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This episode features Alex Bouaziz, founder and CEO of Deel, a global payroll and HR services company with over 5,000 employees and $800 million in run rate. Born in Paris to immigrant parents from Tunisia and Algeria, Alex's entrepreneurial journey began early, graduating high school at 16 and pursuing engineering degrees in Israel and MIT. (03:00) His path to building Deel wasn't linear - from failed startup attempts to a brief PhD stint, Alex eventually found his calling through Y Combinator, where Deel pivoted from a freelancer payment platform to a comprehensive global employment solution. The conversation explores his philosophy of default optimism, the importance of customer obsession, and how being comfortable working with people he'd never met in person (stemming from his gaming background) shaped Deel's remote-first culture.
• Core themes: International entrepreneurship, the power of persistence through multiple pivots, building global infrastructure businesses, and maintaining optimism while scaling rapidly in complex regulatory environments.
Alex Bouaziz is the founder and CEO of Deel, a global payroll and HR services company valued at over $1 billion with more than 5,000 employees. Born in Paris to immigrant parents from North Africa, Alex graduated high school at 16, studied environmental engineering at Technion and MIT, and briefly pursued a PhD before founding Deel through Y Combinator in 2019. Under his leadership, Deel has grown from a small freelancer payment tool to a comprehensive global employment platform serving thousands of companies worldwide, with reported run rates exceeding $800 million.
Alex and his co-founder deliberately chose "default optimism" as a core company principle, stemming from Alex's naturally happy disposition. (02:16) This wasn't just a feel-good motto - they actively screen for happiness in interviews, with Alex asking candidates directly if they consider themselves happy people. This philosophy creates a positive work environment that attracts talent and helps the team navigate challenges with resilience. In practice, this means approaching problems with the assumption that solutions exist rather than focusing on obstacles, leading to more creative problem-solving and higher team morale.
Alex learned that exceptional customer service can overcome product limitations, stating "it doesn't matter how good your product is. You need to have really good customer success and really good service. I think that trumps everything." (57:52) He personally handles customer issues, believing his primary job is making customers' lives better. This approach allowed Deel to maintain high customer satisfaction even during rapid growth periods and product bugs. The strategy involves putting a salesperson and customer success person in front of every customer, enabled by their high ACV model, ensuring no customer feels abandoned during their journey.
Throughout his journey, from being two years younger than classmates to working with significantly older teammates, Alex developed the mindset that "age doesn't matter" - what matters is skills, experience, and ability to contribute. (21:54) At MIT, his best friends were 38 and 40, and he never felt he didn't belong due to age. This perspective allowed him to build diverse teams based on merit rather than traditional hierarchies. For professionals, this means focusing on value creation and competency rather than being intimidated by or dismissive of colleagues based on age differences.
Alex's willingness to cold email executives, including Disney's CEO during his theme park startup attempt, taught him that "the world is not such a big place after all." (29:54) He received responses and forwarded connections that wouldn't have existed otherwise. This approach extended to his hiring practices - his designer came from a Reddit DM, and many early employees were found through unconventional channels. The key is being strategic in outreach: making messages concise, relevant, and showing genuine value rather than just asking for favors.
Alex's background in gaming and online communities made him comfortable working with people he'd never met in person, which became crucial for Deel's global success. (46:16) Many of his early team members were hired through platforms like Reddit and Upwork and remained fully remote, with some becoming senior leaders. This distributed approach allowed Deel to access global talent while keeping costs low during early growth phases. For modern entrepreneurs, this demonstrates the importance of embracing remote work tools and building systems that support distributed collaboration from day one rather than retrofitting for remote work later.