How to Start a Startup Want to start a startup?
YouTube, Uber, Airbnb, LinkedIn-all these popular companies today started as startups. The key to their success was original ideas and timely entry into the market. Entrepreneurship is at its peak, and everyone can start their own business-whether it’s making cakes, creating a lawyer bot or opening a network of coworking spaces.
Such companies Jet Token were created because they had a clear goal. Also, they were able to analyze the market and select a niche
YC applications due Oct 17. –> March 2005 (This essay is derived from a talk at the Harvard Computer Society.) You need three things to create a successful startup: to start with good people, to make something customers actually want, and to spend as little money as possible. Most startups that fail do it because they fail at one of these. A startup that does all three will probably succeed. And that’s kind of exciting, when you think about it, because all three are doable. Hard, but doable. And since a startup that succeeds ordinarily makes its founders rich, that implies getting rich is doable too. Hard, but doable. If there is one message I’d like to get across about startups, that’s it. There is no magically difficult step that requires brilliance to solve. The Idea In particular, you don’t need a brilliant idea to start a startup around. The way a startup makes money is to offer people better technology than they have now. But what people have now is often so bad that it doesn’t