“A Student’s Guide To Startups”, 2006-10 (; backlinks):
(This essay is derived from a talk at MIT.)…
Till recently graduating seniors had two choices: get a job or go to grad school. I think there will increasingly be a third option: to start your own startup. But how common will that be?
…The problem with starting a startup while you’re still in school is that there’s a built-in escape hatch. If you start a startup in the summer between your junior and senior year, it reads to everyone as a summer job. So if it goes nowhere, big deal; you return to school in the fall with all the other seniors; no one regards you as a failure, because your occupation is student, and you didn’t fail at that. Whereas if you start a startup just one year later, after you graduate, as long as you’re not accepted to grad school in the fall the startup reads to everyone as your occupation. You’re now a startup founder, so you have to do well at that.
…When we first started Y Combinator we encouraged people to start startups while they were still in college. That’s partly because Y Combinator began as a kind of summer program. We’ve kept the program shape—all of us having dinner together once a week turns out to be a good idea—but we’ve decided now that the party line should be to tell people to wait till they graduate.
Does that mean you can’t start a startup in college? Not at all. Sam Altman, the co-founder of Loopt, had just finished his sophomore year when we funded them, and Loopt is probably the most promising of all the startups we’ve funded so far. But Sam Altman is a very unusual guy. Within about 3 minutes of meeting him, I remember thinking “Ah, so this is what Bill Gates must have been like when he was 19.”
If it can work to start a startup during college, why do we tell people not to? For the same reason that the probably apocryphal violinist, whenever he was asked to judge someone’s playing, would always say they didn’t have enough talent to make it as a pro. Succeeding as a musician takes determination as well as talent, so this answer works out to be the right advice for everyone. The ones who are uncertain believe it and give up, and the ones who are sufficiently determined think “screw that, I’ll succeed anyway.”
So our official policy now is only to fund undergrads we can’t talk out of it. And frankly, if you’re not certain, you should wait. It’s not as if all the opportunities to start companies are going to be gone if you don’t do it now. Maybe the window will close on some idea you’re working on, but that won’t be the last idea you’ll have. For every idea that times out, new ones become feasible. Historically the opportunities to start startups have only increased with time.
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