The response to my last post made one thing clear: the best talent wants to work at companies that treat them right. I commit to showing up for my team at every juncture. If you’re looking to join a values‑based company, read on 👇 I’m hiring three foundational roles to help define how our startup is built: 1. Product Engineer → Craft + taste. Teach AI to ship beautiful, reusable frontends that make the web feel alive. You love design systems, Tailwind, and Next.js. 2. Applied AI Engineer → You want to push the frontier of what AI can actually do. You're obsessed with building models that reliably hit the bar for real customer problems. 3. Chief of Staff → My right hand. A force in ops who’s down to run every function as we scale. Be my body double with customers + business, then grow into leading the biz side. If you want values + outsized impact + true product ownership, DM me.
Michelle Lim
Michelle Lim29.7.2025
I was founding engineer, like my friend Prem. This is how I think about the founder-employee social contract, now that I’m a founder. Founders must recognize that financial scales are wildly different between ourselves and employees. For example, when I joined a company as first engineer, I had to pay five figures just to early exercise all my equity. I was a new grad, and any salary bump was game-changing. In contrast, a founder with a few years of career experience typically has more savings and doesn't have to pay to obtain their equity. In big acquisitions, liquidation for a founder can be the difference between being a billionaire and a very rich millionaire. For an employee it’s the difference in whether their student loans are paid out, whether they can rent a bigger apartment, or whether they can become a homeowner. Founders hold the cards in acquisitions and we should advocate for employees to be paid out. Employees are a privilege. They are betting their career and wealth on us. We have to honor that and look out for our people.
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