It's been a great week for thoughtful co-founder Casey Mackrell. First, he got married. After that, he went viral.
At a wedding reception, Mackrell needed to quickly give a colleague access to a code that could only be unblocked from his own laptop. His co-founder, Torrey Leonard, captured the moment by snapping a photo of Mackrell putting together a pull request, staring at a computer in a ballroom where friends and family danced in a backdrop filled with flower arrangements and fairy lights. I caught it.
Leonard posted a photo of his co-founder on LinkedIn with a respectful caption. Images of the founder coding at his wedding went viral, sparking both awe and anger.
However, the actual story behind this image is not as bad as it seems.
“At this moment when the photo was taken, Casey needed to push one thing to the server: He had code on his laptop that his co-workers needed to access,” Leonard told TechCrunch. spoke. “For 30 seconds, Casey was clicking the button. He logged in, clicked the button, and it was done. You can see in the photo that people are smiling.”
Leonard provides no context that Mackrell was using the computer for less than a minute. But that's what made his post click so much. The idea of founders spending hours coding at their own wedding is infuriating. What actually happened is not that heinous.
The reason Leonard's post sparked so much discussion in the startup community is because it is an extension of existing discourse around “founder mode,” a concept coined by Y Combinator founding partner Paul Graham. . And beyond Silicon Valley, the post became fodder for major outrage.
“Last year, we spent some time in San Francisco. I was talking to a friend at a restaurant or bar, and Casey was on her laptop, and so were the others. “It's San Francisco,” Leonard said. “I think this founder mode mindset is very exciting for a lot of people in the technology industry.”
But beyond the tech bubble, what founders see in their dedication could be considered a lack of work-life balance.
According to Graham, a company can be run in one of two ways. Founder mode or Manager mode. Founder mode requires founders to be hands-on with all activities of the company. Graham argues that when founders start delegating, they shift into manager mode, which can reduce a startup's success.
Both Graham's essay and Leonard's LinkedIn post received mixed reactions. While some found Mackrell's embodiment of “founder mode” motivating, others were appalled by this lack of work-life balance.
“Publicly, all the comments we've received have been very negative…We've been on 4chan, we've been on Reddit, and obviously people representing the non-tech community, quite frankly, I didn’t like that,” Leonard said.
From satire to paranoia, viral LinkedIn posts are usually taken out of context and distributed on other platforms. One particularly successful post, in which a founder confesses what he learned about B2B sales while proposing to his fiancée, was originally posted as a joke, but it became a novelty in its own right. It exploded as a meme.
“On the other hand, I have received thousands of emails at this point from founders I know, unicorn founders I don't know, Fortune 500 CEOs, and the world's top investors across Silicon Valley. , I got a LinkedIn DM, a text message, “Let's go, I'm on your side,'' Leonard said.
Mackrell is currently on his honeymoon with his wife and could not be reached for comment. But Leonard said his wife didn't mind him taking out his laptop at the wedding. Still, the company probably needs to figure out a way to avoid situations like this in the future, where only one person can solve a particular problem in a 15-employee company. However, Paul Graham would probably disagree.