A note about "Business Guy seeking Technical Co-Founder(bigthink.com) |
A note about "Business Guy seeking Technical Co-Founder(bigthink.com) |
"This could make sense if Mr. Business Guy had a MUCH better understanding of the market needs, the product capabilities, and the process required to build a product that evolved over time. Developing this skillset turns Mr. Business Guy into Mr. Product Guy, and makes him a much more attractive cofounder."
Then again, I don't trust founders who won't invest their own money in their idea(s).
That said, I think we should be quick to realize that there are perfectly legitimate non-technical founders who add a ton of value. They just aren't guilty of the "looking for free labor" problem.
Keeping that in mind, look for tangible skills that could help push the company forward. Experience in Design, Product Management, Marketing/Sales, or some other useful skill is great. Experience with running companies, recruiting, fundraising are all positives. Some ability to generate PR (through fame or connections) is a positive. If those were successful ventures, even better.
Here's two good posts on it: - http://www.quora.com/Startup-Advice-Strategy/What-is-the-per... - http://onstartups.com/tabid/3339/bid/13808/The-Magical-Found...