22 Rules for First-Time Startup CEOs: From Fundraising to Firing 💼
22 practical rules for new CEOs who want to survive and scale
Being a first time CEO is brutal, exhilarating, and full of traps.
You will make mistakes.
That is inevitable.
The point is to make fewer catastrophic ones.
Below are 22 bite-size, battle-tested pieces of advice arranged by theme:
Capital
Team
Product
Execution
Leadership
Strategy
Read them, argue with them, then act on the useful ones.
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Key Takeaways
Investors are long term partners, not just funding sources. Terms and alignment matter more than valuation headlines.
Early focus beats early scale. Dominate one market and prove economics before expanding.
Hiring decisions shape company trajectory faster than product decisions. Talent fit is leverage.
Metrics drive survival. Know your numbers cold and align the team around one core goal.
Speed of learning is your real competitive advantage. Ship, measure, adjust, repeat.
Table of Contents
22 Pieces of Advice
I. Capital and fundraising
II. Team and hiring
III. Product and customers
IV. Execution and operations
V. Leadership and culture
VI. Strategy and personal choices
Final thought
22 Pieces of Advice
I. Capital and fundraising
Pick partners, not checks
Investors matter more than the money. Check for constructive help, realistic expectations, and fair terms. If they micromanage in good times they will crush you in bad times.Take sensible terms over headline valuation
A slightly lower price with clean terms beats a high valuation with crushing liquidation preferences.Treat fundraising like a project, not a solution
Raising cash is a milestone. It is not a business model. Use capital to buy traction, not lifestyle.Run tight runway math
Know your true runway at all times. Include hiring commitments, deferred pay, and worst case scenarios.
II. Team and hiring
Hire for mission fit and temperament, then skill
Smart people who disagree with the company mission are expensive problems. Prioritize attitude and adaptability.Hire slowly, fire fast
Hiring mistakes cost far more than the time saved by rushing. Fix them early and cleanly.Pay with equity thoughtfully
ESOPs keep people aligned. Get paperwork in place early and explain clearly how it vests.Promote clarity on roles and owners
Every major function should have a single owner. Ambiguity kills momentum.
III. Product and customers
Ship for learning, not perfection
Small, measurable experiments beat long internal debates. Ship a test, measure, iterate.Nail your first market before expanding
Dominate one customer segment or geography first. Replication is easier than invention.Understand unit economics before scaling
LTV, CAC, and payback time decide whether growth compounds or buries you.Talk to users the way humans talk
Ignore fancy surveys early on. Watch behavior, conduct short interviews, and sell to them directly before building broad automation.
IV. Execution and operations
Single north star metric
Pick one number everyone understands and align incentives to it. Less noise, faster learning.Keep finance tidy from day one
Clean books, simple charts of accounts, and disciplined expense rules save months of drama later.Avoid unnecessary complexity
If a process can be manual for now, keep it manual until repeatability is proven.
V. Leadership and culture
Be the loudest learner in the room
Admit ignorance, ask for evidence, and change your mind openly. People follow humility and curiosity.
Protect the team from volatility
Buffer your team from panic. Decisions are better when people are calm and informed.Make hiring and firing decisions with speed and compassion
Be decisive and humane. That builds trust, not fear.Set cadence and ritual
Weekly priorities, monthly metrics reviews, and regular 1:1s create predictable accountability.Guard your energy
This is a marathon. Schedule recovery, unplug on a regular basis, and model sustainable intensity.
VI. Strategy and personal choices
Decide the company destiny together
Early alignment on exit expectations, ambition level, and pace avoids late stage moral fights.
Learn to say NO with reasons
Every feature, meeting, and hire costs runway. Saying no is a strategic tool.
Final thought
You will make decisions that feel right and later feel naive.
The goal is not perfection.
It is to learn faster than your competitors and to protect optionality.
Use these rules as guardrails, not shackles.
Build clarity, ship experiments, measure ruthlessly, and lead with humility.
Continue Exploring the Frontier
If this piece resonated, you may want to go deeper.
Here are three recent articles readers found especially useful:
Each one tackles a different part of the same challenge: building with intent, not hope.
If you are serious about shaping the future rather than reacting to it, you are exactly where you should be.









"Use capital to buy traction, not lifestyle."
This 🔥 it's human, but ask yourself what's the real reason you want the lifestyle. The best things in life are nearly free.
Do your future self a favor and keep your costs of living low.