The founder intentionally waited years to bring on a co-founder, passing on other qualified candidates who weren't a perfect fit. Finding the right partner with a critical mix of skills (mining engineering, project finance) and pre-existing advisory relationship was a bigger priority than filling the role quickly.
The firm intentionally uses a 6-to-12-month hiring process, fully accepting it will lose some candidates. This deliberate friction acts as a powerful filter, selecting for patient individuals who are genuinely committed to a long-term career and ensuring deep cultural alignment.
Non-technical founders can attract technical co-founders by first building a manual, non-scalable version of their product. This creates a user base of passionate early adopters who are mission-aligned. The ideal co-founder is often among these first users, as they have already demonstrated belief in the solution.
When fundraising, the most critical choice isn't the VC fund's brand but the specific partner who will join the board. Sophisticated founders vet the individual's strengths, weaknesses, and working style, as that person has a more direct impact on the company than the firm's logo on a term sheet.
Delaying key hires to find the "perfect" candidate is a mistake. The best outcomes come from building a strong team around the founder early on, even if it requires calibration later. Waiting for ideal additions doesn't create better companies; early execution talent does.
Technical competence is the easiest part of a technical co-founder to evaluate. The real risks lie in misaligned goals (lifestyle vs. unicorn), personality clashes, and incompatible work styles. Prioritize assessing these crucial "human" factors first.
The founder's number one piece of advice is to get the co-founder relationship right. While you can pivot ideas, raise more funding, or change markets, replacing a co-founder is incredibly difficult. A strong, complementary founding team is the foundation for overcoming all other startup challenges.
When you need to fill a major operational gap, hire for the role (e.g., a COO) before immediately seeking a co-founder and splitting equity. This allows you to "date before you marry"—assessing a candidate's impact and fit as an employee before committing to them as a long-term partner.
The interview process at Capital Group intentionally takes 6 to 12 months. While acknowledging they lose some candidates, the firm views the lengthy process as a valuable filter. It helps select for patient individuals who are genuinely committed to a long-term career, aligning with the firm's core investment values.
Instead of immediately hiring after validating his idea, the founder of Sure worked alone for a year. He used this time to secure the company's first critical insurance partner, ensuring the business was on stable footing before asking anyone else to leave their job and join the venture.
Ather's founder learned that hiring senior leaders for non-core functions too early fails due to value system clashes. Founders must first build the function themselves, establish principles, hire into that mold, and only then step back. This ensures cultural alignment.