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The great thing about heading your own startup is that you get to handpick your own people. The daunting thing about heading your own startup is that you have to handpick your own people. There鈥檚 no HR department to hold your hand, you have to be familiar with your labor laws and regulations, and then there鈥檚 managing who you鈥檝e hired.

贵辞谤迟耻苍补迟别濒测,听SparkUp聽is here to guide you on the road to business success. (Just don鈥檛 forget us when you get there.) And if you weren鈥檛 there to attend the Spark Series last October 25 at the UP School of Economics, don鈥檛 worry. We鈥檙e coming to more schools soon with more insightful topics. But for the mean time, here鈥檚 the rundown of what happened and what we can learn from stellar heads of Filipino startups on how to manage your future party.

贵辞谤听, hiring starts early. 鈥淗ow did I start my first hiring? I started with interns and students,鈥 Refundo said during the Spark Series. 鈥淭he most important employees in my company are still students.鈥

Sure, students don鈥檛 come with training and experience, but Refundo made that work to his advantage. 鈥淭he good thing about hiring interns is that once you get them on board they become independent,鈥 he explained. 鈥淎nd when you train people well, you can trust them.鈥 That cuts off from the stress of having to do everything by yourself as the head of your company. You can delegate tasks to the people you can trust, which makes life less stressful for you later on.

Your employees can and will still make mistakes, he admits. Again, not exactly a bad thing, since that鈥檚 a natural part of working with human beings. 鈥淓mployees need the freedom to be creative and the freedom to make mistakes,鈥 Refundo said. 鈥淎s long as they understand that a mistake is made they can rectify it later on.鈥

Meanwhile, Dindo Marzan, managing director of Voyager Innovations, the digital innovations arm of PLDT and Smart, advises budding startup founders to stick to their PEEPS: People, Education, Experiment, Pivot/Perish/Persevere, and Solution.

鈥淐hoose the right people with the right attitude,鈥 Marzan explained the first P, adding that it isn鈥檛 always about qualifications and educational attainment. Sometimes it鈥檚 about personality. 鈥淎s an investor I would rather invest on a person who knows his stuff and can keep a low profile.鈥

And then there鈥檚 education, which he said has to be continuous, especially with how quickly technology develops nowadays. 鈥淪ometimes you need to unlearn because either your business has been disrupted or things have changed,鈥 Marzan said. Related to quick changes are Experimentation, and the second set of P鈥檚. Experimentation means doing constant testing of your product. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e creating a product, you better test your RAT (riskiest assumption test),鈥 he added. And after that, to cope with the changing times, you to decide if you have to pivot your company to a better position, perish and accept defeat, or persevere and go through with what you鈥檙e already doing.

In the end, 鈥渋t always boils down to the solution. Identify the pain point and find the solution,鈥 he said, on how to make a successful startup business.聽-Lucia de Guzman


Hastings Holdings, a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a stake in聽大象传媒聽through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

Catch more informative talks as SparkUp continues its Spark Series caravan across Metro Manila鈥檚 top colleges and universities. Like our聽