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Ask PG & HN: So, when should someone go to Silicon Valley?

10 点作者 diminium超过 12 年前
I once asked this "Ask HN: You arrived at Silicon Valley. What do you do next?" (http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4268060)<p>The few responses I had basically said "DON'T COME TO SILICON VALLEY UNTIL YOUR READY WITH AN IDEA AND SO FORTH AND MONEY TO SUPPORT YOURSELF" or something like that.<p>While nice and all, this seems contradictory to the advice that people like PG and various blogs say that you need to be in an environment like SV so that non motivated people commonly found elsewhere don't spend all day shooting your dreams and ambitions down.<p>Which comes to the question. When should someone come to Silicon Valley? Can a dream survive in one of the most expensive places in the world to live when all you have is a dream and no other resources?

5 条评论

moocow01超过 12 年前
While I don't think its malicious, remember that PG, Silicon Valley VCs and most of those blogs make money off of the starry eyed young entrepreneurs coming to Silicon Valley. Entrepreneurs essentially are their resources that power those types of businesses. Nothing wrong with it - just remember where people who give out advice are coming from and what they benefit from even if it may benefit you as well.<p>My personal advice would be to start doing whatever it is you are dreaming about on as little cost as possible and once you identify that your business actually has a true need to be in SV then make the move. It all depends on financial habits and lifestyle but I think many will find that their "normal" middle class lifestyle in SV can gobble through a 100k/yr salary quite easily - its possible to live here on way less but one should be aware of the elevated cost of living.
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jason_slack超过 12 年前
I dont subscribe to the philosophy that one must be in SV to take their idea to the next level or succeed in general. SV is not a shrine for success and coming here isn't a magical formula for success.<p>Yes, I am in SV, but I feel like other areas also have a thriving startup community just as great as SV.<p>NYC, Boston, Seattle.<p>DuckDuckGo for example is in Philly.
soneill超过 12 年前
My feeling on the matter is that you don't go there until you have, at minimum, a well developed concept that you're ready to start moving on, and it's probably preferable to have gotten started on a MVP. The other question you should ask yourself is whether you need to be located in Silicon Valley at all. As you note, there are both personal barriers to entry (i.e. expense) as well professional barriers to entry (i.e. it may be easier to gain initial traction in another market that isn't as inundated as Silicon Valley is with other startups), and every case is different.<p>Like most other decisions, it really should just come down to a cost-benefit decision. Are the additional costs of moving to Silicon Valley offset by the benefits (better networks, available talent pool, availability of VC funds), or are you better served somewhere else? Only you can make that decision.
sskates超过 12 年前
One way to make the transition easier- get a job offer from a tech firm out here. Then if you're still unsure about moving out here to start a company, you can use that as a stepping stone to make the transition more comfortable.<p>If you can't manage to get a single job offer, I wouldn't recommend moving out here to start a company on your own. The bar is much, much, higher for starting a company than getting a job as a developer.
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djsamson超过 12 年前
I plan on moving to SV and working for a startup, then launching my own venture one day. I feel like this is an easier transition and I'll be able to accumulate some more experience and assets before I develop something on my own.