mobilenatives.io
“I kept giving them feedback. They kept delivering the same thing.”
They didn’t have a dev problem.
They had a context problem.
The best devs don’t just listen.
They translate.
That’s how you build momentum.
“I kept giving them feedback. They kept delivering the same thing.”
They didn’t have a dev problem.
They had a context problem.
The best devs don’t just listen.
They translate.
That’s how you build momentum.
It’s about chemistry.
I’ve seen teams slow down after hiring one technically solid dev.
Wrong communication style.
Wrong energy.
Wrong instincts.
Bad culture fit doesn’t always look like drama.
It looks like drag.
It’s about chemistry.
I’ve seen teams slow down after hiring one technically solid dev.
Wrong communication style.
Wrong energy.
Wrong instincts.
Bad culture fit doesn’t always look like drama.
It looks like drag.
The first can design beautiful systems.
The second keeps you alive long enough to matter.
At seed stage, you don’t need an architect.
You need someone who knows what not to build.
The first can design beautiful systems.
The second keeps you alive long enough to matter.
At seed stage, you don’t need an architect.
You need someone who knows what not to build.
Sounds harmless.
But if that’s their top priority in a startup, you're in trouble.
You don’t need perfectionists.
You need product thinkers who can ship clean enough.
Sounds harmless.
But if that’s their top priority in a startup, you're in trouble.
You don’t need perfectionists.
You need product thinkers who can ship clean enough.
Either a dev feels the weight of the roadmap or they don’t.
The ones who thrive in startups don’t wait for clarity.
They move with it.
They close gaps.
They unblock themselves.
That’s not experience.
It’s mindset.
Either a dev feels the weight of the roadmap or they don’t.
The ones who thrive in startups don’t wait for clarity.
They move with it.
They close gaps.
They unblock themselves.
That’s not experience.
It’s mindset.
None made it past round one.
Not because the bar was too high.
Because most were good at applying, not building.
That’s why I don’t wait for inbound.
I find the ones already shipping.
None made it past round one.
Not because the bar was too high.
Because most were good at applying, not building.
That’s why I don’t wait for inbound.
I find the ones already shipping.
They’re consistent.
• Clear priorities
• Tight loops
• No dead weight
• No hand-holding
• No overthinking
Speed doesn’t come from pressure.
It comes from direction.
They’re consistent.
• Clear priorities
• Tight loops
• No dead weight
• No hand-holding
• No overthinking
Speed doesn’t come from pressure.
It comes from direction.
If they want the perfect setup before shipping a feature, I ask why.
Quality matters. But context matters more.
Perfect code won’t save you, f no one wants what you built.
If they want the perfect setup before shipping a feature, I ask why.
Quality matters. But context matters more.
Perfect code won’t save you, f no one wants what you built.
Others ask the harder question first:
Should we even build this?
That second kind protects your roadmap, your team’s time, and your burn rate.
Startups don’t fail from bad code.
They fail from building the wrong thing.
Others ask the harder question first:
Should we even build this?
That second kind protects your roadmap, your team’s time, and your burn rate.
Startups don’t fail from bad code.
They fail from building the wrong thing.
Not because they’re unqualified, but because they’re not looking.
They’re already building, contributing, helping teams ship.
The best Flutter devs I’ve placed were already on my radar.
You just have to know where to look.
Not because they’re unqualified, but because they’re not looking.
They’re already building, contributing, helping teams ship.
The best Flutter devs I’ve placed were already on my radar.
You just have to know where to look.
They’re shipping side projects at midnight.
Debugging with strangers in Discord.
Writing code that speaks louder than any resume.
You won’t find them in a stack.
You find them by following the work.
They’re shipping side projects at midnight.
Debugging with strangers in Discord.
Writing code that speaks louder than any resume.
You won’t find them in a stack.
You find them by following the work.
You need someone who gets what you’re building.
Understands urgency.
Can run with a loose brief.
Makes smart tradeoffs under pressure.
That’s the kind of hire that moves the needle fast.
You need someone who gets what you’re building.
Understands urgency.
Can run with a loose brief.
Makes smart tradeoffs under pressure.
That’s the kind of hire that moves the needle fast.
“He looked great on paper. But everything was overbuilt.”
He defaulted to BLoC and Firebase before asking a single question.
It wasn’t about tools. It was about thinking.
The best devs don’t rely on patterns. They rely on judgment.
“He looked great on paper. But everything was overbuilt.”
He defaulted to BLoC and Firebase before asking a single question.
It wasn’t about tools. It was about thinking.
The best devs don’t rely on patterns. They rely on judgment.
What to ship now.
What to leave out.
Where to simplify.
What to ignore.
It’s not just speed.
It’s judgment.
Knowing what moves the product forward and what doesn’t.
What to ship now.
What to leave out.
Where to simplify.
What to ignore.
It’s not just speed.
It’s judgment.
Knowing what moves the product forward and what doesn’t.
They screen for safe answers instead of smart tradeoffs.
If you want someone who can build under pressure, skip the quiz.
Give them a product call and watch how they think.
That’s the real signal.
They screen for safe answers instead of smart tradeoffs.
If you want someone who can build under pressure, skip the quiz.
Give them a product call and watch how they think.
That’s the real signal.
They’re overcomplicating.
Scaling before users.
Over-architecting simple flows.
Solving fake problems with real time.
Simple ships faster.
Simple scales later.
Simple wins.
They’re overcomplicating.
Scaling before users.
Over-architecting simple flows.
Solving fake problems with real time.
Simple ships faster.
Simple scales later.
Simple wins.
But great teams ship on repeat.
They don’t chase inspiration.
They don’t overthink specs.
They win by removing chaos.
You don’t need a faster team.
You need a more predictable one.
But great teams ship on repeat.
They don’t chase inspiration.
They don’t overthink specs.
They win by removing chaos.
You don’t need a faster team.
You need a more predictable one.
Zero hires who could move fast.
The company didn’t learn who could ship.
They learned who could survive process.
Startups need less theatre, more proof of execution.
Want signal? Look at what they question, not just what they build.
Zero hires who could move fast.
The company didn’t learn who could ship.
They learned who could survive process.
Startups need less theatre, more proof of execution.
Want signal? Look at what they question, not just what they build.
They ask “Why build this at all?”
AI writes code.
Product engineers kill bad ideas, ship faster, and care if users actually use it.
The market pays 10x for builders who think like owners.
They ask “Why build this at all?”
AI writes code.
Product engineers kill bad ideas, ship faster, and care if users actually use it.
The market pays 10x for builders who think like owners.
Strong CV. Great interview.
3 weeks in, their lead was rewriting PRs and skipping lunch to keep up.
The code shipped. The team slowed.
The most expensive hire?
A mid-level dev you manage like an intern.
Strong CV. Great interview.
3 weeks in, their lead was rewriting PRs and skipping lunch to keep up.
The code shipped. The team slowed.
The most expensive hire?
A mid-level dev you manage like an intern.
They shipped proof.
→ GitHub
→ Live apps
→ Smart product calls
Résumés show history.
Startups need execution.
Still screening PDFs?
You’re missing the ones who move the needle.
They shipped proof.
→ GitHub
→ Live apps
→ Smart product calls
Résumés show history.
Startups need execution.
Still screening PDFs?
You’re missing the ones who move the needle.
They shipped proof.
→ GitHub
→ Live apps
→ Smart product calls
Résumés show history.
Startups need execution.
Still screening PDFs?
You’re missing the ones who move the needle.
They shipped proof.
→ GitHub
→ Live apps
→ Smart product calls
Résumés show history.
Startups need execution.
Still screening PDFs?
You’re missing the ones who move the needle.
1,080 were AI junk.
The result?
→ Wasted sprints
→ Burned morale
→ Investors asking questions
The best hires didn’t apply, they shipped.
If you’re still hiring from the pile, what’s it really costing you?
1,080 were AI junk.
The result?
→ Wasted sprints
→ Burned morale
→ Investors asking questions
The best hires didn’t apply, they shipped.
If you’re still hiring from the pile, what’s it really costing you?
2% of inbound apps lead to interviews.
Top talent doesn’t apply.
They ship in public.
They get referred.
Still relying on inbound?
You’re behind.
Where did your last great hire come from?
2% of inbound apps lead to interviews.
Top talent doesn’t apply.
They ship in public.
They get referred.
Still relying on inbound?
You’re behind.
Where did your last great hire come from?
Legacy doesn’t matter. Adaptation does.
What killed them?
→ Networks (LinkedIn)
→ Speed (Indeed)
→ Fit (Niche platforms)
The best hire I made last month came from a GitHub thread.
Where did yours come from?
Legacy doesn’t matter. Adaptation does.
What killed them?
→ Networks (LinkedIn)
→ Speed (Indeed)
→ Fit (Niche platforms)
The best hire I made last month came from a GitHub thread.
Where did yours come from?