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When deciding to leave his previous YC-backed company, the founder of Superset prioritized building an 'insanely technical' team he could work with for decades. He views the team itself as the primary product, justifying the immense personal risk of starting over to get that composition right.

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The Method Security co-founders spent nearly a decade sharing ideas and trying to poach each other for various ventures. By the time the right idea and technological moment arrived, the team was already a cohesive unit with proven chemistry, eliminating the major risk of founder breakups.

Instead of replacing leaders at each growth stage, the Uber Eats management team was built like an "organism" with complementary strengths and was kept largely intact from launch to a $20 billion run rate. This proves a cohesive team that can learn together is more valuable than constantly hiring for "scale experience."

Contradicting the common startup goal of scaling headcount, the founders now actively question how small they can keep their team. They see a direct link between adding people, increasing process, and slowing down, leveraging a small, elite team as a core part of their high-velocity strategy.

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.

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.

Drawing from experience at big tech, Surge AI's founder believes large organizations slow down top performers with distractions. By building a super-small, elite team, companies can achieve more with less overhead, a principle proven by Surge's own success.

The Sprint0 team realized that even a great idea needs the right founders. They passed on building a WordPress competitor, despite its potential, because it required strong developer evangelism skills they didn't possess. This highlights the importance of aligning the business model with founder strengths.

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.

To scale a high-performing product team, hire individuals who exhibit the same level of ownership and love for the product as the original founders. This means prioritizing a blend of deep curiosity, leadership potential, and an unwavering commitment to execution over a simple skills checklist.

Constant exposure to top founders and a build-centric environment at YC creates an irresistible "itch" to start a company. The organization accepts that its best employees will almost always leave to become founders themselves, not to join other tech giants.