Paul Graham is the co-founder of Y Combinator. He helped shape companies like Airbnb, Stripe, Dropbox and mentored founders who would later define an entire generationPaul Graham is the co-founder of Y Combinator. He helped shape companies like Airbnb, Stripe, Dropbox and mentored founders who would later define an entire generation

The 3-Word Advice I Got From Paul Graham

\

On recognizing when a small idea stops being a niche and starts becoming social infrastructure

Paul Graham doesn’t need much introduction in the startup world.

\ As the co-founder of Y Combinator, he helped shape companies like Airbnb, Stripe, Dropbox and mentored founders who would later define an entire generation, including Sam Altman.

More than an investor, Paul Graham has spent decades observing a very specific phenomenon: why some ideas remain small experiments, while others quietly grow until they become unavoidable.

That’s why I reached out to him.

I’m building a cultural-recommendation platform in Brazil called RecomendeMe, and I wanted clarity on a question that often comes up when you’re working on something that doesn’t fit existing categories:

How do you know when an idea stops looking like a niche project and starts behaving like a new kind of social infrastructure

What signal actually matters?

This was the question I sent him.

His response came back short — almost aggressively simple:

Three words.

No theory. \n No explanation. \n No caveats.

And yet, it immediately reframed how I think about what I’m building.

When you’re creating something new, especially something cultural or social, it’s easy to focus on complex signals: depth of community, engagement quality, niche relevance, social graphs, long-term vision.

Those things matter but they’re not the first signal.

Growth rate isn’t just a metric. \n It’s a proxy for inevitability.

\ Paul and Sam

\ If something grows consistently, it means people are finding it, returning to it, and bringing others along — not because they were told to, but because it feels useful or meaningful to them.

That distinction matters.

It forces a more uncomfortable question:

Is this growing because people genuinely want it to exist — or because I’m pushing it forward?

For founders working on “small” or unconventional ideas, this is the part worth remembering.

Most social infrastructure doesn’t start out looking important. It starts with a handful of people who care enough to come back. Sometimes clarity doesn’t come from a long explanation.

\n Sometimes it comes in three words: from someone who’s seen this pattern repeat itself for decades.

\

What “Growth Rate” Actually Means

When Paul Graham says “growth rate”, he’s not talking about vanity metrics or short-term spikes.

Growth rate is about how fast something grows consistently over time — users, activity, usage, or engagement — without artificial push.

It answers a very specific question:

If you stop promoting this product today, does it keep growing anyway?

A healthy growth rate usually shows a few things at once:

  • People are discovering the product organically
  • A meaningful percentage of users come back
  • Some users naturally bring others with them
  • Usage forms a habit, not just a one-time interaction

In early-stage products, growth rate matters more than absolute size. Ten users growing into twenty is often a stronger signal than a thousand users who never return.

What makes growth rate powerful is that it compresses multiple truths into one signal: product-market fit, relevance, word-of-mouth, and perceived value.

For cultural or social products, this matters even more.

  1. You can’t force people to care about culture.
  2. You can’t buy genuine recommendations.
  3. If a cultural platform is growing at a steady pace, it’s usually because it’s creating something people feel compelled to participate in.

That’s why growth rate works as an early test of inevitability.

Not because it predicts scale perfectl: but because it reveals desire.

And desire is what turns small ideas into infrastructure.

\

Another Useful Insight: Growth Rate Replaces Speculation

One practical reason growth rate matters so much is that it removes guesswork.

\

  • Early founders tend to debate endlessly: \n - Is the idea too niche? \n - Is the market ready? \n - Is this cultural or just a hobby? \n - Is it infrastructure or just content?

Growth rate answers those questions without discussion.

If usage grows week over week, something is working. \n If it doesn’t, no amount of theory will fix that.

This is especially important for cultural products, where it’s easy to confuse taste with traction. People may like the idea, praise it, or say it’s interesting — but unless they return and use it again, nothing real is happening.

Growth rate doesn’t measure enthusiasm. \n It measures behavior.

And behavior is what scales.

\

Conclusion

What I value most about Paul Graham’s writing and advice is how consistently it cuts through noise.

His ideas don’t try to impress. They try to clarify.

Over the years, his essays have shaped how many founders think about growth, focus, and what actually matters early on. This short response felt like an extension of that same mindset; not a new theory, but a reminder.

For me, it helped reset priorities.

Instead of spending energy debating whether what I’m building shouldbecome infrastructure, the question became simpler: \n is it growing because people find it useful enough to come back?

That shift matters. It turns abstract ambition into something measurable. It replaces speculation with observation.

This wasn’t about validation or endorsement.

\n It was about being reminded how to think clearly at an early stage — and that, in practice, is one of the most valuable things a founder can receive.

\ \ \

Piyasa Fırsatı
Wink Logosu
Wink Fiyatı(LIKE)
$0.004198
$0.004198$0.004198
+6.65%
USD
Wink (LIKE) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği
Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen service@support.mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

What Does Coinbase’s New Move Mean for Crypto and Finance?

What Does Coinbase’s New Move Mean for Crypto and Finance?

The post What Does Coinbase’s New Move Mean for Crypto and Finance? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The most prominent cryptocurrency exchange in the United States, Coinbase, revealed a significant step on October 3rd by applying for national trust company status with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). This initiative aims to consolidate oversight for new product developments under a centralized federal structure, streamlining the integration of cryptocurrencies with […] Continue Reading:What Does Coinbase’s New Move Mean for Crypto and Finance? Source: https://en.bitcoinhaber.net/what-does-coinbases-new-move-mean-for-crypto-and-finance
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/10/04 14:32
Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) Stock: Rises as Battery Cell Investment Expands at German Gigafactory

Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) Stock: Rises as Battery Cell Investment Expands at German Gigafactory

  TLDR TSLA trades near $485 after news of higher battery investment in Germany • Tesla targets up to 8 GWh of annual battery cell output by 2027 • Total cell factory
Paylaş
Coincentral2025/12/17 04:37
‘One Battle After Another’ Hits Peak Popularity With 97% Rotten Tomatoes Score

‘One Battle After Another’ Hits Peak Popularity With 97% Rotten Tomatoes Score

The post ‘One Battle After Another’ Hits Peak Popularity With 97% Rotten Tomatoes Score appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. ‘One Battle After Another’ is already being tipped for Oscar success Warner Bros It tends to take time to build interest in movies, even ones which seem to be sure-fire successes. In the era of social media, many movie fans want to read reviews from their counterparts rather than mainstream outlets. As a result, all but the biggest franchises usually only gain traction once they have been released. There are however exceptions to this rule and one is on the verge of release. Called One Battle After Another, it stars Leonardo DiCaprio as a washed-up delusional revolutionary who lives off grid with his teenage daughter. When one of his old enemies resurfaces and his daughter is abducted, the movie turns into a game of cat and mouse with car chases aplenty as well as the involvement of militias and mysterious organizations. The plot has a hint of 80s action extravaganza Commando but is actually loosely based on a book written by American author Thomas Pynchon. The movie hits a timely note as Pynchon is famous for sending up nefarious quasi-government organisations in his novels and director Paul Thomas Anderson continues that theme on screen. It has been seen as a political commentary and DiCaprio was a natural fit. His role combines the paranoia he portrayed in Howard Hughes biopic The Aviator with the comedic chases from his crime comedy Catch Me If You Can. DiCaprio is supported by an equally heavyweight cast led by Benicio del Toro as his accomplice and Sean Penn as his nemesis. One Battle After Another premiered in Los Angeles on September 8 and was met with universal acclaim. It has a critics’ rating of 97% on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes but doesn’t yet have a single score from audiences as the film won’t be released…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/19 06:41