Just a few years ago I was sitting in the audience of O’Reilly’s Where 2.0 conference listening to a panel on venture capital and startups, and a prominent VC stood up and said something along the lines of “…we don’t fund hardware.”
But things have changed rapidly, and while there might not yet be a queue of people waiting to give you money when you go to Sand Hill Road, they’ve at least started to take the meetings.
Although hardly the first, the arrival of PCH’s Highway1—a hardware startup accelerator located in San Francisco, headed up by Brady Forrest—was probably a fairly pivotal moment in that sea change, and seems to be setting the model for how VC money handles hardware startups. Highway1, and others like it, provide mentoring and assistance to hardware makers to build companies. It is, in other words, an incubator.
Incubators are there to take really early stage ideas and prove viability, and it seems that most people now seem to view incubators are a fairly vital stage in a hardware startup’s life. While you can take an idea, and a pitch deck, for a software startup to a major VC and expect a hearing, if you’re pitching hardware you really need a prototype—which is where a hardware incubator comes into its own.
One of the most famous incubator programs in the industry is Y Combinator, who today announced a program of added support for the growing number of hardware startups they fund.
“As YC has grown, we’ve funded more and more hardware companies. Hardware companies have very different needs from pure software companies…” — Sam Altman, President, Y Combinator
As part of today’s announcement to help the incubator better cater to hardware startups, they have a partnered with Bolt, and Autodesk’s Pier 9 lab. Bolt’s partners and engineering staff will offer advice on product development and manufacturing, and the incubator’s startups will be able to work with Bolt’s staff at Autodesk’s Pier 9 Workshop facility at no cost.
As well as providing access to the extensive Pier 9 lab, they have committed to building a smaller in-house electronics prototyping shop in the Mountain View offices.
Finally, they’ve announced a number of other discounts on services—ranging from 3D printing and injection moulding, PCB fabrication and assembly, all the way to product photography—and said they’re looking for more deals to help out their hardware companies.
“…we’re happy to see all sorts of hardware companies, but we especially like the ones that are fundamentally new ideas that Kickstarter might not support.” — Sam Altman, President, Y Combinator
This announcement by Y Combinator is newsworthy, not so much because of the content, but the context behind it. That such a prominent incubator is taking such notice of hardware startups—is actively going out to look for them—means that there has been a real change in the way that venture capital sees hardware, and that’s important.
There’s never been a better time to become a maker of things, and become part of the next industrial revolution. You just have to pick up your tools and get started.
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