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Why Your Startup Needs a QA Before a Second Developer

Almost every early-stage startup hires its second developer before its first QA. Almost every early-stage startup then spends six months wondering why velocity keeps dropping, bugs keep reopening, and the founder is doing test runs at 1am. This post makes the unpopular case that a good QA in the first five hires pays for itself five times over — and how to spot a great early-stage QA versus a process-heavy one who will slow you down.

Siddharth PuriMarch 14, 20268 min read
Startup & Learning

Why Your Startup Needs a QA Before a Second Developer

March 14, 2026 · 8 min read · Siddharth Puri

Almost every early-stage startup hires its second developer before its first QA. Almost every early-stage startup then spends six months wondering why velocity keeps dropping, bugs keep reopening, and the founder is doing manual test runs at 1am before a release.

I have watched this pattern four times now. The math quietly works against you without a QA, and founders cannot see it until the hole is deep.

Why the second-developer math breaks

Your first developer can hold the whole product in their head. Quality is emergent — they see bugs because they wrote everything. The moment you hire a second developer, two things happen: the codebase doubles in surface area, and nobody holds all of it in their head anymore. Regressions start appearing in parts nobody remembered to test.

You can either pay that tax in developer time (re-testing, re-fixing, re-releasing) or you can pay it in QA time. Developer time is more expensive, slower at testing, and more frustrated about it. QA time is cheaper and better at it. This is not a subtle tradeoff.

What a good early-stage QA actually does

  • Writes exploratory test plans before a release — not 200-page docs, usually one page
  • Runs the manual smoke tests the developers would skip
  • Builds a small, focused automated suite (Selenium, Cypress, Playwright — pick one) covering the top 10 flows
  • Owns the bug tracker. Developers file fewer regressions when someone is curating them
  • Acts as the first customer of every release. The founder should no longer be playing that role

What a bad early-stage QA does

  • Asks for a full test management tool and six weeks to "set things up"
  • Wants a strict gating process before the team has found product-market fit
  • Writes test cases for features that will be deleted in two weeks
  • Insists on 80% coverage before measuring whether the covered bits matter
  • Treats speed as an enemy rather than a constraint

You want the first kind. The second kind is a process hire, not a quality hire. In a pre-PMF startup, process is what you add later, after you have something worth protecting.

The hiring signal

In interviews, ask the candidate to test your actual product for 30 minutes live. The good ones find five issues you had not noticed and explain them by severity. The process-heavy ones ask for your test plan and a formal bug template. You can tell in twenty minutes.

The ROI nobody calculates

A QA in the first five hires pays for themselves in prevented regressions in about four months. By month six they have shipped a small Selenium suite that prevents the three bugs that keep reopening. By month twelve they have freed your developers to actually build new things instead of fighting fires.

Meanwhile the "we will hire QA later" version of the startup is twelve months in, has a reputation for flaky releases, and is now trying to backfill quality into a codebase that was never designed for it. That backfill takes a year.

The unpopular summary

Your second hire should probably be a QA. Your third can be a developer. Almost nobody does this. The ones who do are the ones shipping clean releases at a pace that makes their competitors look amateur.

A good QA pays for themselves in prevented bugs within four months. Most startups discover this in year two, the hard way.
All postsSiddharth Puri

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