a16z Podcast - Meta CMO: How Advertising Works Under the Hood
Episode Date: September 29, 2025Ads pay for the internet—and they’re about to change again. a16z General Partner Erik Torenberg, entrepreneur and author Antonio García Martínez, and Meta CMO Alex Schultz dive into growth and p...erformance marketing, privacy myths, retail media, and the AI future of “audience-of-one” advertising—plus Instagram what-ifs, WhatsApp as a super-app, and how Meta’s feed shifted from social graphs to AI-ranked content. Timecodes:0:00 Introduction 0:38 Book Inspiration & Positive Perspective on Advertising4:43 Critiques of Online Advertising & Data Privacy7:34 The Evolution of Media Business Models10:12 Content Moderation and Platform Shifts11:43 Connected vs. Unconnected Content & The Rise of AI13:34 The Future of AI, Personalization, and Advertising28:18 Retail Media Networks & First-Party Data38:18 Alternative Histories: Instagram, Libra, and Industry What-Ifs46:31 The Impact of AI on Jobs and Company Structure55:00 The Metaverse, VR, and Future PlatformsResources:Make sure to get Alex’s book here!Follow Alex on X: https://x.com/alexschultzFollow Alex on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/alexschultzFollow Alex on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@alexorigFollow Antonio on X: https://x.com/antoniogm Stay Updated: If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to like, subscribe, and share with your friends!Find a16z on X: https://x.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zListen to the a16z Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bC65RDvs3oxnLyqqvkUYXListen to the a16z Podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a16z-podcast/id842818711Follow our host: https://x.com/eriktorenbergPlease 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. Stay Updated:Find a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Podcast on SpotifyListen to the a16z Podcast on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please 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. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm sick and tired of all the negative talk about online ads.
It drives the entire internet economy.
You wouldn't have all of these companies without online advertising.
It has democratized all this stuff so the startups can do little things
that before you'd have to pay for a soup bowl ad to do.
I've learned to stop worrying and love the automated ad campaign.
I am full in on algorithm.
I'm sick and tired of no one saying the positive thing.
Ads is the damn business.
Antonio Garcia Martinez, director of ads at Coinbase,
picked up, click here.
art and science of digital marketing and advertising by Alex Schultz, CMO and Meta, and called it
the definitive book on growth and performance marketing. That moment led to today's conversation.
We cover why ads pay for the internet, while people misunderstand about data and surveillance
capitalism, and how retail media and first-party data are reshaping the game. We also dig into
AI's audience of one future, where ads, agents, and even transactions happen inside the ad,
and along the way, we explore Instagram's alternate history.
WhatsApp as the stealth super app
and what meta got right and wrong
in its shift from family and friends
to AI ranked content.
Let's get into it.
Antonio, this conversation was inspired by you
appreciating Alex's work and thinking it'd be good
to discuss his book.
Why don't you share what captivated you about it
and would inspire the conversation?
How did this get started, Alex?
I think either I DM'd you or you DM me on LinkedIn or something
or I noticed that you were publishing a book
and I'm like, hey, congrats.
and somehow I got a review copy.
One of the great things about Alex's book
is that he really understands marketing funnels,
which seems simple in theory,
but are actually super complicated in detail.
It's really hard to reconcile the super high-level thinking
of someone who's like CMO at meta or running growth at meta, et cetera,
like high-level, like the theory of this, how does it work?
And then the super detailed thing that's like,
oh, if the email server gets backlogged,
it doesn't send out the email,
it's going to completely hose your analytics.
or if you do server-side versus client-side logging,
you're going to see completely different conversion rates
for like X, Y, and Z region.
And then that's the reality of working in marketing.
It's like the super high-level strategy
and then the most detailed technical breakages
you can possibly imagine.
And so I think your book is brilliant
at showing the full fun, so to speak.
Alex, I want you go deeper?
Why did you write this book?
What are you trying to say
that's not already understood
by people about the company?
Say more.
I mean, the obvious banal reason
why I wrote this book is
there's a gap in the market.
Everyone asks me for a book like this, and there isn't one that I can recommend, and the publisher agree, and my team tells me to do thought leadership all the time because I'm a CMO of a company that sells ads, so they won't be to do thought leadership by ads. So this seemed like a really good fit. So that's the banal reason. The less banal reason, which works for you guys, and I think both of you in particular, is I'm sick and tired of all the negative talk about online ads, about our industry as a whole, and all the books that get rid in, especially.
especially about us are the people who like
don't like Mark and don't like Facebook and don't like
meta. I just actually want to have a book out there that's like online advertising
rocks. It drives the entire internet economy. You wouldn't
have Google. You wouldn't have meta. You wouldn't have all of these companies without
online advertising. It is, you know, democratized all this stuff so the startups can do
little things that before you have paper a Super Bowl ad to do, but they can try
it small and then build up. And I just think it's awesome. I'm sick and tired of
no one's saying the positive thing.
And thought I wanted to do that too, so that's the less analogies.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like what Mark said in TPN, right?
Thinking ads are bad is like a luxury belief of people in wealthy countries
who can entertain the notion of paying whatever Facebook's Arpoo is that Alex knows and probably can't say.
But let's say it's something north of 100 bucks or whatever.
Maybe someone in the United States will pay that.
But if you're going to get three to four billion people online, there's no way they're going to do it.
And ads is an indirect business model that works.
It's not the only business mall in the world.
Like I used to be on Substack.
I used to charge subscriptions.
There's other business models.
But if you want to pay for the internet at scale, ads is a way to do that.
And I totally agree with Alex.
It's time to end the stigma of ads.
It's how the internet gets paid for.
And the reality is good ads experiences.
Like everyone cites me the example.
Alex, like even in crypto that I'm in now, Instagram ads are amazing, right?
People like Instagram ads, actually.
The CTRs are crazy.
And I think one thing that we both learned at Facebook, Alex, is that like people's stated preferences
and revealed preferences are very different, right?
And it all comes out in the CTRs and the conversion rate,
which is one message you have in your book.
And that kind of is the only thing
that actually matters.
And so, yeah.
Yeah.
In general, I think as an industry,
a lot of people in tech kind of think ads is like,
oh, it's that thing over there that pays for everything.
But actually, like, ads is the damn business.
And anyway, I want to say positive things about ads.
Before we do that,
why don't we just steal man,
just so we understand the critiques better?
Maybe, Tony, you could say a stab.
It's been a few years since the critiques were in full swing.
But what were people so concerned about with ads?
people had all sorts of outlandish claims about it. Can you sort of recall
and steal man their side and then we could respond back? I think people feel a sense of
mistrust and violation that their personal data is being used. I mean, I even wrote a
wired piece about it because it so annoyed me. Like the rumors that Facebook is listening to
you through your microphones, which is like completely ludicrous. A, you'd be able to tell
on your phone that it's like constantly talking to the mothership and it would consume so much
network bandwidth. Secondly, the reality is like, even in this conversation, what are the
chances that anything I say could actually be used in ads targeting, even assuming
perfect godlike knowledge, not very much.
And the reality is what actually happened
and people are still asking themselves a question,
it's like you search for something
or maybe your spouse or partner
actually search for something on the same machine
and maybe you're actually in the same lookalike cluster
on Facebook as the case may be.
So there's other things going on
that you actually do have control over
than art isn't nefarious
as anyone listening to you in your microphone.
And so they just don't understand how it is.
I do definitely think that Alex said like a certain level
of transparency and what data is being used
is often not clear to most users.
Like, they just don't understand it.
And I think a lot of Web2 ad tech,
I'm not putting Facebook in that bucket, by the way.
There's other way more sketchy forms of ad tech
that I do think do sell data.
But it's not even true that Facebook sells data, right?
It doesn't.
So, yeah, I'll stop there.
Alex probably has more informed comments here.
I think that Dealman is like the Zubov surveillance capital.
Like, that's what they're describing it as,
surveillance capitalism.
You know, you are the product.
You don't understand what these companies are doing.
That's all in your debt.
That's the steel man.
Oh, and by the way, you're manipulated by all of these marketers because people don't like average advertising either.
It's not just online performance advertising.
It's just like it's advertising as a whole.
So then there's the meta critique of the marketing industry as a bunch of people who drink martinis and convince you to buy things you don't need.
I think there was also another critique in addition to the ones you're making, which is that it shapes the content itself.
That because it's a business model, it sort of, it like dumbs down the content.
It makes the incentive to create, you know, sort of the cat with a sort of buzzfeed.
lists, et cetera, the cat videos
and stuff.
It's actually as part of the core
the Zubov's surveillance capitalism thing.
That's actually part of the core
is because your incentives are to get more time
spent in the attention and clicks,
therefore, you know,
you are going to do stuff that's nefarious
that incentivizes bad content and so on.
The thing that blows my mind
of it, we are not, we're not
attacking this to your mind yet.
Yeah. Well, I mean, one thing I'll say is that it seems
almost the opposite in the sense
that I think we have some nostalgia for
Like, you know, New York Times moving to a subscription model didn't quite make the New York Times more sort of, you know, detached and objective.
When people, you know, when you're charging, you know, a certain demographic, you're going to want to tell that demographic what it wants to hear.
If you look at the history of advertising, particularly newspaper advertising, which you go into a little bit in the book, very briefly, it was actually, the New York Times was originally a platform for advertising, right?
If you look at 19th century American journalism, it was overtly partisan, right?
the press Democrat was the Democratic Party's newspaper,
and if you were a party member, you'd subscribe.
And that's fine.
And everyone understood that if they read that version of reality,
it would be very biased.
If you still go to Europe now,
most European countries have a left and writing newspaper.
In the UK, they have 12.
But you can still see a sort of partisan media here.
A lot of why American press became objective
was that the New York Times could sell ads for Macy's
without offending anybody, right?
Because the Macy's didn't want to run an ad
alongside some screaming editorial for or against this or that president.
And so in many ways, ads actually kept media honest
in the sense that you couldn't take an overt position.
But once you have a subscription model,
and I think what's his name? Ben Smith even said this.
The New York Times then becomes a home for compelling narratives
that people are paying for.
And that, in some sense,
that actually skews media more than an ad model would, in my opinion.
Completely right.
I actually think that is completely correct
in terms of the incentives of the models.
But these are the critiques.
And I think a lot of the critiques when you actually get into them,
are negative. The biggest piece for me about attacking the critique is growth is good. Growing
the economy is good. Growing the economy gives people better lives. It provides taxes. It improves
the world to have a growing economy. Now look, if it's out of control, if you've got rivers
catching on fire, none of that stuff is good. You do need some level of regulation and you need
to figure out the balance. But I think we've got to a place where online advertising has been
so attacked. It's as if it's Satan. And actually, it just
helps people get selectly better ramped ads for trainers, which is a good thing because it sells more
trainers, people get products they love, companies employ more people, the economy grows, it's just
good. That's the point I want to make out that. Advertising is a good thing. It's useful.
Alex, you're in the UK, so your pro-growth arguments are thought crime at the moment.
I was not going to say that, but I was thinking it, Alex. I'm just doing.
Look, I get the point. I have seen CoinBolt's latest work in the UK. I think there's a lot of very
pro-growth people here who are fighting for it,
who I'm pretty supportive of. And I encourage you to read
the UK Foundations.co-sse. That's a very good essay.
I know. I'm just, yeah, a lot of great companies,
pro-growth ethos. And Antonio, so you also wrote a book about
Facebook obviously that we referred to Chaos Monkeys, you know,
over decade earlier. If the book had sort of a new forward
or an updated edition based on what's happened at Meta
and the advertising industry since then, what do you think would be different?
I mean, I don't know that the ad side would actually be fundamentally different.
think, I don't know how much we're going to get into this, but I think the attitude towards
what's changed in the past five years is the attitude towards content moderation, not of ads
content, but of organic content, right? And to what extent should platforms put a thumb on the
scale and say, this is truth or not? Or, you know what, we're going to be an open forum for
ideas. And other than, you know, bad content and nobody wants like porn and violence, we're
not going to do anything. I think that pendulum swinging is what has changed in the past 10 years,
not really the ad side of things. Yeah. I mean, I think that the biggest,
So, yeah, I agree with Antonia's point.
And that pendulum swings and it swings.
I think like the revolution in social media in the last five years
has been that it was all connected content five years ago,
like it was people you follow.
And now the combination of the modern AI systems
that allow you to have semantic understanding of content
and do ranking based on semantic understanding of content,
combined with short form video means the majority of meta,
and I spend a lot of time testifying in court
to this fact, the majority of matter at this point
is actually unconnected content that people
are engaging with, the majority of people's engagement.
And I think
the TikTok factor is the other
massive thing that's happened to the industry
in the last five years. It's totally different.
We have been complete, I mean,
people don't understand how completely disrupted
as a company we've been. Fundamentally,
five years ago it was all connected
content. Now, the vast majority
of engagement is on unconnected content.
You define unconnected and connected for the listeners who maybe don't know what that means?
Yeah, I kind of think of the world as a sort of two by two with one cell hopefully never existing.
So connected and unconnected.
Connected content is someone you follow, a group you've joined, a page you've liked, whatever.
Unconnected is something you've not followed joined, connected with an anyway friend, whatever.
And then private and public is obviously private is, it's restricted to some small group of people.
public as it's open to the world.
If you think Facebook started in
connected private. So it was friends,
it was private, even
small public networks of your
university, but no bigger. So connected
private. If you think
about it, like Instagram started as connected
public, right? It was like
photographers and celebrities and
whatever. Twitter started there as well.
And then TikTok started
as unconnected public.
And each of these companies
have moved and now play in everyone
of the zones like TikTok has its friends tab. It does an awful lot on message sending and
DMs. Instagram has reels and Facebook has reels, which are completely unconnected content.
And so what's happened is each of these social media companies started in a different
quadrant and they're all competing across all quadrants now.
It seems social networks in general, but we also might have shifted from, you know,
primarily or mostly, you know, friend to friend to content feed.
over time. I'm curious what that means for switching costs, network effects, and more broadly,
the way I sort of read, or one way to read, sort of made a big push into, in AI recently
is just the sort of the threat of a world in which people are communicating less and less
to their friends and more and more to chat GPT or sort of, et cetera. How do you react to that?
I mean, I think there's two or three things. One thing is, I mean, we just posted,
a very significant earnings result.
That could not have happened
without the modern AI systems
in two different ways.
The first way is they drive engagement,
so getting more time spent
and more engagement with reels
is really, really what's driving
our usage growth at this stage.
But the second element is at ranking.
And so, you know, I mean, 10 years ago,
I would not use automated ad campaigns
to save my life.
I'm like, get set against them.
today, I've learned to stop worrying and love the automated ad campaign.
I am full in on algorithm first.
And the place where the creativity lies is what data do you feed to the algorithm,
what you teach the machines.
All of that relies on the modern AI systems.
And so if you don't, when people say we don't have any reason to invest in these AI systems,
I'm like, first and foremost, our core business is all AI ranking and has been since I've been there.
You know, it's always machine learning after it's shipped and it's AI until it shipped.
until the last two years.
And so, like, it's our core business
would be the number one point.
The number two point would be,
yes, I mean, I think people are going to be
talking to AI chatbots a lot.
And I think down the line, there will be a feed
of AI content.
You're already seeing a lot of it on TikTok
and Instagram, Facebook, Twitter,
some on Snapchat.
People are really interacting and liking
the right AI content,
and that's only going to get better
because these things are definitely good,
even if scaling law of ends,
these things are good at media.
And so I think there's two elements to it.
One is like, it's our core business, ranking things.
And two, yeah, there's really engaging AI stuff out there
and we need to be on top of it.
It's just like we were the shift to Reels,
just like we worked the shift to stories,
just like mobile, just like Messenger.
Yeah, I have one comment on that out.
It says you have a section at the internet AI
that I thought is really interesting.
And one of the concepts you introduce is,
I forget how you frame it exactly,
but it's a world where there's an audience of one, right,
which is like the media I'm consuming
is literally hyper-personalized
like literally me
as if the person
and you always had a feed
that was ranked differently person to person
but you're still engaging with not exactly mass media
but media that is being seen by more than one person
while AI totally changes the dynamic
and you know in the past 30 years of ad tech
we've gone from something that it felt like newspapers
like everyone got the front page in the New York Times
to something that it feels like you know
Facebook which is a ranked feed
but it's the same content
the one where, no, no, literally nobody else is seeing this except me, right?
I mean, the underlying influences that bubble up through an LLM model or through search indexing
might be common, but what you're actually visualizing is different.
So I'm curious if you've thought about it, because I've gotten interested in what AI ads
will eventually look like.
Having some sort of sponsored offer or surfacing or re-ranking content inside your AI result
seems like it'd be really interesting.
And to the extent the web browser goes away, like I almost don't even use Google anymore.
I'm really a chat to BT guy.
Obviously, it's going to be a channel, you know, you mentioned AIDA, right?
The eye side of it, the intention side of it's happening inside AI.
I'm curious if you thought about how that plays out and how advertising kind of gloms on to AI.
Yeah, I mean, I actually think this is going to be super, super interesting.
There's, I think there's two major interesting sort of things to think about.
One is what happens to search, which, you know, Google's very on top of, like,
They're very worried about the innovator's dilemma they find themselves in right now.
But if search ads goes to a paid model like CHAPDPT and people start asking their questions in that way and they pay for it,
that is very disrupted to online advertising and who knows where that lands?
Or does it go the other way where people are using more and more search and there's a freemian model and there's ads associated,
in which case the AI ads will have a lot of principles of the search ads.
And so which way that goes is one big question.
The second big question is, yeah, what happens to the creative intersected with the target?
So my perspective is it gets more engaging, more personalized.
You can convert in the advert, like in a world where you can tell an agent,
hey, I want to buy this thing, take a picture of me, or look at my camera, this is my size,
like, evaluated.
By the way, you've got all of my past purchases associated with me,
and you can therefore make sure it's the perfect fit for this particular retailer
because you can compare it with everyone else.
you can get the conversion experience right in the interface where you're in,
start the buy flow, complete the buyflow from an agenetic perspective
or honestly just a you interacting with the other company's agent perspective.
So I think you're going to find a completely personalized ad will happen,
targeted entirely to you that is customized to you,
and you can convert in the ad by interacting with the company you're trying to buy from
through an AI interest.
I mean, the crazy end world of this is
ads to AI agents,
which I think is definitely also going to happen
within our life's time.
Yeah, the AI agent is doing a search.
There are ads for the AI agent to click on
and pay for placement
where you're promoting stuff to someone's agent.
I mean, this is all very likely,
and the underlying principles of online marketing
are actually going to hold, like,
AI optimization versus search engine optimization,
really actually a lot of similarities
on a bunch of companies
trying to do the same thing there.
AI search ads versus search ads
don't have a lot of similarities.
And when you talk to a chat bar,
why is that that different
than SMS marketing push notifications
or snail mail back in the day?
There's a lot of similarities.
It's going to be wild.
I mean, you just think about,
I think the way you think about it
as like intelligence too cheap to meet it.
Like there's a lot of people who are afraid of loss,
right? You look at the ads industry
and every agency freaked out when Mark said,
oh, someone will use AI as their agency
and we'll use a credit card to buy.
Now, big ad agency clients don't use credit cards,
so it clearly was talking about SMBs
and not big clients.
But you're going to be in this world
where I think a bunch of stuff that today
is not ROI positive
because it's not worth staffing it,
suddenly becomes possible and becomes ROI positive,
and AI will unlock a bunch of abundance
in terms of us being able to make things possible,
like creative for SMBs,
like having a chat bot.
I mean, we're in this place where we're replacing our content moderation systems
with AI from old ML.
And we've just been watching the curves get closer and closer and closer,
and they finally crossed over on a few cases,
and they're doing better,
better than experts even when we use expert trend data.
The same is true for customer support.
You can now actually get customer support in the US for Facebook.
It is possible by a chapboard, and that is entirely AI, and at the end, passes over to human beings.
It's suddenly possible.
We could never staff it with human beings.
We can now actually start something that wasn't possible before.
And yes, there's incrementally a few more stuff, but the workload is that of 100,000 people.
The workload isn't that like 100 extra people.
So I think there's going to be just a ton of stuff that's unlocked, that today isn't ROI positive,
but you add in an AI tool that makes you as a human being more efficient.
and you're going to suddenly make things ROI positive
but they never are a positive before.
When we think about the future of advertising,
like, is there going to be a world where I have the option
to just get a ton of things for free
if I just ingest ads?
I go into an Uber and I don't have to pay for it,
but I'm just looking at ads.
Then I go to a restaurant and I don't have to pay for that,
but I'm just seeing ads everywhere.
Like, how more integrated can you see ads
to the day they experience more so than it is now?
I mean, the classic terrible,
web 2 ad tech idea was paying the users
for their data. I mean, that's flawed
for a bunch of reasons. A, it instantly gets farmed
and you have massive fraud.
Also, the amount of
the value of the user's data
that they actually own isn't nearly as valuable as they
think it is, right?
Like, it's,
it just isn't that valuable in the scheme of things
if you were actually shot. Like, data is not the new oil.
It actually isn't this commodity product that you could
just sell. Like, even if I
managed, let's cite a third-party company
so we don't get into trouble. Let's say,
managed to take Amazon's conversion record for users and steal it and try to sell it.
I mean, somebody might find it meaningful if they managed to match the identities, but it's not
actually that that is worth billions of dollars within the context of the Amazon buying
experience and the customer relationship they have. On its own, it's actually not worth
a huge amount of money, right? And that's, that applies even more so for like literally the past
30 days of my browser behavior. I don't know, like, how much would you price the past 30 days
in my browser behavior, a few bucks, 10 bucks maybe
at most. It just isn't, it isn't
enough money to make anyone switch off
a browser, say, and go to this browser versus
that one, typically. Well, I think what's
interesting, there's a few things that's interesting in this. I agree.
Data is not the new oil. Data is
sand. And sand is only about
able if you're refining silicon chips,
right? And by the way,
feature isn't destroyed. Data
exists forever. Oil gets burned once and it
goes away. So there's a ton of reasons.
I really agree with all you're saying there.
I mean, the thing you're saying, I've literally got an example in the book of incentive affiliates
where at eBay, when we paid people to get confirmed registered users,
incentive affiliates would go out and pay people to sign up for eBay and confirm,
and then they would give them money back.
And then we changed it to activated confirmed registered users.
And that caused us a huge amount of credit card chargebacks,
because activation was buying or bidding on something,
and people would convert, activate, and then they would charge back once
They've got paid back by their affiliate partner.
So 100% here lies a lot of issues.
On the other side of it, I really do think this is the point about online ads being
awesome.
You live in that world today, Eric.
Like Google search, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, Twitter.
Like these are incredible YouTube.
These are incredible products that you get completely free.
Not like cable where you pay and get ads.
You get them completely free.
and you get them completely free because ads makes that possible.
And so I think it will go further.
I actually agree it will go further.
At the same time, I think there's a lot of risks with it.
If you don't think about the fundamental principles in my book
in dealing with affiliates because, like,
there's a lot of ways you can be deployed.
And I have a lot of examples of fraud.
Hey, Alex, why hasn't Meta built a one integrated super app like WeChat?
Why are Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, siloed?
Well, two thoughts.
One, I would actually say the WeChat doesn't really integrate Instagram and Facebook in that meaningful way.
So I wouldn't, I wouldn't smush all of social media together into one super app.
I think there's a few comments here.
One, actually WhatsApp is disarmingly close to that and people don't understand it.
So WhatsApp is the place, the single largest broadcast sharing channel on Earth.
The WhatsApp status tab is bigger than Instagram or Facebook in terms of the amount of content shared.
It just so happens it's not in the US, so Americans don't notice it, but it is massive.
WhatsApp has payments in India.
It just got awarded the best payments platform in India.
The government reports us for a long time on that one and now is really supportive of what
WhatsApp payments, which is a wonderful turnaround.
So WhatsApp actually has payments in India.
They're growing very rapidly.
The interesting thing, though, about WeChat is going back to growth.
Why did WeChat turn the corner so dramatically on payments?
And it comes down to two things in the Chinese market.
Thing number one is China has red envelopes.
And nowhere else on the Earth had the red envelopes, cash in envelopes that you get with the...
And thing number two is China had...
not the credit cards.
And so what happened was you have to connect your bank details
to WeChat if you wanted to partake in WeChat red envelopes.
And WeChat allowed people to give their friends red envelopes,
but also gave people red envelopes.
And one in 50, 100, whatever, had a large chunk of cash in it,
but most of them didn't.
And WeChat got people to connect their bank accounts
before they could receive the red envelope.
So WeChat wired up the payment system in China,
in a way, had never been wired up before
through this viral growth mechanism
that couldn't exist anywhere else on Earth.
So we are building a super app.
It's called WhatsApp.
It is the largest place for broadcast sharing on Earth
and it has a lot of success in commerce
and in particular, in payments growing,
but it's a lot harder to do it anywhere else on Earth
than it is in China.
Yeah, I was going to say,
I mean, WhatsApp really is like the business communication later.
And it's funny, Americans don't use it
because they all use messages,
which is funny because it's like,
only Americans would deflect using an inferior product
and say, oh, no, no.
Like, there was this viral tweet.
It's like, oh, I don't live in a thorough country.
I don't use WhatsApp.
It's like, bro, messages sucks.
I can't even synchronize across two devices.
The message thread in WhatsApp, I never have that problem.
But, like, I was in Lisbon randomly for a conference,
and, like, the dry cleaner on the corner only did it via WhatsApp.
And, like, I had to WhatsApp them.
And, like, somebody magically appears, the clothes came back,
all via WhatsApp.
Like, no other touchpoint, WhatsApp, the whole thing, right?
And I assume in India is probably even more sophisticated than that.
But I think people in America don't quite understand, like, calling a business is like backwards or, like, even text like, no, no, no, no, no.
There's a whole business WhatsApp accounts where you can just transact business with WhatsApp, and that is the communication layer.
And like you said, also as a social thing, right?
Like group chat started as like a WhatsApp thing.
And it's like, I also did a wire piece, you know, it's like Facebook got so much flack during the whole post-2016 thing for like feed and ranking.
It's like, bro, there's no ranking and feed in WhatsApp.
And it still causes both good and bad.
Like, technology always has positive and negative externalities.
And so, of course, there are some negative externalities to come out of tech.
But that all happens on WhatsApp, too.
It's not the ranking.
It's just putting a network computer in everyone's hand and connecting everybody to everybody
is obviously kind of a shock to the system, right?
And so that's, it's always going to have, you know, it's going to convulse the system a little
bit so you see some negative outcomes.
But net, I think it's positive.
And again, having a communications layer that everyone can communicate on, that's just,
to me, it's crazy, right?
And WhatsApp is that layer.
So one thing that actually has changed in the past,
10 years of ad tech, is retail ad networks.
And you mention them a little bit inside your book, Alex.
And for those who aren't familiar with it,
and I haven't played in that pond too much,
but one of the unique things,
and it actually reflects another topic
that we haven't gotten into, which is privacy and GDPR
and all that, but basically inside
large retailers like Walmart,
like Amazon is probably what, the number three ad system
after meta and Google at this point,
or like number three and number four.
And it's unique because what retail
ad network means is you're showing ads
inside a retailer that already
has a first-party experience with the
user, which again is somewhat
unusual, right? Like typically the classic
ad network is advertiser A,
advertising and publisher B,
and A and B, I'm like nothing to do with each other.
But in this case, advertisers are actually paying
for placement inside like a
native Walmart shopping experience.
And part of it is it's very
efficacious, right? Like you control the entire
like you say in your book, friction kills everything.
And so having a single form of payment
whether it be Amazon Pay, Walmart, or Shopify, for example,
who also does the same thing, is absolutely key.
But the other thing, of course, the way privacy law works,
if you have a first-party relationship with the user,
you can do things with data that you can as a third-party.
I mean, arguably, it's a good reason for that,
but it does skew the market a little bit.
Walmart can sit there and construct a certain segment around users
because they can legally do that because they have a first-party relationship,
but then they leverage that data for a third-party
who's buying an ad inside that system.
And so it's a combination of both easing the funnel
and frankly, you know, getting through existing privacy law
that's kind of driven that.
But I'm curious, yeah, what you think about that?
Because that world, I think, didn't really exist
when I was at Meta, and it's only come recently.
I'm curious what your take is on that art.
Yeah, there's one other thing that you're missing off,
which goes on deeper in the retail out network funnel
that necessarily than Walmart and Amazon.
But like the smaller retailers that do it,
they also buy off other companies
with the data they have on first part.
So the retail ad network becomes a third party out network as well, which is space for opportunity for things to go awesomely and space for opportunity for things to go really badly in terms of fraud attribution in your eyes showing up in the wrong place.
Yeah, I mean, I think when you look at it from the perspective of an FMCG company, and I'd add in for a lot of quick serve restaurants, QSRs, Doddash is a retail ad network as well.
Uber Eats has a retailer in our book as well.
And so they're seeing this situation where they're getting a double bite of the cherry from the people who are retailing their goods, both at Walmart and Amazon and also with Uber Eats and DoorDash, where they have to pay for placement to promote themselves and they have to pay a commission to the vendor.
So this sounds terrible, right?
This sounds like it's a real squeeze from the distribution channels onto the FMCG companies and the quick serve restaurants.
But it's also just the history.
and this gets back to a lot of what I feel
and have put in the book.
This gets back to the history
that Benedict Evans likes to say,
Amazon got the Sears Catalogue from 1950
and just implemented everything
in the Sears Catalogue for the Internet.
You paid for placement in the shelves
when you were on Walmart in the big megastore.
You paid a placement in the Sears catalog.
Retail ad networks have existed
for as long as retailers basically have existed.
And so all it's done is modernized that
and brought it online.
It's going more to below the line media budgets,
so kind of direct response, placement-related media budgets,
discount-related media budgets,
and less to above-the-line, typical media buying.
So it's competing for different budgets,
but it's a major, major factor in terms of the industry like now.
And the whole thing does boil down, as you say,
to data and algorithms,
and first-party data having advantage over third-party data.
So these big companies have a really good leg-up
to be successful in this space.
Which if you're being charitable, you would say,
well, that was a good outcome of GDPR, right?
I mean, it's true.
Like, the sketchiest part of ads was always the third-party data vendors.
I won't name names, but you know where the companies are,
or were, for that matter, because the world has died a little bit.
But, like, that part of it always kind of sketched me out a little bit.
I think the reason why I think you should privilege first-party data
is because if you have the user relationship,
you'll safeguard that user relationship
because you have a long-term incentive in making sure that user is comfortable
and doesn't, you know, bail or try.
turn out of Amazon Prime or stop buying on Walmart and buy some targeted stead, right?
They're not just a random user that you have a very transactional relationship with.
There's actually like an arc of a relationship there.
And if they were to turn out, that same growth leader is going to get dinged in the next report.
Like, well, why did the retention rate go down to 75% or whatever?
It's like, well, because you burnt them out on ads or the ads are terrible or what have
you, right?
So I think it actually align incentives very nicely.
100%.
But it is directly incentivization of privacy laws.
But yeah, 100%.
Is there anything else?
worth sharing about how the industry is going to change with the platform shift to
Alex, you gave a couple examples earlier, but anything else high level or concrete that's
worth mentioning?
Yeah, I think ads to AI agents are going to be nuts.
I think the interesting question is you have to pass that personal context somehow.
Like you mentioned, like, it's funny, you know, one of the interesting exercises,
go ask your favorite chat to BT, like your open session when you're logged in.
So what do you know about me?
And it's amazing how much it knows about you.
And it's not even scraping the internet.
It's just like literally, so what do you think my political opinions are?
What do you think my taste in clothing are?
And it just sits there and rattles off the most informed opinion that knows me better than my fiancé does.
And, you know, how you activate that in a kind of ads sponsored sort of way, I think will be interesting.
I think there's going to be billions of dollars of billable hours for privacy lawyers.
I have to figure this out.
But at some point, you're going to get to the point where, in fact, you have even better personalization than you have now.
And again, in a way that you yourself control and is probably centralized.
in one place and all that good stuff.
But it'll be interesting to see that play out.
It's funny, though, cookies are still around, Alex.
Everyone's been predicting the death of cookies for 10 to 15 years,
and yet here they still are.
And Google has reversed scores.
So that's actually quite pleasing on that one.
Yeah, I think this point is also like,
if you think about which ads are going to be disrupted,
you've already got a bunch of disruption happening
for Google search, for Metro advertising.
You know, there's going to be more disruption.
That's going to be more creative stuff happening.
We talked about that already.
I think the thing we haven't talked much about is direct mail.
And now direct mail was a letter and then direct mail was an email and then direct mail was an SMS and then it was a push notification and now it's a chat thread and has a lot of stuff in common across all of those different areas.
But when your direct mail is sentient and can interact with you, that is going to completely change the value of direct mail marketing and having a chat thread with your client, with your customer.
And so I think that is probably the field inside marketing
that's going to get revolutionized the most
because I mean, I was talking
at one very large, very large luxury
cosmetics company at Pan.
And they were saying in one country,
like of their D to C sales, 30% online
were coming to chat box now, a large company.
And the startups in the beauty space,
there are some that are totally chatbot
first in terms of sales. And if you look at India, if you look at Thailand, so much of what's
happened in tech came out of Southeast Asia and Asia and German. So look, Kakao was the first
real breakthrough in messaging. Yes, there was WhatsApp line, we chat, all the others, but Kikau
was like the first one we looked at that woke us up. Kikau Story was there before Snapchat
brought it to the U.S. by a year. And then they made, Snapchat made it disappear, which was
really smart. But like Kikau story was first. You know, TikTok came out of Southeast
Asia. You're in this place where at the moment you're looking at TikTok shop. You're looking
at some of the other stuff that's going on that's come out of Southeast Asia. And the stuff,
or Asia in general, sorry. And the stuff that I'm looking at a lot is for businesses, they are now
replacing a chat thread with a human being with a customer with a chat thread with a chat bot,
an AI chatbot. And in the US, that's not working. And in Western Europe, that's not working.
But in Asia, that is working right now. And in the developing world, Brazil, Africa,
that's working really well, and it's scaling.
And so I think that's something that be really big that comes across,
is direct mail will be completely revolutionized by AI.
It's funny you mentioned direct mail because it's, I mean,
direct mail is where this all started.
I mean, actually in Chaos Monkeys, I kind of draw a line between, at the time,
I remember Alex, when we were doing like custom audiences and stuff,
it was like, yeah, bed, baths and beyond and there's like 20% off coupons or whatever.
And the reason why direct mail, people were wondering, like,
what the hell is direct mail about?
the reason why is because the primary key
to use database language for the American consumer
was the address, right?
And that was the way that you would address,
like a lot about ads to get a little philosophical about it
is about identity and addressable media.
Like, how do I actually reach out to that person
and then follow that identifiers throughout the entire conversion funnel?
It used to be literally the address
because then you'd order something,
it'd arrive at your address,
and that was the attribution system, right?
You received the thing, and then that would be catalogued by that.
But of course, everything going on the internet
meant a total reshift,
whether it be a mobile device identifier or Facebook user ID, cookie, what have you.
It's just interesting that how the notion of who you are as an individual
actually informs a lot of the marketing and in the crypto context,
just to go to what I do right now a little bit,
your on-chain wallet address is kind of that identifier, right?
And that's a whole different namespace for the user.
And so it's just interesting to see how, I think you say this in your book,
the details change, but the fundamentals always persist, right?
So, like, the primary key on the database shifts from mailing address to cookie, to mobile
device identifier, to Facebook user ID, to blockchain address.
But the actual principles don't change, actually.
They're exactly the same across all these channels.
Could just think of that I thought of myself.
100%.
So I want to play a little bit of alternative history, but it's like four or five questions.
What if Instagram was an independent company and wasn't bought by Facebook?
Antonio, because I'm not sure if Alex can comment on it.
Antonio,
Antonio, in comments on it,
the anti-trust trial from over,
and I just spent two months in D.C.
I can comment on it.
Great.
So maybe, imagine a world where Instagram said,
no, no, played the Snap route.
What would that look like?
They look like Snap.
Maybe smaller.
I mean, I think, like, if you look at what Kevin has testified to,
like he's explicitly testified to,
he said it could go either way.
You know, on WhatsApp, I think WhatsApp,
was tremendously successful, and I would not say that I, as a growth leader, did much for the
success of WhatsApp. We helped them a lot with infrastructure. I think we kept them free. I think
there was a bunch of things that we enabled to happen for WhatsApp. But bluntly, WhatsApp was a
great, great product with higher attention. Instagram, I think, was touching go as to whether it
could be either a Twitter or a Snapchat or just a complete also ran like path. When we announced
we were buying it, there was a massive spike in their growth just caused by the PR. Like, literally
the global news that Mehta was buying, Facebook would buy Instagram, caused their growth to
accelerate. And there's a whole stack of things I can go into in the details of like their
infrastructure was on the verge of falling over. They were in a position where they had real,
real issues with spam filtering and massive issues with comments that they were failing to get on top
on. Now, the flip is, obviously it could have gone either way. And that's exactly what Kevin
said and I can see how it could have gone either way and other company we've got there.
But, and Mikey and Kevin were, this family moment, we can see if what Mike is doing today,
but Mikey and Kevin were just so brilliant.
And I loved working with it.
At the start, we fought so much.
Like, Kevin and I fought so much.
And by the end, I'm like, he's one of my favorite people who work.
Will you fight Alex?
No way.
I don't believe it.
I know.
But we did, so we thought.
And by the end, we were like, hopefully aligned.
And so I think it could have gone either way.
my gut is it would have been
maybe Snapchat, maybe Twitter.
It wouldn't have been zero,
but it certainly wouldn't have been
the Instagram it is to death.
What were some of the biggest,
what was the crux underlying the fights?
So there was some organizational stuff
which literally came up in the trial.
My team really,
so you need to have a product
and engineering team on growth.
You can't just have an marketing team.
And the magic in meta
is that we have really made,
made it a hiller, a capability that is so ingrained in the company that every product
and engineering team gets growth now.
And it is really special about the company and it's different about that.
And I have a product growth team, but it's only like 150 people for an 80,000 person
company.
It's not a massive, massive team who then go in and help teams implement growth best practices
throughout the company.
At that time, Instagram didn't have a growth product and engineering team.
and sort of we had a big disagreement over that.
In the end, they'd built one out.
It was really successful for that.
And actually, it's a place where we ended up being super aligned and super happy with each other,
but we've got met a fight.
The other place that was massive was called the Connections Pippets.
So Instagram was focused on public figures, and it was not focused on friends and family.
You remember, it was public photographers and cool celebrities and everything.
And we said, no, people you may know,
on Instagram is accounts you should follow or suggested users is really important to get that
happy blend of friends and family with public figures, you know? And Instagram was a modern social
network where there wasn't a distinction between business account and friend account, whereas
Facebook, MySpace others, they had some of these distinctions back in the day. And so we had a
disagreement over like importing contacts, focusing on friends, all of those things, focusing on
algorithmic follows and all of those. So those were the two, I think,
larger disagreements that ended up being
quite front and center in the antitrust case.
And so I feel I can mention them
because they have been covered in the press
and they are literally a matter of court record at this time.
Okay, continuing our alternative history theme
and Antonio, why don't you take this one?
What if Libra was allowed to sort of exist
in its full vision without regulatory challenges?
Yeah, I mean, I wasn't there for the Libra period,
to be honest, but obviously I'm at a crypto company now.
It's amazing how much the regulatory landscape changes everything.
I think recently Stripe announced it as building an L1.
Every company in their brothers used to be announcing a stable coin.
We had major crypto legislation passed that was favorable to crypto.
We've had members of the admins say that they want the U.S. to be the capital of crypto,
which obviously something I'm supportive of.
It's just, yeah, I mean, I think if Libra were to launch now or something,
it would be a very different conversation.
And it seems like it was doomed from the start at the time.
it's a shame
but yeah
I think you're going to start seeing crypto B
be sort of the rails under the hood
people are going to be on chain and not even realize it
actually which is fine
and actually arguably is the way you should build these things
and I think it's again what's
the positive shine on all that? I think I tweeted
about it yesterday right? The fact that you're going to have
investors around the world who can hold dollars freely
or who can invest in American equities but have them on chain
with all the rigmaral that it takes to buy a U.S. stock
in some other country, that's going to be magical in a way.
And it's going to open a level of economic freedom that you haven't seen to date.
I know that's probably a little bit beyond the purview of whatever Libra's goal were back in
the day, but just to give an example of how it actually opens up the world that makes it
freer and drives more economic growth, that's kind of a good thing.
And that's kind of part of the reason why I got crypto-pilled.
It's like, man, it just seemed like a lot of traditional institutions are actually choking
innovation rather than fomenting it.
And sometimes you kind of need a different paradigm to kind of kick-start that process.
and I'm old enough to remember Web 1 and Web 2
and now Web 3 if we're still using that term
or on-chain or whatever.
Yeah, I think obviously Libra now
would be a very different scenario.
Maybe Alex has thoughts on this one.
I'd have one thing which is,
look, it's public now that one of the places we go
when we are sourcing terrorist material
to take off of Facebook and Instagram is Telegram.
Like we go to Telegram, we subscribe to
terrorist groups. We take the data and for prescribed organizations in the United States
and the United Kingdom and so on, we take down the terrorist information. That is illegal
content by anyone's standards. It's not sort of one of these debatable areas of a content
moderation. If you were in a place where Libra had succeeded, you would have WhatsApp,
messenger, Instagram, friend I.E. U.S. friendly messaging apps, be the successful ones
with crypto and he said, you don't.
And I think that probably matters to national security
and matters to a lot of things that the people who beat us up on this
actually care about.
Continuing our alternative history, Antonio, we'll start with you.
What if Hillary had won the 2016 election?
Oh, my God.
I'm not even going to go into that topic.
I have no idea.
Absolutely.
No clue.
Is there anything to say on the topic?
Totally different.
I have no idea.
Going back to,
sort of AI for a second
it seems that mobile was a
more of a sustaining technology than it was a disruptive
technology. Sure, we got Uber and Snap
and Instagram, but
more of the gains went to
Facebook and Google than the entire
startup industry from the
time. Do you think something similar is going to
happen in AI? Maybe Antonio will get your first
take where companies
invented pre-2016
pre-open AI are going to
just accrue so much more
value than the companies after it?
You know, I don't have a hard answer.
I find myself somewhat unopinated.
I do think it's one of the great questions.
Are you going to have the incumbents?
I mean, Microsoft seems to be playing the AI game pretty well
and actually have it, you know, bootstrap or like boost their growth.
Are they going to be totally and utterly disrupted?
I mean, I think another way of framing the same problem is, is Open AI and Chack TBT and
some of the other foundational models who currently own the consumer experience?
Are they going to own the consumer experience forever?
Are people going to actually be building apps on top of?
of a more API-ified version of,
and it's, like Alex said,
it's intelligence too cheap to meter,
and it just infiltrates every product,
you know, bots, whatever.
I really don't know what the answer there is, to be honest.
I think it's going to be,
it's a standard yin-yang thing of like,
can Amazon become Walmart before Walmart can become Amazon thing, right?
In which can the old become the new fashion,
then you can eat the old.
And we're going to see that play out again.
Yeah, and I've challenged you a little bit on mobile
how sustaining it, how sustaining it was,
as disruptive it was.
I think maybe I'm being a Chinese diplomat here.
I think it is too soon to tell
because a lot of stuff couldn't happen without mobile
in the current wave of destruction,
of disruption that's coming with the chat,
the chat face interfaces for AI.
So we will see.
The thing for me that's been the realization
is when I got into this with 20 years ago
and sort of, you know,
Google was maybe the previous generation of
company and then you had Apple and Microsoft and Yahoo and eBay were the most valuable
companies on the internet and you know what like Google Amazon and Microsoft they made
it true Yahoo and eBay are much less relevant today and the question is are we the
leadership team that does the Google Apple Microsoft Amazon or are we the leadership team does
the eBay Yahoo is a question that really does keep me up at night and makes me think about
this this moment of transition we've done to a lot but there's another one coming and now
with the Nipple-H company leadership, which is interesting.
I think META's recruiting strategy from how I understand it as an outsider is just absolutely
brilliant.
And I'm surprised more sort of, you know, big tech companies haven't done it sooner and have
more just sort of antiquated sort of understanding of sort of aligning compensation to true
value.
Antonio, do you have any perspective on whether or any thoughts on whether that's going to be
the norm going forward?
That's so about my pay grade, Eric.
I wouldn't know what to tell you there.
I mean, obviously, you know,
I think one of Mark's, you know, famous thing
is that we judge you based on your outputs,
not your inputs, right?
And that was like the party line even at meta,
like in 2011, and I assume it hasn't changed.
And I think every sane, you know,
successful company I've worked at
has had some version of that
as a company principle.
Yeah.
I mean, I think the thing that certainly has been talked
about in conversations I'm having is...
People who can successfully use AI as individual contributors in particular, it is a force
multiplier.
Like you give a 10x engineer access to AI, like they become a hundred X engineer, and it is
showing therefore the talent, the best talent, when they can use the tools that currently
exists, becomes way more valuable, and then being able to produce the tool is way more valuable
too. If that continues to play out, that will mean there will be a massive differentiator in how
pay works out for the 10x100x engineers than there is today, which is already, like they come in at
BP level, they're paid significantly more than the typical I see, but clearly, clearly there's
going to be more. The other alternative is these tools make it easier. Now, my perspective is the
tools help you implement a lot of stuff that's been implemented before, but they don't
solve logic for you. They don't solve creative thinking for you. And so they push things up the
value stack in terms of where the work is happening, whether you're talking about marketing
or I run data science and data engineering for the company. You talk about DS and DE. They take
away routine data pipeline coding, but they don't get you to the creative analysis that actually
does something that changes the direction of the company. So,
I think there's a good chance
that value accrues to
the most creative best logic thinkers
and value gets taken away
from the routine work, which therefore
would say, compensation
is going to go up for the best employees.
Yeah, the best encapsulation effort is you're not going to lose
your job to AI. You're going to lose your job
to a human who uses AI better than you do.
You're going to lose your job to.
I mean, it's still kind of a harsh
lesson, but that's the reality of
it. Do you think these companies
in the future have fewer employees or
or more employees?
Or what's the way to think about?
So this is a really interesting one.
I have two things.
One, it depends how weird you think it's going to get.
Like, do we actually get to a S-I-A-G-I?
If you do, that's not, you know, AI 20-27 is not the table.
Look, this comes back to three different things,
which we are talking about a lot in terms.
Thing number one for the framing is doing existing stuff more efficiently.
existing stuff is going to be done more efficiently
with AI as it exists today without more
breakthroughs.
Like a lot of stuff can be automated,
a lot of stuff can be done more efficiently.
So that work, there will be less of it.
Thing number two is
things that literally weren't possible before
will become possible.
That can open up a lot more jobs.
And thing number three is
things that were possible,
but just were really effing expensive,
suddenly become over the threshold,
of, you know, reasonable to do.
That's the support example I used recently.
So thing number one, let's just, you know, rank ads better.
We could already rank out, so we can now do it more efficiently.
We can rank them better.
Thing number two was semantic understanding of content to lead to content ranking
to enable short form video and unconnected content could not exist without these models.
It now exists.
Thing number three is support chatbots.
You could do it with human beings before.
It was just prohibitively expensive.
and now AI does a hell of a lot better
in a phone true.
So there are those three different categories
and what matters is jobs will go down
in category number one, they were.
How many jobs category number two
and category number three create
will determine
some of these companies may even get bigger
like literally because so many things
are now ROI positive to do.
So this is just, I think it's still up in the air
but what is certain is all three of those things go out.
Yeah, no, I think in the short term,
you know, one of the biggest
problems here is what's called a lump of labor fallacy, which you assume that does a certain
fixed amount of work in the world. And it's not true for manual labor. It's not even true
for now. It's certainly not true for knowledge of labor. I think in the short term, you might
have AI might have a negative impact on hiring ever so slightly in certain places, maybe interns or
junior engineering. But overall, I think I agree with the latter, I think it was the last scenario
that Alex set out, which is, no, it actually increases jobs. I mean, take the example of stage
Coast drivers in the introduction of a car, right? It's like, yeah, the poor Sagecoach driver who
had a team of horses through, you know, New York whose streets used to be full of horses with
horsemen around the streets. I'm looking at New York, which is why I'm citing the analogy.
Cars created hundreds, thousands of new roles that didn't exist in the past from motel
owners to gas stations, everything you can possibly imagine. So the thought that we're just going to
sit around with 99% of people just getting paid UBI from Open AI. Like, I just like the least
like this scenario I see playing out, actually.
To be clear, I think there'll be disruption between here and that point,
but I just don't see, no, I think there's going to be more demand.
There's going to be more code.
There's going to be more companies.
Like Alex said, there's going to be things that weren't even physically possible
or possible if they're so expensive you can possibly give them,
which are suddenly seizable.
And so, no, I think it's going to be actually a net positive on society.
It's just going to change.
And change is scary.
But that's it.
I mean, generally kind of positive AI.
I think if anything, like, it's funny because you think,
oh, this cognitive elite of AI builders,
like, dude, if you have intelligence on demand,
does that make intelligence more or less valuable
as like a thing that just exists in the world?
It's like, no, no, the human touch EQ rather than IQ,
and I hate those buzzwords, so they sound very LinkedIn.
But you know what I mean, right?
Like, actually the raw intelligence is just going to be a thing you buy
just like a server on AWI.
It's like that actually matters a lot less
than actually framing the problem or the human touch too.
What if Snap had sold to meta?
I didn't snap would be Instagram.
I genuinely think we have the rules and the ability and the know-how to make things more successful.
So I genuinely think it would be significantly more successful if it had.
But, you know, that's a would-a-coulda-coulda-shoulda-shoulda,
and I'm sure they might not agree with me, but that's what I believe.
Five plus years after the acquisition of, you know, well after the acquisition of Oculus,
us after sort of the big bet on the metaverse, help us conceptualize where we are, you know,
five plus years later and where we're going.
Yeah, I mean, the thing I would do is we spent an awful lot of time and an awful lot of
money on a video that was the mother of all demos of what the future looks like.
And that video contains AI assistance.
It contains audio glasses.
It contains glasses like our Orion glasses we put out last year.
which have sort of the visual overlay.
And what's really interesting to me is,
despite everyone saying the metaverse is over or whatever,
a lot of stuff in that video is coming true.
And so my perspective on this is these are a smash here.
So the boss is total smash here.
It's AI with you at any stage.
You can ask you questions.
I now ask it all the time to give me a reminder.
I think of something and I say, hey, meta AI, remind me in three hours of X,
which I know is a minor use of it,
but I don't have to take my phone out and send myself an email,
and I'm finding myself just because it's with me all time, all day,
I'm thinking of things to use it for.
These have a lot of active users at this stage.
And that is one of the things we feature in the video.
So my perspective is, you know, where are we?
It's a research and development space.
Actually, amazingly, the AI jumped forward far faster than we thought,
which means that it got ahead
of the wave guides that are needed to do the
overlaid, like augmented reality
experience that we think is the end game.
So, yeah, that's going at the pace
that we expected it to. The AI is going far
faster than we expected it to. And I think you'll
probably see 10 years from now
people walking around with these glasses
with always on AI, with a visual
overlay of the real world, helping
them navigate their lives better.
What is your prediction of
Antonio as a now
an outsider of what the legacy will be of Meta's big bet, you know, rebrand and sort of big,
you know, financial bet on the category.
I mean, this is definitely an outsider view because of all the companies we talked about,
the VR thing didn't exist at all when I was at Facebook, so this is a completely uninformed view.
It felt to me the big investment.
I mean, and again, you know, Alex has a deeper knowledge here, but it seems to me that
Mark's obsession was always mediating human social behavior in different forms.
How many touch points could that possibly take?
I think Facebook played its cards with the mobile revolution very well.
And I guess the thinking there was like, well, VR is the next way
the humans are going to interact with each other.
And so we're going to build a social grass around that.
It hasn't quite played out that way.
I'm not quite sure why because I used to be an AI skeptic as well.
For the past 20 years in tech, it's like AI is the constant of the future,
and it seems like the future is finally here.
But similarly, virtual reality has always been just like perpetual technology of the future.
And somehow that ship hasn't really quite come in yet.
that said over the longer term
I suspect something like the VR headsets
that I think Alex mold for us a second ago
probably will be in production and at scale
but you know sometimes things are just too early
I think people if you actually read technological history
you realize that technologies develop a lot longer
developing you think they did right
there was 20 years between the transistor
and the integrated circuit another 20 years
between the integrated circuit and the PC
and the PC and the internet
and like 10 years between the internet and mobile
So these are like decade-long things that play out.
So it might just be too early, I think, in the case of VR.
Is there any world which Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft could have made an actual competitor
to the iPhone, or was it just too complex and a better try for the next platform, you know, VR?
Maybe if everyone had spotted it early enough, but everyone said it was the year of mobile
for years and then stopped saying it.
and then suddenly it actually became the year of mobile
and we all missed it because it actually happened around 2010
and so I think the issue is everyone missed it
yeah maybe maybe but I think probably not
gearing towards closing here
the book is click here
is a history of the industry is it is a history of the company
meta Facebook obviously it's one of the most
if not the most iconic and important company of the last
20 years not just a technology but but globally
and it's had a lot of different evolutions and
phases in its substance and its perception. What do you think is not fully appreciated about
where the company is now or what's a misperception or misunderstanding of that that's worth
correcting? You know, I'm going to come back to what I said at the beginning, but this is
obviously my personal take. I'm sure if you're stock, he'd have a different, you know, a different
opinion. The biggest thing is that appetizing is good. And I think there's this whole, this whole thing
about like, you know, surveillance capitalism, ads are bad.
ad, you know, and it's all protecting people from slightly better ads for personalized trainers.
And I actually think, like, the way that it gives people access to things that they like.
Like, people prefer personalized ads to non-personalized ads.
We have tested that again and again and again.
If we just personalize the ad based on your demographic, you will not like what you get.
But if it's based on what you truly like, you'll get a better experience.
And I'm still struggling to see what European customers have been protected from,
the U.S. customers are suffering from when it comes down to a lot of this privacy regulation
and a lot of this hatred of ads.
And so the number one perfection I want people to ship is ads are a good thing.
People like personalized ads.
And, you know, yes, the book has a bit of history in it of the company.
It has a lot of context on each of the channels.
And I think it is really important that we as an industry care about advertising and learn how
to do it well.
A lot of startup founders just still believe in like,
Oh, they clicked on my ad and they converted, therefore the ad drove that conversion.
There's some really obvious stuff that people can learn.
And this book is, I think, at a good level to get people to know how to do the basics really, really, really well.
The book is Click Here, The Art and Science of Digital Marketing and Advertising.
Alex has been a fantastic conversation.
Thanks for coming up.
Thank you very much.
And thanks, Antalya.
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