How to build a great startup team
Think about what you have to offer a potential cofounder or team member, and what that must look like to them vs not working in a startup.
No wonder persuading people to join a startup is hard:
| Working for a startup | Working for a normal employer |
| Long, unpredictable hours | Reasonable, predictable hours |
| Too much change | Not quite enough change |
| Minimum viable compensation | Good compensation |
| No job security | Job security |
| Great individual responsibility | Responsibility is shared |
| Have to stack and unstack the dishwasher | Somebody else stacks and unstacks the dishwasher |
| Pizza, beer and ping-pong | Lavish corporate parties and retreats |
| Eventually this equity might be worth something | Most likely, that startup friend’s equity will end up worth nothing, I’ll keep my job thanks. |
| Do I really have to be friends with these people? | Nobody expects us all to be friends |
For every hundred job candidates with similar skills, there might be only a few in a personal, financial, legal and emotional state that allows them to consider joining a startup. And it’s very likely that many of those people are the founders of a startup of their own.
It’s a common but potentially fatal mistake to wait until you have a job before you start learning how to recruit a candidate. Since we’re hiring a very difficult to find sort of candidate, for a very different kind of business, we need to think outside the box.
You will need to experiment with different messaging, different distribution channels, and different interview processes to maximise our chances of finding the right candidates for your startup team.
Keep the following in mind, and raise them with the founders of other startups you get to know:
Test some of your own ideas; design experiments that let you establish whether your ideas are validated or not. It might take some time to get your team member acquisition strategies to work effectively — maybe a year, or more. Do you want to do that year of experimentation before you need to hire someone, or after you need them to start work?
Another very common mistake founders make is to think that startup jobs are a one-way, linear process, where the employer or hiring manager writes a job description and a job advertisement, collects a bunch of candidates, interviews them, and employees the best candidate to do the job, as specified by the job description.
You don’t have the time to see enough candidates to find the perfect candidate to perform the duties in the job description! What you need to do instead is allow for some collaboration and negotiation with some of the talented, motivated and/or experienced people who are interested enough to consider taking a huge risk in joining your startup.
They’ve got their own set of skills, experience, aspirations and motivations, and one thing you can offer them in lieu of job security, great pay and regular hours is the opportunity to collaborate on what their job description should be.
In six months, the job will have changed beyond recognition. So hire for attitude, hire for potential, and hire for raw talent.
Don’t:
Do:
If possible, don’t hire full-time employees, because if you can’t afford the time to hire one person for a role, you certainly can’t afford the time to hire their replacement if they don’t work out.
Hire each team member for a short project associated with the kind of work you would like them to perform first and evaluate the results; then hire them as a part-time contractor, then as a full-time contractor, and in time, eventually, make them a full-time employee.
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