| I am posting this in a throwaway on the off chance he sees this. Without going into details as much as I can here is the situation. I am a lazy hacker myself, pull in 50-60k a year working part time making things for people and they are happy. My friend is post PHD from a top school; rock solid mathematics/compsci background. A genius by any measure and hard working. Bound to be rich. He is working and has been working on an unsolved problem of great commercial value in the machine learning world. I say unsolved meaning that no one has decided how to do it and its only happening in research circles. So, taking for granted that this person is solving these problems as well or better than anyone in the world and sees a plan to turn it into a commerical product; how do I get VC attention to him. He is still at a school doing research and plans on staying in academia for a couple years because he is somewhat fearful of making the leap. What I would like to to see happen is some people with money to talk to him, because he would drop what he was doing if the cash was there (and the deal was right). He estimated he would need 750k and two years; the vast majority of that going to processor time. Who do I talk to to say, "hey this person is living off 35k a year, is one of the smartest people you will ever meet and is absolutely going to make a business worth 100M+ in the next 4-5 years" Of course I recognize the possibility that I have no idea what I am talking about, but for the sake of argument lets assume I am right. Any VC/other hacker could look at/talk to this person and see what I am saying is true. He has turned down many 150k+ positions in finance because his vision is bigger; but I think VC is too hot right now for him to do his research for 2 more years when it seems like investors with a clue would be falling over themselves trying to give him cash. |
somewhat fearful of making the leap
That's a red flag. Rightly or wrongly, VCs expect people likely to create $100M businesses in the next 3-4 years act like they're intending to create $100M businesses in the next 3-4 years. Your friend is acting like he is intending to have a secure academic job in 3-4 years. There's nothing wrong with that but it is not maximally compelling in terms of convincing people to give him money. (H'd ironically be better off poor because you were hustling in SV than poor because he was an academic. Poor hustlers can fairly easily create the illusion of forward progress. Poor academics suggest that forward progress will be deeper into academia and probably mostly lateral with respect to poverty.)
750k and two years; the vast majority of that going to processor time.
YMMV depending on who you talk to, but a software company which doesn't budget for any engineers is likely to be a hard sell.
Also: the most common outcome for commercialization of academic research is that the research has wonderful ideas with no commercial potential whatsoever. Investors are very aware of this. One sales challenge is convincing them that your friend is, unlike the other 100 PhDs with no real world experience they have talked to, actually on to something that can create money.