Tim Guinness prioritizes recruiting graduates with engineering degrees for investment roles. He believes engineers are uniquely trained to make decisions with incomplete information and can handle complex numerical and statistical analysis, which are critical skills for evaluating companies.
When hiring, top firms like McKinsey value a candidate's ability to articulate a deliberate, logical problem-solving process as much as their past successes. Having a structured method shows you can reliably tackle novel challenges, whereas simply pointing to past wins might suggest luck or context-specific success.
Since modern AI is so new, no one has more than a few years of relevant experience. This levels the playing field. The best hiring strategy is to prioritize young, AI-native talent with a steep learning curve over senior engineers whose experience may be less relevant. Dynamism and adaptability trump tenure.
Bill Gates and Paul Allen deliberately hired young, enthusiastic programmers, often straight from university with bachelor's degrees. They believed it was better to get talent "before they were ruined by working somewhere else." This strategy allowed them to mold a unique, high-intensity engineering culture from scratch.
When hiring, prioritize a candidate's speed of learning over their initial experience. An inexperienced but rapidly improving employee will quickly surpass a more experienced but stagnant one. The key predictor of long-term value is not experience, but intelligence, defined as the rate of learning.
When building core AI technology, prioritize hiring 'AI-native' recent graduates over seasoned veterans. These individuals often possess a fearless execution mindset and a foundational understanding of new paradigms that is critical for building from the ground up, countering the traditional wisdom of hiring for experience.
When hiring for the C-suite, the importance of domain expertise varies by role. For Chief Product Officers, a deep passion and knowledge of the problem space is critical for setting vision. For engineering leaders (CTOs/VPs), specific domain experience is less important than relevant tech stack knowledge and transformation skills.
An engineering background provides strong first-principles thinking for a CEO. However, to effectively scale a company, engineer founders must elevate their identity to become a specialist in all business functions—sales, policy, recruiting—not just product.
Instead of hiring based on network or general talent, Applied Intuition's founders strategically assessed the biggest technical and knowledge risks facing the company. They then hired their first employees specifically to mitigate those existential threats.
The very best engineers optimize for their most precious asset: their time. They are less motivated by competing salary offers and more by the quality of the team, the problem they're solving, and the agency to build something meaningful without becoming a "cog" in a machine.
Strong engineering teams are built by interviews that test a candidate's ability to reason about trade-offs and assimilate new information quickly. Interviews focused on recalling past experiences or mindsets that can be passed with enough practice do not effectively filter for high mental acuity and problem-solving skills.