Founding Ops Manager Seed Jobs
A founding business operations hire is responsible for the operational backbone of an early-stage startup — everything from financial modeling and fundraising support to process design, tooling, and strategic projects that do not fit neatly into other functions. The role is inherently cross-functional and often acts as the founder's right hand on execution, data analysis, and anything that needs to get done. Ops is common at startups that have raised institutional capital and need operational rigor.
Founding Ops Manager roles at Seed startups with meaningful equity.
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View Founding Ops Manager Salary GuideFrequently Asked Questions
How much equity does a founding Ops hire get?
Founding Ops hires typically receive 0.3% to 1% equity depending on stage and scope. At seed stage, the first BizOps hire might receive 0.6-1%, while at Series A they might receive 0.3-0.7%. Ops roles receive similar equity to product or strategic business roles, reflecting the cross-functional impact.
What does a founding Ops person actually do?
A founding Ops hire handles operational backbone work — financial modeling for fundraising, board reporting, strategic projects, process design, and ad-hoc analysis to support decision-making. They often act as the founder's chief of staff on execution-heavy projects and anything that doesn't fit neatly into product, sales, or marketing.
When should a startup hire a founding Ops person?
Hire a founding BizOps person once operational complexity increases beyond what founders can manage — typically post-seed or at Series A when fundraising, board management, hiring, and strategic projects create competing demands on founder time. The role makes most sense at companies with 20-50 employees.
What skills are most important for Ops?
Strong analytical ability (financial modeling, data analysis), executive presence to work directly with founders and board, and operational judgment to design processes without over-engineering them. Ops hires should be comfortable with ambiguity and context-switching across very different problem types.
Where do founding ops hires typically go after leaving a startup?
Founding ops hires often become COOs or VP of Operations at growth-stage companies, scaling the systems and processes they built. Some transition into founder/CEO roles, having learned how startups operate end-to-end. Others join venture capital as operating partners or start ops consulting practices. A smaller group becomes fractional COOs for early-stage startups. The breadth of experience — finance, legal, HR, process — makes founding ops highly versatile.
Can I make this transition if I've only worked at large companies?
Yes, but you need to show comfort with ambiguity and hands-on work. At large companies, ops people manage vendors and processes. At startups, you build them from scratch. You might be setting up payroll on Monday, negotiating office space on Tuesday, and building a hiring process on Wednesday. Demonstrate that you've created processes where none existed and are comfortable doing work that would normally be delegated to specialized teams.
Is it too late to join as a founding ops hire at Series A?
At Series A, the founding ops role is usually filled or evolving into a Head of Operations. What exists is a senior ops role with some established systems, vendor relationships, and less equity (0.1% to 0.3%). If your goal is to build the entire ops function from a blank slate, Series A is late. If you want to join a company with early processes and help professionalize operations, it can work — but expect more management and less founding-level creation.
How is founding ops different from the same role at a 200-person company?
At 200 people, ops is specialized — finance ops, HR ops, revenue ops, with dedicated teams and systems. At a startup, founding ops is all of those functions plus whatever else needs doing. There is no dedicated HR team, no finance department, and no established vendor relationships. You create all of it. The role is closer to a general manager or co-founder than a function head.
What should I watch out for when evaluating a founding ops position?
Watch for four things. One: founders who see ops as administrative overhead, not a strategic function — you'll be undervalued. Two: no budget for tools or systems — you can't build processes without resources. Three: founders who won't delegate operations — if they micromanage every vendor decision, you can't operate. Four: equity without a clear vesting schedule. Read our guide on red flags when evaluating founding roles for a complete checklist.
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