How to Find a Startup to Work For (And Know If It's a Good Deal)

Most people default to LinkedIn and general job boards when they decide they want to work at a startup, and then wonder why every role feels generic. The best early-stage openings rarely surface there. They live on platforms built specifically for startups, get shared inside VC networks before they’re public, or get posted by a founder who wants to hire fast and skip the noise. Knowing where to look is half the work. The other half is knowing how to read a startup once you’ve found it, because not every fast-growing company is actually a good bet.

Where to actually find startup jobs

These are organized from broad to insider. Start broad, then narrow once you know which stage and sector you want.

  • The big curated boards. Welcome to the Jungle (formerly Otta) is still the strongest matching tool for the UK and EU, with good remote filtering and deep coverage across France, Spain, and the rest of the European tech corridor. Wellfound (formerly AngelList Talent) is the original and still the largest dedicated startup board, and most listings show salary and equity ranges upfront, which saves you from guessing. Y Combinator’s Work at a Startup puts your profile in front of every YC-backed company at once, and the YC badge itself is a quality filter most open boards can’t offer.
  • High-signal, lower-polish. Hacker News’ “Who is Hiring” thread runs on the first weekday of every month and is still one of the most direct ways to land in front of a founder or an early engineer with no recruiter in between. GrepJob is good for mid-stage and near-FAANG roles, filterable by stack and level. Hiring Cafe is less curated but has by far the largest volume and the best filtering if you already know exactly what you want.
  • Curated directories. Startups.Gallery is a clean directory of top startups and scaleups with a built-in job board, good for browsing companies before roles. Startup.Jobs and topstartups.io work similarly, organized by function and funding source.
  • Insider access through VCs. Joining a VC’s talent network is one of the highest-leverage moves you can make, because these roles are pre-vetted by people whose job is to back winners. Greylock and South Park Commons both run active talent networks worth joining even before you’re ready to move. Next Play specializes in founding and early-team roles, though it leans heavily SF and NY.
  • Regional. Communitech is the go-to for Canadian tech. In Europe, Sifted regularly publishes lists of the VCs and scaleups actively hiring that quarter, which works as a job board and a market signal at the same time.

How do you know if it’s a good deal?

A startup offer is a bet on a company you can’t fully see from the outside. Before you say yes, check these.

Funding stage and runway

Ask when the last round closed and how large it was. Twelve to eighteen months of runway is healthy for an early-stage company; under six months, or a string of “bridge” rounds, is a warning sign that the next paycheck isn’t guaranteed.

Headcount trend

Pull up the company on LinkedIn and look at the employee growth chart, not just the current headcount. Steady upward movement is a good sign. A flat or shrinking line, especially after a recent raise, usually means a freeze or layoffs are coming.

Who’s on the cap table

A round led by recognized investors means real diligence has already happened on your behalf. It also tends to mean more pressure to scale fast, which is worth knowing going in.

Leadership turnover

Check how long the founders and the leadership team have actually been there. Frequent departures in the C-suite, especially right after a raise, almost always means something internally that the careers page won’t tell you.

Real revenue, not just users

In the interview, ask directly about revenue or ARR growth, not signups or downloads. Vanity metrics are easy to make look good. Revenue growth is much harder to fake.

Equity in writing

Get the equity percentage, vesting schedule, and strike price in writing before you accept, not as a verbal estimate. At seed to Series A, founding and early engineering hires typically see somewhere in the 0.5% to 2% range, but it varies enormously by stage and role, so ask rather than assume.

Stay plugged in

A few sources worth following so you’re not making decisions on stale information: Sifted for Europe’s funding and hiring news, TechCrunch and EU-Startups for broader coverage, and Crunchbase News for fast funding updates. For career-specific reading, Lenny’s Newsletter regularly covers the state of the tech job market and is one of the few sources that backs its takes with real data rather than opinion.

The best startup job for you isn’t the one with the flashiest brand or the biggest funding headline. It’s the one where the stage, the team, and the terms actually line up with what you’re looking for, and now you know how to check all three before you sign anything.

Need a second opinion on an offer, or help figuring out which stage of startup actually fits your career goals? That’s exactly what we work through together at gogotechy.com.

How can we help you?