When a company is in a growth phase (start-ups or expanding companies), how much transparency should there be?<p>How much transparency have some of you seen in your experience?<p>When I say transparency I refer to cash flow, operations, etc. as well as creating a corporate culture of mutual respect instead of a domineering hierarchy of leadership.<p>From my perspective I see growing companies having a need to be open and honest with their stakeholders since they're being asked to embed work into their lives to a much greater detail then usual.<p>Thoughts?
What dimension of transparency you are talking about?<p>It sounds as if you are speaking about internal transparency between the founders and staff, as well as asking about the relationship between the startup and VC/investors. These are two very different things - Investors are going to have a pretty rigid set of expectations that will probably vary from firm to firm - there are probably also certain legal requirements that need to be fulfilled depending on how the startup is structured legally. I can't speak to that specifically because I'm not on the biz side.<p>Internally, my personal opinion is that a (traditional)startup is built with blood sweat and tears. You can't afford to have a hierarchy of haves and have-nots when it comes to buy in. Everybody needs to have a voice, and everyone needs to be enabled to invest emotionally in the process. You can't buy the kind of passion that comes from being personally invested in a company or project. Lack of transparency internally creates an economy of knowledge power, and puts up walls that don't need to be there. Of course, there are times when some specifics can't be common-knowledge, but I do believe that there should be a culture of openness at a basic level.
You should share everything but individual salaries.<p>If there's good or bad financial news, the best thing you can be doing is having public discussions about it.<p>If you're making decisions about the direction of the company, everyone should get to have their say (not that you have to be a democracy).
Here's my basic maxim:<p>"Share as much as you can. Not as little as you must."<p>What matters most is not what you share, but how you share it.<p>For example, you can be transparent with bad news, but it's best to present that bad news as an opportunity or at worst a challenge to be overcome.
I'll agree with the anecdote of sharing as much as possible, but be aware that if an employee has access to monthly revenue and a good idea of profit, you can't get away with paying less than market rate. Experience from being an employee at my last company. ;)