Ask HN: Who is looking for a co-founder?
(I'm reposting this as I guess the initial timing of posting did not give any results. Here is the old post - http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=774508)
Hi HN,
This is similar to "Who is hiring" post. I'm personally actively looking for co-founders, so thought it will be useful to start this discussion, and see if we can meet our next co-founders via HN.
Please submit your details if you're looking for a co-founder. (My details are posted in comment below.)
53 comments
[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 104 ms ] threadI'm currently working on a social shopping startup - Shopialize. Shopialize is a Founder Institute (http://founderinstitute.com) incubated company. Currently I'm the only founder and developer at Shopialize. I'm actively developing the product and hoping to launch beta by October.
I'm seeking a bay-area based talented and passionate backend developer to join me as a Co-Founder to build this innovative and valuable product which will help consumers to discover great products and save money when they buy products.
Responsibilities: As a technical Co-Founder, you'll be primarily responsible for scalable software architecture and backend technology. You need to have experience in data-mining, information retrieval, and search engine technologies. It'll be great if you have experience in semantic web and machine learning as well.
I'm proficient in PHP and MySQL technologies, but if you convince me that we need to use other technologies, then I'm open to listen and change if it makes sense.
Compensation: It will be generous co-founder equity. If you want cash as well, then we can discuss cash+equity model as well. But Shopialize is currently in a pre-financing stage, so cash will be reasonable. To start with, you can start working with me in the part-time with minimum time commitment of 20 hours per week. When the company secures financing, you can expect a salary that will rise over time as revenue grows. It will then require a full-time commitment.
Contact: If you are interested, then please write to me aditya.kothadiya at gmail.com. You can send me your resume, or link of exciting projects you've done. We can meetup locally and then discuss the details in person.
To learn more about me, my recent project was http://tweeght.com and my blog is http://adityakothadiya.com
I don't think I've posted a job posting. I'm still being very broad in description. But I'm looking for a co-founder who is more experienced in backend technologies. I'm not looking for passionate startup person who is great in design, and have no experience in backend. I'm trying to compensate my skills.
About what the company is aiming to do - I can't write all the details openly and with everybody. My approach is to discuss the details with the right set of people - on one and one basis. Once someone shows any interest, then I'll discuss the details with him.
Bottom line: if you are serious about joining a startup pre-funding, where most of the fun and the action is, Silicon Valley is full of such opportunities.
The challenge is to build trust so that the team doesn't break apart after a month. How can you trust a stranger? Friends of friends are a great way to start. Ask people you trust who they trust.
My contact info is in my user info on HN. Find me and we can talk if you don't get any hits on this.
(I'm not looking for a co-founder at the moment, but would be interested to hear about any projects going on in the DC area.)
But we'd really love to find a good graphic artist for icons, layout, etc.
crowdlancing logo design. You can ask for a project and find a good designer that you can keep working with.
The comment there was a bit tongue-in-cheek. It's for some old JS that once upon a time faded in / faded out a "coming soon". Bleah.
my partner just wrote up a neat survey that we're using to quickly understand prospectives. love to get feedback on that, too ;-)
EDIT: cambridge, MA closeness is a strong requirement from now until the end of december.
I'm a python and javascript hacker. I have a couple of ideas, but the one I'd like to persuade is real-time web analytics with understandable, beautiful presentation of data and statistics to the user. However I'm not insisting on this, I'll gladly discuss your ideas.
Interested? Let's talk; contact details are in my profile.
I'm in MA, and not willing to relocate (have a fam/business). Don't need someone local, just someone with passion and the geek cred to make my (and soon our) vision real.
My product is currently in Beta and I should be releasing V1 soon.
You can download a copy of my product here:
http://www.transactor.com
If you are interested, please send mail to:
cofounder@transactor.com
I'm looking for an engineer who can help start work on V2 of the product.
The basic qualifications that I'm looking for are:
1. You have to be willing work with out pay (in return for a big chunk of equity), until we start generating revenue.
2. You have to be ready to make a firm commitment to the business.
3. You have to be a hacker.
4. You have to have at least 7, but preferable 10 years of programming experience. This doesn't mean you have to be 10 years out of school. If you are 23, just graduated from college, but have been programming since you were 13, that would qualify as 10 years of programming experience. This is pretty firm. I need to know that you will be able to work independently, at a high level, from the "get-go". If you can't hit the ground running then it isn't worth the cost of brining you on board.
5. Your experience should have some significance. If your 10 years of experience is really 1 year of experience 10 times over, then it doesn't count. It can be stuff you did on your own, or in school. However, you should have a list of impressive projects that demonstrate you are a top notch programmer. For example, in the course of getting a BS in Computer Science, I was able to accomplish the following projects:
a. I wrote a compiler
b. I converted a Java data flow analysis framework that worked over source, to also work over byte code
c. I wrote an implementation of the genetic algorithm
d. I wrote a library that added method injection (before and after methods) to C#
Plus I worked full time as a programmer while going to school full time.
6. You can't be a snob. If you are the type of person that thinks "all Windows Programmers are idiots", then I don't want you. Transactor makes tools for programmers. Windows programmers are the largest segment of the developer market.
7. You have to be interested in building a business, not in career advancement. You aren't going to get promoted. If we succeed, you may get wealthy. That has to be enough. If you want to build a business, so that when it grows you career will advance, and you can fulfill your life long dream of being a middle manager, I don't want you. Transactor eschews "career thinking".
8. I don't care where you work from. However, you have to be willing to fly out to Seattle to do an in-person technical interview.
Also: what platform are you developing on? Is this a C# application?
As an unrelated point, what's the startup scene look like in Seattle?
I'm looking to start-up and willing to relocate, but my wife hates San Fran, so unless I can find a SV suburb that's more midwestern (read: strip malls and yards) then I have to look elsewhere.
Seattle has a very healthy startup scene. If you want to you should come into Seattle and checkout Startpad (startpad.org). That's where I have my office at. They lease office space specifically to software startups. There's a good mixture of early stage and later stage companies there. The "biggest" company there is Rescue Time (I think they were funded by YC).
In any case it's in Pioneer Square, which is basically startup central. I'd be happy to show you around (and of course try to convince you to come work with me).
Once a day? Once an hour? You are still vulnerable to any mistakes you make in between checkins. The laws of the universe state that the one time you forget to commit is the one time you will need access to be a backup. Or, you might revert the wrong change.
Also, even if you checked in every 5 minutes, the big question is why? You shouldn't have to.
Source control should be used for what it was meant for: managing change.
Backups should be simple, automatic, and easy. You shouldn't have to work to make sure you stuff is backed. It should just be handled for you.
That's what Code Agent does.
www.transactor.com
Also, take a look at my post about the type of person I'm looking for.
If you are interested, please feel free to shoot me an email and we can setup a time to talk.
-Scott
Anyone in the area looking for a hand, or at the very least someone to talk to about their project?
I'm based out of Seattle, but with the magic of the internet, I don't think that would be a big problem.
Would you be available to talk on Skype sometime?
If you're interested, you can check it out here: http://www.igfactory.com
We have an exciting opportunity to be in front of lots of important people in the very near future, and we're looking to round out our team with someone who possesses the technical chops we lack.
We have lots of plans and we're looking for someone who wants to really dig in with us, get involved, and contribute. Get in touch, let me know if you have any questions. Looking forward to telling you all about it! Thanks! gb5150 [at] gmail [dot] com