Joining a team that’s just starting?

Andra Bria
Join Circles
Published in
3 min readAug 24, 2017

Here’s my unsolicited advice.

  1. Avoid picking a company. Or an idea

The most important decision you can make is who you surround yourself with. Don’t fall for an idea or a product. Fall in love with a team, and pick someone you can trust.

Ask yourself: how are the people you choose to spend your time with? Do they have a healthy and ethical thinking? How are your interests aligning? Do you care and value the same things?

2. Your value is not in your title

It’s very common for startups to use pretentious job titles in order to compensate for smaller incentives. That job title might offer you an illusory understanding of what you’re actually doing.

Instead, think about what skills you will employ, whether you have something new to learn from that environment or not, and position yourself accordingly.

3. On *revenue models*

For starting companies, paying a full time salary to its few employees is close to impossible. Especially if that company hasn’t yet fully figured out a viable self-sustaining business model.

Incentives based on an hourly rate might sound like a solution, but most often they don’t reflect the value of the work that’s being done.

You can come up with a great idea that’s gonna bring a major turnover to your team in just 5 minutes. That’s way more important than staying at your desk for a whole 8-hour day, doing random paper-work.

So start with asking yourself: where are you bringing value and on what? How will the company benefit from your talent and how will that reflect on its growth? How skilled was the team before you joined and how skilled is it now, you included? What’s your unique selling proposition as a professional?

4. Always ask for feedback

You have the right to know the impact of your work, both as an individual contributor and as part of a team. Who are the other members of the team that, along with you, are contributing to the company’s growth and in which way? What are the other activities that, together with yours, impact the organisation and how? *Know your metrics* mantra is not reserved only to the C-suite.

5. Is there any leadership material?

I strive for more empathetic leadership. The founders I look up to are bold experimenters with a humble attitude, not in appearance, but in their daily acts of leading. Who are not afraid of sharing power, because they know that helps them be more productive, and on a longer term, helps the company rise in a healthier way.

Some conclusions

What about being fair?

This living ecosystem, made up of relationships, has to be responsible on the long term.

From a sustainable point of view, the growth of a starting company must be reflected proportionally among its employees, collaborators and partners.

Otherwise, the value is captured only to the top, like in the old-school models of production and consumption. The organisation buys a service, consumes it, throws out the package, buys something else and so on. A lot of waste going on.

Be aware of people who hoard, or are overly proprietary. You’ll never get to grow among those. Search for open, transparent and cooperative mindsets, those will own the future. Or be one yourself.

Because if we’re gonna be the builders of tomorrow, we must give op on old-school, hierarchical models of incentivising, behaving, managing, and embrace more candid, empathetic, and collaborative mindsets.

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