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2018's biggest moments at AngelList

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angel.co

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newsletters@angel.co

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Thu, Jan 17, 2019 05:38 PM

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Plus: What skeptics get wrong about full-stack engineers We?re building something new at AngelList

Plus: What skeptics get wrong about full-stack engineers [View Online]( [Nvidia]( We’re building something new at AngelList we can’t wait to share. AngelList is the go-to network for startup success. Across a family of companies—AngelList Venture, AngelList Talent, and Product Hunt—startups of all sizes have found the tools they need to grow. In 2018, we reached over $1 billion in assets under management, supported two million candidates in their job search, and helped makers launch over 20,000 products that will define the future of tech. Over 75% of startups that announced seed funding from leading U.S. investors in the last two years have raised, recruited, or launched on AngelList or Product Hunt. - 28% took money from a fund or syndicate run on AngelList - 59% used AngelList to hire - 36% launched a product on Product Hunt We also made more than a million introductions between startups and job-seekers last year—reaching four million for all-time. Check out our year in review, and sign up to see what's coming next. [Keep reading]( What skeptics get wrong about full-stack engineers—and why we need them [Full-stack engineers]( In 2018, there were roughly 30% more full-stack engineering roles posted to AngelList than there were front-end or back-end positions. To many in the engineering community, this is a bad thing. Over the last 10 years, think piece after think piece has been published questioning the legitimacy of full-stack engineering roles. The criticism can be bucketed into two claims: - Full-stack engineering roles are unrealistic. With how complex the average stack is today, no one could possibly become an expert in every piece of it. - Full-stack engineering roles are exploitative. Cash-strapped companies hire full-stack engineers to do the job of multiple engineers for one salary. But does the data support either? [Keep reading]( How to find a mentor in tech, with Floodgate’s Ann Miura-Ko [Product Hunt Radio]( Ann Miura-Ko is founding partner at Floodgate, a seed-stage VC firm in Palo Alto. She has been called “the most powerful woman in startups” by Forbes and is an early investor in Lyft and TaskRabbit. She is also a lecturer in entrepreneurship at Stanford’s School of Engineering and a founding member of All Raise. In this episode of Product Hunt Radio, she shares everything from how she got to where she is today, (including what it was like growing up with a NASA scientist for a dad) to why she never approaches a relationship with an expectation of mentorship. [Keep reading]( Hot startups hiring now 🔥 📊 [Datavore]( believes visualization and process tracking facilitated by machine learning can help simplify complex big data problems and bring them directly to the business user. [Hiring a software engineer, front-end engineer, and more.​​]( 👛 [Perch]( transforms the way shoppers experience products in-store. Its platform enables brands and retailers to create impactful product displays that attract, engage and inform. [Hiring a software engineer, account executive, and more. ​​]( 💪 [Public Goods]( makes healthy products affordable by selling direct, at cost, in exchange for a small annual membership. [Hiring a head of growth, product development manager, and more. ​]( 📱 [Sling]( is a scheduling and communication software for non-desk working industries. It focuses on restaurants and retail stores, but has customers in a variety of industries. [Hiring a software engineer, growth marketing manager, and more. ​]( [Search now]( AngelList Weekly 90 Gold St San Francisco, CA 94133 [Unsubscribe]( | [Update Preferences](

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