Maybe that part was referring to "entire teams." I.e. if we are going to keep an entire team intact, rather than pick a few people, then they better make a huge impact.
Does recruiting a whole team from another company actually works? I wonder if it is common practice for startups that come and go to move entire dev teams like they do in the show "Sillicon Valley" in Season 5.
Never witnessed it in person but
I can see the appeal of hiring a team of people who hopefully have a degree of trust and cohesion over a fresh team of strangers. Downsides might be that the team has baggage or the team as a whole fails to integrate into the wider culture
It's not entirely uncommon to acquire a small company (2-15) as an acqui-hire. I've seen it work well, and I've seen it work poorly. It generally works well when the acquired product is entirely abandoned.
I don't know about recruiting, but I know of at least three groups I've worked with (at different companies) that have indeed migrated together
Easily the most effective people I've seen at any of the organizations. It's been interesting as an outsider to watch
edit:
The peer comment from 'djtango' is on the mark in regards to fitting with the wider culture.
These groups are effective, but they also cause waves. It can be crazy when it's a unified team holding a position instead of newbies being steamrolled by status quo
Reading about this, it seems that Automattic is trying to revive Tumblr (which was severely mismanaged in Verizon/Oath days), not for WordPress or other ventures. Good luck to them, but I fear that the ship has already sailed.
Eh, it doesn't seem like a bad time to try it, honestly. There's a clear market for things which are quite like twitter but not actually twitter, suddenly, and Tumblr is squarely in the category of things which are quite like twitter (arguably, a lot of twitter was heavily inspired by Tumblr in the first place; I believe it had a reblog/retweet mechanism, likes, and hashtags, before Twitter did).
I think this is less _visible_ because Tumblr's basic UX is so unlike Twitter's, but there's a lot of functionality crossover.
Tumblr's only major problem was policy and the drive for ever-more ad impressions to please investors. Automattic could pay off what they spent on Tumblr by passing a hat around at one of their meetups, and they eased up on the policy. A lot of people really liked Tumblr, and it fills a lot of gaps that nothing else really fits. Automattic has enough trust from their handling of WordPress that people are trickling back in.
Culturally, Tumblr solves the problem of blogs where it's hard not to feel like a post is wasted if it's not a big, serious article. Tiny posts, images, links, and goofs get around just as well as big, serious posts. It solves in one platform what the fediverse is trying to solve with an awkward amalgam of Write.as, Pixelfed, and Mastodon. It might get there with a few years of iterations, but Tumblr is there today if you can stand a centralized platform. They at least let you use your own domain, unlike Twitter.
Very cool. I think whole teams got laid off at Twitter - DEI, human rights, ethical AI, social good, coms and more. Be great if they could find a home at automattic still as a team
That's smart move imho. Usually engineers and other people that worked at Twitter went through a very strict hiring process. So hiring them is equal (usually) to hiring very skilled and smart people.
I think this is a clever talent funnel. These individuals will obviously still be vetted and interviewed, but it feeds on the ongoing manipulation of, “if you worked in big tech you’re exceptional and deserve special treatment.”
What if I pretended to be an ex-twitter employee? How will they vet this as they aren't exactly going to get references from people when almost the entire company has been gutted.
[+] [-] josefresco|3 years ago|reply
OOOOOf. Big miss to create contrast from Elon there Automattic.
Don't get me wrong, I love Automattic and WordPress is my jam but boy am I disappointed they bungled the messaging here.
If I'm an engineer escaping a tyrant with unrealistic expectations, I certainly don't want to join another company... with unrealistic expectations.
If you increase Automattic's revenue by 10x you deserve to OWN Automattic.
[+] [-] francisofascii|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dzab|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] meldyr|3 years ago|reply
It seems they only hire people that can increase there revenue from 65 million to 650 million dollar.
That is not hiring or worth a blogpost.
[+] [-] soganess|3 years ago|reply
> Elon: You are either okay with "hardcore" wage theft or out on your butt.
> Automattic: Wow, isn't Elon the worst! Come work for us. All we need is that you grow our past-its-prime blogging platform 10x.
Forgot Charlie Brown, y'all are being treated like the football. I'm sorry, you deserve better.
[+] [-] manv1|3 years ago|reply
Catmull's team did it with Disney Animation - they took low performers and made them high performers with a better process.
However, you have to start with a process that works. Does automattic have a process that works?
10x revenue isn't hard if you're going from $1 to $10. Going from $10 to $1000 is harder. Going from $1,000 to $10,000 is even harder, etc.
A team of engineers can't go to 10x by themselves. It doesn't work that way.
[+] [-] leogout|3 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon_Valley_(TV_series)
[+] [-] djtango|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hayst4ck|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bravetraveler|3 years ago|reply
Easily the most effective people I've seen at any of the organizations. It's been interesting as an outsider to watch
edit: The peer comment from 'djtango' is on the mark in regards to fitting with the wider culture.
These groups are effective, but they also cause waves. It can be crazy when it's a unified team holding a position instead of newbies being steamrolled by status quo
[+] [-] marjann|3 years ago|reply
yes, it is called company acquisition
Buy a great team and kill the product.
[+] [-] poliuk|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] surewe|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] zinekeller|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rsynnott|3 years ago|reply
I think this is less _visible_ because Tumblr's basic UX is so unlike Twitter's, but there's a lot of functionality crossover.
[+] [-] Kye|3 years ago|reply
Culturally, Tumblr solves the problem of blogs where it's hard not to feel like a post is wasted if it's not a big, serious article. Tiny posts, images, links, and goofs get around just as well as big, serious posts. It solves in one platform what the fediverse is trying to solve with an awkward amalgam of Write.as, Pixelfed, and Mastodon. It might get there with a few years of iterations, but Tumblr is there today if you can stand a centralized platform. They at least let you use your own domain, unlike Twitter.
[+] [-] onphonenow|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ALittleLight|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] joegahona|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sys_64738|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wheresmycraisin|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] davide_v|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Waterluvian|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|3 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] stjohnswarts|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tbyehl|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Dave3of5|3 years ago|reply
[+] [-] snowwrestler|3 years ago|reply
See for example this dust-up about Apple:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2022/02/10/apple-a...
[+] [-] rhaway84773|3 years ago|reply
If they are concerned about vetting, paystubs and official bsckgroune checks are much better ways to go.
[+] [-] s1artibartfast|3 years ago|reply
This is the same way companies check for dual employment.
Companies like ADP/Equifax provide services that will confirm past and current employment, income, ect.
[+] [-] T3RMINATED|3 years ago|reply
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