Bits
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Dalton was one of my group partners. He’s awesome. Top 0.001%. Consider yourself lucky if you get the privilege of working with him.
Dalton Caldwell@daltonc
The first Standard Capital Series A deadline is in 6 days. Cost: ~1 hour to fill out an application (and the questions help you think about your business). Benefit: Raise your Series A in 2 weeks with clean terms: - No board seat - 10% dilution - Post-PMF founder community/support for the life of your startup The value proposition is simple: minimal downside + unconstrained upside.
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Here’s a question I use when interviewing- too many people fail it.
Say you have a credit card with a £70 limit, which is 70% used, and you pay off £7. What’s your ending balance?
Numbers are more complicated than words for most people and that makes credit all the more difficult to understand.
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About 6.5% of recent YC batches become worth $1B or more.
About 25% of those go on to become worth $10B or more.
There is no other place you can go where you have this kind of ability to meet these outliers all in one place four times a year: YC Demo Day
Yuri Sagalov@yuris
Every time I do a "venture fund modeling" exercise I essentially reach the same conclusion: If you get a $5B+ outcome, nothing else matters. If you don't, nothing else really matters either.
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What is the path to startups worth billions of dollars? Great startups are not born. They are forged. Tracking their origins gives you a peek at what your journey might be like.
youtu.be/HB3l1BPi7zo?si…

YouTube

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At the YC Alumni Reunion, I got lots of questions from new founders about how to build a successful company, but realized that they all had the same answer. And it’s this:
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DO TOO MUCH
As a new founder, I’d often look at the CEOs of successful companies and wonder, “How do they do it?”
As Scale grows and as I learn on the job, I’ve come to realize that leaders of great organizations never just do it. They overdo it.
As a leader, you are the upper bound for how much anyone in your company will care. You need to do more, care more, attempt more than would seem reasonable. It will seem like overkill. But too much is the right amount.
This is true in big and small ways.
- What people say is overoptimism is just optimism.
- What people say is overcommunicating is just communicating.
- What people say is overdelivering is just delivering.
- What people say is micromanagement is just management.
- What people say is ruthless prioritization is just prioritization.
Actually living this way will seem crazy, and that’s ok. There is no Apple without Jobs’s “obsessive” attention to detail. There is no SpaceX or Tesla without Elon’s “maniacal” drive for execution. I have never seen ordinary effort lead to extraordinary results.
If we had not done too much, Scale would not be the company it is today.
When AI really started to take off in 2022 and “generative AI” became a thing, within 6 months Scale shifted the vast majority of our team to working on generating data for scaling LLMs.
Most companies would go through quarters of bureaucratic planning cycles and only move after a competitor started eating their lunch. In our case, the change was drastic and abrupt — some might say jarring or extreme.
What people might have reasonably described as overreacting was just reacting. And in hindsight, that reaction to developments in AI was what made Scale’s subsequent path possible, including growing 4X over the last year.
What we’ve accomplished to date represents the compounded results of everybody embracing the culture of overdoing. Scale will do things incumbent companies wouldn’t, because it’s simply too scary or painful, but others not going to the same lengths is a feature not a bug.
Creating something meaningful is a beautiful, and yes, scary and painful thing. And if you’re not overdoing it, you’re underdoing it.
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@raccomandino @raccomandino so happy to hear you started this journey using our service, and that you used us as a stepping stone towards your financial goals, as this is exactly what we strive for!
Experiences like yours are what Bits aims to provide, thank you for sharing your experience!
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@getabit hi bits 👋 new member here I have the store card and the credit card. Quick question please if that's okay? Can the credit card be used in Egypt? And if so is there any fees?
Thank you very much :)
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@Large_Amount1 @NIUKCommunity Hey there @Large_Amount1! Mostly like a normal credit card, but the payments are weekly instead of monthly, and ATM withdrawals are unable to be made. for more information the credit card, please check our website: getbits.app
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@NIUKCommunity Please how does Bits credit card works please?
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