You just closed your seed round. Congratulations - now the real work begins.
The money is in the bank, the pressure is on, and everyone (your investors, your co-founder, your partner) is asking the same question: "Who are you hiring first?"
Get this wrong, and you'll burn 6-12 months of runway on people who don't move the needle. Get it right, and you'll build the foundation that carries you to Series A.
Here's what we've learned from working with 400+ seed-stage startups since 2019.
Most founders approach their first hires like a shopping list: "We need an engineer, a marketer, a salesperson..."
This is backwards.
Your first 5 hires should be determined by one question: What needs to be true for us to raise Series A?
For most startups, the answer involves some combination of:
Work backwards from there.
When to hire: Immediately after closing, if your technical team can't ship fast enough.
Why this role matters: At seed stage, your product is your business. If you can't build and iterate quickly, nothing else matters.
What to look for:
What to avoid:
Salary range (Europe): €65,000-100,000 + meaningful equity (0.5-2%)
Reality check: This hire will likely take 2-3 months. Start sourcing the day you close your round.
When to hire: 2-4 months after Hire #1 is productive.
Why this role matters: One engineer hits limits fast. A second person allows you to work in parallel, reduces bus factor, and lets you move faster.
What to look for:
Alternative: Designer If your product is consumer-facing or UX-heavy, this might be a product designer instead. Look for someone who can do both design and basic frontend implementation.
Salary range (Europe): €50,000-80,000 + equity (0.3-1%)
When to hire: When you have something that works and need to find more people to use it.
This is where startups diverge:
If you're B2B (sales-led): Your first GTM hire is probably a sales rep or founding AE. Look for someone who's closed deals at early-stage companies and is comfortable doing everything from prospecting to closing to customer success.
If you're B2B (product-led): You might skip sales entirely and hire for growth/marketing instead. Look for someone who can run experiments across channels and isn't afraid to do the work themselves.
If you're B2C: This is usually a growth person who can do paid acquisition, SEO, or community building depending on your model.
What to avoid:
Salary range (Europe): €60,000-90,000 + equity (0.3-0.75%)
When to hire: When founders are spending more than 20% of their time on non-core activities.
Why this role matters: At some point, you're drowning in customer questions, onboarding, finance admin, and operational tasks. This person buys you back time to focus on product and growth.
What to look for:
Title options: Customer Success, Operations, Business Operations, Chief of Staff (though this is often overused)
Salary range (Europe): €45,000-70,000 + equity (0.2-0.5%)
When to hire: When your engineering team has clear bottlenecks, OR when you've identified a specific skill gap.
What this looks like:
Key insight: Hire #5 should be determined by what's limiting your progress. By this point, you should have enough data to make a targeted decision rather than following a generic playbook.
Salary range (Europe): Varies by role - €55,000-120,000
|
Month |
Activity |
Team Size |
|---|---|---|
|
Month 1 |
Close round, start sourcing Hire #1 |
Founders only |
|
Month 3 |
Hire #1 starts |
3 (founders + 1) |
|
Month 5-6 |
Hire #2 starts |
4 |
|
Month 7-9 |
Hire #3 starts |
5 |
|
Month 9-12 |
Hires #4 and #5 |
6-7 |
|
Expense |
Cost Range |
Notes |
|---|---|---|
|
Recruiting fees |
€5k-15k per hire |
Using a fixed-fee partner like Funded.club |
|
Job boards |
€1,500-3,000/month |
LinkedIn, specialist boards |
|
Equity |
3-5% total for first 5 |
Dilution you need to budget for |
|
Time |
15-20 hours/week |
Founder time on hiring |
A VP of Sales with 50 reports at their last company is not going to be happy doing cold outreach to your first 10 customers. Hire people who want to do the work, not manage it.
Your university friend might be loyal, but if they're not the right person for the job, you're creating a problem you'll have to solve later - usually painfully.
At seed stage, you're competing with companies that have more money, more brand recognition, and more stability. You won't get the objectively "best" candidates. Hire people with high potential who want to bet on you.
The best candidates are off the market in 2-3 weeks. If your hiring process takes 6 weeks, you're losing people to faster-moving companies.
Cash-strapped startups who refuse to give equity end up hiring B-players. Your early employees should be owners.
Total time: 2-3 weeks from first contact to offer.
Hiring is one of the most important things you'll do as a founder. It's also one of the most time-consuming.
Consider getting help when:
At Funded.club, we work exclusively with funded startups on their first key hires. Fixed fees starting at €4,900 per hire (not percentages), with a 100% placement success rate.
Book a free discovery call to discuss your hiring plan.
|
Hire # |
Role |
Timing |
Budget (Europe) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Founding Engineer |
Month 1-3 |
€65-100k + 0.5-2% equity |
|
2 |
Second Engineer or Designer |
Month 4-6 |
€50-80k + 0.3-1% equity |
|
3 |
First GTM (Sales/Growth) |
Month 6-9 |
€60-90k + 0.3-0.75% equity |
|
4 |
Operations/CS Hybrid |
Month 8-11 |
€45-70k + 0.2-0.5% equity |
|
5 |
Third Engineer or Specialist |
Month 10-12 |
€55-120k + 0.2-0.5% equity |
Funded.club has helped 400+ startups make their critical early hires since 2019. We know what works because we've seen what doesn't.