I had a phone interview last week with the VP of
Products at a startup in SF. They’ve got an interesting product—predictive
suggestions for sales reps, using big data analytics. But they really wanted
someone with deep Agile experience, and I’ve only used the waterfall
methodology, although I’ve taken a course and got Certified Scrum Product
Owner (CSPO) certification from the Scrum Alliance.
The VP and I got along well; he’s an Aussie, so
that was pretty easy. And I made my case for understanding the principles of
Scrum, and how impressed I am with their product—which is true, because it’s
applying artificial intelligence algorithms to the applications side of Big
Data (one of the über-buzz words in software these days, along with Mobile), and they’ve placed heavy emphasis on the user experience (UX), which is one
of my major focal points. (Seriously—there’s a lot of software out there with
completely crap UX.)
Well, the short version of this story is that the VP
sent me a very nice thanks-but-no-thanks email—in a ten-person company, they
have to choose their additions carefully, and solid Agile experience is key at
this point, etc.
I’ll admit to being ambivalent about this turn-down.
A ten-person startup in SaaS effectively means ten men, probably most under the
age of 35. Ten also means that the health insurance they offer is going to be
crap—high deductible, high-copay, low coverage; this is because they’re limited
to Anthem as a provider of small-group insurance. Other benefits will also be
sketchy.
This company is a couple of years old, but it’s
still seeking angel funding; they have one customer, in Japan. And they’ve
outsourced their development…to Bolivia.
Additionally, they’re in downtown SF, a minimum
two-hour each way commute from Sunnyvale and more than $300 per month.
Still—it was an interesting solution. I think I’ll
submit a CV to their primary competitor.
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