增长:创业公司的唯一核心
保罗·格雷厄姆认为,创业公司的本质是设计用于快速增长的公司,增长是唯一核心要素。他阐述了增长如何驱动一切:从定义(理发店无法规模扩张,故不是创业公司)到决策(以周增长率为指南针),再到经济逻辑(高风险高回报)。他给出具体指标:在 Y Combinator 期间,每周 5-7% 是良好增长率,5% 周增长对应年 12.6 倍增长。他还解释了风险投资为什么偏好创业公司(资本利得 vs 股息、易于监督),以及为什么创业公司常被收购(高速增长既有价值又具威胁)。文章鼓励创始人将增长视为优化问题,以每周增长目标做出所有决策。

September 2012
A startup is a company designed to grow fast. Being newly founded does not in itself make a company a startup. Nor is it necessary for a startup to work on technology, or take venture funding, or have some sort of "exit." The only essential thing is growth. Everything else we associate with startups follows from growth.
If you want to start one it's important to understand that. Startups are so hard that you can't be pointed off to the side and hope to succeed. You have to know that growth is what you're after. The good news is, if you get growth, everything else tends to fall into place. Which means you can use growth like a compass to make almost every decision you face.

2012年9月
初创公司是一种旨在快速增长的公司。新成立本身并不使一家公司成为初创公司。初创公司也不必从事技术工作、接受风险投资或实现某种“退出”。唯一本质的东西是增长。我们与初创公司关联的一切其他事物都源于增长。
如果你想要创办一家初创公司,理解这一点很重要。初创公司如此艰难,以至于你不能偏离重点而期望成功。你必须知道增长是你追求的目标。好消息是,如果你实现了增长,其他一切往往会水到渠成。这意味着你可以用增长作为指南针,来做出几乎每一个决定。
Redwoods
Let's start with a distinction that should be obvious but is often overlooked: not every newly founded company is a startup. Millions of companies are started every year in the US. Only a tiny fraction are startups. Most are service businesses — restaurants, barbershops, plumbers, and so on. These are not startups, except in a few unusual cases. A barbershop isn't designed to grow fast. Whereas a search engine, for example, is.
When I say startups are designed to grow fast, I mean it in two senses. Partly I mean designed in the sense of intended, because most startups fail. But I also mean startups are different by nature, in the same way a redwood seedling has a different destiny from a bean sprout.
That difference is why there's a distinct word, "startup," for companies designed to grow fast. If all companies were essentially similar, but some through luck or the efforts of their founders ended up growing very fast, we wouldn't need a separate word. We could just talk about super-successful companies and less successful ones. But in fact startups do have a different sort of DNA from other businesses. Google is not just a barbershop whose founders were unusually lucky and hard-working. Google was different from the beginning.
To grow rapidly, you need to make something you can sell to a big market. That's the difference between Google and a barbershop. A barbershop doesn't scale.
For a company to grow really big, it must (a) make something lots of people want, and (b) reach and serve all those people. Barbershops are doing fine in the (a) department. Almost everyone needs their hair cut. The problem for a barbershop, as for any retail establishment, is (b). A barbershop serves customers in person, and few will travel far for a haircut. And even if they did, the barbershop couldn't accommodate them.
红杉
让我们从一个显而易见但经常被忽略的区别开始:并非每一家新成立的公司都是初创公司。美国每年有数百万家公司成立,但其中只有极小一部分是初创公司。大多数是服务型企业——餐馆、理发店、水管工等等。这些不是初创公司,除了一些罕见情况。理发店不是为了快速增长而设计的,而搜索引擎则是。
当我说初创公司是为了快速增长而设计时,我指的是两层含义。一方面意味着“意图上的设计”,因为大多数初创公司会失败。但另一方面,我也意指初创公司在本质上就不同,就像红杉幼苗与豆芽有着不同的命运。
这种差异就是为什么会有“初创公司”这个独特的词来指代那些旨在快速增长的公司。如果所有公司本质上都相似,只是有些公司通过运气或创始人的努力最终增长得非常快,那我们就不需要一个单独的词汇了。我们只需谈论超级成功的公司和不太成功的公司即可。但事实上,初创公司确实拥有与其他企业不同的DNA。谷歌不仅仅是一家理发店,其创始人异常幸运且勤奋。谷歌从一开始就与众不同。
要快速增长,你需要制造一些可以销售给大市场的东西。这就是谷歌和理发店的区别。理发店不具备可扩展性。
一家公司要真正做大,必须满足两个条件:(a) 制造很多人想要的东西,并且 (b) 能够触达并服务所有这些用户。理发店在 (a) 方面做得很好——几乎每个人都需要理发。但理发店的问题,如同任何零售场所一样,在于 (b)。理发店必须亲自服务客户,很少有人会为理发而长途跋涉。即使他们愿意,理发店也容纳不下这么多人。
[1]
Writing software is a great way to solve (b), but you can still end up constrained in (a). If you write software to teach Tibetan to Hungarian speakers, you'll be able to reach most of the people who want it, but there won't be many of them. If you make software to teach English to Chinese speakers, however, you're in startup territory.
Most businesses are tightly constrained in (a) or (b). The distinctive feature of successful startups is that they're not.
Ideas
It might seem that it would always be better to start a startup than an ordinary business. If you're going to start a company, why not start the type with the most potential? The catch is that this is a (fairly) efficient market. If you write software to teach Tibetan to Hungarians, you won't have much competition. If you write software to teach English to Chinese speakers, you'll face ferocious competition, precisely because that's such a larger prize.
[2]
The constraints that limit ordinary companies also protect them. That's the tradeoff. If you start a barbershop, you only have to compete with other local barbers. If you start a search engine you have to compete with the whole world.
The most important thing that the constraints on a normal business protect it from is not competition, however, but the difficulty of coming up with new ideas. If you open a bar in a particular neighborhood, as well as limiting your potential and protecting you from competitors, that geographic constraint also helps define your company. Bar + neighborhood is a sufficient idea for a small business. Similarly for companies constrained in (a). Your niche both protects and defines you.
Whereas if you want to start a startup, you're probably going to have to think of something fairly novel. A startup has to make something it can deliver to a large market, and ideas of that type are so valuable that all the obvious ones are already taken.
That space of ideas has been so thoroughly picked over that a startup generally has to work on something everyone else has overlooked. I was going to write that one has to make a conscious effort to find ideas everyone else has overlooked. But that's not how most startups get started. Usually successful startups happen because the founders are sufficiently different from other people that ideas few others can see seem obvious to them. Perhaps later they step back and notice they've found an idea in everyone else's blind spot, and from that point make a deliberate effort to stay there.
[3] But at the moment when successful startups get started, much of the innovation is unconscious.
What's different about successful founders is that they can see different problems. It's a particularly good combination both to be good at technology and to face problems that can be solved by it, because technology changes so rapidly that formerly bad ideas often become good without anyone noticing. Steve Wozniak's problem was that he wanted his own computer. That was an unusual problem to have in 1975. But technological change was about to make it a much more common one. Because he not only wanted a computer but knew how to build them, Wozniak was able to make himself one. And the problem he solved for himself became one that Apple solved for millions of people in the coming years. But by the time it was obvious to ordinary people that this was a big market, Apple was already established.
Google has similar origins. Larry Page and Sergey Brin wanted to search the web. But unlike most people they had the technical expertise both to notice that existing search engines were not as good as they could be, and to know how to improve them. Over the next few years their problem became everyone's problem, as the web grew to a size where you didn't have to be a picky search expert to notice the old algorithms weren't good enough. But as happened with Apple, by the time everyone else realized how important search was, Google was entrenched.
That's one connection between startup ideas and technology. Rapid change in one area uncovers big, soluble problems in other areas. Sometimes the changes are advances, and what they change is solubility. That was the kind of change that yielded Apple; advances in chip technology finally let Steve Wozniak design a computer he could afford. But in Google's case the most important change was the growth of the web. What changed there was not solubility but bigness.
The other connection between startups and technology is that startups create new ways of doing things, and new ways of doing things are, in the broader sense of the word, new technology. When a startup both begins with an idea exposed by technological change and makes a product consisting of technology in the narrower sense (what used to be called "high technology"), it's easy to conflate the two. But the two connections are distinct and in principle one could start a startup that was neither driven by technological change, nor whose product consisted of technology except in the broader sense.
[4]
[1]
编写软件是解决(b)问题的好方法,但你仍然可能在(a)方面受到限制。如果你编写软件来教匈牙利人说藏语,你能触达大多数想要学习的人,但这样的人不会很多。然而,如果你制作软件来教中国人学英语,你就进入了初创公司的领域。
大多数企业在(a)或(b)方面受到严格限制。成功初创公司的显著特征就是它们不受这些限制。
创意
似乎创办一家初创公司总是比创办普通企业要好。如果你要创办一家公司,为什么不选择最有潜力的类型呢?问题在于这是一个(相当)有效的市场。如果你编写软件教匈牙利人说藏语,你不会有多少竞争。但如果你编写软件教中国人学英语,你将面临激烈的竞争,正是因为那是一个更大的奖励。
[2]
限制普通企业的约束也保护了它们。这就是权衡。如果你开一家理发店,你只需要与其他本地理发店竞争。如果你创办一家搜索引擎,你就得与全世界竞争。
然而,普通企业约束保护它们最重要的方面不是竞争,而是想出新颖创意的难度。如果你在某个街区开一家酒吧,除了限制你的潜力和保护你免受竞争之外,地理约束也有助于定义你的公司。酒吧+街区就足以构成一家小企业的创意。同样,对于在(a)方面受限制的公司也是如此。你的利基市场既保护了你,也定义了你。
相反,如果你想创办一家初创公司,你可能需要想出一些相当新颖的东西。初创公司必须制造能够交付给大市场的产品,而这种类型的创意如此宝贵,以至于所有显而易见的创意都已被占用。
那个创意空间已经被彻底翻遍了,以至于初创公司通常必须研究其他人忽视的东西。我本想写,人们必须有意识地努力寻找其他人忽视的创意。但大多数初创公司并非这样起步的。通常成功初创公司的诞生是因为创始人足够与众不同,以至于别人很少能看到的创意对他们来说显而易见。也许后来他们会退后一步,注意到自己发现了别人盲点中的创意,并从此有意识地努力保持在那片区域。
[3] 但在成功初创公司起步的那一刻,大部分创新是无意识的。
成功创始人的不同之处在于他们能看到不同的问题。既擅长技术又面临可以通过技术解决的问题,这是一个特别好的组合,因为技术变化如此之快,以至于以前糟糕的创意往往会在无人注意的情况下变成好创意。史蒂夫·沃兹尼亚克的问题是他想要一台自己的电脑。这在1975年是一个不寻常的问题。但技术变革即将使它变得更加普遍。因为他不仅想要一台电脑,而且知道如何制造它们,所以沃兹尼亚克能够为自己制造一台。而他自己解决的问题后来成为苹果公司在接下来几年为数百万人解决的问题。但当普通人意识到这是一个大市场时,苹果已经站稳了脚跟。
谷歌也有类似的起源。拉里·佩奇和谢尔盖·布林想要搜索网络。但与大多数人不同,他们拥有技术专长,既能注意到现有搜索引擎不够好,也知道如何改进它们。在接下来的几年里,随着网络发展到一定规模,即使你不是挑剔的搜索专家也能注意到旧算法不够好,他们的问题变成了每个人的问题。但就像苹果一样,当其他人意识到搜索的重要性时,谷歌已经根深蒂固。
这就是初创公司创意与技术之间的一种联系。一个领域的快速变化会揭示其他领域巨大且可解决的问题。有时变化是进步,它们改变的是可解决性。这是产生苹果的那种变化:芯片技术的进步最终让史蒂夫·沃兹尼亚克设计出他能负担得起的电脑。但在谷歌的案例中,最重要的变化是网络的发展。那里改变的不是可解决性,而是规模。
初创公司与技术之间的另一种联系是,初创公司创造了做事的新方式,而新方式在广义上就是新技术。 当一家初创公司既始于技术变革暴露的创意,又制造出由狭义技术(以前称为“高科技”)构成的产品时,很容易将两者混为一谈。但这两种联系是不同的,原则上可以创办一家既不受技术变革驱动,其产品也不包含技术(除了广义上)的初创公司。
[4]
Rate
How fast does a company have to grow to be considered a startup? There's no precise answer to that. "Startup" is a pole, not a threshold. Starting one is at first no more than a declaration of one's ambitions. You're committing not just to starting a company, but to starting a fast growing one, and you're thus committing to search for one of the rare ideas of that type. But at first you have no more than commitment. Starting a startup is like being an actor in that respect. "Actor" too is a pole rather than a threshold. At the beginning of his career, an actor is a waiter who goes to auditions. Getting work makes him a successful actor, but he doesn't only become an actor when he's successful.
So the real question is not what growth rate makes a company a startup, but what growth rate successful startups tend to have. For founders that's more than a theoretical question, because it's equivalent to asking if they're on the right path.
The growth of a successful startup usually has three phases:
There's an initial period of slow or no growth while the startup tries to figure out what it's doing.
As the startup figures out how to make something lots of people want and how to reach those people, there's a period of rapid growth.
Eventually a successful startup will grow into a big company. Growth will slow, partly due to internal limits and partly because the company is starting to bump up against the limits of the markets it serves.
[5] Together these three phases produce an S-curve. The phase whose growth defines the startup is the second one, the ascent. Its length and slope determine how big the company will be.The slope is the company's growth rate. If there's one number every founder should always know, it's the company's growth rate. That's the measure of a startup. If you don't know that number, you don't even know if you're doing well or badly.
When I first meet founders and ask what their growth rate is, sometimes they tell me "we get about a hundred new customers a month." That's not a rate. What matters is not the absolute number of new customers, but the ratio of new customers to existing ones. If you're really getting a constant number of new customers every month, you're in trouble, because that means your growth rate is decreasing.
During Y Combinator we measure growth rate per week, partly because there is so little time before Demo Day, and partly because startups early on need frequent feedback from their users to tweak what they're doing.
[6] A good growth rate during YC is 5-7% a week. If you can hit 10% a week you're doing exceptionally well. If you can only manage 1%, it's a sign you haven't yet figured out what you're doing.
The best thing to measure the growth rate of is revenue. The next best, for startups that aren't charging initially, is active users. That's a reasonable proxy for revenue growth because whenever the startup does start trying to make money, their revenues will probably be a constant multiple of active users.
[7]
增长率
一家公司需要增长多快才能被视为初创公司?没有精确的答案。“初创公司”是一个极点,而非一个门槛。创办一家初创公司起初不过是宣布自己的雄心壮志。你不仅承诺创办一家公司,而且承诺创办一家快速发展的公司,因此你承诺寻找那种罕见类型的创意。但起初你只有承诺。创办初创公司在这方面就像当演员。“演员”也是一个极点而非门槛。在职业生涯初期,演员是一个去试镜的服务员。找到工作使他成为成功的演员,但他并不是只在成功时才成为演员。
所以真正的问题不是什么样的增长率使公司成为初创公司,而是成功的初创公司通常有什么样的增长率。对创始人来说,这不仅仅是一个理论问题,因为它等同于询问自己是否走在正确的道路上。
成功初创公司的增长通常经历三个阶段:
有一个初始的缓慢或零增长时期,在此期间初创公司试图弄清楚自己在做什么。
当初创公司弄清楚如何制造很多人都想要的东西以及如何触达这些人时,会有一个快速增长期。
最终,成功的初创公司会成长为一家大公司。增长会放缓,部分是由于内部限制,部分是由于公司开始触及所服务市场的极限。
[5] 这三个阶段共同构成一条S形曲线。定义初创公司的增长阶段是第二个阶段,即上升期。它的长度和斜率决定了公司会有多大。斜率就是公司的增长率。如果有一个数字是每个创始人应该始终知道的,那就是公司的增长率。这是衡量初创公司的标尺。如果你不知道那个数字,你甚至不知道自己做得好还是坏。
当我第一次见到创始人并询问他们的增长率时,有时他们会告诉我“我们每月大约获得一百个新客户”。这不是一个比率。重要的不是新客户的绝对数量,而是新客户与现有客户的比例。如果你真的每月都获得固定数量的新客户,那你就有麻烦了,因为这意味着你的增长率在下降。
在Y Combinator期间,我们按周衡量增长率,部分原因是距离Demo Day时间很短,部分原因是初创公司早期需要频繁的用户反馈来调整他们正在做的事情。
[6] 在YC期间,良好的增长率是每周5-7%。如果你能达到每周10%,那就非常出色。如果你只能做到1%,表明你还没有弄清楚自己在做什么。
衡量增长率的最佳指标是收入。对于最初不收费的初创公司,次优选择是活跃用户。这是收入增长的合理代理,因为当初创公司开始尝试赚钱时,他们的收入很可能是活跃用户的一个固定倍数。
[7]
Compass
We usually advise startups to pick a growth rate they think they can hit, and then just try to hit it every week. The key word here is "just." If they decide to grow at 7% a week and they hit that number, they're successful for that week. There's nothing more they need to do. But if they don't hit it, they've failed in the only thing that mattered, and should be correspondingly alarmed.
Programmers will recognize what we're doing here. We're turning starting a startup into an optimization problem. And anyone who has tried optimizing code knows how wonderfully effective that sort of narrow focus can be. Optimizing code means taking an existing program and changing it to use less of something, usually time or memory. You don't have to think about what the program should do, just make it faster. For most programmers this is very satisfying work. The narrow focus makes it a sort of puzzle, and you're generally surprised how fast you can solve it.
Focusing on hitting a growth rate reduces the otherwise bewilderingly multifarious problem of starting a startup to a single problem. You can use that target growth rate to make all your decisions for you; anything that gets you the growth you need is ipso facto right. Should you spend two days at a conference? Should you hire another programmer? Should you focus more on marketing? Should you spend time courting some big customer? Should you add x feature? Whatever gets you your target growth rate.
[8] Judging yourself by weekly growth doesn't mean you can look no more than a week ahead. Once you experience the pain of missing your target one week (it was the only thing that mattered, and you failed at it), you become interested in anything that could spare you such pain in the future. So you'll be willing for example to hire another programmer, who won't contribute to this week's growth but perhaps in a month will have implemented some new feature that will get you more users. But only if (a) the distraction of hiring someone won't make you miss your numbers in the short term, and (b) you're sufficiently worried about whether you can keep hitting your numbers without hiring someone new.
It's not that you don't think about the future, just that you think about it no more than necessary.
In theory this sort of hill-climbing could get a startup into trouble. They could end up on a local maximum. But in practice that never happens. Having to hit a growth number every week forces founders to act, and acting versus not acting is the high bit of succeeding. Nine times out of ten, sitting around strategizing is just a form of procrastination. Whereas founders' intuitions about which hill to climb are usually better than they realize. Plus the maxima in the space of startup ideas are not spiky and isolated. Most fairly good ideas are adjacent to even better ones.
The fascinating thing about optimizing for growth is that it can actually discover startup ideas. You can use the need for growth as a form of evolutionary pressure. If you start out with some initial plan and modify it as necessary to keep hitting, say, 10% weekly growth, you may end up with a quite different company than you meant to start. But anything that grows consistently at 10% a week is almost certainly a better idea than you started with.
There's a parallel here to small businesses. Just as the constraint of being located in a particular neighborhood helps define a bar, the constraint of growing at a certain rate can help define a startup.
You'll generally do best to follow that constraint wherever it leads rather than being influenced by some initial vision, just as a scientist is better off following the truth wherever it leads rather than being influenced by what he wishes were the case. When Richard Feynman said that the imagination of nature was greater than the imagination of man, he meant that if you just keep following the truth you'll discover cooler things than you could ever have made up. For startups, growth is a constraint much like truth. Every successful startup is at least partly a product of the imagination of growth.
[9]
指南针
我们通常建议初创公司选择一个他们认为能达到的增长率,然后每周努力去实现它。这里的关键词是“只是”。如果他们决定每周增长7%,并且达到了这个数字,那么那一周他们就成功了。没有更多需要做的。但如果他们没有达到,他们就失败了,这是唯一重要的事情,应该相应警惕。
程序员会认识到我们在这里做什么。我们把创办初创公司变成了一个优化问题。任何尝试过优化代码的人都知道这种狭隘聚焦有多么有效。优化代码意味着拿一个现有程序并更改它,使其使用更少的某种资源,通常是时间或内存。你不需要思考程序应该做什么,只需让它更快。对大多数程序员来说,这是非常令人满意的工作。狭隘的聚焦让它成为一种谜题,而且你通常会惊讶于自己能多快解决它。
专注于实现增长率将创办初创公司这一原本令人困惑的多样化问题简化为一个单一问题。你可以用那个目标增长率为你做所有决定;任何能让你获得所需增长的东西都是理所当然正确的。你应该花两天时间参加会议吗?你应该再招一个程序员吗?你应该更注重营销吗?你应该花时间讨好某个大客户吗?你应该添加某个功能吗?只要能让你达到目标增长率就行。
[8] 用每周增长来评判自己并不意味着你只能看一周之内的事情。一旦你经历了一周未达目标的痛苦(那是唯一重要的事情,而你失败了),你就会对任何能让你将来免于这种痛苦的事情产生兴趣。因此,你会愿意例如再雇一个程序员,他可能不会对本周的增长有贡献,但也许一个月后他会实现一些新功能,为你带来更多用户。但前提是:(a) 雇人的干扰不会让你短期内错失目标,并且 (b) 你足够担心在不雇新人的情况下是否能持续达成目标。
并不是说你不想未来,只是你思考未来的程度不超过必要。
理论上,这种爬山可能会让初创公司陷入麻烦。他们可能会陷入局部最大值。但实际上从未发生过。每周必须实现增长数字迫使创始人行动,而行动与不行动是成功的高位。十有八九,坐着制定策略只是一种拖延。而创始人关于该爬哪座山的直觉通常比他们意识到的要好。此外,初创公司创意空间中的最大值并不是尖锐和孤立的。大多数相当好的创意都与更好的创意相邻。
关于为增长优化的一个迷人之处在于,它实际上可以发现初创公司的创意。你可以把对增长的需求作为一种进化压力。如果你从某个初始计划开始,并根据需要修改它以保持例如每周10%的增长,你最终可能会得到一家与你最初打算创办的截然不同的公司。但任何能够持续每周增长10%的东西几乎肯定比你开始时拥有的创意更好。
这里与小企业有相似之处。正如位于特定街区的约束有助于定义一家酒吧,以一定速率增长的约束也有助于定义一家初创公司。
你通常会最好地遵循这个约束,无论它引领你到哪里,而不是受一些初始愿景的影响,就像科学家最好跟随真理,无论它引领到哪里,而不是被他希望的情况所影响。当理查德·费曼说自然的想象力大于人类的想象力时,他的意思是,如果你只是不断跟随真理,你会发现比你能编造出来的更酷的东西。对于初创公司来说,增长就像一个与真理相似的约束。每一个成功的初创公司至少部分上是增长想象力的产物。
[9]
Value
It's hard to find something that grows consistently at several percent a week, but if you do you may have found something surprisingly valuable. If we project forward we see why.
weeklyyearly 1%1.7x 2%2.8x 5%12.6x 7%33.7x 10%142.0x
A company that grows at 1% a week will grow 1.7x a year, whereas a company that grows at 5% a week will grow 12.6x. A company making $1000 a month (a typical number early in YC) and growing at 1% a week will 4 years later be making $7900 a month, which is less than a good programmer makes in salary in Silicon Valley. A startup that grows at 5% a week will in 4 years be making $25 million a month.
[10]
Our ancestors must rarely have encountered cases of exponential growth, because our intuitions are no guide here. What happens to fast growing startups tends to surprise even the founders.
Small variations in growth rate produce qualitatively different outcomes. That's why there's a separate word for startups, and why startups do things that ordinary companies don't, like raising money and getting acquired. And, strangely enough, it's also why they fail so frequently.
Considering how valuable a successful startup can become, anyone familiar with the concept of expected value would be surprised if the failure rate weren't high. If a successful startup could make a founder $100 million, then even if the chance of succeeding were only 1%, the expected value of starting one would be $1 million. And the probability of a group of sufficiently smart and determined founders succeeding on that scale might be significantly over 1%. For the right people — e.g. the young Bill Gates — the probability might be 20% or even 50%. So it's not surprising that so many want to take a shot at it. In an efficient market, the number of failed startups should be proportionate to the size of the successes. And since the latter is huge the former should be too.
[11]
What this means is that at any given time, the great majority of startups will be working on something that's never going to go anywhere, and yet glorifying their doomed efforts with the grandiose title of "startup."
This doesn't bother me. It's the same with other high-beta vocations, like being an actor or a novelist. I've long since gotten used to it. But it seems to bother a lot of people, particularly those who've started ordinary businesses. Many are annoyed that these so-called startups get all the attention, when hardly any of them will amount to anything.
If they stepped back and looked at the whole picture they might be less indignant. The mistake they're making is that by basing their opinions on anecdotal evidence they're implicitly judging by the median rather than the average. If you judge by the median startup, the whole concept of a startup seems like a fraud. You have to invent a bubble to explain why founders want to start them or investors want to fund them. But it's a mistake to use the median in a domain with so much variation. If you look at the average outcome rather than the median, you can understand why investors like them, and why, if they aren't median people, it's a rational choice for founders to start them.
价值
很难找到某种以每周几个百分点的速度持续增长的东西,但如果你找到了,你可能发现了某种惊人的价值。如果我们向前推算,就会明白为什么。
周增长率 年增长倍数 1% 1.7倍 2% 2.8倍 5% 12.6倍 7% 33.7倍 10% 142.0倍
一家每周增长1%的公司一年将增长1.7倍,而一家每周增长5%的公司一年将增长12.6倍。一家每月收入1000美元(YC早期典型数字)并以每周1%增长的公司,4年后每月收入将达到7900美元,这还不到硅谷一个优秀程序员的工资。而一家每周增长5%的初创公司,4年后每月收入将达到2500万美元。
[10]
我们的祖先一定很少遇到指数增长的情况,因为我们的直觉在这里毫无指导作用。快速增长初创公司所发生的事情甚至常常让创始人感到惊讶。
增长率的微小变化会产生质的不同结果。这就是为什么“初创公司”是一个单独的词汇,以及为什么初创公司会做普通公司不做的事情,比如融资和被收购。而且,奇怪的是,这也是它们如此频繁失败的原因。
考虑到一家成功的初创公司可以变得多么有价值,任何熟悉期望值概念的人都会对失败率不高感到惊讶。如果一家成功的初创公司能为创始人带来1亿美元,那么即使成功的概率只有1%,创办一家初创公司的期望值也是100万美元。而对于一群足够聪明和坚定的创始人来说,达到那种规模的成功概率可能远高于1%。对于合适的人——例如年轻的比尔·盖茨——概率可能是20%甚至50%。所以,如此多的人想尝试也就不足为奇了。在一个有效的市场中,失败初创公司的数量应该与成功的规模成正比。既然后者巨大,前者也应该是巨大的。
[11]
这意味着,在任何给定的时间,绝大多数初创公司都在做毫无前途的事情,却用“初创公司”这个宏大的标题来美化他们注定失败的努力。
这并不困扰我。其他高贝塔值的职业也是如此,比如演员或小说家。我早已习惯了。但这似乎困扰着很多人,尤其是那些创办了普通企业的人。许多人感到恼火的是,这些所谓的初创公司获得了所有关注,而它们几乎没有一家能成事。
如果他们退后一步,看到全局,可能就不会那么愤慨了。他们犯的错误是,基于轶事证据的意见隐含着以中位数而非平均值来判断。如果你用中位数来判断初创公司,那么整个初创公司的概念看起来就像是一个骗局。你必须发明一个泡沫来解释为什么创始人想创办它们,或者投资者想资助它们。但在这个差异如此巨大的领域中使用中位数是一个错误。如果你看的是平均结果而非中位数,你就会明白为什么投资者喜欢它们,以及为什么对于不是中位数的人来说,创办它们是理性的选择。
Deals
Why do investors like startups so much? Why are they so hot to invest in photo-sharing apps, rather than solid money-making businesses? Not only for the obvious reason.
The test of any investment is the ratio of return to risk. Startups pass that test because although they're appallingly risky, the returns when they do succeed are so high. But that's not the only reason investors like startups. An ordinary slower-growing business might have just as good a ratio of return to risk, if both were lower. So why are VCs interested only in high-growth companies? The reason is that they get paid by getting their capital back, ideally after the startup IPOs, or failing that when it's acquired.
The other way to get returns from an investment is in the form of dividends. Why isn't there a parallel VC industry that invests in ordinary companies in return for a percentage of their profits? Because it's too easy for people who control a private company to funnel its revenues to themselves (e.g. by buying overpriced components from a supplier they control) while making it look like the company is making little profit. Anyone who invested in private companies in return for dividends would have to pay close attention to their books.
The reason VCs like to invest in startups is not simply the returns, but also because such investments are so easy to oversee. The founders can't enrich themselves without also enriching the investors.
[12]
Why do founders want to take the VCs' money? Growth, again. The constraint between good ideas and growth operates in both directions. It's not merely that you need a scalable idea to grow. If you have such an idea and don't grow fast enough, competitors will. Growing too slowly is particularly dangerous in a business with network effects, which the best startups usually have to some degree.
Almost every company needs some amount of funding to get started. But startups often raise money even when they are or could be profitable. It might seem foolish to sell stock in a profitable company for less than you think it will later be worth, but it's no more foolish than buying insurance. Fundamentally that's how the most successful startups view fundraising. They could grow the company on its own revenues, but the extra money and help supplied by VCs will let them grow even faster. Raising money lets you choose your growth rate.
Money to grow faster is always at the command of the most successful startups, because the VCs need them more than they need the VCs. A profitable startup could if it wanted just grow on its own revenues. Growing slower might be slightly dangerous, but chances are it wouldn't kill them. Whereas VCs need to invest in startups, and in particular the most successful startups, or they'll be out of business. Which means that any sufficiently promising startup will be offered money on terms they'd be crazy to refuse. And yet because of the scale of the successes in the startup business, VCs can still make money from such investments. You'd have to be crazy to believe your company was going to become as valuable as a high growth rate can make it, but some do.
Pretty much every successful startup will get acquisition offers too. Why? What is it about startups that makes other companies want to buy them?
[13]
Fundamentally the same thing that makes everyone else want the stock of successful startups: a rapidly growing company is valuable. It's a good thing eBay bought Paypal, for example, because Paypal is now responsible for 43% of their sales and probably more of their growth.
But acquirers have an additional reason to want startups. A rapidly growing company is not merely valuable, but dangerous. If it keeps expanding, it might expand into the acquirer's own territory. Most product acquisitions have some component of fear. Even if an acquirer isn't threatened by the startup itself, they might be alarmed at the thought of what a competitor could do with it. And because startups are in this sense doubly valuable to acquirers, acquirers will often pay more than an ordinary investor would.
[14]
交易
为什么投资者如此喜欢初创公司?为什么他们如此热衷于投资照片分享应用,而不是稳健的赚钱业务?不仅仅是因为显而易见的原因。
任何投资的测试都是回报与风险之比。初创公司通过了这个测试,因为尽管它们风险极高,但成功时的回报也极高。但这并不是投资者喜欢初创公司的唯一原因。一个增长较慢的普通企业,如果风险和回报都较低,可能同样具有好的回报风险比。那么为什么风投只对高增长公司感兴趣?原因是他们通过收回资本来获得回报,理想情况是在初创公司IPO后,或者如果不行,在它被收购时。
从投资中获得回报的另一种方式是分红。为什么没有一个平行的风投行业,投资于普通公司以换取其利润的一部分?因为控制私营公司的人太容易将公司收入转移给自己(例如,从他们控制的供应商那里购买定价过高的组件),同时让公司看起来利润微薄。任何投资于私营公司以换取分红的人都必须密切关注其账簿。
风投喜欢投资初创公司的原因不仅仅是回报,还因为这样的投资很容易监督。创始人不能在不使投资者也获利的情况下使自己致富。
[12]
为什么创始人想要风投的钱?还是增长。好创意与增长之间的约束是双向的。你不仅需要可扩展的创意来实现增长。如果你有这样的创意却增长不够快,竞争者就会追上来。增长太慢在具有网络效应的业务中尤其危险,而最好的初创公司通常在一定程度上拥有网络效应。
几乎每家公司都需要一些启动资金。但初创公司即使已经盈利或能够盈利,也常常融资。以低于你认为未来价值的价格出售盈利公司的股票可能看起来很愚蠢,但这并不比购买保险更愚蠢。从根本上说,最成功的初创公司就是这样看待融资的。他们可以用自己的收入来发展公司,但风投提供的额外资金和帮助让他们增长得更快。融资让你可以选择你的增长率。
最成功的初创公司总是能够获得资金以更快增长,因为风投更需要它们,而不是它们更需要风投。一家盈利的初创公司如果愿意,完全可以依靠自己的收入增长。增长慢一点可能有点危险,但很可能不会致命。而风投需要投资初创公司,尤其是最成功的那些,否则他们就会倒闭。这意味着任何足够有潜力的初创公司都会获得条件好到令人无法拒绝的资金。然而,由于初创公司成功的规模之大,风投仍然可以从这样的投资中赚钱。你必须疯了才会相信你的公司能变得像高增长率所能带来的那样有价值,但有些人确实如此。
几乎每一个成功的初创公司也会收到收购要约。为什么?初创公司有什么特质让其他公司想要收购它们?
[13]
从根本上说,这与让其他人想要成功初创公司股票的原因相同:一家快速增长的公司是有价值的。例如,易趣收购贝宝是件好事,因为贝宝现在贡献了他们43%的销售额,可能还有更多的增长。
但收购方还有另一个想要初创公司的原因。一家快速增长的公司不仅有价值,而且危险。如果它继续扩张,可能会扩展到收购方自己的领域。大多数产品收购都带有一些恐惧成分。即使收购方本身不受初创公司的威胁,他们也可能对竞争对手可能利用它做什么感到警觉。由于初创公司对收购方具有这种双重价值,收购方通常会比普通投资者支付更高的价格。
[14]
Understand
The combination of founders, investors, and acquirers forms a natural ecosystem. It works so well that those who don't understand it are driven to invent conspiracy theories to explain how neatly things sometimes turn out. Just as our ancestors did to explain the apparently too neat workings of the natural world. But there is no secret cabal making it all work.
If you start from the mistaken assumption that Instagram was worthless, you have to invent a secret boss to force Mark Zuckerberg to buy it. To anyone who knows Mark Zuckerberg, that is the reductio ad absurdum of the initial assumption. The reason he bought Instagram was that it was valuable and dangerous, and what made it so was growth.
If you want to understand startups, understand growth. Growth drives everything in this world. Growth is why startups usually work on technology — because ideas for fast growing companies are so rare that the best way to find new ones is to discover those recently made viable by change, and technology is the best source of rapid change. Growth is why it's a rational choice economically for so many founders to try starting a startup: growth makes the successful companies so valuable that the expected value is high even though the risk is too. Growth is why VCs want to invest in startups: not just because the returns are high but also because generating returns from capital gains is easier to manage than generating returns from dividends. Growth explains why the most successful startups take VC money even if they don't need to: it lets them choose their growth rate. And growth explains why successful startups almost invariably get acquisition offers. To acquirers a fast-growing company is not merely valuable but dangerous too.
It's not just that if you want to succeed in some domain, you have to understand the forces driving it. Understanding growth is what starting a startup consists of. What you're really doing (and to the dismay of some observers, all you're really doing) when you start a startup is committing to solve a harder type of problem than ordinary businesses do. You're committing to search for one of the rare ideas that generates rapid growth. Because these ideas are so valuable, finding one is hard. The startup is the embodiment of your discoveries so far. Starting a startup is thus very much like deciding to be a research scientist: you're not committing to solve any specific problem; you don't know for sure which problems are soluble; but you're committing to try to discover something no one knew before. A startup founder is in effect an economic research scientist. Most don't discover anything that remarkable, but some discover relativity.
Notes
[1] Strictly speaking it's not lots of customers you need but a big market, meaning a high product of number of customers times how much they'll pay. But it's dangerous to have too few customers even if they pay a lot, or the power that individual customers have over you could turn you into a de facto consulting firm. So whatever market you're in, you'll usually do best to err on the side of making the broadest type of product for it.
[2] One year at Startup School David Heinemeier Hansson encouraged programmers who wanted to start businesses to use a restaurant as a model. What he meant, I believe, is that it's fine to start software companies constrained in (a) in the same way a restaurant is constrained in (b). I agree. Most people should not try to start startups.
[3] That sort of stepping back is one of the things we focus on at Y Combinator. It's common for founders to have discovered something intuitively without understanding all its implications. That's probably true of the biggest discoveries in any field.
[4] I got it wrong in "How to Make Wealth" when I said that a startup was a small company that takes on a hard technical problem. That is the most common recipe but not the only one.
[5] In principle companies aren't limited by the size of the markets they serve, because they could just expand into new markets. But there seem to be limits on the ability of big companies to do that. Which means the slowdown that comes from bumping up against the limits of one's markets is ultimately just another way in which internal limits are expressed.
It may be that some of these limits could be overcome by changing the shape of the organization — specifically by sharding it.
[6] This is, obviously, only for startups that have already launched or can launch during YC. A startup building a new database will probably not do that. On the other hand, launching something small and then using growth rate as evolutionary pressure is such a valuable technique that any company that could start this way probably should.
[7] If the startup is taking the Facebook/Twitter route and building something they hope will be very popular but from which they don't yet have a definite plan to make money, the growth rate has to be higher, even though it's a proxy for revenue growth, because such companies need huge numbers of users to succeed at all.
Beware too of the edge case where something spreads rapidly but the churn is high as well, so that you have good net growth till you run through all the potential users, at which point it suddenly stops.
[8] Within YC when we say it's ipso facto right to do whatever gets you growth, it's implicit that this excludes trickery like buying users for more than their lifetime value, counting users as active when they're really not, bleeding out invites at a regularly increasing rate to manufacture a perfect growth curve, etc. Even if you were able to fool investors with such tricks, you'd ultimately be hurting yourself, because you're throwing off your own compass.
[9] Which is why it's such a dangerous mistake to believe that successful startups are simply the embodiment of some brilliant initial idea. What you're looking for initially is not so much a great idea as an idea that could evolve into a great one. The danger is that promising ideas are not merely blurry versions of great ones. They're often different in kind, because the early adopters you evolve the idea upon have different needs from the rest of the market. For example, the idea that evolves into Facebook isn't merely a subset of Facebook; the idea that evolves into Facebook is a site for Harvard undergrads.
[10] What if a company grew at 1.7x a year for a really long time? Could it not grow just as big as any successful startup? In principle yes, of course. If our hypothetical company making $1000 a month grew at 1% a week for 19 years, it would grow as big as a company growing at 5% a week for 4 years. But while such trajectories may be common in, say, real estate development, you don't see them much in the technology business. In technology, companies that grow slowly tend not to grow as big.
[11] Any expected value calculation varies from person to person depending on their utility function for money. I.e. the first million is worth more to most people than subsequent millions. How much more depends on the person. For founders who are younger or more ambitious the utility function is flatter. Which is probably part of the reason the founders of the most successful startups of all tend to be on the young side.
[12] More precisely, this is the case in the biggest winners, which is where all the returns come from. A startup founder could pull the same trick of enriching himself at the company's expense by selling them overpriced components. But it wouldn't be worth it for the founders of Google to do that. Only founders of failing startups would even be tempted, but those are writeoffs from the VCs' point of view anyway.
[13] Acquisitions fall into two categories: those where the acquirer wants the business, and those where the acquirer just wants the employees. The latter type is sometimes called an HR acquisition. Though nominally acquisitions and sometimes on a scale that has a significant effect on the expected value calculation for potential founders, HR acquisitions are viewed by acquirers as more akin to hiring bonuses.
[14] I once explained this to some founders who had recently arrived from Russia. They found it novel that if you threatened a company they'd pay a premium for you. "In Russia they just kill you," they said, and they were only partly joking. Economically, the fact that established companies can't simply eliminate new competitors may be one of the most valuable aspects of the rule of law. And so to the extent we see incumbents suppressing competitors via regulations or patent suits, we should worry, not because it's a departure from the rule of law per se but from what the rule of law is aiming at.
Thanks to Sam Altman, Marc Andreessen, Paul Buchheit, Patrick Collison, Jessica Livingston, Geoff Ralston, and Harj Taggar for reading drafts of this.
理解
创始人、投资者和收购方的组合形成了一个自然生态系统。它运作得如此之好,以至于那些不理解它的人被迫发明阴谋论来解释事情有时如何如此巧妙地发展。就像我们的祖先解释自然世界看似过于巧妙的运作一样。但并没有秘密集团在操控一切。
如果你从Instagram毫无价值的错误假设出发,你就必须发明一个秘密老板来迫使马克·扎克伯格收购它。对任何了解马克·扎克伯格的人来说,这是对初始假设的归谬法。他收购Instagram的原因是它有价值且危险,而使其如此的是增长。
如果你想理解初创公司,就理解增长。增长驱动着这个世界的一切。增长是初创公司通常从事技术工作的原因——因为快速增长公司的创意如此罕见,以至于找到新创意的最佳方式是发现那些因变化而变得可行的创意,而技术是快速变化的最佳来源。增长是为什么这么多创始人选择创办初创公司在经济上是理性的:增长使成功的公司如此有价值,以至于即使风险很大,期望值也很高。增长是风投想要投资初创公司的原因:不仅因为回报高,还因为从资本收益中获得回报比从分红中获得回报更容易管理。增长解释了为什么最成功的初创公司即使不需要也会接受风投资金:这让他们可以选择自己的增长率。增长也解释了为什么成功的初创公司几乎总会收到收购要约。对收购方来说,一家快速增长的公司不仅有价值,而且危险。
不仅仅是如果你想在某个领域成功,你必须理解驱动它的力量。理解增长就是创办初创公司的全部内容。当你创办一家初创公司时,你真正在做的是(令一些观察者沮丧的是,你唯一在做的是)承诺解决比普通企业更困难的问题。你承诺寻找那些能产生快速增长的罕见创意。因为这些创意如此宝贵,找到一个很难。初创公司是你迄今为止发现的体现。因此,创办一家初创公司非常像决定成为一名研究科学家:你并不承诺解决任何特定问题;你不确定哪些问题可解;但承诺尝试发现一些没人知道的东西。一个初创公司的创始人实际上是一名经济研究科学家。大多数没有发现什么了不起的东西,但有些发现了相对论。
注释
[1] 严格来说,你需要的不是大量客户,而是一个大市场,即客户数量乘以他们愿意支付的金额要高。但客户太少也很危险,即使他们支付很多,因为个别客户对你的权力可能让你变成事实上的咨询公司。所以无论你处于哪个市场,通常最好倾向于为该市场制造最广泛的产品。
[2] 有一年在创业学校,大卫·海涅迈尔·汉森鼓励想创业的程序员以餐馆为模型。我相信他的意思是,开一家在(a)方面受限的软件公司是可以的,就像餐馆在(b)方面受限一样。我同意。大多数人不应尝试创办初创公司。
[3] 这种退后一步是我们在Y Combinator关注的事情之一。创始人直觉地发现了一些东西而不理解其全部含义是很常见的。这可能是任何领域最大发现的共同点。
[4] 我在《如何致富》中说初创公司是承担硬技术问题的小公司,这是错误的。那是最常见的配方,但不是唯一的。
[5] 原则上公司不受所服务市场规模限制,因为它们可以扩展到新市场。但大公司这样做的能力似乎有限。这意味着因触及市场极限而导致的放缓最终只是内部限制的另一种表现形式。
也许其中一些限制可以通过改变组织形态来克服——特别是通过分片。
[6] 显然,这只适用于已经推出或能在YC期间推出的初创公司。构建新数据库的初创公司可能不会这样做。另一方面,推出一个小东西然后用增长率作为进化压力是一项非常有价值的技术,任何可以这样启动的公司可能都应该这样做。
[7] 如果初创公司走Facebook/Twitter的路线,构建他们希望非常受欢迎但尚无明确盈利计划的东西,那么增长率必须更高,尽管它是收入增长的代理,因为这类公司需要海量用户才能成功。
也要警惕一种边缘情况:某物传播很快但流失率也很高,这样你在耗尽所有潜在用户之前有很好的净增长,然后突然停止。
[8] 在YC内部,当我们说做任何能带来增长的事情都是理所当然正确的时,隐含排除了诡计,比如以超过客户生命周期价值的价格购买用户,将实际上不活跃的用户算作活跃,以定期递增的速度发送邀请以制造完美的增长曲线等。即使你能用这些诡计欺骗投资者,最终你会伤害自己,因为你扔掉了自己的指南针。
[9] 这就是为什么相信成功初创公司只是某个 brilliant 初始创意的体现是一个危险的错误。你最初寻找的不太是一个伟大的创意,而是一个可以演变成伟大创意的创意。危险在于,有希望的创意不仅仅是伟大创意的模糊版本。它们往往在本质上不同,因为你赖以演化的早期采用者与市场的其他部分有不同的需求。例如,演变成Facebook的创意不仅仅是Facebook的子集;演变成Facebook的创意是一个面向哈佛本科生的网站。
[10] 如果一家公司以每年1.7倍的速度增长很长时间呢?它难道不能长到和任何成功的初创公司一样大吗?原则上当然可以。如果我们假设那家每月1000美元的公司以每周1%的速度增长19年,它将和一家以每周5%增长4年的公司一样大。但这种轨迹在房地产等行业可能常见,在科技行业却不常见。在科技领域,增长缓慢的公司往往不会变得那么大。
[11] 任何期望值计算都因人而异,取决于他们对金钱的效用函数。也就是说,第一个一百万对大多数人来说比后续的百万更值钱。更值多少取决于个人。对于更年轻或更有野心的创始人,效用函数更平坦。这可能是有史以来最成功初创公司的创始人往往偏年轻的部分原因。
[12] 更准确地说,这是对那些最大的赢家而言,而所有回报都来自它们。初创公司创始人也可以通过向公司出售定价过高的组件来以公司为代价让自己致富。但谷歌的创始人不会这样做。只有失败的初创公司创始人才会动心,但那些从风投的角度来看无论如何都是坏账。
[13] 收购分为两类:收购方想要业务,和收购方只想要员工。后一种有时被称为人才收购。虽然名义上是收购,有时其规模对潜在创始人的期望值计算有显著影响,但收购方将人才收购视为更类似于招聘奖金。
[14] 我曾经向一些刚从俄罗斯来的创始人解释这一点。他们觉得如果你威胁一家公司,他们会为你支付溢价,这很新奇。“在俄罗斯他们只会杀了你,”他们说,而且不完全是开玩笑。从经济角度看,老牌公司不能简单地消除新竞争者的事实可能是法治最有价值的方面之一。因此,当我们看到现有企业通过法规或专利诉讼压制竞争者时,我们应该担心,不是因为它背离了法治本身,而是因为它背离了法治的目标。
感谢Sam Altman、Marc Andreessen、Paul Buchheit、Patrick Collison、Jessica Livingston、Geoff Ralston和Harj Taggar阅读本文草稿。