🎯 LOT Newcomer Limited-Time Airdrop is Live!
Individual users can earn up to 1,000 LOT — share from a total prize pool of 1,000,000 LOT!
🏃 Join now: https://www.gate.com/campaigns/1294
Complete deposit and trading tasks to receive random LOT airdrops. Exclusive Alpha trading task await!🎯 LOT Newcomer Limited-Time Airdrop is Live!
Individual users can earn up to 1,000 LOT — share from a total prize pool of 1,000,000 LOT!
🏃 Join now: https://www.gate.com/campaigns/1294
Complete deposit and trading tasks to receive random LOT airdrops. Exclusive Alpha trading task await!
Dragonfly Talent Partners: Job seeking is investing, a checklist of 12 questions to think like a founder.
Written by: Richard, Dragonfly Talent Partner
Compiled by: Luffy, Foresight News
If I need to find a job again, I will use this checklist. If you are interviewing at a startup, you should steal this checklist.
In my career, I have been fortunate to hear the genuine thoughts from various people, including founders, operators, recruiters, interviewers, internal staff, investors, and job seekers. This is the framework I formed in my mind after listening to the opinions of different parties.
1. Founding Team and Structure
Start with "person":
Ultimately, even if the company undergoes significant changes (which usually happen), you are still betting on "people." Sometimes it's not the first idea that succeeds, but the team that makes the idea happen.
2. Capital and Development Path
You are exchanging time for equity, and you need to understand its value:
If they cannot provide a clear answer, you should not blindly join.
3. Products, Technology, and Progress
What are you actually joining?
Especially in AI, infrastructure, and the cryptocurrency space, you need them to genuinely solve problems, rather than just hype and jargon.
4. Market and Growth Potential
Your equity is only valuable when the company grows:
No market entry strategy = show; having ambition without distribution = fantasy; having vision without execution = PPT. Choose your favorite.
5. Mission and Coordination
If you joined early, it's best to really believe:
You don't have to "change the world," but you should believe in what you are building.
6. Regulatory and Legal Risks
In the fields of fintech, cryptocurrency, medical technology, and AI, it is particularly important to pay attention to regulatory and legal risks.
A sudden subpoena might turn your "rocket ship" into ruins.
7. Indicators and Focus
Clear motivation for creation.
Sometimes there are no indicators, and that's okay. But you should still be able to discern what the focus is. Jensen Huang and NVIDIA do not have formal OKRs; they are simply building with obsession.
8. Culture and Recruitment
You are not just joining a company; you are also joining a team project.
Additionally, consider: asynchronous or synchronous culture, remote or offline. If you feel the culture is harmful or superficial? Trust your instincts.
9. Founder's Mindset
How will they react when things go off course (which will definitely happen)?
The best founders are not perfectionists, but relentless learners.
10. Risks and Vulnerabilities
No company is invincible.
You don't need to avoid all risks, but you need to be clear about your situation.
11. Talent Attraction
There may be bias, but this could be the most important signal after the founder.
A strong team will give you room for error, while a weak team will magnify every mistake.
12. The Role Itself
Return to the specific role:
Typically, early / inexperienced hiring teams only realize what they need when interviewing candidates. Be prepared to adapt to their actual needs or walk away.
The practical actions I will take for my next job search
These actions are not radical, but informed. The best thing you can do for yourself is to make fully informed decisions.
Final Thoughts
Joining a startup is like writing yourself a check with your time and career. Therefore, ask questions like an investor and think like a founder. Raise the right questions, conduct your own due diligence, and make informed choices rather than emotional ones.
Work is a transaction, and a career is an investment portfolio; please choose wisely.