Is Experience as a Founder good to get a corporate job?
After spending the last few years building an AI startup within a corporate setup—navigating ambiguity, owning end-to-end execution, wearing multiple hats—I’m now stepping into the job market.
But here’s the catch:
When you apply as a “founder,” even within a structured organization, it often raises eyebrows more than interest. Was it just a title? Was it too niche? Was it too independent to translate into team-based environments?
I’m curious:
How do hiring managers and recruiters truly view startup-founder experience—especially when it’s grown inside a corporate ecosystem?
Does it count as real leadership and product-building, or does it get filtered out for not fitting a traditional mold?
Open to thoughts, reflections, or even pushback.
#careerquestions #startupexperience #ai #jobsearch #founderjourney
Replies
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I think it could be but I am a little bit "sceptical" about the status. Some founders are too dominant and won't want to fulfill a request from above if they think differently about it. Personally, I see founders as having a bit of a problem with authority, which is why they became founders in the first place, But maybe I am wrong. :D
It depends on the employer.
I'm the President of a tech company with 200 employees and I've done a lot of hiring. I've found that people who come from entrepreneurial backgrounds tend to think much more holistically.
With a typical employee, I tell them to solve a problem. They'll try to do what they think I'm asking and usually create something that requires several iterations of feedback for them to fully deliver.
Entrepreneurs, however, tend to get it right the first time. They are used to running a business from all angles and solving real problems. So when you ask them for something, they understand the ask behind the ask and make sure the problem is solved or the task is accomplished in its entirety.
They typically also hold a higher standard. I've found regular employees with higher standards tend to have long write-ups and over-explain things.
Former entrepreneurs are much more punchy communicators. Here's the point.
So it all comes down to the perspective of the employer, but on average, I've had much better experiences hiring former entrepreneurs than general employees.