For startups experiencing hypergrowth, the ideal HR leader has experience not just in growth, but in chaotic, high-stress environments. These individuals, often veterans of companies like early Uber, have the resilience and scar tissue necessary to navigate the inevitable cultural and organizational challenges.

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A scaling founder can avoid "breaking the model" during hypergrowth by hiring senior leaders with proven track records in similar environments. For example, Profound hired a CRO who previously scaled a company with the same target customer to $250M, bringing invaluable experience to manage chaos.

The ideal early startup employee has an extreme bias for action and high agency. They identify problems and execute solutions without needing approvals, and they aren't afraid to fail. This contrasts sharply with candidates from structured environments like consulting, who are often more calculated and risk-averse.

Palo Alto Networks' founder advises that when facing a 10x leap in scale, founders who haven't navigated that stage should hire leaders who have. Rather than being a hero and learning on the job, it's safer and more effective to bring in proven experience to de-risk the next phase of growth.

Avoid hiring a growth leader with a big-name pedigree for your early team, as they are often unsuited for the necessary hands-on experimentation. Instead, seek young, hungry builders who are motivated by chaos and comfortable rebuilding their own work as the company's needs evolve.

The company's leadership philosophy, borrowed from Palantir, is to hire highly opinionated and sometimes difficult talent. While this feels chaotic, these individuals are essential for innovation and adaptation, unlike talent that merely optimizes existing, stable systems.

At Larroudé, the executive culture is "hands-on." Leaders are not just strategists who delegate; they must be able to execute tasks themselves. Furthermore, a critical hiring criterion for leadership is the ability to recruit, with the expectation that they can build out their own high-performing teams.

Unlike companies where recruiting is a support role, Uber founder Travis Kalanick elevated it to a frontline function, on par with operations. He dedicated an hour each week to the recruiting team, signaling its importance and making the function more effective and motivated.

By adding resilience as a core hiring criterion, Pinterest naturally attracts diverse candidates from non-traditional backgrounds who have overcome adversity. This focus shifts hiring away from traditional signals of success, increasing diversity and bringing in employees who are better equipped for business challenges.

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.

ElevenLabs' CEO has 15 direct reports, split evenly between experienced veterans who have "seen it before" and high-potential employees who have grown with the company. This blend of experience and internal context is key to managing rapid scaling.