1

Startups are high risk: As an employee, plan accordingly

 2 years ago
source link: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/startups-high-risk-employee-plan-145520093.html
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
neoserver,ios ssh client

Startups are high risk: As an employee, plan accordingly

Haje Jan Kamps
Thu, June 9, 2022, 11:55 PM·4 min read
5c8ba6f54e21fb05ea32d18f3f825f65

If you've done a quick scroll down the list of TechCrunch's most recent stories over the past few weeks, you've seen a wall of articles about layoffs. Even just our roundups (one, two, three, four) bring some sobering reading to the mix. Alex and Natasha remind us that tech layoffs don't happen to companies; they happen to people — and as someone who just got off the phone with a close friend who had just received a layoff notice, I'm feeling that more acutely today.

And there's a flip side to all of this. Tech startups are, by their nature, high risk. I've had to downsize companies myself — it's excruciating — and I always advise that if you want to work at a startup, make sure you have 3 months worth of wages saved up, because you can lose your job at any time.

Over the past 5 years, we've seen an unprecedented amount of VC cash flow into ever-growing startups where the business fundamentals weren't working yet. We've seen companies rise at incredible valuations and completely wild ARR multiples. In our exhilaration, as reporters following the industry, we celebrate monster rounds and we cheer on the startups as they bungee-cord on some rocket boosters, light the fuse, and hope for the best.

There's a not-often-talked-about truth here: What goes up, must come down. A lot of tech workers are so easily lured in by the promise of extremely valuable stock options, high wages and the frothy hunt for top talent that's been going on for years now. Smart engineers get poached out of established companies to take a walk on the wild side, and too many have not paused to think exactly why the salary graph has been pointing sharply up and to the right.

Alex asks a great question:

How do you check the financial stability of a company you're interviewing at?
Speaking from experience, when companies are looking to reduce headcount in an upcoming recession, I'd rather not be in that situation.
How do you navigate it without sounding paranoid?!

— Alex Hansford (@alexhansford) June 7, 2022

At early-stage companies, you may not get a straight answer for exactly how much money there is in the bank, or what the company's burn rate is. At later-stage companies, you'll probably never get a straight answer. But it isn't unreasonable to ask about what the runway is — that's the amount of time (typically weeks or months) that the company can keep going without getting in trouble in the current financial climate and the current financial parameters. You may not get an answer, but it can't hurt to ask what happens if something changes in the business dynamics, if there's a recession, if the company loses its biggest customer and so on.


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK