
165
Episode 165 43 min
Scouting for Entrepreneurial Talent: When to Hire Generalists vs Specialists
Jason Smith, CEO and Cofounder of Klue
00:00
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The bouncer at the door is you from a hiring standpoint, of how good the clubâs going to be on the inside. You have to pick the right people to come in.
In this episode
Do you ever think about the importance of the types of people your company hires?
When hiring, many companies focus on the experience of their candidates. While this plays a large role, who a person is and their level of entrepreneurial talent could be even more important.
Jason explains the nuances of hiring the right fit for your company, breaking down the distinction between generalists and specialists. He also shares how to get your company ahead by leveraging AI and developing relationships with your competitors.
Jason Smith is a product driven, sales and marketing centric tech entrepreneur. He has been the cofounder, investor or early employee of 5 start-ups. Heâs led sales, marketing, product and services teams, advised great companies like Mobify (acquired by Salesforce.com) and Strutta (acquired by LX Ventures) and received E&Yâs Emerging Entrepreneur of the Year for the Pacific Region. He is currently the CEO and Cofounder of Klue, an AI-powered Competitive Enablement platform.
In episode #165, Jason shares his experiences as an entrepreneurial leader to help you delegate, hire and manage better.
Tune in to hear all about Jasonâs leadership journey and the lessons learned along the way!
Like this episode? Be sure to leave a âď¸âď¸âď¸âď¸âď¸ review and share the podcast with your colleagues.
04:10
Delegation reluctancy
09:30
How to know when to have a tough conversation
14:40
Hiring entrepreneurial people
20:40
Ambiguous interview questions
26:00
Looking at a candidateâs past
30:00
Develop relationships with your competitors
36:00
Company-wide AI day
41:00
Being the bouncer of your company
Resources mentioned in this episode:
- Connect with Jason on LinkedIn
- Check out Fellowâs new Meeting Guidelines feature
- Read No Rules Rules by Reed Hastings and Erin Meyer
- Subscribe to the Supermanagers TLDR newsletter
Transcript
Jason, welcome to the show.
Jason Smith (Klue) 03:02
Excited to be here.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 03:05
Yeah, really excited to do this. I mean, you and I have known each other for a number of years now, Iâve always really enjoyed our conversations, you always have so much wisdom to impart. So Iâm glad we get to do this and press record. So you obviously have the, you know, extensive management and leadership career worked at companies like Columbus group guy, ultimate Elida, which was formerly vision critical today, founder and CEO at Klue. So lots of different experiences that weâre going to touch on. But as you know, we always like to start with the mistakes. And so do you remember when you first started to manage and lead a team? What were some of those very early mistakes that used to make?
Jason Smith (Klue) 03:56
Alright, is that the entire podcast because we could just keep going on the mistakes that were made. Because my first business was straight out of university and founded with two of my best friends, thatâs always a good idea. So we had no idea what weâre doing. So it was a bit comical on that. I think, you know, at that stage, when youâre 23 trying to build a business, thereâs, thereâs so many management errors that you make, and it was so just context. Columbus group was a web services business. And so every time we landed a couple more clients, we would add more people. And so when you add more people, youâre naturally having to manage and lead those people. And 23 you do it in the way that you think you should, which is basically you doing everything yourself and not letting anybody do anything. So we call it delegation. reluctancy is probably the number one mistake and itâs probably true of most early stage founders where youâve got this. Youâre used to doing everything. Youâre used to probably doing it better than anybody Eltz could do it. So you have this trust issue, when youâve got great employees coming in and letting go and letting them make decisions, make mistakes. And you instead of doing it are providing guidance and input into that journey of decision making. And certainly in those early days, I was not sophisticated enough to think about proper delegation. It was like, Whatâs your thought? Okay, hereâs my opinion, weâll do that. Right. Was comical. The other thing that I actually find interesting was, those tough conversations that are pretty easy to have now, you know, five startups in were very difficult early on. And they were hard conversations that you needed to have, if there was always an elephant in the room that would crop up and theyâd be small in the beginning, and they turn into big animals. And if you didnât have those conversations, it would create blockages for the entire company. So avoiding those hard conversations, thinking being nice was the right way to be. And instead, I should have just attacked, you know, some of the issues right off the bat.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 06:02
Iâd love to dig in there. So on the delegation thing, so I am curious. So like you said, five startups, and youâre very well known founder had lots of successes, but five startups and do you ever make the delegation mistake again? Or do you think like, this is something that you do really well, you know, you hire someone new, trust Him fully give him everything? Iâm just wondering, like, is it a spectrum? Because this is something that people talk about? And I feel like, even though the broad lesson maybe makes sense, maybe you still make the same mistake, but maybe in a slightly different form? Like does it ever go away? Or is this like a lesson that one keeps learning? Like, how do you feel about from from the delegation angle? Or do you feel like now, for the most part, youâve mastered it? Like, have you think about that? Yeah, I
Jason Smith (Klue) 06:46
think itâs definitely lifelong learning. I donât think whenever masters, I think what you do get is you get more sophisticated in how you communicate, and how you share opinions in a much more contributor way than a directive way. And so thatâs something I think you get more elegant at over time with more and more interactions. But look, the reality on startups is you canât afford to hire the best and most experienced people in every position. So you are going to have this delta, on folks that are really effective in a role and those that maybe are new, or generalists in a role that need some of that guidance. And so they might be smart. And so you want to lay the breadcrumbs for those smart people. But I think there is the spectrum of dictator and almost like reckless delegation where youâre just letting people flow on their own. Somewhere in the middle, there is that contributor, that guidance where youâre asking some of the right questions, because you probably have some experience across some of these spectrums. And so youâre asking, have you thought about that? Are there new variables compared to the last time that we might have tried that? Whatâs your perspective? Youâre asking all of those may I know better way, youâre asking it in a purely curious way. And thatâs maybe one of the learnings in the early days, Iâve asked the same questions. It was dripped with I know better. Instead of now, itâs much more truly I am curious. There are new variables that pop in, there are different experiences that people have. And I want to learn that and I want to test my own paradigm, my own frame of whether or not I should be evolving. And so once you look at it through the curious lens, then I think it gets easier to provide some guidance. One last thing that I think for us, you know, a Klue one of the I use the term grenades, CEO, grenades, founder grenades that you you have a handful that you can pull out. But if you keep throwing grenades all the time, it really is a warzone. But every now and again, it can keep people on their toes. And so I kind of think of myself as having a grenade a quarter that I could throw at maximum, where I feel very strongly about something with that conviction that Iâll drive it through, and really force a decision. Otherwise, you know, at the stage that weâre at with hundreds of employees, now, I have to give people the room to make some of those mistakes, provide the input. And as long as itâs not a material mistake thatâs going to blow many millions of dollars. You can let them run and go learn. The smart people want to learn, they donât want to be told. So yeah, use your grenades wisely as a CEO today and contribute in a very genuinely curious way.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 09:26
Let me also ask you about this tough conversation piece. I feel like this is also one of those things that you get better at over time youâre never perfect at. And Iâm curious, like, is there a feeling that you have or a way that you know that hey, itâs time for me to have a tough conversation? You know, like, how do you know that you need to have one or that youâve delayed one for longer than you should have?
Jason Smith (Klue) 09:50
Oh, yeah, itâs this is a great one. And again, we could spend a lot of time on it. I think, you know, certainly I think you develop your instincts better over time through 1000s of hires. 1000s of conversations, multiple startups. So I think, you know, experience obviously makes a difference where you can sniff things a lot earlier, and then know that you need to address them that early as well. So, but clearly lifetime of learning, I think, you know, for me, the instinct is one thing, but I think most people end up having a bit of a spider sense, you know, when it feels a little bit awkward, when it feels frustrating when somebody is not being candid, authentic, genuine. And as soon as you have that, I think itâs your duty and your responsibility to try and get past the veneer and figure out whatâs going on. It ultimately will impact your relationship with that person, but itâll impact the performance of the individual and you if youâre managing them, and overall as the company. So in terms of sniffing it, I think everybody can just trust their spider sense, just that little bit more than this is a little bit off. And whether itâs moving from a group situation to a one on one, hey, I want to have that follow up, I just want to have that discussion. And I found starting being vulnerable myself makes a big difference. I might have been Miss reading this. But this is something that it felt like was there, Iâd been in a situation where I felt awkward like that, and I share an example. And that usually sets the stage for an open conversation. But the other thing that you know, I do now and and struck a lot of folks a Klue to think about is candidness is a core part of a lot of company cultures today. But itâs one thing to be candid, in a very direct way without care and curiosity. If youâre candid, without that sense of I care about you, and Iâm genuinely curious about you, youâre a jerk. Youâre just candidate as a jerk. You can be honest and direct and hurt people. But if you have you proceed that candidness that direct conversation that you think you need to have with some level of care and genuine curiosity, then people are game, theyâre usually for it. Iâm curious, and why are you thinking that? And what was it about that, like, I helped me understand it. And people can tell when youâre dripping with sarcasm on that, or youâre loaded, and genuine. And I think if you can come at it from that genuine, caring curiosity proceeding candidness the whole world opens up.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 12:23
I love that. If youâre just candid, youâre a jerk. But if youâre a candidate and curious, and people think that you actually care, because you do, thatâs a different way to approach it. And I agree that that does make a whole world of difference. You know, Jason, this isnât part of like, the usual set of questions. But one of the things I have noticed about just because we havenât known each other for a while is it seems like you youâre just very thoughtful. Right? And so you when you do respond to things, or when you do opine on things, itâs clear that youâve done a lot of thinking, and youâve thought things through so my question is, do you have a reflection process? Or do you do some sort of journaling? Or is there anything that you rituals that you have in place that allow you to, you know, holistically look at whatâs going on, maybe in your style of doing things or the way that the company is going, you know, how do you generate insights for yourself,
Jason Smith (Klue) 13:17
number of things, Iâm listening to smart people like you and others on your podcast to make sure that Iâm elevating. So thereâs inputs that youâre going to get from a variety of different people. And youâre going to take different elements of what you learn in those or a direct manager experience and kind of choose what you get. But in terms of like micro habits, and little things, but one thing thatâs really made a difference for me is I would often wrap a meeting, and have thoughts and not get them down, think that Iâm going to get them down later. And recall that information. And then you know, by the end of the day, youâve kind of lost it. And so Iâve really become strict about posting a meeting or writing my thoughts, and whether thatâs to myself and a note, or whether thatâs directed in a Slack combo to others inside the company. Itâs very much like I want to get my outtake of my perception of what it is. And that can create a frame for me to kind of now jump off of our board that I can launch from another discussion on. So itâs a simple little app. But truly it is at the end of a conversation with somebody, whether itâs somebody youâre learning from or whether somebody youâre managing, youâre going to have mental thoughts that need a place. And I note those down and come back to those and either share them directly, or tune them before sharing them with the team.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 14:37
Yeah, I mean, thatâs a good tactical hack, and we love those on the podcast. So thank you for sharing that. I also want to talk about hiring. So again, youâve hired hundreds, maybe more than 1000 people, lots of people and many acts that in interviews, so youâve had a chance to seeing whatâs worked, what hasnât worked. And so what have you learned about hiring and maybe we can think about it actually like the early stages of when youâre starting something new. And I know that people might think, okay, thatâs mainly startups that start something new. But new teams formed all the time, new departments form new products within companies. And yeah, what have you learned about just hiring people that really help organizations in those early stages?
Jason Smith (Klue) 15:20
Yeah, thereâs I mean, thereâs, thereâs a lot in the earliest stage, you know, you know, from startup land, youâre either building the product or the service offering, youâre selling it and marketing it, or youâre servicing it, itâs kind of one of those three cores. Thatâs in the early stage startup. As you mature, though, the evolution of generalist hiring to specialist hiring is another big change, right. So in the early days, Iâm constantly looking for jazz musicians. Those generalists who are comfortable with ambiguity they see around corners are willing to jump in, theyâre willing to own it, they might not know, theyâre almost leaping before theyâre looking, but theyâve got the ability to pick up the tune and run with it. And I think thatâs super critical in the early days of whether itâs a new department, or whether itâs a new company launching, you need the generalist, and then you know, as it matures, youâre looking for more of the specialists, youâre looking now symphony, you need the pros that know how to play that specific instrument, and you get better. And you know, I donât know where that perfect line is where the hundreds of employees, but youâre going to layer in more of those specialists in around the generalist, and then you start to see the shortcomings of the generalist, as the structure of the company gets more and more defined. And the people that Excel are the people that excel in that structured environment, it becomes pretty natural, you can kind of see it, but those early days, you got to have the jazz musicians that can pick up a tune, I got that beat, letâs roll with it. Yeah, maybe that maybe that. And itâs an idea. And itâs more iterative. And thereâs this like unknown that theyâre willing to jump into. And very few specialists are really good at that are keen on that even theyâve got a historical reference point. This doesnât look like what Iâve done before. Now Iâm a little bit awkward. Who do I talk to generalist and early Day Startup people, much more entrepreneur. Now. Iâm a core entrepreneur, five time entrepreneur, I canât help but want to hire entrepreneurial people. So no matter what Iâm looking for those folks that are just going to try and see around corners and problem solve. And thereâs you know, now Iâve got fairly specific hiring criteria they look for, for individual relative to the rule, thereâs kind of two different sets that we look at.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 17:27
Yeah, and I remember this one time, I was I think I was hiring for a sales role or something. And you were like, Oh, hereâs my list of questions, and like my mental model and framework for like sales roles. And it was really awesome. Are there any generic things? I mean, you said, it sounds like even though you might look for specialists, youâre looking for maybe an entrepreneurial specialist or you appreciate those sorts of qualities. Yeah. How do you test for that? Like, how do you know that someone has that?
Jason Smith (Klue) 17:54
Let me just back up. Because I think the thing that Iâve now come to Iâve kind of distilled some really core attributes that I find are required for the types of businesses that Iâm running, I actually look for the cognitive agility or just plain smarts now i skew towards that cognitive agility, how quickly can they move and adapt to some of the thinking that combined with resilience and grit, you know, youâre looking for something in their past, or how they approach problems without resilience and grit. And then, you know, the third set is kind of their ambitious achievers, they just want to do more, they want that 1% better every day. And youâve seen that reflected in their career or even how theyâre asking the questions. So that curiosity lens will kind of flow through all of that. Iâm very curious about what youâre doing. I want to understand it and the last five more questions, and then how that one person is getting better. What could I do in here, and you can just see it in some of those early people. This other maybe the fourth thing that is kind of like the sub context, itâs really critical for me is I want to get past the veneer, I want to know the person. And some people are just too damn polished, and I canât work with them, I need to know and feel who they are. So Iâm looking for that genuine, authentic self to come through. And if I canât get past the veneer, Iâve got this weird motion of like, do I truly trust them? And so you know, some people are very quick to have no guard, and they are who they are. Other people are well groomed. Salespeople in particular are very good at saying what needs to be said. So poking at that real person and understanding them. And usually what I do there for all of these things, the smarts, the resilience and the ambitious mindset, because Iâm throwing ambiguity at them. Now, hey, how have you approached this one particular element in your career when you did that, that looked like it was something new if youâre going to come into this company, thereâs going to be this new space that youâre into, weâre building this new category, what are your initial thoughts on that? And you start to see people kind of run with that ambiguity in a way that either is a step back, let me take some time a theoretical construct shirred or just jumping into it and kind of rolling in, you can see them unravel their brain in front of you. So Iâm constantly asking questions that really arenât that crisp. Theyâre leaving out some pieces and theyâre jumping to maybe some conclusion. I think what you mean by that, Jason is this? If thatâs the framing, then let me answer it this way. I love kind of leaving half questions that might not be fully clear, weâll stumbling over how Iâm asking the question so that they need to create that connected.so. Thatâs one of the pieces. Yeah,
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 20:34
yeah. So four really good thing to look for? And is that how you test for cognitive agility? Is that what you mean for people to be able to solve in ambiguous situations and, you know, when things arenât clear instructions arenât clear for them to be able to just piece things together and figure it out.
Jason Smith (Klue) 20:51
It is an itâs like, literally purposely ambiguous questions that maybe arenât crystal clear.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 20:57
Can you give us an example? Like, whatâs an example?
Jason Smith (Klue) 21:00
An example might be looking at your past and saying, so, you know, you came from this this area, you might have had a, you know, a struggle of how youâre doing it? And how did that struggle get reflected in you your approach to how you might think about joining a company thatâs building a category? And itâs kind of like an all over question where theyâre kind of going, Well, what Iâm trying to get out here, and the people that I find, you know, with really good commentary are kind of connecting that going, I think what you mean is like, how am I going to be able to jump into that company and run, when thereâs a lot of ambiguity with the company itself, or this category that youâre building? And, you know, and I struggled in the past with that, let me give you an example. They run with it, others are like, they make a guess. And itâs just completely off, you know, and theyâre like, oh, right, you want to talk about when I, you know, had trouble in that classroom. And I know, that was in it, I was kind of meandering to this other thing. So itâs, itâs seeing how well they can kind of piece together enough of the ambiguity of the question to get at what Iâm hoping to get at. And honestly, a lot of thatâs in the flow of looking at their history, and how it might connect to you know how Iâm seeing Klue.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 22:17
Hey, everyone, just a quick pause on todayâs episode to tell you about a new feature that I am so excited about, weâve been working on this one for quite a while, and excited to announce it to the world. Weâre calling it meeting guidelines. So thereâs all these things that people already know they should do when they organize a meeting. So for example, you should make sure that you shouldnât invite too many people or if youâre booking a recurring meeting, you probably want to put an end date on that meeting. Or if youâre going to invite someone to a meeting, you should probably you know, if they have more than 20 hours of meetings that week, maybe be a little bit more considerate, and ask Should I really invite that person to the meeting. So thereâs a bunch of these sorts of things that you might even know about. But what happens somehow in larger organizations, is that people forget all of these things. And so thatâs why we built this feature called meeting guidelines. Itâs super easy to use, itâs a Google Chrome extension. So if you install it, what will happen is it will integrate with your Google Calendar. And that way, whenever anyone within your company is about to book a meeting, these meeting guidelines will show up and make sure that people know and take a second look at that meeting that theyâre about to book and make sure that it adheres to these guidelines. So if you want to book or within your company, have a no meeting day, or if you want to make sure that every meeting has an agenda in advance before itâs booked. So all the different sorts of guidelines that you may want. And theyâre all obviously highly configurable, because every company is going to be slightly different. But this is the first time that there is a way that you can get an entire organization to change their meeting behavior. Itâs something that weâve been working on for a very long time, super proud to announce it to the world. Itâs called meeting guidelines. If youâre interested in checking it out. Weâd love for you to do that and give us feedback. You can get to it by going to fellow.app/guidelines. Again, that Fellow.app/guidelines, check it out, and let me know what you think. And on the grip piece, you know, give me an example when times were really tough and you just didnât give up or like how do you tease that out?
Jason Smith (Klue) 24:32
Yeah, I think you know, thereâs maybe some biases and shortcuts there. You know, I love athletes that have gone through you know, a lot of challenges rejection had to get up and do it again. Thereâs people that have done things in their earlier part of their career. I always start interviews in hiring with just almost like the WHO method just tell me walk me through your your background. You were born on a farm where you know, letâs start there. And theyâre like, Whoa, really that far back and and I really just want to see their journey and you Usually, within that, youâre gonna hear something about, you know, the hardest thing they did was, you know, teach tennis, you know, that probably doesnât compare to, I was an immigrant that landed here. And I made no friends for the first four years in school. And I had to figure out how to, you know, come through that. So I jumped into my studies here. And one of the jobs that became open to me where I can make a lot of money and put myself through university was pre planning, and I figured out how to plant over 3000 trees a day, youâre hearing that and going, okay, thatâs very different than maybe the person that hasnât gone through any of those challenges. Now, I donât preclude the people that havenât gone through those challenges. Sometimes you can kind of dig at them a little bit and just see that they did have challenges in a different way, and how theyâve approached it. But what youâre looking for is that push back that strength of like, yeah, I went through some rough stuff, and I figured out some things and I can go at something and I can be pushed down and Iâll get back up, not in a chip in the shoulder way, just I have confidence in myself. And so historically, youâll look for going way back what theyâve done in their career in their life and look for those little threads.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 26:07
Yeah. And I think whatâs the most interesting part about this is youâre optimizing for the type of companies that you are building, which are early stage, but also category building doing a thing that people didnât necessarily buy before. Itâs like a new way of doing things. So all of these things are the, you know, the pieces that people need to be successful at those types of companies. And itâs really cool that youâve put that together. And I think like this probably fits into that, which is just on the notion of being able to think big. Thatâs obviously something that that you practice, but can you talk about that in terms of, you know, how that materializes? In the team that you hire?
Jason Smith (Klue) 26:49
Yeah, I think thereâs, you know, so this is, so Iâm a Canadian entrepreneur, Iâm based in Vancouver, I grew up in Toronto, you know, my first business, I was pretty excited about getting, I donât know, BC Hydro as a client instead of Verizon. And, you know, I didnât think Verizon was in the realm of possibility. And what Iâm constantly trying to do with my current set of employees, forget even about hiring that but looking at how do you expose your current employees to think bigger and elevate is demystifying Verizon, itâs demystifying the people that are doing big things. And that can start by just listening to them, thereâs a lot of podcasts and reading their tweets, and watching videos, and that kind of thing that can give you exposure to their brain and how theyâre thinking, and then literally reaching out to some of those people that are at the top of their ladder in whatever position and what theyâre doing. And youâd be surprised about how many of them would actually give you a bit of time. And if maybe not the top, itâs the next top. And so I found demystifying these people that are thinking bigger, you know, itâs pretty hard to get a conversation going with Elon, but thereâs other people that, you know, might be, you know, connected Elon and exposed to that thinking big and have gone into it that you might have that conversation with. And as soon as you have the combo, you realize, okay, theyâre super smart, theyâre ambitious, theyâre motivated, theyâre doing all these things. But Iâm not that different. Maybe I can, and as soon as that switch turns in peopleâs heads that maybe they can, then they start seeking again, if theyâre smart and ambitious, if youâve already got those core characteristics, theyâre smart, and then theyâre seeing, Oh, maybe Iâll look for that one little thing. And Iâll try that little thing. And it opens up the realm of possibility of maybe me, maybe I can do, Iâm from a small town, but maybe I can do it. And itâs just exposure, I think, to the people that are already doing it, and realizing they were kinda like you.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 28:43
So if thereâs someone on your team, and you feel that they should be thinking bigger, what do you do specifically? Like, whatâs the example of what you might do? Or tell them to do?
Jason Smith (Klue) 28:55
Yeah. And so like, literally, I start with, like, Who do you think the best is and what youâre doing, if youâre a salesperson whoâs the best in the world, salesperson, whatâs the company with the best salespeople in the world? Start by going to research those people or those companies. And that could be again, just following on Twitter, it could be or acts, it could be podcasts, it can be videos, itâs just exposure to how theyâre thinking and how theyâre talking and absorbing some of that insights, kind of like what youâre trying to do in the ScrumMasters. Like, youâve got the sense of like, exposure to people that have done some things. The more people hear that the more they take some of these tidbits and go maybe I can do that. But to me, the next step is reaching out to some of those people to actually talk to them, see them, see them live, be part of it. And you know, for better or worse, the Bay Area is still is the magnet for you know, probably some of the most ambitious big thinking people in the world. And so you can go to conferences in the Bay Area. You can have coffees, you can have one on ones you can reach out thereâs a lot of Pay It Forward mentality in the Bay Area. So once you start getting exposure through a one way medium, you move to the second, which is reaching out and physically being in the presence and talking to some of these people directly. And again, that totally starts to demystify the god status that those people might have in your head, and you start to think that they could do it. So literally, itâs exposure, its exposure to the bigger thinker, starting from listening podcasts through to then being in person and trying having one on ones.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 30:29
Yeah, thatâs really good advice and a good way to do it. The other topic that you know, I also have to talk to you about is just competitors. And obviously, Klue is a competitive intelligence platform. This is your bread and butter. This is what you do, what you help your customers do. But I wanted to maybe start with something that Iâve learned about you, which I find is different. And not everybody does it this way, which is, you like to actually talk to your competitors and actually get to know your competitors, whereas other people may not want to do that youâre potentially enemies. And so why do you want to talk to your enemies, maybe they might learn something about you that you, you accidentally let slip, but youâre very candid about it, and you just go meet them and talk to them. So maybe you can talk to us about just like how you think about competitors to begin with,
Jason Smith (Klue) 31:20
youâre just picking up on that threat. I think itâs an absolute, I mean, if you went to a conference, and you physically sat next to your competitor, or youâre not going to talk to them, youâre going to talk to them, and youâre going to talk about a mutual competitor. And youâre both going to share insights, and you are going to connect over that mutual competitor or a market view, the irony of not reaching out to competitors, his that they know everything that you know, but from a different lens. Theyâre the most knowledgeable, theyâre probably the people that you could relate to most in building your category. And yet, youâre like, No, theyâre the enemy. And truly, you want to beat them. But that human knowledge sharing is often far greater. And so clearly, when I speak to my competitors, Iâm relatively evasive of sharing what Iâm specifically doing, certainly relative to them, theyâre going to be the same with their own. But we have common ground on things like mutual competitors, things like investment, things like growth, things like growing the category, things like approaches to where non competitors, but potential incoming competitors, if we grow, the category could come in. And so thereâs so much common ground that you can have your competitors, that I just think it totally makes sense to reach out to them and develop a relationship. And then when other pieces, depending on how you grow relative to them, you might find them. And so itâs a really good idea to get to know those founders in advance of doing that, or people on their team in advance of doing that.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 32:53
And so is this something that you as the CEO and the founder do? Or like, do you recommend your VP of marketing to do that with VP of marketing spin competitors? Like how deep does this go? What do you recommend there?
Jason Smith (Klue) 33:07
Yeah, thatâs interesting. At our company, it goes all the way through. So like, literally, we have people all the way through the ranks reaching out to different competitors. Itâs not something that weâre focused on, itâs just, if they do something interesting, we might reach out and say, Hey, that was a really interesting thing that you did inspiring. Thatâs great. Hopefully, it helps build the category. Like there could be those types of reach outs at the VP level. I donât know about at the you know, the junior level, you know, I donât think STRS are reaching out, I donât think you know, first time CS person is, but certainly at the director VP level, we have, you know, a lot of common ground. Are you going to that conference, we are you like you actually want some of your competitors there. So weâll do that.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 33:53
Yeah, that is super interesting to when a competitor does something well to tell them that they actually did that. Well. I mean, thatâs, I mean, you know, itâs very sportsman like, and it makes sense when you think of business as a sport. And yet, but for whatever reason that framing isnât maybe the first place that people go to. So thank you for explaining that in that way.
Jason Smith (Klue) 34:15
Itâs like an MMA fighter, like you are going to be in the ring, and you are going to want to win. But you get out of that ring. And like that MMA fighter just like you is a fighter, and like, thatâs your living. And so you connect on a lot of those fronts. But make no mistake, I want to beat my competitor very badly in the ring. But I still think you can do that and be respectful of what they do.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 34:38
Yeah, that makes sense. So Jason, the other thing that is very topical these days and I know youâre focused on it is everybodyâs talking about generative AI is changing the way that everybody is operating people are building it into their products into the ways that they sell and market and develop software, everything. And so maybe we can talk about You know, what are the things that youâre doing and things that you have learned and the ways that maybe you have incorporated it into your style of leadership?
Jason Smith (Klue) 35:09
Let me separate the AI trend into two buckets. One is, you know how it impacts my product. And at the end of the day, our product is trying to find signal and a bunch of noise that exists from many, many data sources. So clearly, like ML has always been a core part of Klue. And now you know, large language models and how genetic is working gives us kind of a boost and accelerator on the product side. And I think every company is probably looking at how to get a boost from APIâs that they can plug in and leverage large language models. And Jenny, Iâm certainly we are, weâre deep down that path, weâve already launched a number of features, weâre probably not going to build our own specific LLM. But take something that can be controlled, and then add, you know, proprietary data on top of that, that could be beneficial for our particular use case, and competitive and market and buyer insights thatâs on the product side. But thereâs another piece like we held, we did a company wide AI day. And what this was, was just trying to create the room for everybody in the company to go down the rabbit hole of different AI tools, everybodyâs kind of played with some different, or what everybody would catch a tee, but probably some other AI tools, more and more tools are baking AI into but thereâs a whole bunch of Gen AI pure play startups that could be quite interesting, whether itâs writing or whether itâs presentation layer, or whether itâs analytics, thereâs a number of pieces that you can play with. The problem is, itâs a bit like the iPhone in the early days, where youâve got a million apps for flashlights, and you know, which one is it. And you know, the OS is probably going to build in the flashlight in the future. So youâre like, oh, how much time do I spend on this, and thereâs the same thing is happening, I think in the world agenda, thereâs all of these new applications, you donât know which oneâs gonna win. Thereâs a whole bunch of marketing veneer, and you have to get through it like all products and understand doesnât truly provide the value. And so I wanted to create room for our employees to do that. So we literally just blocked off an entire day, we built our own software, we use coop cards to actually illustrate these are the things that we found. People were voting on different tools and sharing that and had this very vibrant Slack channel through the day, did you see this back and forth. And it resulted in like this list of roughly about 100 tools that weâve come across now where weâve all spent a bit of time on these different tools. And now thatâs kind of our repository of like, Klue reviewed, AI tools that we think might have legs. So itâs a shortcut for a lot of others when they think, whatâs the presentation tool? Oh, thereâs three that a whole bunch of people have reviewed already. Iâll start there. Itâs kind of like your intro library. And so I truly encourage every company, every manager to dip into that and try and find space, because thereâs a bunch of wasted time of like, that tool wasnât any good. And youâre probably going to look at five before you find the one you like. And from a manager standpoint and like Iâm just like, which employee Do you want the employee that says, I know how to leverage these five AI tools that are going to make me way more efficient, or the one that says I havenât really used those tools. So youâre clearly going to want the one thatâs kind of creating an AI system for doing things more efficiently. So itâs not only important for my company, itâs important for individual careers.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 38:18
Yeah. And is there a way that you are encouraging this on a ongoing basis. And the reason I say that is because obviously there was a lot of hype early on. And thereâs still a lot of hype. But as with any hype cycle, I feel like the hype will go away. And maybe a lot of people will go back to normal and their old way of doing things. And I do think this time is a little bit different than anything weâve seen before. But itâs just is there like a constant almost like an OKR or something that you have in place, which is maybe getting people to think about the way that they do things differently, maybe thereâs different ways to sell are different ways to market or, you know, something that allows people to keep getting more efficient using these tools.
Jason Smith (Klue) 39:01
So I think my hope, and Iâm still early in this journey right now is that weâve created a spark that created some experimentation and investigation and created some collaboration and sharing across different things that might be valuable. And the taste of productivity that you can get with some of those tools, creates the reinforcement loop to say, Ooh, there might be something else that gets my job done faster. That is beneficial for both the company in my personal career. And Iâm starting to see those dividends right now. So literally, I think you need to force function it with time dedicated, like block off a day, all meetings, create something that gets everybody down this path. And now what Iâm seeing is, you know, thatâs the rock starting to roll down the hill and gather steam. So from that standpoint, TBD. If itâs not going to be sustained, but like think your phone, like do you scroll through to the eighth page on your phone and look at those apps anymore. Like itâs whatever apps end up on the first So I think weâre in the download a ton of apps moment experiment like crazy. Pick up your friendâs phone of going, what cool apps do you have, and create that inspo collaboration, sharing? Maybe Iâll try that it works for you. It doesnât. And you know, when in very short period of time, I think weâll end up with that one screen have apps that are beneficial for you personally. And thatâll be true of kind of the Gen AI apps.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 40:23
Yeah, it always seems things in tech, itâs always the winner takes most so you make it on the home screen or you donât. So there, Jason, this has been an awesome conversation, we started talking about delegation, tough conversations. I love the just the idea of being candid and curious. At the same time, you had your hack about writing things right after the meetings, the thoughts and insights, you recorded, the four things you use in order to hire and of course, we also talked about AI, which is awesome. And of course, your view on competitors, which I think is a very refreshing view. And everybody can learn from so the final question that we like to end on is for all the managers and leaders constantly looking to get better at their craft any final tips, tricks or words of wisdom that you would leave them with,
Jason Smith (Klue) 41:10
maybe Iâll circle back to kind of the hiring, I do think that moment of the bouncer at the door is you from a hiring standpoint of how good the clubâs going to be on the inside, you got to pick the right people to come in. And so from my standpoint, you need to be very clear on the cultural and values alignment, super clear on the expectations in the workplace that theyâre going to join. And literally in many cases, try and talk them out of it, particularly in early stage tech companies. There are way easier jobs, there are ways your jobs than joining a high growth tech startup, or a struggling startup that is not got the next round of funding yet or has some challenges. I think you need to be really clear on that. And the right people will self identify on that and go no, actually, thatâs what Iâm looking for. I want to challenge I want to work with, you know, highly ambitious people that might not make it on this product or this company. But I want the shot. And so I think when they fully opt in to that, you know, expectation reality, they walk in and days one through 60 On that first kind of onboarding. Theyâre like, Yep, this is what I expected. Okay, this is our part. And theyâre approaching everything with a can do instead of what we were what I thought this was going to be a little bit easier. So that cultural values, alignment, very clear expectations about the workplace are joining I think is critical. Iâm a big fan of the no rules rules. Reed Hastings book, I love that thereâs probably 80% of the things in there that I totally agree with that kind of really kind of put forward the idea of being candid and clear about the workplace and the expectations that theyâre joining ahead of time.
Aydin Mirzaee (Fellow.app) 42:46
Yeah, Jason. Thatâs great advice and a great place to end it. Thank you so much for doing this. And thatâs it for today. Thank you so much for tuning into this episode of the Supermanagers podcast. You can find the show notes and transcript at WWW.Fellow.app/Supermanagers. If you liked the content, be sure to rate review and subscribe so you can get notified when we post the next episode. And please tell your friends and fellow managers about it. Itâd be awesome if you can help us spread the word about the show. See you next time.
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