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年轻创始人分享创业经验,获得百万美元融资
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Attention Engineering的联合创始人Aidan Guo(19岁)和Julian Windeck(23岁)近日分享了他们获得125万美元pre-seed融资的经验。该公司开发一款由AI驱动的桌面助手。两位年轻创始人强调了在旧金山建立人脉、展现进步“坡度”而非追求完美、个性化冷启动外联、保持融资势头以及成为一个值得信赖的合作者对于创业成功的重要性。他们认为,旧金山作为AI时代的“文艺复兴”中心,为初创企业提供了独特的机遇和支持环境。

🚀 **展现进步“坡度”而非追求完美:** 投资者更关注初创公司进步的速度和潜力,而非当前的完美程度。创始人应勇于尝试和迭代想法,持续展现公司发展的积极趋势,这比拥有一个未经检验的完美想法更为重要。

✉️ **个性化冷启动外联:** 在进行冷邮件联系时,高度个性化的信息至关重要。通过深入了解对方,量身定制沟通内容,增加获得回应的可能性,这对于建立早期联系和争取机会至关重要。

⚡ **保持融资势头:** 融资过程中,保持持续的动力非常关键。尽早启动并维持融资节奏,能够帮助初创公司在更有利的条件下获得更多资本,避免因拖延而错失良机。

🌉 **移居旧金山:** 两位创始人强烈建议将创业重心放在湾区,特别是旧金山。这里是AI领域的汇聚地,便于建立人脉、寻找导师和投资者,并能从周围的创业者群体中获得激励和学习。

🤝 **成为值得信赖的合作者:** 创业成功不仅取决于技术能力和商业想法,更在于个人品质。展现专业性、准时守信、言行一致,能够赢得他人的信任,为未来的合作和融资奠定坚实基础。

Attention Engineering cofounders, Aidan Guo, 19, and Julian Windeck, 23, say: Move to SF.

San Francisco goes by many names. There are the basics: SF, San Fran, and even Frisco. Now, as AI takes hold of the city, some have taken to calling it Cerebral Valley.

For Julian Windeck, the 23-year-old founder of Attention Engineering, San Francisco these days evokes an earlier era where creativity was its own currency.

"What Florence was in the Renaissance, SF is in the age of AI," Windeck told Business Insider.

Windeck and Aidan Guo, 19, launched Attention Engineering earlier this year to build a next-generation desktop assistant powered by AI.

"It's not exactly a desktop assistant, but kind of becomes one: ambient, proactive, and personally understands you," Guo said. "It can surface a lot of insights like how you use your time," he said. In the coming months, the tool will be able to automate everything you do on your computer, like a "cursor for everything," he said.

Guo, originally from Vancouver, who said he's on his "second gap year" from college, decided to forgo Carnegie Mellon to move to the Bay Area. He joined programs like Z Fellows and Emergent Ventures, and quickly found mentors who encouraged him to build, he said.

"People are generous with their time, especially if you're young," he said.

Windeck, from Germany, took a more traditional path. He studied computer science in Germany and at Cambridge University, and then conducted AI research at MIT before deciding academia wasn't for him. "I didn't want to be some cog in the machine," he said.

The two said they met through mutual friends, Silas Alberti, the cofounder of Cognition, and Marvin von Hagen, the cofounder of The Interaction Company of California.

Guo and Windeck began working on a few small projects, and once they realized they worked well together, they went on to found Attention Engineering this year.

The startup has five employees and has raised $1.25 million in pre-seed funding from backers like Lukas Haas, a product manager at Google DeepMind and scout for Sequoia Capital; Marvin von Hagen and Felix Schlegal, the cofounders of Interaction; Bryan Pellegrino, the cofounder of LayerZero; and venture capital firms Village Global and Liquid 2 Ventures.

"Everything in the Bay is built on trust. There's basically no governance — you can kind of do whatever you want," Guo said. So you need to "get people to trust you, with capital again and again," he said.

The two founders shared with Business Insider their top five tips for landing funding.

1) It's about 'slope,' not perfection

"You just have to show slope in some way," Guo said.

Slope is just another word for progress. Potential backers want to see how much — and how quickly — a company is improving, Guo said. They're less invested in how perfect or technically precise an idea is at any given moment, he added.

"Usually, the first idea you'll have won't be a good one, right. You actually want to cycle through a lot of ideas," Windeck said. In the end, people "invest in you because they see a lot of potential."

2) Be personal with cold outreach

Starting a company means sending a lot of cold emails. The trick is figuring out how to make people hit reply.

"You have to be really, really personalized with cold reach-outs," Guo said. He said he remembers reading several old cold emails that worked — like the one some 18-year-old sent to Evan from Snapchat in 2016. It was just "three bullet points, and it got him a job. It's just taking that energy and applying it to reaching out to founders."

3) Keep up the momentum

In short: Don't wait.

"Momentum is important when you're raising," Guo said. "It would be easier for us to raise more capital at better terms in the first week than it would have been if we had waited."

4) Move to San Francisco

The action is all in the Bay Area, according to Guo and Windeck. It's easier to network, find mentors, investors, and learn from other builders in the city.

"Everyone should come here to the Bay," Windeck said. You "want to be surrounded by other people — even if you're not working with them directly." You'll feel more accountable when you see others making progress, he added.

5) Be someone others want to work with

Their final piece of advice is to be professional — from the very beginning, even before you have a fleshed-out idea or a business plan.

"It's not just, like, how good are you technically? How sound are you, how great is your idea," Guo said. "It's about showing up on time, saying the right things."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Attention Engineering Aidan Guo Julian Windeck AI 创业 融资 旧金山 Startup Venture Capital Artificial Intelligence
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