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4 Things Entrepreneurs Should Never Delegate (Naval Ravikant)

Date
Nov 8, 2025
Classification
  1. Startups
#
  1. Organization/Leadership
Alex Note / NOWBELL, Developer
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"If You Leave Even This to Others, You Will Go Bum": 4 Taboos for Founders Warning About by the Silicon Valley Investment God

🫑 3-Line Summary

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Silicon Valley venture investor Naval Ravikant defined the essence of a startup as a "talent acquisition game," emphasizing that hiring, fundraising, strategy, and product vision are sanctuaries that founders should never delegate.
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In particular, since early members determine the company's DNA, the founder must personally vet talent with a 'low ego' and exceptional capabilities, and only uncompromising hiring standards act as a magnet to attract top-tier talent.
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Since investors are betting on the potential of the founder rather than an agent, they must handle fundraising directly; ultimately, they must bear in mind that the founder's own capabilities represent the 'ceiling' of talent the organization can accommodate.

🥦 Insight

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Delegation is handing over 'menial tasks,' not 'souls.'
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Many early-stage founders outsource or delegate their most critical tasks to others, using the excuse that they are "too busy." They often entrust hiring to headhunters and investment to finance managers. However, Naval Ravikant's warning is chillingly clear: "That is not delegation; it is giving up control of the company."
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In particular, do not take the hiring process lightly. The initial five members are not merely employees who divide the work; they are figures of the caliber of 'co-founders' who determine the company's culture and DNA. If you do not enter the interview room, your philosophy cannot enter it either.
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You must also face a painful truth: "In an early-stage startup, no one better than you will work under you." In other words, the capacity of your own as a founder defines the limit of the talent the company can accommodate. If you want to build the best team, you must become a compelling leader and an overwhelming visionary yourself before refining your job postings. Today, were you the company's 'limit' or its 'potential'?

— View original —

Hello, this is Alex.
I have translated excerpts from Silicon Valley venture investor Naval Ravikant's *Curate People* podcast.
I hope this helps.
4 Things Founders Should Never Delegate
​
Venture investor Vinod Khosla once said, "The team you build is the company you build." While business may appear on the surface to be a competition of technology, its essence is a "talent acquisition game" to secure the best talent. Founders are entrusted with four core missions that determine the outcome of this game, and these cannot be delegated to anyone else: hiring, fundraising, strategy, and product vision.
​
Of these four missions, recruitment is by far the most important. The company's early members are not merely personnel; they are the company's DNA itself. An ideal early team should consist of highly skilled individuals who possess genius-level capabilities, act proactively, have low self-esteem, are diligent, and possess exceptional abilities. Since the founder cannot supervise everything individually, the ability to manage oneself is essential.
The moment hiring is outsourced or someone else makes hiring decisions without the founder's direct approval, the company slips out of the founder's control.
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