| The main learning I took away from growing from 20 to 250ish employees, 1 product to multi-product and 1 geo to multi-country: As a startup, your speed of execution is a function of your simplicity.
It's about your only advantage over the big players. Adding employees, adding products, and adding new markets increase your complexity non-linearly. ie. Going to 1 product to 2 products doesn't increase complexity by 2x, it increases it by 4x. Avoid this complexity if you can: it makes you slow, makes you hire middle management, and makes what could/should be simple decisions, multi-dimensional. So the lesson: stay as simple as you can for as long as you can.
If you can't stay simple, don't underestimate the exponential drag of complexity. Hope that's helpful |
I have a pleasant little workflow maintaining a content-based website. I'd like to hire help, but offloading work to a first employee feels like more effort than just doing the work myself.
How do I transmit 7 years of tacit knowledge, principles and best practices to someone else so that they do good work? How do I teach a writer to use my elaborate static site generator setup that was never designed for other users?
Then comes the paperwork, and the inherent difficulty of working with other people instead of having full control over everything.
So far, I have just accepted that my work has a limited scope, and that as long as I'm satisfied with my income I don't need to change that.