TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Ask HN: If your startup fails, can you be an employee at another company?

9 pointsby timrpetersonover 9 years ago

8 comments

DiversityinSVover 9 years ago
My last co-founder kinda soured badly on steady corporate world. I plucked him from Yahoo (before Marissa) and did a startup for a couple of years. When we closed shop, he tried to go back to the corporate world (Disney&#x2F;BigCommerce) and found them unsufferable. He got used to small, do whatever I want to do. He ended up at another startup, a little bigger, but still under 40 people. So, moral of the story is that some people won&#x27;t go back to big corporate behemoths after doing a startup.<p>If you are a dev&#x2F;eng&#x2F;cs guy you&#x27;ll land fast anywhere, non-dev startup work (marketing&#x2F;PR&#x2F;social&#x2F;sales&#x2F;support&#x2F;fundraising) will require a lot of explaining and time. You&#x27;ll get there.
muzaniover 9 years ago
&quot;Failed&quot; startup founder here.<p>For me, it&#x27;s just a matter of what&#x27;s more cost efficient. Statistically it&#x27;s easier to get a job than funding. Very little of funding ends up in founders&#x27; pockets anyway.<p>Salaries and openings for developers have gone way up lately. Entrepreneurs need to chase the best opportunity and timing.<p>Also inevitably, you come across competition. Ideally you become best friends with your competitors. Because statistically, fail rate is high.<p>The best employee is very often someone who can build&#x2F;sell something very effectively. The best employer is someone who views you as an equal, works on your vision, and admires your strengths. So competitors are often a perfect match.
smeyerover 9 years ago
To add on to what celticninja said, it&#x27;s not just that it can be done, but is in fact quite common. Experience from running a startup can be a positive even if the company failed. Do you have a more specific question or any other information?
celticninjaover 9 years ago
Yes. Providing information as to why you think this is not possible may widen the scope of the discussion.
评论 #10889091 未加载
27182818284over 9 years ago
Absolutely. The hardest part is actually just re-adjusting to a non-startup workstyle. Like rejoining a 5K employee office from a 4-person startup comes with changes in workstyles, management, etc.
timrpetersonover 9 years ago
OP here. It was more a philosophical question rather than to be taken literally.
UK-ALover 9 years ago
Not only yes, but for certain types of company it considered a benefit.
a_lifters_lifeover 9 years ago
Of course. Happens everyday