『The Spikiness Principle: What Executive Search Gets Wrong About Talent and Fit』のカバーアート

The Spikiness Principle: What Executive Search Gets Wrong About Talent and Fit

The Spikiness Principle: What Executive Search Gets Wrong About Talent and Fit

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The investors closest to the best founders have a front-row seat to what great fit really looks like.In this episode of Fit Happens, I sit down with Laela Sturdy, Managing Partner at CapitalG — Alphabet's growth investment fund — and one of the most thoughtful voices on leadership fit I've encountered. Laela has spent 20 years inside Google and Alphabet and 13 years partnering with hyper-growth companies like CrowdStrike, Duolingo, UiPath, and Lovable. She brings a rare investor's lens to the question at the heart of this show: does the right person in the right context actually change outcomes? Her answer is an emphatic yes — and she has the portfolio to prove it.Key Takeaways:The biggest context failure Laela sees isn't skill — it's growth rate. Leaders built for stability often struggle when dropped into hyper-growth, and vice versa.The single trait that predicts founder success more than any credential: pace of learning. The best founders she's backed look radically different as CEOs just one year in."Spikiness" over well-roundedness. When building a venture capital team — or any high-stakes team — one world-class skill beats a collection of average ones every time.Founders rarely get honest feedback. The systems around them are set up to idealize, not challenge. Laela shares how she earns the trust to hold up the mirror.The board is not the operator. Laela describes how the healthiest founder-board relationships work — and where executive coaching for leaders fits into that dynamic.Talent you should have attracted before you could. Laela looks for founders who've pulled exceptional people before it made rational sense — a signal of leadership magnetism.Flow is findable at work. A Harvard basketball player who chased the zone on the court, Laela explains why the intensity of startups replicates that feeling for her professionally.Self-reflection is an underused leadership tool. Tracking hiring decisions — including the nos — is one of the most honest feedback loops a leader can build.AI-native companies operate differently. Fewer meetings, faster decisions, radical transparency, and a cultural tolerance for public mistakes — Laela describes what she sees on the inside.Data intuition over data dependency. Laela pushes back on the "everything must be data-driven" orthodoxy, arguing that the inventors of the future run on pattern recognition and gut as much as dashboards.Connect with Jason: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonbaumgarten/ Email the show here: fithappens.fm00:00 Introduction & Laela Sturdy's background01:37 How long Laela has been at CapitalG01:58 Does context really determine leadership success?02:33 The growth rate as the biggest context failure04:12 What makes founders good at hyper growth05:00 Pace of learning: the single most predictive trait06:44 Fit and the feeling of flow07:19 Basketball, Harvard, and finding flow at work09:23 Laela's own bad-fit career experience09:53 Consulting, 80/20, and the mismatched pace11:30 How the bad fit led to the perfect fit12:09 Getting people in the right roles, not just right jobs12:55 The spikiness principle in team building15:15 Defining the critical spike before you recruit16:53 When boards can't agree on what they need17:09 Success distorts self-awareness18:29 How Laela holds the mirror up for founders22:03 Creating safe space: boards, feedback, and trust22:50 How founder-board relationships really work25:39 When companies don't reach their potential26:04 Talent density as an investment signal27:47 The "one job before they became great" framework29:33 Betting on unproven talent: what the data shows33:08 Three rules for better hiring decisions36:29 Recruiting ruthlessness: outbound talent acquisition37:27 The question leaders rarely ask themselves37:43 Self-reflection and tracking your hiring record39:00 AI as a leadership context shift39:33 Inside AI-native companies: speed and uncertainty41:49 What Fortune 100 leaders can learn from AI startups42:12 Fewer meetings, faster decisions, radical transparency43:32 Is 80/20 even the right framework anymore?44:01 AI usage inside high-growth companies44:45 Being AI-native as a cultural identity45:59 How AI has changed Laela's own investing process47:25 Speed round begins47:33 Favorite book: The Enneagram Guide to Waking Up48:20 Overrated leadership advice: everything must be data-driven48:57 Advice to a younger Laela49:13 Still in flow doing: basketball49:25 Favorite tech product in 2026: Lovable49:52 What Laela has built on Lovable50:24 Closing thoughts and wrap
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