - not $5000. Last year I was on the same salary (in the UK £1000 a month, which is probably a touch less). I lived at home with my parents and paid them £120 a month rent. Even then I just about managed to have any liquid income (buying foodand contributing to the house bills). Were I living on my own (payinf real rent) I dont think I could afford it :D (would be a push) and certainly not afford the facilities to be an entrepeneur.
Drip funding an individual for that length of time is unlikely to make them successful either - 5000 a month is enough to live on fairly well but if they are still relying on it after the first 2 years then I dont see them succeeding... a lump sum up front (or payments over 2 years) would probably have a better effect.
Giving the individual liquid funds above what is needed to live will probably show greater returns in the end :D
If I had to choose between having debt, and working side jobs like I do now, I would choose the debt. I understand that you would have chosen the side job. I guess the question is, are there enough people who would have chosen the debt?
As for why I would choose the debt: I know at >99% that I could pay it. Therefore it will hardly distress me. Even if my life would turn out to be a total failure I could still get some coding job at a big company, take a separate loan from the bank, and pay it all off in a few years. It would suck, but for a worst case scenario it's not that bad.
If people aren't willing to give you cash for equity, it's probably a bad idea for a company and you should switch projects. (It's unlikely that you're the one in 100,000 entrepreneur who has a brilliant idea others just can't see the brilliance of.) Otherwise I don't think there's much of a good argument for turning down equity financing for a high-risk venture.
It just makes a lot of sense economically: your biggest asset as a poor entrepreneur is your time and effort, and you need some capital to make your project happen. Investors have a lot of capital, but only a finite amount of time/effort to do things with it. So it's a fair trade: you put in time/effort, and the investor puts in money. If you just finance everything with debt, you end up having to incur both downsides of losing time and money -- and the downside of losing $100k in capital is a lot worse for you than for the rich investor. If the project fails, you'll have to spend time/effort to repay the $100k instead of just moving on to the next project.
I agree that if the entrepreneur actually starts a start-up proper, he would do best by financing it using equity. But most entrepreneurish activity is not a start-up proper - Just little things you try and that sometimes evolve into big projects. It's hard to sell equity out of those.
That's the problem I see with this idea: as soon as you start taking debt instead of equity, your competition changes. And there're lots of people already willing to give you money at 20% interest, even if your qualifications aren't stellar. Besides credit cards, you could just go to Prosper.com.
BTW, I'd be far, far more worried about taking on $100k of debt than you seem to be. Companies fail for all sorts of reasons, and while I won't exactly say that they're beyond the control of founders (mine failed do to my own stupidity), they are often beyond the ability of founders to predict when they begin their venture. And while I was lucky enough to get a job at Google afterwards, it's important to point out that the first few firms to offer me jobs weren't all that great, and it was only because I had cash in the bank that I could afford to wait them out until BigCo Coding Job came through.
This idea comes up from time to time and someday might catch on. Here's some recent discussion:
http://www.american.com/archive/2008/june-06-08/popping-the-...
http://blog.gocollege.com/2008/11/30/paying-for-college-radi...
...and the company mentioned in the second piece...
http://www.lumni.net/
No idea if they're legit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowie_Bonds
There was also a minor league player that was selling shares in himself (although I think he did so in blatant violation of the '33 Act).
The _only_ way this idea meets my standards is if the loan is invested in a corporate entity which enables the recipient to fail and walk away from the debt (and assets, of course).
Let me state this as clearly as possible for anyone that thinks this is a good idea: "excessive usury" is pure evil. Being able to walk away from failure and start again is the secret sauce that makes the American economy the envy of the world.
Part of my motivation to get an investor was precisely to offload that financial risk to someone else. I'm already putting in at least 2 years of my life, including a lot of blood and sweat. If I fail then the last thing I'd want is to spend another X years getting rid of that debt...
Also I'm truly baffled at your statement of:
even an entrepreneur who has failed to get rich by the end of the four year can resort to taking a job at a big company. One year of that will pay off most of the loan, and will allow him to take a separate loan from the bank to cover the rest.
Excuse me?
After the 4th year I'd owe you roughly $120000. Most of us mere mortals would probably need closer to 7-8 years to pay that back.
It'd be a small sector of people who'd qualify and among those, they'd either be ill equipped to hit a home-run the first time out or other factors would preclude them from succeed the way they'd want to.
I appreciate the sentiment, but I think there are a lot of better ways that you could reach "ordinary people" (aka, folks who don't know what Y Combinator is and would never care) without offering them high interest loans.
The barriers to entry to capital are high and programs that say "forget business plans that no one reads, lemme see what you can create in a short period of time," are the right model, but there are status quo ways to do that and the pitch of "we can create millionaires" isn't going to do much for the ones you're asking to pony up the cash.
I would personally take that loan at 30%, and even more.
For (b): I don't have access to such a thing. I found that without a job I couldn't get a loan bigger than $10,000. I would be very happy if you showed me a program which would give me a big loan, at any interest rate which is below 40%.
Imagine you decide to study some cool new technology. You are making a bet: Learning this technology now might get you a great reward in the future, but you can possibly just be wasting your valuable time. So it's a sort of mini-startup, your study of this technology. But you can't sell equity out of that thing.
If you're looking for ways to support talented people with pie-in-the-sky ideas, that's what the Macarthur Fellowships are for. Those are outright grants, so the people in question can concentrate on what they love and not have to worry about paying back a high-interest loan.
The big problem to solve is reputation - if you can reliably figure out who is trustworthy then you might be onto something.
Also, debt is a lousy choice - investor upside is limited and not proportionate to the amount of the value they bring to the table. Equity will make a much better choice. I don't think it should be hard to draft up a contract that says "I will give up 10% of my earnings over 100k/year up to the maximum of $1m total in exchange for $100k investment". Talk to a lawyer about this. But once again, anyone can simply declare bankputcy and get rid of this contract.
Your problem is about finding a) honest and b) resourceful people to invest into.
But your scheme is flawed in just another way: You invest in the entrepreneur, but you don't profit from his success. You're just granting a credit (% on capital), not making an investment (% on performance).
And there alread _are_ such schemes, where investors can give money to high potentials and profit from their later income. These high potentials have to take a life insurance for the case they die in the meantime...
So, if in one year your hypothetical recruit could pay off the majority of this $100000+ %20/year loan, why wouldn't they just work for one year at big co, save a bunch of money and then quit to do the startup?
Your major flaw is that you assume 85% success. The truth is that for $100,000 loans, most entrepreneurs will spend it and then default on the loan.
Entrepreneurs will invest the money you give them: hire people, hire contractors, build stuff, etc. Once their venture fails, they come back to you and apologize, but the money is gone.
To use your words, your plan is great for the entrepreneurs, and very lousy for the investors.
I can buy MO right now at a dividend yield of 7+% and have equity in the company. Assuming zero change in the dividend payout or stock price over the next 5 years - which I don't think is any more unlikely than your assumed 85% required success rate, the 5%-10%/year (with no equity) from your assumptions doesn't seem quite so attractive.
If you are making the loan to the corporation, then it'd a fine business. You are basically limiting your upside, as opposed to an equity investment, but you will be able to calculate your revenue stream more easily. If the loan is to the corporation, then the founders won't be liable for the money, and you're just another investment vehicle.
If you are making these loans to the founders, then you're just another credit card company. I doubt there will be anyone good competing for your loans. The good people will get the equity, and only a dope would take a $100,000 loan at 20%, for anything. Maybe you can sucker some college kids like the credit card companies do.
Now if you could come up with something that actually modeled what YC does, but for individuals instead of companies, then that might be a good idea. "Here's 20k and a pile of help. Knock yourself out, but we get 6% of anything big that you do".