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A Cheat Sheet to Understanding Your Technical Cofounder

I’m a technical founder with two non-technical founders. We have worked together for over 15 years, but our current business has been around for five (this is our first company).

BS statements are a part of any tech person’s arsenal, but the main purpose is always to deflect blame away.

When I was younger (I’m in my upper 30’s now), I would compensate for my lack of understanding of the full-stack (UI, UX, back-end code, databases, servers, etc…) by attributing failures to any of the following:

If your technical founder blames users for not using things right, that would be a large red flag. Also, if you constantly find him/her talking about how bad other people’s code is, that gets old fast. I have enough self-confidence in my abilities now that I don’t get into BS. A good technical founder should take responsibility for all technical issues, be able to articulate them, and be able to put their head down and come up with a solution.

To know progress is being made on an MVP, I would look for and watch out for a few things:

What a tech cofounder wants:

What I want from my non-technical cofounder is trust. I’m lucky enough to have worked with my partners 10 years prior to our launch of this business. We don’t always agree on things, but we trust one another enough to put each of our families’ futures on the line. When something goes wrong, I want the other founders to be calm and know:

  1. I take it as seriously as they do, if not more …
  2. I’m going to work my ass off to figure out what’s wrong and provide a solution.

Emotions are tough to handle with seemingly so much at stake all the time, but trust usually takes over as the initial emotion as the issue subsides.

I honestly can’t imagine how some people find others they never knew before and bring them on as cofounders. Trust is involved in every decision of a startup and through the life of the business.

One other issue that you might find is that on average, I would say most technical founders are somewhat introverted and non-technical business partners are extroverted. From a technical introverted perspective, this just means the business-side founder is going to want to talk more than you really feel is necessary (you know the task at hand and want to be left alone to complete it). This can get even more complex when you want to get away for some R&R. I haven’t been able to fully enjoy my honeymoon, birth of my first child, and countless other getaways. At some point a non-technical founder seemingly feels helpless when you, the technology guy, are off the grid. They can’t resist calling you to discuss how important some (non-important) issue is to get resolved. It comes back to trust (if it’s an issue in my mind, it will be fixed ASAP), and usually just talking to the business side founder will calm them down.

They just want to know we’re here and available.

This post was submitted anonymously and originally appeared on Startups Anonymous.

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