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How to Start a Startup from Y Combinator and Stanford Course - Completely Free

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In this course, Sam Altman (president of YC) will lead us through 20 killer sessions with the likes of startup experts like Peter Thiel, Aaron Levie, and Reid Hoffman to discuss how to come up with ideas and evaluate them, how to get users and grow, how to do sales and marketing, how to hire, how to raise money, company culture, operations and management, business strategy, and more.

A letter from Sam Altman, President at YCombinator about the course:
CS183B is a class we’re teaching at Stanford. It’s designed to be a sort of one-class business course for people who want to start startups.
Videos of the lectures, associated reading materials, and assignments will all be available here. There will be 20 videos, some with a speaker or two and some with a small panel. It’ll be 1,000 minutes of content if you watch it all.
We’ll cover how to come up with ideas and evaluate them, how to get users and grow, how to do sales and marketing, how to hire, how to raise money, company culture, operations and management, business strategy, and more.
You can’t teach everything necessary to succeed in starting a company, but I suspect we can teach a surprising amount. We’ve tried to take some of the best speakers from the past 9 years of Y Combinator dinners and arrange them in a way that will hopefully make sense.
We’re doing this because we believe helping a lot of people be better at starting companies will be good for everyone. It will hopefully be valuable even for people who don’t want to start startups.
Talks like these have really helped Y Combinator founders create their companies. We hope you find it helpful too!
-Sam
How the course will work
All of the lecture videos for this course will be uploaded to startupclass.samaltman.com after the in-person lectures every Tuesday and Thursday. Universities will also be organizing groups to watch the videos together, as well as peer evaluate the projects.

Given the mailing list, Facebook Group, Youtube channel and website (startupclass.samaltman.com) are likely to get a little unwieldy, this site was created to:

  1. More easily access all the YCombinator "How to Start a Startup" lecture series videos, associated readings, and assignments.

  2. To have a single, ad-free place for meaningful discussion for each of the lectures so we can collaborate and learn from each other.

  3. To open-source the discussion. All lectures, discussion and content here will be held under a Creative Commons License to foster the most openness and creativity possible.

  4. Progress tracking. Within the course, you'll be able to track your progress from lecture to lecture.

We're hoping to get speakers and experts to engage with the group. Looking forward to seeing you inside.

Related Stores

startupclass.co
startupclass.co

closed Comments

  • +1

    why - oh why? - didn't / don't these guys put this up into Coursera's course catalog,;to make it easy to enroll?

  • +3

    Starting up a startup in Australia is a lot different from the US where strategies for getting venture capital may just end up bankrupting you here.

    Just be fully aware of localised issues when starting up and dont assume what they are saying here will work without further investigation….

  • This looks like it is always free. Hence it does not meet the posting guidelines.

    https://www.ozbargain.com.au/wiki/help:deal_posting_guidelin…

  • +2

    Do you get a .edu email account?

    • +1

      dunno, but - as you'd be giving an eMail address to sign-up - I doubt it.

      If anyone finds a bona fide way to get a valid .EDU[.AU] eMail address, for own use, let me know.

      (Eg, Fora.TV (with their US$ 50 paygate) gives - or gave, last time we checked - a 6 month "trial" subscription to those with an .EDU address.)

      PS We should create "OzBargain Uni" & get an EDU domain, so any "faculty" can have an EDU-address; actively contributing OzB-members could be "elected" to honorary, life-time (read: zero-salary) visiting faculty positions.

      How hard can it be to create a genuine (& useful) online institute of higher consumer learning… eg, during these (as always) uncertain economic times?

      As long as it never charged for what it didn't deliver (read: never charged fees), what should stop it from being formed? Is there a Lawyer in the audience / family? ;-)

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