Hiring People Smarter Than You Sounds Cool… Until You Actually Try It!
I read this piece, and honestly, it hit harder than most “leadership advice” out there. Because on the surface, it sounds obvious: “Hiring people smarter than you.”
Everyone agrees.
Everyone posts it.
Everyone pretends they do it.
But in reality? Almost no one actually does.
Let’s Start With The Uncomfortable Truth
If you’re not hiring people smarter than you…Your company doesn’t get better.
It just gets bigger.
More people.
More meetings.
More noise.
Same level of thinking.
The Real Problem with Hiring People Smarter Than You
Hiring people smarter than you is easy to say. But incredibly hard to execute.
Why?
Because it directly attacks your ego.
Think About It
You built the company. You’re the “smart one.” You’re the decision-maker. And now you’re supposed to bring in someone who:
- Knows more than you
- Thinks better than you
- Might even replace you someday
Yeah… sounds fun.
This is Where Most Founders Lie to Themselves
They say, “I hire the best people.”
But what they actually mean is: “I hire people I’m comfortable being better than.”
Subtle difference. Massive impact. Because comfort hiring leads to:
- Safe teams
- Predictable thinking
- Average outcomes
And suddenly your company becomes…
A very efficient version of you. And that’s the ceiling. Because a company cannot outgrow the thinking of its leader…Unless the leader allows it to.
The Real Challenge (no one talks about this)
How do you hire someone better than you…In something you don’t even understand? That’s the paradox. You’re hiring people smarter than you in a domain where you’re not the expert.
What Do Most People Do?
They default to:
- Credentials
- Past companies
- Fancy resumes
Because those are easy proxies. But proxies don’t build great teams.
What Actually Matters?
From what I’ve seen (and painfully learned): You’re not hiring for: “Is this person better than me?”
You’re hiring people smarter than you for: “Does this person raise the standard of thinking in the room?”
Then Comes The Hard Part
Even if you hire great people…You still have to let them operate.
This is where most leaders fail.
They hire smart people…And then:
- Micromanage them
- Override decisions
- “Just tweak things a bit.”
Basically: Hire A-players → Treat them like B-players
Which defeats the entire purpose. Because hiring better people only works if you let go. And that’s terrifying. Because now:
- You’re not the smartest in the room
- You’re not making every decision
- You’re not in control of everything
So what are you?
That’s the identity crisis of leadership
When you stop being the “doer”…You have to become:
- The context setter
- The decision filter
- The person who decides what matters
Not how everything is done.
The Satire Writes Itself (Again)

Founders say: “I want people better than me.”
Also founders: “Why didn’t you do it exactly the way I would have?”
Let me make this practical.
If you truly want to hire better than you:
- Hire for strengths you don’t have
- Ask questions where you don’t know the answer
- Be okay with feeling slightly insecure in interviews
If you feel completely comfortable…You’re probably hiring wrong.
And one more thing (important)
Hiring better people doesn’t reduce your importance. It changes it.
Because now your job is: Not to be the smartest. But to build a team where: Smart people do their best work.
My Takeaway

Most companies don’t fail because of a lack of talent. They fail because: Leaders couldn’t handle talent.
Final Thought
If you’re always the smartest person in the room…You’re not leading. You’re bottlenecking.
Also, just saying—
If your team never challenges you…You didn’t hire well. You hired safely.
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