Wil Schroter
"Did you hear about the Founder who sold their startup and 'only' made a million dollars?!"
Ah, the popular refrain of startup haters everywhere when they gleefully recount the supposedly "shitty" outcomes of hard-working Founders. They get almost giddy with speculation. Nothing excites the people who don't start companies more than trying to belittle the outcomes of those that do.
Well, startup haters, this one is for you. This is a not-so-subtle reminder that not only do your opinions not matter — at all — but how wrong your position is, to begin with.
Before we even dig into how wrong their analysis even is, and it's almost always wrong, let's begin with who is even making this analysis. 99% of the time these are people who have never suited up themselves or have never achieved an outcome even remotely close to the one they are dogging.
Let me ask: "Are you a Startup Founder? No. Have you ever sold a startup? No. Have you ever made a million dollars? No. Then STFU!"
Before we even entertain someone's opinion, it seems only logical that we consider the source. How could we possibly value the input from someone who has no credentials to deliver it? And yet, we somehow let these bozos chatter on.
Let's say our startup sold for $200 million and we walked away with $2 million. Surely the hater-patrol will be out in full force. But wait a minute — isn't two million dollars incredibly life-changing for us? What were we going to do at our last job that was going to put $2 million in the bank? Probably nothing. So how is it that putting $2 million in the bank is somehow a miss in our lives?
That $2 million is going to be the nest egg that prevents us from ever having a substantial financial crisis for the rest of our lives. Even at a reasonable yield investment, we can generate enough extra cash per month on investments alone to make any career choice we want so much easier.
You know who doesn't have that outcome? The person complaining that ours wasn't enough! The person who actually put $2 million in the bank is thinking about what an incredible windfall that is, and even if they feel they could have gotten more, they can sleep on it in a bed of $100 bills!
What's missing in all of this analysis is that selling a startup at all is so incredibly hard to do! We act like selling is a constant, and that how much we sold is the only variable. How many cashed-out Founders are really good friends of yours? One, two, five? Why is that do you think?
That's because we're totally missing the point of an exit and what a unicorn moment that is in any startup's career. The fact that we're sitting around bitching about what the economics are is like watching someone pass the finish line at an Ironman Triathlon and complaining that they didn't get there fast enough.
This isn't about the score, it's about winning at all. And until you've put points on the board yourself, you're not entitled to have an opinion, to begin with. End rant.
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