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.
The most promising hires are often high-agency individuals constrained by their current environment—'caged animals' who need to be unleashed. Look for candidates who could achieve significantly more if not for their team or organization's limitations. This is a powerful signal of untapped potential and resourcefulness.
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.
In a fast-moving environment, Larroudé prioritizes hiring people who admit what they don't know rather than bluffing. They also seek candidates who, when in crisis, proactively look for solutions instead of panicking. These traits, combined with non-negotiable ethics, indicate success in a scrappy culture.
Founders often chase executives from successful scaled companies. However, these execs can fail because their experience makes them overly critical and resistant to the painful, hands-on work required at an early stage. The right hire is often someone a few layers down from the star executive.
In rapidly evolving fields like AI, pre-existing experience can be a liability. The highest performers often possess high agency, energy, and learning speed, allowing them to adapt without needing to unlearn outdated habits.