(2009-07-27) Graham Ramen Profitable

Paul Graham defines "RamenProfitable" for a Start Up. Ramen profitable means a startup makes just enough to pay the founders' living expenses. This is a different form of profitability than startups have traditionally aimed for. Traditional profitability means a big bet is finally paying off, whereas the main importance of ramen profitability is that it buys you time... a startup that becomes profitable after 2 months, even though its revenues are only $3000 a month, because the only employees are a couple 25 year old founders who can live on practically nothing. Revenues of $3000 a month do not mean the company has succeeded, or even found a path to success. But the ramen profitable startup does share something with the one that's profitable in the traditional way: they don't need to raise money to survive... It does not, for example, imply that you're "BootStrapping" the startup - that you're never going to take money from investors. Empirically that doesn't seem to work very well. Few startups succeed without taking investment. Maybe as startups get cheaper it will become more common. On the other hand, the money is there, waiting to be invested. If startups need it less, they'll be able to get it on better terms, which will make them more inclined to take it. That will tend to produce an equilibrium.


Edited:    |       |    Search Twitter for discussion

No twinpages!