Inside Comnplus Inc. With Karan Chaudhry

Train your team to build the culture up by identifying not only problems but solutions.

Karan Chaudhry is a serial entrepreneur and co-founder of Comnplus and DropThought. Follow him @karan_chaudhry

Recently, YEC spoke with Karan about his employee management and company culture experience. His best advice is below.

10734137_10204903174917090_6251304631338367156_n

What interview question do you always ask potential hires and why?

I ask them what they are passionate about and why. People usually open up when talking about their passions and I strongly believe in open casual conversations rather than a formal interview. It also gives me an inside view on what drives them to evaluate a cultural fit.

What makes your company culture unique?

I think it’s the “we’re in this together” attitude and rewarding the micro-behaviors surrounding it. It starts with having an appreciative environment. Often in startups, people are so busy that they do not spend enough time appreciating colleagues for all the hard work that is put in. At our company, we compliment folks during daily standups. Also, we encourage everyone to always have a solutions mindset. So if they want to discuss a problem, we encourage them to also suggest the possible fixes that might be viable. In a lot of cases, we actually go with their advice, which makes them feel great and increases their ownership of the task and the culture.

How can you make sure team outings or activities appeal as best they can to all employees?

The first thing to realize is that team outings and activities should be about the team and not about you. They need to enjoy it and have fun. Start with giving them options to choose from. Try to accommodate for multiple options if there is a strong split. For example, we often have a split between a movie night and bowling. Either we combine both or plan two events close to each other to cater to both groups. Also, take feedback during and post event to improve it further. Create an activities channel on Slack and ask people to share photos. It’s amazing how they get discussed for a long time afterwards.

11136744_10206130933370284_2035826315141508185_n

What’s your best tip for keeping a personal touch to onboarding and training as you grow?

Assign a buddy to the incoming employee for the first thirty days. The buddy becomes the go-to person for the employee for all their queries and concerns. It makes a big difference to have someone to navigate you through the systems and processes in the early days. In a lot of cases, the buddy relationship voluntarily stretches beyond that time.

What’s one quick, easy way any company at any stage can invest in their company culture?

Seek employee feedback and act upon the top two or three suggestions to make them own the culture. We actually have an anonymous feedback system and evaluate employee suggestions on a regular basis. Just the fact that they are being heard makes a big difference to the employees. If you actually act on some of their recommendations, it immediately increases their ownership of the culture.

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Inside Comnplus Inc. With Karan Chaudhry

Train your team to build the culture up by identifying not only problems but solutions.

Karan Chaudhry is a serial entrepreneur and co-founder of Comnplus and DropThought. Follow him @karan_chaudhry

Recently, YEC spoke with Karan about his employee management and company culture experience. His best advice is below.

10734137_10204903174917090_6251304631338367156_n

What interview question do you always ask potential hires and why?

I ask them what they are passionate about and why. People usually open up when talking about their passions and I strongly believe in open casual conversations rather than a formal interview. It also gives me an inside view on what drives them to evaluate a cultural fit.

What makes your company culture unique?

I think it’s the “we’re in this together” attitude and rewarding the micro-behaviors surrounding it. It starts with having an appreciative environment. Often in startups, people are so busy that they do not spend enough time appreciating colleagues for all the hard work that is put in. At our company, we compliment folks during daily standups. Also, we encourage everyone to always have a solutions mindset. So if they want to discuss a problem, we encourage them to also suggest the possible fixes that might be viable. In a lot of cases, we actually go with their advice, which makes them feel great and increases their ownership of the task and the culture.

How can you make sure team outings or activities appeal as best they can to all employees?

The first thing to realize is that team outings and activities should be about the team and not about you. They need to enjoy it and have fun. Start with giving them options to choose from. Try to accommodate for multiple options if there is a strong split. For example, we often have a split between a movie night and bowling. Either we combine both or plan two events close to each other to cater to both groups. Also, take feedback during and post event to improve it further. Create an activities channel on Slack and ask people to share photos. It’s amazing how they get discussed for a long time afterwards.

11136744_10206130933370284_2035826315141508185_n

What’s your best tip for keeping a personal touch to onboarding and training as you grow?

Assign a buddy to the incoming employee for the first thirty days. The buddy becomes the go-to person for the employee for all their queries and concerns. It makes a big difference to have someone to navigate you through the systems and processes in the early days. In a lot of cases, the buddy relationship voluntarily stretches beyond that time.

What’s one quick, easy way any company at any stage can invest in their company culture?

Seek employee feedback and act upon the top two or three suggestions to make them own the culture. We actually have an anonymous feedback system and evaluate employee suggestions on a regular basis. Just the fact that they are being heard makes a big difference to the employees. If you actually act on some of their recommendations, it immediately increases their ownership of the culture.

See Also: 10 Ways to Efficiently Onboard New Employees

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