I'm interested in building a cofounding matching platform that focuses on the interests of the technical cofounder.
2. Willingness to put in the work. Vast majority seek passive income, and are dead weight after launching.
3. A conscience. No cults. No lying to investors. None of this "fake it before you make it" crap. Negotiation is fine, but not to the point of demoralising your partners and employees.
4. Humility. I was pretty eager to work with one guy, until he argued that my tech stack was stupid because we'd have to pay licensing fees to Oracle if we used JavaScript.
5. Trust. Many have done a fairly successful business before, and bring in cultures that really don't work with tech talent. If you're negotiating sick days and expecting people to be in office for a fixed period, everyone will leave. One guy hired a supervisor whose role is to watch the devs code.
6. Sales skill. Not just getting leads. Not just running ads. Just being able to close a deal, take money, repeat the process, get feedback, and hire someone to repeat that.
* A cogent vision that addresses a real customer need
* Someone (senior) on the team who knows the domain
* A reasonable real-currency salary
* A reasonable equity share
* A reasonable level of autonomy; not micro-management, especially for technology choices
* Transparency in all things, but especially finances, board, investors, and deals
* Not zero salary in cash (not IOU, not cryptocoins, not equity, real green cash)
* At least 20% of equity. (YC uses 10% instead, and they know more than me, so you probably should follow their threshold.)
1- Talking is easy. Show me what have you built. Business plan, market research, list of potential investors.
2- Long term vision. I've been always reluctant to work with people whose goals are 6-12 months.
3- If you are not a leader, know that.
I've always liked the idea that if they didn't have a technical cofounder they might still be able to hack together an MVP using tools like Bubble, Zapier, Airbase, Sheets, etc.
a. not an idiot. b. understands business (product marketing, finance) concepts. c. doesn't need to be baby-sat.