The Handy Culture Deck provides an inside look at the uniquely Handy company and culture we are building to achieve our mission. It outlines the things we believe at Handy and the ways we try to live up to them.
Interested joining the team at Handy and changing the world? Visit handy.com/careers.
The document provides an overview of Patreon's company culture. It discusses the company's mission of funding creators and creating a fulfilling workplace. It outlines 7 core behaviors including putting creators first, being an energy giver, candor, moving fast, seeking learning, respecting time, and fixing issues. It also covers expectations for transparency, manager roles in coaching teams, and a commitment to diversity and inclusion. The overall summary emphasizes Patreon's focus on creators and teammates through its cultural values and behaviors.
Electrolux overarching purpose is to shape living for the better by reinventing taste, care and wellbeing experiences, for more enjoyable and sustainable living around the world.
The Handy Culture Deck provides an inside look at the uniquely Handy company and culture we are building to achieve our mission. It outlines the things we believe at Handy and the ways we try to live up to them.
Interested joining the team at Handy and changing the world? Visit handy.com/careers
This document discusses the culture at Uberflip, emphasizing that employees should feel valued, the work should be relevant, and a consistent experience is important. It outlines Uberflip's core values of being hustlers who prioritize culture over revenue and create great customer experiences. Employees are encouraged to feel valuable by providing ideas, stay relevant by understanding customer needs and innovating, and ensure consistency by always delighting customers. The goal is for Uberflip to be an empowering and collaborative workplace where the work experience is optimized, like the experiences they provide to customers.
Our culture is much more than we could ever put into a group of slides, but we did our best to pack as much of it into this Culture Code. Flip through to get a glimpse into what our agency is all about.
At Asana, we put a lot of time, energy, money, and most importantly, heart, into our company culture. That's why we recently updated our 2014 Culture Code deck.
In 2011, Allegory – a small marketing firm with a passion for building brands – wanted to buy the URL www.CultureCode.com. It’s where we planned to launch products and services that would help organizations uncover their unique culture by identifying their underlying patterns, strengths and passions. The URL was taken.
Fast forward four years and we launched our system of tools under the name CultureTalk (www.culturetalk.com). Born at the intersection of culture and communications, our #CultureCode speaks both to our big vision of helping individuals and organizations realize their true potential and from the heart of little agency where it all began.
Hootsuite's Manifesto: Building a Social RevolutionHootsuite
This document is a resource for all Hootsuite employees. We give this to each new team member who joins us. Hootsuite's Manifesto contains our core principles, some stories of our history and culture, and a special Peepsbook.
Buffer culture 0.6 (With a change to Be a No Ego Doer)Buffer
This is the 6th evolution of the cultural values we try to live to at Buffer. Read more about our values and approach to business at http://open.bufferapp.com
These are the cultural values that RedMartians live every day in order to become the most customer-centric company in the world and the best place to work.
The document outlines the culture at GiveForward, including their mission to empower compassion, vision to be the first place people turn in difficult times, and core values of cultivating compassion, taking fun seriously, authenticity, being CEO of your position, and being first. It emphasizes that culture and living the mission, vision, and values are what attract passionate people and drive business success through an inspired team, product, and customers.
The document summarizes the culture and values of LinkedIn. It describes LinkedIn's culture as one focused on transformation, with three types of transformation: of self, of the company, and of the world. It emphasizes values like integrity, collaboration, humor, and results. The document also outlines LinkedIn's operating principles that guide the company, which include putting members first, valuing relationships, demanding excellence, and taking intelligent risks.
This is the biggest change to Buffer's core values since they were first written down in 2013. For more about our values head over to www.buffer.com/values and read more about our approach to business at open.buffer.com.
Why our executive team didn't write our culture deck, on Harvard Business Review: http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/06/why_executive_teams_shouldnt_write.html
Is corporate culture really about organizational structure and incentives? What the company’s founders and executive team is on a mission to accomplish? How those same people ideally want their culture projected to investors? Or is company culture more about who people are and how they interact – what commonalities they share, and how they work and play?
Genuine culture is organic, not imposed. It’s why our executive team did not write our culture deck. Culture is what keeps people at Nanigans – not our mission statement or how our teams are structured. Our culture deck is a guide for company hiring and fit, as much as it is a signature of what’s made us so successful to date.
Culture is something we take pride in at LinkedIn. As the collective personality of our organization, it sets us apart, defines who we are and shapes what we aspire to be.
Hundreds of companies have defined their unique cultures on SlideShare as part of the Culture Code campaign. We thought it was important for LinkedIn to join in this effort; we want everyone, including our current and our future employees, to know exactly what it’s like to work here.
Pop Inc. is a company that aims to support creators by giving them tools to monetize their work across different creative outlets. Their mission is to fulfill their responsibility of ensuring creators are getting paid. They outlined their core behaviors which are Creatives First, Over Serve, Learn Fast, Open Communication, and Respect Time. These behaviors are important for building their culture and individual adherence to them leads to more ownership and responsibility. They operate in a transparent way and share key information publicly so everyone has context to make good decisions. They also strive to build an inclusive and diverse team to best serve the diverse community of creators. They are mindful of spending and only invest in things crucial for success while not impacting employee happiness. Their
The Socious Way Culture Code: How We Work & What We ValueSocious
Get a peek into the culture and beliefs at online community software company, Socious. Learn about the words we live by and aspire to as we serve our customers businesses, association, & user groups) and each other.
These slides are a living document. They contain the values conveyed by a company’s people and their actions.We created The Socious Way because we want to work for a company that we love. We are sharing our values to stand behind our brand, attract the best people to join our team (and keep them), and share our values with our customers and partners.
This code in only the beginning. It is the way that we live out these values in our leadership, words, and actions that make this document meaningful.
About Socious
Socious provide online community software and services that help organizations strengthen relationships with customers, members, partners, and employees.
Learn more at www.socious.com and follow us on Twitter at @SociousSoftware or @SociousSuccess (nonprofits).
ATTOLLO Culture Deck - Creating the future together. ATTOLLO
ATTOLLO's culture is in all that we do – our interactions, our relationships, what we expect from our company and what the company expects from us. Cementing this our culture deck and helps to keep us on track. #ateam #attollo #culture #culturedeck
This document provides a summary of a new employee's first 22 days at their job. It is written as a journal with notes from each day. The employee feels overwhelmed at first but starts to get more comfortable as they learn about the company culture, which values continuous learning, creativity, and an energetic collaborative environment. They begin to enjoy the job and feel like they are becoming part of the community.
This document outlines the culture, values, responsibilities, and mission of Scribewise. It describes a culture that aims to attract talented people by minimizing rules and encouraging risk-taking, collaboration, and learning from mistakes. The values discussed are intelligence, passion, and clientcentricity. Employees are expected to know their clients' businesses well, be responsive, organized, energetic, and care about clients on a personal level. The company is portrayed as being on a "quest" to make a difference for clients through challenging work and success. The mission is to strengthen customer connections and the vision is to be a content-first digital agency that helps clients succeed.
What's the spirit of your company? At Odoo, we know that a great and motivating atmosphere is the key! It can help employees to feel better and then be proud of working for your company!
Ever wonder what it’s like to work at the fastest growing tech startup in Europe? The Lesara Culture Code will give you a brief insight into our team, our values, our culture and how we are changing the fashion industry.
The document describes the founding of Thread by Kieran O'Neill and his co-founders. They had previously sold a successful company and were discussing their next venture over beers. They realized they were most fulfilled by working on ambitious problems with excellent teammates who shared their values. This inspired them to start Thread, focusing on an ambitious mission to reshape the clothing industry using stylists and AI, building an incredible team through rigorous recruiting practices, and upholding values of impact and excellence.
Culture code || Wandertrails People Operations || Indian StartupWandertrails
We seek to instill "A high performance culture, driving results and accountability, while ensuring agility & learning"
This document captures how we strive to do this through the ups and down, through thick and thin, through light and dark.
This document captures the Wandertrails Culture Code
The document outlines the culture code of New Breed, a marketing company. It emphasizes driving to unify marketing and sales, innovating and educating others, questioning things and driving positive change, embracing transparency and honesty, getting work done, turning metrics into action, and being awesome. New Breed's culture aims to attract great people by focusing on customer success, continuous self-improvement, and making data-driven decisions.
Our culture is the summary of who we are at meploy & what we value. It make us understand how we work together & treat each other.
This deck is our second edition and will be revised & updated during 2020.
AES helps you believe in better. This presentation is part manifesto and part employee handbook. It’s about who we are, and what we aspire to become (and we continue to work hard to get there).
Two companies, the Center for Sales Strategy and LeadG2, are merging. They share a culture focused on quality, integrity, and responsiveness. Employees are empowered to use their instincts rather than rigid rules. The companies exist to help other companies improve sales and marketing performance through training, tools, and tactics. Leaders emphasize building a strong sense of community and family within a fun and collaborative work environment.
This document discusses company culture at HubSpot. Some key points:
1) HubSpot believes culture is important for attracting talent and focuses on creating a culture employees love. They aim to be radically transparent, give autonomy, and focus on delighting customers over competitors.
2) HubSpot operates with a guiding goal of delighting customers. All decisions are evaluated based on how they support this goal. They also balance a focus on mission and metrics.
3) Employees are given significant autonomy and trusted to use good judgment. Policies emphasize flexibility and transparency over rigid rules. Results are prioritized over hours worked or location.
Culture evolves from a collective belief and core set of values, and there are 10 guiding principles we drive our business decisions with. Here they are:
This document introduces BCS Consulting, a management consultancy that works with clients in banking and financial services. BCS Consulting has deep domain expertise in areas like capital markets, retail banking, and risk management. They help clients deliver large-scale business and technology change initiatives to improve performance and address regulatory changes. BCS Consulting prides itself on its culture and believes in servant leadership, supporting employee careers and charities. They aim to be the biggest small management consultancy.
This document summarizes the mission and culture of Palo Alto Software. Their mission is to revolutionize how small businesses set goals and track performance by being the "Fitbit for Small Business." Their culture focuses on relying on data to test ideas and make decisions, solving problems for customers rather than focusing on their own success, being transparent in sharing information, giving employees autonomy over their work, being selective in hiring top talent, and valuing the community.
1) The document provides guidelines for anyone working with ALX, outlining the organization's values, mindsets, and practices needed to achieve its bold vision of developing 3 million African leaders by 2035.
2) Key values include doing hard things, having courage, humility, initiative and resilience. ALX believes in moving from scarcity to abundance by empowering frontline staff and continuous learning.
3) Employees are expected to learn through challenging experiences rather than training, and failure is seen as an opportunity to improve. The relationship with ALX is framed as an alliance to support employees' long-term growth.
Prognos health culture guide 2020 (June update)Bella Allen
This document outlines the culture guide of a company called Prognos. It discusses the importance of defining a company's culture proactively as the company scales. The culture is meant to guide decisions through alignment with principles and values rather than strict rules. The culture focuses on values like collaboration, courage, curiosity and enthusiasm. It also establishes a "Prognos world order" that prioritizes the company's mission, clients, company and employees. The culture aims to create an awesome team of amazing people through hiring the best talent and helping people grow as leaders.
This document provides information about Charity People, a recruitment consultancy that specializes in placing candidates within the charity sector. Some key details:
- Charity People was founded in 1990 and has placed over 30,000 people into new jobs within charities while maintaining their values of a consultative approach and understanding of the charity sector.
- They recruit for roles at all levels from all areas including fundraising, marketing, operations, and senior management.
- In addition to permanent hiring, they also assist with contract and temporary roles.
- The company emphasizes their collaborative approach, integrity, expertise within the charity field, and aim of having fun while making an impact.
Academic Writing Assignments adds Value to an Academic Landscape that makes information ℹ️ more valuable than just Letters but Threads that link the Vitality 🩸💧😱 of Commerce that's the Lifeblood of Business.
With Business Processes Efficiency that Stands at the Core of Functional Area's of Expertise to achieve RESULTS.
Portfolio - Muhammad Ikmal Fahmi Bin Che Mohamood (Ikmal Fahmi)FahmiMohamood
Ikmal Fahmi is a Malaysian entrepreneur. and a journalist at IF Reporter. In early 2023, he published his e-book called Explore Inner Self He won a grant worth RM 4500 in YSEALI Bootcamp 2022 which enabled him to organize Kau Okay Tak K.O.T Expo, a children mental health expo. In early 2024, he ventured into his news agency start-up called IF Reporter and founded IFG Technology, a cybersecurity firm in the same year. To further create a healthy political way, he came out with Akademi Parlimen Malaysia, a political education enterprise followed by IFC Property, a construction firm.
Discover the core principles and frameworks of Agile methodology in this comprehensive presentation by Mohamed Shebl. Designed for professionals and teams looking to adopt Agile practices, this presentation covers:Introduction to Agile: Understand what Agile is and how it helps teams deliver value efficiently.
Key Principles: Explore the four key values and twelve principles of Agile that prioritize flexibility, customer collaboration, and continuous improvement.
Benefits of Agile: Learn about the advantages of Agile, including flexibility, customer satisfaction, improved team collaboration, and early delivery.
Agile Frameworks: Get insights into popular Agile frameworks such as Scrum, Kanban, and Extreme Programming (XP).
The Scrum Framework: Detailed overview of Scrum roles, events, and artifacts to help you implement Scrum effectively.
Agile Artifacts: Understand essential Agile artifacts like the Product Backlog, Sprint Backlog, and Increment.
Agile Workflow: Step-by-step guide on planning, designing, developing, testing, reviewing, and releasing in Agile.
Agile Tools: Introduction to tools like JIRA, Trello, and Azure DevOps that facilitate Agile project management.
Getting Started with Agile: Delve into the world of Agile methodology with this in-depth presentation by Mohamed Shebl. "Agile Methodology In-Brief V1.1" provides a thorough exploration of Agile principles, frameworks, and practices, making it an essential guide for professionals seeking to enhance their project management approach.
Introduction to Agile:
Start with a clear understanding of what Agile is. Agile is an iterative approach to project management and software development that enables teams to deliver value to their customers faster and with fewer headaches. Unlike traditional project management methods that rely on a 'big bang' launch, Agile focuses on delivering work in small, consumable increments.
Key Principles of Agile:
Learn about the core values and principles that form the foundation of Agile methodology. Agile prioritizes individuals and interactions over processes and tools, working software over comprehensive documentation, customer collaboration over contract negotiation, and responding to change over following a plan. These principles guide Agile teams to work more efficiently and flexibly.
Benefits of Agile:
Discover the numerous benefits Agile offers, including:
Flexibility and Adaptability: Quickly respond to changes in the project environment.
Customer Satisfaction: Ensure continuous delivery of valuable software.
Improved Team Collaboration: Foster better communication and teamwork.
Early and Predictable Delivery: Achieve smaller and more frequent releases.
Continuous Improvement: Regularly reflect and enhance processes.
Agile Frameworks:
Explore popular Agile frameworks such as:
Scrum: The most widely used framework with defined roles, events, and artifacts.
Kanban: Focuses on visualizing the workflow and limiting work in progress.
2. The Handy culture has undergone several drafts and
revisions, as we’ve scaled from 5 to 50 to about 100
employees.
This is our attempt to write it down in a culture deck.
It represents part what we practice today and part what
we aspire to be.
We’ll continue to improve our culture and update this deck
as we learn more.
Always a work in progress
2
6. What We Do (So Far…)
Handy is disrupting the $400b home services market by connecting
customers with independent, local service professionals in a fast,
convenient and reliable way - at the tap of a button.
6
7. We seek to create value for both customers
and professionals; and in return we earn a piece
of the transaction.
7
Customers Professionals
8. 8
So, if that’s WHAT we do,
the question is, HOW do we do it…
and how do we do it in a way that’s
never been done before?
9. CULTURE.
Is the set of basic assumptions, beliefs,
learned behaviors, values and norms
shared among a company’s employees.
9
10. OUR CULTURE.
Describes the uniquely “Handy way”
of doing things, which is necessarily
different than other companies where
you’ve previously worked. The very fact
of what we do shapes who we are.
Need to be
11. You mean it’s not about the foosball table, the
company retreats, and the snacks?
Not really, but we like those things too.
11
12. THE HANDY WAY is defined by these eight
1. Embrace challenges
2. Support smart & passionate people
3. Today not tomorrow
4. Build for love
5. Growth always
6. Data beats opinion
7. Do more with less
8. Enjoy the journey
Things We Believe At Handy
12
13. 1. EMBRACE CHALLENGES
We believe we should be stretched to hit big goals.
To build something great, we will have to be
aggressive, and willing to make tough decisions.
Nothing worth doing is easy.
14. You
represent
this value
when:
● You say “yes” to new challenges and
make tough decisions without agonizing.
● You are inspired by big goals to think and
act big in order to achieve them.
● You break down complex problems into
manageable pieces and develop simple,
scalable solutions.
14
1. EMBRACE CHALLENGES
16. 16
One of the ways we embrace challenges
is by setting BIG goals.
17. 17
We set big goals not to be mean or impractical,
but because:
● Big goals force us to find ways to make radical and
significant improvements rather than incremental ones.
● If we are solving hard problems, that creates a competitive
advantage. If what we are doing is easy, a less talented
competitor can do the same and catch up to us.
19. 19
But challenging problems ≠ complicated solutions.
Simple, elegant, user-friendly solutions are often the best answer,
even if they don’t solve 100% of the problem.
And we’d rather solve 80% of a really hard problem,
than 100% of easy problems.
20. 20
We also know that in order to solve challenging
problems, we need to create the right environment
to succeed by:
● Providing better context for the decisions that are being made.
● Making sure we’re solving the right problems, not just the ones in
front of us.
● Communicating that failure is acceptable, and not to be feared,
if you recognize it fast, pick yourself up and learn from it.
We like new mistakes, not old ones.
These are all areas
where we are working
to improve.
21. 2. SUPPORT SMART & PASSIONATE PEOPLE
We believe in constantly raising the bar by hiring,
developing and supporting the smartest, most
passionate people in the world.
22. You
represent
this value
when:
● You care deeply about Handy’s success, and
inspire your team(mates) with your hard work,
excellence, enthusiasm and thirst for winning.
● You refer, and help recruit, other extraordinary
people who are excited by Handy’s mission, and
will live and breath Handy’s values all the way to
the finish line.
● You invest in your team(mates) and help them
succeed by being collaborative, asking questions
that stretch their thinking, and providing direct
and constructive feedback.
22
2. SUPPORT SMART & PASSIONATE PEOPLE
23. 23
When we first started Handy, we had the value:
“Recruit Smarter (than You).”
#wedidthemath,
←
and set about
recruiting the 5
smartest people who
believed in what we
were doing.
- Jim Rohn
25. 25
Today, we strive to not only recruit,
but also Support, empower, develop
and retain Smart & Passionate People.
26. 26
To us, Support smart & passionate people
doesn’t mean tons of free shit, zero conflict,
and short work hours.
The reality is: a) marketplace margins don’t support tons of
free shit, b) some conflict is good, and c) aggressive work hours help
us get more accomplished.
Instead, by Support smart & passionate people,
we mean that we strive to:
Help Each Other Be Great.
27. 27
We strive to support smart & passionate people by
doing 4 things:
● Creating the context for greatness.
● Rewarding above & beyond.
● Direct feedback.
● Intolerance for mediocrity.
We are always looking
to improve in these
areas.
28. 28
Creating the context
for greatness.
By setting vision, defining big goals,
and giving lots of ownership, freedom
and trust, we strive to create the context
for smart & passionate people to do their
best work and achieve amazing results.
MACRO-management
> micro-management
Sometimes, we mess up
and forget this equation.
We’re working on it ;-)
30. 30
Rewarding above & beyond.
We reward extraordinary performers by surrounding them with amazing
people, as well as providing them with new challenges, more responsibility,
and higher compensation.
Unlike many companies, we don’t have set career paths. We have incredibly
high standards and when those are exceeded, unexpected paths open up.
“But at some times and in some groups, there may not be enough growth
opportunity for everyone. In which case, we should celebrate someone for
leaving Handy for a bigger job we didn’t have available for them.”*
*This sentiment is borrowed from Netflix because it resonated with us, and didn’t think we could say it better.
31. 31
Direct feedback.
Everyone will struggle at one time or another in their role at Handy.
Duh! That’s because we are constantly being stretched to hit big goals.
To help people course-correct
and excel, we believe in
providing direct, honest and
actionable feedback. Feedback
comes real-time in meetings, in
annual reviews, and in 1 on 1s
with your managers. We do this
even at the risk of creating
conflict or hurting feelings
because it’s in the best interest
of personal and company
growth.
This is where
we’re aiming
33. 33
Intolerance for mediocrity.
To win, we need stars in every position. Handy’s leaders hire, develop and fire
on the basis of our values. Keeping team members around who are just
adequate, aka “B” players, risks driving away “A” players.
“A” players want to be surrounded by “A” players.
34. 34
The catch is that…
As a manager, if you have any humanity at all, this is muuuuch easier said
than done. When you hire and invest in someone, and they are not working out,
it’s difficult to swallow.
But keeping people around who are underperforming doesn’t do them, you or
their teammates any favors.
Instead, think about the success that person could be having elsewhere in the
right role and company for them, and then imagine the new, amazing person
you can recruit to fill their position at Handy.
36. 3. TODAY NOT TOMORROW
We work with urgency and believe moving fast is
one of our key advantages with the end goal of
always moving forward.
37. You
represent
this value
when:
3. TODAY NOT TOMORROW
● You make the hard decisions, find a path
forward, and repeat.
● You understand what is most impactful for our
business, and work intensely on moving those
projects forward.
● You strive to make things better today than they
were yesterday, not necessarily perfect in one
shot.
● You gain as much information as possible, but
avoid paralysis by recognizing when you have
sufficient data to move forward, and take
calculated risks.
37
38. 38
In this business,
speed matters.
We’re not a biotech and
we’re not a government agency
- our horizons for change are
much shorter.
Today not tomorrow is an
attitude that compels you to act
before it’s too late. It’s about
having a sense of urgency and
desire to get shit done.
39. 39
Compounding effect => the more we do
and grow today, the more we can accomplish
and grow tomorrow.
It can wait til tomorrow =>
Simple growth
Today not tomorrow
=> Compound growth
Time
Bookings
41. 41
survival today—not tomorrow.
What this means daily in practice:
If an email comes in and you’re about to enter the
elevator to go home, if you can answer at that
moment and unblock a junior team member or
make an important decision, take action then and
there. Avoid the mindset that “this email will still be
in my inbox tomorrow, so it can wait a day.”
—
If you can push yourself a bit more on a Thursday to
push code, knowing on Fridays we don’t push, then
do it. Don’t wait until Monday. Customers and pros
will be better off 3 days earlier.
—
If you are working on an data analysis, and can get it
done today rather than tomorrow, that means your
business partner can make a decision earlier which
can drive a policy or process change sooner.
Our
42. 42
We recognize that at times there are projects that require
longer arcs, that sometimes there are scenarios with
downside risk where a more measured approach is necessary.
However, we continue to believe, where possible, we should accomplish as much
as we can today.
Tomorrow is a new day, which promises even more new things we need to get
done. Our mission is enormous - the only way we’ll shrink the time it takes to get
there is by accomplishing more every day.
43. Today not tomorrow doesn’t mean:
Quality doesn’t matter. We should take pride in the quality of our output and
strive for creating an amazing product and service experience. But if what you’ve
completed so far is better than what’s on the site right now, push it. Don’t wait for
perfect. Over time, user feedback, iteration and course-correction will help us get
to perfect.
All tasks are equally urgent. Focus and prioritization are still required. We need
to prioritize working on those things that have the largest impact first, rather than
treating all tasks at the margin with equal urgency. This requires having proper
context and knowing what’s most important, self-discipline, and at times,
pushing back on your manager.
43
44. 4. BUILD FOR LOVE
We put heart into our work and strive to create an
experience that enhances customers’ and
professionals’ lives, while having a positive impact
on local communities around the world.
45. You
represent
this value
when:
4. BUILD FOR LOVE
45
● You empathize with our customers and pros,
and work hard to continually delight and
empower them.
● You listen to, and believe that, all user feedback
presents an opportunity to be a better company;
no feedback should be discounted.
● You represent the voice of our customers and
pros, and have the courage to speak up when
you feel their voice is being drowned out by
louder interests.
46. 46
We exist for our users: both customers and professionals.
If we don’t take care of them, someone else will.
Build for love means striving to create an amazing service experience that enhances our users’ lives by
solving a real need in a new way that’s materially better than how things used to be done.
47. 47
Build for love is a call to action that refers to every important
aspect of the entire Handy experience, not just the product.
● Customer journey: discovery → booking → payments → in-home service → customer
support → communications → ongoing bookings management.
● Pro journey: discovery → application → platform orientation → scheduling → performing the
service → professional support → communications → payments.
Customer support handling Email communications
Engineering Craftsman Wall
48. 48
Many companies delude themselves
into thinking they are loved.
SurveyMonkey surveyed 1,500
consumers and businesses to find
there’s a big disconnect between
how businesses perceive the
experience they’re building and how
consumers perceive the experience
they’re receiving.
At Handy, we understand we have a
long way to go to earning our
customers’ and pros’ love. We are just
scratching the surface of “useful.”
“Love” is where we’re headed.
49. 49
In other words, we don’t get it right every time.
When building the future, it’s rare to get it right the first time around. As a result,
there are bound to be unhappy customers and pros. Our aim is to make the most
important aspects of the customer and pro experience a bit better everyday.
We do this by working tirelessly and iteratively (Today not tomorrow), and by
listening to our customers and pros through: CX contacts, ratings, product usage,
social media, surveys, and feedback sessions.
51. But, Build for love doesn’t mean build every
requested feature.
Customers and pros will ask for lots of things. It’s our job to
prioritize building the most impactful things. Customers and pros
will only give you feedback on the old way of doing things or on
what you’ve already built. It’s our job to listen to their “need,”
not their “want,” and to build the future.
51
53. 53
Build for love also doesn’t
mean give more away for free.
While over time we seek to be the most affordable, efficient and flexible marketplace for
pros and customers, we recognize that bankrupt companies don’t delight and
empower customers or pros.
We also know it’s our responsibility to set policies that help govern the marketplace in
order to mitigate harmful user behavior. For example, we charge fees on late
cancellations. We do this not to make money, but because those behaviors harm the
experience for the other market participants.
So we build for love within the constraints of building
a long-term viable business and balancing the needs of
customers and pros, which are not always aligned.
54. 5. GROWTH ALWAYS
When faced with tough choices we will choose the
path that allows us to serve the most people in a
responsible way over the long term.
55. You
represent
this value
when:
5. GROWTH ALWAYS
55
● You understand that by building a bigger
platform we build a better platform for both our
customers and pros; because pros value bookings
and customers value availability, scale is the key
to a better experience for everyone.
● You take responsibility for Handy’s growth,
regardless of your role or department.
● You make decisions aimed toward
step-change, rather than incremental growth;
You do things that scale.
56. 56
Demand
Supply
To be successful in a marketplace
business, growth is a biological
imperative. Pros will go where there are
more customers. Customers will go where
there are more pros. At this stage in our
lifecycle, we should always be doing the
most impactful thing to achieve a step
change in our growth rather than polishing
what already exists at the margin.
Handy Flywheel →
When it comes to the Handy platform,
we believe BIGGER is BETTER.
58. 58
Wait a tick: Isn’t growth just
Marketing’s responsibility?
Nope: Every person on every
team at Handy is responsible
for Growth.
59. But Growth always doesn’t mean:
Growth without love. We understand that growing too fast at the cost of hurting the
customer or pro experience does not equate to a long term, viable business. Build for
love should ultimately be our long term growth strategy.
Growth at all costs. We don’t throw money away needlessly to acquire customers who
are not right for the platform; we look at cost of acquisition relative to customer lifetime
value. And we pay attention to our burn rate to ensure we are growing sustainably.
Over-expansion. Launching new markets or services too aggressively adds complexity
that is hard to manage at our current stage - new languages, new payment methods,
new use cases, etc. We know scale and liquidity in a given market is what benefits
customers and pros most. So for now, we want to go deeper in the markets we
currently serve, rather than spread ourselves too thin. Ultimately, however, we believe
an amazing service experience crosses verticals and borders, and will opportunistically
expand our scope.
59
60. 60
In the spirit of Growth Always, use this coupon code
to get 30% off your first home cleaning by Handy.
Code: CULTURE
Go to handy.com to book a home cleaning, and
enter CULTURE in the promo code section on the
checkout page.
61. 6. DATA BEATS OPINION
We focus on the details and make decisions based
on analysis and data, not anecdotes.
62. You
represent
this value
when:
● You understand Handy’s core business metrics
and goals you are working toward.
● You use data, where possible, to inform your decisions
or build a case for any new process, feature, etc.
● You seek out learning opportunities to build the
capabilities needed to access data and conduct
analyses required to perform your job.
● You understand that data integrity is critical and
make an extra effort to record accurate data
(whether automated or manual).
62
6. DATA BEATS OPINION
63. WE LOVE DATA AND METRICS. Here’s why.
They tell us where we are succeeding and where we need to be better.
They give us a competitive advantage over upstarts who have zero data
to inform their decisions.
They represent the revealed needs and preferences of our customers
and pros at scale. Anecdotes help bring context to data, but taken
alone, it’s hard to know if they are representative of the many.
63
64. 64
It doesn’t have to be big data...
The early days of Handy’s
“Counter Culture” →
66. Where data and metrics can go wrong.
Too much data → Lack of focus on key metrics. Tracking lots of metrics for the sake
of it is not helpful. Focus on actionable metrics, not the quantity of metrics.
Analysis paralysis. Too much data and analysis can hold up progress. Get to the core
analysis needed to make a decision, and don’t get held up by “nice to know” data.
Garbage in. Garbage out. Data integrity is key, so make sure you are making decisions
off of data you understand and have sense-checked.
Sometimes data is not available. This is particularly so when pursuing new
opportunities. The absence of data should not stall decision making. Either figure out
how to get the data quickly through an experiment, or acknowledge the lack of data,
move on, and take a calculated risk.
66
67. 67
Once upon a time, this is where
it felt like all of our data was
stored →
But over the last couple of years we’ve
made significant improvements in enabling
users to access our data to inform
decision-making.
We overhauled our data warehouse,
created robust automated business critical
reporting, built out a Data & Analytics team,
and have invested significantly in tools that
allow us to do quick data investigations to
power our decision making.
We know we still have
work to do here.
68. 7. DO MORE WITH LESS
By being resourceful, innovative and disciplined,
we can outrun any competition.
69. You
represent
this value
when:
7. DO MORE WITH LESS
69
● You are scrappy, prioritize effectively, avoid fake
work, and use experimentation to achieve
outsized results from limited time and resources.
● You spend Handy’s money responsibly, and use
your craftiness over cash, where possible.
● You do not aim to expand your team for the
sake of empire-building - instead, you build
David teams that deliver Goliath performance.
72. 72
As a platform business - we make money by taking
a cut of the fee between customers and pros. To
ensure we continue to add more value than we
extract, our goal should be to take a smaller and smaller
and smaller cut, lots and lots and lots of times. In other
words, we need to be lean to grow big.
73. 73
● customers in terms of
lower pricing
● pros in the form of
higher payments
● employees and investors
through higher salaries
or equity value.
By serving more
customers and
pros with less, it
allows us to return
more to our:
74. 74
Doing more with less manifests at Handy in four primary areas.
1. Lower costs. We relentlessly lower our costs - both fixed and variable.
We seek to serve each customer and pro by being the most efficient and
innovative marketplace.
2. Continuous improvement. We try to stop bugs from traveling downstream,
and take it as an article of faith that allowing bugs to “travel down the line”
is expensive.
3. Automation. We automate as much as possible, where product and algorithms
can solve problems or deliver consistent, delightful experiences. When we
cannot fully automate a task, we build simple and intuitive processes.
4. Small teams. Empire building is not tolerated. Instead, we reward lean teams
that work efficiently together to deliver outsized performance.
75. 75
Some examples in practice:
For two years, we packed our own supply bags. We use Ikea desks (and apparently, computer
monitors as post-it boards).
76. 76
We run a Banana Stand initiative each year - because there’s
always money in the banana stand...
Banana Stand projects aim to reduce monthly
expenses in meaningful ways.
Banana Stand project examples
Cash out now
Pro premium
Replace salesforce
Automated CL posting
Banana Stand savings tracker
77. 8. ENJOY THE JOURNEY
We believe work should be fun, and aim to create
meaningful friendships throughout the company.
78. You
represent
this value
when:
● You develop the best ideas and products when you
look forward to coming to work.
● You are yourself at work, and people look forward
to working with you.
● You build strong, meaningful friendships with your
Handy colleagues; not just those limited
to your immediate team.
● You understand that while embracing challenges is
good, it is also exhausting, exhilarating and exciting,
so it’s important not to take yourself too seriously.
78
8. ENJOY THE JOURNEY
80. 80
Some of the tangible things happening
around Handy to foster community...
Better Communication
● Bi-Weekly All Hands
● Regular 1:1s
● TV monitors
● Employee recognition
awards
● People & culture
surveys
Office Atmosphere
● Daily catered meals
● Couches
● Foosball table
● Glass conference rooms
● Open seating
Events
● Monthly team outings
● Company retreats
● Holiday Parties
● Charity Events
● Community Advisor
Programs
● Speaker Series
83. THE HANDY WAY is defined by these eight
1. Embrace challenges
2. Support smart & passionate people
3. Today not tomorrow
4. Build for love
5. Growth always
6. Data beats opinion
7. Do more with less
8. Enjoy the journey
Things We Believe At Handy
83
To recap...
84. 84
At times, our values will conflict. Build for love vs.
Today not tomorrow. Growth always vs. Do more with less.
That’s ok.
And not every value will be as important or helpful in every
decision or at all times. That’s expected.
What’s important is that we understand why we value these
things, and that we use them, where possible, to guide our
actions and decisions. Moreover, that we feel empowered to
call out tensions where they exist or acknowledge what
tradeoffs we are making and why.
85. Our culture is not for
everyone.
(on purpose)
85
Why? Wouldn’t you want
everyone to be happy
working at Handy?
86. Remember, we’re attempting to
build the sort of company that has
never been built before, and that
means doing things in a way that hasn’t
necessarily been done before.
86
87. So, these 8 things define the Handy Culture.
Meaning, they are things we believe and value
collectively at Handy, for Handy; not necessarily other
companies or every individual who passes through Handy.
And they are (/should be) the basis for our small daily
actions, our big strategic decisions, and any hiring,
rewarding and organizational changes made at Handy.
87
88. If we tried to appeal to everyone, we’d revert
to the average. And we’re not interested in
building an average company.
Good enough for everyone is great for no one.
We opt for greatness.
88
89. Some of what’s in this deck is already
happening in reality. And some of it is
aspirational.
But we’re still at the very beginning.
89