10 Lessons from 1000 hours spent recruiting at Opendoor
1 min readJan 9, 2018
Expanded from a LinkedIn post.
Recruiting is one of the most important activities at a startup. At each stage of Opendoor, we’ve needed everyone’s involvement to source, interview, close, and onboard candidates. Here are some of the lessons I’ve gained —
- I have spent less than 10% of my time recruiting, but I should have spent 20%
- You can stand at an intersection in SoMa and shout that you have a PM role open and get 5 applicants
- One bad hire outweighs 10 good ones
- When SF-based candidates say they would do anything to land a role, that does not include moving outside SF
- The top student from a state school is better than the average student at Stanford
- I receive about one personalized cold email per year (Eric receives far more). I respond to them all. Last year’s cold email is now a rising star.
- Some zero-base-salary people from traditional real estate business models are hard wired to have that comp structure
- Just because someone refers a candidate does not mean they endorse them.
- When you can least afford to shift capacity to recruiting, you will need to shift capacity to recruiting.
- Never skip diligence.
Special thanks to everyone who has trusted me with their referrals in the past. We’re entering our biggest recruiting wave yet, so if you’re interested in a role for yourself or for a friend, check out opendoor.com/jobs or drop me a note!