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Ask HN: Should I go from big tech to a startup?

12 pointsby civicsquidover 3 years ago
I work at one of the big tech companies. I make what I think is good money, and I generally enjoy my work (although it has been starting to feel like a bit of a grind). I&#x27;ve been here for over two years.<p>I got an offer from a startup that is doing well financially. The salary is good and the equity seems like it could be okay after some negotiation. I&#x27;m not sure precisely what I&#x27;d be working on but I do know the general area. The people seem intelligent and fun.<p>I&#x27;m trying to decide if I should make the jump. I really like having an office to go into, the benefits, and the pay of where I&#x27;m at. But trying something new seems like a really interesting change, even if I&#x27;m giving up quite a bit in my book.<p>Has anyone else made a similar change (or decided against it)? How did you come to your conclusion?

5 comments

recursivefaultsover 3 years ago
Edit: Formatting My perspective is pretty well echoed here about the major differences.<p>Startup: High-energy, high-impact, high-volatility.<p>Enterprise: low-mid-energy, low-mid impact, low-volatility.<p>For me, when I look at this I look at it from the lens of what I want next in life, then figure out which option might give the best &quot;Step&quot; to it. Then I set a kind of timebox to it.<p>So for example, if I want to get back to feel that high-impact again... maybe I&#x27;d be willing to try a startup for lets say 6 months. I&#x27;d re-evaluate after that.<p>I think the timebox helps because it helps folks remember it isn&#x27;t a permanent choice and re-evaluate what opportunities really exist where you are and elsewhere.
itakeover 3 years ago
For a financial and work-life balance perspective:<p>Personally, I&#x27;d will never work for early stage startups again. The risk vs reward is extremely unfair, with co-founders and investors eating most of the pie.<p>Late-stage startups near IPO &#x2F; exits (usually 6-10 years after founding) might be worth it, b&#x2F;c equity will 2x quickly. But often those deals tend to still pay less than big tech after the 2x.<p>If you really want to work at an early stage, start your own.
alek_mover 3 years ago
&quot; (although it has been starting to feel like a bit of a grind)&quot;<p>Working in a startup also requires a lot of grind, just be aware of that. But if you want jump to something new i would take the opportunity.
weasturover 3 years ago
When I was faced with the same choice, I just had thought that I just need to try to compare. There are plenty of big companies with great salaries, so I could always come back.
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tsjqover 3 years ago
If you like the super organized way of working: those processes, paperworks, etc : you might not like the startup ways.
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