
Life was so simple back when we first started beehiiv.
All we did was ask users what they wanted, then built it. Then weβd talk to users on other platforms, ask what they wished they hadβ¦ and build that next. It was lean, agile, and fun.
I donβt think Iβd use any of those words to describe my time working at Google, which is where I spent a year prior to launching beehiiv. They sit at two completely opposite ends of the spectrum.
Itβs just blindly accepted that the natural trajectory of companies is to move from one end to the other. That companies just βgrow upβ and as they accumulate success they also begin to accumulate processes and performance reviews and everything in between.
I think thatβs total bullshit.
When I think about the early success weβve experienced at beehiiv, I believe a large part of it is due to our ability to outpace, out innovate, and out hustle relative to the competition. Waking up to a complaint from a user and shipping a solution by lunch β thatβs what makes us great.
Organizations who have become bogged down with processes and layers of management cannot comprehend that last sentence.
As a founder, I get to help shape the culture we create and determine how we spend our time as a team. And quite frankly, I donβt want to spend my days in meetings or talking about processes. I genuinely donβt think anyone does, itβs just βwhat companies at this size do.β
But instead of conforming, Iβd rather fight it.
My thesis: processes and middle management kill companies.
My solution:
startups donβt need more processes as they scale
they need to hire people smart enough to work comfortably with ambiguity
β #Tyler Denk π (#@denk_tweets)
4:36 PM β’ Sep 17, 2024
I think processes exist primarily for two reasons: to prevent mistakes and because most leaders donβt actually trust their employees.

In my college textbook era
To use engineering as an example:
A: Fuck it, ship it straight to production.
B: Have another engineer review the code first, then test it on a staging environment.
C: Schedule a demo with key stakeholders to discuss how each team may be impacted by the changes. Distribute materials regarding the go-to-market strategy, and have a backup plan in case there are any unintended consequences from the launch. Schedule a post-mortem after the launch to assess and extract key learnings for upcoming initiatives.
Itβs not the wild west at beehiiv, we certainly have some baseline level of processes in place. But Iβd argue if you hire the right people and foster the right culture, you can operate with far less friction and still yield fewer mistakes.
But mistakes are certainly part of the trade-off, and weβve created a culture very tolerant of them (you canβt have it both ways). We even have a Slack channel #sunlighting where employees openly share their mistakes so others can learn from them.
tl;dr: rather than assuming everyone is a moron and implementing processes for the sake of preventing mistakes⦠empower people to take initiative and learn from previous mistakes. (See above: hire people smart enough to work with ambiguity).
I do genuinely believe that most companies operate from a place where leadership doesnβt trust their employees. When other founders learn that weβre an entirely remote company they always ask me βbut how do you ensure that your employees are actually working?β
So from that lens, it makes sense that processes are just a means of quality assurance passed down from leadership.
Iβd consider that βplaying not to loseβ. Iβm playing to win:
We hire people who prefer to work freely with autonomy and are comfortable with ambiguity. We empower them to make decisions on their own and be held accountable for them.
I lead from a place of complete transparency. Each employee knows all of our current issues, how much revenue weβre making, how much cash weβre burning, upcoming initiatives, etc.
They canβt help solve issues if they donβt know what they areβ¦ and I canβt do this alone.
Each person has meaningful equity in the business. The intention is that these shares will be life changing for everyone if this company can scale to its potential.
When you combine complete transparency with a workforce who are empowered and equally incentivized, you end up with this:
am I doing "founder mode" correctly ??
$1M MRR in under 3 years is a nice milestone.. but truly so much more to build and accomplish @beehiiv
** this doesn't include revenue from the Ad Network or Boosts, which accounts for another ~$500k /mo
β #Tyler Denk π (#@denk_tweets)
2:30 PM β’ Sep 6, 2024
Not to be outdone by unnecessary processes, the blind acceptance that companies need middle management will also crush momentum.
Again, Iβll use engineering as an example.
Letβs say you have a 10x engineer β weβll call her Sarah. Sarahβs output is incredible. She proactively unblocks other people on the team, takes initiative, and is voraciously pushing the roadmap forward.
Assuming youβre a tech company, the ability to swiftly push the roadmap forward is of utmost importanceβ¦ so consider Sarah someone who is having an outsized impact on the success of the business.
At a certain size, youβll feel pressured into needing some sort of management introduced into the org chart. And when that time comes, Sarah is likely the leading candidate to move into this new management role.
But taking your star engineer and making her a manager quite literally just removed her from doing what she was previously best at⦠to doing something entirely different.
The Boston Celtics finished the 2024 regular season with the best record in the NBA at 64-18. Now imagine if they took Jaylen Brown (their best player) and made him the coach for the playoffs. They would never consider doing that because heβs the best player on the court. Plus, thereβs no guarantee heβd be even half as good a coach as he is a player.
So why do companies so frequently make the mistake of moving their top βplayersβ into management positions?
Honestly I have no fucking idea and it doesnβt make any sense. Probably some confluence of:
Blindly following what other companies do.
Not offering attractive career paths to develop as an independent contributor.
Wishful thinking that the move will βlevel upβ everyone else on the team.
For example, hereβs a team of 5 engineers. Iβll use a scale of 100 to represent their output.

Credit: Tyler Denk, Director of Graphic Design
Now letβs say Sarah is the star engineer on the left, and we choose to move her into a management position. And perhaps βit worksβ to the extent that the output of the other engineers each increase by 10!

Credit: Tyler Denk, Director of Graphic Design
Well now youβre still 60 points short of the output you had previously when you had your best engineerβ¦ well, engineering things. And sure, you could argue that the other members of the team could increase their output by more than the 10 value I arbitrarily choseβ¦ but Iβve seen enough shit to say Iβm not buying it.
Meta and Twitter (X) laid off 24% and 80% of their workforces, respectively, over the past few years as they gutted levels of middle management. Zuckerberg even declared 2023 the βyear of efficiencyβ β¦ and their stock is up 194% since.
My former employer, Google, could probably learn a thing or two about handling bloatβ¦ but thatβs a topic for another post.
So how do we handle management at beehiiv? Player coach.
We moved one engineer into a management position and heβs been an absolute rockstar. He unblocks the others on the team, clearly communicates objectivesβ¦ and still contributes more than 60% of his time towards shipping code.
β
Player
β
Coach
I donβt really believe in having a pure play manager, especially as a small company. Itβs 2024 β if youβre primary skillset is βcommunicationβ and βleadershipβ β¦ well Iβd consider that table stakes for all employees. I think the best managers are able to and enjoy to do the work themselves:
Our CTO, despite overseeing nearly 30 employees, still contributes to the code base regularly and does some feature work.
Our Sales lead spends the majority of his time selling and closing deals.
Our Support lead is routinely in the queues responding to user tickets.
Our Growth lead spends a lot of his time launching and optimizing campaigns.
Donβt over complicate it β fight the conformity.
If you enjoyed this post or know someone who may find it useful, please share it with them and encourage them to subscribe: mail.bigdeskenergy.com/p/fight-the-conformity
Classic founder mistake I made: wasted tons of time cycling through different payroll partners.
Solution I wish I had: Thera, the all-in-one payments platform for global teams. They handle everything from US payroll, to paying international contractors, and everything in-between.
I met their founder, Akhil, at the Big Desk Energy Mastermind in July. Heβs an absolute killer and is offering an exclusive deal for BDE readersβ¦
Direct Slack access to their team
3 months free on Thera


Credit: Armis Sunday
I feel like Jony Ive would have a hideout in Montana that looks like this. Super zen, but absolutely no back support.
Shoutout Armis for the reader submission π«‘.
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Reply and let me know which headphones were your favoritesβ¦
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