A 4 Point Test To Know If You Are Ready to Hire BigCo Folks

A 4 Point Test To Know If You Are Ready to Hire BigCo Folks

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It’s easy to say “only hire people with start-up experience.”? It’s also very tempting to hire folks that have worked at the partners, in the ecosystem that you work in, and at the companies you aspire to be like.

And at some point, you have to scale.? To scale, you do need some folks that have been there.? Not everyone can be doing it for the first time.

So when are you ready?? When can you that risk on a Big Company hire?? That seemingly great sales leader, marketer, etc. from Twilio?? From Box?? From Datadog?

I offer up a 4 point test to know if you are ready:

Roughly, you are ready to hire folks with no start-up experience at all once you:

  • have a proven onboarding program
  • have documented systems and processes
  • have a second layer of management
  • have a brand

These are table stakes for BigCo folks to thrive in a start-up.? That, and enough capital to run.? BigCo folks, especially VPs, cost most.? Not just in salary, but because they hire more folks under them.

Let’s break it down a bit.

#1.? Is your onboarding good enough?? It’s terrible at most start-ups.? How do you guarantee a new hire hits the ground running in her first two weeks?? If you’ve never worked at a great BigCo, you may not even know what this is.? But the best BigCos really onboard their hires well.? You learn how things work, what resources can help you, what the cadence is, who to talk to, and often, who your mentor is.? BigCo folks cannot learn by osmosis.


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#2.? Are your systems and processes well documented?? They almost never are at a startup.? This will profoundly confuse BigCo folks, who need documented processes and systems in sales, in engineering, in product releases, etc.? And you want these systems and processes.? You will sell better, and ship better features once you have them.? It’s just, they are rarely there before you hire your first true VPs.

#3.? Do you have two layers of management yet?? If you only have VPs, you probably aren’t ready to hire BigCo folks yet.? VPs without a layer of Directors or something similar under them just don’t have the time to train and teach.? That’s the Director of Sales’ job in many cases, at a practical level.? Together with the head of sales operations (do you even have one of those?).? Without that extra layer of management, they may never learn the product, the sales motions.? They may never learn the secret sauce.

#4.? Do you have a brand?? This is subtle but important.? Sales and marketing and feature priorities are tough at Big Companies, too.? But they are different.? When you have a brand, you are generally the default choice already, or at least one of 2.? Your real competition is often budget, and time.? The question is often Why Now once you have a brand.? Before you have a brand, the question is generally very different.? Before you have a brand, the question is Can This Crazy New Vendor Solve My Acute Problem Better Than a Brand?? There so little in common here.? BigCo folks know the Brand playbook.? How to leverage it, how to compete with folks with lesser brands, how to sell trust in that brand.? But that’s what you need before you have a brand.

Once you are at $20m+ ARR, have a layer of good VPs, and enough cash in the bank, you’re ready to hire BigCo folks.? Earlier can work, too.? But if you hire them too much earlier, make sure you can at least meet this 4-part test.


Hey everyone,

It’s officially December, which means, we’re one month closer to the fifth edition of?SaaStr Europa in London. Next June, we’re bringing together 3,500+ SaaS executives and investors, a superb selection of speakers, and endless opportunities to network.

As part of the SaaStr community, our partners are an integral part of what makes SaaStr the top resource to help companies of all sizes scale and grow their businesses. We would love for you to join us in London!

For Europa, we are offering a wide range of exciting opportunities for our partners.

?We’d love to brainstorm with you?on how to reach 3,500 SaaS leaders in just 2 days.

Craig Aspey

Sales Manager APAC - Empowering companies to drive revenue from their social media relationships | Growing businesses and people

12 个月

Don't hire seasoned VPs early in your start up, they are not scrappy enough. Once you have scaled sufficiently, then go for it. Even if that means replacing your position with someone better.

回复
Jon Barkman

Microsoft Dynamics Specialist Dynamics 365. F&O. GP. AX. Nav. Integrations and support. .NET. EDI. E-Commerce. Manufacturing. MRP Supply Chain. Projects Workflows SSIS/SQL/SSRS Power BI

12 个月

Mentor is always the first hire. Then second hire is his or her mentor .

Karen Cornelissen

Senior Director of Content and Digital Strategy

12 个月

I quite agree, Jason! Most folks are not a fit for the entire trajectory of a startup, and that's not a bad thing. It's just that new companies change so much as they grow. For one person to be a match for the company's needs as it grows, that person has to change with it. Same idea works in reverse. Bring in folks who know big companies when the company gets big. That's likely when they will be most helpful. It's all about maximizing contributing employees' value to the team and satisfaction with the work by timing their involvement well. ??

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