When the root cause is under-capitalization, that’s a better problem to spend energy on.
Because it has compounding returns.
Cost reduction has diminishing returns.
Starting out under-capitalized means the business is default-dead. Odds are no amount of hard work will change that (that’s the nature of diminishing returns).
Of course all this is in the abstract. Actual businesses need different amounts of capitalization.
I agree, it DEPENDS, but wanted to give my counterpoint.
You can waste a lot of time chasing capital when you should be building a product. I have seen founders spend years chasing capital, to get 500k and support 2 developers for a year.
Offshore talent allows you to shortcut this issue entirely if you so choose.
40k out of pocket can save you that time plus 15% of your company, and get you the same product.
You eventually will need funding, but this let's you get a working product and customers when you go looking for it.
I think more founders should consider it, especially if they don't have VCs on speed dial or a product VCs don't readily understand.
Because it has compounding returns.
Cost reduction has diminishing returns.
Starting out under-capitalized means the business is default-dead. Odds are no amount of hard work will change that (that’s the nature of diminishing returns).
Of course all this is in the abstract. Actual businesses need different amounts of capitalization.