They use the fact that since many teams have graduated from accelerators and become successful, teams themselves must be the driving factor. Or they use some hand-wavy notion (without any facts) that teams *must* be better. However isn't this a prime example of self-selection bias? If startup accelerators let more solo founders in, would we see similar rates of success for startups founded by teams and by solo founders?
I'd like to know on what basis this assumption was formed, if there's any empirical evidence to back it up and if the startup ecosystem gatekeeps solo founders as a result of self-selection bias.
They bias towards multiple founders because running any business on your own is hard. You can collect this anecdote from almost every solo founder. It requires such a breadth of skills that is rarely in just one person. You don't have time to specialise in multiple non related areas. You need help.
What can you do about it? Successful solo founders tend to hire very quickly so if you're doing well and you're in a position to start hiring, do it, then apply to accelerators or whatever with your hired team. Or don't and just continue working on your business like a normal person.