Intentionally raising your hand to join the hiring process at your day job provides critical "reps" in evaluating, hiring, and firing. This is a founder's superpower that's difficult to learn without direct experience, and a corporate role provides a safe environment to build this muscle.

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ElevenLabs' CEO avoids ineffective delegation by first immersing himself in a new function (like sales or legal). This allows him to understand the fundamentals, which is crucial for assessing and hiring the right expert leader for that role.

To improve hiring decisions, founders should proactively meet top performers in roles they anticipate needing in 2-3 quarters. This isn't for immediate hiring but to build a mental model of excellence for that specific function and stage, which sharpens intuition when you do start recruiting.

Figma's founder, Dylan Field, admits he was a poor manager initially. His solution was to hire experienced leaders he could learn from directly, like his first director of engineering. This flips the traditional hiring dynamic; instead of hiring subordinates, insecure founders should hire mentors who can teach them essential skills and push the company forward.

Before hiring for a critical function, founders should do the job themselves, even if they aren't experts. The goal isn't mastery, but to deeply understand the role's challenges. This experience is crucial for setting a high hiring bar and being able to accurately assess if a candidate will truly up-level the team.

Don't wait for a promotion or for the perfect role to be created. The most effective path to leadership is to proactively identify and take on critical, unowned tasks within your organization. This demonstrates value and allows you to carve out a new role for yourself based on proven impact.

Before being involved in interviews, you can learn to hire by observing which coworkers you collaborate with best. This trains you to value traits like coachability and desire to improve over raw skill, honing your ability to evaluate candidates before you're responsible for building a team.

Before hiring for a critical function like growth marketing, Gamma's CEO spent 6-12 months doing the job himself. This immersion taught him what "great" looks like, preventing a bad hire and ensuring he could properly lead the function he was delegating.

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.

The founder hired an experienced CEO and then rotated through leadership roles in different departments (brand, product, tech). This created a self-designed, high-stakes apprenticeship, allowing him to learn every facet of the business from experts before confidently retaking the CEO role.

Turn your day job into a free MBA by seeking out colleagues in functions like finance, operations, and support. Asking how their jobs work—from purchase orders to customer collections—provides a holistic business understanding that makes you a more prepared and less intimidated founder.