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Y Combinator

Y  Combinator (YC) is an American technology startup


Y Combinator
accelerator launched in March 2005.[1] It has been used to launch
more than 3,000 companies,[2] including Stripe, Airbnb, Cruise,
Management, LLC
PagerDuty, DoorDash, Coinbase, Instacart, Dropbox, Twitch, and
Reddit.[3] The combined valuation of the top YC companies was
more than $300 billion by January 2021.[4] The company's
accelerator program started in Boston and Mountain View,
expanded to San Francisco in 2019, and has been entirely online
since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.[5] Forbes characterized
the company in 2012 as one of the most successful startup
accelerators in Silicon Valley.[6]

Contents
Type Limited liability
History company
Programs Industry Startup accelerator
People Founded March 2005
Controversies Founders Paul Graham,
Open Research (Originally formed as YC Research) Jessica Livingston,
Robert Morris,
See also Trevor Blackwell
References Headquarters Mountain View,
External links California, United
States
Number of 2 offices (2014)
History locations
Products Venture capital,
Y Combinator was founded in 2005 by Paul Graham, Jessica Investments
Livingston, Robert Tappan Morris, and Trevor Blackwell.[7] Website ycombinator.com
(http://ycombinator.
From 2005 to 2008, one program was in Cambridge, com)
Massachusetts, and one was in Mountain View, California. As Y
Combinator grew to 40 investments per year, running two programs became too much. In January 2009, Y
Combinator announced that the Cambridge program would be closed and all future programs would be in
Silicon Valley.[8]

In 2009, Sequoia Capital led the $2 million investment round into an entity of Y Combinator to enable it to
invest in approximately 60 companies a year.[9] In 2010, Sequoia led an $8.25 million funding round for Y
Combinator to further increase the number of startups the company could fund.[10]

In 2011, Yuri Milner and SV Angel offered every Y Combinator company a $150,000 convertible note
investment.[11] The amount put into each company was changed to $80,000 when Start Fund was
renewed.[12]
In September 2013, Y Combinator began funding nonprofit
organizations that were accepted into the program after testing the
concept with Watsi.[13]

In 2014, Sam Altman replaced Graham as president of Y


Combinator.[14] In 2014, Y Combinator began a new deal for
startups, offering $150,000 for 7 percent equity.[15]

In 2014, Altman announced a partnership with Transcriptic to


Paul Graham talking about Prototype
provide increased support for Y Combinator's growing community
Day at Y Combinator Summer 2009
of biotech companies.[16] In 2015, he announced a partnership with
Bolt and increased support for hardware companies.[17]

The YC Fellowship Program was announced in July 2015, with the goal of funding companies at the idea
or prototype stage.[18] The first batch of YC Fellowship included 32 companies that received an equity-free
grant instead of an investment.[4]

In January 2016, Y Combinator changed the fellowship program, with participating companies receiving
$20k investment for a 1.5 percent equity stake. The equity stake is structured as a convertible security that
converts into shares only if a company has an initial public offering (IPO), or a funding event or acquisition
that values the company at $100 million or more.[19] The fellowship was discontinued in 2017.[20]

In 2016, Y Combinator announced that YC partners would visit 11 countries to meet with founders and
learn more about how they could be helpful to international startup communities. Those 11 countries were
Nigeria, Denmark, Portugal, Sweden, Germany, Russia, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Israel, and India.[21]

Former Twitter chief financial officer and chief operating officer Ali Rowghani, who was in charge of the
YC Continuity Fund when it began, became CEO of YC Continuity. Michael Seibel, who co-founded
Justin.tv, became CEO of YC Core, the program that Paul Buchheit had run since 2016.[22]

In 2017, Y Combinator began Startup School, an online course that released public videos and coached
individual startups. More than 1500 startups graduated the program in its first year.[23]

In 2018, Y Combinator announced a new batch of startup school. After a software glitch, all 15,000
startups that applied to the program were accepted, only to learn a few hours later that they had been
rejected.[24] But the ensuing outcry led Y Combinator to change course again and decided over an official
blog to accept all those 15,000 companies.[25] Now, every company is accepted to join YC Startup School
without any restrictions.

In 2019, Geoff Ralston replaced Altman as president of Y Combinator.[26][27]

The summer 2020 batch was conducted remotely via videotelephony due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[28]

Programs
Y Combinator interviews and selects two or more batches of companies per year. The companies receive
total of $500,000 seed money as well as advice, and connections. The companies receive $125,000 on a
post-money safe in return for 7% equity and $375,000 on an uncapped safe with a Most Favored Nation
(“MFN”) provision. Non-profits receive $100,000 donation. [29] The program includes "office hours",
where startup founders meet individually and group meetings. Founders also participate in weekly dinners
where guests from the Silicon Valley ecosystem (successful entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, etc.) speak to
the founders.
Y Combinator's motto is "Make Something People Want."[30] The program teaches founders to market
their product, team and market, refining their business model, achieving product/market fit, and scaling the
startup into a high growth business, etc. The program ends with Demo Day, where startups present their
business and sometimes technology to potential investors.[31]

The Y combinator operates an additional program and fund designed to support and invest in startups
which have already graduated from the main accelerator program. The YC Growth Program and YC
Continuity fund are operated by the same team and focus on helping fast growing startups which are
approaching 50 employees, and startups raising their Series B funding of $20 million to $100
million.[32][33]

Y Combinator has introduced additional programs since 2015, including:

In July 2015, Y Combinator introduced the YC Fellowship Program aimed at companies at


an earlier stage than the main program.[18]
In October 2015, Y Combinator introduced the YC Continuity Fund. The fund allows Y
Combinator to make pro rata investments in their alumni companies with valuations under
$300 million. Y Combinator will also consider leading or participating in later stage growth
financing rounds for YC companies.[34]
Nonprofit research lab YC Research was announced in October 2015. Researchers are
paid as full-time employees and can receive equity in Y Combinator.[35][36][37] OpenAI was
the first project undertaken by YC Research, and in January 2016 a second study on basic
income was also announced.[38] Another project is research on new cities.[39] Australian
quantum physicist Michael Nielsen is a research fellow at YC Research since 2017.[40]
In October 2015, YC introduced YC Research to fund long-term fundamental research. YC
President Sam Altman donated $10m.[35]
During 2017–2019, YC launched Startup School, the Series A program, the YC Growth
program, Work at a Startup, and YC China.[41]
In March 2019, it was reported that Y Combinator was moving headquarters to San
Francisco.[42]

As of late 2021, Y Combinator had invested in >3,000 companies,[2] most of which are for-profit. Non-
profit organizations can also participate in the main YC program.[43] Few non-profits have been accepted
in the last years, among them Watsi, Women Who Code, New Story (charity), SIRUM (organization),
Zidisha, 80,000 Hours, and Our World in Data.[44]

People
Y Combinator was founded in March 2005 by Paul Graham, Jessica Livingston, Robert Morris and Trevor
Blackwell.

In 2010, Kirsty Nathoo joined as an accountant and became CFO in 2012.[45]

In early 2010, Harj Taggar joined as an advisor. In September 2010, Alexis Ohanian joined.[46] In
November 2010, Paul Buchheit and Harj Taggar were named partners.[47] In 2015, Taggar left YC.[48]

In January 2011, Garry Tan joined YC, first as designer-in-residence and later as partner.[49][50] He left YC
in November 2015.[50]
[51]Later in 2011, Aaron Iba joined as a partner.[52]
In February 2014, Sam Altman became president of Y Combinator.[14]

Michael Seibel joined Y Combinator as part-time partner in January 2013 and later became a full-time
Partner in 2014.[53]

The company includes managing directors, group partners, visiting group partners and team members as
listed on its website.[54]

In 2018, Y Combinator announced that Lu Qi, a former CEO of Baidu and Bing, would join the company
as CEO of YC China.[55] Y Combinator announced that Lu left YC in November 2019 and that it had
decided not to pursue a program in China.[56]

In March 2019, Y Combinator announced its president Sam Altman would be transitioning into a
Chairman position to focus more on OpenAI and Geoff Ralston would be the new president.[41][57]

Controversies
Y Combinator has been blamed for its encouragement of the ageism culture in Silicon Valley. Paul Graham
said in 2005 that people over 38 lacked the energy to launch startups.[58] It was also at a Y Combinator
event, the 2007 Startup School, that Mark Zuckerberg said, "Young people are just smarter".[59] Research
on this issue published by Harvard Business Review found Y Combinator's views to be misguided, as the
average age of a successful startup founder was found to be 45 years old.[60]

Open Research (Originally formed as YC Research)


The Human Advancement Research Community (HARC) project was set up with the "mission to ensure
human wisdom exceeds human power".[61][62] The project was inspired by a conversation between Sam
Altman and Alan Kay.[63] Its projects include modelling, visualizing and teaching software, as well as
programming languages. Members included Alan Kay and Bret Victor. Other people who have worked for
HARC include Vi Hart. Patrick Scaglia was chair of HARC and was listed as an advisor in 2017.[64][65]
YC Research disaffiliated with Y Combinator and now operates as Open Research.[66][67]

See also
Hacker News
List of Y Combinator startups
Entrepreneurs Roundtable Accelerator
Techstars
500 Startups
HighTechXL

References
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External links
Official website (http://www.ycombinator.com)
Wonderful Performance (https://www.miracleplus.com/), formerly Y Combinator China

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