I am one of the co-founders of Recruiting portal www.reffster.com incubated in Sept 2007 and have recently divested from the website, though not from the e recruiting idea. My co-founders and I have a copy each of the software /IPR and while my ex partners will henceforth run reffster .com, at some stage I plan to use a modified version of the software on a different Business model idea. Simultaneously there is a best practise oriented partnership brewing with another set of senior professionals, which includes Strategic HR outsourcing, Exec Search and other Talent Aquisition and Retention initiatives.
It has been 6 months of entrepreneurial experience following 24-years of  corporate life that took me through various Functional roles and General management experience in PepsiCo. These 6 months, however, have given me the headiest experience of my life with ample adrenaline rush and roller coasters. I thought I should share my learnings from the e-recruiting domain as well as on how ideal partnerships should be formed in start-ups if more than one co founder exists.
Let me first share my impression of what I believe is necessary for the success of any new recruitment portal in the market. The key for any new portals’s success in my opinion will lie in a service offerring where clients perceive significant value vs. alternative existing channels of recruiting. Presently alternatives as we all know range from subscription based portal models (where Reach largely depends on those who put their Resumes on the net — where the client at times has to wade through thousands of Resumes), to brick and mortar value added Search where often the “right fit” candidate materialises only if the company is willing to pay high fees to quality recruiters. Most portals are not expected to “physically” value add (as Search consultants do by screening candidates) though there are niche portals in the US that offer a concierge service to subscription based high-end candidates with no charge to companies .Â
The key to success for any new portal in my opinion will lie in providing “value added” services of reaching AND screening candidates vs Job descriptions and Ideal candidate Profiles –done entirely through technology play. Without cutting edge technology , a portal which also aims to physically value-add will not be able to handle scale –something that in my opinion is desirable for any mass oriented portal in todays globalised world. If a new portal aims to replicate Naukri, Monster or Times–all very successful ‘vanilla’ platform models– that would not work since the space is already clutterred. If it aims to go beyond ‘vanilla’ and also value add that recruiting vendors do, then that will limit scalability with clients. Therefore a  100% Tech enabled value add led by new-age technology that matches Profiles with job descriptions to get ‘the right fit’, could be an idea that is innovative — and if another idea on the Sources of Revenue (from candidates rather than companies) is implemented, perhaps disruptive as well to the way existing portals operate.
Let me share what I believe are best practises in partnering with other co founders. There is undoubtedly a need to have shared values apart from only shared interests between co founders. Chemistry too is essential! Also  –whether it is a bunch of college mates getting together or professionals getting together — co founders ideally need to have complementary skill sets which will ensure an effective relay race as the business starts off, churning of ideas and leveraging of each others strengths. All this is well known. In addition , I would urge all budding entrepreneurs who plan to partner to also spend quality time–as they would do building up their business plans — to carve out strategic and operational Roles at the outset. I would strongly advise co-founders to work out a Founders agreement during the incubation phase where future situations and how they would be tackled are thought through. Perhaps –and it would be interesting to get reader comments – it may not be a bad idea to also have a “First among equals” leadership Role assigned to one of the co founders at the outset for operational and strategic business decisions that will need to be taken after the launch( eg a casting vote in Board meetings) , though there would obviously be guardrails in place to ensure that consensus is enshrined for key strategic decisions e.g. exits, new partners, changes to Founders agreement etc. I know of successful SMEs who have co founders largely of the same age/experience who assign the “First among equals” Role by rotation each year through majority vote. The Founders agreement should be incorporated as part of the Articles of association of the Pvt Ltd. If well thought out governance procedures, Roles for each co founder and way forward for future situations has been well defined before the launch, it would definitely help the start up team during the ups and downs of the roller coaster that every start-up inevitably faces. The VC/seedfund fraternity would also welcome it.
I can be contacted at rjatar@gmail.com.
Ranjit Jatar
- Software Architect - November 22, 2009
- THE EXPERIENCE OF STARTING A NEW E RECRUITING PORTAL - April 23, 2008
Hi Ranjit
I actually signed upto your portal, because I think that the recruitment industry as a whole sucks, I wont go into too much detail here, people have tried the referer model, again personally I think that does not work, at least in the way it is implemented currently, it just makes everyone a recruitment agent and you get into a whole load of spam.
Aside from you want to ensure that the “legal” copies are legal in terms of a written agreement. Although I would be surprised if you could use it elsewhere, its always easier to use the best bits and actually start again.
I don’t agree with the Founders agreement on one hand , but on another I do. Founders agreements always bring out the tricky questions, and these can come a little to early (which is good some may say), on the other hand, you have to see what it will really achieve, except create a power struggle very early on. Fundamentally a person should do the job they can, and what they are suited for, but we all know that does not happen, you always get a CEO before you get a sales team, which is rather ironic to me.
What I find that works, is that I like to split the team into thinkers and doers, people sometimes believe tha a doer is “below” a thinker, which actually is not always the case. Once this is done, then things actually start to happen. You let the thinking team look at the strategy and decide ddirection, and you get the doers to execute, else you get left with lots of ideas and nothing happening, OR lots of happening in no coherent direction.
Founders agreements would not fix this, if you rotate people every year, you get the poorest excuse for a human actually trying in vain to lead the company. I am in favour of having startups which do not follow the old designation system (I mean why should they , what does a COO do in a startup), but instead have a decision making process, and team, and leave it at that.
At the end of the day if you can stamp out the ego the rest works.
Iqbal
so what happened, why did you leave Reffster? 6 months seems small.
Well, VCs are just one tiny part of the equation. It’s just good business sense to be prepared for the worst case scenarios – hopefully with the prudence and capability to balance it without stiffling it too much
Vijay
Thanks Vijay for your incisive comments and advise on vacationing ( a Lhasa, Everest base camp 2500 km trip was rejuvinating and its effects will last for some time……) Your comments are especially welcome from someone who is the Founder of Proto. And your point noted on not mixing two issues up in the same post.
Incidentally we have two legal copies of the software — which each co founder can use as one wishes, with or without modifications.
Thanks for finding my views on partnering insightful. My comments about a Founders agreement are not specifically based on my experience of the partnership between the co founders of Reffster. It was and is genuinely meant for readers based on a study of many partnerships which have worked ( eg Mindtree, or the software company which helped us create Reffsters software , Iris Consultants and some others ….)– and also those which have not. I also would not like any reader to believe that my comments are aimed at bringing restrictive structures to a relationship–eg by having a Founders agreement. I personally believe a successful partnership can never be successful because of a Founders agreement. Partnerships are successful because of chemistry, shared values, shared goals and high collaboration between founders..where recourse to a Founders agreement will never be needed. Its just that the process of working out a Founders agreement implies that a broad governance structure and a situational handling plan has been thought through and agreed upon even before the business is launched. That helps — and I know that VC’s tend to like that.
Cheers
Ranjit:
1. Introductions Help.
2. You are mentioning that you took out some code out of the previous company. Do you realize how much due deligence needs to go into it to make sure that there are no legal issues?
3. You are “thinking” about a new venture using some of the old principles.
4. I dont know what you did to the fonts, but it hurts my eyes.
5. Fabulous insight into some of your experience of getting out of a partnership that didn’t work. But I think that alone would have made for a good post – the recruitment bit just killed it.
Good luck ahead mate. I hope someone fixes that linkedin URL. It’s hurting the format 🙂
PS: Solid Advise: Dont jump into anything yet. Take time off. Go off with your family and friends to some remote place on a vacation, chill for three months and get into business with a clear and straight vision. Avoid a rebound. Whatever goes for relationships, applies very much here.