Reddit创始人
Reddit创始人
2024年3月
我在我们甚至开始Y Combinator之前就认识了Reddit创始人。事实上,他们是我们开始创办它的原因之一。
YC源于我在哈佛计算机协会(本科生计算机俱乐部)的一次关于如何创办创业公司的演讲。观众中的其他人可能都是本地人,但史蒂夫和亚历克西斯是从弗吉尼亚大学乘火车来的,他们是那里的高年级学生。既然他们来了这么远,我同意和他们见面喝咖啡。他们告诉我一个后来我们资助他们放弃的创业想法:一种在手机上订购快餐的方式。
这是在智能手机之前的时代。他们必须与手机运营商和快餐连锁店达成协议才能推出。所以这是不可能实现的。即使在19年后的今天,这仍然不存在。但我对他们的智慧和能量印象深刻。事实上,我对他们以及我在那次演讲中遇到的其他一些人是如此印象深刻,以至于我决定创办一些东西来资助他们。几天后,我告诉史蒂夫和亚历克西斯我们正在创办Y Combinator,并鼓励他们申请。
第一批我们没有任何方式来识别申请人,所以我们给他们起了绰号。Reddit创始人是”手机食物松饼”。“松饼”是杰西卡用来形容小狗和两岁小孩等事物的亲昵称呼。所以这让你对史蒂夫和亚历克西斯当时给人的印象有所了解。他们有着小鸟那种略带凌乱的惊讶表情。
不过他们的想法很糟糕。而且由于那时我们认为我们是在资助想法而不是创始人,所以我们拒绝了他们。但我们对此感到不好。杰西卡因为我们拒绝了松饼而难过。对我来说,拒绝那些激励我们创办YC来资助的人似乎是错误的。
我认为创业公司意义上的”转型”这个词还没有被发明出来,但我们想要资助史蒂夫和亚历克西斯,所以如果他们的想法不好,他们就必须研究其他东西。而且我知道是什么。那时候有一个叫Delicious的网站,你可以在那里保存链接。它有一个叫del.icio.us/popular的页面,列出了最多保存的链接,人们正在使用这个页面作为事实上的Reddit。我知道这一点是因为我网站的很多流量都来自它。需要有一个类似del.icio.us/popular的东西,但设计用于分享链接而不是作为保存链接的副产品。
所以我打电话给史蒂夫和亚历克西斯,说我们喜欢他们,只是不喜欢他们的想法,所以如果他们研究其他东西,我们会资助他们。那时他们正在乘火车回弗吉尼亚的家。他们在下一站下车,登上了北上的下一班火车,到那天结束时,他们承诺致力于现在被称为Reddit的东西。
他们本想叫它Snoo,就像”What snoo?“一样。但snoo.com太贵了,所以他们决定把吉祥物叫Snoo,并为网站选择一个未被注册的名字。早期Reddit只是一个临时名称,或者至少他们是这样告诉我的,但现在可能改不掉了。
就像所有真正伟大的创业公司一样,公司和创始人之间有一种不寻常的紧密匹配。特别是史蒂夫。Reddit有一种特定的性格——好奇、怀疑、准备被娱乐——这种性格就是史蒂夫的性格。
史蒂夫会对这个翻白眼,但他是一个知识分子;他对为了其自身而感兴趣的想法感兴趣。这就是他为什么会出现在剑桥的那个观众席上。他认识我是因为他对一种我写过的叫做Lisp的编程语言感兴趣,而Lisp是那种很少有人学习的语言之一,除非是出于智力好奇心。史蒂夫那种真空吸尘器式的好奇心正是你想要的那种,当你创办一个网站,它是一个包含任何有趣内容的链接列表。
史蒂夫不是权威的粉丝,所以他也喜欢一个没有编辑的网站的想法。那时程序员的主要论坛是一个叫Slashdot的网站。它很像Reddit,只是首页上的故事是由人工版主选择的。虽然他们做得很好,但这一微小的差异被证明是一个巨大的差异。由用户提交驱动意味着Reddit比Slashdot更新。那里的新闻更新,用户总是会去最新的新闻所在的地方。
我推动Reddit创始人快速发布。第一版不需要超过几百行代码。怎么需要一周多的时间来构建?他们确实发布得相对较快,大约在第一批YC批次开始后三周。第一批用户是史蒂夫、亚历克西斯、我,以及他们的一些YC同班同学和大学朋友。事实证明,你不需要那么多用户来收集一个像样的有趣链接列表,特别是如果你每个用户有多个账户。
Reddit从他们的YC批次又得到了两个人:克里斯·斯洛和亚伦·斯沃茨,他们也异常聪明。克里斯刚刚完成他在哈佛的物理学博士学业。亚伦更年轻,一个大学新生,甚至比史蒂夫更反权威。将他描述为后来权威对他所做的事情的殉道者并不夸张。
Reddit的流量缓慢但不可阻挡地增长。起初数字太小,很难与背景噪音区分开来。但在几周内,很明显有一个真正的用户核心定期返回网站。尽管Reddit公司在后来的年份里经历了各种各样的事情,但Reddit网站从未回头。
Reddit网站(现在的应用程序)是一个如此根本有用的东西,几乎是不可摧毁的。这就是为什么,尽管在史蒂夫离开后很长一段时间里,管理策略从良性忽视到惊人的错误都有,但流量一直在增长。你不能对大多数公司这样做。大多数公司你把眼睛从球上移开六个月,你就会陷入深深的麻烦。但Reddit是特别的,当史蒂夫在2015年回来时,我知道世界将会感到惊讶。
人们认为他们看透了Reddit:硅谷的参与者之一,但不是重要的参与者。但那些知道幕后发生的事情的人知道故事不止于此。如果Reddit能够在最多无害的管理下增长到它所达到的规模,如果史蒂夫回来,它能做什么?我们现在知道这个问题的答案。或者至少是答案的下限。史蒂夫还没有没有想法。
The Reddits
March 2024
I met the Reddits before we even started Y Combinator. In fact they were one of the reasons we started it.
YC grew out of a talk I gave to the Harvard Computer Society (the undergrad computer club) about how to start a startup. Everyone else in the audience was probably local, but Steve and Alexis came up on the train from the University of Virginia, where they were seniors. Since they’d come so far I agreed to meet them for coffee. They told me about the startup idea we’d later fund them to drop: a way to order fast food on your cellphone.
This was before smartphones. They’d have had to make deals with cell carriers and fast food chains just to get it launched. So it was not going to happen. It still doesn’t exist, 19 years later. But I was impressed with their brains and their energy. In fact I was so impressed with them and some of the other people I met at that talk that I decided to start something to fund them. A few days later I told Steve and Alexis that we were starting Y Combinator, and encouraged them to apply.
That first batch we didn’t have any way to identify applicants, so we made up nicknames for them. The Reddits were the “Cell food muffins.” “Muffin” is a term of endearment Jessica uses for things like small dogs and two year olds. So that gives you some idea what kind of impression Steve and Alexis made in those days. They had the look of slightly ruffled surprise that baby birds have.
Their idea was bad though. And since we thought then that we were funding ideas rather than founders, we initially rejected them. But we felt bad about it. Jessica was sad that we’d rejected the muffins. And it seemed wrong to me to turn down the people we’d been inspired to start YC to fund.
I don’t think the startup sense of the word “pivot” had been invented yet, but we wanted to fund Steve and Alexis, so if their idea was bad, they’d have to work on something else. And I knew what else. In those days there was a site called Delicious where you could save links. It had a page called del.icio.us/popular that listed the most-saved links, and people were using this page as a de facto Reddit. I knew because a lot of the traffic to my site was coming from it. There needed to be something like del.icio.us/popular, but designed for sharing links instead of being a byproduct of saving them.
So I called Steve and Alexis and said that we liked them, just not their idea, so we’d fund them if they’d work on something else. They were on the train home to Virginia at that point. They got off at the next station and got on the next train north, and by the end of the day were committed to working on what’s now called Reddit.
They would have liked to call it Snoo, as in “What snoo?” But snoo.com was too expensive, so they settled for calling the mascot Snoo and picked a name for the site that wasn’t registered. Early on Reddit was just a provisional name, or so they told me at least, but it’s probably too late to change it now.
As with all the really great startups, there’s an uncannily close match between the company and the founders. Steve in particular. Reddit has a certain personality — curious, skeptical, ready to be amused — and that personality is Steve’s.
Steve will roll his eyes at this, but he’s an intellectual; he’s interested in ideas for their own sake. That was how he came to be in that audience in Cambridge in the first place. He knew me because he was interested in a programming language I’ve written about called Lisp, and Lisp is one of those languages few people learn except out of intellectual curiosity. Steve’s kind of vacuum-cleaner curiosity is exactly what you want when you’re starting a site that’s a list of links to literally anything interesting.
Steve was not a big fan of authority, so he also liked the idea of a site without editors. In those days the top forum for programmers was a site called Slashdot. It was a lot like Reddit, except the stories on the frontpage were chosen by human moderators. And though they did a good job, that one small difference turned out to be a big difference. Being driven by user submissions meant Reddit was fresher than Slashdot. News there was newer, and users will always go where the newest news is.
I pushed the Reddits to launch fast. A version one didn’t need to be more than a couple hundred lines of code. How could that take more than a week or two to build? And they did launch comparatively fast, about three weeks into the first YC batch. The first users were Steve, Alexis, me, and some of their YC batchmates and college friends. It turns out you don’t need that many users to collect a decent list of interesting links, especially if you have multiple accounts per user.
Reddit got two more people from their YC batch: Chris Slowe and Aaron Swartz, and they too were unusually smart. Chris was just finishing his PhD in physics at Harvard. Aaron was younger, a college freshman, and even more anti-authority than Steve. It’s not exaggerating to describe him as a martyr for what authority later did to him.
Slowly but inexorably Reddit’s traffic grew. At first the numbers were so small they were hard to distinguish from background noise. But within a few weeks it was clear that there was a core of real users returning regularly to the site. And although all kinds of things have happened to Reddit the company in the years since, Reddit the site never looked back.
Reddit the site (and now app) is such a fundamentally useful thing that it’s almost unkillable. Which is why, despite a long stretch after Steve left when the management strategy ranged from benign neglect to spectacular blunders, traffic just kept growing. You can’t do that with most companies. Most companies you take your eye off the ball for six months and you’re in deep trouble. But Reddit was special, and when Steve came back in 2015, I knew the world was in for a surprise.
People thought they had Reddit’s number: one of the players in Silicon Valley, but not one of the big ones. But those who know what had been going on behind the scenes knew there was more to the story than this. If Reddit could grow to the size it had with management that was harmless at best, what could it do if Steve came back? We now know the answer to that question. Or at least a lower bound on the answer. Steve is not out of ideas yet.