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http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=638350

from pg:

"There are quite a lot of founders over 30. I don't know exactly how many because we don't keep track of ages. The sharp falloff is around 35, but we've had a handful of founders over 40. None over 50 though. I think our age distribution is probably close to the age distribution for startups generally. We've funded more founders who are 27 than 20 or 35 because more people start startups at 27 than at 20 or 35."



I think our age distribution is probably close to the age distribution for startups generally.

That can't be right - surely there is a correlation between the value of that YC provides and the amount of time one has spent in industry. I'd imagine that once one has $50k in savings, and has worked with law firms, knows angels and VC's, the value of YC funding drops drastically. Hence, I'd imagine older (more experienced) founders wouldn't be as interested in YC as, say, students in their early 20's.


True, but ...

"Half (maybe more) of the startups we fund don't need the money. And in fact the money is a only a small part of what YC does. The money we invest works more like financial aid in college: it ensures that the people who do need money can cover their living expenses while YC is happening. "

http://www.ycombinator.com/faq.html


As somebody who is over 30 and works in startups, I'd say you're right. I'd not even consider for a moment the standard YC deal ($11k + $3k/founder for 6%).

When I was right out of school, or off my first job I might've considered it... but these days? never.




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