Hi, I'm with Atlantic.Net cloud so I speak with startups quite frequently.
In terms of dialing up risk, I think you're looking @ it backwards. You have a finite life, which means you are slowly eroding to zero. You have nothing to lose by taking risk because you are already eroding towards zero.
Even worse, the remaining days you have left are a greater percentage of the remaining days in totality of your existence, so therefore each day is eroding FASTER than the previous one.
So, relatively speaking, you should be increasing risk over time in any case because the rate at which you are eroding is accelerating.
Basically, rather than looking @ risk as what you have to lose, really its about what you have to gain. There isn't any true risk because the end game is the same.
In terms of dialing up risk, I think you're looking @ it backwards. You have a finite life, which means you are slowly eroding to zero. You have nothing to lose by taking risk because you are already eroding towards zero.
Even worse, the remaining days you have left are a greater percentage of the remaining days in totality of your existence, so therefore each day is eroding FASTER than the previous one.
So, relatively speaking, you should be increasing risk over time in any case because the rate at which you are eroding is accelerating.
Basically, rather than looking @ risk as what you have to lose, really its about what you have to gain. There isn't any true risk because the end game is the same.