Alpine's hiring philosophy for leaders downplays resume experience, instead focusing on core attributes like grit, humility, and emotional intelligence. They believe these traits are better predictors of success and that specific business skills can be trained on top of this strong foundation.
Alpine recruits top MBA graduates into a two-year training program where they are mentored by experienced portfolio CEOs. This creates a homegrown, internal pipeline of leaders steeped in the firm's playbook, de-risking future leadership needs and ensuring cultural alignment.
In extreme environments like concentration camps, survivors observed that strength of character was the primary determinant of survival, more so than physical strength or intelligence. This principle applies universally; investor Arnold Van Den Berg prioritizes hiring for character indicators like discipline over traditional credentials.
Senior leaders now value candidates who ask excellent questions and are eager to solve problems over those who act like they know everything. This represents a significant shift from valuing 'knowers' to valuing 'learners' in the workplace.
Investor Mark Rampolla argues that a brand's potential is capped by its leader's personal development. His firm seeks self-aware founders committed to "inner work," believing this psychological resilience is a key predictor of building a billion-dollar company.
Sales experience on a resume can be a 'false positive.' When hiring SDRs, prioritize untrainable qualities like work ethic, mindset, and resilience over specific past roles. These character traits are a better predictor of long-term success than skills that can be taught.
Experience taught Herb Wagner that great leaders consistently surprise on the upside. He now weights leadership quality far more heavily, assessing CEOs not by interviews or charisma, but by their verifiable track record and through trusted backchannel references who have worked with them directly.
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.
Beyond IQ and EQ, interview for 'Resilience Quotient' (RQ)—the ability to persevere through setbacks. A key tactic is to ask candidates about their proudest achievement, then follow up with, 'What would you do differently?' to see how they navigated strife and learned from it.
Alpine's "People-First" strategy inverts the typical PE model by building a bench of pre-vetted CEOs-in-Residence. This allows them to acquire businesses that lack incumbent management teams, positioning the firm as being in the "talent business" more than the "deals business."