Hello!! May I know some pre IPO companies in US that have a good growth and tech jobs!?
Most of the unicorns are not much different than big tech right now
Except for you know, their valuations (ie the definition of a unicorn)? Blind IQ dropping like a rock these days. Exposure to a bear portion of the business cycle has brought out the bricks. People arnt joining unicorns for their WLB. They're joining unicorns because its lucrative when they IPO. Just look at something like Figma as a best case example, as it 20x returned on its private valuation when acquired for 20+ billion by Adobe. Where are you getting 20x returns on RSUs from big tech?
Yeah all those down rounds that are coming are great for your equity… better to join after their values get adjusted to the new reality of no more free money.
Hard to say when exactly companies will go IPO in this climate.
If you’re in Boston or Denver or would move there, we’re hiring.
y'all sponsor visas?
Sorry but since my comment this place has turned into a dumpster fire and wouldn’t recommend, i think they do sponsor though
Unicorns have more overvalued valuation than big tech right now
Who cares? Valuations being overvalued at 2 billion is a lot different then valuations being overvalued at 1 trillion. What's the point of comparing these? One has no scale and insane upside from a lower denominator and the other has scale and marginal long term upside. It's just basic math, can we stop the ridiculousness?
Im not talking about those trash sub 10bil startups. 1. Stripe 95b 2. Canva 40b 3. Instacart 39b 4. Databricks 38b List goes on. Tell me again Microsoft peanut boy?
ONLYFANS
I doubt they'll go public given their business.
Series a or series b companies. Or big tech where stock is down
Stripe is an obvious answer, although it's too mature to really make bank with RSUs. You could look into popular SaaS platforms such as notion.so or monday.com that seem to be growing, despite the bear market.
Isn't yours supposed to be one of the few? If you still work at TripActions.
Just google “tech unicorns”