Magdalena King Is Fixing the Most Expensive Mistake in SaaS Scaling.
The Hidden Cost of Hiring Under PressureThe most expensive mistake in SaaS scaling never shows up on the P&L as a line item. It looks like progress at first. New senior hire, LinkedIn announcement, maybe even a few congratulatory comments from the network. Six months later, the founder is quietly wondering why the business still feels stuck, why every decision still routes through them, and why they are paying a London salary for problems that remain unsolved.
This moment of recognition, uncomfortable and costly, is exactly what Magdalena King built her business to prevent. She has made a career out of telling founders to slow down before they speed up, and her clients keep coming back because the alternative is burning capital on hiring decisions that create more chaos than clarity.
The Consultant Who Says No to Your Open Roles
Magdalena King is the Founder of Mekion Consulting, an embedded talent partner working exclusively with VC-backed SaaS founders across the UK and United States. She does not operate like a traditional recruitment agency. She will not send you five CVs and wait for feedback. Instead, she embeds directly into your growth challenges, questions the assumptions behind every open role, and builds hiring roadmaps that align with funding milestones, runway constraints, and investor expectations.
What makes her approach genuinely different is the thing that should destroy her revenue model: she regularly tells paying clients not to hire at all.
This level of strategic friction is either commercially suicidal or exactly what overwhelmed founders need. The track record suggests the latter.
From Corporate Law and Hospitality Careers Pressure to Startup Strategy
Magdalena’s path to the startup world was not linear. She completed two Master’s Degrees: in Business and then in Law. She started her career as a Lawyer but quickly realised the corporate world wasn’t the right fit for her. After stepping away from the legal profession, she built her early career in hospitality, an environment that teaches essential skills no MBA program covers: reading pressure in real time, managing teams when everything is moving fast, and maintaining composure when the margin for error disappears.
She carried those instincts into recruitment, eventually reaching Principal Consultant level, where she developed the technical expertise to handle complex, high-growth mandates. But the more she understood startup operations, the more the transactional recruitment model frustrated her.
That conviction became the foundation for Mekion Consulting, which she launched in May 2025. During her career in recruitment , she supported over 100 SaaS founders and built a client roster including Lightfoot, DeGould, RoleMapper, and BreatheHR. She also embedded herself into the South West startup ecosystem as a Growth Partner at Tech South West and co-founder of Founder Dinners, invitation-only quarterly events capped at fifteen people that ban panels and pitches in favor of honest conversation about the messy reality of scaling.
When Founders Become Their Own Bottleneck
The founders who seek out Magdalena King are not typically struggling with recruitment in the obvious ways. They are struggling with something more fundamental: clarity about what actually needs to be fixed. Revenue is growing, the team exists, but everything still flows through the founder. Decisions wait. Progress stalls. The instinctive response is to hire someone senior who will take the pressure.
Magdalena’s first move is almost always to challenge that instinct.
The results of getting this clarity right are measurable and immediate. One VC-backed founder approached her mid-raise, facing investor scrutiny about the team’s ability to scale responsibly. Instead of immediately opening multiple senior roles, Magdalena mapped the business against its next eighteen months, identified genuine capability gaps, and restructured the hiring roadmap around specific outcomes rather than impressive titles.
The impact extended beyond better hires. The people strategy became part of the investment narrative. Investors who had been questioning capital deployment efficiency left the process with confidence that this leadership team understood sustainable growth, not just rapid expansion.This embedded approach transforms how founders experience scaling. As one client recently explained: “Magda has become an extension of our team and understands our goals and timescales sufficiently to be able to flag potential new hires ahead of time, so we are not waiting to onboard people but able to maintain momentum.”
That shift from reactive scrambling to predictive planning is what separates sustainable growth from expensive chaos.
She means this for both sides. A Head of Product who completes five interview stages and then hears silence for three weeks is not just a disappointed candidate. They become a cautionary story that travels through the exact networks a founder will need to access at their next growth stage.
Building From Devon, Thinking Beyond Geography
There is something significant about where Magdalena does this work. Based in Devon, she operates far from the London startup circuit and Silicon Valley echo chambers. She walks dogs in the woods before her first call, trains for Ironman events, and co-hosts intimate founder dinners with guests who have run naval operations and backed companies through various VCs .
This distance from the noise is not incidental to her effectiveness. It is central to it.
That perspective shapes her entire approach. She does not sell speed or promise shortlists by Friday. She offers something the recruitment industry has historically avoided because it is harder to package: the discipline to pause before scaling, and the strategic rigor to make every hire count toward specific outcomes.
Mekion Consulting entered its second year with five offers accepted in a single week and nine candidates starting within months. New roles are opening in San Francisco and New York. The embedded model, built by one person working from the edge of Dartmoor, now reaches the markets that matter most to the founders she serves.
The Question That Changes Everything
The most expensive mistake in SaaS scaling is not one bad hire. It is the pattern of hiring without clarity, building teams around pressure rather than strategy, and mistaking headcount growth for business momentum. Founders make this mistake not from carelessness but from the very qualities that got them this far: urgency, optimism, and the belief that more resources solve more problems.
Magdalena King’s answer to that pressure is not a faster process. It is a better question, asked early enough and honestly enough to save more than money. It preserves culture, protects cap tables, and sometimes prevents the kind of organizational chaos that kills promising companies.
In an industry full of people promising to find the right hire, she has built something rarer: a practice founded on the willingness to tell founders when hiring is not the answer they need.
Key Takeaways / Playbook
- 1. Strategic Discipline: Most hiring problems are business problems in disguise. Pause and find absolute clarity before jumping to match a new hire to immediate scaling pressure.
- 2. Brand Experience: Your recruitment process represents your brand narrative. Delivering a poor candidate experience can echo through critical professional ecosystems long before your next growth stage.


