I recently sat down with Gretchen Howard, COO of Robinhood. Gretchen joined Robinhood in early 2019 as the company’s COO and just its second executive hire. She climbed aboard the Robinhood rocketship after 5 years building CapitalG, Alphabet’s investment fund. That lens—hypergrowth, scale, and rigor—made for a candid, deeply practical conversation about the art and science of executive hiring.
My first principle: align the hiring profile to the trajectory of the business. Before I draft a role spec, I map where the company will be in 12–24 months and work backward—org design, critical outcomes, decision rights, and the interfaces this leader must own. This prevents over-hiring for prestige or under-hiring for comfort, and it keeps us investing in the right places where leadership leverage is highest.
We also dug into the balance between domain and operating DNA. For certain roles, industry context matters, but in high-velocity environments I prioritize builders who can scale ambiguity into systems. Put differently, I look for leaders capable of balancing financial industry expertise with an innovative, hands-on mindset that’s critical for startups. That balance avoids the two common failure modes: executives who can “talk the talk” but can’t ship, and specialists who struggle once the playbook runs out.
On the executive interview process, I keep a tight loop that tests judgment, learning velocity, and execution. I probe for whether someone has a “knower” versus a “learner” attitude by asking for specific instances where they reversed a strongly held view based on new data, what broke when they scaled from one stage to the next, and how they built successor benches. I also ask candidates to walk me through decisions they owned end-to-end—the context, options considered, trade-offs, and how they measured outcomes.
My feelings toward interview exercises are intentionally mixed. Over-engineered “strategy cases” can select for presentation polish over operating truth, yet lightweight, job-relevant exercises can surface depth and working style. I time-box collaborative work sessions on a real (sanitized) problem we’re facing, making expectations explicit: I’m evaluating how we think together, not a perfect answer. This yields a more authentic read on communication, prioritization, and bias-to-action.
Reference checks are non-negotiable and high-signal when structured. I run both provided and backchannel references, triangulating on scope, followership, and change management. My go-to questions: What did this leader make better that stayed better? How did they handle a miss? Would you rehire them for this stage and why? I also ask references to predict the candidate’s most likely struggle in the first 90 days; those predictions often become my onboarding guardrails.
Even great hires can fail without intentional onboarding—what I call preventing “organ rejection.” I co-create a 30/60/90 plan that includes outcomes, decision rights, and the first 10 relationships to cement. We align on a cultural narrative (how we build, decide, and escalate), clarify non-negotiables, and schedule fast feedback loops at weeks 2, 6, and 12. Success here looks like early, compounding wins and a clear rhythm with peers—before muscle memory hardens in the wrong direction.
If you’re struggling with your executive hiring—whether it’s coming up with the right candidate profile, aligning on culture fit, or finding that your interview process doesn’t seem to be surfacing the best candidates—this playbook will help you de-risk the decision. The combination of a stage-appropriate profile, a learning-oriented interview loop, disciplined reference checks, and deliberate onboarding dramatically increases the probability that your next executive hire will unlock leverage instead of friction.












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