was initially posted in August 2008 and continues to be both equally a well known post including a poignant question. failed startup in your resume count against you?
This is certainly an amazing query. In traditional recruiter style, I’m going to be very definitive and say: I think that it depends. :-) excellent because they force people to wear multiple hats,
office 2010 Professional Plus, work in a resource-constrained environment,
office Professional Plus generator key, and think about how what they work on interacts with other pieces of the puzzle rather than of owning a very narrow project or piece of code. While that entrepreneurial flexibility is highly desirable in any size org,
cheap office 2010 32 bit key, a pattern of several in a row might unfairly brand someone as a serial startup person,
discount win 7 x64, likely to bolt every year or so. of patterns, how many failed startups are we talking here? I love people who take risks and follow their passions, but if your resume lists a series of short stints at failed startups,
office 2010 product key, I think it’s natural to question a person’s career management skills. curious to get my candidate’s take on why the company failed. Were there adverse market conditions at play? Was the product ahead of the need? Was it unforeseen technology gaps, poor product or shady business dealings? I think it’s fair game to find out what role the candidate played in contributing to the success or failure of any venture. to keep in mind is that building and scaling provide different challenges and not everyone is good at (or wants to do) equally. During the interview cycle, you might be asked about whether you are solely a "V.1 person" or if growing a product/service is something you’d find as intriguing as building from scratch. worth mentioning that failure is not an absolute. Microsoft LOVES to ask questions around what one has learned while failing. We’d be foolish to discount valuable lessons learned in defeat. I think it’s funny that I’m answering this question because my whole "pre-Microsoft" career had been finding candidates for small startups in the Bay Area and Puget Sound. During that time I learned a lot of lessons that have helped pave the way for future successes. a good "lesson learned at Startup X" story they’d like to share?