![]() But I also believe in investing heavily in creating amazing experiences. I appreciate how GitKraken enables developers to try before they buy to use our products for free to not talk to anyone unless they want to. This begins with our team members, and carries through to our customers and partners. Beyond that, we want to have an incredibly high say:do ratio, both with our customers and with each other. With that said, we want to move fast to ensure our tools continue to keep up with (or even get out in front of) the needs of millions of developers around the world. This is a marathon, not a sprint, and we’re building the company and our products for the long run. We will take the long view on our investments in culture, customers, and our products. Lastly, for anyone who’s curious about how I approach my role as a leader and an entrepreneur – how I hope to grow GitKraken – here are a few of my pillars after 20+ years as a CEO and CMO, building teams, cultures and startups in NYC and Boston: ![]() So while we’ve added a lot of new ideas, methodologies, and know-how in the past few months, it’s our long-time employees that will help us stay connected to our past, execute in the present, and plan for an even bigger, brighter future. These people have vast expertise, and the passion to match. It’s rare to join a team that has so many employees in every group who have been with the company for 5 years… 7 years… 10+ years. Yet, even with all that new (and that’s a whole lotta new), the backbone of this company is its long-time employees. Added a new CTO ( Eric Amodio from GitLens), a new General Manager ( Adam Wride from Git Integration for Jira), a new VP of Engineering ( Ross Wheeler) and a new CEO ( hello).More than doubled the size of our team, from 40 people to 90+ awesome, driven individuals, including new members from across North America, South America, Europe and Asia.Added millions of new users who rely on our suite of tools to make Git work for developers, rather than requiring developers to adapt to Git’s (ahem) idiosyncrasies. ![]()
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