Hello everyone, I'm not sure where to post this but this seems like a good place i have been working on a project for about 2 year we have some early customers around 50 its a niche products in an already established industry.
In the first year we had a developer but he didn't do a good job so i had to take over that i basically learned to code i learned front end and backend development. We pivoted to a different idea and had one investor interested in the product but my co-founder rejected it because he "didn't want to loose control".
He doesn't want to grow the project further he's happy with a few customs he keeps jumping from projects to projects because he loves the idea of building but doesn't want to take any responsibility. Its weird because he had some experience in startups already so i thought he would be a responsible person. but he only joined startups when they were already doing well so he only had to manage people.
The only reason i joined that project is because i wanted to learn how to build stuff and i have some health issues and i can't really get a proper job, meanwhile he already have a job and don't really need the project to succeed.
As much as i learned from this I'm quitting this project he doesn't take it seriously i just feel like i have been exploited.
I'm thinking of going back to school for product design but I'm not sure its a good industry i would love to join a real startup with ambitious people. How can i use this experience in my resume its not even a proper company so i can't even put that in my LinkedIn.
My co-founder doesn't want to succeed
byu/TheWheelOfortune inEntrepreneur
Posted by TheWheelOfortune
12 Comments
No one will care as much as you do. I find working alone is the solution.
I found that guessing people’s motivation doesn’t work at all, and people often behave weirdly from our point of view. I found that for me the best way is to have crucial conversations that uncover all assumptions and make all expectations transparent. Sometimes (and often) it could lead to the decision not to continue collaboration, but at least it will be an informed, adult decision.
I’ve had it both ways in my life. There were times when during such conversation I realized that I had no damn idea who I was working with, and, thank God, I finally had a chance to learn it. And there were times when such conversation opened me to a whole new perspective I wasn’t aware of at all and saved valuable relationships. That’s what Kerry Patterson calls “don’t tell stories about them, just go talk”.
That sucks but honestly sounds like you dodged a bullet by learning this now instead of after scaling up. Put the coding skills and customer acquisition experience on your resume – “Self-taught full-stack development while building B2B product from 0-50 customers” sounds way better than most bootcamp grads can claim.
The fact that you taught yourself to code AND got paying customers shows way more hustle than most people have
I’m siding with your partner. Why take on an investor and lose equity? Sounds like he wants to build it slow and steady while you want to pour gas on it. He sounds a lot more experienced than you so maybe you should listen to him instead of thinking your way is the right way. Don’t like it? Dissolve the partnership and do your own thing.
What if he sees this post
Probably a good idea to break from this cofounder and count your losses. Unfortunately it’s a rough life lesson. The upside is that you know what to do, so probably building something won’t be an issue. From now on, you run the show and hire people under you. When I “shared” the business with my husband years ago, I was still sole proprietor and we worked each on our part of the business, but I was the one with the signature. And we were (and still are) happily married and great partners. As I build my SaaS, I have 4 people who will work with me, but nobody gets “co-founder”. I will pay them royally, but I keep full ownership. Even if I’ll need a “right hand”, that person will still work FOR me, so that I can avoid any issues.
been there, cofounder mismatch kills motivation fast
This is actually a common startup story. Alignment on ambition is non-negotiable. It’s better to walk away now and use what you’ve built/learned as a portfolio piece for your next venture.
You can still put that down as an experience – since you put actual time on it. It may or may not count a lot for resume shortlist but if you get through you may be able to demonstrate some working experience in interviews. Be as candid as you can and come across as someone who has reflected well on what happened while working on the project, leanings and failures etc.
Just quicly adding here that for all that is holy do not spend any money on learning product design now. The field is really stuggling from dilution, AI restructuring and massive overapplication. Practically the only segment that is still doing great is FAANG, but working history within there is almost a must to get a job.
On the brighter side of things, your experience surely can be translated into a ‘selling point’ because it is the kind of first hand experience and tolerance for ambiguilty that is higly valued by startups. Chatgpt (or whichever AI) can help a lot to frame it appropriatelly and get some ideas what kind of roles would be the best to target.
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Another « micro-manager » in the making.
Nothing wrong with choosing to build your self-employment world but it has nothing to do with the « entrepreneurial journey. »