Why hiring the weirdos works
“We were searching for a really long time for our founding engineer.
The person that we ended up hiring, his work experience was a few months at an insurance company in Iowa. And before that, he had been a manager at a Taco Bell, and before that on a factory floor,” Granet told Build Mode, adding that the team found him through his GitHub account.
“The thing that got me was not his tech,” Granet said.
“We asked him, like, what do you do for fun? And I have never seen a grin as big as on his face. He said, ‘I like to ship code.
From philosophy majors to beekeepers, the Bland team has been built on people outside of the typical tech ecosystem.
What it just shows is that level of obsession, because that can be put onto anything,” Granet said.
In the episode, Granet goes into detail about how Bland developed a fair pay structure and ensured that all early hires understood their equity.
There are downsides to this hiring philosophy, he said.
Scrappy talent can be inexperienced, so the company often has to adjust for employees who may need time to grow into a role.
This way of hiring can also be difficult to scale, especially at the rate Bland is growing.
The founding team can make or break an early-stage startup, and Bland’s unique hiring methods and lightning-fast growth point to the benefit of finding the secret sauce to acquiring talent.
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