Latest news about Bitcoin and all cryptocurrencies. Your daily crypto news habit.
A New Hire’s Guide to Startup Terms and Definitions
The world of tech startups is a fast-paced, cutthroat, whirlwind of activity. Working at a small startup (Kapwing) as a “creative” with a non-technical background I often hear words like “pivot,” “benchmark,” or “move out of the way” that confuse me. I brought this up to my boss and she outlined a glossary of common terms that I’ve written up here.
Acquisition
A fancy name for the action of getting up to go get lunch when the food delivery arrives.
Angel Investor
An accredited investor who invests his or her personal relationship with God to bestow a company with good fortune. They sometimes enforce employee baptisms.
ARR
When a really frustrating software bug occurs, engineer, like pirates, shout “ARR!”
Benchmark
The impression made in a software engineer’s chair after a code sprint.
Bootstrapping
The act of strapping engineers to the ground by their shoes during a code sprint to enforce efficiency.
B2B
Short for “back to back,” this is the position co-founders assume when attacked by wolves during company camping offsites.
Burn rate
To save money on electricity during early stages of startups, founders often buy candles to work through the night. The speed at which the candle burns is called the burn rate. The lower the burn rate, the better the candle.
Light in the seemingly never ending dark
Buyout
A trendy dance move.
Capital
Another name for Silicon Valley, the capital city of tech.
Convertible Note
This is the slip of paper, also called a ticket, placed on your Tesla convertible when you park it in a 2 hour parking zone for 4 hours.
Dilution
The act of making a liquid more dilute. For example, mixing water with your whisky because it’s “too early” to get blackout drunk.
Beer is already diluted so no need to dilute further
EBITDA
The noise often made by overtired founders trying to explain an idea but not finding the words.
Equity
Better than equality; it’s Equity!
Exit Strategy
Because startup employees often work 80+ hour work weeks, employees must plan an exit strategy every time they want to take a break.
9 more hours until I can see my newborn son
Going Public
The name for the rare time startup employees emerge from work to see other people in their lives.
Independent Contractor
The person you hire when you need to take out the competition, literally, via assassination.
Intellectual Property
When you’re starting a company and can’t afford your rent, you can take comfort in your intelligence by pretending it’s a mansion in North Beach. This is called intellectual property.
Incubator
Working at a startup is stressful. Keeping pets is a valuable way to destress. This is why startups often have an incubator to raise baby chickens for stress relief. Ask any founder about their incubator to see how their chickens are doing.
Initial Public Offering
The sacrificial ritual a company makes on New Years Day, offering its chickens to the public for good fortune in the coming year.
Liquidation Waterfall
This is the inevitable need to pee after being bootstrapped to the ground for great lengths of time.
Lock Up
If bootstrapping is not successful enough in ensuring efficiency, a lock up is required. This often lends itself to a worse liquidation waterfall.
Nondisclosure Agreement
Disclosure is an electronic music duo that plays wonderful music, but wonderful music can be distracting during the day to day grind. With a nondisclosure agreement everyone makes a pact to not listen to Disclosure.
Options
So many, yet so few.
Pitch
The casual playing of sports are a great way for startup founders to decompress. A normal American sport to play is “baseball.” A pitch is the first move of baseball, where one person throws a ball for the other to hit with a “bat” (a long stick, not the night bird).
Pivot
The action of turning in the other direction when you see someone on the street who you met at a networking event but whose name you don’t remember.
Runway
The main thoroughfare in the coworking space that you walk through as people judge you for wearing the same shirt 3 days in a row.
Seed Round
Once upon a time, two children were arguing over whether a seed they had found on the ground was a rectangle or a triangle. They spent hours arguing over this until a third child arrived. “Child,” they asked, “is this seed we found on the ground a rectangle or a triangle?” The child looked at them quizzically. “Seed round.” This classic fairytale has inspired many a founder and continues to be referenced as a metaphor for the simplest solution often being the one you think of last.
SEO
This is shorthand for the classic expression of “See- oh.” as someone shares their idea only to realise it is not executable.
Social Proof
The act of populating your Instagram and Facebook with photos of yourself photoshopped into stock photos of social events in order to prove to your family, friends, and yourself that you have a work-life balance.
Valuation
The special startup lingo word for when a founder is sizing up another, competing founder, debating whether its worth hiring an Independent Contractor.
VC
Stands for Very Carefully. Often used when talking about how to tell your parents you are quitting your job to start a tech company.
These happy parents won’t be happy for long
Vesting
The tech trend of this winter season is to wear vests. On days where everyone on the team happens to wear a vest, a startup is said to be “vesting.”
These employees accidentally wore the SAME vest!
Startup Glossary of Terminology and Definitions was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.