Most startup success stories begin with venture capital or a breakthrough product. Airbnb almost ended with mounting credit card debt. Long before it became one of the world’s biggest travel platforms, the company was struggling to stay alive, with almost no users, no investor interest and founders who were running out of money. Their most successful product in 2008 wasn’t home rentals at all. It was a pair of novelty cereal boxes themed around the U.S. presidential election.
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As first reported by Yahoo Finance, Airbnb founders Brian Chesky, Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk created two limited-edition breakfast cereals, Obama O’s and Cap’n McCain’s, each sold for $40 during the 2008 election season. Only 500 boxes of each were produced, complete with actual cereal inside. The quirky campaign generated roughly $30,000 , giving the struggling startup enough cash to continue operating while it searched for investors.
A side hustle that became Airbnb’s lifeline
The cereal idea wasn’t part of Airbnb’s original business model. It emerged because the founders had exhausted most other options. Their short-term rental platform, then known as AirBed & Breakfast, had generated very little revenue, and fundraising meetings had largely ended in rejection.
The election-themed cereal unexpectedly attracted widespread media attention. According to Airbnb’s official company timeline , the founders sold about $30,000 worth of Obama O’s and Cap’n McCain’s, providing the financial runway that helped them survive until they were accepted into the startup accelerator Y Combinator in early 2009. The cereal boxes ended up doing something equally valuable beyond raising cash. They demonstrated the founders’ creativity and persistence.
In The Airbnb Story, later excerpted by WIRED , author Leigh Gallagher recounts how the founders brought one of the cereal boxes to their Y Combinator interview. Initially unconvinced by Airbnb’s business idea, investor Paul Graham reportedly changed his view after hearing how the founders had managed to finance themselves by selling novelty cereal. Graham famously described them as “cockroaches” that simply refused to die, a compliment in startup circles because it reflected extraordinary resilience. Airbnb was subsequently accepted into Y Combinator, receiving its first major institutional backing.
The cereal stunt reflected a broader startup lesson
Looking back, the cereal campaign has become one of Silicon Valley’s best-known examples of entrepreneurial resourcefulness. Rather than waiting for funding, the founders created a completely different product that generated publicity, cash flow, and credibility at exactly the moment they needed it.
Nathan Blecharczyk later reflected on the episode in a letter published by Airbnb, recalling that he initially viewed the cereal boxes as a distraction from the company’s real mission. Joe Gebbia secretly carried one to the Y Combinator interview anyway, where it became an unexpected conversation starter. Blecharczyk later acknowledged that the cereal story helped convince investors that the founders possessed the determination needed to build a successful company.
Today, Airbnb is worth tens of billions of dollars and operates in more than 220 countries and regions. Yet one of the company’s defining moments had nothing to do with technology or hospitality. It came from recognizing an unusual opportunity, packaging ordinary breakfast cereal inside collectible political boxes, and buying just enough time to keep pursuing an idea that almost nobody believed in.