People | Y Combinator (2024)

President & CEO

Group Partners

    Tom BlomfieldGroup PartnerTom Blomfield is a Group Partner at YC. He was co-founder of Monzo, one of the first app-based challenger banks in the UK. Monzo raised more than £500m, counts 10% of the UK population as customers, and was the #1 recommended brand in the UK for two years running. Previously, he founded GoCardless (YC S11), an online payments processor for the Direct Debit system. In 2019, he was awarded an OBE for increasing competition in the banking sector.Paul BuchheitGroup PartnerPaul Buchheit is a Group Partner at YC and the creator of GMail. While at Google he also built the prototype for AdSense and came up with Google's famous slogan "Don't be evil." In 2007 he was one of the founders of Friendfeed, which in 2009 became Facebook's largest acquisition to date. He has a BS and MS in Computer Science from Case Western Reserve University.Dalton CaldwellManaging Director, Investments and Group PartnerDalton Caldwell is Managing Director, Investments and Group Partner at YC. He was the cofounder and CEO of imeem (acquired by MySpace in 2009), and the cofounder and CEO of App.net. He has a BS in Symbolic Systems and a BA in Psychology from Stanford University.Nicolas DessaigneGroup PartnerNicolas Dessaigne is a Group Partner at YC. He was the co-founder of Algolia (YC W14), a growth stage Search API used by millions of developers. He led the company as CEO up to 350 people before hiring a successor in 2020. He is still very involved in the success of Algolia as Board Director. He has a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Nantes.Aaron EpsteinGroup PartnerAaron Epstein is a Group Partner at YC. He was co-founder of Creative Market (YC W10), a marketplace for graphic design assets, which he sold to Autodesk in 2014 and spun out as an independent startup again in 2017. Aaron founded the company to make beautiful design simple and accessible to everyone, and has since helped generate more than $100M in sales for independent creators around the world. He has a BS in Business from the University of Maryland.Brad FloraGroup PartnerBrad Flora is a Group Partner at YC. He was co-founder and CEO of Perfect Audience, an ad network funded by Y Combinator in 2011, acquired by Marin Software in 2014 and used by companies like Eventbrite, Atlassian, and New Relic to market to more than a billion people. He is an active angel investor, occasional contributor for Slate.com and lives in San Francisco with his wife and three children. He has a BA from Princeton University in English and an MS in Journalism from Northwestern.Jared FriedmanManaging Director, Software and Group PartnerJared Friedman is Managing Director, Software and Group Partner at YC. He was cofounder of Scribd, which was funded by Y Combinator in 2006 and grew to be one of the top 100 sites on the web. Jared previously worked at a pioneering AI company and studied computer science at Harvard.Diana HuGroup PartnerDiana Hu is a Group Partner at YC. She was co-founder and CTO of Escher Reality (YC S17), an Augmented Reality Backend company that was acquired by Niantic (makers of Pokémon Go). At Niantic, she was the head of the AR platform. Previously, she led data science at OnCue TV that was sold to Verizon. Originally from Chile, Diana graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with a BS and MS in Electrical and Computer Engineering with a focus in computer vision and machine learning.Pete KoomenGroup PartnerPete Koomen is a Group Partner at YC. He co-founded Optimizely (W10) which helps companies run experiments on their websites and apps. He helped Optimizely grow from inception, to $100M+ in ARR to, ultimately, its acquisition in 2020. Pete holds a Master's degree in Computer Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign.David LiebGroup PartnerDavid Lieb is a Group Partner at YC. He was previously the co-founder and CEO of Bump (S09), a mobile app used by more than 150M people to share photos and contact info by bumping their phones together. Bump was acquired by Google in 2013, and an unreleased photo-sharing app they were building became the foundation of Google Photos. Before Bump, Dave was a researcher in the Stanford AI Lab and a software engineer at Texas Instruments. He holds EE/CS degrees from Princeton and Stanford and finished half an MBA at Chicago Booth before dropping out to start Bump.Surbhi SarnaGroup PartnerSurbhi Sarna is a Group Partner at YC. She was the founder and former CEO of nVision Medical, which developed a first-in-kind microcatheter for the detection of ovarian cancer. After raising $17M in venture funding, completing three clinical trials, and obtaining two first-in-class FDA approvals, nVision was acquired by Boston Scientific (NYSE: BSX) for $275M, more than 15X money-in. Surbhi stayed at Boston Scientific for two years, running the 150+ person commercial organization in preparation for launch. She sits on both private and public company boards.Michael SeibelGroup PartnerMichael Seibel is a Group Partner at YC. He was the cofounder and CEO of Justin.tv and Socialcam. Socialcam sold to Autodesk in 2012 and under the leadership of Emmett Shear, Justin.tv became Twitch.tv and sold to Amazon in 2014. Before getting into startups, he spent a year as the finance director for a US Senate campaign and in 2005, Michael graduated from Yale University with a BA in political science.Harj TaggarManaging Director, Knowledge and Group PartnerHarj Taggar is a Managing Director, Knowledge and Group Partner at YC. He was previously founder and CEO of Triplebyte (YC S15) and Auctomatic (YC W07), which was acquired by Live Current Media in 2008. He first joined YC as a partner in 2010, leaving in 2014 to start Triplebyte and rejoining in 2020. He graduated in 2006 from Oxford, where he studied Jurisprudence.

Visiting Group Partners

  • People | Y Combinator (16)

    Tyler Bosmeny

    Tyler Bosmeny was the co-founder and CEO of Clever (S12), which lets students and teachers access all of their learning software in one place. 60% of students in the US log into Clever regularly. In 2021, Clever was acquired for $500M. Tyler graduated from Harvard and has a BA in Applied Math and an MA in Statistics.

  • People | Y Combinator (17)

    Ooshma Garg

    Ooshma Garg is the founder and former CEO of Gobble (W14), the easiest and fastest way to make home-cooked meals and the only profitable acquisition in the food space. She scaled the business from inception to $300M+ in subscription sales – and ultimately to a profitable acquisition by Intelligent Brands in 2022. Ooshma was named CEO of Intelligent Foods and managed 750+ employees working across multiple nationwide D2C food brands, including Gobble and Sunbasket. For her work with Gobble, Ooshma was named to Forbes' Top 30 Innovators Under 30 and Inc. Magazine's 30 Under 30. Ooshma has founded and built three businesses. She sold her first B2B SaaS startup in 2010, just one year after graduating with a B.S. in BioMechanical Engineering from Stanford University.

  • People | Y Combinator (18)

    Andrew Miklas

    Andrew Miklas is the co-founder and former CTO of PagerDuty (S10, NYSE:PD), a digital operations platform used by thousands of businesses to coordinate their responses to mission-critical issues. As PagerDuty's founding CTO, he scaled the product & engineering team to 70+ individuals and led the team that designed the initial product and its high availability architecture. After leaving PagerDuty, he joined the team at s28 Capital, where he invested in early stage startups, like CaptivateIQ, Retool, and Clerk, and worked with founders to help them scale their companies. He has a BSE (Software Engineering) from the University of Waterloo and an MSc in Computer Science from the University of Toronto.

  • People | Y Combinator (19)

    Nate Smith

    Nate Smith was the co-founder and CEO/CTO of Lever (S12), an all-in-one system that helps companies handle the talent recruiting process. Lever was acquired by Employ Inc. in 2021. Before starting Lever, Nate was a Product Manager on Google Search and Google Analytics, and he authored the JavaScript application framework DerbyJS. Nate graduated from Olin College of Engineering with a degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering.

  • People | Y Combinator (20)

    Jon Xu

    Jon Xu is the co-founder and former CTO of FutureAdvisor (S10), one of the first robo investment advisors that made high-quality investment management available to everyone. FutureAdvisor was acquired by BlackRock in 2015 where Jon continued to lead Product and Engineering as Managing Director in Aladdin Wealth Tech. FutureAdvisor powered robo investment services for the largest banks and broker dealers in the US and managed over $2B in client assets. Prior to starting FutureAdvisor, Jon graduated from MIT with a degree in Computer Science and worked on mobile data synchronization protocols at Microsoft. Jon is dedicated to helping others on their startup journeys and is an active angel investor and board member in early-stage companies.

Founders

  • People | Y Combinator (21)

    Trevor Blackwell

    Founder, Retired

    Trevor Blackwell is a roboticist who in 2007 built the first dynamically balancing biped robot. He has published papers on congestion control in high speed wide area networks, signalling protocol architecture, and file system performance. He has a BEng from Carleton, and a PhD in Computer Science from Harvard.

  • People | Y Combinator (22)

    Paul Graham

    Founder, Retired

    Paul Graham is the author of On Lisp (1993), ANSI Common Lisp (1995), and Hackers & Painters (2004). In 1995, he and Robert Morris started Viaweb, the first SaaS company, which in 1998 became Yahoo Store. In 2002 he discovered a simple spam filtering algorithm that inspired the current generation of filters. He has an AB from Cornell and a PhD in Computer Science from Harvard.

  • People | Y Combinator (23)

    Jessica Livingston

    Founder, Retired

    Jessica Livingston was previously VP of marketing at investment bank Adams Harkness, where she managed an award-winning rebranding of the company. She is the author of Founders at Work (2007), a book of interviews with startup founders. She has a BA in English from Bucknell.

  • People | Y Combinator (24)

    Robert Morris

    Founder, Retired

    Robert Morris is a professor of computer science at MIT, where he is a member of the PDOS group. He has published extensively on wireless networks, distributed operating systems, and peer-to-peer applications. In 1988 his discovery of buffer overflow first brought the Internet to the attention of the general public. He has an AB and PhD in Computer Science from Harvard.

Batch

  • People | Y Combinator (25)

    Lauren Goldberg

    Executive Assistant

  • People | Y Combinator (26)

    Pegah Saki Payne

    Executive Assistant

  • People | Y Combinator (27)

    Martina Tokosova Rivas

    Executive Assistant

  • People | Y Combinator (28)

    Lindsay Selvitelle

    Director of Events

  • People | Y Combinator (29)

    Leah Ulip

    Junior Executive Assistant & Events Support

Application Operations

  • People | Y Combinator (30)

    Eve Bouffard

    Application Operations, Associate

  • People | Y Combinator (31)

    Sean Pennino

    Product Engineer

Investment Operations

Software

  • People | Y Combinator (34)

    Regan Bell

    Product Engineer

  • People | Y Combinator (35)

    Doug Duhaime

    Product Engineer

  • People | Y Combinator (36)

    Emanuel Evans

    Infrastructure Software Engineer

  • People | Y Combinator (37)

    Matt Insler

    Product Engineer

  • People | Y Combinator (38)

    Casey Muller

    Product Engineer

  • People | Y Combinator (39)

    Evan Solomon

    Product Engineer

  • People | Y Combinator (40)

    Mark Thurman

    Head of Infrastructure and Security

Post Batch

  • People | Y Combinator (41)

    Eric Bakan

    Head of Data

  • People | Y Combinator (42)

    Katherine Bernstein

    Product Engineer

  • People | Y Combinator (43)

    Ryan Choi

    Head of Alumni Relations

  • People | Y Combinator (44)

    Jon Levy

    Managing Director, Partnerships

  • People | Y Combinator (45)

    Arnav Sahu

    Principal

  • People | Y Combinator (46)

    Chris Simon

    Data & Community Analyst

  • People | Y Combinator (47)

    Frank Stratton

    Product Engineer

Legal

  • People | Y Combinator (48)

    Joseph Borges-Santos

    Legal Analyst

  • People | Y Combinator (49)

    Nicole Cadman

    General Counsel, Early Stage

  • People | Y Combinator (50)

    Otice Carder

    Legal Analyst

  • People | Y Combinator (51)

    Mitch Duncombe

    Legal Counsel

  • People | Y Combinator (52)
  • People | Y Combinator (53)

    Carolynn Levy

    Managing Director, Legal

  • People | Y Combinator (54)

    Brigid McCurdy

    Senior Legal Counsel

  • People | Y Combinator (55)

    Nick McMullan

    Legal Analyst

  • People | Y Combinator (56)

    Micah Morgan

    Legal Analyst

  • People | Y Combinator (57)

    Alex Petersen

    Associate General Counsel

  • People | Y Combinator (58)

    Angela Prochnow

    Legal Operations & Innovation Program Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (59)

    Tommy Szalasny

    Legal Counsel

  • People | Y Combinator (60)

    Tasnim Thakur

    Legal Analyst

  • People | Y Combinator (61)

    Shirley Truy

    Legal Operations Specialist

Finance

  • People | Y Combinator (62)

    Allison Bryan

    Senior Accounting Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (63)

    Jess Burns

    Tax Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (64)

    Celia Cheung

    Senior Controller

  • People | Y Combinator (65)

    Logan Clayson

    Senior Fund Accountant

  • People | Y Combinator (66)

    Trevor Goddard

    Senior Fund Accountant

  • People | Y Combinator (67)

    Irina Lukashuk

    Business Analyst

  • People | Y Combinator (68)

    Emily Manashi

    Accounting Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (69)

    Eliana Moorer

    Finance Coordinator

  • People | Y Combinator (70)

    Kirsty Nathoo

    Managing Director, Finance

  • People | Y Combinator (71)

    Yna Ortega

    Fund Accounting Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (72)

    Verena Prescher

    Senior Director of Finance

  • People | Y Combinator (73)

    Esther Schwyter

    Fund Account Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (74)

    Anji Song

    Fund Controller

  • People | Y Combinator (75)

    Shaun Weber

    Director of Tax

  • People | Y Combinator (76)

    Shellie Wong

    Fund Accounting Manager

Outreach

  • People | Y Combinator (77)

    Lindsay Amos

    Senior Director of Communications

  • People | Y Combinator (78)

    Zach Both

    Video and Content Lead

  • People | Y Combinator (79)

    Joan DeGennaro

    Operations Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (80)

    Matthew Kang

    Senior Video Producer

  • People | Y Combinator (81)

    Greg Kumparak

    Editorial Content Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (82)

    Kat Mañalac

    Managing Outreach Officer

  • People | Y Combinator (83)

    Ryan Loughlin

    Senior Video Producer

  • People | Y Combinator (84)

    Steven Pham

    Online Community Director

HR and Workplace

  • People | Y Combinator (85)

    Renée Beck

    Chief of Staff

  • People | Y Combinator (86)

    Adele Gower

    Workplace Operations Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (87)

    Renee Mars

    Head of HR and Workplace

  • People | Y Combinator (88)

    Sophia Mayol

    Office Manager

  • People | Y Combinator (89)

    Tatyana Veremyova

    Director of Payroll & Benefits

Policy

  • People | Y Combinator (90)

    Luther Lowe

    Head of Public Policy

Hacker News

  • Daniel Gackle

    Hacker News

People | Y Combinator (2024)

FAQs

How many people get accepted into the Y Combinator? ›

According to Y Combinator , the Startup School receives over 15,000 applications each year , but only accepts around 5,000 participants . This means that the acceptance rate for the Startup School is less than 33 % , making it a highly competitive program .

How hard is it to get a Y Combinator interview? ›

Depending on your source, the Y Combinator acceptance rate is between 1.5% to 3%. There is no formula for getting into YC. Every founding team's story is different to ours, which makes for a diverse group of companies.

What are the odds of getting into Y Combinator? ›

Since 2005, Y Combinator has funded over 3,000 companies and worked with over 6,000 founders. Every 6 months over 10,000 companies apply to participate in our accelerator and we typically have a 1.5% - 2% acceptance rate.

What percent of YC applicants get interviews? ›

Applying early also provides time for creating a dialog if YC has any questions. About 3% of applicants get an interview. You'll need a winning YC application before you get to the interview round. A good application gets you an invitation email (“We want to see you in Mountain View”) and a 10 minute interview.

Is the Y Combinator a waste of time? ›

I do agree that Y Combinator is waste of time for most start-up founders. Instead of begging for money from old start-up lottery winners, focus on sales and own your company completely. Y combinator and other VCs should be your last option, not your first.

Is getting into YC a big deal? ›

Getting into Y Combinator is a huge deal. As the startup accelerator responsible for launching companies like Airbnb, DoorDash, Dropbox, Instacart, and many others, Y Combinator (YC) is widely respected by the top tech investors.

What is the average founder age for Y Combinator? ›

This is yet another example of YC getting back to its roots, as the prototypical YC founder has historically been young and technical. Assuming most YC founders started working around 22 years old, this means the average founder age has decreased from ~32 to ~30 years.

What percentage of Y Combinator startups succeed? ›

Startups are not for everyone. The hours are long, the route to success is often unconventional, and it is certainly not a surefire way to make a large sum of money. Roughly 90 percent of startups end in failure. (YC is an exception; over 50 percent of YC companies that are over five years old are still alive).

How do you ace an Y Combinator interview? ›

How to Prepare for Your YC Interview
  1. Don't rehearse. ...
  2. Instead of rehearsing, make progress. ...
  3. Be ready to describe what your company does. ...
  4. Understand your users and metrics. ...
  5. Don't be afraid to be honest about challenges. ...
  6. Have a demo ready. ...
  7. Make sure all founders are ready to participate. ...
  8. Be earnest.

How quickly does YC get back to you? ›

Most interviews will be held by video conference from April to early June. We typically make decisions the same day as your interview, and we give everyone who interviews detailed feedback on our decision. We invest in companies as soon as they are accepted; we do not wait for the batch to start.

How much equity does EF take? ›

If you pass Investment Committee, you'll get investment of up to $250,000. This is made up of a $125,000 investment for 8% equity from EF, and the opportunity to receive a further $125,000 investment from a partner of EF, Transpose Platform.

Does Y Combinator pay for housing? ›

Y Combinator require that the entire founding team must live in the Bay Area during the program. Y Combinator doesn't assist with accommodation, so each company finds its own solution. This gives each company a way to forge their own approach and identity.

Does YC accept solo founders? ›

Can a single person apply for funding? Yes. We regularly accept solo founders. That said, our advice remains that one-person startups are tough and you're more likely to succeed with a co-founder.

What are the top YC interview questions? ›

Sample YC Interview Questions
  • Why do you want to be part of YC?
  • Why is your product priced the way it is?
  • If your startup succeeds, what additional areas could you expand into?
  • What's the biggest mistake you have made?
  • What will be your biggest challenge two years from now?
  • Who are your competitors?
May 8, 2023

Do YC referrals help? ›

𝗚𝗲𝘁𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗮 𝗿𝗲𝗳𝗲𝗿𝗿𝗮𝗹 First things first—you don't need a referral to get into YC. We didn't have one, and it worked out fine. A positive referral from someone who knows you well can definitely help you land an interview.

What is the success rate of Y Combinator companies? ›

Roughly 90% of startups end in failure. (YC is an exception; more than 50% of YC companies are still alive 5 years later.) Here are some other reasons why you might want to reconsider working at a startup.

What is the acceptance ratio for YC? ›

Marty Kausas on LinkedIn: Y Combinator's acceptance rate is 1.5% (2x as selective as Harvard) We… 24 comments.

How prestigious is the Y Combinator? ›

Y Combinator (often abbreviated as "YC") is a highly prestigious startup accelerator based in Mountain View, California.

How big is the Y Combinator batch? ›

AI is a catalyst unlike anything we've seen in a long, long time; what the Internet did for startups in the 90s, and smartphones did in the 2000s, AI is doing once again. With this batch, the YC community is now made up of more than 4,500 startups and 11,000 founders.

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