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Year off of school vs. starting a company
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5 points
by etcetc
4376 days ago
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Sorry if this is the wrong place to ask, but I figured I would find the best insight and expertise here. I am currently a sophomore at UC Berkeley in EECS. I have two more years of education to go until I graduate, as I will be getting my degree earlier.<p>I currently have been working for a small startup in San Francisco called XVolve. It has been a blast, I've learne d a lot and had fun being productive and getting more work experience. However, since my boss has been forced to go to Japan for three months, the project is on hold. This small startup is owned by a parent company in Japan, Onesty. They, through my boss, have offered to fund me to create a new company with me at the head and build a new product (likely a social app or something of the like) for them. I would get some equity, but that's not my concern. I am wary of this opportunity because I don't know why they would be dumping so much money into me, when I have no product, no team, and no background experience. They want me to take a trip to Japan (paid by them) to meet the executives and take a look at their company. They have no other well-known companies they've funded in their portfolio, I would be part of the first.<p>Any insight and perspective is greatly appreciated. It's difficult not to fantasize about the slim chance of success, but I need to keep my options realistic. My biggest fear is regretting that I didn't take this opportunity. |
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I don't put much faith in the arguments that "you'll never go back" if you take a year off - I did, and when I made the decision to go back, it was precisely that - a conscious decision, rather than how most students go to college (which is by following the default path). At any time, the decision is yours to return to college - if you decide not to return to school it will only be because you judge your current opportunity (the startup or wherever your career takes you) to be better than going to school.
Obviously the details of this opportunity are pretty important - how much equity are you getting? How much control? Who do you get to work with (the people you meet and/or work with is probably the single greatest factor in your early career)? How much funding do you get? How flexible is the parent company in letting you make decisions (remembering that if you don't have >50% of the equity, they have final say in all decisions)?
If you want to take this offline, my email is in my profile. I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss an opportunity like this. If you think your skills are up to it, it's worth considering. At the very least, I would take the trip to Japan, and come prepared with tough questions for the executives (questions about control, autonomy, flexibility, the conditions of funding, how they make decisions, their philosophy around product management, etc.)