How to build a good development team when you're not a techie yourself

Imagine you have a great business idea - perhaps an app, a platform or a tool - but you don't know how to programme. No problem! Many successful tech founders didn't have any technical expertise to begin with. The key is to build a strong development team that you can trust to realise your vision. But how do you do that if you're not a "techie"?

How to build a good development team when you're not a techie yourself

Here are concrete steps to help you build an excellent development team even without technical expertise:

1. understand what you need - not how it is built

You don't have to learn programming languages, but you should understand them:

    • What is to be built?
    • Which functions are critical?
    • What are the product's short-term and long-term goals?

Create a Clearly defined specifications or a feature list with must-haves and nice-to-haves. Use simple language, sketches, tools like Notion, Miro or Figma. Clarity saves time and reduces misunderstandings.

2. get technical sparring early

If you are not a technical person yourself, get a technical consultant or Interim CTO on board - perhaps as a mentor or in return for a share. This person can:

    • Check requirements
    • Help with job interviews
    • Evaluate technologies
    • Co-decide the tech stack

This allows you to make informed decisions without having to understand the technical jargon.

3. pay attention to people, not just CVs

You can recognise good developers not only by their GitHub profiles or university degrees. Look out for:

    • Communication skills - Can you explain technical relationships in an understandable way?
    • Personal responsibility - Are they solution-orientated and proactive?
    • Team-Fit - Do they match your values and your working style?

Ask questions like:

"How would you explain what you do to a non-technical person?"
"What was the most difficult project you solved - and how?"

4. focus on small tests instead of big promises

Before you hire someone for the long term, start with a small paid test project:

    • A feature
    • A bugfix
    • A simple prototype

This gives you a feel for the working method, speed and quality - without committing yourself directly.

5 Use external resources strategically

Especially at the beginning, it can be useful to Agencies, Freelancers or Nearshoring teams to work. Advantages:

    • Quickly available
    • Flexibly scalable
    • Broad technology expertise

Important: Maintain long-term control over the code, access and architecture - otherwise you will become dependent.

6. build trust and structure

Even if you don't understand everything: good teams need clarity. Take care:

    • Transparent processes (e.g. Kanban board, regular stand-ups)
    • Clear goals and deadlines
    • Honest feedback - in both directions

Use tools like Slack, Trello, Jira or Asanato structure the collaboration.

7. consider: Do you need a CTO or a Tech Lead?

If technology is a core component of your company, you can't go forever without it. Technical management off. Options:

    • A co-founder with a tech background
    • One salaried CTO/lead developer
    • An experienced external CTO on a temporary basis

The right person can lead your team technically while you focus on vision, sales and product.

Conclusion: Not a techie? No problem - if you take a smart approach

Building a good development team is not magic. It takes clarity, trust, communication and the willingness to buy in expertise where you lack it yourself. Your job as a non-techie is not, everything but to ask the right questions, set priorities and create an environment in which talented people enjoy working.

Want to build your tech team? Then take a look now at what you need to consider when recuriting!