Most Series A–C teams slow down because their execution capacity is exceeded — not because they lack talent.
Execution capacity is not headcount.
It’s the system’s ability to absorb decisions, clarify ownership, and turn intent into action without constant founder intervention.
Adding people doesn’t automatically increase capacity.
When roles, decision rights, and success criteria are unclear, every new hire increases coordination overhead and reduces speed.
Senior hires don’t fix broken execution systems.
They amplify ambiguity, opinion load, and decision friction when execution capacity is already stretched.
“Almost-right” candidates and hiring uncertainty are signals.
They indicate that the system can no longer support decisive hiring — not that candidate quality suddenly dropped.
When execution capacity is addressed first, hiring becomes obvious.
Fewer hires create more leverage, decisions move faster, and founders finally get out of hiring mode.
About the author
Olga Fedoseeva is the Founder of UnitiQ, a talent acquisition and People Projects partner for Tech Startups across EU, UKI, and MENA.
She works with founders in Fintech, AI, Crypto, and Robotics to prevent mis-hires before they compound — restoring execution momentum and protecting teams from quiet burnout.