Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

The HubSpot Culture Code

Avatar for dharmesh dharmesh
August 06, 2019

The HubSpot Culture Code

An inside peek at how we work and what we believe at HubSpot.

This is part culture manifesto, part employee handbook and part diary of dreams.

Visit us at www.hubspot.com/jobs

Avatar for dharmesh

dharmesh

August 06, 2019
Tweet

Transcript

  1. Culture is to recruiting as product is to marketing. Customers

    are more easily attracted with a great product. Talented people are more easily attracted with a great culture. Click to tweet this quote.
  2. Culture doesn’t just help attract amazing people, it amplifies their

    abilities and helps them do their best work.
  3. CULTURE HAPPENS. Whether planned or not, all companies have a

    culture. So why not create a culture we love?
  4. THEN NOW FOCUS Pension Purpose NEED Good Boss Great Colleagues

    HOURS 9-5 Whenever WORKPLACE Office Wherever TENURE Whole Career Whatever
  5. This document is part manifesto and part employee handbook. It’s

    part who we are and part who we aspire to be.
  6. This document is part manifesto and part employee handbook. It’s

    part who we are and part who we aspire to be. When something is still aspirational (not yet true) we try to call that out.
  7. THE CULTURE CODE 1. We commit maniacally to both our

    mission and metrics. 2. We look to the long-term and Solve For The Customer. 3. We share openly and are remarkably transparent. 4. We favor autonomy and take ownership. 5. We believe our best perk is amazing people. 6. We dare to be different and question the status quo. 7. We recognize that life is short.
  8. “Pursue something so important that even if you fail, the

    world is better off with you having tried.” TIM O’REILLY. Note: The O’Reilly conference room at HubSpot is named after Tim.
  9. OUR MISSION is to help organizations GROW. We want to

    transform how they attract, engage and delight their customers.
  10. We’re working to help the world GO INBOUND. It’s a

    more empathetic, human-friendly approach to marketing and sales. (It’s also demonstrably more effective.)
  11. Our commitment to our mission will help us earn the

    love of many. Our commitment to our metrics will help us earn the resources to further our mission. We are passionate about both.
  12. This dual personality of mission & metrics is uncommon. It’s

    partly what makes us DIFFERENT. And also kind of quirky, in mostly good ways.
  13. SFTC. Solve for the customer We don’t want to satisfy

    them, we want to delight them. Our goal is to help them succeed.
  14. WAIT. Does “Solve For The Customer” mean just giving more

    away for free? Wouldn’t that delight customers? NO. To delight customers in the long-term, we have to survive in the short-term. Because…
  15. HubSpot has a professional sales team. How do we ensure

    we SFTC? How do we know we’re doing it right?
  16. We’re on the right path as long as we sell

    to customers that we expect to delight.
  17. We’re on the right path as long as we sell

    to customers that we expect to delight. This is the key. Don’t sell customers we’re not justifiably confident we can delight.
  18. WE SHARE (ALMOST) EVERYTHING. We make uncommon levels of information

    available to everyone in the company (all 1100+ of us, and counting)
  19. WE HAVE THE MOST ACTIVE WIKI ON THE PLANET.* Examples

    of things we share and discuss: • Financials (cash balance, burn-rate, P&L, etc.) • Board meeting deck • Management meeting deck • “Strategic” topics • HubSpot Lore & Mythology (the funniest page on the wiki) *Unverified claim
  20. We protect information only when: It is legally required. Example:

    Information covered under a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) It is not completely ours to share. Example: Individual compensation data
  21. WAIT. ISN’T HUBSPOT PUBLICLY TRADED? Yes. We had our IPO

    in Oct 2014 [NYSE:HUBS] Usually, publicly traded companies can only share detailed information with a select group of “insiders”. This didn’t fit well with our culture. So…
  22. Everyone has open access to anyone in the company. It’s

    not an open door policy. It’s a no door policy.
  23. NOBODY HAS A CORNER OFFICE. Not because we work in

    circular buildings, but because nobody has an office.
  24. Transparency is about being open, not making decisions by consensus.

    We each have a voice, but not always a vote. TRANSPARENCY ≠ DEMOCRACY
  25. Just because someone made a mistake years ago doesn’t mean

    we need a policy or rule. WE DON’T PENALIZE THE MANY FOR THE MISTAKES OF THE FEW. We only protect against big stuff.
  26. Social media policy. Travel policy. Sick day policy. Buy a

    round of drinks at an event policy. Work from home during a blizzard policy. Our policy on all of these (and most other) things: USE GOOD JUDGMENT.
  27. team > individual Don’t solve for your personal interests to

    the detriment of the team. We loathe selfishness and love teamishness.
  28. customer > company When in doubt, favor solving for the

    customers’ interest over our own. Solving for customers’ interest is in our long-term interest too.
  29. Debates should be won with better data not bigger job

    titles. We disfavor pulling rank. It happens sometimes, but we don’t like it.
  30. smart, self-motivated people clear, compelling vision + = Shared understanding

    around mission and goals. The discretion to do what best moves us forward. sustainable, scalable growth
  31. To support transparency and trust, we have to be thoughtful

    about who we hire. It’s also important because…
  32. DISCLOSURE: HubSpot is not a utopian workplace. We are not

    a perfect fit for everyone. And not every amazing person is a great fit for us.
  33. What makes someone a great fit for HubSpot? What makes

    this the place they belong? What does it mean to be
 HUBSPOTTY?
  34. Wait. Doesn’t being humble mean lacking confidence? No. The very

    best people are self-aware and self-critical – not arrogant.
  35. When things go well, humble people tend to share the

    credit. When things go poorly, they tend to shoulder the responsibility.
  36. Goes beyond understanding another person’s perspective. Acts with compassion and

    respect for customers, partners and colleagues. EMPATHETIC.
  37. Stands out by being: Remarkably helpful. Remarkably resourceful. Remarkably effective.

    *h/t to Seth Godin REMARK∙ABLE. worthy of being remarked upon*
  38. EFFECTIVE PEOPLE: Are predisposed to action. They just do things.

    Have a sense of ownership. Are resourceful and always looking for leverage.
  39. WAIT. Aren’t some people just private? This is not about

    sharing personal information. (What happened in Vegas should stay in Vegas) This is about sharing knowledge generously.
  40. HUMBLE EMPATHETIC ADAPTABLE REMARKABLE TRANSPARENT We like people with heart.

    Yes, “heart” is a bit cheesy. We’re a bit cheesy sometimes.
  41. We don’t just believe in these values, WE BET ON

    THEM. We recruit, reward and release people based on these values.
  42. example: THE J.E.D.I. AWARD Awarded to those that just quietly

    and selflessly do the right thing and move us forward. (J.E.D.I. stands for “Just Effing Does It”)
  43. Compromising on culture fit is mortgaging the future. It’s reasonable

    to want to hire for skills and experience when the need is painfully acute. It’s reasonable. But, it’s also wrong. The interest rate on culture debt is crushingly high.
  44. We’re a team, not a family. We hire, develop and

    cut smartly so we have stars in every position. +1 We couldn’t have said it better ourselves, so we didn’t.
  45. WE HAVE A NO ASSES RULE. (Truth: We try hard

    not to hire them. But, they temporarily sneak in sometimes.)
  46. Don’t just hire to delegate. It’s tempting to bring people

    in that you can push off work you don’t have time for. Hire to elevate. Bring people in that can teach us something. Continually seek to raise our average.
  47. We want to be as proud of the people we

    grow as we are of the company we grow.
  48. THERE ARE TWO WAYS TO PROGRESS AT HUBSPOT. 1. Gain

    mastery as an individual contributor and make magic. 2. Provide spectacular support to those who are doing #1. Confession: We have a lot of first-time managers at HubSpot. We’re working hard to develop them.
  49. 94 To achieve mastery you must dive deep. Talent is

    not enough. Mastery requires intense commitment.
  50. HubTalks: Learning From Leaders Clay Christensen “Innovator’s Dilemma” Eric Ries

    “The Lean Startup” Patty McCord Former Chief People Officer, Netflix Deval Patrick Former Governor, Massachusetts These are private talks given at HubSpot.
  51. Unlimited Free Books Program. Request a book – it magically

    shows up in your Amazon Kindle account. No muss, no fuss. No expense sheets.
  52. Unlimited Free Meals Program. Take someone smart out for a

    meal. Learn something. Expense it. No approval needed. Use good judgment.
  53. Many companies start out being exceptional. As they grow, there

    is a dark, powerful force that pulls them towards the average. If we regress to the mean, we fail. It’s that simple.
  54. We don’t mind making mistakes, we do mind repeating them.

    Each mistake carries a lesson, we try to make sure we learn it.
  55. To think different we need to be different. We cannot

    all be the same. We want a diversity of backgrounds and beliefs. Confession: We want diversity, but do not yet have it. Still work to do.
  56. 110 Conventional wisdom suggests more is better. More bells, more

    whistles. We believe simplicity is a competitive advantage.
  57. WHY DOES COMPLEXITY CREEP IN? It is often the quick,

    seductive answer to short-term issues. Fighting for simplicity and looking to the long-term takes courage and commitment.
  58. 1 Like software… Organizations should be frequently refactored. Refactoring means

    to improve internal structure without changing external behavior.
  59. REFACTOR. • Stop generating unused reports. • Cancel unproductive meetings.

    • Remove unnecessary rules. • Automate manual processes. • Prune extraneous process. A handy acronym to remember these: SCRAP
  60. So it should be fulfilling and fun. Work is a

    big part of life. So work should also be fulfilling and fun. LIFE IS SHORT.
  61. It’s important to take care of yourself. LIFE IS SHORT.

    Healthy @ HubSpot initiative: • standing desks • healthy snacks • fitness room • spontaneous laughter
  62. Always be kind and compassionate. LIFE IS SHORT. We encourage

    candor and criticism. It helps us grow. But remember,
  63. And full of tough choices. Always take the high road.

    LIFE IS SHORT. The view is better and it’s much less crowded.
  64. THE HUBSPOT CULTURE CODE 1. Mission and metrics. 2. Solve

    For The Customer. 3. Be transparent. 4. Take ownership. 5. People > Perks. 6. Dare to be different. 7. Life is short, make it matter.
  65. Whether you were delighted or displeased, all feedback is appreciated:

    @dharmesh (one of our founders) reads every email.
  66. THANK YOU. Congrats for making it this far. Visit CultureCode.com

    to ask questions or join the open discussion. Yes, we’re hiring. Click the logo.