a16z Podcast - Building Substack: Reinventing Culture through Subscriptions
Episode Date: January 9, 2025In this episode, Substack cofounder and CEO Chris Best joins a16z General Partner Andrew Chen to discuss the origins and evolution of Substack, a platform redefining media and empowering creators to c...onnect directly with their audiences. They dive into how Substack’s early days led to over 3 million paid subscribers, why creators are moving away from traditional platforms to establish direct connections with their audiences, and how the future of media in the AI era is reshaping opportunities for writers, podcasters, and video creators.From Chris’s lessons scaling Kik Messaging to Substack’s profound impact on the creator economy, this conversation shares insights on building platforms, culture, and opportunity in the modern era. Resources: Find Chris on Substack: https://cb.substack.com/Find Andrew Chen on Substack: https://andrewchen.substack.com/ Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In a world of abundant content, how do I allocate my scarce attention?
We're so used to the internet being this place where you can publish anything and anything can happen.
I think you could make the argument that actually it's a fluke.
The same way that you might write a piece of software and change how a million people do their jobs,
you could write a great essay and change who a million people are.
We're now in an era where you're not going to be able to build a billion active user.
active user, ad-supported thing.
If what I read is what I become, who do I trust for that?
If you're a listener here, you've likely heard of the company, Substack.
And you almost certainly have read something on Substack.
But today, you'll get to hear about the very origins of this company.
Why in 2017 did Chris Best and his co-founders choose, of all things,
to target a technology originally developed in 1971, over,
50 years ago. That is, of course, email.
Sitting down today with Chris is A16Z general partner, Andrew Chen, as they traverse through
the future of media and curation, but also what changes with the latest technological wave,
artificial intelligence. Even before AI, we had more content than we could ever want in the whole
universe. Chris, by the way, was also a co-founder of KIC for nearly a decade, a messaging app that
He helps scale to hundreds of millions of users, so there are plenty of war stories throughout.
By the way, this episode was originally recorded during our last Tech Week in San Francisco.
So, as you plan for the new year, new dates for Tech Week have already been announced.
We're going back to New York in June and back to San Francisco and L.A. in October.
For more information, and to stay posted on hundreds, if not thousands of events to come,
plus any other cities where Tech Week might be going, head to 10,000.
tech-week.com. That's tech-dashweek.com, or you can tap the link in our show notes.
As a reminder, the content here is for informational purposes only, should not be taken as legal,
business, tax, or investment advice, or be used to evaluate any investment or security,
and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any A16C fund.
Please note that A16Z and its affiliates may also maintain investments in the companies
discussed in this podcast. For more details, including a link to
investments, please see A16C.com slash Disclosures.
I wanted to say one really funny thing, which was how I originally met the substack team,
which was I have been writing a blog now for like almost 15 years.
And when these guys were going through Y Combinator, Hamish actually reached out to me.
So this is Chris's co-founder.
And he said, can I meet up with you?
I was like, great, let's do it.
I always love meeting founders.
And then he gave me a pitch to move my blog over to Substack.
And I was like, no fucking way.
You don't know how much money you could have made if you don't have done that.
Yes.
Well, that's actually very much true.
I actually very much regret this.
And so don't be like me instead, be like all the other smart people.
And so what ended up happening was I said no.
But then years later, I started to see, of course, substack all over the place
on X and so on.
And then I approached Chris and Hamish and Jay.
And I was like, hey, I have a new job now.
I can give people money.
It's a really cool superpower.
Would you like some money?
And Chris says, no fucking way.
It actually, I think it took maybe six months for us that he finally would allow us to.
It was time to build.
What can I say?
Anyway, so that is the backstory of how we met.
Eventually we did.
And then now my blog actually does run on some.
Substack. And it's wonderful. And I wish I had migrated earlier. And so, Chris, my first question to you
is you are CEO of Substack, but actually you had this whole other life before this where you
were an engineer. People almost don't know that you built a multi-hundred million user products
before all of this, but as CTO. So tell us about the whole journey. Yeah. Well, I went to University
of Waterloo for college. We did the co-op internship process.
program where you have six real jobs when you go to school, which is nice because then you
can afford to go to school and you do real things.
I got kind of like a taste for building.
I was sort of bored at the fake learning thing and always really liked the really making
something thing.
And I got into the kick thing.
I was just hanging out with Ted Livingston, who was the CEO.
And we were just tinkering.
We were just building some stuff.
We weren't really sure exactly what we were making at the start.
We started out building a music player for the BlackBerry.
and very Canadian
very Canadian story
and we ended up building a messenger
that had an absolutely wild arc
I learned a lot
it's funny I think being sometimes
the technical co-founder
you experience things
in a weird opposite land
like we went through a period
where we were doubling our user base
every four or five months
for like several years
and the way that I experienced that
at the time was like
oh this hurts
and I'm not getting to sleep at all
and we're all dying
and we're 23 and we have
no idea how to scale a service like this and we're flying servers around because we didn't
know to use AWS because we're idiots and it was a bazillion years ago. And of course, now I'm
like, oh man, that's the luckiest thing we ever could have had happened to us. But at the time,
I was like, this sucks. I don't get to sleep. Like, we're working hard. And when you started,
you were actually coding, how did the job evolve and change and how did you stay, you know,
involve, like close to the metal or not or become a manager? Tell us about your sort of technical
journey there. At Kick, I started out just writing the code, ended up building the engineering team
as we grew, and then gravitated towards the product's end of the world, because for me, I realized
the impact of the things that we build on people is the part of the challenge that motivates me.
That's where, like, the fascinating problems wind up being, and then being able to bridge that
into the physical realities of what do we have to build. How can we make this thing real? And even at
substack. I'm the CEO this time, which is a very different story. But I built all the early
code. Jay and I wrote the vast majority of the product for the first over years. When we finally
relented and did that series A, it was just the three of us working out of my apartment. And it was
Jay and I that built everything. I think some people have that choice where they want to go down
the super icy really deep versus a thing where you fork and you're going more engineering manager
and leader. And then, of course, a CEO. How did you know which one was right for you?
and obviously Jay is like a genius, right?
And so you obviously ended up with a very strong technical co-founder
that you met by Kick originally.
I never really even thought about it too much
as like the management track versus the IC track.
I think when you're a founder,
you tend to really blur those things
and you wind up having to do both in order to do a good job.
The way that I think about it is it's like a cliche
in our industry, but it's deeply true,
is you have to start with the user,
start with the product,
start with the thing that matters in the world,
and be willing to work backwards to everything else,
work backwards to what should our stack be,
how should our servers be architected,
and also what should our org structure be,
and how should we hire,
and what should our business model be?
And ultimately when you're building a company,
it is sort of a challenging, fun engineering problem
if you look at it the right way.
I think weirdly maybe the founder path
is a way to do both of those things in a pretty unique way.
And maybe before we transition,
you can tell us about peak kick, what did that look like before? Yeah, we started, we were sort of like WhatsApp before WhatsApp blew up for a minute there. We were growing very fast. They were unknown. And then BlackBerry sued us and tried to kill us and almost succeeded. And then we built a backup from nothing. And in that second phase, I think probably the most interesting part, there was at one point we were like 40% of U.S. teenagers were using Kik. We raised money at a billion dollar valuation from Tencent. The world was our oyster, except we didn't know how to make money.
Yes. And then you guys have hundreds of millions of active users and all the stuff.
Yes, exactly. Yeah. It was big. Really impressive. And yeah, you were in your 20s when you built it, right?
This is truly like out of college. This is one of these really rare, interesting experiences.
Yeah, I started building it in college instead of going to class.
Okay. So after KIC, you have the messaging app wars, et cetera. And then eventually you decided to move on and talk about early days of, okay, you're going to start a new company.
you want to do a bunch of things differently.
What were some of the lessons you took how to kick
and how did that inform how you picked the substack idea in the first place?
There's a lot of positive stuff I took from kick.
Even I think having been somewhere where we built something
that had that kind of traction made me believe that it was possible
and understand what pieces have to come together
for something like that to happen
and understand the impact that you can have
when you make one of these online systems
that everybody's spending their life in.
Like, I gained a big respect at KIC
both for human nature.
Like, the people using your software at scale
are going to do all kinds of strange things
and can't change who they are too much
and you shouldn't try.
But nonetheless, when you're designing
the systems that people are spending
their lives in online,
you can make a heaven or a hell out of the exact same people.
And so the way you set up the rules,
the way you set up the incentives,
the way you set up the norms,
the way the system works, I guess I became a believer in the kind of social technology that we're
building at Substack at all, which I think was a big part of what probably spurred me to do it
ultimately. We did do a bunch of things differently. We also had a business model in mind,
a way to make money. This is part of why we were always saying no to the money is we had a way
to make money, which was nice. It's very inconvenient for us. I recommend it. It gives you a lot of
leverage whenever you need it. I don't know. We built the thing fast. Many of you guys know,
know in HBO Silicon Valley, there's the Russ Hanuman thing about how it's so great to be the no
revenue company, because then if you have the no revenue company, then there's no multiples.
It's just the dream, right? And there's sort of an advantage of that.
You guys probably saw that and we're like, I hope everybody believes this shit.
Yeah, that's right. That's right. Well, it's funny. I mean, I was recently just making the
argument that we're now in an era where you're not going to be able to build a billion active
user ad-supported thing. That's an idea from 15 years ago, right? And instead, because
we're in a much more competitive environment, there's a lot more going on, much easier to
think about how do you build and monetize something that's very valuable? That's like 100 million
user environment. I often ask founders now, hey, if someone wants to spend $5,000, how do they
do that in your product? Because it's almost like the deeper, the monetization, the better.
And I know with Substack, there are certain people that spend a lot of money. I forget what
the order of magnitude is, but a lot of money. And then tell us about day one of Substack. I think
you had like Bill Bishop, you're quite a famous writer and he was involved quite early. I think
he was like one of the seed investors and he was making good money on substack from the early
days. Help us imagine what like kind of year one was like. Yeah, well, I'll give you the potted
founding story, which was I wasn't actually planning to build a company yet. I was taking a year
off. I'd plan to give myself basically a sabbatical. I'd been grinding pretty hard at the last
startup. I wanted to live my life and pursue my hobbies. And I'd always been an avid reader.
I grew up in a house full of books, and I've always thought that what you read, the media you consume, shapes how you think, shapes how you see the world, sort of shapes who you are.
And so great writing and great culture is valuable.
The same way that you might write a piece of software and change how a million people do their jobs, you could write a great essay and change who a million people are.
And that thing is this inherently valuable, wonderful thing.
And my answer to that was, I should be a writer.
I should start blogging.
Cool.
This is going to be one of my things that I do in this sabbatical that I take.
And I wrote what was going to be an essay or a blog post or a screed or something.
It was like outlining my frustrations with the media economy on the internet.
I was kind of like, wow, wow.
The internet's killed the business model for traditional media.
And maybe social media is not an unalloyed good, et cetera, et cetera.
And I sent it to my friend Hamish, who's really a writer who became my co-founder.
And he let me down very gently.
And Hamish, by the way, he's like a published author.
He wrote a book on Tesla.
He's a journalist.
Yeah, exactly.
He worked at Tesla.
He has worked for a lot of the top publications in the world.
And he was like, dude, it's 2017.
And your point here is maybe newspapers are in trouble.
And maybe social media is a mixed blessing sometimes.
We know this is not the brilliant new idea that you think it is.
However, a more interesting version of this thing might be.
so what? Let's say that all of these things you're whining about in this dumb essay you're writing
are true. What would you even do differently? And we started arguing about that. And that's the thing
that became the kernel of the idea for Substack. And as we talked it over, we realized that it was
simultaneously like a very ridiculously ambitious, grandiose idea. Like maybe we could reinvent the
business model for culture on the internet and create an entire new economy of writing and media
and video and things based on the idea that people would pay for things they value
that could cause all these new things to exist, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And also there was this very simple MVP core of it
that was like the very first instantiation of that idea
that was basically paid email newsletters.
And that thing was the very simplest version of this very large idea.
But that thing, I was like, I bet you I could build that in the weekend.
And he was like, I know this guy, Bill Bishop, I know a couple of people, like a couple of my friends would probably use that tomorrow if only it existed.
So we had this like small group of people initially for whom the simple thing that we could build was like the cure for cancer.
And of course, I couldn't build on a weekend.
You're always a little bit optimistic.
It took me a few weeks.
But we built an early version of it.
We actually started out.
The very first act we did was publishing a manifesto.
I don't recommend this, but we, on this little CMS that I was hacking together, we like wrote our founding document of what we were doing and why.
And I think Hamish sent that to Bill and a couple of other people.
And it hooked us up with our first customer who was someone who had been writing a email newsletter for years for a big international business and government audience and had been wanting to charge money for it, but couldn't figure.
He was like the perfect early customer.
and we launched with him in October 2017,
and it instantly worked.
He made $100,000 his first day.
And I was just sitting there being like,
is this good?
By the way, startups always work like this.
It turns out, you built something in a weekend,
you make $100K in the first day.
You know what it is now?
If you ever talk about professional gamblers,
every professional gambler has a story
where at the start of their career,
they go on this huge winning tear.
And the reason this is true, obviously,
is because everybody who starts their careers
of a professional gambler on a losing tear
does not go on to become a professional gambler.
And so we did this thing where we're like,
I wonder if this crazy thing we're working on
is going to go anywhere.
And our first customer, we got super lucky
in addition to being very smart and hardworking.
And it really worked.
And we were like, oh, shit, we're doing this.
And we like got into YC.
And I remember very clearly in the YC interview.
So first of all, when we applied,
we put on the form, we have zero dollars in revenue.
And then we interviewed four days later.
And they were like, it says you have zero dollars in revenue.
And I got to say, oh, actually, there's been an update in the past four days.
There's been $100,000.
And that seemed very good.
And I remember the thing that they said to us, they were like, oh, this is going to be easy.
If you just get four or five more customers like this, you're going to like raise your
demo day money.
The whole thing's going to go.
Like, you're off to the races.
We're like, great.
This is going to be like smooth sailing from here and out.
It took us like three years before we ever got another customer that was that good.
They were the best customer.
They were the biggest customer.
and the fastest launching customer for so long.
And there was such a long time
where that early win overshadowed everything else we did.
And we were gradually like, oh, my God,
did we make a terrible mistake?
Building this thing, is it going to work?
But that initial success, I think,
gave us enough energy momentum to keep going.
And of course, eventually it turns out
there's lots and lots of people
who go on to make millions of dollars on substack
and that thing has really worked.
But if we didn't both, I think,
find the right hole in the universe and then get a little bit lucky. I don't know if we would
have done the thing. One thing that was so fascinating in the early days was your choice of
technology platform because this was way after the mobile first thing. And I remember when
we first had it, I was like, okay, it's a website and email list. And you didn't do mobile.
And then by the way, this guy was so against all the algorithmic anything. This is almost like
a Luddite startup. You know what's a sexy technology to work on?
email. Yes, exactly, exactly. And so maybe two things on this. Why pick from a tech standpoint
something that was where you started. That's one. And then in the early days, as you're hiring
and building out your engineering team, how do you get people excited about the mission and everything
when maybe folks come in and they're like, okay, well, what's the technology problem in this?
And tell us maybe how the engineering vision has evolved over time as well. Technology is a means to an
And the thing that was so cool about email to us was
this is one of the last places on the internet,
especially on your phone,
where you can have a direct connection with your audience
without having to install an app.
And it's not mediated by one of the big social algorithms.
Yes, there's like a Gmail priority inbox algorithm.
But email was sort of like this really fun hack
where early on you could be a writer
and have a direct connection with your audience
in a way that did actually work on the phone
and it didn't require that you install a new app
because in the early days of Substack,
nobody was ever going to install an app.
But if you have one newsletter you're subscribing to
and it's get this app to get it,
that's never going to work.
So we knew that we needed especially early on
to have a growth loop that didn't require
putting an app in that thing.
We wanted to be just as easy as possible.
We wanted to be like, hey, you want this thing?
What's your email?
Cool.
Do you want to pay for it?
Give some money.
Great.
You're done.
So we built that.
And this is like working backwards from the customer.
We're like, what's the thing that's going to be great?
What do we need to build to make that happen?
And what's a great fun engineering challenge is scaling a service that has lots of users
because you made something good.
That's a better challenge than figuring out some really cool, deep technological problem
and then realizing that you didn't make something that anybody cares about.
And the tech problems are going to come with scale.
And now we get to do all that stuff.
Yeah, we're building like crazy machine learning stuff for our recommendation engine.
And we're doing AI video.
editing for our video platform and we've got an app and it's wonderful and we get to do all that
stuff. But we get there by not focusing on what's a sexy technology. You focus on what's a sexy
product to build. And then how are we going to let ourselves move very fast to do that?
I wanted to build on one point that you mentioned about the open internet because I think a very
interesting argument that we're so used to the internet being this place where you can publish
anything and anything can happen. I think you could make the argument that actually it's a
fluke. Because prior to the internet, the primary platform was Microsoft Windows and a little bit
Macintosh and Amiga and like all these other things. But Microsoft was a closed system. And
Microsoft did a lot of things with their power that caused them eventually to be sued by the DOJ
and they became a convicted monopolist on all those things. And then the internet was open.
And then mobile is really a duopoly of two companies. And then this
new thing that we're creating right now on top of it, which is all the AI things, you're like,
well, is this going to be a couple really wealthy companies or is this going to be something that
can be open again, right? And so one thing with the substack team that I always admired and
something that got me excited about the company beyond just the business being great is that
the mission is actually so amazing. And you guys have such a strong philosophy beyond this
as an amazing business model for people. You've gotten to a point where there's actually been
real scale. There is a mobile app that's going big time. What are you excited about from a technology
standpoint now that you have hit that scale and presumably you are not coding and making all the tech
decisions these days? Yeah. Funnily enough, I'm still like one of the top three contributors to
the code base, even though I haven't done anything useful in three years or something. Yeah,
so I mean, we're over three million paid subscribers. We have tens of millions of active users.
Some of the people who write on Substack are among the most red columnists in the U.S. in politics and a bunch of different topics.
I think there's an increasing cultural footprint and intellectual footprint that runs even ahead of the economic footprint.
It's easy to see ideas that started on Substack making their way into the traditional media and the rest of media.
You can see that thing happen in real time.
And there's a lot of frontiers of Subdact that are very excited to me because at its core, Substack,
is not about just email. It's not about just writing. The center of it is this business model.
It's this Promethean idea that as a writer, as somebody who's making culture, you should own
your connection with your audience. You should have creative freedom. You should get the
editorial independence. You should get to do the thing you want. And you should be able to make
money and potentially a lot of money. If you can make a living or a fortune making something
that people deeply value, the magic of that is not just, oh, I can do this.
same thing that I could do anywhere else and make some more money from it, although that's
nice. The magic of that is the kind of stuff you can make gets better. And then the opportunity
that creates for us is now there's this whole universe of really differentiated stuff on substack.
And you can get the substack app and read all the things that you're subscribed to and have a
wonderful experience for that and also discover everything else in that universe. And then that
thing adds, of course, to the network value for all the creators who are there, all the writers
who are there. And it's become possible to build, like, machine learning recommendations.
You can do all of this stuff that used to have, like, a team of 100 really smart people
to make. You now have a team of, like, four really smart people to make. We have those people
at Substack, and they're getting to make this entire new universe of media on the internet with
these, like, sci-fi amazing tools from scratch that tons of people are reading and are making their
favorite writers, filthy rich, that's cool as hell. Another thing we're doing is expanding
into audio, podcast, into video. We have people launching video native stuff. We're at the
forefront of all, like we're using all these AI tools where you can like automatically edit.
You can find a clip. You can transcribe in another transcription. There's all of these things
that are giving people tremendous new creative leverage that make things that you never could
have made before suddenly become possible into a world where now we have a way.
to distribute that. Now we have a way to make money from that. It's a very exciting time to be
working on it. We touched a little bit on AI a second ago. And obviously, one of the most
interesting and compelling use cases for everything that's happening in UI is creativity and
being able to edit and a lot of other stuff. Say a little bit about what you think, how it might
play a role in the product. And then to the extent that you're skeptical about any roles that
I might play, meaning ways you don't think people want to consume content or ways.
that maybe tools won't be useful.
I'm a big AI bull in general.
I think we are in the early phases of the most important technological revolution of my lifetime.
I think there's going to be, as with any new technology,
there's like a hype cycle and a reality cycle,
and those two things don't always match up and they don't always have a predictable pattern.
That's all true.
But I've seen enough, this thing is going to change everything.
And the way that we think about it, I said it before a little bit,
is like creative leverage. I think what's going to happen is that the cost of creating content
of where things are fussy, when I need to produce things, when I need to like do work.
I used to have a big team that had to realize this creative vision. The cost of doing that thing
is going to plummet to zero and you're going to have like a massive supply of content of
every kind that you could ever want. By the way, that's not a new trend. That's just a continuation
of a trend that we've already been in.
Even before AI, we had more content than we could ever want in the whole universe.
And the reason that people subscribe to a substack is not, oh, gee, I don't have enough emails
to read and I wish I could pay money to get some more.
The problem you have in a world of abundant content is like, how do I allocate my scarce
attention, right?
You know what AI has not given us yet is more seconds to be alive?
And so how am I going to spend my time and my life?
What kinds of things do I want to put in my mind?
If what I read is what I become, who do I trust for that?
What is the point of this culture that I'm consuming?
That gets to like really interesting philosophical territory.
But my answer to all this is you're still going to care what other people think.
You're still going to want to have a connection to the human culture and human society that you're a part of.
You're going to want to not just consume that, but you're going to want to act back upon it.
But then all of the tools that make that stuff are.
going to get so much better. You're going to be able to have two people write and make a feature
film by themselves that's better than anything that could have existed before or whatever the new
format that replaces the feature film will be. You're going to have people that can sit there on
their phone and just talk to each other and have it turn into the best TV show or the best series
of clips or the best essay if you wanted to. You're going to have weird things where you write a
science paper and it turns into a podcast. I don't think we can predict exactly how it's all
going to bounce, but the like cost of creating really high production values, slick, well done,
whatever you want from it, content is going to drop.
I actually think that's not only not going to lessen, it's going to increase the value
of your trusted relationships, the things that you really care about.
People always talk about, like, how is AI going to impact substack, the product, and
what are we building?
There's a bunch of interesting stuff there we've talked about.
It's all creative tools.
It's all that stuff.
The thing that I think is maybe less thought about, but just as important to us.
is how is AI changing, like making a company? Because my view on this is, I think there's
going to be like a great extinction event where there's sort of like a pre-AI world and a post-AI
world. And companies that are getting started now are going to be native adopters of all
of the things that change as that happens. And that happens pretty quickly. And companies that came
before by default are going to die, I think, because by force of habit, you'll keep doing the old
thing. And unless you're willing to remake yourself pretty substantially, you're going to get
laps by new entrants that are using these tools natively. And so we're pretty obsessed at
Substack of like avoiding that fate by being constant early testers, early adopters. I think
if it is like testing the fences. Because at any given moment, there's like hype about 20 different
things in AI that's, oh, everyone's going to be doing this now. I'm like 19 times out of 20. It's not there
yet. It's bullshit. People are getting hyped about something. You can do a cool demo, but it's not
real. But then one in 20 times, it's fucking real. And we cannot afford to miss the one in 20 times.
We got to be like, we have a Slack channel called Model Behavior where we're just constantly
talking about, is this possible now? Does this work now? Can it write tests for us? Can it do this?
Can it handle our customer support? Turns out, yes, it can. And I think that's true in our careers,
too. I think this is true if you're like a more senior engineer, it's very tempting to feel like,
oh yeah, I played around with co-pilot. It's not that good. Whatever, I'm not even faster with it.
This is all fake. It's not going to be fake. You got to test the fences.
And just to add to your point about companies, I think it's absolutely true that we can now
really conceive of using LLMs to write essays and ultimately books. I think that's like a linear
extrapolation on what's going to happen. And we often talk about the two people that get together,
they make a Marvel movie. Today would cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Tomorrow,
it's something that you can do on the laptop.
And same with video games and so on.
But I very much agree that companies themselves are almost like a format.
How do you run something that feels like a thousand person enterprise, but by yourself?
That's a very interesting vision in this.
And it's absolutely true that we don't know how companies are going to be organized.
And in fact, if you go back to pre-industrial revolution, I mean, every business was basically
a family business.
You have the blacksmith and you teach that to your kids.
And it was all based on like the labor of your family.
Then factories were very different.
and then even the concept of a limited liability corporation had to be invented and so on and so forth.
And so, yeah, one of the things we have to talk about is in the future, do we even know what the job titles are going to be?
Do we even know what?
And I think it's very hard to extrapolate.
So it's cool that you're leaning into all this.
And I go back to the thing I said before.
If the thing you're doing is starting with the value in the world that you're making and working backwards, so how do we do that thing?
And you're good at that and you're focusing on that and you're willing to like shift up how you do that.
as you learn new things, I think this whole thing is going to be a huge win for you. It's only
going to make the people doing that more powerful, more effective. We're going to have such
wealth and abundance that gets created. And you just have to be willing to use whatever tool
becomes available to make great things. Do you think people want to subscribe to and follow
fully AI content creators? Or do you think that it matters that there's always a human in
loop for that authenticity aspect of it.
I'm not going to say anything's not going to happen.
I have enough epistemic humility and I've been surprised enough times by things that have
happened that I'm not going to say this is not going to happen or that's not going to happen.
When I tried to think about this kind of from first principles, the thing I come back to is
like, what is the point of culture?
What are we doing here?
What do I want from substack?
What do I want from whatever thing I'm using to experience the internet and put media?
what's the point of media? Like, why do I consume media? And I do think one answer is basically solely for
its effect on me, right? Like I use media like a drug. It's like I watch this thing and I feel good and
that's what I get from it. And I think AI is going to be able to do that really, really well.
I think it's going to be like science fiction wireheading. Like we already have things that are
like this. There's already people that treat TikTok this way where you just switch your brain off or
reality TV or any kind of thing, giving me a feeling, making me forget the world.
That will happen. There'll be big businesses built on that. That's one of the real motivation.
It's giving me what I want. But the other point of media to me is learning what I should want.
It's being part of a wider society of trying to figure out who I want to become.
Am I like becoming more like the person that I think I should be? Am I understanding the purpose of my life?
Am I getting to contribute back positively? Am I connecting with other people who I can like live in
in society with, I basically think both of these things are going to be enormous businesses,
and we're building the second one.
Tell us about the next chapter of substack.
What are you the most excited about now that you have scale?
Now that you have that momentum going, what is the next chapter?
What are you the most excited about?
I think there's probably three related things that we're working on right now that I think
are going to change what's possible.
The first is the substack app and destination.
He sort of asked, like, why did we never build an app?
It's like, well, we couldn't at the start.
Turns out we can now.
And there is a place, you know, we want to be like the first class place on the internet
where you can go and have a real direct relationship with the people that are making
the things you deeply value.
And then that enables some other things, right?
It enables the multimedia stuff.
We're pretty deep into podcasting now.
Video's starting to really take off.
The fact that this model doesn't only work for writers, but it also works for all kinds
creators who are starting to have the same kind of complaints. A lot of people feel about
Instagram today like writers felt about the New York Times in 2019. I don't have enough control over
this thing. I'm not getting to make the thing that I actually want. I'm not making as much money
as I wish I could from this. There's a whole sort of like class of creative people beyond exclusively
writers who are starting to discover substack in weird and wonderful ways that I never would have
predicted. There's a thriving, like, fashion scene on Substack, which could not have been further
from Hamish and my original network that we were making. And then related to those two things,
the last thing is just, like, making it radically easier for the next generation of creators.
And within the last month, we've made it possible where you can just pull out the app and publish
something. And we've already had people who, like, pull out the app and publish something.
And then three weeks later, they're making like 50K. And they're like, 50K. And they're like,
like, ooh, this is very interesting. And I think you tie that into the video stuff, you tie
that into all this AI stuff. I think we're going to live in a world where like, I can talk
to my phone. And if the things I say are important enough, smart enough, good enough, I can
get famous. I can make a million dollars. Every other thing that I would have had to worry about
besides making something great, I don't have to worry about it anymore. And that's going to
dramatically increase the amount of great culture we have. Last question for you, Chris.
one of my favorite things about
substack when I talk to people about it
is substack is one of those products
where people will literally come up and tell me
this has changed my life
especially for creators, right?
And so I'd love to maybe close
on maybe an anecdote or something,
a very interesting creator's experience.
I know you have a lot of creators.
Well, there's one person in particular
that kind of jumps to mind.
I won't say who it is,
but there's this early period
where like a butterfly could have flapped its wings
and they wouldn't have started a side.
Substack, right? It's like at the very beginning, I'm not even a writer. I don't know if I want to do this. I don't know if I have anything worthwhile to do. I don't know if I can do it. And sometimes you get to just give a little like push. And so there's this one woman who told us after the fact that she couldn't figure out how to work our stupid website to start a substack to the point where she actually paid someone else to set up her substack for her and then started. And then she went on to make over a million dollars a year on substact.
to the point where her husband was able to quit his job
and spend time with the family.
And it completely transformed their life.
And she's like doing the kind of work she really believes in.
There's so many people that have something very valuable to give the world
if they had a way to make culture and have a real business model for it.
And the more that we can take this kind of Promethean act of
giving them the power to do that,
making it radically easy,
especially at the beginning,
the amount of stuff that can get created
is the reason we exist.
All right, that is all for today.
If you did make it this far,
first of all, thank you.
We put a lot of thought into each of these episodes,
whether it's guests, the calendar Tetras,
the cycles with our amazing editor Tommy
until the music is just right.
So if you'd like what we put together,
consider dropping us a line at rate this podcast.com
slash A16C. And let us know what your favorite episode is. It'll make my day and I'm sure
Tommy's too. We'll catch you on the flip side.