...

The 19 Laws of Hiring for Founders

"You don't have to figure out hiring alone. HFBAC is the team behind your team."

"You've found your people. The ones who know hiring inside out, have your back completely, and will stand next to you every step of the way. You can do this - and you won't do it alone."

After 27 years placing people into founding teams, I’ve accumulated a set of beliefs about hiring that the recruitment industry rarely says out loud.

These aren’t best practice guidelines from a corporate handbook. They’re the things I’ve learned from working directly with bootstrapped and founder-led companies – from first hire through to embedded talent partnerships – and watching what actually works versus what looks good on a process diagram.

Some of these will make traditional recruiters uncomfortable. Several of them should have been told to you before your last hire. All of them are things I wish every founder knew before they started.

This page is free. No email address needed. Read it, save it, share it.

— Helen Wingrove-Sanders, Founder – HFBAC

On the Role Itself

Law 1: The role you think you need to hire next is often the wrong one. Before you write a job description, audit where your business is now - not where it was when you last hired.

Most founders start a search with a title in mind before they’ve thought clearly about the problem they’re trying to solve. The role that made sense eighteen months ago may not be the right one for where the business is today.

Law 2: When someone leaves, the instinct is to replace them like-for-like. The right move is to ask whether that role still serves the business you're building today.

Backfilling is one of the most expensive hiring mistakes a small team can make. The person who left occupied a role that was built around them. The business has moved on. The hire you need now is rarely identical to the person you’ve just lost.

Law 3: A job description written in an afternoon is a liability. A role brief built around your team's actual chemistry needs is a hiring strategy.

Time spent on the brief is time saved on every other stage of the search. Founders who invest properly in defining what they actually need – not just what the role is called – make better decisions faster and with less regret.

On Interviews and CVs

Law 4: A CV is a document designed to get someone an interview. It tells you almost nothing about whether they'll thrive in your team.

A CV is a marketing document. It’s written to pass screening, not to show you who someone actually is or how they’ll perform in your specific environment. Using it as your primary filter means you’re optimising for the wrong thing from the very start.

Law 5: Give your candidate an agenda. Use a trial task. Ask questions that reveal how they think, not ones designed to catch them out. Most roles don't require someone to perform brilliantly under pressure in a formal interview - so stop selecting people as if they do.

Surprise questions and adversarial interview styles test one thing: how well someone performs under formal pressure. If that’s not what the role demands, you’re measuring the wrong variable entirely.

Law 6: Interview performance and job performance are completely different skills. The person who dazzles in the room is not always the person who delivers at the desk. Most hiring processes confuse the two - and founders pay for that confusion for months.

The best interviewee is not always the best hire. Build your process to test for what the role actually requires – not for how well someone has rehearsed their answers.

Law 7: A university degree tells you someone could sit exams aged 21. It tells you almost nothing about whether they'll thrive in your founding team. Stop using it as a filter and start using it as context.

Drive, adaptability, and chemistry predict success in early-stage teams far more reliably than academic credentials. A degree is one data point. Treat it accordingly.

Law 8: AI is brilliant at finding candidates. It cannot assess whether someone will work with your co-founder, energise your team, or stay when things get hard. Use it to search. Use humans to decide.

The tools that help you find people faster are valuable. The decision about which person actually belongs in your team is not something to outsource to an algorithm – especially in the early hires that set the culture for everything that follows.

On Process

Law 9: The hiring processes built for companies of 500 will break your team of 8. Founders don't need a scaled-down version of corporate HR. They need an entirely different approach.

The seven-round interview process, the competency framework panel, the headcount planning cycle – these were designed for organisations with dedicated HR teams and months of runway. They don’t compress into a small team context. They need to be rebuilt from scratch.

Law 10: Chemistry First is not touchy-feely. It is the most rigorous methodology available to a small team because it tests the one variable a CV can never reveal - whether this person actually belongs here.

Assessing for chemistry is not about whether you like someone. It’s a structured evaluation of values alignment, working style compatibility, and culture fit – the things that determine whether an early hire stays and thrives, or leaves within twelve months taking your momentum with them.

Law 11: A 12-month free replacement guarantee is not a marketing promise. It is proof that the person offering it believes in their own process enough to stand behind it completely.

Any recruiter who isn’t prepared to back their own process with a meaningful guarantee is telling you something important about how confident they actually are in their methodology.

Law 12: Rushing a hire is how you get the wrong person in the wrong seat for 18 months. Slowing down to hire right is the fastest path to a functioning team.

The urgency to fill a role is real. The cost of filling it with the wrong person is higher. The founders who take an extra two or three weeks to hire properly consistently outperform those who hire fast and manage the fallout.

On the Industry

Law 13: Most recruiters are paid when someone starts. They have no financial incentive for that person to still be there in six months. That misalignment is built into every contingency fee arrangement in the industry.

This is not an accusation – it’s a structural observation. If the person who places a candidate has already been paid before you know whether the hire is working, their interest in the outcome ends at the invoice. Understand the incentives in any arrangement you enter.

Law 14: The recruitment industry was not designed for founders. It was designed for HR departments with established processes, large headcounts, and time to manage agencies. Founders have none of those things.

The standard recruiter model – contingency fee, speculative CV submission, multiple competing agencies – was built for a corporate buyer with a procurement team. If you’re a founder making your third hire, you are not that buyer. You need a different kind of relationship.

Law 15: Being told "we have someone perfect for you" within 48 hours of briefing a recruiter is a red flag, not a green one.

A properly conducted search takes time. A recruiter who has the perfect person ready within two days either had them on a shelf waiting for any brief that might fit, or hasn’t done the work to understand what you actually need. Either way, ask more questions.

Law 16: Sending an unsolicited CV to get into a founder's inbox is not talent introduction. It is spam with a staple. The best candidate introductions happen when someone you genuinely believe in tells you exactly where they want to work - and you open that door for them properly.

The speculative CV drop is a volume play that treats both founders and candidates as transactions. A genuine introduction – where a recruiter knows both parties well enough to vouch for the match – is a completely different thing. That’s the standard worth holding to.

On Founders

Law 17: Founders who say "I'll know the right person when I meet them" have usually already made three expensive hiring mistakes. Instinct is valuable. Instinct without structure is gambling.

Pattern recognition built over years of experience is a genuine asset in hiring. Gut feel with no framework to validate it is how you end up justifying the wrong choice because the interview felt right. Use both – and when they contradict each other, investigate why.

Law 18: Your first hire sets the culture. Your fifth hire reinforces it. By hire ten, the culture is hiring itself - for better or worse.

Every early hiring decision is also a cultural decision. The values, standards, and ways of working that your first few people bring with them become the template for everything that follows. This is why the first handful of hires matter disproportionately – and why getting them right is worth the investment.

Law 19: The founders who build the best teams are not the ones who hire the most experienced people. They are the ones who hire the most aligned ones.

Experience is easy to assess. Alignment – with your values, your pace, your ambition, your way of working – is harder to find and far more valuable in an early team. The most experienced candidate is not always the most aligned one. Choose accordingly.

Ready to hire with this in mind?

If you’re a founder about to make a critical hire – or you’ve got a hiring situation that isn’t working and you’re not sure why – there are two ways to work with me.

The Hiring Health Check is a focused 90-minute session where we look at your specific role, your team, and your hiring approach – and identify exactly what’s getting in the way. It’s £300 and available to book now.

If you’re looking for a more embedded partnership – someone who works alongside you on hiring over time rather than project by project – the Fractional Talent Partner model might be the right fit. Book a 20-minute conversation to find out.

Or if you'd rather start by reading more - the Hiring Humans newsletter goes out every Thursday with hiring insights written specifically for founders. It's free and you can unsubscribe any time.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Chemistry First hiring?

Chemistry First is a hiring methodology developed by Helen Wingrove-Sanders at HFBAC. It prioritises team fit, values alignment, and cultural compatibility over credentials and CV screening. The methodology holds that for small founder-led teams, whether someone belongs in the team is the most important hiring variable – and the one most often overlooked by conventional processes.
Not necessarily. The advice to always have a co-founder is typically given in the context of VC-backed ventures, where investors want shared risk and complementary leadership. If you’re building a bootstrapped, founder-led business, your first hire may deliver more value than a co-founder – without the equity split, the legal complexity, or the relationship risk that a co-founder arrangement carries. This is worth examining carefully rather than accepting as a default assumption.
Most mainstream hiring advice – structured interview panels, competency frameworks, six-round processes – was designed for large organisations with dedicated HR departments. These processes assume headcount planning, hiring committees, and significant administrative capacity. Founder-led teams of 2-30 people have none of those things. Applying corporate hiring processes to a small team creates bureaucracy without the safety net, and often selects for the wrong qualities entirely.
Traditional recruitment agencies typically work on contingency – they’re paid when a candidate starts, which misaligns their incentives with yours. HFBAC works on retained fees with a 12-month free replacement guarantee, taking full accountability for outcomes rather than just placements. The Chemistry First methodology also means every search is built around your specific team culture and needs – not a database of available candidates matched by job title
The Hiring Health Check is a 90-minute diagnostic session with Helen Wingrove-Sanders, designed for founders who are about to hire or who have a hiring situation that isn’t working. For £300, it covers your role definition, your hiring process, your team chemistry, and your current blockers – and leaves you with a clear picture of what to do next. It’s the starting point for many HFBAC engagements.
Helen Sanders, Founder of HFBAC and host of Bootstrapped Founders Community

About Helen Wingrove-Sanders

Helen Wingrove-Sanders is the founder of HFBAC (Hiring For and Building Awesome Companies) and the creator of the Chemistry First methodology. With 27 years of recruitment experience and a background as the BBC’s first female football commentator, she’s helped hundreds of founders build teams that actually work – from first hire through to embedded Fractional Talent Partner engagements.

She’s the author of Hire Ready (Book 1 of The Bootstrapped Founder’s Hiring Trilogy) and co-host of the podcast Three Founders Walk Into A… She holds dual British-American citizenship and is based in the UK.

Seraphinite AcceleratorOptimized by Seraphinite Accelerator
Turns on site high speed to be attractive for people and search engines.