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by pg
6826 days ago
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The percentage is based on a very rough estimate of the startup's prospects. If the founders seem like superstars and have been working on it for a while, we might ask less than 6%. Whereas if the company seems riskier we might ask for more. We should go back and see if the predictions implicit in the offers correlate at all with how the startups have done. |
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6% seems like a 200% profit if each yc startup generates a 1 million dollar investment.
If the VC deal rate is closer to 1 in 10 or 1 per year, it looks like you need one $10 million dollar deal a year, each of which needs to have a potential of $250 million eval, or $25 million a year in revenue before the VC will be interested.
So my question is, if a team can demonstrate "real" projections with lower than average risk, and demonstrate a 2 year projection of greater than $25 million a year would you consider an offer of less than 6%?
My second question is, since we are in the Midwest, "What exactly is a rockstar?" ;-) We have Billy Corgan, and Garbage to be proud of, but the coasts seem to be more keen on the idea of the "rockstar," so, what are the characteristics of a "tech" rockstar?