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日刊 /2026-07-07 / 大学里该做什么?Paul Graham:别急着创业,先学习

大学里该做什么?Paul Graham:别急着创业,先学习

原文 www.paulgraham.com 收录 2026-07-07 15:35 阅读 25 min
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Paul Graham 在斯坦福创业课上的演讲,劝诫大学生不要急于在校期间创业。他提出六个反直觉观点:创业违背直觉,不要相信本能;不必精通创业知识,而要精通用户和问题;创业不是游戏,无法作秀;创业会吞噬全部生活;无法预判自己是否适合创业;最好的创业想法来自兴趣驱动的学习,而非刻意寻找。核心建议:大学期间追求真正的学问,成为领域专家,创业自然会水到渠成。

原文 25 分钟
原文 www.paulgraham.com ↗
§ 1

October 2014

(This essay is derived from a guest lecture in Sam Altman's startup class at Stanford. It's intended for college students, but much of it is applicable to potential founders at other ages.)

One of the advantages of having kids is that when you have to give advice, you can ask yourself "what would I tell my own kids?" My kids are little, but I can imagine what I'd tell them about startups if they were in college, and that's what I'm going to tell you.

Startups are very counterintuitive. I'm not sure why. Maybe it's just because knowledge about them hasn't permeated our culture yet. But whatever the reason, starting a startup is a task where you can't always trust your instincts.

It's like skiing in that way. When you first try skiing and you want to slow down, your instinct is to lean back. But if you lean back on skis you fly down the hill out of control. So part of learning to ski is learning to suppress that impulse. Eventually you get new habits, but at first it takes a conscious effort. At first there's a list of things you're trying to remember as you start down the hill.

Startups are as unnatural as skiing, so there's a similar list for startups. Here I'm going to give you the first part of it — the things to remember if you want to prepare yourself to start a startup.

2014年10月

(本文源自萨姆·奥尔特曼在斯坦福大学创业课上的客座讲座。虽面向大学生,但其中很多内容也适用于其他年龄段的潜在创始人。)

有孩子的一大好处是:当需要给出建议时,你可以问自己“我会告诉自己的孩子什么?”我的孩子还小,但我能想象如果他们上大学,我会告诉他们关于创业的哪些道理——而这就是我今天要告诉你们的。

创业非常反直觉。我不确定原因,或许只是因为相关知识尚未渗透进我们的文化。但无论原因为何,创业这件事上你并不能总是相信直觉。

这和滑雪很像。初学滑雪时,你想减速,直觉会让你身体后仰。但滑雪时后仰只会让你失控地加速冲下山坡。因此,学滑雪的一部分就是学习抑制这种冲动。最终你会养成新的习惯,但起初需要有意识地努力。一开始,你需要记住一张清单,上面列着冲下山坡时该做的事。

创业和滑雪一样不自然,所以也有一份类似的清单。这里我将给出其中的第一部分——如果你要为创业做准备,需要记住的要点。

§ 2

The first item on it is the fact I already mentioned: that startups are so weird that if you trust your instincts, you'll make a lot of mistakes. If you know nothing more than this, you may at least pause before making them.

When I was running Y Combinator I used to joke that our function was to tell founders things they would ignore. It's really true. Batch after batch, the YC partners warn founders about mistakes they're about to make, and the founders ignore them, and then come back a year later and say "I wish we'd listened."

Why do the founders ignore the partners' advice? Well, that's the thing about counterintuitive ideas: they contradict your intuitions. They seem wrong. So of course your first impulse is to disregard them. And in fact my joking description is not merely the curse of Y Combinator but part of its raison d'etre. If founders' instincts already gave them the right answers, they wouldn't need us. You only need other people to give you advice that surprises you. That's why there are a lot of ski instructors and not many running instructors.

[1] Some founders listen more than others, and this tends to be a predictor of success. One of the things I remember about the Airbnbs during YC is how intently they listened.

清单上的第一项就是我刚才提到的事实:创业太奇特了,如果你相信直觉,就会犯很多错误。即使你只知道这一点,至少能在犯错前停下来想一想。

我运营 Y Combinator 时经常开玩笑说,我们的职能就是告诉创始人他们将会忽略的事。这是千真万确的。一轮又一轮,YC 合伙人警告创始人即将犯的错误,创始人置之不理,然后一年后回来说:“真希望我们当时听了。”

为什么创始人会忽略合伙人的建议?这正是反直觉概念的特性:它们与你的直觉相悖,看上去是错的。所以你的第一反应当然是忽略它们。事实上,我这个玩笑式的描述不仅是 YC 的宿命,也是其存在的理由之一。如果创始人的直觉已经给出了正确答案,他们就不需要我们了。你只需要别人给你令你惊讶的建议。这就是为什么滑雪教练很多,而跑步教练很少的原因。

[1] 一些创始人比别人更善于倾听,这往往是成功的预兆。我记得 Airbnb 团队在 YC 期间,他们听得多认真啊。

§ 3

You can, however, trust your instincts about people. And in fact one of the most common mistakes young founders make is not to do that enough. They get involved with people who seem impressive, but about whom they feel some misgivings personally. Later when things blow up they say "I knew there was something off about him, but I ignored it because he seemed so impressive."

If you're thinking about getting involved with someone — as a cofounder, an employee, an investor, or an acquirer — and you have misgivings about them, trust your gut. If someone seems slippery, or bogus, or a jerk, don't ignore it.

This is one case where it pays to be self-indulgent. Work with people you genuinely like, and you've known long enough to be sure.

不过,关于人的直觉你是可以信赖的。事实上,年轻创始人最常见的错误之一就是在这方面做得不够。他们与那些看起来很厉害的人打交道,但内心却隐隐有些不安。后来事情搞砸了,他们就会说:“我知道他有点不对劲,但因为他看起来那么厉害,我就忽视了。”

如果你在考虑与某人合作——作为联合创始人、员工、投资者或被收购方——并且你对他们有所疑虑,请相信直觉。如果某人显得滑头、虚伪或像个混蛋,不要忽视。

在这种情况下,放纵自己是值得的。与你真正喜欢且认识足够久、可以确定的人一起工作。

§ 4

The second counterintuitive point is that it's not that important to know a lot about startups. The way to succeed in a startup is not to be an expert on startups, but to be an expert on your users and the problem you're solving for them. Mark Zuckerberg didn't succeed because he was an expert on startups. He succeeded despite being a complete noob at startups, because he understood his users really well.

If you don't know anything about, say, how to raise an angel round, don't feel bad on that account. That sort of thing you can learn when you need to, and forget after you've done it.

In fact, I worry it's not merely unnecessary to learn in great detail about the mechanics of startups, but possibly somewhat dangerous. If I met an undergrad who knew all about convertible notes and employee agreements and (God forbid) class FF stock, I wouldn't think "here is someone who is way ahead of their peers." It would set off alarms. Because another of the characteristic mistakes of young founders is to go through the motions of starting a startup. They make up some plausible-sounding idea, raise money at a good valuation, rent a cool office, hire a bunch of people. From the outside that seems like what startups do. But the next step after rent a cool office and hire a bunch of people is: gradually realize how completely fucked they are, because while imitating all the outward forms of a startup they have neglected the one thing that's actually essential: making something people want.

第二个反直觉点是:对创业了解很多并不那么重要。创业成功的关键不是成为创业专家,而是成为用户专家,以及解决他们问题的专家。

马克·扎克伯格的成功不是因为他是创业专家。他成功恰恰是因为对创业一无所知,但他非常了解用户。

如果你对如何筹集天使轮一无所知,不必为此感到难过。这类事情可以在需要时学习,用完即可忘记。

事实上,我担心不仅没必要详细学习创业的机制,而且可能还有些危险。如果我遇到一个对可转换债券、员工协议以及(天呐)FF 级股票了如指掌的本科生,我不会认为“这个人遥遥领先于同龄人”,这反而会拉响警报。因为年轻创始人的另一个典型错误就是走过场式地创业。他们编造一个听起来很合理的想法,以高估值融资,租一个酷炫的办公室,雇佣一大群人。从外面看,这似乎是创业该做的事。但租办公室、雇人之后的下一个步骤是:逐渐意识到自己彻底完蛋了,因为他们在模仿创业的所有外在形式时,忽略了真正本质的东西:做出人们想要的东西。

§ 5

We saw this happen so often that we made up a name for it: playing house. Eventually I realized why it was happening. The reason young founders go through the motions of starting a startup is because that's what they've been trained to do for their whole lives up to that point. Think about what you have to do to get into college, for example. Extracurricular activities, check. Even in college classes most of the work is as artificial as running laps.

I'm not attacking the educational system for being this way. There will always be a certain amount of fakeness in the work you do when you're being taught something, and if you measure their performance it's inevitable that people will exploit the difference to the point where much of what you're measuring is artifacts of the fakeness.

I confess I did it myself in college. I found that in a lot of classes there might only be 20 or 30 ideas that were the right shape to make good exam questions. The way I studied for exams in these classes was not (except incidentally) to master the material taught in the class, but to make a list of potential exam questions and work out the answers in advance. When I walked into the final, the main thing I'd be feeling was curiosity about which of my questions would turn up on the exam. It was like a game.

It's not surprising that after being trained for their whole lives to play such games, young founders' first impulse on starting a startup is to try to figure out the tricks for winning at this new game. Since fundraising appears to be the measure of success for startups (another classic noob mistake), they always want to know what the tricks are for convincing investors. We tell them the best way to convince investors is to make a startup that's actually doing well, meaning growing fast, and then simply tell investors so. Then they want to know what the tricks are for growing fast. And we have to tell them the best way to do that is simply to make something people want.

So many of the conversations YC partners have with young founders begin with the founder asking "How do we..." and the partner replying "Just..."

Why do the founders always make things so complicated? The reason, I realized, is that they're looking for the trick.

So this is the third counterintuitive thing to remember about startups: starting a startup is where gaming the system stops working. Gaming the system may continue to work if you go to work for a big company. Depending on how broken the company is, you can succeed by sucking up to the right people, giving the impression of productivity, and so on.

[2] In fact, this is one of the reasons startups are possible. If big companies weren't plagued by internal inefficiencies, they'd be proportionately more effective, leaving less room for startups.

But that doesn't work with startups. There is no boss to trick, only users, and all users care about is whether your product does what they want. Startups are as impersonal as physics. You have to make something people want, and you prosper only to the extent you do.

The dangerous thing is, faking does work to some degree on investors. If you're super good at sounding like you know what you're talking about, you can fool investors for at least one and perhaps even two rounds of funding. But it's not in your interest to. The company is ultimately doomed. All you're doing is wasting your own time riding it down.

So stop looking for the trick. There are tricks in startups, as there are in any domain, but they are an order of magnitude less important than solving the real problem. A founder who knows nothing about fundraising but has made something users love will have an easier time raising money than one who knows every trick in the book but has a flat usage graph. And more importantly, the founder who has made something users love is the one who will go on to succeed after raising the money.

Though in a sense it's bad news in that you're deprived of one of your most powerful weapons, I think it's exciting that gaming the system stops working when you start a startup. It's exciting that there even exist parts of the world where you win by doing good work. Imagine how depressing the world would be if it were all like school and big companies, where you either have to spend a lot of time on bullshit things or lose to people who do.

[3] In a startup you have to spend a lot of time on schleps, but this sort of work is merely unglamorous, not bogus.

I would have been delighted if I'd realized in college that there were parts of the real world where gaming the system mattered less than others, and a few where it hardly mattered at all. But there are, and this variation is one of the most important things to consider when you're thinking about your future. How do you win in each type of work, and what would you like to win by doing? [4] What should you do if your true calling is gaming the system? Management consulting.

我们见得太多了,以至于给这种现象起了个名字:“过家家”。最终我明白了为什么会这样。年轻创始人之所以走过场式创业,是因为他们从小到大所受的训练就是如此。想想考上大学需要做什么:课外活动,打钩。即使在大学课堂上,大部分作业也像跑圈一样虚假。

我并非在攻击教育体系如此。在教学中,作业总会有一定程度的虚假性;如果你衡量表现,人们不可避免地会利用这种差异,以至于你衡量的很多东西都只是虚假的产物。

我承认自己在大学也这样做过。我发现很多课程中,只有20-30个想法适合出考题。我备考的方式(并非有意)不是掌握课程内容,而是列出可能的考题并提前准备好答案。走进考场时,我主要的好奇心是哪些题目会出现在试卷上。这就像个游戏。

因此,在经历了毕生的游戏训练后,年轻创始人创业时的第一反应就是试图找出赢得这个新游戏的诀窍,这也就不足为奇了。由于融资看起来像是创业成功的衡量标准(又一个典型的新手错误),他们总是想知道说服投资者的诀窍。我们告诉他们,说服投资者的最佳方式是把创业公司做得真正好——快速增长——然后直接告诉投资者。接着他们想知道快速增长的诀窍,我们不得不告诉他们,最好的办法就是做出人们想要的东西。

YC 合伙人与年轻创始人的很多对话都以创始人问“我们如何……”、合伙人回答“只要……”开始。

为什么创始人总是把事情搞得这么复杂?我意识到,原因在于他们在寻找诀窍。

因此,关于创业的第三件反直觉的事是:创业正是玩弄系统不再奏效的地方。如果你去大公司工作,玩弄系统可能仍然有效。取决于公司有多糟糕,你可以通过巴结对的人、制造高产出的假象等来成功。

[2] 事实上,这也是创业之所以可能的原因之一。如果大公司不被内部低效所困扰,它们会相应更有效率,从而留给创业公司的空间就会更小。

但这对创业公司行不通。没有老板可欺骗,只有用户,而用户只关心你的产品是否满足他们的需求。创业像物理一样客观。你必须做出人们想要的东西,并且你只能根据做的程度获得回报。

危险的是,虚假在投资者那里确实有一定作用。如果你特别擅长说得头头是道,你可以愚弄投资者至少一轮甚至两轮融资。但这不符合你的利益。公司最终会失败,你只是在浪费自己的时间陪葬。

所以别再找诀窍了。创业中确实有诀窍,就像任何领域一样,但它们的重要性比解决真正的问题低一个数量级。一个对融资一无所知但做出了用户喜爱的产品的创始人,比一个通晓所有诀窍但用户增长曲线平缓的创始人更容易筹集资金。更重要的是,做出用户喜爱产品的创始人才能在融资后继续成功。

尽管从某种意义上说这是坏消息,因为你失去了最强大的武器之一,但我认为创业时玩弄系统不再有效这一点令人兴奋。令人兴奋的是,世界上竟然还存在通过做好工作就能赢得成功的领域。想象一下,如果世界都像学校和大公司一样,你要么花大量时间做无意义的事,要么输给那些做无意义事的人,那该多令人沮丧。

[3] 在创业中,你必须花大量时间处理杂务(schleps),但这种工作只是不光彩,并非虚假。

如果我上大学时就能意识到现实世界中有些领域玩弄系统不太重要,而有几个领域几乎完全无关,我会很高兴。但确实如此,这种差异是你在考虑未来时最重要的事情之一。你在每种工作中如何获胜?你希望靠做什么来获胜?

[4] 如果你的真正天职是玩弄系统,那么你应该做什么?管理咨询。

§ 6

That brings us to our fourth counterintuitive point: startups are all-consuming. If you start a startup, it will take over your life to a degree you cannot imagine. And if your startup succeeds, it will take over your life for a long time: for several years at the very least, maybe for a decade, maybe for the rest of your working life. So there is a real opportunity cost here.

Larry Page may seem to have an enviable life, but there are aspects of it that are unenviable. Basically at 25 he started running as fast as he could and it must seem to him that he hasn't stopped to catch his breath since. Every day new shit happens in the Google empire that only the CEO can deal with, and he, as CEO, has to deal with it. If he goes on vacation for even a week, a whole week's backlog of shit accumulates. And he has to bear this uncomplainingly, partly because as the company's daddy he can never show fear or weakness, and partly because billionaires get less than zero sympathy if they talk about having difficult lives. Which has the strange side effect that the difficulty of being a successful startup founder is concealed from almost everyone except those who've done it.

Y Combinator has now funded several companies that can be called big successes, and in every single case the founders say the same thing. It never gets any easier. The nature of the problems change. You're worrying about construction delays at your London office instead of the broken air conditioner in your studio apartment. But the total volume of worry never decreases; if anything it increases.

Starting a successful startup is similar to having kids in that it's like a button you push that changes your life irrevocably. And while it's truly wonderful having kids, there are a lot of things that are easier to do before you have them than after. Many of which will make you a better parent when you do have kids. And since you can delay pushing the button for a while, most people in rich countries do.

Yet when it comes to startups, a lot of people seem to think they're supposed to start them while they're still in college. Are you crazy? And what are the universities thinking? They go out of their way to ensure their students are well supplied with contraceptives, and yet they're setting up entrepreneurship programs and startup incubators left and right.

To be fair, the universities have their hand forced here. A lot of incoming students are interested in startups. Universities are, at least de facto, expected to prepare them for their careers. So students who want to start startups hope universities can teach them about startups. And whether universities can do this or not, there's some pressure to claim they can, lest they lose applicants to other universities that do.

Can universities teach students about startups? Yes and no. They can teach students about startups, but as I explained before, this is not what you need to know. What you need to learn about are the needs of your own users, and you can't do that until you actually start the company. [5] The company may not be incorporated, but if you start to get significant numbers of users, you've started it, whether you realize it yet or not.

So starting a startup is intrinsically something you can only really learn by doing it. And it's impossible to do that in college, for the reason I just explained: startups take over your life. You can't start a startup for real as a student, because if you start a startup for real you're not a student anymore. You may be nominally a student for a bit, but you won't even be that for long. [6] It shouldn't be that surprising that colleges can't teach students how to be good startup founders, because they can't teach them how to be good employees either.The way universities "teach" students how to be employees is to hand off the task to companies via internship programs. But you couldn't do the equivalent thing for startups, because by definition if the students did well they would never come back.

Given this dichotomy, which of the two paths should you take? Be a real student and not start a startup, or start a real startup and not be a student? I can answer that one for you. Do not start a startup in college. How to start a startup is just a subset of a bigger problem you're trying to solve: how to have a good life. And though starting a startup can be part of a good life for a lot of ambitious people, age 20 is not the optimal time to do it. Starting a startup is like a brutally fast depth-first search. Most people should still be searching breadth-first at 20.

You can do things in your early 20s that you can't do as well before or after, like plunge deeply into projects on a whim and travel super cheaply with no sense of a deadline. For unambitious people, this sort of thing is the dreaded "failure to launch," but for the ambitious ones it can be an incomparably valuable sort of exploration. If you start a startup at 20 and you're sufficiently successful, you'll never get to do it.

[7] Charles Darwin was 22 when he received an invitation to travel aboard the HMS Beagle as a naturalist. It was only because he was otherwise unoccupied, to a degree that alarmed his family, that he could accept it. And yet if he hadn't we probably would not know his name.

Mark Zuckerberg will never get to bum around a foreign country. He can do other things most people can't, like charter jets to fly him to foreign countries. But success has taken a lot of the serendipity out of his life. Facebook is running him as much as he's running Facebook. And while it can be very cool to be in the grip of a project you consider your life's work, there are advantages to serendipity too, especially early in life. Among other things it gives you more options to choose your life's work from.

There's not even a tradeoff here. You're not sacrificing anything if you forgo starting a startup at 20, because you're more likely to succeed if you wait. In the unlikely case that you're 20 and one of your side projects takes off like Facebook did, you'll face a choice of running with it or not, and it may be reasonable to run with it. But the usual way startups take off is for the founders to make them take off, and it's gratuitously stupid to do that at 20.

这就引出了第四个反直觉观点:创业是消耗一切的。如果你开始创业,它将以你无法想象的程度接管你的生活。如果你的创业公司成功了,它将在很长一段时间内接管你的生活:至少几年,也许十年,甚至可能占据你整个职业生涯。因此,这里存在真实的机会成本。

拉里·佩奇的看似令人羡慕的生活中有一些并不令人羡慕的方面。基本上,从25岁起他就开始全力奔跑,而且似乎从来没有停下来喘口气。每天谷歌帝国都会出现新的破事,只有CEO能处理,而他作为CEO必须处理。即使他只休假一周,一周的烂摊子也会堆积起来。他必须毫无怨言地承受,部分原因是作为公司的家长,他不能表现出恐惧或软弱,部分原因是亿万富翁如果抱怨生活艰难,几乎得不到任何同情。这产生了一个奇怪的副作用:成功创业者的艰难几乎不为外人所知,只有经历过的人才知道。

YC 现在已经资助了几家可以称为巨大成功的公司,在每一个案例中,创始人都说了同样的话:情况从未变得更容易。问题的性质改变了。你担心的是伦敦办公室的建设延误,而不是公寓里坏掉的空调。但忧虑的总量从未减少,如果有的话,反而增加了。

成功创业和生孩子类似,就像一个按钮,按下后你的生活便不可逆转地改变。虽然生孩子确实美妙,但有很多事情在有孩子之前做比之后更容易。其中许多事情会让你在有了孩子后成为更好的父母。既然可以推迟按下按钮,富裕国家的大多数人都是这样做的。

然而,说到创业,很多人似乎认为他们应该在大学期间就开始。你疯了吗?大学又在想什么?他们不遗余力地确保学生有充足的避孕用品,却又在左右设立创业项目和创业孵化器。

公平地说,大学也是被迫的。很多新生对创业感兴趣。大学至少实际上被期望为学生做好职业准备。因此,想创业的学生希望大学能教他们关于创业的知识。无论大学是否能做到,他们都有压力声称自己能,以免学生流向其他能教的大学。

大学能教学生创业吗?既能也不能。他们可以教学生关于创业的知识,但正如我之前解释的,这并不是你需要知道的。你需要了解的是自己用户的需求,而这只有在你真正创办公司之后才能做到。

[5] 公司可能尚未注册,但如果你开始获得大量用户,你就已经开始了,无论你是否意识到。

因此,创业本质上只能通过实践来学习。而你在大学里不可能做到,原因我刚解释过:创业会占据你的生活。你不能以学生身份真正创业,因为如果你真正开始创业,你就不再是学生了。你可能名义上还是学生一段时间,但也不会太久。 [6] 大学无法教学生成为优秀的创业创始人并不奇怪,因为它们也无法教学生成为优秀的员工。大学“教”学生成为员工的方式是通过实习项目将任务交给公司。但你不能对创业做同样的事,因为如果学生做得好,他们就不会回来了。

面对这样的二分法,你应该选择哪条路?做一个真正的学生而不创业,还是开始真正的创业而不做学生?我可以为你回答:不要在大学创业。如何创业只是你试图解决的更大问题的一个子集:如何拥有美好人生。虽然创业可以成为许多有抱负的人美好人生的一部分,但20岁不是最佳时机。创业就像一次极其快速的深度优先搜索。大多数人在20岁时仍应进行广度优先搜索。

你在20岁出头可以做的事情,前后都难以做到,比如凭一时兴起深入项目,或者毫无截止日期感地超级廉价旅行。对于没有抱负的人来说,这可能是可怕的“未能起飞”,但对于有抱负的人来说,这可以是一种无比宝贵的探索。如果你在20岁创业并且相当成功,你就再也无法体验这些了。

[7] 查尔斯·达尔文22岁时收到邀请,作为博物学家登上小猎犬号航行。正是因为他当时没有其他事情可做(甚至让家人担忧的程度),他才能接受邀请。而如果不是这样,我们可能不会知道他的名字。

马克·扎克伯格再也无法在国外漫无目的地闲逛。他可以做其他大多数人都做不到的事情,比如包机飞到国外。但成功已经从他生活中夺走了很多偶然性。Facebook在驱动着他,就像他在驱动Facebook一样。尽管被一个你认为是一生事业的项目深深吸引很酷,但偶然性也有其优势,尤其是在人生早期。除其他外,它为你提供了更多选择一生事业的机会。

这里甚至不存在权衡。如果你放弃在20岁创业,你并没有牺牲什么,因为等待会提高你成功的可能性。万一你20岁时有一个像Facebook那样爆发的副项目,你会面临是否继续的选择,继续可能是合理的。但创业公司通常爆发是因为创始人推动它爆发,而在20岁这样做是毫无必要的愚蠢。

§ 7

Should you do it at any age? I realize I've made startups sound pretty hard. If I haven't, let me try again: starting a startup is really hard. What if it's too hard? How can you tell if you're up to this challenge?

The answer is the fifth counterintuitive point: you can't tell. Your life so far may have given you some idea what your prospects might be if you tried to become a mathematician, or a professional football player. But unless you've had a very strange life you haven't done much that was like being a startup founder. Starting a startup will change you a lot. So what you're trying to estimate is not just what you are, but what you could grow into, and who can do that?

For the past 9 years it was my job to predict whether people would have what it took to start successful startups. It was easy to tell how smart they were, and most people reading this will be over that threshold. The hard part was predicting how

tough and ambitious they would become. There may be no one who has more experience at trying to predict that, so I can tell you how much an expert can know about it, and the answer is: not much. I learned to keep a completely open mind about which of the startups in each batch would turn out to be the stars.The founders sometimes think they know. Some arrive feeling sure they will ace Y Combinator just as they've aced every one of the (few, artificial, easy) tests they've faced in life so far. Others arrive wondering how they got in, and hoping YC doesn't discover whatever mistake caused it to accept them. But there is little correlation between founders' initial attitudes and how well their companies do.

I've read that the same is true in the military — that the swaggering recruits are no more likely to turn out to be really tough than the quiet ones. And probably for the same reason: that the tests involved are so different from the ones in their previous lives.

If you're absolutely terrified of starting a startup, you probably shouldn't do it. But if you're merely unsure whether you're up to it, the only way to find out is to try. Just not now.

那么你该在任何年龄开始创业吗?我知道我把创业描述得相当困难。如果还没有,让我再说一遍:创业真的很难。如果太难了呢?你如何判断自己能否承受这个挑战?

答案是第五个反直觉点:你无法判断。目前的生活可能让你大致了解自己在成为数学家或职业足球运动员方面的前景。但除非你经历非常奇特,否则你没有做过太多像创业创始人那样的事。创业会极大地改变你。所以你要估计的不仅仅是现在的你,而是你能成长为什么样的人——谁又能做到这一点呢?

在过去的9年里,我的工作就是预测人们是否具备成功创业的素质。判断他们有多聪明很容易——在座的大部分人都超过这个门槛。困难的部分是预测他们会变得多么坚韧和雄心勃勃。也许没有人比我更有经验试图预测这一点,所以我可以告诉你专家能了解到多少:不多。我学会了在每一批创业公司中保持完全开放的心态,不知道哪些会成为明星。

创始人有时自以为知道。一些人到来时确信自己会在 YC 脱颖而出,就像他们之前通过的所有(少数、人为、简单)测试一样。另一些人到来时则疑惑自己怎么被录取的,希望 YC 不要发现导致他们被录取的错误。但创始人的初始态度与公司表现之间几乎不存在相关性。

我读到军队中也是如此——狂妄的新兵并不比安静的新兵更有可能成为真正坚韧的人。原因可能相同:所涉及的测试与他们之前生活中的测试截然不同。

如果你对创业感到极度恐惧,那你可能不应该做。但如果你只是不确定自己是否胜任,唯一的方法就是尝试。只是不要在现在。

§ 8

So if you want to start a startup one day, what should you do in college? There are only two things you need initially: an idea and cofounders. And the m.o. for getting both is the same. Which leads to our sixth and last counterintuitive point: that the way to get startup ideas is not to try to think of startup ideas.

I've written a whole essay on this, so I won't repeat it all here. But the short version is that if you make a conscious effort to think of startup ideas, the ideas you come up with will not merely be bad, but bad and plausible-sounding, meaning you'll waste a lot of time on them before realizing they're bad.

The way to come up with good startup ideas is to take a step back. Instead of making a conscious effort to think of startup ideas, turn your mind into the type that startup ideas form in without any conscious effort. In fact, so unconsciously that you don't even realize at first that they're startup ideas.

This is not only possible, it's how Apple, Yahoo, Google, and Facebook all got started. None of these companies were even meant to be companies at first. They were all just side projects. The best startups almost have to start as side projects, because great ideas tend to be such outliers that your conscious mind would reject them as ideas for companies.

Ok, so how do you turn your mind into the type that startup ideas form in unconsciously? (1) Learn a lot about things that matter, then (2) work on problems that interest you (3) with people you like and respect. The third part, incidentally, is how you get cofounders at the same time as the idea.

The first time I wrote that paragraph, instead of "learn a lot about things that matter," I wrote "become good at some technology." But that prescription, though sufficient, is too narrow. What was special about Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia was not that they were experts in technology. They were good at design, and perhaps even more importantly, they were good at organizing groups and making projects happen. So you don't have to work on technology per se, so long as you work on problems demanding enough to stretch you.

What kind of problems are those? That is very hard to answer in the general case. History is full of examples of young people who were working on important problems that no one else at the time thought were important, and in particular that their parents didn't think were important. On the other hand, history is even fuller of examples of parents who thought their kids were wasting their time and who were right. So how do you know when you're working on real stuff?

[8] Parents can sometimes be especially conservative in this department. There are some whose definition of important problems includes only those on the critical path to med school.

I know how I know. Real problems are interesting, and I am self-indulgent in the sense that I always want to work on interesting things, even if no one else cares about them (in fact, especially if no one else cares about them), and find it very hard to make myself work on boring things, even if they're supposed to be important.

My life is full of case after case where I worked on something just because it seemed interesting, and it turned out later to be useful in some worldly way. Y Combinator itself was something I only did because it seemed interesting. So I seem to have some sort of internal compass that helps me out. But I don't know what other people have in their heads. Maybe if I think more about this I can come up with heuristics for recognizing genuinely interesting problems, but for the moment the best I can offer is the hopelessly question-begging advice that if you have a taste for genuinely interesting problems, indulging it energetically is the best way to prepare yourself for a startup. And indeed, probably also the best way to live.

[9] I did manage to think of a heuristic for detecting whether you have a taste for interesting ideas: whether you find known boring ideas intolerable. Could you endure studying literary theory, or working in middle management at a large company?

But although I can't explain in the general case what counts as an interesting problem, I can tell you about a large subset of them. If you think of technology as something that's spreading like a sort of fractal stain, every moving point on the edge represents an interesting problem. So one guaranteed way to turn your mind into the type that has good startup ideas is to get yourself to the leading edge of some technology — to cause yourself, as Paul Buchheit put it, to "live in the future." When you reach that point, ideas that will seem to other people uncannily prescient will seem obvious to you. You may not realize they're startup ideas, but you'll know they're something that ought to exist.

For example, back at Harvard in the mid 90s a fellow grad student of my friends Robert and Trevor wrote his own voice over IP software. He didn't mean it to be a startup, and he never tried to turn it into one. He just wanted to talk to his girlfriend in Taiwan without paying for long distance calls, and since he was an expert on networks it seemed obvious to him that the way to do it was turn the sound into packets and ship it over the Internet. He never did any more with his software than talk to his girlfriend, but this is exactly the way the best startups get started.

那么,如果你有一天想创业,大学里该做什么?一开始你只需要两样东西:创意和联合创始人。获取两者的方法是相同的。这引出了第六个也是最后一个反直觉点:获得创业创意的方法不是刻意去想创业创意。

我曾专门写过一篇文章,这里不再赘述。简而言之,如果你有意识地努力想创业点子,想出来的不仅会是很差的点子,而且是听起来不错但实际很差的点子——这意味着你会在它们身上浪费很多时间才意识到它们很差。

想出好创业点子的方法是退一步。不要有意识地去想创业点子,而是把你的头脑变成那种无需刻意努力就能自然产生创业点子的类型。事实上,这种过程如此无意识,以至于你一开始甚至不觉得它们是创业点子。

这不仅可能,而且正是苹果、雅虎、谷歌和 Facebook 的起源。这些公司一开始甚至都不打算成为公司,它们都只是副项目。最好的创业公司几乎必须以副项目开始,因为伟大的想法往往非常独特,以至于你的意识会拒绝将它们视为公司的想法。

那么,如何才能把你的头脑变成那种无意识产生创业点子的类型?(1) 学习很多重要的事物,(2) 解决你感兴趣的问题,(3) 与你喜欢和尊重的人一起解决。顺便说,第三点也是你同时获得联合创始人的方法。

我第一次写那段话时,用的不是“学习很多重要的事物”,而是“擅长某项技术”。但这个处方虽然足够,却太狭隘了。Brian Chesky 和 Joe Gebbia 的特别之处不在于他们是技术专家。他们擅长设计,或许更重要的是,他们擅长组织团队并推动项目实现。所以你不必非要研究技术本身,只要你研究那些足够有挑战性、能让你成长的问题就行。

什么样的问题是这样的?在一般情况下很难回答。历史上充满了年轻人致力于当时没人认为重要(尤其是父母不认为重要)的重要问题的例子。另一方面,历史上有更多父母认为孩子在浪费时间并且确实对的例子。那么你怎么知道自己在做真正的事情?

[8] 父母有时在这方面特别保守。有些人定义的重要问题只包括通往医学院的关键路径上的问题。

我知道我是怎么知道的。真正的问题是有趣的,而且我在某种程度上放纵自己:我总是想做有趣的事情,即使没人关心(事实上,尤其是没人关心的时候),并且很难强迫自己做无聊的事情,即使它们被认为很重要。

我的生活中充满了这样的案例:我仅仅因为觉得有趣而去研究某事,后来它却在世俗意义上变得有用。YC 本身也是因为我觉得有趣才去做的。所以我似乎有某种内在指南针帮忙。但我不知道别人脑子里有什么。也许再多想想我能想出识别真正有趣问题的启发法,但目前我能给出的最好建议是,如果你对真正有趣的问题有品味,那么精力充沛地放纵这种品味就是为创业做的最好准备。事实上,这也可能是最好的生活方式。

[9] 我确实想到了一个启发法来检测你是否对有趣的想法有品味:你是否觉得已知的无聊想法无法容忍?你能忍受学习文学理论,或者在大公司担任中层管理吗?

虽然我无法在一般情况下解释什么算是有趣的问题,但我可以告诉你其中的一大类。如果你把技术想象成某种分形污渍般扩散的东西,那么边界上的每个移动点都代表一个有趣的问题。因此,一个保证能让你的头脑产生好创业点子的方法是让自己进入某项技术的前沿——用 Paul Buchheit 的话说,就是“活在未来”。当你到达那个点时,那些在别人看来不可思议地有先见之明的想法对你来说将是显而易见的。你可能不觉得它们是创业点子,但你知道它们是应该存在的东西。

例如,90年代中期在哈佛,我朋友 Robert 和 Trevor 的一个研究生同学自己写了 VoIP 软件。他无意将其变成创业公司,也从未尝试过。他只是想和在台湾的女朋友免费打长途电话,作为网络专家,他自然而然想到的方法就是把声音变成数据包通过互联网传输。他除了和女朋友通话外从未对软件做过更多事情,但这正是最好的创业公司起步的方式。

§ 9

So strangely enough the optimal thing to do in college if you want to be a successful startup founder is not some sort of new, vocational version of college focused on "entrepreneurship." It's the classic version of college as education for its own sake. If you want to start a startup after college, what you should do in college is learn powerful things. And if you have genuine intellectual curiosity, that's what you'll naturally tend to do if you just follow your own inclinations.

[10] In fact, if your goal is to start a startup, you can stick even more closely to the ideal of a liberal education than past generations have. Back when students focused mainly on getting a job after college, they thought at least a little about how the courses they took might look to an employer. And perhaps even worse, they might shy away from taking a difficult class lest they get a low grade, which would harm their all-important GPA. Good news: users don't care what your GPA was. And I've never heard of investors caring either. Y Combinator certainly never asks what classes you took in college or what grades you got in them.

The component of entrepreneurship that really matters is domain expertise. The way to become Larry Page was to become an expert on search. And the way to become an expert on search was to be driven by genuine curiosity, not some ulterior motive.

At its best, starting a startup is merely an ulterior motive for curiosity. And you'll do it best if you introduce the ulterior motive toward the end of the process.

So here is the ultimate advice for young would-be startup founders, boiled down to two words: just learn.

因此,奇怪的是,如果你想成为成功的创业创始人,大学里最优的做法并不是某种专注于“创业”的新型职业教育,而是经典的通识教育本身。如果你想在大学毕业后创业,你在大学里应该做的就是学习强大的东西。如果你有真正的好奇心,那么只要追随自己的倾向,你自然会这样做。

[10] 事实上,如果你的目标是创业,你甚至可能比过去几代人更贴近自由教育的理想。过去学生主要关注毕业后找工作,他们会至少稍微考虑一下所选课程在雇主眼中如何。更糟的是,他们可能会因为害怕得低分而不敢选有难度的课程,从而损害至关重要的 GPA。好消息是:用户不在乎你的 GPA。我也从未听说过投资者在乎。YC 当然从不问你在大学上了什么课或得了什么成绩。

创业中真正重要的成分是领域专长。成为拉里·佩奇的方法是成为搜索专家。而成为搜索专家的方法是由真正的好奇心驱动,而不是别有用心。

在最好的情况下,创业仅仅是好奇心的一个别有用心的动机。如果你把这个别有用心的动机放到过程的最后,你会做得最好。

因此,给年轻准创业创始人的终极建议,浓缩成两个词:just learn(只管去学)。

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