The Hiring Dilemma
Every founder reaches the same inflection point: you are working 70-hour weeks, turning down opportunities because you do not have the capacity, and the quality of your work is slipping because you are spread too thin.
But hiring is expensive. And risky. And irreversible (or at least very painful to reverse).
So you keep pushing. Another week. Another month. "I'll hire when revenue is more stable." "I'll hire when I find the perfect person." "I'll hire after we close this next deal."
Meanwhile, you are burning out, missing opportunities, and building a business that cannot scale past your personal capacity.
The truth is that most founders approach hiring with emotion and gut feeling. But hiring is a math problem. And once you see the math, the decision becomes much clearer.
The Cost of Not Hiring
Before calculating the cost of hiring, you need to calculate the cost of NOT hiring. This is the number most founders never compute.
Opportunity Cost
The question: What revenue or growth are you leaving on the table because you do not have capacity?
Calculate it:
- How many leads or opportunities did you turn away or delay in the past quarter because you did not have bandwidth?
- What is the average value of those opportunities?
- Multiply.
Example:
- Turned away 4 consulting engagements in Q4 (no capacity to deliver)
- Average engagement value: €25,000
- Opportunity cost: €100,000 per quarter
Most founders are shocked when they do this math. The opportunities you cannot pursue are often worth more than the salary you are hesitant to pay.
Quality Cost
The question: What is the cost of declining quality due to being overstretched?
This is harder to quantify, but very real:
- Client satisfaction drops because you are slow to respond
- Deliverables have more errors because you are context-switching constantly
- You lose a client because your competitor delivered faster
- Your product has more bugs because you are rushing
Example:
- Lost 1 client worth €30,000/year due to slow response times
- Spent 20 extra hours fixing quality issues caused by rushing (at your hourly rate of €150 = €3,000)
- Quality cost: €33,000 per year
Health and Sustainability Cost
The question: How long can you sustain 70-hour weeks before you burn out?
Research by the World Health Organization found that working 55+ hours per week increases the risk of stroke by 35% and heart disease by 17%. Beyond the health risk, burnout leads to poor decision-making, irritability, and eventual inability to function.
If you burn out, the cost is not just your health — it is the business. A solo founder who burns out kills the company.
Conservative estimate: If burnout forces you to take 3 months off, the cost is 3 months of lost revenue plus the cost of recovery.
Total Cost of Not Hiring
Add it up:
- Opportunity cost: €100,000/quarter = €400,000/year
- Quality cost: €33,000/year
- Burnout risk: Existential
The total cost of not hiring is almost always higher than the cost of hiring. Most founders just do not see it because opportunity cost is invisible.
The Cost of Hiring
Now let us calculate the actual cost of a hire.
Direct Costs
Salary: The obvious one. For a first hire at a tech startup, typical ranges:
- Junior developer/marketer: €35,000-€50,000
- Mid-level developer/consultant: €50,000-€70,000
- Senior developer/specialist: €70,000-€100,000
- Executive assistant/operations: €30,000-€45,000
Employer costs: Social security, insurance, benefits. In most European countries, add 25-40% on top of salary. In the US, add 20-30%.
Equipment and tools: Laptop, software licenses, desk/chair. Budget €2,000-€5,000 one-time.
Recruiting: If you use a recruiter, expect 15-25% of first-year salary. If you recruit yourself, factor in your time (easily 40-80 hours for a good hire).
The Ramp-Up Cost
A new hire does not produce full value on day one. The ramp-up period — the time from start date to full productivity — is a real cost.
Typical ramp-up times:
- Operations/admin role: 1-2 months
- Junior technical role: 2-3 months
- Mid-level technical role: 2-4 months
- Senior technical role: 1-3 months (faster because they bring expertise)
During ramp-up, the employee produces at 25-75% capacity while consuming 100% of their salary — and also consuming YOUR time for training, onboarding, and review.
Example ramp-up cost:
- Hire a mid-level developer at €60,000/year (€5,000/month)
- 3-month ramp-up at 50% productivity
- Cost: 3 months x €5,000 x 50% inefficiency = €7,500
- Plus your time: 5 hours/week x 12 weeks x €150/hour = €9,000
- Total ramp-up cost: €16,500
The Risk Cost
Not every hire works out. Industry data suggests that roughly 20-30% of hires do not work out within the first year. If a hire fails, you lose:
- Salary paid during the failed period (typically 3-6 months before you realize and act)
- Recruiting costs (to do it again)
- Your time (training, managing, terminating, recruiting again)
- Team morale impact
Expected risk cost: Probability of failure (25%) x cost of failure (€30,000-€50,000) = €7,500-€12,500
Total First-Year Cost of Hiring
For a mid-level hire at €60,000 salary:
- Salary + employer costs: €78,000 (60K + 30%)
- Equipment: €3,000
- Recruiting: €5,000 (self-recruited)
- Ramp-up inefficiency: €16,500
- Risk-adjusted failure cost: €10,000
- Total first-year cost: approximately €112,500
The Decision Framework
Now you have both numbers:
- Cost of not hiring: €433,000/year (opportunity + quality costs)
- Cost of hiring: €112,500/year
The math is clear in this example. But your numbers will be different. Here is the framework for making the decision:
The Revenue Threshold
Hire when the cost of not hiring exceeds the cost of hiring by at least 2x.
Why 2x and not 1x? Because the cost of hiring is more certain (you know the salary), while the cost of not hiring is an estimate (opportunity cost is inherently uncertain). The 2x buffer accounts for estimation error and provides a margin of safety.
Formula: If (Opportunity Cost + Quality Cost) > 2 x (Salary + Employer Costs + Ramp-Up), hire now.
The Runway Test
You must have enough cash to cover the hire for at least 6 months without any increase in revenue. This is your safety net.
Formula: Cash on hand > 6 x (monthly salary + employer costs)
If your monthly cost for the hire is €6,500 (including employer costs), you need at least €39,000 in the bank before you hire — assuming the hire will eventually generate or enable revenue, but protecting yourself if it takes time.
The Leverage Test
Not all hires create equal leverage. The best first hire is one that either:
Option A: Frees your time to do higher-value work. An operations hire that handles admin, scheduling, invoicing, and client communication can free 15-20 hours/week for the founder to do revenue-generating work.
Option B: Directly generates or enables revenue. A developer who can deliver client projects. A salesperson who can close deals. A consultant who can run engagements.
Calculate the leverage ratio:
- Hours freed x your hourly value: If the hire frees 15 hours/week and your revenue-generating rate is €150/hour, that is €2,250/week = €117,000/year in freed capacity.
- Revenue enabled: If the hire can deliver €150,000 in client projects per year.
Best first hires by leverage:
- Operations/admin (frees founder's time for revenue generation)
- Delivery/technical (enables more revenue through increased capacity)
- Sales (generates new revenue, but longer ramp-up)
- Marketing (builds pipeline, but longest time-to-value)
When NOT to Hire
The math does not always say hire. Do not hire if:
- Revenue is not recurring or predictable. If you had one great quarter but no pipeline, do not hire based on one quarter.
- You have not validated the role. Before hiring a full-time marketing person, try a contractor for 3 months to validate that marketing actually produces leads for your business.
- You are hiring to avoid doing something yourself. If you are hiring a salesperson because you hate selling, that is a motivation problem, not a capacity problem. Learn to sell first, then hire someone to scale what works.
- You cannot describe what success looks like in 90 days. If you cannot clearly define what this person should accomplish in their first 90 days, you are not ready to hire.
The Contractor Bridge
If you are not ready for a full-time hire but need capacity now, contractors offer a lower-risk intermediate step:
Advantages:
- No long-term commitment
- No employer costs (social security, benefits)
- Faster onboarding (experienced contractors ramp up quickly)
- Easy to end if it does not work
Disadvantages:
- Higher hourly rate (€80-€150/hour vs. equivalent of €35-€50/hour for full-time)
- No long-term loyalty or investment in your company
- Intellectual property complexity
- Not always available when you need them
The rule of thumb: If you need more than 20 hours/week of a specific capability for more than 6 months, a full-time hire is almost always more cost-effective than a contractor.
How Hyperion Consulting Helps With Hiring Decisions
At Hyperion Consulting, we help founders and CEOs make data-driven hiring decisions. Our advisory services include capacity analysis, cost modeling, and organizational design to ensure every hire maximizes your return on investment.
Struggling with the hire/no-hire decision? Book a free consultation to walk through the math for your specific situation.
