Tag Archives: legal counsel

How to Build a Killer Team

Nothing is more exciting for founders than that first moment when they take their destiny into their own hands. After putting in the hard work and research using the Lean Startup Model, and determining that the product or service you have developed is really desired by customers, it’s finally time to bring your vision to life.

Now it’s time to identify who you need to join you to grow and protect your business. There are well defined as well as unexpected challenges ahead that are beyond the scope of just one person, and it’s up to you to identify the kinds of people you need behind you – those with the right experience and expertise – to face those challenges. You also need to know when you will need them.

Facebook’s CEO Mark Zuckerburg recognizes the power of a good team. “The most important thing for you as an entrepreneur trying to build something is … to build a really good team. And that is what I spend all my time on.”

What Skills Do You Outsource?

At the very beginning, you probably did a little bit of everything in order to put your plan into action. However, a few more people with specific expertise will be needed to help you go beyond the nuts and bolts of creating the business. These are the types of people you will need to make sure your business has the right financial and legal footing to hit the ground running:

  • An experienced startup accountant
  • An experienced corporate lawyer
  • A banker – Finding a banker that is willing to dig in and understand you and your business will be a valuable resource for the future. By winning this person over, you won’t be viewed as another commodity and source of a fee. Instead, you’ll have a valuable partner that will more likely be a source of financial support to help grow your business.
  • A reliable outsourced bookkeeper
  • Product Development – This is an area that can be outsourced as well. However, be sure you control the vision and the strategy. If you have the skills and experience in house, keep it there.

All Hands on Deck

Next, as the founder, you need to assess your own competencies. Be brutally honest about acknowledging your strengths and weaknesses, and the type of person you will need to fill the gaps in terms of both skill and time.You should have a very strong vision and clear goals for the company after defining and redefining them with the startup model, so you can proceed to identify the skillset you will need to make your business a success.

Identify what you need, from product or service development, sales, marketing, project management, to operations, and who be responsible for these things. Sometimes that person will be you, the founder, and other times, you will have to evaluate who to bring onto your team.

Finding someone with the right experience and expertise isn’t the only only criteria you need when vetting a potential teammate. A candidate could be the best in the business, but if you can’t stand him or her, it’s probably best not to lay down an offer. Here are some things to consider when looking at future teammates for your business:

  • Vision – It’s important to look for candidates that are passionate about the vision you have for the company. Founders must communicate the big-picture goals they have, and provide a potential teammate with an opportunity to make a difference.
  • Diverse Knowledge – Find candidates with knowledge and skills different from your own, so that your team is well rounded and prepared to deal with any challenges that arise.
  • Continuous Improvement – Look for evidence of learning ability. Someone who has learned from the past and will adapt their knowledge to future challenges at your company is a prime candidate for your Lean Startup Model mindset.

If you have found people with the right experience, expertise, and characteristics, you will have a found the right players to join your killer team to bring your business to life.

Written by: Judson Sutherland, Founder & CEO

Sutherland, PLLC – FoundersFirm.com

FoundersGuide: Make the Most of Your Time

Communication is key to most successful interactions. It is especially important when your attorney is charging hourly rates, or more importantly, trying to distill all necessary information from you in order to best represent you and your interests. Face to face meetings are a rewarding and essential part of the attorney client relationship. In person interaction develops the bond that breeds the trust necessary for open and clear communication to take place and move a founder or business owner toward their goals.

As attorneys, we are counselors, but we are constrained by time when meeting with our clients. First and foremost, we respect our client’s time, but even if we spent an entire afternoon with a client, effective communication requires both time and thought. Unclear communication can cloud the attorney client relationship and impede our efforts. The best thing we can do, and our clients can do, to prepare for any meeting is to think about the meeting and what we want from it.

So how do we prepare? How should you prepare? Beforehand, dedicate time to thinking about the upcoming meeting. Clarity around the following questions helps us, your attorneys, zero in on what we need in order to better understand your needs.

  1. What do you care about most? Write down what you really value.
  2. What is your goal? Do not try to create a laundry list, but try and clearly describe the goal that you need help on from the person you are meeting.
  3. What are your biggest threats around that goal? Again, no laundry list needed, just try and narrow it down to the key threats and try to identify what is keeping you from accomplishing your goal.

Answering these 3 simple questions will not only help you prepare the development of your better communication in any meeting, but also helps us, as your advisors, focus on where and how to guide our strategy. Taking quiet time and space to prepare for meetings is important because communication is the foundation of relationships. It not only gives you clarity, but helps us better understand your needs, and better cue in on what questions to ask, and information to seek. Through these efforts we aim to understand your needs, and best serve you.

Written by:  Santiago Diaz

http://www.foundersfirm.com

3 Tips on Winning Top Talent for Your Startup

Contrary to what many budding entrepreneurs think, a business start up can compete and win top talent in the market without much cash. Here are three tips for attracting and retaining the best talent.

#TIP 1: LOOK FOR RESTLESS EMPLOYEES LOOKING FOR NEW ADVENTURES

In your search for top talent, pay attention to high potential workers who are looking for a new adventure. Many large corporations tend to stifle talent and many top performers feel restricted in such environments. With a good pitch, you can offer a restless employee a new lease of life by offering them a position in your business start up that will give them the freedom to fulfill their career aspirations. For instance a talented middle level manager will seriously consider a VP post in your startup if you find that this is one of their career aspirations.

#TIP 2: GIVE UP SOME EQUITY FOR TOP TALENT

Facebook and Google both used equity to retain top talent when they were still startups. They offered stock options to some of their initial employees. Even the most talented employees have the desire to own something more than their generous paychecks. Many big corporations do not have this option. Dedicate a percentage of your equity to retain your top talent if you realize that this is what will secure for you the best talent in the market.

#TIP 3: LOOK FOR PEOPLE WITH AN ENTREPRENEURIAL MINDSET

The third way you can attract and retain top talent for your starts up is by focusing on people who have an entrepreneurial mindset. In other words, find fellow entrepreneurs who are yet to launch, maybe because they are held up in an eight to five job, and give them an opportunity to test their wings. A business start up not only needs employees who will stay with it until it matures, but it also needs a set of entrepreneurs who will take the risks needed for it to grow.

Written by:  Judson Sutherland, Founder & CEO

Sutherland, PLLC – FoundersFirm.com