Terminal is Plaid for Telematics in commercial trucking. Companies building the next generation of insurance products, financial services, and fleet software for trucking use our Universal API to access GPS data, speeding data, and vehicle stats.
We are a fast growing, venture-backed startup supported by top investors including Y-Combinator, Golden Ventures, and Wayfinder Ventures. Our exceptionally talented team is based in Toronto, Canada.
For more information, check out our website https://withterminal.com
We are looking for a Chief of Staff to work closely with our CEO in scaling our business operations and delivering on diverse strategic initiatives to accelerate Terminal’s operational velocity. In particular, we’re looking for someone who has previously scaled a venture-backed startup beyond Series B and now wants to be part of the leadership team at a high-impact, earlier-stage company. Your work will be critical in establishing the operational excellence and repeatability required for Terminal to continue accelerating into its next stage of growth. Our ideal CoS has the ambition and work ethic to grow with the company into a VP Operations and/or COO.
We liked this description of the COS role, and are plagiarizing it wholesale:
Patrick Aylward, a vice president and CoS at Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, breaks the job down into five roles: serving as an air traffic controller for the leader and the senior team; as an integrator connecting work streams that would otherwise remain siloed; as a communicator linking the leadership team and the broader organization; as an honest broker and truth teller when the leader needs a wide-ranging view without turf considerations; and as a confidant without an organizational agenda. Aylward points out that “while a CEO’s other direct reports typically emphasize their own areas, a good CoS can consider the needs of the whole enterprise.”
The most sophisticated chiefs of staff also assist CEOs in thinking through and setting policies—and making sure they are implemented. They anticipate problems and are especially sensitive to issues that require diplomacy. They function as extra eyes and ears by pointing out political potholes their bosses may not recognize (especially if the bosses are new to the company). Importantly, a CoS acts with the implicit imprimatur of the CEO—something that calls for humility, maturity, and situational sensitivity.
The CoS role is decidedly different from that of the leader’s executive assistant (EA). Unlike an EA, a chief of staff works autonomously and does not handle routine correspondence or manage the leader’s day-to-day schedule.