Reddit is filled with stories about people who sold too early or missed their shot at generational wealth. But there's something different when that story comes from one of the people who actually built the platform.
Alexis Ohanian, Reddit's co-founder, opened up on Wired's "Uncanny Valley" podcast in August about selling the site for $10 million back in 2006. It's the kind of number that sounds enormous until you realize the company is now worth around $35 billion. But the story behind that decision isn't really about money—it's about what happens when your entire world collapses while you're trying to build something.
A Different Era for Startups
Ohanian described the mid-2000s as a completely different landscape. "In 2005, 2006, it was not the startup economy. All the things we take for granted now were not a thing yet." There was no well-worn path for young founders, no ecosystem of accelerators and angel investors, no cultural script for turning down offers and holding out for billions.
When Mark Zuckerberg famously rejected Yahoo's $1 billion offer for Facebook, Ohanian remembers thinking it was insane. "My God, if I could have gotten that much money for a few years' worth of work, I would've taken it in a heartbeat." To him, $10 million for 16 months of work wasn't a consolation prize—it was more money than his parents would make in their entire careers combined. It felt like winning, not settling.
When Everything Falls Apart
But the financial calculation wasn't the only factor. Not even close. "A month into Reddit, my then-girlfriend falls into a coma, my dog dies, and then my mom is diagnosed with terminal brain cancer," Ohanian said. The timing was devastating. He was trying to navigate the chaos of an early-stage startup while dealing with the kind of personal tragedy that would derail anyone.
His mother's diagnosis came with a brutal prognosis—doctors gave her just a few years. When Ohanian reached her in the hospital, her first words were "I'm sorry." She worried that her illness would distract him from building the company. He described her as "an exceptional woman" and said all he wanted was to make her proud.
When she passed away in 2008, everything shifted. "From that moment forward, I've never had anyone come to me with a business problem that was even remotely jarring." After watching someone you love die, startup stress just hits differently.
No Regrets, Just Reality
Reddit, of course, kept growing. It became a foundational piece of internet culture, evolving far beyond what it was when Ohanian and his co-founders sold it. As of November, the platform's market cap sits at roughly $35 billion—a number that makes the original $10 million sale look microscopic.
Yet Ohanian doesn't talk about it like he made a mistake. He sees it as a fork in the road that led him to where he is now. He's currently relaunching Digg alongside Kevin Rose, returning to the social media space that launched his career in the first place. It feels like coming full circle, but with decades of perspective baked in.
What Really Matters
The narrative around startup founders tends to focus on the ones who held out and became billionaires. But that's not the only story worth telling. Ohanian's experience is a reminder that real life doesn't follow clean arcs or tidy spreadsheets. Sometimes you make decisions because you're 23 years old, your world is falling apart, and $10 million feels like a lifeline.
Value isn't only measured in market caps or exit multiples. It's also measured in what you do after the first chapter ends, how you rebuild, and whether you let regret define you or just become part of the story. Ohanian chose the latter. And now he's building again.