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Hiring
Is Obsolete
by
Paul Graham
(This
essay is derived from a talk at the Berkeley CSUA in May 2005.)
The
three big powers on the Internet now are Yahoo, Google, and
Microsoft. Average age of their founders: 24. So it is pretty
well established now that grad students can start successful
companies. And if grad students can do it, why not undergrads?
Like
everything else in technology, the cost of starting a startup
has decreased dramatically. Now it's so low that it has disappeared
into the noise. The main cost of starting a Web-based startup
is food and rent. Which means it doesn't cost much more to start
a company than to be a total slacker. You can probably start
a startup on ten thousand dollars of seed funding, if you're
prepared to live on ramen.
The
less it costs to start a company, the less you need the permission
of investors to do it. So a lot of people will be able to start
companies now who never could have before.
The
most interesting subset may be those in their early twenties.
I'm not so excited about founders who have everything investors
want except intelligence, or everything except energy. The most
promising group to be liberated by the new, lower threshold
are those who have everything investors want except experience.
Market
Rate
I
once claimed that nerds
were unpopular in secondary school mainly because they had better
things to do than work full-time at being popular. Some said
I was just telling people what they wanted to hear. Well, I'm
now about to do that in a spectacular way: I think undergraduates
are undervalued.
Or
more precisely, I think few realize the huge spread in the value
of 20 year olds. Some, it's true, are not very capable. But
others are more capable than all but a handful of 30 year olds.
Till
now the problem has always been that it's difficult to pick
them out. Every VC in the world, if they could go back in time,
would try to invest in Microsoft. But which would have then?
How many would have understood that this particular 19 year
old was Bill Gates?
It's
hard to judge the young because (a) they change rapidly, (b)
there is great variation between them, and (c) they're individually
inconsistent. That last one is a big problem. When you're young,
you occasionally say and do stupid things even when you're smart.
So if the algorithm is to filter out people who say stupid things,
as many investors and employers unconsciously do, you're going
to get a lot of false positives.
Most
organizations who hire people right out of college are only
aware of the average value of 22 year olds, which is not that
high. And so the idea for most of the twentieth century was
that everyone had to begin as a trainee in some entry-level
job. Organizations realized there was a lot of variation in
the incoming stream, but instead of pursuing this thought they
tended to suppress it, in the belief that it was good for even
the most promising kids to start at the bottom, so they didn't
get swelled heads.
The
most productive young people will always be undervalued by large
organizations, because the young have no performance to measure
yet, and any error in guessing their ability will tend toward
the mean.
What's
an especially productive 22 year old to do? One thing you can
do is go over the heads of organizations, directly to the users.
Any company that hires you is, economically, acting as a proxy
for the customer. The rate at which they value you (though they
may not consciously realize it) is an attempt to guess your
value to the user. But there's a way to appeal their judgement.
If you want, you can opt to be valued directly by users, by
starting your own company.
The
market is a lot more discerning than any employer. And it is
completely non-discriminatory. On the Internet, nobody knows
you're a dog. And more to the point, nobody knows you're 22.
All users care about is whether your site or software gives
them what they want. They don't care if the person behind it
is a high school kid.
If
you're really productive, why not make employers pay market
rate for you? Why go work as an ordinary employee for a big
company, when you could start a startup and make them buy it
to get you?
When
most people hear the word "startup," they think of
the famous ones that have gone public. But most startups that
succeed do it by getting bought. And usually the acquirer doesn't
just want the technology, but the people who created it as well.
Often
big companies buy startups before they're profitable. Obviously
in such cases they're not after revenues. What they want is
the development team and the software they've built so far.
When a startup gets bought for 2 or 3 million six months in,
it's really more of a hiring bonus than an acquisition.
I
think this sort of thing will happen more and more, and that
it will be better for everyone. It's obviously better for the
people who start the startup, because they get a big chunk of
money up front. But I think it will be better for the acquirers
too. The central problem in big companies, and the main reason
they're so much less productive than small companies, is the
difficulty of valuing each person's work. Buying larval startups
solves that problem for them: the acquirer doesn't pay till
the developers have proven themselves. They're protected on
the downside, and they still get most of the upside.
Product
Development
Buying
startups also solves another problem afflicting big companies:
they can't do product development. Big companies are good at
extracting the value from existing products, but bad at creating
new ones.
Why?
It's worth studying this phenomenon in detail, because this
is the raison d'etre of startups.
To
start with, most big companies have some kind of turf to protect,
and this tends to warp their development decisions. For example,
Web-based applications are hot now, but within Microsoft there
must be a lot of ambivalence about them, because the very idea
of web-based
software threatens the desktop. So any Web-based application
that Microsoft ends up with, will probably, like Hotmail, be
something developed outside the company.
Another
reason big companies are bad at developing new products is that
the kind of people who do that tend not to have much power in
big companies (unless they happen to be the CEO). Disruptive
technologies are developed by disruptive people. And they either
don't work for the big company, or have been outmaneuvered by
yes-men and have comparatively little influence.
Big
companies also lose because they usually only build one of each
thing. When you only have one Web browser, you can't do anything
really risky with it. If ten different startups design ten different
Web browsers and you take the best, you'll probably get something
better.
The
more general version of this problem is that there are too many
new ideas for companies to explore them all. There might be
500 startups right now who think they're making something Microsoft
might buy. Even Microsoft probably couldn't manage 500 development
projects in-house.
Big
companies also don't pay people the right way. People developing
a new product at a big company get paid roughly the same whether
it succeeds or fails. People at a startup expect to get rich
if the product succeeds, and get nothing if it fails. [1] So
naturally the people at the startup work a lot harder.
The
mere bigness of big companies is an obstacle. In startups, developers
are often forced to talk directly to users, whether they want
to or not, because there is no one else to do sales and support.
It's painful doing sales, but you learn much more from trying
to sell people something than reading what they said in focus
groups.
And
then of course, big companies are bad at product development
because they're bad at everything. Everything happens slower
in big companies than small ones, and product development is
something that has to happen fast, because you have to go through
a lot of iterations to get something good.
Trend
I
think the trend of big companies buying startups will only accelerate.
One of the biggest remaining obstacles is pride. Most companies,
at least unconsciously, feel they ought to be able to develop
stuff in house, and that buying startups is to some degree an
admission of failure. And so, as people generally do with admissions
of failure, they put it off for as long as possible. That makes
the acquisition very expensive when it finally happens.
What companies should do is go out and discover startups when
they're young, before VCs have puffed them up into something
that costs hundreds of millions to acquire. Much of what VCs
add, the acquirer doesn't need anyway.
Why
don't acquirers try to predict the companies they're going to
have to buy for hundreds of millions, and grab them early for
a tenth or a twentieth of that? Because they can't predict the
winners in advance? If they're only paying a twentieth as much,
they only have to predict a twentieth as well. Surely they can
manage that.
I
think companies that acquire technology will gradually learn
to go after earlier stage startups. They won't necessarily buy
them outright. The solution may be some hybrid of investment
and acquisition: for example, to buy a chunk of the company
and get an option to buy the rest later.
When
companies buy startups, they're effectively fusing recruiting
and product development. And I think that's more efficient than
doing the two separately, because you always get people who
are really committed to what they're working on.
Plus
this method yields teams of developers who already work well
together. Any conflicts between them have been ironed out under
the very hot iron of running a startup. By the time the acquirer
gets them, they're finishing one another's sentences. That's
valuable in software, because so many bugs occur at the boundaries
between different people's code.
Investors
The
increasing cheapness of starting a company doesn't just give
hackers more power relative to employers. It also gives them
more power relative to investors.
The
conventional wisdom among VCs is that hackers shouldn't be allowed
to run their own companies. The founders are supposed to accept
MBAs as their bosses, and themselves take on some title like
Chief Technical Officer. There may be cases where this is a
good idea. But I think founders will increasingly be able to
push back in the matter of control, because they just don't
need the investors' money as much as they used to.
Startups
are a comparatively new phenomenon. Fairchild Semiconductor
is considered the first VC-backed startup, and they were founded
in 1959, less than fifty years ago. Measured on the time scale
of social change, what we have now is pre-beta. So we shouldn't
assume the way startups work now is the way they have to work.
Fairchild
needed a lot of money to get started. They had to build actual
factories. What does the first round of venture funding for
a Web-based startup get spent on today? More money can't get
software written faster; it isn't needed for facilities, because
those can now be quite cheap; all money can really buy you is
sales and marketing. A sales force is worth something, I'll
admit. But marketing is increasingly irrelevant. On the Internet,
anything genuinely good will spread by word of mouth.
Investors'
power comes from money. When startups need less money, investors
have less power over them. So future founders may not have to
accept new CEOs if they don't want them. The VCs will have to
be dragged kicking and screaming down this road, but like many
things people have to be dragged kicking and screaming toward,
it may actually be good for them.
Google
is a sign of the way things are going. As a condition of funding,
their investors insisted they hire someone old and experienced
as CEO. But from what I've heard the founders didn't just give
in and take whoever the VCs wanted. They delayed for an entire
year, and when they did finally take a CEO, they chose a guy
with a PhD in computer science.
It
sounds to me as if the founders are still the most powerful
people in the company, and judging by Google's performance,
their youth and inexperience doesn't seem to have hurt them.
Indeed, I suspect Google has done better than they would have
if the founders had given the VCs what they wanted, when they
wanted it, and let some MBA take over as soon as they got their
first round of funding.
I'm
not claiming the business guys installed by VCs have no value.
Certainly they have. But they don't need to become the founders'
bosses, which is what that title CEO means. I predict that in
the future the executives installed by VCs will be increasingly
be COOs rather than CEOs. The founders will run engineering
directly, and the rest of the company through the COO.
The
Open Cage
With
both employers and investors, the balance of power is slowly
shifting towards the young. And yet they seem the last to realize
it. Only the most ambitious undergrads even consider starting
their own company when they graduate. Most just want to get
a job.
Maybe
this is as it should be. Maybe if the idea of starting a startup
is intimidating, you filter out the uncommitted. But I suspect
the filter is set a little too high. I think there are people
who could, if they tried, start successful startups, and who
instead let themselves be swept into the intake ducts of big
companies.
Have
you ever noticed that when animals are let out of cages, they
don't always realize at first that the door's open? Often they
have to be poked with a stick to get them out. Something similar
happened with blogs. People could have been publishing online
in 1995, and yet blogging has only really taken off in the last
couple years. In 1995 we thought only professional writers were
entitled to publish their ideas, and that anyone else who did
was a crank. Now publishing online is becoming so popular that
everyone wants to do it, even print journalists. But blogging
has not taken off recently because of any technical innovation;
it just took eight years for everyone to realize the cage was
open.
I
think most undergrads don't realize yet that the economic cage
is open. A lot have been told by their parents that the route
to success is to get a good job. This was true when their parents
were in college, but it's less true now. The route to success
is to build something valuable, and you don't have to be working
for an existing company to do that. Indeed, you can often do
it better if you're not.
When
I talk to undergrads, what surprises me most about them is how
conservative they are. Not politically, of course. I mean they
don't seem to want to take risks. This is a mistake, because
the younger you are, the more risk you can take.
Risk
Risk
and reward are always proportionate. For example, stocks are
riskier than bonds, and over time always have greater returns.
So why does anyone invest in bonds? The catch is that phrase
"over time". Stocks will generate greater returns
over thirty years, but they might lose value from year to year.
So what you should invest in depends on how soon you need the
money. If you're young, you should take the riskiest investments
you can find.
All
this talk about investing may seem very theoretical. Most undergrads
probably have more debts than assets. They may feel they have
nothing to invest. But that's not true: they have their time
to invest, and the same rule about risk applies there. Your
early twenties are exactly the time to take insane career risks.
The
reason risk is always proportionate to reward is that market
forces make it so. People will pay extra for stability. So if
you choose stability—by
buying bonds, or by going to work for a big company—it's
going to cost you.
Riskier
career moves pay better on average, because there is less demand
for them. Extreme choices like starting a startup are so frightening
that most people won't even try. So you don't end up having
as much competition as you might expect, considering the prizes
at stake.
The
math is brutal. While perhaps 9 out of 10 startups fail, the
one that succeeds will pay the founders more than 10 times what
they would have made in an ordinary job. [2] That's the sense
in which startups pay better "on average".
Remember
that. If you start a startup, you'll probably fail. Most startups
fail. It's the nature of the business. But it's not necessarily
a mistake to try something that has a 90% chance of failing,
if you can afford the risk. Failing at 40, when you have a family
to support, could be serious. But if you fail at 22, so what?
If you try to start a startup right out of college and it tanks,
you'll end up at 23 broke and a lot smarter. Which, if you think
about it, is roughly what you hope to get from a graduate program.
Even
if your startup does tank, you won't harm your prospects with
employers. To make sure I asked some friends who work for big
companies. I asked managers at Yahoo, Google, Amazon, Cisco
and Microsoft how they'd feel about two candidates, both 24,
with equal ability, one who'd tried to start a startup that
tanked, and another who'd spent the two years since college
working as a developer at a big company. Every one responded
that they'd prefer the guy who'd tried to start his own company.
Zod Nazem, who's in charge of engineering at Yahoo, said, "I
actually put more value on the guy with the failed startup.
And you can quote me!"
So
there you have it. Want to get hired by Yahoo? Start your own
company.
The
Man Is The Customer
If
even big employers think highly of young hackers who start companies,
why don't more do it? Why are undergrads so conservative? I
think it's because they've spent so much time in institutions.
The
first twenty years of everyone's life consists of being piped
from one institution to another. You probably didn't have much
choice about the secondary schools you went to. And after high
school it was probably understood that you were supposed to
go to college. You may have had a few different colleges to
choose between, but they were probably pretty similar. So by
this point you've been riding on a subway line for twenty years,
and the next stop seems to be a job.
Actually
college is where the line ends. Superficially, going to work
for a company may feel like just the next in a series of institutions,
but underneath, everything is different. The end of school is
the fulcrum of your life, the point where you go from net consumer
to net producer.
The
other big change is that now, you're steering. You can go anywhere
you want. So it may be worth standing back and understanding
what's going on, instead of just doing the default thing.
All
through college, and probably long before that, most undergrads
have been thinking about what employers want. But what really
matters is what customers want, because they're the ones who
give employers the money to pay you.
So
instead of thinking about what employers want, you're probably
better off thinking directly about what users want. To the extent
there's any difference between the two, you can even use that
to your advantage if you start a company of your own. For example,
big companies like docile conformists. But this is merely an
artifact of their bigness, not something customers need.
Grad
School
I didn't consciously realize all this when I was graduating
from college—partly
because I went straight to grad school. Grad school can be a
pretty good deal, even if you think of one day starting a startup.
You can start one when you're done, or even pull the ripcord
part way through, like the founders of Yahoo and Google.
Grad
school makes a good launch pad for startups, because you're
collected together with a lot of smart people, and you have
bigger chunks of time to work on your own projects than an undergrad
or corporate employee would. As long as you have a fairly tolerant
advisor, you can take your time developing an idea before turning
it into a company. David Filo and Jerry Yang started the Yahoo
directory in February 1994 and were getting a million hits a
day by the fall, but they didn't actually drop out of grad school
and start a company till March 1995.
You
could also try the startup first, and if it doesn't work, then
go to grad school. When startups tank they usually do it fairly
quickly. Within a year you'll know if you're wasting your time.
If
it fails, that is. If it succeeds, you may have to delay grad
school a little longer. But you'll have a much more enjoyable
life once there than you would on a regular grad student stipend.
Experience
Another
reason people in their early twenties don't start startups is
that they feel they don't have enough experience. Most investors
feel the same.
I
remember hearing a lot of that word "experience" when
I was in college. What do people really mean by it? Obviously
it's not the experience itself that's valuable, but something
it changes in your brain. What's different about your brain
after you have "experience", and can you make that
change happen faster?
I
now have some data on this, and I can tell you what tends to
be missing when people lack experience. I've said that every
startup needs three things: to start with good people, to make
something users want, and not to spend too much money. It's
the middle one you get wrong when you're inexperienced. There
are plenty of undergrads with enough technical skill to write
good software, and undergrads are not especially prone to waste
money. If they get something wrong, it's usually not realizing
they have to make something people want.
This
is not exclusively a failing of the young. It's common for startup
founders of all ages to build things no one wants.
Fortunately,
this flaw should be easy to fix. If undergrads were all bad
programmers, the problem would be a lot harder. It can take
years to learn how to program. But I don't think it takes years
to learn how to make things people want. My hypothesis is that
all you have to do is smack hackers on the side of the head
and tell them: Wake up. Don't sit here making up a priori theories
about what users need. Go find some users and see what they
need.
Most
successful startups not only do something very specific, but
solve a problem people already know they have.
The
big change that "experience" causes in your brain
is learning that you need to solve people's problems. Once you
grasp that, you advance quickly to the next step, which is figuring
out what those problems are. And that takes some effort, because
the way software actually gets used, especially by the people
who pay the most for it, is not at all what you might expect.
For example, the stated purpose of Powerpoint is to present
ideas. Its real role is to overcome people's fear of public
speaking. It allows you to give an impressive-looking talk about
nothing, and it causes the audience to sit in a dark room looking
at slides, instead of a bright one looking at you.
This
kind of thing is out there for anyone to see. The key is to
know to look for it—to
realize that having an idea for a startup is not like having
an idea for a class project. The goal in a startup is not to
write a cool piece of software. It's to make something people
want. And to do that you have to look at users—forget
about hacking, and just look at users. This can be quite a mental
adjustment, because little if any of the software you write
in school even has users.
A
few steps before a Rubik's Cube is solved, it still looks like
a mess. I think there are a lot of undergrads whose brains are
in a similar position: they're only a few steps away from being
able to start successful startups, if they wanted to, but they
don't realize it. They have more than enough technical skill.
They just haven't realized yet that the way to create wealth
is to make what users want, and that employers are just proxies
for users in which risk is pooled.
If
you're young and smart, you don't need either of those. You
don't need someone else to tell you what users want, because
you can figure it out yourself. And you don't want to pool risk,
because the younger you are, the more risk you should take.
A
Public Service Message
I'd
like to conclude with a joint message from me and your parents.
Don't drop out of college to start a startup. There's no rush.
There will be plenty of time to start companies after you graduate.
In fact, it may be just as well to go work for an existing company
for a couple years after you graduate, to learn how companies
work.
And
yet, when I think about it, I can't imagine telling Bill Gates
at 19 that he should wait till he graduated to start a company.
He'd have told me to get lost. And could I have honestly claimed
that he was harming his future—that
he was learning less by working at ground zero of the microcomputer
revolution than he would have if he'd been taking classes back
at Harvard? No, probably not.
And
yes, while it is probably true that you'll learn some valuable
things by going to work for an existing company for a couple
years before starting your own, you'd learn a thing or two running
your own company during that time too.
The
advice about going to work for someone else would get an even
colder reception from the 19 year old Bill Gates. So I'm supposed
to finish college, then go work for another company for two
years, and then I can start my own? I have to wait till I'm
23? That's four years. That's more than twenty percent of my
life so far. Plus in four years it will be way too late to make
money writing a Basic interpreter for the Altair.
And
he'd be right. The Apple II was launched just two years later.
In fact, if Bill had finished college and gone to work for another
company as we're suggesting, he might well have gone to work
for Apple. And while that would probably have been better for
all of us, it wouldn't have been better for him.
So
while I stand by our responsible advice to finish college and
then go work for a while before starting a startup, I have to
admit it's one of those things the old tell the young, but don't
expect them to listen to. We say this sort of thing mainly so
we can claim we warned you. So don't say I didn't warn you.
Notes
[1]
If a company tried to pay employees this way, they'd be called
unfair. And yet when they buy some startups and not others,
no one thinks of calling that unfair.
[2]
The 1/10 success rate for startups is a bit of an urban legend.
It's suspiciously neat. My guess is the odds are slightly worse.
Paul
Graham is an essayist, programmer, and programming language
designer. In 1995 he developed with Robert Morris the first
web-based application, Viaweb, which was acquired
by Yahoo in 1998. In 2002 he described a simple Bayesian spam
filter that inspired most current filters. Paul is the author
of On
Lisp (Prentice Hall, 1993), ANSI
Common Lisp (Prentice Hall, 1995), and Hackers
& Painters (O'Reilly, 2004). He has an AB from Cornell
and a PhD in Computer Science from Harvard, and studied painting
at RISD and the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence.

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