Startups do not inherently reward novelty or difficulty of work
1 Argument
0 Citations
0 Consequences
2 Mentions
Arguments
Argument #df00ce6a 1 0 2
If it is true that...
In startups, rewards are given for tangible progress towards a commercially valuable product 1 0 2Then it must be true that...
Startups do not inherently reward novelty or difficulty of work 1 0 2Opposing Arguments
No opposing arguments found
Citations
No citations found
Consequences
No arguments found
Mentions
Related Propositions
Increasingly, success comes from having new ideas and building new things 1 0 2Maximizing a startup's chances of success is more important than retaining a large amount of stock 1 0 2The valuation of a startup is not just the value of its current assets, but also its ideas and potential future work 1 0 2Starting a startup does not require extensive knowledge about business 1 0 2All other things being equal, the more of a startup hub a place is, the better startups will do there 1 0 2In certain fields, ideas need to be both correct and novel 1 0 2Some types of work only require correctness, not novelty 1 0 2Academic founders need to adapt to a different incentive structure in startups 1 0 2In startups, rewards are given for tangible progress towards a commercially valuable product 1 0 2In startups, taking shortcuts is often advantageous 1 0 2