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In before the Elon apologists claiming something batshit crazy like: * this was always meant to happen or * this would have happened even if Elon didn’t gut the entirety of the Trust and Safety team


I work on authentication and access control at Datadog - we've recently improved the group mapping through SAML and we have a number of features in the permission model that we're excited about. Eager to show it off if you're interested.


Just another example of Stupid High Valuation (SHiV) in the Valley Echo-Chamber


People keep saying we're in a bubble and yet seven years later, since 2008, I can only think of three major VC implosions off the top of my head: fab.com, zynga, and groupon. Fab was a train-wreck that anyone with a pulse could have seen coming. Zynga... way too dependent on Facebook and a fad. Groupon is the better of the three, only seeing its valuation fall from $30 billion to just $4 billion - but still well over $1 billion. These valuations, as lofty as they seem, are not falling. It's kinda weird, but not surprising considering how much wealth is circulating in the silicon valley. Then you look at twitter and it held up very well after its IPO despite its very high valuation.

The problem with using the past to predict the future is that there are often subtleties that can produce wildly diverging outcomes. These app & web 2.0 companies seem to be doing something right to avoid the valuation chopping block that afflicted so many of the earlier internet startups. web 2.0 companies retain value better than a CD lol

One reason why app companies, as opposed to sites that that sell physical stuff, are doing so well is that they have better profit margins and can use network effects for added growth.


Trouble is that whilst the VC implosions are rare, so too are the >$1bn exits over that same period. And Twitter, down 20% in a market which has moved steadily in the opposite direction, is not exactly a poster child for holding prices...

From the 590 companies identified by CB Insights in December 2013 as being the "cream of the crop" of VC funded, IPO-ready firms, a total of just $33bn - less than one Uber - was made from actual exits (IPOs and M&A).[1] And 2014 was the best year for tech IPOs since 2000...

[1]OK, so its not a complete list, especially as the figure presumably excludes Alibaba and Whatsapp. And the 67 companies on the list that opted to exit in 2014 rather than hold out a little longer managed a mean exit valuation in the region of $0.5bn, which isn't peanuts. But it does put into perspective that this hyped IPO would be a very significant percentage of the annual revenues realised collectively for tech exits in a good year, which is probably a better metric than the number of unicorn valuations floating around.


Tech IPO is a bad metric though because ever since the passage of Sarbanes-Oxley, no one in tech wants to go public, because the requirements for a public company are stupid, costly and time-consuming.


It's nice to bash SarbOx, but really that's not the problem.

The thing that is causing these absurd valuations is that Yagoopplezonsoft are choking out the pipeline too early for the big plays.

Most startups cash at less than $50 million, and LOTS of companies are sitting on huge cash reserves that can buy them there now. To the big companies, that's a big win if they pick up 10+ engineers and something possibly worth money. To the startup, that's also a huge win if you kept your headcount down. So, who's going to oppose the cashout?

After Yagoopplezonsoft vacuums up anything even remotely competitive in their space at the Series A point combined with the fact that VC's hate doing Series A funding because "Waaaaaaah. It's riiiisky."--the problems of getting your $5-10 million funding are well documented here--what's left?

So, the problem is that then number of companies that are willing to rack up a huge valuation is small. Once those companies actually get to the huge valuation, sure, there are a ton of people waiting for them throwing money at them.

The question you have to ask as a founder or employee single digit is, do I want to take the risk to go there?

If your founding bunch are remotely rational, the answer is "Not on your life, take the cash."

So, the only companies that would be willing to go to high valuations are high headcount, resource intensive companies that build real products--like Atheros. And VC's LOATHE those kinds of companies--so Atheros needed to get bought anyway.

The problem is of the VC's own making. Since they won't fund at Series A levels, they have so little to flog at Series C levels that the valuations go astronomical when one appears.


I suspect if you removed Sarbanes-Oxley the effect would be marginal: The primary reason to avoid going public is to be able to operate independently of the pressure from public investors and the media.


Honestly, I'm surprised Google and Apple haven't started massive stock buyback programs with the cash they're throwing up so they're no longer beholden to shareholders.


Going for 7 years doesn't prove it's not a bubble, especially when many of the externalities people have suggested are causing a bubble have not changed (low interest rates, for instance).


It's more like 10 years if you include Facebook - that's an entire business cycle, or about the same duration as the 1990-2000 internet boom. But in siding with Andreessen and others, I think this one has further to run.

But I am pessimistic about the hardware unicorns (fitbit, skullcandy, jawbone) as opposed to the app/website ones, so It's not like I am emphatically bullish about everything. http://greyenlightenment.com/billion-dollar-startup-club-pic...


Its not a business cycle, really. The fed last week said the stock market will crash if they put interest rates much above zero. That is the definition of a bubble. A bubble is a mis-pricing of risk based on non-market force (irrational or otherwise) that will revert to equilibrium when given the chance.


Is your argument that we aren't in a bubble really "it hasn't popped yet"?


Look at companies like Uber, Whats-app, Dropbox, Snapchat, Instagram...these aren't flashes in the pan, but are ecosystems harnessing hundreds of millions of people. These companies are creating entire infrastructures and industries. Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pretty created the entire mobile advertising market. Uber is revolutionizing transportation.


Not long ago did MSN, Y! Chat, AIM boast multi-million people network. I wonder what makes WhatsApp, and Instagram different? One product businesses are also one trick ponies. WhatsApp has real ubiquity about them... (Replacing SMS), but then, I'm not so sure about Instagram and Twitter. Sure the celebs pull in a lot of users, but if the past is any indicator, social networks can come down in a heap...


The question isn't whether the companies create value, it's whether the value matches the valuation.


Why not? It's the same one that's trotted out every time.


It's why I switched to a PM role. I miss programming every day, but I hate the thought of doing another stupid technical interview.


Not all companies require them if you have decent experience. My friend interviewed with several companies and flat out told them "I don't do code tests anymore, my experience should speak for itself." Obviously your milage will vary but he ended up in a good position at a large well known company.

Edit: Also if you have a connection into the company that can vouch for you, that will work as well. The best coding test that can be administered is "yeah I've worked with this guy before and he's a good developer."


As I often say, interviews based on the final year algorithms and datastructures exam are just a way to sneak ageism under the HR radar.


What final year algorithms and data structures exam are you referring to?


Questions like pruning a red-black tree or manipulating a linked list on a whiteboard.


Actually I was more curious about the final year exam itself. Is this required in some schools? I have never heard of such a thing in colleges in the US.


No algorithms and datastructures in CS??


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