This is true of all businesses, but itâs especially true, and ever so critical for startups looking to scale.Â
âHaving a strong senior team is always of great importance but the level of impact it has is determined, ultimately, on the size of the companyâ explains Smedvig Ventures MD Jon Lerner. âFor businesses with millions in revenue, the impact of the top team is large, but in the early stages, and particularly at Series A when the company is looking to take its growth to the next level, it is absolutely critical. Thereâs a reason why certain companies rise to the top, and why companies with exactly the same or even superior technology donât end up winning the race. That reason is the team and organisational structure.â
However, hiring the best people and building the right teams is a costly and time-consuming minefield. In the UK, research has found that the average interview process takes 27.5 days to complete. Some 25 people, on average, apply for every job; six will make it to the first interview and half of those will progress to a second. Each interview lasts 30-45 minutes; it takes an average of 12 days to decide on a candidate and three weeks to make an offer in writing. Thatâs before you factor in notice periods of as much as six months, the fact that this process exponentially increases the more senior the role, and that once hired, the person may not be the best fit after all.Â
Get this wrong, and the damage can be severe; failing to hire a harmonious team is cited as the cause of a fifth of startup failures. Get it right, however, and the rewards can be plentiful and endless, especially for founders of startups looking to grow â the inspiration behind Smedvigâs recent Building Winning Teams playbook.
Profile - a Smedvig Ventures portfolio company
Timing it right
Scaling a business is hard. Finding the right people to support you on that journey can be just as hard. As a VC, Smedvig knows itâs one of the most common challenges founders face and a large reason for this is that founders often donât know what âgreatâ looks like when it comes to building teams.Â
Founders come in all shapes and sizes but few are ex-general management. Few have had the experience of being a CEO and, as a result, many donât know when to hire, let alone how or who.Â
The exact point of when to hire will vary from business to business â and a good investor partner will be able to help guide you â but there are red flags to look out for. If you start having to turn customers away this can be a sign youâre not effectively managing your resources; or if you can't deliver product for your existing customers on time; or if your employee satisfaction starts wavering. These can all damage your internal and external brand and subsequently your ability to raise further funding. Yet the most significant sign is that the everyday running of the business is preventing you from seeing the bigger picture. Youâre so lost in the weeds that youâre not able to look forward; to implement a growth strategy and your revenues start stalling or even falling, as a result.Â
Adzuna - a Smedvig Ventures portfolio company
Building out the board
As a founder who has reached this stage, hiring an executive team is the best place to start. Aside from being able to divide the roles and responsibilities, hiring an executive team brings a range of different perspectives and viewpoints to the table. Your execs should act as an invaluable sounding board while allowing for creativity and new ideas. From surveys with founders for their Building Winning Teams playbook, Smedvig found that the highest performing teams are those built around trust, respect and alignment. They contain people who can engage in healthy conflict, can collaborate and who are consistent across the board. This means that they treat a junior hire in the same way they would treat the CEO.
âI once read a report that included an anecdote about a leadership group meeting,â said Stuart Dawson, Chair of Smedvig portfolio company, Infinity. âThe author was sitting in on the meeting as an outsider and he said it was 30 minutes before he could work out who the CEO was because everybody was contributing, challenging, congratulating and criticising. Everyone had that leadership role within the group. It wasnât one person going around the table holding people to task. Thatâs an amazing space if you can get to it.â
An executive team also brings functional expertise. This allows a founder to focus on the business, rather than being in the business itself, and prioritise the longer term areas that need attention such as overall strategy and organisational design.Â
While there isnât a one-size-fits-all approach to choosing the structure of your executive team, itâs worth looking at the skills that are missing within your current team and filling those gaps first. In small numbers, to begin with. In early-stage businesses, it can be beneficial to map out the weaknesses and strengths of the founding team to help identify areas of improvement and need. Donât be afraid to lean on your investors to support this process, too.
Good investors should be extensions of your board, and Smedvig prides itself on being able to help founders identify what skills their team needs, and how to fill roles to meet these needs.
Captify - a Smedvig Ventures portfolio company
Retaining your culture
In a successful high-growth business, there needs to be a balance between retaining the entrepreneurial attitude that attracted initial funding to the company, and the experienced leadership needed to scale.
With this in mind, itâs beneficial to have a balance of members of the team that were there from the beginning working alongside those that have experience gained from multiple companies. In the same way as itâs beneficial to map out the founding teamâs areas of weaknesses, it can benefit the wider team to map out who has the experience and skills internally, and which skills you are lacking.
This extends into the diversity of the team too â diversity of thought, as well as diversity of background. Analysis has shown that companies with higher levels of gender diversity on executive teams are 25% more likely to have above-average profitability than those without. This equates to a 36% jump in profitability when the executive boards are also ethnically and culturally diverse.Â
Improving diversity and inclusion starts by putting D&I at the heart of every decision you make, and involves making sure the hiring team itself represents a mixture of backgrounds, ages, cultures, beliefs and backgrounds. Part of this includes involving decision makers earlier than you might think. Knowing who should be involved in the process and bringing them along from the beginning of the journey is really important. If you all think youâre hiring something different due to lack of context halfway through a process, then itâs a huge waste of time and can set you back months.Â
âIn lots of cases culture is about the way in which we do things, but sometimes to grow it's those very ways in which we do things that have to be challenged,â said David Grossman, CEO of Smedvig portfolio company, Simplify. âTherefore, to recruit somebody who is too much like the people you already have, is actually a positively bad thing.â
Poq - a Smedvig Ventures portfolio company
When things go wrong
"As a CEO you hate the realisation that a hire isn't working,â continued Dawson. âYou want with every sinew in your body for it to come good because you donât want to go through that process again. Therefore you resist it and hope it will get better. But as a non-exec who doesnât have to do the hiring, youâll see it clear as day. Itâs therefore our responsibility to be the conscience and say you know whatâs right and get it done.â
Acknowledging that youâve made the wrong hire, or realising when existing team members have gone as far as they can in your business is as important as the process of hiring in the first place.Â
âOne of the biggest lessons Iâve learned both as a manager, and with our work with many portfolio companies is that you canât let go of the wrong person soon enough,â continues Lerner. âSome people delay doing so because theyâve invested heavily in that hire, from both an economic and time perspective. Others dread having to go back out to market, or theyâre worried about the impact the change will have on the wider team. Yet many of these people will have known, from very early on, that they werenât a right match and you have to just act on it. The opportunity cost lost is always greater than the other costs youâre concerned about.â
Other than relying on your gut feeling, it is possible to quantify this challenge, too. You can measure performance with key KPIâs and behaviours and set objectives with regular check-ins so you can see the employees progress. This also gives them an open forum to discuss issues and concerns with you.Â
âWhen weâre looking to make investments, especially at Series A, the best entrepreneurs are people who can show us they have the ability to hire great people. Even if they havenât done so to their fullest yet,â adds Lerner. âYou can see how they talk about their team, and how their teams talk about them that theyâve built, and are building something special. That, to us, is the best starting point for not just building teams, but building teams that win.â
Since 1996 Smedvig Ventures has partnered with and helped scale over 70 companies. Leading Series A/B rounds, we are passionate about finding and investing in the best fast-growing businesses across the UK, Nordics, and Netherlands. We work closely with a small number of high-quality teams and build strong relationships with our founders. Weâre not afraid to roll up our sleeves and be there for our portfolio when and how weâre needed through the inevitable ups and downs of growing a business. Weâre a flexible source of capital supporting and accelerating ambition with a long-term view, often backing companies over multiple rounds all the way to exit. We understand that great things can take time.