Michael Seibel's Advice For Young Entrepreneurs (MD@Y Combinator) | Decode Innovation Conference

Ғылым және технология

Things you should know if you're considering entrepreneurship as a career. Michael Seibel (MD@YC) shares his best advice for young entrepreneurs. This is recorded at Decode Tech & Innovation Conference 2019 (formerly BSCF), an annual conference based in UC Berkeley and Stanford.
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ABOUT MICHAEL SEIBEL
At the age of 23, Michael founded Twitch and developed it into the largest gaming broadcast platform (LoL, Dota2, PUBG, etc.). Later, he sold Twitch to Amazon for $1 billion.
At the age of 33, he became the MD and the first African American partner at Y Combinator, the largest startup accelerator that has incubated over 1900 startups and funded over 4000 entrepreneurs in the last decade. To date, the total valuation of startups funded by YC exceeded $100 billion.
During his career at Y Combinator, Michael mentors and invests in hundreds of startups including Airbnb, Dropbox, Reddit, Twitch, etc. Michael is an important mentor to Airbnb's founders and introduced the team to YC, which later proved to be the transforming point for Airbnb and set the company on the trajectory to become a game-changing unicorn. Over the past couple of years, Michael works closely with early-stage startups and help them find product-market fit in areas including Biotech, Aerospace, FinTech, and etc. Before joining Y Combinator, Michael co-founded Twitch (sold to Amazon for $1 billion) and Socialcam(exit for $60 million in merely 18 months). Before that, he was a Yale student who majored in political science.
ABOUT DECODE
DECODE (D/CODE) is a global, open community for ambitious creators and builders. We have our roots from Berkeley and Stanford as well as the tech and entrepreneurship community in Silicon Valley, where we hosted the largest technology and innovation forum, featuring speakers including founders and executives from Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, Netflix, Tesla and Zoom among others.
Over the years, we have hosted 10,000+ attendees and our community has grown to include students across universities including Columbia, Cornell, Harvard, MIT, UPenn, Princeton, and Yale, as well as professionals across Fortune 50 companies. At D/CODE, through our online and offline courses, conferences, and professional consulting practice, we are building a community for people to decode technology and innovation, as well as build ventures of the future together.

Пікірлер: 36

  • @Weensy
    @Weensy3 жыл бұрын

    he has such a calming way to explain things

  • @mmjsj2929
    @mmjsj29292 жыл бұрын

    Notes if you prefer skimming: - People often think that startups fail because they have a "bad idea" (whatever that is). But bad ideas don't kill startups. A loss of faith often does. - Sometimes startups start working quickly, but usually they don't. Founders often lose faith after 18 months of trying, but it usually takes longer. - Founders should spend more time connecting with users and liking them, genuinely, and thinking about the problem they're trying to solve for them. This attachment to others is what will pull you through the inevitable stress. - Excellence in startups is very different from excellence in the real world. In most situations, being above average sets you up. It's what gets you into Google or other FAANG companies. But in startups, being above average isn't good enough. You have to be exceptional, extraordinary, orders of magnitude above average. - The startup community isn't here to support you. Starting a startup is more like trying to be on a sports team. Lots of people want to; very few do. Those that do sacrifice a lot of their life for it. It is their life. - Be careful about where you get advice. Using your peers isn't going to work, because you need to be far better than your peers. Statistically speaking, most of your peers would fail at this. The vast majority of people on Twitter who give startup advice are bad at startups. - We have a culture that glorifies investors as heroes, but they're more like accountants or lawyers than "angels". They give you money, not advice. You take their money and use it to change the world. They usually aren't very good mentors unless they've actually gone through the grind themselves. - Investors help, but founders change the world. - You don't live within a system, you create new systems. That's far more valuable than writing a check. - There's too much emphasis put on ideas. Other factors have a much stronger impact on your likelihood of success. One is your cofounders - it's basically like a marriage. Two - your commitment. Are you hedging your bets? Three - your passion. Are you working on something you believe in? Can you and your team commit to making the idea work, even when things aren't looking good? - Nobody's really qualified to determine what ideas can turn into a good business. YC accepts so many companies not because they're nice, but because they have no idea what will succeed. - There's a lot of advice written for post-PMF companies, and not much for pre-PMF companies. - Competition is only an issue for post-PMF companies. The vast majority of startups die before they ever build anything that anyone wants. Competition won't kill you pre-PMF. You should know of it, but it's mostly irrelevant to pre-PMF companies. Most "business" stuff is. Business school trains managers, not startups. - Founders don't need encouragement. Nobody can teach you to give a shit. It comes from within. - When people say "we invest in people, not ideas", what they mean is - we invest in evidence of execution. The earlier the stage in the company, the more that evidence has to come from what the founder has done before the startup. The later the stage in the company, the more that evidence has to come from what the founder has done within the startup. - The biggest risk for investors is giving money to someone who doesn't do anything with it. - "Execution" doesn't have much to do with revenue. It just means that you've executed by talking to customers, making products, iterating upon feedback - some evidence of progress. - A lot of founders believe that they can't make progress without money, but this isn't true, especially if you can code. - Startups don't go from idea to team to money to product to launch to revenue. They go from idea to product to launch to learning to maybe revenue/funding. - If you're a minority, your opportunity might feel like it's limited by the fact that gatekeepers give Zuckerbergs the benefit of the doubt more than they give minorities the benefit of the doubt. But investors' core motivation is money, full-stop. So if you give them a way to make more money, you'll eventually get a hit. The bias within the startup community isn't organized, it's disorganized and different from the systemic bias you might see in big companies. If you execute, you will get resources. - Startups are sort of like guerilla warfare. You don't have a lot of resources and you're up against large incumbents with powerful weaponry. But they're slow, they have a lot of taxes to pay, and those taxes present a tactical opportunity. Your job is to find those opportunities and exploit them. When people talk about "unique insight" - this is what they're talking about. What do you understand that they don't see and can't leverage? How can you throw all of your resources into that blind spot in order to exploit it? - An example of this is Slack. They didn't win by hiring B2B salespeople. Instead, they targeted the individual users and let them carry the tech into enterprises. Most people don't voluntarily use Microsoft software. It's usually forced upon them. Formatted / bookmarkable: www.karma.fm/p/tRaBddI/michael-seibels-advice-for-young-entrepreneurs

  • @mrjohncrumpton

    @mrjohncrumpton

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you, that's really helpful!

  • @baihaocheng8676
    @baihaocheng86763 жыл бұрын

    ^Investor helps but founders change the world

  • @callmelil
    @callmelil2 жыл бұрын

    "Most business schools are not training entrepreneurs, they're training managers" 100% true. Thanks a lot for sharing this with us! 👍

  • @christiangada8763
    @christiangada87633 жыл бұрын

    Wow !! this morning I started doubting my Idea, but now at night I find This. Thanks Decode :D

  • @DecodeSV

    @DecodeSV

    3 жыл бұрын

    Glad I could help! Thank you for watching our content:)

  • @GabrielSestrem
    @GabrielSestrem2 жыл бұрын

    I am a programmer and we are building a powerful software without money.

  • @cherubin7th
    @cherubin7th2 жыл бұрын

    Founders change the world, but investors own it.

  • @anthonyanurugwo4769
    @anthonyanurugwo47693 жыл бұрын

    Michael soooo proud of you...we await you some day in Africa...Lagos Nigeria precise....You need to seee what opportunity this city holds....still young and yearning......

  • @afrojinq

    @afrojinq

    2 жыл бұрын

    He has come to Lagos before. Check out his video on Guardian for that that.

  • @georgew1857

    @georgew1857

    Жыл бұрын

    Why do you think a guy who grew up in the US and went to Yale who isn't even fully black is "part of Africa"?

  • @AleatoricSatan
    @AleatoricSatan2 жыл бұрын

    Michael Seibel and Justin Kan must have been such a kickass team.

  • @tethron.
    @tethron.7 ай бұрын

    Love this guy! Great conference

  • @thatryanp
    @thatryanp Жыл бұрын

    4:16 "five wins out of two hundred" Michael giving the straight facts

  • @furkanwb
    @furkanwb3 жыл бұрын

    I love this dude.

  • @DecodeSV

    @DecodeSV

    3 жыл бұрын

    We love him too;)

  • @anilbangera1
    @anilbangera13 жыл бұрын

    Best advice

  • @jaredbeckwith
    @jaredbeckwith2 жыл бұрын

    Good advice for new founders

  • @predcr
    @predcr Жыл бұрын

    Great Video Sir.

  • @eliaslouw6400
    @eliaslouw6400 Жыл бұрын

    Hi mike you a one of the best if not the best of all thank you

  • @geekboy328
    @geekboy3283 жыл бұрын

    So inspiring

  • @DecodeSV

    @DecodeSV

    3 жыл бұрын

    Glad you like it!

  • @ashwin8692
    @ashwin86922 жыл бұрын

    Where to find startup school library

  • @marcoscarlomagno3065
    @marcoscarlomagno30652 жыл бұрын

    Poor guy with the back shirt, he was almost slaping Michael with his hand during the Q&A and couldn't ask his question

  • @L1naks
    @L1naks3 жыл бұрын

    "No one can teach you to give a sh*t"

  • @DecodeSV

    @DecodeSV

    3 жыл бұрын

    Exactly.

  • @shanrocksify
    @shanrocksify3 жыл бұрын

    This guy is smart , ,, Like google for business

  • @BobF510
    @BobF5106 ай бұрын

    The wisdom in this content is unmatched. A book with related material had a monumental impact on my life. "The Hidden Empire: Inside the Private Worlds of Elite CEOs" by Adam Skylight

  • @CandyLemon36
    @CandyLemon366 ай бұрын

    I'm moved by this content. A book with a corresponding subject matter was a pivotal moment in my life. "The Hidden Empire: Inside the Private Worlds of Elite CEOs" by Adam Skylight

  • @ja7857
    @ja78573 жыл бұрын

    I've witnessed this "worship" first-hand. People in silicon valley give way too much respect to the famous/rich people without realizing that they're idiots like us. Everyone is an idiot, including me. If you aren't Von Neumann, then you probably just got lucky in life.

  • @cocoarecords

    @cocoarecords

    3 жыл бұрын

    why Von Neumann?

  • @DheerajBhaskar

    @DheerajBhaskar

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@cocoarecords he just picked a random popular smart guy

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