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May 3-10, 2026: Your Bridge to San Francisco.
Silicon Valley is fundamentally a community of outsiders who've come together—and you, as an outsider, absolutely belong. Moving here is easier than you think. You're probably overestimating the barriers and underestimating how many people want to help you succeed.
We help you land at an early-stage startup where you'll be surrounded by the best people you've ever worked with. We handle the visa, connect you with the right people, and make sure you're never alone. After a few years working alongside the best, we expect you'll start your own company—and when you do, we'll want to back you.
You'll stay at a house in San Francisco with 10 other fellows. Every night, we invite founders for dinner and a fireside chat. These are some of the people who've come in past cohorts:
Our whole job during the week is to make sure the right people know who you are. We've hosted two cohorts so far. Today, 10+ fellows live in San Francisco working at companies like Vercel, Replit, Flai, Domu, and Terac. Each fellow averaged 4-5 interview processes, and about 80% received an offer.

Eva Alonso, Ribbit

David Cramer, Sentry & Ted Nyman, Cased
[Seba Paps (Puentes #1). Now building renderahouse.com. ](attachment:67db017b-86c0-4171-89a6-70e32fdd84b9:WhatsApp_Video_2025-07-17_at_15.01.52.mp4)
Seba Paps (Puentes #1). Now building renderahouse.com.
[Nico Montone (Puentes #1). Now at v0.dev](attachment:b2e7a103-0941-448b-b58e-7424b2fe573d:WhatsApp_Video_2025-07-18_at_12.40.07.mp4)
Nico Montone (Puentes #1). Now at v0.dev
We're looking for people who are already excellent but feel like they've hit a ceiling too early. The kind of person who's probably the best engineer at their company, who reads everything about startups and technology, who builds side projects because they can't help it, and who has this feeling that their career shouldn't be this easy yet.
You want to live an entrepreneurial life. You know that about yourself. And you know the right next step is to be in San Francisco, surrounded by people who are better than anyone you've worked with, learning what it actually takes. You're choosing to pull yourself out of a context where you've already won and put yourself somewhere you have to start over.
I moved to San Francisco 7 years ago, and it was a shock. It’s the same for all of us that moved here. You land at the airport and the first thing you notice are the billboards. Anywhere else, billboards are for the most popular brands (Coca-Cola or some local bank). But not in SF, here the billboards are for technology. San Francisco is the highest level competition for technologists.

Vercel.

Twilio.