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I think you did well and received a good price!

For the last several years, bitcoin and crypto related domain names have been really hot and selling at high prices. supertokens.com would make a great crypto business name, this would have been in the seller's mind when he set the price. I'm surprised that your domain broker didn't mention it.


This is a well written and interesting article. Large corporations will usually have a checklist with things like: Get the support of top management; Get the necessary resources (budget, people, office space); etc. This article tells you what those things should really mean. It is based on actual experience, not just some academics studying 3M and Apple, good stuff David! - Please feel free to write a similar blog post about Latin American startups, another area where on paper you would expect some big successes, but so far things have been underwhelming.


Thank you, elantis. I'm glad you enjoyed it.

In terms of LATAM, I think the party's just getting started. Literally earlier _this month_ we saw the formation of the first ever Mexican unicorn as Kavak was valued at over 1$bn. I feel like the potential for both the market and the startups out of LATAM have not been fully appreciated or priced in, so there are many opportunities there. In particular "Series B" / growth financing rounds are unnaturally difficult to raise, so the first Sequoia or the like to double down on the space will likely perform very well over a 10 year fund lifetime.

Many US funds have Limited Partner Agreements that put restrictions on the amount of capital that can be invested in non-US entities. Some clever firms and companies have gotten around this by having LATAM startups create a parent company that is a Delaware C corporation in which investors invest. That has some nice auxiliary benefits like falling under QSBS. But it would be good to have large VCs have funds set up such that they could invest directly in promising LATAM startups.


Hi Peter,

I understand that E-3 visas for Australians are easier to obtain than other types of visas. In your experience, does this mean startups will welcome applications from Australians where the job advert does not mention visa sponsorship? Or should we only apply for jobs mentioning H-1B etc?

Thank you very much for your time.


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