Y Combinator 的创立故事

Paul Graham 2012-03-01

Y Combinator 的创立故事

2012年3月

Y Combinator的7岁生日是3月11日。像往常一样,我们太忙了,直到几天后才注意到。我想我们从来没有能在生日当天记住我们的生日。

2005年3月11日,杰西卡和我在哈佛广场吃完晚饭走回家。杰西卡当时在一家投资银行工作,但她不太喜欢,所以她面试了波士顿一家风险投资基金的市场总监职位。这家风险投资基金正在做现在看来对风险投资基金来说喜剧性地熟悉的事情:花很长时间做决定。

与此同时,我一直在告诉杰西卡他们应该改变风险投资业务的所有方面——基本上是现在支撑Y Combinator的理念:投资者应该做更多、更小的投资,他们应该资助黑客而不是西装革履的人,他们应该愿意资助更年轻的创始人,等等。

当时我一直在考虑做一些天使投资。我刚刚在哈佛大学的本科生计算机俱乐部做了一次关于如何创办创业公司的演讲,之后我突然意识到,尽管我一直打算做天使投资,但自从我有足够钱做这件事已经过去了7年,我还没有开始。我也一直在考虑再次与罗伯特·莫里斯和特雷弗·布莱克威尔合作的方法。几小时前我给他们发了一封电子邮件,试图弄清楚我们能一起做什么。

在哈佛广场和我的家之间,这个想法成型了。我们将创办自己的投资公司,杰西卡可以为那家公司工作。当我们转到沃克街时,我们决定这样做。我同意向新基金投入10万美元,杰西卡同意辞职为它工作。在接下来的几天里,我招募了罗伯特和特雷弗,他们各投入了另外5万美元。所以YC以20万美元开始。

杰西卡非常高兴能够辞职创办自己的公司,以至于到家时我给她拍了张照片。

公司当时还不叫Y Combinator。起初我们称之为剑桥种子。但这个名字从未见光,因为几天后当我们宣布时,我们已经把名字改为Y Combinator。我们很早就意识到我们所做的工作可能具有全国范围的影响力,我们不想要一个将我们束缚在一个地方的名字。

最初我们只有部分想法。我们要做标准化条款的种子资金。在YC之前,种子资金非常随意。你会从你朋友的富叔叔那里得到第一笔1万美元。交易条款往往是灾难性的;通常投资者、创始人和律师都不知道文件应该是什么样的。Facebook作为佛罗里达有限责任公司的早期历史显示了当时事情是多么随意。

我们将成为前所未有的事物:标准的种子资金来源。

我们根据我们自己创办Viaweb时获得的种子资金来设计YC。我们用从朋友朱利安·韦伯那里得到的1万美元开始了Viaweb,朱利安是伊德尔·韦伯的丈夫,我在哈佛读研究生时上了伊德尔的绘画课。朱利安了解商业,但你不会说他是个西装革履的人。除其他外,他还曾担任国家讽刺剧的主席。他也是一名律师,把我们所有的文书工作都正确设置。

作为回报,朱利安获得Viaweb 10%的股份,以换取1万美元,帮我们成立公司,教我们商业知识,以及在危机时刻保持冷静。我记得曾经想过朱利安得到了多么好的交易。但一秒钟后我意识到,没有朱利安,Viaweb永远不会成功。所以即使这对他是好交易,对我们也是好交易。这就是为什么我知道像Y Combinator这样的东西有存在的空间。

最初我们没有后来证明是最重要的想法:同步资助创业公司,而不是像以前那样异步资助。或者更确切地说,我们有这个想法,但我们没有意识到它的重要性。我们很早就决定,我们要做的第一件事是在即将到来的夏天资助一批创业公司。但我们最初没有意识到这将是我们进行所有投资的方式。

我们一开始同时资助一批创业公司的原因不是我们认为这将是资助创业公司的更好方式,而仅仅是因为我们想学习如何成为天使投资者,而为本科生举办的夏季项目似乎是最快的方法。没有人那么认真地对待暑期工作。一群本科生花一个夏天在创业公司上工作的机会成本足够低,我们不会感到内疚鼓励他们这样做。

我们知道学生已经在为夏天做计划了,所以我们做了我们经常告诉创业公司要做的事情:我们快速启动。这里是当时被称为夏季创始人计划的初始公告和描述。

我们很幸运,夏季项目的长度和结构对我们做的事情来说证明是完美的。YC周期的结构仍然几乎与第一个夏天完全相同。

我们在第一批创始人是谁方面也很幸运。我们从未期望从第一批中获得任何利润。我们认为我们投资的钱是教育费用和慈善捐赠的结合。但第一批的创始人证明出人意料地好。而且他们也是很棒的人。直到今天,我们还和他们中的很多人是朋友。

现在人们很难意识到YC在当时看起来多么微不足道。我不能责怪那些没有认真对待我们的人,因为我们自己在一开始也没有非常认真地对待第一个夏季项目。但随着夏天的进展,我们对创业公司的表现越来越印象深刻。其他人也开始印象深刻。杰西卡和我发明了一个术语,“Y Combinator效应”,用来描述某人意识到YC并非完全糟糕的那一刻。当人们第一次夏天来到YC在晚宴上演讲时,他们的精神状态就像来向童子军部队发表讲话的人一样。当他们离开大楼时,他们都在说”哇,这些公司实际上可能会成功”的某种变体。

现在YC足够知名,当我们资助的公司是合法的时人们不再感到惊讶,但声誉赶上现实需要一段时间。这就是我们特别喜欢资助可能被dismissed为”玩具”的想法的原因之一——因为YC本身最初也被dismissed为一个。

当我们看到同步资助公司效果很好时,我们决定继续这样做。我们将每年资助两批创业公司。我们在硅谷资助了第二批。这是一个最后一刻的决定。回想起来,我认为让我下定决心的是那年秋天去Foo Camp。湾区的创业公司人口密度比波士顿大得多,天气也这么好。我从90年代住在那里时记得这一点。另外,我不想让别人复制我们并将其描述为硅谷的Y Combinator。我希望YC成为硅谷的Y Combinator。所以在加州做冬季批次似乎是那种自我放纵的选择和雄心勃勃的选择相同的罕见情况之一。

如果我们有足够的时间做我们想做的事情,Y Combinator会在伯克利。那是我们最喜欢的湾区地区。但我们没有时间在伯克利找大楼。我们没有时间在任何地方找我们自己的大楼。及时获得足够空间的唯一方法是说服特雷弗让我们接管他在山景城(当时看来)巨大的建筑的一部分。

我们又一次运气好,因为山景城证明是放置像YC这样的东西的理想地点。但即使如此,我们也勉强做到了。在加州的第一次晚宴上,我们不得不警告所有创始人不要碰墙壁,因为油漆还是湿的。

How Y Combinator Started

March 2012

Y Combinator’s 7th birthday was March 11. As usual we were so busy we didn’t notice till a few days after. I don’t think we’ve ever managed to remember our birthday on our birthday.

On March 11 2005, Jessica and I were walking home from dinner in Harvard Square. Jessica was working at an investment bank at the time, but she didn’t like it much, so she had interviewed for a job as director of marketing at a Boston VC fund. The VC fund was doing what now seems a comically familiar thing for a VC fund to do: taking a long time to make up their mind.

Meanwhile I had been telling Jessica all the things they should change about the VC business — essentially the ideas now underlying Y Combinator: investors should be making more, smaller investments, they should be funding hackers instead of suits, they should be willing to fund younger founders, etc.

At the time I had been thinking about doing some angel investing. I had just given a talk to the undergraduate computer club at Harvard about how to start a startup, and it hit me afterward that although I had always meant to do angel investing, 7 years had now passed since I got enough money to do it, and I still hadn’t started. I had also been thinking about ways to work with Robert Morris and Trevor Blackwell again. A few hours before I had sent them an email trying to figure out what we could do together.

Between Harvard Square and my house the idea gelled. We’d start our own investment firm and Jessica could work for that instead. As we turned onto Walker Street we decided to do it. I agreed to put 100kintothenewfundandJessicaagreedtoquitherjobtoworkforit.OverthenextcoupledaysIrecruitedRobertandTrevor,whoputinanother100k into the new fund and Jessica agreed to quit her job to work for it. Over the next couple days I recruited Robert and Trevor, who put in another 50k each. So YC started with $200k.

Jessica was so happy to be able to quit her job and start her own company that I took her picture when we got home.

The company wasn’t called Y Combinator yet. At first we called it Cambridge Seed. But that name never saw the light of day, because by the time we announced it a few days later, we’d changed the name to Y Combinator. We realized early on that what we were doing could be national in scope and we didn’t want a name that tied us to one place.

Initially we only had part of the idea. We were going to do seed funding with standardized terms. Before YC, seed funding was very haphazard. You’d get that first $10k from your friend’s rich uncle. The deal terms were often a disaster; often neither the investor nor the founders nor the lawyer knew what the documents should look like. Facebook’s early history as a Florida LLC shows how random things could be in those days.

We were going to be something there had not been before: a standard source of seed funding.

We modelled YC on the seed funding we ourselves had taken when we started Viaweb. We started Viaweb with $10k we got from our friend Julian Weber, the husband of Idelle Weber, whose painting class I took as a grad student at Harvard. Julian knew about business, but you would not describe him as a suit. Among other things he’d been president of the National Lampoon. He was also a lawyer, and got all our paperwork set up properly.

In return for $10k, getting us set up as a company, teaching us what business was about, and remaining calm in times of crisis, Julian got 10% of Viaweb. I remember thinking once what a good deal Julian got. And then a second later I realized that without Julian, Viaweb would never have made it. So even though it was a good deal for him, it was a good deal for us too. That’s why I knew there was room for something like Y Combinator.

Initially we didn’t have what turned out to be the most important idea: funding startups synchronously, instead of asynchronously as it had always been done before. Or rather we had the idea, but we didn’t realize its significance. We decided very early that the first thing we’d do would be to fund a bunch of startups over the coming summer. But we didn’t realize initially that this would be the way we’d do all our investing.

The reason we began by funding a bunch of startups at once was not that we thought it would be a better way to fund startups, but simply because we wanted to learn how to be angel investors, and a summer program for undergrads seemed the fastest way to do it. No one takes summer jobs that seriously. The opportunity cost for a bunch of undergrads to spend a summer working on startups was low enough that we wouldn’t feel guilty encouraging them to do it.

We knew students would already be making plans for the summer, so we did what we’re always telling startups to do: we launched fast. Here are the initial announcement and description of what was at the time called the Summer Founders Program.

We got lucky in that the length and structure of a summer program turns out to be perfect for what we do. The structure of the YC cycle is still almost identical to what it was that first summer.

We also got lucky in who the first batch of founders were. We never expected to make any money from that first batch. We thought of the money we were investing as a combination of an educational expense and a charitable donation. But the founders in the first batch turned out to be surprisingly good. And great people too. We’re still friends with a lot of them today.

It’s hard for people to realize now how inconsequential YC seemed at the time. I can’t blame people who didn’t take us seriously, because we ourselves didn’t take that first summer program seriously in the very beginning. But as the summer progressed we were increasingly impressed by how well the startups were doing. Other people started to be impressed too. Jessica and I invented a term, “the Y Combinator effect,” to describe the moment when the realization hit someone that YC was not totally lame. When people came to YC to speak at the dinners that first summer, they came in the spirit of someone coming to address a Boy Scout troop. By the time they left the building they were all saying some variant of “Wow, these companies might actually succeed.”

Now YC is well enough known that people are no longer surprised when the companies we fund are legit, but it took a while for reputation to catch up with reality. That’s one of the reasons we especially like funding ideas that might be dismissed as “toys” — because YC itself was dismissed as one initially.

When we saw how well it worked to fund companies synchronously, we decided we’d keep doing that. We’d fund two batches of startups a year. We funded the second batch in Silicon Valley. That was a last minute decision. In retrospect I think what pushed me over the edge was going to Foo Camp that fall. The density of startup people in the Bay Area was so much greater than in Boston, and the weather was so nice. I remembered that from living there in the 90s. Plus I didn’t want someone else to copy us and describe it as the Y Combinator of Silicon Valley. I wanted YC to be the Y Combinator of Silicon Valley. So doing the winter batch in California seemed like one of those rare cases where the self-indulgent choice and the ambitious one were the same.

If we’d had enough time to do what we wanted, Y Combinator would have been in Berkeley. That was our favorite part of the Bay Area. But we didn’t have time to get a building in Berkeley. We didn’t have time to get our own building anywhere. The only way to get enough space in time was to convince Trevor to let us take over part of his (as it then seemed) giant building in Mountain View.

Yet again we lucked out, because Mountain View turned out to be the ideal place to put something like YC. But even then we barely made it. The first dinner in California, we had to warn all the founders not to touch the walls, because the paint was still wet.