Culture: An Early-Stage Startup’s Competitive Advantage
Speed. Team. Technology. These are just a few of the competitive advantages startups tout. I’d propose adding another one to the top of the list—culture. Culture isn’t the free food, happy hours, or Yeti mugs—it’s the set of common values that the team shares and the secret sauce that helps propel the business higher. In the famous words of Peter Drucker: "Culture eats strategy for breakfast.”
The culture of an organization is established in its infancy, when the team is small. The first key hires are instrumental in informing that culture. They bring fresh and complementary perspectives to the organization. Many founders then let culture evolve on its own, without a clear plan, and are often surprised when the company looks nothing like the business they set out to build. By contrast, I believe in building culture methodically and deliberately, which starts with setting up a strong cultural foundation from which the team can grow.?
At Arc, we’ve put culture at the center of how we build the business. Culture is always a work in progress, and while there’s always room to improve, we’ve learned a lot along the way. Below I’ve outlined some of the takeaways we’ve had around defining company values, creating an inclusive culture, and how those efforts have helped us create a stronger team.
Defining your company values
One of the aspects of the business Don, Raven and I agreed upon early was the need for all-encompassing values—values that represented not only who we were then and how we wanted to work together, but also what was important in future hires and the types of companies and investors we would partner with.?
We’ve taken our initial company values and revisited and redrafted them three times over the past year—at 5 employees, 10 employees, and most recently at 20 employees. While it’s taken iterations and a fair amount of time, these efforts have helped pave the way for the well-defined values every Arc-itect shares today.
A few of the learnings we’ve had defining our values:
By focusing heavily on defining your values, you’ll ensure that you have a north star from which to build your cultural tenets.
Building your team
The early employees of an organization set the tone for the future—they are your cultural guardians. As such, it’s critical in the early days to solve for individuals who can both execute and foster an inclusive culture.
At Arc, we’ve spent an outsized amount of time assessing potential hires from a cultural perspective. Our dedicated “culture interviews” are geared towards understanding how a candidate works with others and makes difficult decisions as well as their motivations, goals, and the “why” behind their experiences and interest in Arc.?
Our cultural assessor is never the hiring manager or a peer on the same team, but rather a rotating cast of non-manager employees focused on protecting and enhancing the company values.
A few of the learnings we’ve had building our early team:
Creating an inclusive culture?
Creating a culture that prioritizes diversity, inclusion, and belonging is the foundation of a strong team. Execution and resilience are the result of diversity of perspective: different people looking at the same problem from various vantage points creates a better solution together. Diversity is also a flywheel: the more you focus on bringing in different perspectives, the more naturally you will be able to recruit a diverse team.?
At Arc, we intentionally seek candidates who have a unique point of view and common desire to win. They may not fit the traditional mold or have the traditional background, but they bring experience and perspective in spades. To ensure that we thrive together, we consciously take action to foster an inclusive and diverse workplace.
It starts with our hiring practices, and continues with our evolving benefits package. We support our teammates through internal affinity-groups and partnerships with local organizations, are committed to being a Conscious Company, and offer benefits that attract people from different walks of life.?
A few of the learnings we’ve had building an inclusive culture:
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By creating an inclusive-first culture, you’ll ensure that your teammates feel supported and empowered to fully express their authentic selves.
The importance of feedback on culture
Feedback is a gift. It’s also an integral part of a company’s culture. Good feedback helps teammates trust each other and helps them grow together. Feedback isn’t about platitudes and niceties. Rather, good feedback is actionable, honest, and specific. Above all, feedback needs to come from a place of care and empathy. The process of giving and receiving feedback is not negative. Employees at feedback receptive companies recognize that this is an opportunity to receive insights on what they are doing right, what skills they can improve on, and how this can translate to long term growth.??
At Arc, we’ve built a hyper-feedback loop that takes place at both the business level as well as the personal level. Feedback is provided by both managers to their direct reports, and vice-versa. It’s also provided to senior leadership through anonymous surveys and skip-level meetings. In this way, everyone is empowered to share their perspective through psychologically safe channels.?
As part of the feedback loop, we’ve also instilled a culture that embraces taking calculated risks. Our teammates are encouraged to swing for the fences. Building a standout company sometimes requires us to deviate from the norm. Thinking differently and acting differently will undoubtedly attract some degree of risk and we have to push past our personal comfort zones. We recognize that at times we may not have the perfect solution, but we lean heavily on experimenting instead of getting caught up theorizing the right answer.?
Note: our philosophy on feedback was directly inspired by the Conscious Culture playbook.
A few of the learnings we’ve had regarding feedback and culture:
-Example of poor feedback:?Missing deadlines is not acceptable, fix it.
-Example of good feedback:?I noticed that you’ve recently missed a deadline on projects A and B. When you miss deadlines, it causes issues downstream because we can’t move forward without your input. Could you help me understand what’s been going on? If it's a bandwidth issue, I’d be happy to help you prioritize deliverables. If it’s a visibility/tracking issue, I’d be happy to help you set up a tracking/ticketing system.
By creating a top-down and bottom-up feedback loop, you’ll improve the trust and bond between your teammates—ultimately strengthening your culture.
Company benefits as a culture driver
Creating an inclusive benefits package directly impacts your culture and the caliber of teammates that you are able to attract—offering a competitive salary is only the baseline.
At Arc, we prioritize the health, safety and wellbeing of our teammates. We believe that we perform our best when we are feeling our best, which is why we take a holistic approach to ensure that we provide necessary support when and where our employees need it most.
Outside of the traditional benefits provided by high-growth startups — e.g., healthcare coverage: including medical, dental, and vision; unlimited PTO; paid parental leave; flexible remote work options; competitive salaries; and access to 401k plans — we also provide:
A few of the learnings we’ve had while creating our benefits package:
By going above and beyond to ensure that your teammates feel supported in all aspects of their life, you can help ensure that they’ll deliver a larger-than-expected impact.
Tying it all together
Building a successful startup is not easy but you can improve your odds of success by building a strong culture. Consider adding team members that are cultural additions (rather than cultural fits) with diverse perspectives, creating benefits packages that are all encompassing,?and instilling a feedback-centric operating model that prioritizes transparency, trust, and honesty at its core.
CEO | Quema | Building scalable and secure IT infrastructures and allocating dedicated IT engineers from our team
1 年Nick, thanks for sharing!
GTM / Sales / SaaS / FinTech
2 年Love to see it! Congrats ??
Co-Founder, Immigrant Food | Forbes 30 Under 30
2 年Congratulations!
Co-Founder of GoliathData | Brick by Brick ??
2 年As they say, "culture eats strategy for breakfast"! Great insights Nick Lombardo
VC+
2 年Nick Lombardo, you and team continue to impress. Congrats.