Getting a job used to be the default. In the future -creating- a job will be. 

E

Startup Investing Trends
http://www.paulgraham.com/invtrend.html

June 2013

(This talk was written for an audience of investors.)

Y Combinator has now funded 564 startups including the current batch, which has 
53. The total valuation of the 287 that have valuations (either by raising an 
equity round, getting acquired, or dying) is about $11.7 billion, and the 511 
prior to the current batch have collectively raised about $1.7 billion. [1]

As usual those numbers are dominated by a few big winners. The top 10 startups 
account for 8.6 of that 11.7 billion. But there is a peloton of younger 
startups behind them. There are about 40 more that have a shot at being really 
big.

Things got a little out of hand last summer when we had 84 companies in the 
batch, so we tightened up our filter to decrease the batch size. [2] Several 
journalists have tried to interpret that as evidence for some macro story they 
were telling, but the reason had nothing to do with any external trend. The 
reason was that we discovered we were using an n² algorithm, and we needed to 
buy time to fix it. Fortunately we’ve come up with several techniques for 
sharding YC, and the problem now seems to be fixed. With a new more scaleable 
model and only 53 companies, the current batch feels like a walk in the park. 
I’d guess we can grow another 2 or 3x before hitting the next bottleneck. [3]

One consequence of funding such a large number of startups is that we see 
trends early. And since fundraising is one of the main things we help startups 
with, we’re in a good position to notice trends in investing.

I’m going to take a shot at describing where these trends are leading. Let’s 
start with the most basic question: will the future be better or worse than the 
past? Will investors, in the aggregate, make more money or less?

I think more. There are multiple forces at work, some of which will decrease 
returns, and some of which will increase them. I can’t predict for sure which 
forces will prevail, but I’ll describe them and you can decide for yourself.

There are two big forces driving change in startup funding: it’s becoming 
cheaper to start a startup, and startups are becoming a more normal thing to do.

When I graduated from college in 1986, there were essentially two options: get 
a job or go to grad school. Now there’s a third: start your own company. That’s 
a big change. In principle it was possible to start your own company in 1986 
too, but it didn’t seem like a real possibility. It seemed possible to start a 
consulting company, or a niche product company, but it didn’t seem possible to 
start a company that would become big. [4]

That kind of change, from 2 paths to 3, is the sort of big social shift that 
only happens once every few generations. I think we’re still at the beginning 
of this one. It’s hard to predict how big a deal it will be. As big a deal as 
the Industrial Revolution? Maybe. Probably not. But it will be a big enough 
deal that it takes almost everyone by surprise, because those big social shifts 
always do.

One thing we can say for sure is that there will be a lot more startups. The 
monolithic, hierarchical companies of the mid 20th century are being replaced 
by networks of smaller companies. This process is not just something happening 
now in Silicon Valley. It started decades ago, and it’s happening as far afield 
as the car industry. It has a long way to run. [5]

The other big driver of change is that startups are becoming cheaper to start.  
And in fact the two forces are related: the decreasing cost of starting a 
startup is one of the reasons startups are becoming a more normal thing to do.

The fact that startups need less money means founders will increasingly have 
the upper hand over investors. You still need just as much of their energy and 
imagination, but they don’t need as much of your money. Because founders have 
the upper hand, they’ll retain an increasingly large share of the stock in, and 
control of, their companies. Which means investors will get less stock and less 
control.

Does that mean investors will make less money? Not necessarily, because there 
will be more good startups. The total amount of desirable startup stock 
available to investors will probably increase, because the number of desirable 
startups will probably grow faster than the percentage they sell to investors 
shrinks.

There’s a rule of thumb in the VC business that there are about 15 companies a 
year that will be really successful. Although a lot of investors unconsciously 
treat this number as if it were some sort of cosmological constant, I’m certain 
it isn’t. There are probably limits on the rate at which technology can 
develop, but that’s not the limiting factor now. If it were, each successful 
startup would be founded the month it became possible, and that is not the 
case. Right now the limiting factor on the number of big hits is the number of 
sufficiently good founders starting companies, and that number can and will 
increase. There are still a lot of people who’d make great founders who never 
end up starting a company. You can see that from how randomly some of the most 
successful startups got started. So many of the biggest startups almost didn’t 
happen that there must be a lot of equally good startups that actually didn’t 
happen.

There might be 10x or even 50x more good founders out there. As more of them go 
ahead and start startups, those 15 big hits a year could easily become 50 or 
even 100. [6]

What about returns, though? Are we heading for a world in which returns will be 
pinched by increasingly high valuations? I think the top firms will actually 
make more money than they have in the past. High returns don’t come from 
investing at low valuations. They come from investing in the companies that do 
really well. So if there are more of those to be had each year, the best 
pickers should have more hits.

This means there should be more variability in the VC business. The firms that 
can recognize and attract the best startups will do even better, because there 
will be more of them to recognize and attract. Whereas the bad firms will get 
the leftovers, as they do now, and yet pay a higher price for them.

Nor do I think it will be a problem that founders keep control of their 
companies for longer. The empirical evidence on that is already clear: 
investors make more money as founders’ bitches than their bosses. Though 
somewhat humiliating, this is actually good news for investors, because it 
takes less time to serve founders than to micromanage them.

What about angels? I think there is a lot of opportunity there. It used to suck 
to be an angel investor. You couldn’t get access to the best deals, unless you 
got lucky like Andy Bechtolsheim, and when you did invest in a startup, VCs 
might try to strip you of your stock when they arrived later. Now an angel can 
go to something like Demo Day or AngelList and have access to the same deals 
VCs do. And the days when VCs could wash angels out of the cap table are long 
gone.

I think one of the biggest unexploited opportunities in startup investing right 
now is angel-sized investments made quickly. Few investors understand the cost 
that raising money from them imposes on startups. When the company consists 
only of the founders, everything grinds to a halt during fundraising, which can 
easily take 6 weeks. The current high cost of fundraising means there is room 
for low-cost investors to undercut the rest.  And in this context, low-cost 
means deciding quickly. If there were a reputable investor who invested $100k 
on good terms and promised to decide yes or no within 24 hours, they’d get 
access to almost all the best deals, because every good startup would approach 
them first. It would be up to them to pick, because every bad startup would 
approach them first too, but at least they’d see everything. Whereas if an 
investor is notorious for taking a long time to make up their mind or 
negotiating a lot about valuation, founders will save them for last. And in the 
case of the most promising startups, which tend to have an easy time raising 
money, last can easily become never.

Will the number of big hits grow linearly with the total number of new 
startups? Probably not, for two reasons. One is that the scariness of starting 
a startup in the old days was a pretty effective filter. Now that the cost of 
failing is becoming lower, we should expect founders to do it more. That’s not 
a bad thing. It’s common in technology for an innovation that decreases the 
cost of failure to increase the number of failures and yet leave you net ahead.

The other reason the number of big hits won’t grow proportionately to the 
number of startups is that there will start to be an increasing number of idea 
clashes. Although the finiteness of the number of good ideas is not the reason 
there are only 15 big hits a year, the number has to be finite, and the more 
startups there are, the more we’ll see multiple companies doing the same thing 
at the same time. It will be interesting, in a bad way, if idea clashes become 
a lot more common. [7]

Mostly because of the increasing number of early failures, the startup business 
of the future won’t simply be the same shape, scaled up. What used to be an 
obelisk will become a pyramid.  It will be a little wider at the top, but a lot 
wider at the bottom.

What does that mean for investors? One thing it means is that there will be 
more opportunities for investors at the earliest stage, because that’s where 
the volume of our imaginary solid is growing fastest. Imagine the obelisk of 
investors that corresponds to the obelisk of startups. As it widens out into a 
pyramid to match the startup pyramid, all the contents are adhering to the top, 
leaving a vacuum at the bottom.

That opportunity for investors mostly means an opportunity for new investors, 
because the degree of risk an existing investor or firm is comfortable taking 
is one of the hardest things for them to change. Different types of investors 
are adapted to different degrees of risk, but each has its specific degree of 
risk deeply imprinted on it, not just in the procedures they follow but in the 
personalities of the people who work there.

I think the biggest danger for VCs, and also the biggest opportunity, is at the 
series A stage. Or rather, what used to be the series A stage before series As 
turned into de facto series B rounds.

Right now, VCs often knowingly invest too much money at the series A stage. 
They do it because they feel they need to get a big chunk of each series A 
company to compensate for the opportunity cost of the board seat it consumes. 
Which means when there is a lot of competition for a deal, the number that 
moves is the valuation (and thus amount invested) rather than the percentage of 
the company being sold. Which means, especially in the case of more promising 
startups, that series A investors often make companies take more money than 
they want.

Some VCs lie and claim the company really needs that much. Others are more 
candid, and admit their financial models require them to own a certain 
percentage of each company. But we all know the amounts being raised in series 
A rounds are not determined by asking what would be best for the companies. 
They’re determined by VCs starting from the amount of the company they want to 
own, and the market setting the valuation and thus the amount invested.

Like a lot of bad things, this didn’t happen intentionally. The VC business 
backed into it as their initial assumptions gradually became obsolete. The 
traditions and financial models of the VC business were established when 
founders needed investors more. In those days it was natural for founders to 
sell VCs a big chunk of their company in the series A round. Now founders would 
prefer to sell less, and VCs are digging in their heels because they’re not 
sure if they can make money buying less than 20% of each series A company.

The reason I describe this as a danger is that series A investors are 
increasingly at odds with the startups they supposedly serve, and that tends to 
come back to bite you eventually. The reason I describe it as an opportunity is 
that there is now a lot of potential energy built up, as the market has moved 
away from VCs’s traditional business model. Which means the first VC to break 
ranks and start to do series A rounds for as much equity as founders want to 
sell (and with no “option pool” that comes only from the founders’ shares) 
stands to reap huge benefits.

What will happen to the VC business when that happens? Hell if I know. But I 
bet that particular firm will end up ahead. If one top-tier VC firm started to 
do series A rounds that started from the amount the company needed to raise and 
let the percentage acquired vary with the market, instead of the other way 
around, they’d instantly get almost all the best startups. And that’s where the 
money is.

You can’t fight market forces forever. Over the last decade we’ve seen the 
percentage of the company sold in series A rounds creep inexorably downward. 
40% used to be common. Now VCs are fighting to hold the line at 20%. But I am 
daily waiting for the line to collapse. It’s going to happen. You may as well 
anticipate it, and look bold.

Who knows, maybe VCs will make more money by doing the right thing. It wouldn’t 
be the first time that happened. Venture capital is a business where occasional 
big successes generate hundredfold returns. How much confidence can you really 
have in financial models for something like that anyway? The big successes only 
have to get a tiny bit less occasional to compensate for a 2x decrease in the 
stock sold in series A rounds.

If you want to find new opportunities for investing, look for things founders 
complain about. Founders are your customers, and the things they complain about 
are unsatisfied demand. I’ve given two examples of things founders complain 
about most—investors who take too long to make up their minds, and excessive 
dilution in series A rounds—so those are good places to look now. But the more 
general recipe is: do something founders want.

Notes

[1] I realize revenue and not fundraising is the proper test of success for a 
startup. The reason we quote statistics about fundraising is because those are 
the numbers we have. We couldn’t talk meaningfully about revenues without 
including the numbers from the most successful startups, and we don’t have 
those. We often discuss revenue growth with the earlier stage startups, because 
that’s how we gauge their progress, but when companies reach a certain size it 
gets presumptuous for a seed investor to do that.

In any case, companies’ market caps do eventually become a function of 
revenues, and post-money valuations of funding rounds are at least guesses by 
pros about where those market caps will end up.

The reason only 287 have valuations is that the rest have mostly raised money 
on convertible notes, and although convertible notes often have valuation caps, 
a valuation cap is merely an upper bound on a valuation.

[2] We didn’t try to accept a particular number. We have no way of doing that 
even if we wanted to. We just tried to be significantly pickier.

[3] Though you never know with bottlenecks, I’m guessing the next one will be 
coordinating efforts among partners.

[4] I realize starting a company doesn’t have to mean starting a startup. There 
will be lots of people starting normal companies too. But that’s not relevant 
to an audience of investors.

Geoff Ralston reports that in Silicon Valley it seemed thinkable to start a 
startup in the mid 1980s. It would have started there. But I know it didn’t to 
undergraduates on the East Coast.

[5] This trend is one of the main causes of the increase in economic inequality 
in the US since the mid twentieth century. The person who would in 1950 have 
been the general manager of the x division of Megacorp is now the founder of 
the x company, and owns significant equity in it.

[6] If Congress passes the founder visa in a non-broken form, that alone could 
in principle get us up to 20x, since 95% of the world’s population lives 
outside the US.

[7] If idea clashes got bad enough, it could change what it means to be a 
startup. We currently advise startups mostly to ignore competitors. We tell 
them startups are competitive like running, not like soccer; you don’t have to 
go and steal the ball away from the other team. But if idea clashes became 
common enough, maybe you’d start to have to. That would be unfortunate.

Thanks to Sam Altman, Paul Buchheit, Dalton Caldwell, Patrick Collison, Jessica 
Livingston, Andrew Mason, Geoff Ralston, and Garry Tan for reading drafts of 
this.

(via Instapaper)



Sent from my iPhone

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