Closed chadwhitacre closed 11 years ago
Does @zwn want the job?
+1
Woo! Congrats!
But @zwn didn't found the company with you; you did it alone. He only joined much, much later (AFAIK).
I don't like this "co-founder as a promotion" mentality. In an existing business you can make people "partner", but the founding moment was years ago.
Bit surprised you are willing to go so mainstream on this issue, even forcing reality into a story that is not really true. Honestly I'd just bootstrap Gittip, who cares what Silicon Valley investors think...
I've been reading the threads. It looks like you could use a cofounder and I'd like to take that on with you and @zwn. Logistically, I'm already in California, can easily make the SF meetings, and want to make sure this funding works out.
Let's discuss, I'll give you a call in the morning. On Oct 17, 2013 11:31 AM, "Chad Whitacre" notifications@github.com wrote:
One of the main pieces of feedback I've gotten on Gittip's YC application (
1404 https://github.com/gittip/www.gittip.com/issues/1404) is that
Gittip needs a cofounder. I agree with this. However, finding the right cofounder is hard. I've approached @zwn https://github.com/zwn, because from what we've done together so far I think he's competent and we're a pretty good fit personality-wise. The downside is that he can't work full-time on Gittip for the foreseeable future. However, after talkinghttps://botbot.me/freenode/bountysource/msg/6989726/with @warreng https://github.com/warreng, who applied and was rejected specifically for not having a cofounder, the sense seems to be that a part-time cofounder would be better than none at all.
[IRQ because the YC application deadline is October 21, and today is October 17.]
— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHubhttps://github.com/gittip/www.gittip.com/issues/1603 .
@tshepang: But @zwn didn't found the company with you; you did it alone. @pjc: I don't like this "co-founder as a promotion" mentality.
I hesitated when I titled the ticket, for this very reason. YC uses the "cofounder" term throughout their application and FAQ and in "What Happens at YC".
I don't know what to do about this.
What I'm wrestling with here is that:
It doesn't feel right to me to tack on a cofounder for YC, be it @zwn or @MikeFair or someone else (Mike and I did catch up via phone this morning, btw). If there were a clear slam-dunk choice that'd be one thing, but there isn't. @zwn can't work on Gittip full-time for the foreseeable future. @MikeFair has a strong vision for partnering with large OSS organizations that doesn't map well to Gittip right now.
YC may not be ready to hear it, but the community is my cofounder, and it would be disingenuous to pretend otherwise.
Honestly I'd just bootstrap Gittip, who cares what Silicon Valley investors think...
We wouldn't go to YC for the funding, we'd go for the connections. The goal would be to find new companies interested in investing in OSS via Gittip.
Blog post: The Community is My Cofounder
Let's change the name from cofounders to coleaders.
And consider that naming a few individuals as coleaders would help the reviewers get to know what makes gittip.com tick. Naming a mass of 20,000+ doesn't really help give the reviewers something specific they can identify as leadership/at-stakeness/executive authority. On Oct 18, 2013 11:46 AM, "Chad Whitacre" notifications@github.com wrote:
Honestly I'd just bootstrap Gittip, who cares what Silicon Valley investors think...
We wouldn't go to YC for the funding, we'd go for the connections. The goal would be to find new companies interested in investing in OSS via Gittip.
— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHubhttps://github.com/gittip/www.gittip.com/issues/1603#issuecomment-26620013 .
@MikeFair It doesn't feel right that you've been out of the loop for a year and then come out of the woodwork to volunteer to be a leader with executive authority once we start talking about getting in front of Y Combinator. It'd be different if you'd been helping us grow Gittip for the past year, but on the phone today you said that "there isn't really anything here to offer" bigger OSS projects, which I think is baloney. :-)
Even if you don't go for the funding, I feel going to YC would make Gittip less special as a concept.
I want to see a world where "Gittipping a business" is a viable alternative to bootstrapping and incubating/raising.
incubating = growing faster than customer demand, fueled by venture capital that bets on an hypothesis. bootstrapping = growing along customer demand, adapting the product based on usage feedback. gittipping = growing along community interest, best suited for basic infrastructure projects with a public goods nature
Edit: Also, I think connections come naturally if your product becomes more indispensable.
@pjc Hmmm ... I've been thinking that YC is a 50/50 toss-up. If they're interested, fine. I spend three months in SF and get to meet lots of people and spread the word about Gittip. If they're not interested, fine. I spend two weeks in SF this winter and get to meet some people and spread the word about Gittip (I already have invitations to speak at Dropbox and Heroku, e.g.). What I hear you suggesting though is that YC would be actively bad for Gittip, yes?
I think most groups and communities start to feel "less special" when they grow to a large enough scale. I have seen this in face-to-face groups I have been part of, and certainly in online communities.
I want Gittip to become "less special". I was talking about Gittip with a scientist/ writer friend last night. Of course he had never heard of Gittip, but he loved the idea. I want to be surprised when people don't know about Gittip.
I would love to see you go to YC for Gittip. YC seems great for nonprofits that are ready to scale. Maybe it's a little scary for some people; if you go to YC and Gittip doesn't take off, maybe some of the doubters are right. I think Gittip is solid, you've got the right priorities, and I sure hope YC says yes. That said, I don't think you are dependent on YC. That's a pretty good place to be right now.
@ehmatthes the difference between the Gittip community and others is that the entire point of Gittip is to invent a new funding mechanism. So yes, @whit537 , I feel it is bad PR for Gittip to stop eating its own dog food.
I understand that Gittip has been built to be sustainable through its own funding, but I don't see accepting the one-time funding that YC offers nonprofits as straying too far from that goal. Chad is interested in YC for the connections he will make on behalf of Gittip, and I think there is plenty of reason to do that. There may be a few purists who dismiss Gittip for being connected with YC, but I think the overall exposure will help Gittip scale.
the difference between the Gittip community and others is that the entire point of Gittip is to invent a new funding mechanism.
Ah! Well, that's a good point that hasn't been brought up yet. If Gittip is accepted, what would we do with the money? That's actually a wider concern. I received a $125 honorarium this past week, and I'm speaking next week for another $200. What should I do with those checks? Reticketed as #1607.
That said, I don't think you are dependent on YC. That's a pretty good place to be right now.
Agreed. :-)
One of the main pieces of feedback I've gotten on Gittip's YC application (#1404) is that Gittip needs a cofounder. I agree with this. However, finding the right cofounder is hard. I've approached @zwn, because from what we've done together so far I think he's competent and we're a pretty good fit personality-wise. The downside is that he can't work full-time on Gittip for the foreseeable future. However, after talking with @warreng, who applied and was rejected specifically for not having a cofounder, the sense seems to be that a part-time cofounder would be better than none at all.
[IRQ because the YC application deadline is October 21, and today is October 17.]