Hiring Sheryl Sandberg was one of the smartest business
decisions Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg ever made.
Sandberg joined in March 2008 at a time when Facebook was ready to scale and needed the acumen she
developed in her role as the head of Google's Advertising arm as well
as the chief of staff to Treasury Secretary Larry Summers.
Facebook would end 2008 with 450 employees, $272 million in revenue, at a loss of $56 million; last year Facebook
had more than 17,000 employees and brought in $27.6 billion in revenue, with
$10.2 billion in net income.
In an episode of LinkedIn Co-founder and chairman Reid
Hoffman's podcast "Masters
of Scale," Zuckerberg told Hoffman that his experience with Sandberg
taught him that the "single most important thing" when it comes to
scaling into a massively successful business is having founders surround
themselves with the best people they can find.
"And when I look at my friends who are running other
good companies, the single biggest difference that I see in whether the
companies end up becoming really great and reaching their potential or just
pretty good is whether they're comfortable and really self-confident enough to
have people who are stronger than them around them," Zuckerberg said.
He created a test for himself for any direct hire he needed
to make. "I've adopted this hiring rule, which is that you should
never hire someone to work for you unless you would work for them in an
alternate universe," he said. "Which doesn't mean that you should
give them your job, but if the tables were turned and you were looking for a
job, would you be comfortable with working for this person? And I basically
think that if the answer to that question is no, then you’re doing something
expedient but you’re not doing something as well as you can on that."
To clarify, you don't need to be hiring the world's most
qualified interns — the rule applies to high-level positions reporting to the
top. The point is that to be effective leaders, founders, and CEOs need to
learn to set aside their egos and hire people they admire.
Zuckerberg took his time with hiring Sandberg. After they
met at a Christmas party in December 2007, he would meet regularly with
Sandberg and talk for hours about his vision for Facebook and what she thought
she could add to it. After a few months, Zuckerberg decided Sandberg passed the
test.
"There are all of these things, for example, that
Sheryl is much stronger than me at, and that makes me better and makes Facebook
better," he said. "I am not afraid or threatened by that. I value
that."
You can listen to the full episode of "Masters of
Scale" on
Stitcher or wherever you get podcasts.
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