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Ask HN: Do founders have to feel passionate about the problem they're solving?

1 pointsby Throwawayh89over 1 year ago
I&#x27;m starting to conclude the founder and CEO of the startup I work at doesn&#x27;t feel very passionate about the problem the company is setting out to solve or end user who experiences it. It&#x27;s just something he thinks might be profitable if built.<p>Have I taken for granted that you need to feel these things to succeed or even bother to embark on creating a startup?

3 comments

gregjorover 1 year ago
Do they <i>have to</i> feel passionate? No. What does <i>feel passionate</i> even mean? Seems subjective and changeable, an interpretation rather than an attribute.<p>I think it helps for “founders” to give the appearance of passion for the product, to impress investors, get interest from customers, and keep overworked employees motivated. What they actually <i>feel</i>… who knows.
WendyTheWillowover 1 year ago
There are usually a lot of dark or difficult days for a startup, and I can’t see how anyone would get through those without a passion for the work.<p>However! If your solution is figured out, you’re not really trying to grow, and things are rosy, you can probably get away with it.<p>In other words, what you describe isn’t the person I’d want for difficult times, but is they are no difficult times, it’s fine.
marssaxmanover 1 year ago
Perhaps he feels passionate about the idea of making a profit. Some people are interested in the process of creating and operating a business, for its own sake, and the actual problem being solved is secondary.