Commonly Heard: I need a developer. Can you introduce me?
- Eric Mathews
- Nov 21, 2012
- 3 min read
by Eric Mathews, founding CEO of LaunchYourCity
Many people walk in our doors with ideas they believe will change the world and make them rich. The problem they invariably have is that they can't build it. 95% of these potential founders have an idea for an mobile app or web app and they want the LaunchYourCity team to play matchmaker to a developer. These potential founders don't realize that the developer probably has his own awesome ideas. Why would he switch from developing his ideas to developing yours? These potential founders will get no where fast with developers because they have ignored the obvious: a developer is your first investor.
Like all investments you need to earn the right to ask!
Here is the typical scenario. A non-technical founder approaches a potential technical co-founder with just an idea. These potential founders usually have very little skin in the game. They haven't invested a ton of their own time, but expect a developer to contribute 100s of hours. They haven't even dipped into their own funds to get something mocked up or designed. These potential founders have not invested energy into determining who the customer is, understanding their buying behaviors, or even determine if they would want the app and pay for it. The outcome is always the same. The developer says no and gets annoyed with wannabe entrepreneurs and gets turned off to the startup world.
This is a very bad outcome for our entire community. It could all be avoided.
Imagine going to a technical co-founder and saying the following:
Guess what a technical co-founder will say after hearing this pitch? People invest in execution, not ideas. If you’re willing to do the work you will have no problems getting the right talent on the bus. Prove that you are a worthy founder by doing the leg work before going to a technical co-founder and you will find many people jumping on board.
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