Why Startups Need To Get The Founding Team Right

The founding team is vitally important to the success of any startup, and indeed, some studies argue that the founding team are more important to the success of the startup than the product itself.  That’s largely the ethos behind accelerators such as Entrepreneur First, who back exceptional people and help them turn their intellect into marketable products and successful businesses.

Rotman research from a few years ago highlighted the vital role the founding team played in the success of the business, due in large part to the breadth of knowledge and experience required to run a successful startup.

“A founder’s individual characteristics are important but what’s more important is that person’s ability to bring a bigger and more experienced team with them,” the researchers say. “And the bigger that team the more likely the firm will succeed.”

Entrepreneurial team formation

A recent study from INSEAD explored the academic literature to try and discover the genesis of what makes a startup team so successful.  They scoured through 69 articles published between 1975 and 2018 to try and find common themes within the research.

It’s well known that the vast majority of new startups fail, but the research highlights that many of these failures are less down to poor products as much as they are due to interpersonal issues within the founding team.  Given the inherent uncertainty and complex working environment in those early months and years, it makes sense that the a cohesive and united founding team is crucial to longer-term success.  The early stages present numerous opportunities for disagreement, whether it’s around funding or product development, and when stress and tiredness are added to the mix, it can be incredibly combustible.

As the likes of Entrepreneur First exemplify, this has signaled a shift away from focusing purely on the product or idea, and a move towards focusing on the founding team instead.  There’s a growing realization that the product and idea are likely to go through numerous iterations and pivots as it develops, but the founding team are likely to be much more stable.

Selecting the team

The founding team of a startup obviously has various differences to teams formed in other work contexts.  While some accelerators play a match making role, in most startups, the team is largely self-selected.  There’s no manager to select team members, much less to assign them the roles they’ll undertake.  Instead, startup teams tend to come together of their own volition, with the roles they take on largely decided among themselves.

This was emphasized by a recent study from the University of Texas, which highlighted the importance of collective ownership among the founding team.

“To get others to feel like, ‘This startup is really ours,’ the team needs to have their fingerprints on the idea,” the researchers say. “Not just building it up as it currently stands, but actually shaping, maneuvering and influencing some aspects of the idea.”

The authors refer to such behaviors as ‘help seeking’ and they believe they are crucial to getting the founding team on board with the vision of the startup.  As is so often the case however, there is a sweetspot to be reached.  If procrastination and squabbling are to be avoided, clear boundaries must be drawn when soliciting feedback so that parts of the business that are set in stone are not up for negotiation.  The authors believe that such ‘territory setting’ is not only popular with team members, but beneficial to the business itself.

Assigning roles

Another study, from researchers at Imperial College London, explores how the distribution of roles among the founding team is undertaken.  Who would be CEO?  Who would be CFO or COO?  This may sound obvious, but in situations where equity stakes are equal, who becomes the ‘boss’ can often be a sensitive matter.

The paper found that teams typically look at two distinct competence cues when divvying up roles in the team:

  1. The prior experience people have had, so, for instance, marketing experience renders someone a good fit for the ‘CMO’ role.
  2. The social status within the team, including such attributes as gender, ethnicity, prestige of prior organisational affiliations and educational achievements, could become markers of general ability  and thus influence the division of labor.

Interestingly, when founders roles were correctly divided up according to their ‘status’, the success rate of the startup was higher.  Rather less appetizing was the finding that this was even so when ‘status’ relied on outdated stereotypes.

For instance, white guys with a prominent firm on their resume were highly likely to be given the top job, whereas Asian women were much more likely to get lowly positions.  When startups conformed to this stereotype, their success rate rose, with the authors suggesting this being because such conformity resulted in less conflict within the team, and even provided a sense of legitimacy, which resulted in higher financial support.

Idea or team

In the startup world, a common question is to ponder whether the idea comes first or the team.  The original INSEAD analysis suggests that the picture is somewhat more complex than that, and indeed the team and the idea are mutually reliant upon each other.

With your team so important to the success of your new venture, how can you go about ensuring you pick the right people to take with you? Here are a few things to consider.

  1. Identify your weak spots – most people have particular strengths and weaknesses. For instance, if you’re a technical wizard, it might be wise to consider bringing with you people with business or operational skills. Try and identify the skills you have, and the skills you need as early as possible
  2. Identify time commitments – ideally your co-founders would be full-time, but it might not be possible, so try and identify early on whether you need them full-time or not. A part-timer you’re confident in is often better than a full-timer you’re not
  3. Identify potential candidates – think of their experience and whether this compliments what you already have on board. Can they be relied upon and how important is a salary to them in the early stages?
  4. Have the conversation – as you’re bringing people with you, it’s likely that you already know them well, so a formal interview is not required, but you will still need to make a formal offer to them, so think through how you can persuade them of the merits of joining your team
  5. Assess continuously – as with most processes, you will then need to assess how well your needs are being met by your founding team and plug any knowledge gaps that may have materialized

There is a growing appreciation that the founding team are crucial to the success of any startup, and hopefully these tips will go some way towards ensuring you have just the right team to take your startup to success.

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