Entrepreneur Plus - Short White
For Subscribers

3 Crucial Steps to Building a Great TeamIgnore the "hire fast" advice. Use these three crucial steps for building a great team.

ByAytekin Tank

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

In the 16 years since I started Jotform, we've reached a lot of milestones. Growing a business from a nights-and-weekends side project into a successful company with 10 million users has been a rewarding (and sometimes exhausting) journey. But of all of the breakthroughs we've made over the years, I think I'm most proud of what we did in 2015.

When I started Jotform in 2006, there was one single employee: Me. Being a bootstrapped founder, growth came slowly and deliberately; up until 2014, I didn't make more than a few new hires each year. But in 2015, we moved our operations into a new, bigger office.

Suddenly, we had room to grow. And we did. In 2014, we had 12 employees. In 2015, we jumped to 22. Such quick growth isn't always successful — adding too many people too fast can upset a company's delicate equilibrium and throw things into chaos.

This is a subscriber-only article. Join Entrepreneur+today for access

Related Topics

Business News

A Popular Pizza Chain Is Giving Away Free 'Emergency Pizzas' to Anyone Having a Not-So-Great Day

Accidentally burn your dinner? Rough day at work? A new promotion from Domino's Pizza might help.

Business News

Israeli Tech Leaders Are Leaving Their Businesses For Battle: 'I Want to Be Part of the People Protecting Our Country'

In addition to volunteers, Israel has drafted 300,000 reservists following Hamas' attack.

Business News

This Is the Heaviest Pumpkin in the World — And Its Grower Won $30,000 for Setting the World Record

Travis Gienger of Minnesota has been growing pumpkins for nearly 30 years.

Growing a Business

These Co-Founders Who Bet Big on Foodies Raised $133 Million to Fund Their Innovative Idea — and It's Helping Restaurants Nationwide

Vanessa and Joe Ariel dreamed up a food marketplace capable of bringing regional cuisines to doorsteps nationwide — then made it into a reality.

Starting a Business

How a Side Hustle Taking People on 'Urban Hikes' Became a Lucrative Business

Kansas City native Lisa Peña shows tourists and locals parts of the city they'd never see by car.