Elon Musk & The Midwit Meme

Episode Summary

The "midwit meme" illustrates how overthinking as a founder can be detrimental. The "naive" founder takes simple, direct action while the "midwit" gets stuck over-analyzing and trying to construct the perfect plan. Examples discussed: - Elon Musk has succeeded by starting with simple, beginner's mind ideas like trying to buy rockets from Russia or that electric cars are cool. - Don't overthink your MVP - just build and launch something quickly rather than trying to make it perfect. - For fundraising, focus on raising the amount you need rather than constructing the perfect round. - For finding a co-founder, don't get stuck on finding the perfect person - work with someone you know or who can contribute in some way. - For applying to YC, just submit the application rather than obsessively perfecting it. - You'll know when you have product-market fit based on demand, not complex metrics. However, "trap door" decisions like legal, regulatory, or health issues do require more thinking. Overall, avoid overthinking unimportant things and focus energy on core startup activities. Maintain a beginner's mindset.

Episode Show Notes

Dalton Caldwell and Michael Seibel on the midwit meme, how it applies to startups, and the best example: Elon Musk.

Apply to Y Combinator: https://www.ycombinator.com/apply/

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_01: This is the beauty of the midwif meme is the genius and the idiot come to the same conclusion. So what is the idiot approach? Like that's actually how you can divine the genius approach. It's just like, what would an idiot do? SPEAKER_00: Everyone can reach for the idiot approach. Everyone has the intellectual capacity to reach for the idiot approach. If I didn't know anything. This is Michael Seibel with Dalton Caldwell. Well today we're going to talk about how overthinking is sometimes a founder's biggest mistake. So Dalton, this video was triggered by this amazing meme that you made on fundraising advice. But before we get to the meme, because I think it's like one of the best memes I've ever seen for fundraising advice. Let's start in general. SPEAKER_00: How can overthinking be bad? And when can overthinking be bad? SPEAKER_01: Yeah, I mean, I think that what people think being a founder is, is what they saw in like watching the Facebook movie or popular television where you know, you're like coding a lot and you know, you're making deals and screwing over your friends. Just kidding. But in reality, it's a lot of feeling lost and being not sure what to do and feeling SPEAKER_01: stressed out a lot. And you're worried all the time. And so you tend to overthink everything and every decision you kind of think in circles over and over and over again because you don't have a boss. You don't have constraints when you're a startup founder, right? There's no one really telling you what to do. So you're on your own. And so when you, the experience of being a startup founder, it's to always be overthinking everything. SPEAKER_00: In this way, there's a bit of an advantage to being young, right? SPEAKER_01: Yeah. You and I experienced this ourselves as founders where we were young when we first started. And this is the beauty of not knowing anything. The beauty of not knowing anything is that you think everything is easy and none of the innumerable reasons why something might be hard or your startup might fail even occurs to you. You're like, oh yeah, I'm 22. Like everything's easy. I can figure this out. Right? And so again, this is like the mid-weight meme, right? Where if you don't know anything, your approach looks a lot like the approach of people that are really good founders. And the worst place to be is that you know just enough to know why the things you're trying are hard and the odds are stacked against you. And that freaks you out. And so you think about it a lot, right? SPEAKER_00: So Dalton, one of the most perfect examples of this is actually Elon Musk. And why I think it's so perfect is that depending on how you tell the story, Elon looks like the dummy or the idiot, right? Like I'm sorry, the dummy or the genius, right? Depending on how you tell the story and it almost doesn't matter, right? Because he's winning. But you know, to me, the first example that I always loved is that, you know, I read some book about the starting of SpaceX and it started with Elon going to Russia trying to buy like rockets. And like the Russian government being like, there's this American billionaire guy who wants to buy rockets and kind of not believing it. But Elon just looking really serious. So they like considered it. And like they eventually said no. But like he got to talk to people about buying rockets from him. He's just a dude with money. He was like, go to Russia, buy rockets. SPEAKER_01: Like that's the extreme. Is that genius or stupid? I can't tell. I can't tell. And like with Tesla itself, like to me, the mid-weight is electric cars are good. That's the extreme. Electric cars is good. Or I'm both in the middle. It's like no one has successfully done a startup car company since the 50s. And every, you know, if you look at all prior attempts to build an electric car, like there's all these words. And the infrastructure you need is good. Yeah. SPEAKER_00: Yes. And I think the one that we find most funny, which we'll see, this video we'll see if we can stand the test of time is the boring company, right? Drilling holes under the ground so that you can drive places faster is very clearly the idiot one, but like it could be the genius one too. SPEAKER_01: It's exact. It's a beginner's mind idea, which is like traffic is bad. What if we dug a hole under the ground to get to downtown Las Vegas? And what's funny is you read all the critiques of this, like the mid-west stuff is like, whoa, bus systems already exist. And it's much more efficient to optimize transportation. You know, there's lots of words in the middle of that, but, you know, drill tunnel to avoid traffic is certainly at the extremes. SPEAKER_01: Yeah. Yes. And you kind of see him approach all of his problems this way where you can imagine it being the same sort of ideas that we like. Mars is cool. Like, yeah, Mars is cool. Like this is the kind of stuff we come up with as teenagers. Like a lot of his ideas. SPEAKER_00: Yes. The hard work is in the implementation, but the idea isn't very complicated. And like the V1 is kind of simple minded. SPEAKER_01: And if he was an overthinker, he would do, he would rule all the stuff out. All this stuff is like obviously a bad idea. And anyone in the Midway territory would rule out all these ideas. Yes. Right? SPEAKER_00: Yes. And they still do. They still do. It's, you know, it's the Tesla short seller, right? Let's go through some examples of the Midway meme. And you have to start with the meme that you made for YC founders. So just to provide context, we're in the part of the batch where YC founders start getting nervous about fundraising. And whenever a founder gets nervous, they start overthinking. And whenever they start overthinking, they assault us with office hours on topics. And Dalton created this meme so that we could fight back. What does the meme say? Yeah. SPEAKER_01: The meme is simple. It's the, the naive founder is like, oh, I'm going to raise the amount of money I need to succeed. I need, I need to, here's the amount of money I need to raise for my series A. I ran a model and it's, you know, $800,000. So that's what I'm going to raise. That is the like naive approach. The really smart three, three, three time founder, someone that's done this before is like, I need to raise $800,000. So I'm going to do it. And then the mid-wit is the one who wants to ask 15 questions and try to construct the perfect round and be afraid that some, they may not have enough allocation for value add investors and they want to not have a signaling risk. They talk a lot about signaling risk and there's like all of these factors where I'll be talking to someone and we'll be like 15 levels deep in a hypothetical for an offer that they don't have. Right. And that's, that's the mid-wit man is that like you're screwing yourself by overthinking all this stuff instead of just being like, Hey, I need X dollars. I'm going to raise it and I'm gonna get back to work. SPEAKER_00: This comes up a lot with MVPs. One of the questions that I love getting from a founder is before we launched our MVP, how do we know we're going to be able to survive the onslaught of traffic and users that will come on our launch day? What's the mid-wit play? What's the mid-wit meme for your MVP? SPEAKER_01: I mean, yeah, the two extremes of the mid-wit meme are launch something fast. Build something fast and put it out. And the mid-wit one is like, Whoa, I don't want to get a bad reputation that my thing was buggy and we only have one shot to launch. And you know, like you come up with. What about the press? SPEAKER_00: We got to do a press launch. Doesn't have to be an event. SPEAKER_01: Yeah. I don't want people to see my idea and copy it. So it's gotta be perfect. Yes. That's one. SPEAKER_00: And then do we do, do we do like a tech crunch post or is it better to try to get the New York Times or like, what about Hacker News? We need to get all three. So how do we coordinate them together? SPEAKER_01: We want to, we want to be featured in the New York Times. And so how do we optimize for that? Or Oh, what should we name the company? How about I don't. SPEAKER_00: Yes. We have to rebrand because there's a name that's kind of similar to ours. We don't want people to be confused. How about co-founders? I hear this a lot. Like I, I am a business person and I'm good at sales. I need to find a marketing co-founder and an engineer, like a CTO who's already managed 50 people because we're going to grow fast. But how, how does co-founders, how do you see this thing go? SPEAKER_01: Yeah, Dalton. Um, I'm open to the idea of a co-founder. I just haven't found the right person. And what I really am looking for is someone with at least five to seven years of experience at Google who made it to at least a level seven. And so, you know, I'm looking, I haven't found the right person yet, but we're looking for it. SPEAKER_00: Yes. When we find them, I'm totally open to bring out a co-founder when I find that one. SPEAKER_01: But first we're going to raise money and then I think that I'll attract a better co-founder. Yeah. Yeah. So again, the point we're kind of making is not that any one of these ideas is the one people say, it's that it's thinking in circles and having a thousand different reasons. Yes. That it's the person that should be your co-founder is no one that you currently know. Yes. Yes. Right. SPEAKER_00: And then, and let's talk about the other sides of the equation, right? The, the, on the dumb side, the founders like, it's fun to work with my friends, so I'm just going to start with my friend. On the smart side, Justin likes to put a camera on his head. SPEAKER_01: You know, you're like, this is our guy. Like we were drinking, buddy. Why did they pick you? Is your, is their co-founder, wasn't it like, well, cause I helped them find an apartment SPEAKER_00: and open it. There you go. SPEAKER_01: This guy, this guy helped us find an apartment. All right. He's the co-founder of Twitch. Done. SPEAKER_00: There you go. Done. And then like the super smart experience founders, like, Oh, having co-founders viable for emotional support and this is going to be tricky. And like they have all the like sophisticated reasons. Same answer. Same answer. I love that. Okay. So this is a classic one, especially because you have to deal with so many admissions questions. Applying to YC, Dalton, what is, what is the, what is the Jedi founder move to apply to YC versus the mid-wit founder? SPEAKER_01: Yeah. The, the extremes of this and the mid-wit meme are I filled out my application and submitted it like, like I applied and the mid-wit founder is like, gee, I don't know if now is the right time to apply. I don't know if we're ready. I'm going to, I'm going to write a draft of my application and to send it to 15 people. And I'm going to get feedback on my application and I'm going to like, you know, Oh, I need an introduction to alumni and I need to talk to alumni and I need recommendations from SPEAKER_00: strangers that don't know me. SPEAKER_01: I'm going to do a lot of research. Like you see, you talk to people that like put months of effort into their application to YC strategy. Yes. Not correlated with success. And then you talk to people and they're like, Oh yeah, I just like filled it out in 30 minutes and submitted it. And I spent all that other time working on my company. SPEAKER_00: And to be clear, we're not saying do a bad job on your application. SPEAKER_01: We're just saying trying to tweak out on this is like something that you can spend tons and tons and tons of time on. I'm not sure that's a great allocation of resources. No, you didn't. SPEAKER_00: And I think that's like maybe the essential point here is that like, we want you to spend time on the important stuff for your startup. Like we're trying to get you to avoid spending time on the things that won't help you. That's the idea. That's the idea. All right, next. And here's, here's kind of a classic one is product market fit. SPEAKER_00: Dalton, do I have product market fit? And how, what's the mid-wit approach to, yeah, the mid-wit approach for this one is to be SPEAKER_01: not sure if you have it and create 15 different metrics and like a complicated series of thoughts that maybe you have it or you have early product market fit versus the extremes of this meme. Early product market fit. Everyone's got early. SPEAKER_01: The extremes of this are like, am I overwhelmed with demand? SPEAKER_01: Like you know it when you see it, like you don't have to think very hard when you have it. It's sort of like hits you over the head when you have product market fit. Dalton, I think the extremes in the meme is like, did I sleep last night? SPEAKER_00: It's like, I didn't sleep last night. Do I have time to wonder if I have product market fit? SPEAKER_01: That's yes. If you have time to wonder about it, if you're like, gee, do I have product market fit? Let me, let's pontificate on this. That probably means you don't. Yes, let's do some, let's make some reports. SPEAKER_00: So we talk about all the situations where maybe overthinking is not a good idea, but you also describe, you know, there are certain situations, you call them trap door decisions, when maybe you want to think a little bit harder than before making a move. So what are some examples of those? SPEAKER_01: Yeah, so legal issues. Don't break any law. Saying you didn't know there was a law is not a great legal defense. Regulatory issues. Similarly, oh, I didn't know that I couldn't launder this money. Probably not great. You may want to overthink that and look into it. Things that affect people's health and wellbeing. Yeah, you should overthink that. You should really spend the time worrying about people. Right, man? SPEAKER_00: Like, let's not be fast and loose if we're building an online pharmacy. Let's measure twice, cut once. And I think that what really good founders do is they are very good at figuring out are they dealing with something like that or are they not? Because even within legal, right, there's certain things that are like, oh, this is like whatever. And there's certain things that are like really bad. Michael, should I file patents for all of my IP? SPEAKER_01: Exactly. Absolutely. Classic overthinking. Absolutely not. SPEAKER_00: Probably not. So I think that like the framework here is really twofold. One, don't overthink when you don't have to. And then two, remember that like most of the work, most of the work is not in these overthinking games. Like most of the work are not in these over optimizing games. Yeah. SPEAKER_01: It's action. Yeah. Taking action and not thinking, right? SPEAKER_00: Yes. It's launching. It's getting the first customer. It's selling. It's like it's doing these things yourself. And that's counterintuitive because I think that founders understand that startups are really hard. So they assume you need complex strategies to succeed. And it's like, oh, that's a hard thing. It makes sense when I say it, right? This is hard. We would need a complex strategy, right? How do you respond to that? It's like what actual kind of strategy do you need? I think if you haven't seen really successful startup companies, either personally, like SPEAKER_01: where you were the founder of one or you know people and you saw them go through it. SPEAKER_01: It's hard to believe how silly these things are when they start. Like I think unless you've literally witnessed it personally and you've seen the silly shit SPEAKER_01: that goes on and like how what it really takes to get big, your brain rejects the idea. That's actually how these companies got built. You're like, no, not true. It had to be like lots of strategy meetings and whiteboarding, you know, flowcharts and you know, Gartner magic quadrants of like like like I think you really your brain won't allow you to see that. Actually here's a nice way to say it is, you know, the term beginner's mind. SPEAKER_01: You want to have a beginner's mind. Yes. That's what the mid-way meme is. And a beginner's mind is like, I guess I'm going to build a product and I'm going to give it to people. I guess I'm going to deliver burritos, you know? That's a beginner's mind approach. SPEAKER_00: Yeah. That's the game. And so you might find yourself after watching this video asking yourself, what do I need to unlearn? Yeah. SPEAKER_01: How can I have a beginner's mind? Because again, this is the beauty of the mid-way meme is the genius and the idiot come to the same conclusion. So what is the idiot approach? Like that's actually how you can divine the genius approach is you're like, what would an idiot do? SPEAKER_00: Everyone can reach for the idiot approach. Everyone has the intellectual capacity to reach for the idiot approach. If I didn't know anything. So with all that being said, have fun and don't overthink it too much. Don't overthink it too much and make sure that you have a little bit of something in your head that's asking yourself, is this the thing that's really important? SPEAKER_01: SPEAKER_00: If not, I can move on. If not, I can move on. All right. Thanks so much, Alton. Thanks. SPEAKER_01: