Should You Hire Workaholics For Your Startup?


The hubbub over Jason Calacanis’ post How to save money running a startup is completely absurd. Congratulations to Jason for causing a colossal sh*t storm where none should have existed.

He provides some great suggestions for things you can save money on. I’ve made plenty of suggestions on stuff you shouldn’t spend money on when starting a business but he’s got a few tips I hadn’t thought of.

What people seem to have reacted so negatively to was Jason’s point about hiring workaholics. He had so much negative feedback, he actually changed the item in his list:

Fire people who are not workaholics. don’t love their work… come on folks, this is startup life, it’s not a game. don’t work at a startup if you’re not into it–go work at the post office or starbucks if you’re not into it you want balance in your life. For realz.

And what exactly is the problem with that statement? Nothing. You should hire workaholics. They should also love their work and be passionate about what they’re doing. Workaholics alone are useless, because if they don’t love what they’re doing, their work will suck. All they’ll be doing is producing more of it…

I read Jason’s original point and thought, “What’s the big deal?”

Of course, I don’t know what Jason’s original intentions were with his suggestion (maybe he is a brutal slave driver) but here’s my take:

  1. You have to hire people who want to and can work hard. It’s not about how many hours they put in, sleeping under desks at the office, etc. It’s about a dedication to working hard, getting things done and seeing things through.
  2. You have to hire people who are passionate about the business. If they’re not passionate, they’ll fail you. If they are passionate but lazy they’ll fail you. They need to have a strong work ethic, a sense of responsibility (to you, their peers & the business) and they need to be passionate.
  3. You (as the CEO / founder of the startup) need to motivate passion. This is where Jason dropped the ball. Yes, he suggests fancy chairs and a good espresso maker. But in part, he suggests some of those “perks” to keep people at the office and working. That’s fairly common advice, but it’s stupid. You don’t buy employees lunch, coffee, etc. to keep them chained to their chairs, you do it to thank them for their hard work. You do it to bring the team together and develop camaraderie. You do it to inspire them, because you care. The more you care about your employees – and show that to them – the more they’ll give back. If they’re hard workers. If they’re lazy, or they don’t care, it won’t matter what you do. And you can’t afford to take time trying to turn lazy people into hard workers; so don’t waste your efforts or perks on them. Dump them.

    37 Signals recently announced some changes to their work environment. One of those is a 4-day work week. In my mind, this is an effort to reward and motivate the team. You don’t think the 37 Signals guys are hard workers? 37 Signals is able to implement this effort because they work so hard. Whether you define them as workaholics or not is irrelevant, they’ve worked hard, put in their time, had success and are now able to benefit from that by implementing changes to their work environment.

Jason’s trying to force “workaholism” at his startup. And you can’t. It doesn’t work. You can’t throw money, coffee, food or fancy chairs at the problem. At the same time, passion isn’t enough. You need to hire people who are:

  • hard workers
  • believers
  • team players (they need to feel a sense of responsibility to everyone on the team)
  • active learners
  • smart workers (you can’t measure a startup employee’s value in terms of hours worked alone)
  • willing to go the extra mile … and then some (the closest thing to “workaholic” in terms of semantics)

I don’t think Jason wrote the post in the best way possible, but I also think the resulting backlash was way over the top. People are playing word games with something that should be more important than that — hiring top-quality people, building great teams and aiming for successful startups.

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March 11, 2008 Posted in Recruiting by

  • http://theticketlodge.com Gary

    I tired to hire a few people to help promote one of my websites. I found that there is a fine line between hiring a work-a-holic that will steal your idea and run with it and a hard working employee that will do what is in the best interest of your company. I think the key distinction is getting a hard worker, not a workaholic.

  • http://www.knives-america.com Dan

    This is a very interesting article. One thing that I have noticed in the past too is that its not always the workaholics that you want. Some questions you have to think about is why are they aways at work. Maybe the like what they do and put in extra hours to complete extra tasks, however, it maybe because they are unproductive and unorganized to the point where they have to stay longer just to get the same amount of work as someone working an 8 hour day.

  • http://www.knives-america.com Dan

    This is a very interesting article. One thing that I have noticed in the past too is that its not always the workaholics that you want. Some questions you have to think about is why are they aways at work. Maybe the like what they do and put in extra hours to complete extra tasks, however, it maybe because they are unproductive and unorganized to the point where they have to stay longer just to get the same amount of work as someone working an 8 hour day.

  • http://salesblog.karlgoldfield.com Kar Goldfield – Sales Trainer

    Ben,

    When making those first few hires, it is imperative that they have the passion to do whatever it takes to help the company succeed. My phrase is, “the have to bleed [Insert company name here]“.

    Anyone that got in an uproar about Jason’s posts is absurd and should stay away from entrepreneurship.

    Great post, keep em coming, back t my 18 hour day….

  • http://salesblog.karlgoldfield.com Kar Goldfield – Sales Trainer

    Ben,

    When making those first few hires, it is imperative that they have the passion to do whatever it takes to help the company succeed. My phrase is, “the have to bleed [Insert company name here]“.

    Anyone that got in an uproar about Jason’s posts is absurd and should stay away from entrepreneurship.

    Great post, keep em coming, back t my 18 hour day….

  • http://freebiesociety.com greg @ freebie

    @Kar,

    What about 6 months into the project and your employees are completely burned out and either their performance tanks or they start looking elsewhere.

    I hope you got enough extra value out of them to justify re-training new employees every 6-12 months.

  • http://freebiesociety.com greg @ freebie

    @Kar,

    What about 6 months into the project and your employees are completely burned out and either their performance tanks or they start looking elsewhere.

    I hope you got enough extra value out of them to justify re-training new employees every 6-12 months.

  • http://www.megan-fox.mobi Vlad

    I don’t have a big company, because I’m still considered a start up company. The thing is when you have people working for you that don’t like there jobs, or are lazy people. You start having lots of problems in the office, from work not being done on time. To customers getting angry because there work is late. So seriously if you want to put your money on the line when starting up a company, make sure you pick the right people.

  • http://www.megan-fox.mobi Vlad

    I don’t have a big company, because I’m still considered a start up company. The thing is when you have people working for you that don’t like there jobs, or are lazy people. You start having lots of problems in the office, from work not being done on time. To customers getting angry because there work is late. So seriously if you want to put your money on the line when starting up a company, make sure you pick the right people.

  • http://kpss-dershanesi.blogspot.com/ kpss

    This is a very interesting article. One thing that I have noticed in the past too is that its not always the workaholics that you want. Some questions you have to think about is why are they aways at work. Maybe the like what they do and put in extra hours to complete extra tasks, however, it maybe because they are unproductive and unorganized to the point where they have to stay longer just to get the same amount of work as someone working an 8 hour day.

  • http://kpss-dershanesi.blogspot.com/ kpss

    This is a very interesting article. One thing that I have noticed in the past too is that its not always the workaholics that you want. Some questions you have to think about is why are they aways at work. Maybe the like what they do and put in extra hours to complete extra tasks, however, it maybe because they are unproductive and unorganized to the point where they have to stay longer just to get the same amount of work as someone working an 8 hour day.

  • http://www.btbtraining.com/blog Niall Devitt

    Hi Ben,

    Great post. I have to agree, I fail to see what the big fuss is about. It’s probably the use of the term “workaholics” as apposed to what was actually meant. In my opinion, a key task for start-ups is to hire people that bring additional skills to the business.

  • http://www.btbtraining.com Niall Devitt Sales Training Consultant

    Hi Ben,

    Great post. I have to agree, I fail to see what the big fuss is about. It’s probably the use of the term “workaholics” as apposed to what was actually meant. In my opinion, a key task for start-ups is to hire people that bring additional skills to the business.

  • http://www.brett-favre-saga.com jeff @ brett favre saga

    @Vlad,

    I see your point but if you have a bad employee it is because they are a bad employee. Employees that work long hours can cause just as much trouble if they are bad workers.

  • http://www.brett-favre-saga.com jeff @ brett favre saga

    @Vlad,

    I see your point but if you have a bad employee it is because they are a bad employee. Employees that work long hours can cause just as much trouble if they are bad workers.

  • http://www.espressoauction.com/ tom

    haha, chained to the desk espresso in hand… it's business, nothing personal

  • http://www.espressoauction.com/ tom

    haha, chained to the desk espresso in hand… it's business, nothing personal

  • http://theforexbrotherhood.blogspot.com forex brotherhood

    if i had a start up on the go, the only people i’d consider hiring would be people who are going to work like trojans.

  • http://www.pdm-archive.co.uk Bethany Storage

    I dont think time necessarily means more work, I have worked with so many people whom do a standard 40 hour week and do much more work as the work mules working from dawn to dusk. Better to go all out for a short period of time then rest and play hard ready for the next segment. Work smart not hard!

  • http://www.pdm-archive.co.uk Bethany Storage

    I dont think time necessarily means more work, I have worked with so many people whom do a standard 40 hour week and do much more work as the work mules working from dawn to dusk. Better to go all out for a short period of time then rest and play hard ready for the next segment. Work smart not hard!

  • http://www.pdm-archive.co.uk Bethany Storage

    I dont think time necessarily means more work, I have worked with so many people whom do a standard 40 hour week and do much more work as the work mules working from dawn to dusk. Better to go all out for a short period of time then rest and play hard ready for the next segment. Work smart not hard!

  • http://www.marstahayatvar.com reklam

    good

  • http://www.webmastercritic.com Matthew Hui

    Great advice. Being passionate is one of the best ways to become successful

  • http://www.webmastercritic.com Matthew Hui

    Great advice. Being passionate is one of the best ways to become successful

  • http://www.webmastercritic.com Matthew Hui

    Great advice. Being passionate is one of the best ways to become successful

  • http://www.marstahayatvar.com reklam

    Hi Ben,

    Great post. I have to agree, I fail to see what the big fuss is about. It's probably the use of the term “workaholics” as apposed to what was actually meant. In my opinion, a key task for start-ups is to hire people that bring additional skills to the business.

  • http://www.marstahayatvar.com reklam

    Hi Ben,

    Great post. I have to agree, I fail to see what the big fuss is about. It's probably the use of the term “workaholics” as apposed to what was actually meant. In my opinion, a key task for start-ups is to hire people that bring additional skills to the business.

  • http://www.marstahayatvar.com reklam

    Hi Ben,

    Great post. I have to agree, I fail to see what the big fuss is about. It's probably the use of the term “workaholics” as apposed to what was actually meant. In my opinion, a key task for start-ups is to hire people that bring additional skills to the business.

  • http://www.b2b-club.ru/?locale=en B2B

    I think that someone can spend more than 40 h per week and resalt could be worse that could theoretically be.

  • http://www.erikalinks.com erika

    yes the passionate is a key of succes like spirutual thing.

  • http://www.erikalinks.com erika

    yes the passionate is a key of succes like spirutual thing.

  • http://Manizesto.com Jonathan loves Innovating

    Replace “Workaholics” with “Passionate People” and this article is spot on. What you want is passionate people who can give their all for a cause, not someone who works themselves to death. Innovation and passion are what makes startups successful.

  • http://Manizesto.com Jonathan loves Innovating

    Replace “Workaholics” with “Passionate People” and this article is spot on. What you want is passionate people who can give their all for a cause, not someone who works themselves to death. Innovation and passion are what makes startups successful.

  • http://Manizesto.com Jonathan loves Innovating

    Replace “Workaholics” with “Passionate People” and this article is spot on. What you want is passionate people who can give their all for a cause, not someone who works themselves to death. Innovation and passion are what makes startups successful.

  • http://www.flytitle.com Tesla

    great advice.

    You start having lots of problems in the office, from work not being done on time. To customers getting angry because there work is late. So seriously if you want to put your money on the line when starting up a company, make sure you pick the right people.

    http://www.flytitle.com

  • http://www.flytitle.com Tesla

    great advice.

    You start having lots of problems in the office, from work not being done on time. To customers getting angry because there work is late. So seriously if you want to put your money on the line when starting up a company, make sure you pick the right people.

    http://www.flytitle.com

  • http://www.flytitle.com Tesla

    great advice.

    You start having lots of problems in the office, from work not being done on time. To customers getting angry because there work is late. So seriously if you want to put your money on the line when starting up a company, make sure you pick the right people.

    http://www.flytitle.com

  • http://www.drdcha.com ?????

    thank you

  • http://www.kudotech.com Borgz

    I think it's a matter of choosing the right people for the job. They should be dedicated, responsible and passionate to get the job well done and always on time.

  • http://www.kudotech.com Borgz

    I think it's a matter of choosing the right people for the job. They should be dedicated, responsible and passionate to get the job well done and always on time.

  • http://www.kudotech.com Borgz

    I think it's a matter of choosing the right people for the job. They should be dedicated, responsible and passionate to get the job well done and always on time.

  • https://www.supergaver.dk RobinGaver

    Passionate people sounds much better. I just started working a company that has recently started up. I don´t consider myself a workaholic, but I am putting a great effort in trying to give the company a kickstart. I feel more passionate about this job, than my last job at a big company where everything was safe and kind of boring.

  • https://www.supergaver.dk RobinGaver

    Passionate people sounds much better. I just started working a company that has recently started up. I don´t consider myself a workaholic, but I am putting a great effort in trying to give the company a kickstart. I feel more passionate about this job, than my last job at a big company where everything was safe and kind of boring.

  • https://www.supergaver.dk RobinGaver

    Passionate people sounds much better. I just started working a company that has recently started up. I don´t consider myself a workaholic, but I am putting a great effort in trying to give the company a kickstart. I feel more passionate about this job, than my last job at a big company where everything was safe and kind of boring.

  • http://www.flicker90.com Littlearth

    It really is the truest thing in the world that you can't judge a workaholic by the hours but by what they get done in those hours. I have hired people that 1 can get done in half the time as the other and get paid the same.

  • http://www.flicker90.com Littlearth

    It really is the truest thing in the world that you can't judge a workaholic by the hours but by what they get done in those hours. I have hired people that 1 can get done in half the time as the other and get paid the same.

  • http://www.digit-8.com Digit-8

    its not easy to find these people.

  • http://www.digit-8.com Digit-8

    its not easy to find these people.

  • http://www.digit-8.com Digit-8

    its not easy to find these people.

  • http://blogger.dealbydeal.com/ Niki

    At the begining is better doing by yourselve. No one can startup your business better then you. Then you may hire who ever you want.

About Ben Yoskovitz
I recently joined GoInstant as VP Product. GoInstant changes how we use the web, making it shareable like never before.

I'm also a Founding Partner at Year One Labs, an early stage accelerator in Montreal. Previously I founded Standout Jobs (and sold it). I'm a hands-on startup guy, helping companies grow successfully from the idea forward. You can reach me at byosko at gmail dot com.

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