Monday, April 20, 2026

Paul Graham's Ramen Noodle University

Y Combinator was a highly innovative launch when it showed up, and it is still today a gold standard in innovation. But the Y Combinator model only worked because Amazon Web Services had happened. Before that startups had to raise millions and buy servers. 5K? 10K? Forget it.

Also, you do all you do. You achieve Product-Market-Fit. And you have supposedly attained nirvana!

That is flawed thinking.

VCs take pride in being anti-marketing. Legend has it A16Z funded companies know that Marc Andreessen will personnally show up with a sldgehammer if they are found doing any marketing.

That is coder hubris, and marketing illiteracy. You can NOT find product-market fit without marketing. Ad spend is a tiny fraction of what marketing is. Marketing is mostlhy listening. Good marketing is sophisticated listening. Great marketing is how you find adjacent spaces. And super marketing is how you invest new, vertical adjacent spaces.

AWS might have cut costs. But AI means now you can 10X or 100X the code, 10X or 100X the marketing, you can start with 100X or 1000X ambition. And the Ramen Noodle framework breaks. Completely.

In my book Marketing Escape Velocity I put out the thesis that ANY tech startup that has achieved product-market fit can hope to achieve unicorn status if it is willing to respect marketing. Marketing is how you become aware of adjacent spaces. And movig into adjacent spaces might mean merging with other tech startups that might also have achieved product--market fit.

The Columbus way does not take you to the moon. Today, with all the tools available, we are in moon territory in every direction. Really big things have become possible.

In fact, the size of the problem/challenge is the key metric. The size of the ambition.

My argument is, the Solara vision IS the starting point. Yes, you need product, and product market fit, but you need at least 10 of them just to unicorn status, and you might have personally been responsible for only one of the 10.

Corporate Culture/ Operating System: Greatness
CEO Functions
Musk’s Management
Six Weeks From Zero
Verbal Martial Arts, Social Concentric Circles, and Non-Reaction
Marketing Escape Velocity: The Path To Unicorn Status And Beyond
Unicorn to Solara: A Journey of Imagination: From Billion-Dollar Startups to Trillion-Dollar Suns
Unicorn to Solara with Purpose: Marketing, Mergers, and Responsible Capitalism
Liquid Computing: The Future of Human-Tech Symbiosis
Beyond Motion: How Robots Will Redefine The Art Of Movement

The most famous company to come out of Y Combinator never did the Y Combinator thing. OpenAI. OpenAI needed to launch big, and raise big, so big that it had to skip VCs and go straight to Microsoft.

Y Combinator is not the correct vehicle for Solaras. My books are.

A Solara vision is about reinventing a new industry, or imagining a new one. That requires tremendous domain expertise, immense imagination and courage, and is everything to do with the spec, and nothing to do with vibe coding. Vibe coding comes later, and might be only a portion of the product. Code is not the only thing. Spec is a thing. Marketing is a fundamental thing. Ambition is a thing. Vision is a thing. Ideas are a thing. As is execution.

But it is not either/or. I think of Y Combinator as primar school. It does take you to product market fit. And you do raise money.