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Hiring the Right
Executives to Grow Your Company
An excerpt from WetFeet.com by Frank
Marquardt
Startups depend on their leaders. Finding
executives with the management experience
and business knowledge necessary to execute
against the business plan is critical in
building effective teams. It's also
essential if you're going to convince
investors to fund your dream.
Of course, you're going to want your CTO to
have different skills than your CEO. But
that doesn't mean you won't look for similar
qualities in all the executives you hire.
Senior Managers Are Not Ordinary Managers
When you're building your senior management
team, there's a lot to keep in mind. You
want to maintain your culture and ensure
there's chemistry with the rest of your
team. You'll want to find leaders able to
take your company to the next level quickly.
And you're going to depend upon the person's
CV to help you get the funding you need.
Consider the Person's Background
Not everybody fits in the startup
environment. In picking a senior executive,
you need someone who can do a lot with a
little and has the passion to build a
bare-bones company from the ground up. If
they're too good to get their hands dirty
with the rest of the team, they're not going
to fit in. Look at what risks
they've taken in their career and what's
motivating their move to a startup.
Look For Domain Experience
Executives who don't know the business will
have trouble doing business. While the Web
changes the rules of business, it doesn't
change the fundamental business you're going
to be in.
Without domain experience, your executives
will need to learn a whole new language,
while building a Rolodex of new contacts. A
competitor who has a domain expert on its
executive team will leave you choking on its
dust.
You Want an Entrepreneur With Passion
You
need executives who are builders, able to
embrace the risks that come with starting up
a company. An entrepreneurial
executive in general is very independent,
very creative, very solution oriented, very
focused, and can work without a lot of
support, meaning support staff. Conversely,
a large-company
executive is used to many resources,
generally gets things done by delegation,
can be more consensus-driven versus
independent-thought-process driven.
Figure Out Who You Need, When
Executives play different roles. Your CEO
will set the vision internally and sell your
plan to the outside world. The COO, on the
other hand, is the internal operator in
charge of bringing different business areas
together and getting things done.
What follows are some additional things to
keep in mind when hiring executives for your
startup:
Make Sure They're Net Savvy. When
you're creating an Internet company, you
need people who understand what is new—what
it can do and how they can use it.
Is There a Cultural Fit? Few things
disrupt a team as much as a leader who
doesn't fit in. When you bring in senior
managers who don't share the vision and
values of the rest of the company, you
create resentment among the rank and file
and imperil your company's ability to
execute.
Who Joins the Executive? Great
leaders attract loyal followers. Find out if
your executive will bring people with him or
her—or has the magnetic personality to
attract talented hires. That's a competitive
advantage when you're recruiting
for the best in a tight market.
You need the right people with the right
experience doing the right things to take
your business forward. Pick your executives
carefully.
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