Ask HN: Evaluating joining a startup
2 comments
Joining a startup is a high risk/high reward decision, and the biggest question you should have for them is where is the money coming from, and how long does the startup have until it needs more money given the current plan.
In addition to the salary cut, what are their expectations of a first employee? Will you be the only engineer, what are their expectations for hiring more staff?
Raising money is very hard, do these founders have an amazing network that they can utilize to raise cash? Have they successfully started companies in the past? If you were an investor would you invest in them?
Also keep in mind that everything is negotiable. Finding first employees is very hard, and as such you have a lot of negotiating power, especially if you're already employed and aren't in a rush to move.
In addition to the salary cut, what are their expectations of a first employee? Will you be the only engineer, what are their expectations for hiring more staff?
Raising money is very hard, do these founders have an amazing network that they can utilize to raise cash? Have they successfully started companies in the past? If you were an investor would you invest in them?
Also keep in mind that everything is negotiable. Finding first employees is very hard, and as such you have a lot of negotiating power, especially if you're already employed and aren't in a rush to move.
after answering this I also found this article in the new section of HN:
https://medium.com/excitingrole/how-to-pick-good-startups-e0...
I haven't read the article but the title makes it seem very relevant.
I haven't read the article but the title makes it seem very relevant.
They do not have external funding, not sure if they have clients yet.
They are paying 20% less than I make in industry, and I would get 0.1-1.0% equity - is this common for the "first employee" essentially non-founder?