Startups scaling engineering
Moving from 3–5 to 10–20 engineers and need a structure that does not block velocity.
Teams & Scaling
A larger team does not automatically mean faster delivery. I help design the structure, roles and work rhythm that scales throughput — not just headcount.
In short
A larger team does not automatically mean faster delivery. After a certain stage, a startup starts paying the tax of communication overhead, unclear ownership, weak onboarding and missing structural decisions. Building a team is not just hiring — it is designing a system that delivers consistently.
Symptoms that a growing team is paying the tax of chaotic structure:
Moving from 3–5 to 10–20 engineers and need a structure that does not block velocity.
You have growing structural debt: overlapping roles, unclear ownership, too many direct reports.
Investors will ask about the hiring plan, org structure and time to productivity. You want ready answers.
The fund expects fast team scaling. You need a hiring strategy and onboarding system that works under pressure.
Review of current structure: roles, ownership, bottlenecks and communication overhead. Map of what does not scale.
Designing new structure for the planned growth stage. Clear responsibility boundaries and ownership for each role.
Which roles do you need now, and which in 6 months? Sourcing strategy, interview process, assessment criteria.
30/60/90 day playbook. Buddy system, ramp-up plan and productivity KPIs to verify contribution.
Implementation of work rhythm and team health metrics. Regular review — is the system working, what needs calibration.
Headcount growth increases communication overhead faster than throughput. Every new engineer requires context, onboarding and coordination. Without structure and clear ownership — you add resources to the bottleneck, not expand it.
When you have 5+ engineers and misalignment starts — role overlap, unclear priorities, senior bottlenecks. Waiting until 15–20 people often means a painful restructuring during growth.
Yes — in strategy, process and role definition. I can also participate in interviews as a technical assessor. I am not a headhunter — I do not source directly, but I build the system that sources effectively.
Basic 30/60/90 day playbook with checklists and a buddy system — 2 weeks. Full onboarding experience with ramp-up techniques and productivity KPIs — 4–6 weeks of implementation.
Yes. I define role requirements, create a scorecard, participate in technical interviews and help with the hire/no-hire decision based on data, not "gut feel".
Engineering Leadership
I step in as interim or fractional VP Engineering when engineering loses velocity: sprints are not closing, release cycles grow, seniors are overloaded with management. I restore delivery rhythm and ownership systems.
Learn more →Fractional Leadership
I step into the company's operating rhythm and own product-tech decisions at C-level — without the full-time cost and without advisory work that ends at the slide deck.
Learn more →Fractional Leadership
I step in at the product strategy level and own the roadmap, priorities and product decisions — when the company asks "how quickly can we ship it" but not "why are we building this".
Learn more →