Daniel Robbins interviews Deepali Vyas about the real reasons people get put on performance improvement plans, how founders can diagnose misalignment before it becomes a firing decision, and how CEO and C-suite profiles must evolve as companies scale. Deepali shares behind-the-scenes insight into executive hiring dynamics, including the power networks that shape boards and why women founders can face different patterns of removal. The episode closes with a clear view of what’s next: portfolio careers, fractional expertise, and a workforce increasingly driven by leverage, skill, and distribution.
Key Discussion Points
Deepali reframes PIPs as a symptom of misalignment: wrong role, wrong stage, wrong manager, or wrong pressure profile, and argues the real leadership question is “where would this person win.”
She defines “talent market fit” as the match between a person’s wiring and the company’s current stage and constraints, and warns founders to ask, “did the person make the logo or did the logo make the person.”
Deepali explains how CEO needs evolve at inflection points, using the Uber search as an example of needing institutional process and maturity once a company outgrows founder-led chaos.
On AI, she lays out level one, level two, level three adoption and says most companies are missing level two, the workflow layer where the real ROI lives, which is why layoffs get justified as “AI” while productivity gains lag.
She predicts the rise of the portfolio career: high-skill talent stacking experience, then shifting into fractional advisory, consulting collectives, and multi-income expertise that disrupts traditional firms.
Takeaways
Performance is contextual, and “fire fast” is often the wrong move; diagnose capability, energy fit, autonomy fit, and stage fit before assuming someone is the problem.
Hiring the “best” résumé is risky if the environment that created their success is not the environment you have, so founders must interview for pressure profile, ambiguity tolerance, and stage readiness.
The VC and board power dynamic still shapes outcomes, especially for women founders, and structural change requires more women check writers and support beyond seed into Series A and later stages.
The future of work is shifting from survival and status to optionality and identity, and the winning model becomes leverage plus skill plus distribution, not tenure.
Closing Thoughts
This Founder’s Story conversation turns hiring and “future of work” from buzzwords into a practical operating system for founders. Deepali Vyas leaves listeners with a clear message: build teams for fit, not prestige, and design organizations for the reality of how talent wants to work now, not how it worked ten years ago.
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.