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The company intentionally avoids junior hires, instead building a small team of expensive senior veterans. This model, combined with an asynchronous, no-meeting culture, allows for rapid execution by ensuring every team member has deep prior experience and can operate autonomously.
A "10x developer" isn't just a brilliant coder but a skilled person in an environment with zero organizational friction. By giving them total ownership, clarity, and trust to make decisions, you remove the blockers that bog down average developers in large companies, unlocking 10x productivity.
Instead of building a platform team of specialists, Eclipse operates like a small special forces unit. A lean team of senior partners, all ex-operators, handles everything from thesis creation to scaling companies. This ensures founders get direct support from proven builders, not junior staff.
Legora has successfully scaled its product organization by hiring former YC founders to lead autonomous 'pods.' This strategy leverages the fact that founders excel in environments with high ownership and delegated responsibility, allowing them to operate their product area like a mini-startup and maintain development velocity.
Resist hiring quickly after finding traction. Instead, 'hire painfully slowly' and assemble an initial 'MVP Crew' — a small, self-sufficient team with all skills needed to build, market, and sell the product end-to-end. This establishes a core DNA of speed and execution before scaling.
By strictly limiting team size, a company is forced to hire only the “best in the world” for each role. This avoids the dilution of talent and communication overhead that plagues growing organizations, aiming to perpetually maintain the high-productivity “mind meld” of a founding team.
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.
In fast-paced environments like AI, the opportunity cost of lengthy internal debates over good-enough options is enormous. A founder mindset prioritizes rapid execution and learning over achieving perfect consensus, creating a significant competitive advantage through speed.
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.
In remote, services-based businesses, pressure to deliver quality and the difficulty of junior mentorship make hiring senior engineers a necessity. The cost and complexity of building remote training programs often outweigh the benefits of hiring less experienced talent.
To avoid bureaucratic bloat, organize the company into small, self-sufficient "pods" of no more than 10 people. Each pod owns a specific problem and includes all necessary roles. Performance is judged solely on the pod's impact, mimicking an early-stage startup's focus.