Acquired - Holiday Special 2022
Episode Date: December 19, 2022Cozy up to the fire and join Acquired as we do our annual strategic review of the show and our business “in public”. We recap our perspectives on Acquired’s big moments from the past ye...ar, a bit of commentary on the current state of the tech ecosystem, and what lies ahead for us in 2023. Plus as always at the holidays, we do an extended carve out session on our favorite things from the past year. Huge thank you to all of you for making 2022 an amazing year here in Acquired-land, and here’s to even bigger and better things to come in 2023! Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Carveouts!:Jerry Seinfeld on The Tim Ferriss ShowProject Hail Mary The Psychology of Money The Power LawMade in AmericaMade in JapanThe Godfather (book) Masters of Doom Stevie Case vs. the WorldHow All this HappenedResonant ArcAll-InFounders PodcastMKBHD’s Waveform PodcastThe Verge Huberman Lab - What Alcohol Does to your BodySmartlessT-Swift’s Midnights Olivia RodrigoAndorBlack PantherTop Gun MaverickEverything Everywhere All At OnceThe White LotusThe VowFlightyRoborock S7 Max Apple Keyboard with TouchIDElgato AV gear, especially sound panels and the Cam Link 4KCapri Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How do I open again? Welcome.
What is this show? What are we doing?
Welcome to How I Built This.
No.
No, nothing against How I Built This, but that's not us.
All right, let's start.
Okay.
Who got the truth?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight Another story on the way Welcome to this special episode of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them. I'm Ben Gilbert, and I'm the co-founder and
managing director of Seattle-based Pioneer Square Labs and our venture fund, PSL Ventures.
And I'm David Rosenthal, and I'm an angel investor based in San Francisco.
But today, Ben, you are hosting me at your lovely home here in Seattle.
Welcome to the studio.
It's great to be here.
And we are your hosts.
Ho, ho, ho.
Ho, ho, ho.
Happy holidays.
Happy holidays.
Man, I don't know about you, but I'm ready to put a bow on 2022.
Well, we have much to talk about.
Yep.
Well, listeners, normally I have like a script, like a thing that I'm looking at in front
of me to know what to say now, but I don't really on this one other than to say, join
the Slack.
There are great people there, including probably you if you're listening to this episode.
We don't think this is an entry point for a lot of people into Acquired.
We think this is probably, if you're a fan, you're gonna listen to this, but I don't think
this is gonna be anyone's sort of first show.
So we're gonna try and go a little, a little deeper and nerdier than normal.
We've got a little agenda.
We're gonna recap 2022 for the show, for tech, for us.
Talk a little bit about what's ahead in 2023. We've got
some extra, extra fun carve-outs. Indeed. Okay, listeners, now is a great time to tell you about
longtime friend of the show, ServiceNow. Yes, as you know, ServiceNow is the AI platform for
business transformation, and they have some new news to share. ServiceNow is introducing AI agents. So
only the ServiceNow platform puts AI agents to work across every corner of your business.
Yep. And as you know from listening to us all year, ServiceNow is pretty remarkable about
embracing the latest AI developments and building them into products for their customers. AI agents
are the next phase of this. So what are AI agents? AI agents can think, learn, solve problems, and make decisions
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to deploy AI across every corner of your enterprise.
They boost productivity for employees, enrich customer experiences,
and make work better for everyone.
Yep.
So learn how you can put AI agents to work for your people
by clicking the link in the show notes or going to servicenow.com slash AI dash agents.
With that, this is not investment advice.
This is probably the episode of the year
where we will come closest to things that might be interpreted as investment advice as we talk
about things that we have liked and didn't like and predict the future and all that.
So do your own research. All right, David, where are we starting with?
All right. I think we got to recap 2022. Despite the craziness of the year of 2022 in the broader world tech markets economy,
this is a pretty great year for the show. I have down here my signature acquired episodes and
favorite memories from the year. We started the year with Taylor Swift.
Yes.
Isn't that crazy that that was like January? That feels like three years ago.
Well, we knew that at the end of the year, she was going to drop Midnight.
It seemed appropriate that in the year where she was going to put on the concert and announce
the tickets for the concert series with the most demand in human history, that we should,
of course, kick the year off with a Taylor episode, predicting the future as usual here
on Acquired.
I think 2023, we might need to line her up for a follow-up.
We should do an Acquired session
with Taylor.
Taylor, we'll come to you.
We'll come to your studio.
Or maybe the Long Pond.
Yeah, Long Pond.
Great.
I was reflecting on this.
It's pretty crazy that
I think the announcement
was that they had 900 stadiums
worth of demand
showing up to Ticketmaster.com.
And there's 50 shows.
I think it's something like
35 stadiums, but a lot of them have two nights. There's two nights in Seattle here. And I'm sure
not all 900 stadiums worth can be counted as actual demand. I have to imagine when there's
a U2 concert or something, there are 100 stadiums worth of demand for 50 shows or something like
that. So clearly not necessarily all purchase
intent or not all purchase intent at the available prices. But still, there was just no way to
service the amount of demand. Like I actually don't know how you solve this problem. Do you
make all tickets $10,000 so that you actually find the correct price equilibrium for the demand?
You know, kind of like we were talking
about on our most recent episode with Ben Thompson and Stratechery. And he's like, the obvious thing
that I should do is raise prices to maximize revenue. But then that's pretty quickly going
to lead to limiting my reach and impact. I think Taylor cares a lot about her reach and impact.
And she could probably make the most money on this tour by having $10,000 tickets exclusively and still fill all 50 stadiums. I don't know what the price, maybe $2,000 tickets, you could do it. But if you're playing for a 50 year career, then you sort of have to like, nurture the fan base over time and recognize that the right if she did, that would be like, that would truly be a farewell tour, because that would create much... Ride off into the sunset. So much negative reaction.
Which of course would create even more demand if you knew it was her farewell tour.
This is making me think though, reflecting back on that episode 11 months ago. So I don't remember
exactly everything we said, but I don't remember talking as much about the obvious point that this raises for me, which is Taylor is a rock star
in the internet. She's probably like the first really, really big internet rock star. And the
thing about the internet is the markets are bigger than you can ever imagine. The demand is larger
than you can ever imagine. Even in niche products like for Stratechery or for Acquired, these niches
are bigger than you could ever imagine. Now think about a mainstream pop star. So the internet
enables two things. It enables the niches to exist. So there's way more artists that can make
a living today, I think, than if you think back to the 60s or something where the labels would
pick the 10 bands of the year and that's kind of it. But why is it that Taylor Swift is bigger than the Beatles? Would the Beatles have had this
much demand too when the only promotion that existed was from the labels in a sort of like
the labels pick the winners and then those are the winners world?
Well, there's multiple things going on here. One is the disintermediation or at least
the reduction of power of the middlemen of the labels and everything else in the middle of the
value chain. And so much more of the value is now accruing directly to Taylor. But that's not an
argument for why there's so much more demand to see for live. I think there also is a lot more
demand for Taylor than there was for the Beatles.
Just because the
internet having several ways to
reach a customer means that
the most popular artist in the world is
going to have
just way more distribution
period.
Way more distribution, way more touch points.
There's also so much less friction, right?
As hard as it was in all the news about how hard it was to get tickets to these taylor concerts everybody
knew when they were going on sale that it was happening right through social media and the
mainstream media amplifying that and it was hard to secure a ticket but very easy to log on to
ticket master or maybe not that easy but uh compared to, I don't even know how you
would have gotten a ticket to a Beatles show back in the day. I assume you have to like go to the
stadium box office and line up that day that they're going on sale. And you would only know
when they're going on sale because of radio ads and print ads. Maybe you read about it in the
newspaper. This is the thing I was thinking about when I was caught up in the Friday night.
Is it Friday night?
Whatever it was that people were like, Twitter's going down.
Like it's going to basically turn off tomorrow.
And I like mentally knew this is a system that would degrade slowly and fade into irrelevance.
Not it's going to turn off tomorrow.
But putting myself in the headspace of Twitter doesn't exist soon.
I was like, how would I know if stuff
is taking off? How will I know what the general consensus is around something? How will I know
that the tenor has shifted and this thing is not interesting anymore and that thing is interesting?
Would I start reading the New York Times many times a day and going deep into many of the
sections? I'm certainly not going to log into Facebook.
But you can't really even get that same kind of experience or understanding from
any kind of centralized publication.
Correct. And it's the centralization that makes it like less valuable. You'd never be able to like
say, oh, nobody's talking about that. Because the New York Times is not a place where you go to find
out if people are talking about something.
It's a place where you get news.
And so you'd literally have to like in person go to events and have a bunch of conversations to know what people are talking about.
Okay, Twitter doesn't exist tomorrow.
Where do you go to find out what people in the world are talking about right now?
I think it's TikTok.
Yeah, but I think it would be a much less efficient experience because it's all video.
The number of new tidbits of information you can consume per minute in Twitter is high
and reasonably low in TikTok. It's 10 to 20 versus two to three.
Yeah. All right. Well, I don't know how we got from T-Swift to Twitter and TikTok.
It's a holiday special, dude. It's a holiday special. Yeah.
Formatless.
Except for the pretty robust format that you fleshed out here.
Well, you know me.
I can't not prepare for an episode, even a holiday special.
Okay, next one on my list.
Sony.
Sony Corporation.
Which I didn't think would be that interesting when we started doing it. It was your idea to do it, right?
I know.
It was, but I found myself being like, God, is this actually an interesting company? I had wanted to read Made in Japan because I'd
heard it was amazing. But as I looked back at like trademark acquired episodes, TSMC,
the New York Times, like I just didn't think it would be one of those. And it very clearly,
especially in the numbers, did become one of those. It has it all. I mean, it has the genius founder. It has probably the most adversity that we've ever talked about in any founding story in
all of Acquired. It's really hard to think offhand of a greater adversity that a company and founders
have overcome than Japan in 1945. It also has so many chapters. I mean, the craziest thing to me
is if you look at the business, as of the time we did the episode, they had five separate business units, all of which
did a double digit percentage of their revenue. So it's super diverse. And all of which did a
double digit percentage of their operating income. So like you have five businesses that are all
reasonably the same size
in top and bottom line in one house. Well, and then we got well over two hours into the episode
before we mentioned PlayStation. And then the PlayStation story in and of itself,
we could do an episode on. I mean, the fact that we got from Rice Cookers and World War II to that
crazy coda about Spider-Man is nuts. In the back of my mind, I've been percolating.
It could be fun to do a whole episode just on Xbox. A, we need to do a Microsoft series at
some point. We've talked a lot about and around Microsoft on the show, but we've never covered
Microsoft and Apple. We've not done Microsoft. We've not done... We have not done the Google IPO. Apple, Google, Oracle.
If we just wanted to cheat and spike the numbers as much as possible,
we'd just take the whole next season and just do Fang, basically.
I think we should do one of those companies a year.
Not even a season.
I think one a year.
It's going to take three episodes to do each one.
We were able to fit Amazon into two episodes,
but Amazon is only a, what, 27-year-old company?
And we didn't talk about a bunch of stuff.
Right.
That was the way we skipped it.
We didn't really talk about Alexa at all.
Right.
Sorry, everybody, if we just lit up here.
Although I think there's enough voice personalization
in those devices that if a piece of media says the A word, I don't
think it lights up anymore. Well, it might be because I have the Sonos ones and the firmware
on the Sonos ones is different than the ones that Amazon actually makes. But mine will just like
light up when people say things that are not that word and are just like in a movie,
like when dialogue sounds too much like that name. Like that word. Yeah.
Interesting.
Here's my proposal.
I think we should do one of these big tech companies a year for two reasons.
One, you know, for Microsoft, for Apple, I think those are going to be three plus episodes
to do it right.
Yeah.
Even at acquired length episodes.
So it's a huge lift.
But also I think we should spread it out.
Like you said, you know, the cheat code would be if we just do them all back to back. length episodes. So it's a huge lift. But also, I think we should spread it out. Because like you
said, the cheat code would be if we just do them all back to back. But we have a diversity of
interests here on Unacquired. We want to go for many years. I even have a lot of fear around doing
a three-part Microsoft series where are people going to be like, I'm just out for the next three
months. Because next year, listeners, what we've decided is, and this is a little bit approximate,
but we're going to average it.
Every month, we're going to do a season episode
and a special.
So either a season being like Apple part one
or a special being an interview with someone
or an acquired sessions
or something that kind of doesn't fit the normal format.
And like that literally means that it's like,
oh, you're doing a three-part Microsoft thing. Well, out for Q1 on Acquired. I actually think about this. I've
experienced this on one of my carve outs for extended carve outs later. One of my favorite
video game podcasts, Resonant Arc. They're a video game story book club. So they choose a game.
And then they'll do, you know, 10 to 20 episodes playing through the game, dissecting the story, all the like literary from a literary perspective. It's really cool. I love it. But if they choose a game that I don't have a large affinity for, then someone decides to take a three-month break from acquired because it's not 100% chance they come back.
Yeah, we got to think about the right way to do this.
Maybe I'm too focused on the downside and maybe it will turn out that while we may alienate some
people, it's the largest thing in acquired history because I was shocked that, and we'll
keep going here on big episodes, but that the Amazon episode was by far the biggest in acquired history. When David pitched me on this idea, I was like,
I don't know. Brad Stone has written some excellent books on this. There's been documentaries.
Jeff Bezos is the most studied CEO in the world, I think, until this recent Elon madness.
What can we bring to the world in the Amazon?
Which by the way,
I think that has become this year.
Something that's crystallized for me about acquired and the show and what we
do.
I think that should always be our lens.
Like what can we add by doing it?
Cause there's lots of voices out there saying lots of things.
Yep.
Spoiler alert.
This is part of why we haven't covered Twitter.
Cause like there's nothing new to add. What can we add? All the best tech journalists in the world are covering it every single day. out there saying lots of things. Spoiler alert, this is part of why we haven't covered Twitter.
There's nothing new to add. All the best tech journalists in the world are covering it every single day. I mean, you have Matt Levine, you have Dan Primack, every single day,
they're reporting the newest thing with not just reporting, but true analysis behind it.
You have then Ben Thompson the following day writing a reaction piece that's like,
here's my even more thoughtful take on what happened.
You have Casey Newton, who has a whole platform dedicated to this.
And a bunch of access, a bunch of insiders sending him stuff, breaking it real time on Twitter.
So it was one of these things where we're like, there's no daylight here for us to talk about it.
We actually felt the same way about FTX, which, I mean, you could argue that we did have a part to play in FTX because Sam was on the show last year, but there was so much good coverage and good reporting
going on, and we're not reporters, and we don't do stuff in real time, blah, blah, blah, that it
felt like the right way to have a choir to add to the conversation is go do 100 hours of research on Enron and try and sort of
indirectly draw as many parallels as we can. We don't want to hit people over the head with like,
this is just like an FTX where they had this. It's more like, how can we
bring up ideas for people that they can draw their own parallels?
It's been interesting to watch this past week. Who knows if it was coincidental or not,
but I think at least two major news outlets have run pieces in the past week. Who knows if it was coincidental or not, but I think at least two major news outlets have run pieces in the past week with a title like How FTX Compares
to Enron. It was obvious. It's obvious to draw that parallel. They were probably in the works
anyway. Yes. Is it worth sharing more on that now? Yeah, yeah. This is a holiday special. We
can break the format. Yeah. Every time people write us in and they're like, oh, you got to do a take on this.
It's like, I almost never have a take in real time.
Yeah.
That's not what we do.
I suppose the traditional acquired format of a company buying another company,
we are some of the most well-positioned people in the world to have a take
on why that acquisition happened, what will make it go well what could
kill it just like you killed grading this season which by the way i love that i was so surprised
it has its place sometimes when you threw it yeah yeah but like look things need to evolve next year
is going to be our eighth year into the show yep Yep. I thought Ben Thompson just said it perfectly on our most recent episode with him where he was like,
you know, when I was young, I used to think when I got old that I would like still be cool
and I would never be one of those old people.
And now that I'm old, I'm like, old, quote unquote, relatively.
Now that I'm older, I think two things.
One, being old is pretty great.
And two, I look at my peers who are still trying to be young, and it just looks kind of sad. You got to change. You got to evolve. And the show has changed and evolved to a point where I think we are a different show than the show that used to do, oh, breaking emergency pod on Whole Foods got bought today, cancel everything today so we can do some quick research. There are times where it still makes sense for us to do those, like John Foley bringing
in a new CEO. The Barry McCarthy connection. That is a take that has not aged well.
Yeah, I think you're right that it's okay that we're something different now than what the show
was. I'm curious what everybody listening thinks. Yeah. Last point on this FTX saga,
which again, we're watching it play out in real time.
I don't know that that's where Acquired shines
because we try to make evergreen pieces
that sort of stand the test of time.
And like every week,
it's so different than it was the previous week.
These are kind of excuses.
We probably just should directly say
we totally had Sam on.
We wanted to tell the
extraordinary story of ftx which was extraordinary i mean in now in a different way you cannot argue
that it is an extraordinary story i do want to say i'm sorry if the exposure that ftx got from
acquired and every other publication in the world but certainly we we lent our platform
to sam and to ftx and um yeah i do feel bad about that i don't think there's any way we could have
known at the time and i don't want to stop having interesting people and companies on the show you
know up and coming companies so but yeah like it you know it sucks and like a lot of people
lost a lot of money yeah so sorry if you were like on the fence on ftx and you were like i
don't know if this thing's legit or not and then acquired legitimized that for you next just to if
you have not listened to the sony episode i'm sure most of you have but like it's so good oh my gosh
talk about like the office of a fraud we made this
thing it's amazing you should listen sony the sony story whether you like our telling of it or not
but just like it is a vastly underappreciated company and an underappreciated journey overcoming
adversity yep okay sony dude we did nvidia this year we did a lot this year yeah i'm trying to
think which of our silicon episodes i feel the strongest about in terms of like enlightening
me about the way the world works i think it's first tsmcVIDIA is... The thing that's the most interesting about the NVIDIA story, I think,
is Jensen bet the company three separate times and truly bet the company.
Like, if this initiative fails, it will go to zero.
And it worked three separate times.
The first time is when they shipped the card in whatever it was, nine months
instead of two years. And they designed the whole thing in emulation, never tested it and shipped
it to customers. And it worked. I mean, it worked enough. And maybe I'm forgetting the story in its
entirety, but I think there was a bet the company moment around programmable shaders.
Right. entirety, but I think there was a bet the company moment around programmable shaders, and then a third one around the seven-year investment before the market was there in
AI and CUDA and building their own developer ecosystem.
Obviously, OpenAI existed. I'm trying to remember if DALI was out at the time when
we did the NVIDIA episodes. Certainly, GPT-3 was.
Well, interestingly enough, I think DALI 1 was, but it got no acclaim.
Right.
The one that lit the world on fire was DALI 2.
Was DALI 2. Yep. But now as we record this, ChatGPT came out last week. We were thinking
about the AI renaissance and how important AI is just in a general sense when we did those episodes.
NVIDIA stock had that crazy run long before we did the episode, like two years before we did the episode at the
beginning of COVID. And so it's interesting that I don't think that was around gaming. I think that
was around AI, the thing that was sort of selling that story. And so in a way, the craziest
NVIDIA bowls that were sort of buying at the top and selling the story as much as humanly possible.
When did it peak?
I don't know, late 2021, maybe.
They were kind of right.
I don't think they knew that the next year would make AI's developments as obvious as it has.
But everybody who believed that AI was going to be this complete step change in the way that we use computers and decided that buying NVIDIA at a very high price was the way to endorse that belief.
Like that ended up happening very quickly soon after.
The moment when it really hit me was when we were recording the LP episode that we did with Jale at Mutiny.
And at some point just kind of casually said. Cavalierly.
It was like, oh yeah, we have a GPT-3 based feature in our product.
Right. And I was like, whoa, okay, you are dynamically rewriting copy on your customers'
websites using GPT-3. Okay, that kind of blows my mind. Yeah. Like I can now see
the business use cases for this. You say you can see them, but we're in this very interesting moment where we've all seen
three pretty amazing proof of concepts in the last six months. We saw DALI 2, GPT-3,
and NowChat GPT, which to me is actually the most interesting because the most meaningful
change is that it changed the modality that you interact with the AI model, but it's either the same or I think it's
like GPT three and a half or something. It's a very similar model, but we're interacting with
it in a new way and it's stateful rather than being stateless as in it sort of can preserve
state and you can ask it more questions about. And so I think there's a little bit of a like
a crypto moment here where it's the first time someone explains to you a decentralized world computer.
You're like, whoa, that unlocks a whole world of possibilities. And you say, what are they?
And someone says, let me think about that. I feel very similar with ChatGPT right now. I'm
looking at it and I'm like, whoa, this unlocks a whole world of possibilities. And someone says,
what is it? And I'm like, I feel better than I did
about the decentralized world computer,
but I still can't articulate to you
like when the App Store launched,
like, oh, this will be an $80 billion
on-demand car service market.
Like that's not...
Well, I think this is just naturally
how markets play out though, right?
Like we look back now and we're like,
oh, when the App Store launched, it was obvious. But was it at the time? I think we probably would have felt very similarly back
in that moment of like, oh, apps on your phone. Cool. When I first saw the iPhone, I thought this
device changes everything because I was like, I wanted one so bad. I mean, I had a coworker at Cisco. I rewatched the keynote so many times between the
keynote and when it was like six months before the phone came out. I was so hyped for it.
I just remember seeing the device at my coworker's desk at Cisco and thinking,
I need one of these things. This is like so much of the money that I have would be used to buy one.
So I think I bought the 3G the next year or six months in or something.
I got one day one. I didn't camp out overnight, but I waited in line for hours. I got day one
release. I got the original one. I just graduated from college. It was the summer I graduated.
I graduated, but I hadn't started work yet, but I had my signing bonus. And I was like,
this is where I am spending my money.
I waited in line just to wait in line.
Like I went to the Apple store. You didn't buy one? I didn't have enough money. I was 17, 18. That's right. Because you had to pay full price.
There was no carrier subsidization for the original iPhone. Correct. And so it was fun to
just, I brought my little point and shoot camera. I took pictures of all the people,
you know, getting their first iPhones and playing with them and setting up.
Did your dad go with you? No, I went with my friend, George.
I remember feeling like this device is amazing.
I remember really wanting to make apps for it.
So I made this to-do list app.
And you couldn't make apps until the next year.
Right.
I sort of missed that whole first year of like, you can't make apps.
I don't think I was thinking about it then.
But like the app that I made was a to-do list.
It's not like I was like, oh my God, this is going to be a way that you can hail cars or order groceries.
Or it was like, let me do the smallest possible thing on this.
And I think that's actually just how I think about products.
I'm not a Travis Kalanick-like person.
I think I always sort of think in terms of like, what product can I fully conceptualize
of and see in my head and understand all the hard stuff involved in it and draw a nice neat box around it
and just work towards shipping that thing that i can fully imagine it's almost like i want to be
able to do everything myself which is why i think acquired has sort of come out the way that it has
rather than us doing a bunch of hard stuff i very much shy away from like oh you'd have to like send
a bunch of people into grocery stores
and like figure out all their inventory to like loaded it. I just wouldn't do that. But the idea
of like, okay, there's this really nice, neat package called an acquired episode. And it
contains these components that David and I can make it ourselves. And what do you think the,
what would have happened otherwise would be if, uh, if we did the hard stuff?
Well, like one thing we've been very explicit about in a trade-off for the show and acquired as an entity in a business is, uh, we don't want to have a lot of employees.
We don't want to have a team.
We don't want to have.
There'd be more shows.
I think we would have tried to turn it into a network.
We would have taken people up on the book offers.
There could be like a Netflix show. There could be... I'm trying to think, is there anything we
could have done or still do that would just be like a fundamentally different thing? Like
everything you're describing would be building a Gimlet or the like, and like, that would be great.
You know, we probably would make more money but that's
that's like not what we want to do but is there anything that would be like an uber versus a to-do
app it depends what on the believability spectrum you're willing to call part of acquired like we
could have launched a new podcast app for acquired another podcast and then we thought about it with
glow we did glow was originally going to be yeah be a new app with payments built in. That would have been a boondoggle. Yeah. I'll
validate your point. When the App Store first came out, you could stare at it and go, this is going
to change everything. But it was only a select few people who actually saw the particular massive
use case with the new thing. And that's how I feel about chat GPT right now. I'm like, this thing's scary, powerful, and I don't actually know what to do with it.
Yeah. Most people I think are also in the same mode that you and I are of like,
oh, I can see how this could rewrite copy dynamically on a website. And I see that being,
but that's the to-do list version of what AI can do do yep man this is fun we're only like halfway through
the year too okay so we did nvidia yep that was so fun and i learned so much and now it's just so
much more important almost like t-swift you know the same dynamic yep then we did amazon and when
i include walmart in amazon i'm so glad we did Walmart first.
That's why I have in my head, I was like, did we do two episodes on Amazon or three?
We really did three.
Yeah.
Episode one was Walmart.
Yep.
In order to understand the role of retail in America today, you sort of first need to understand that everything we think of as a
retailer, or most things we think of as retailer, are actually discounters.
Yes.
And I totally didn't get that before doing the Walmart episode. I was like, well,
there's stores like Walmart and Target, and there's department stores, which are more expensive
and opinionated, and then the brands that have sort of their own stores.
But I didn't conceptualize that the most common place that you buy things are actually
discounters.
And Walmart was really the company that single-handedly created the wave of the modern store
period, which then Amazon could take digital.
Yes. Yes. Well, and I was so blown away learning about with Walmart, how much of a tech company
they were. Like, I think we said on the episode, and I still think that they were the first applied
technology company in America.
I think this is silly.
I think you've said this a few times now.
I don't agree with it.
Okay, so technology at its purest definition is anything that enhances the productivity of a human.
So the wheel is technology because with the same number of calories burned, you're able to go farther. Or a a navigational instrument which means you're able to get somewhere in a shorter amount of time
so i mean maybe you could scope it to like apply digital technology what makes me want to say that
is they were a company who did business in an established sector. Yep. And they transformed the way they worked
and ultimately the whole sector
by applying technology to it.
So did Standard Oil by applying technology
to the old way that you used to extract oil
from the ground.
Fair enough.
I mean, I guess like you could say the car companies.
Or the lighting, the way people light their homes.
But those, I guess the distinction I'm trying to draw, which may not be a valid one, is
I think in all those cases, the business was the technology. Here, it was a separate existing part
of the economy that they were in that business and they use technology to transform the way they
do it. Maybe it's a meaningless distinction.
It's interesting.
I just feel like today,
like Walmart would have been like a hot venture-backed startup.
Well, it's interesting.
The question with applying technology to an existing market
is always, what are you using the technology for?
I always think about this with tech-enabled businesses.
Okay, what are you using technology for and how does it make your financial statements of your business at maturity look better?
Are you using it to consolidate back office operations to make your company more operationally
efficient and thus lower your cost structure and thus with the same amount of revenue,
you just run at better margins? Or are you using it because you're able to get better
distribution? The internet enables you to generate way more revenue because you're able to reach way
more customers on the same set of costs. And so I always think about it as like, what are you
actually using technology for in your business? And does that make it a meaningfully better
business than non-tech
enabled incumbents? I think there's a lot of stuff in the world today that is a tech enabled thing
that is not all that tech enabled when you look at the financials.
Yeah. But Walmart is a perfect example of a tech enabled business that is like the right way to do
it. And why? What previously large number did it collapse in their financials to a small number
because of technology? Well, certainly the coordination of the distribution and the way
Walmart built their supply chain was vastly different than all of the theretofore traditional
retailers and way more efficient and made their financials
work in a way that just wouldn't work for other retailers.
Legitimately enabled them to have lower prices to get more customers.
Yeah. That's a strong argument. Agree to disagree that they were the first that
sort of like brought technology, but yeah, that's a good point.
Benchmark.
Benchmark.
Benchmark was super cool.
I mean, that like a pinch me moment for you and I both.
I think we should lean into that format as much as possible going forward of we tell a story
and then we have the protagonist on.
I think Acquired has been a bunch of iterations to find our way to that format.
That does feel like the platonic ideal of an Acqu a way acquired talks about a topic. I do think it's probably you and I spending
three hours diving deep from everything we can find telling the story in the way that we sort of
see it. I used to think, oh, what can make us different and better is we're going to spend
more time preparing than any other interviewer we're going to take this super
seriously we only do one of these interviews a month this is like which is a tactic not a strategy
exactly and like yeah we probably do more preparation for our interviews than 80 90 percent
of other interviewers out there but there are other really great interviewers like ben thompson
yep patrick o'shaughnessy. Patrick O'Shaughnessy,
exactly. But what we did with Benchmark, that's something that only we can uniquely do.
It's interesting. Only is aggressive, but it's something that our format and the set of trade-offs
that we make in our business makes it easier for us to do that than for someone else. I always think about strategy as about
trade-offs. What's the original Michael Porter journal entries called? Competitive Strategy.
And it's great. It's like for anyone who hasn't read it, it was in the Harvard Business Review,
I think when it first came out, something like 20 pages. It's very cogent. It's very straightforward.
And he talks a lot about how there's operational efficiency
and there's strategy. And operational efficiency is we're just going to be better. We're going to
be more efficient. We're going to do it for cheaper costs. You and I are going to do more
research than anybody else. But there's real strategy, which is trade-offs. It's the Southwest
model. The former is not a strategy. Right. There's sort of the Southwest model of like,
we are going to have a different model for where we keep planes than every other airline. We're not going to use the hub and spoke model. We're going to, everywhere that we fly to
in a constrained set of places that we fly to is going to be a pseudo hub for us. And we're going
to keep our planes sort of diversified and we're only going to have one model of airplane. So that
way they're easier to service. And there's a whole bunch of trade-offs involved with that,
but that's our strategy. Even though it's comes with a lot of downsides, we're easier to service and there's a whole bunch of trade-offs involved with that but that's our strategy even though it's comes a lot of downsides we're going to lean into the upsides
and i think like the lean into the upsides thing for us is if you're doing a super high velocity
show benchmarks probably not going to feel like you're giving them a unique spotlight in a way
to do something like that if you do things that may or may not enable deep trust from
listeners, then there's people that are not going to want to come on the show because they don't
know how they're going to come across. But if you always sort of lean into this, we have very few
guests. We think there are people that you really should hear from, which by the way, this is why
the SPF thing burns me up so much is because like we try to be ridiculously selective, then it enables you to
create content with people that otherwise are not going to go do the circuit.
Yep.
Not to mention when we do three hours of content about the thing before it enables
us to come in with that prepared mind.
I was going to say too, there's an element in the case of the benchmark episodes,
it actually was all pre-planned in advance that we were going to do the episode just us,
and then we were going to do the dinner with them. That was planned before we even released
the first episode. But I do think we've experienced in the past with the show, there are times where we will engage with a company or a CEO or a firm before having done any acquired content on them. And they're like, they don't engage fully.
Right.
And then we do an episode just us and then it completely changes the tenor of the conversation. Yeah. It's like being willing to do the work to prove that you're as serious about caring about this topic as you say you are. And by us having the
format of you and I just doing these deep dives on companies, that is a differentiated strategy
than an interview show. Yep. Okay. Enron kind of talked about it. It's super recent. I have
nothing to add other than one. I think it's fun to add little corrections and additions as we go through here. Yeah, we've got a few of these.
On the Enron one, I neglected to point out that there is a company today called Enron Oil and Gas
that's like an $80 billion company publicly traded as EOG. Yeah, a listener emailed us about this.
Yep. That's the upstream production business. So the oil and gas industry over the last 30 years
has sort of fragmented into upstream and downstream. And midstream.
Oh, I think so. That makes sense. And I think EOG is sort of their upstream business that spun off,
but it is a publicly traded company that still bears the Enron name.
Yeah. I should have looked this up. Did they change the name officially to EOG or is the
actual name? I don't know. It's a good question. It's a good question. It is actually called EOG Resources. Like the name of the company is EOG.
That makes sense. Like the Accenture to Arthur Anderson. Yeah. Although there is,
after many rebrands and iterations, some subset of Arthur Anderson was preserved
as a tax organization that is now called Anderson Tax again.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
Because I guess tax is separate from audit, right?
They had tax audit and consulting, and consulting became Accenture.
I assume audit went away entirely, and I think they spun off tax in its own new name that is now
Anderson Tax.
Anderson Tax.
Interesting.
Which is crazy to me that there was enough brand equity in Anderson left to sort of go.
Right.
You wouldn't think that you would have thought that, um, there's gotta be a story there.
It could be an LP episode.
Could be an LP episode.
We talked a minute ago about trade-offs when we were talking about the benchmark two-parter.
What in your mind are the biggest trade-offs that we make here on Acquired?
I think we make a ton of trade-offs.
I think we are maybe to a fault purist organization.
I think that's the first one, we're two people.
We're going to say, you're looking at the whole organization here.
Okay, not a lot of content, right?
A common wisdom is to release content every week. We don't do that. That has downsides, such as it's hard to become a top show in the charts. If you're not constantly producing new content, it works against the algorithms, listen to you when you do that, but the people who do really like it. Another one being people often ask, do another
show, bring another host. You could leverage the podcast feed to promote other episodes of your new
spinoff show with your new host where you have some of the economics of that. There's a lack
of purity to me that that's not acquired then. I don't know why we would do that.
It doesn't fit in the box. It's one of those things where it's like, sure, you could
make more money doing that, but it goes in the too hard pile. I think you and I have a really
big too hard pile. Yeah. In some ways, that's strategy. It's like if you actually believe in
the set of trade-offs that you have, then you have to be willing to have a really big too hard pile
when there's a lot of people telling you there's low-hanging fruit to be done. But often that low-hanging fruit is counter to your strategic trade-offs.
It's interesting. I feel like you've always been this way, I think, in your life.
I'm cranky.
You're not cranky though. You're wonderful.
But I'm cranky about things like this.
You're persnickety. You're not cranky. I'm persnickety. You're persnickety. You're wonderful. But I'm cranky about things like this. You're persnickety. You're not cranky.
I'm persnickety.
You're persnickety. Yes, for sure.
Jerry Seinfeld said it really well on the Tim Ferriss show,
which is one of the best podcast interviews in history.
That's my first carve out of the night.
Tim asked him, how does he come up with all the bits?
How does he observe things?
And his comment is, there's so many things that annoy me.
I sit there and all I can see in the world is all the
things that are like a little bit wrong and that just really bother me. And then I write them down
and then I polish, polish, polish, polish, polish. And I'm not Jerry Seinfeld and I don't,
it's not to that extent. Very different application. Right. But a similar.
Like we ship an acquired episode. All I can see are the 16 ways that we could have made it better.
I'm proud that it's out there, but like really all I can see are the flaws. I think my hunch is right that you've
always been this way. Yes. I've become much more this way over time. I used to be not this way at
all. I used to be like, I believe you can do everything. Trade-offs, like the old Jim Moore,
the Colts coach of the playoffs, like playoffs, trade-offs, trade-offs. As old uh jim mora the colts coach of the playoffs like playoffs trade-offs
as i become older though like i completely have shifted and embrace trade-offs oh yeah you don't
even answer email i mean it's honestly crazy it's like a joke now yeah but this is not a joke
i'm trying to get a hold of you i feel so. The only person I feel bad about with it is you.
You bear a huge brunt to that.
Thank you.
You're also pretty good about like,
I said I was going to be done working today at six.
And so I'm just like not really doing anything after six,
even if the texts look kind of important.
That's fine.
Well, that's called parenthood.
That's true.
Yeah, parenthood has probably forced you toood. But that's true. Yeah. Parenthood has probably
forced you to lean into some of that more. Yes. I was leaning this way anyway, for sure.
But like, it was like a massive like tidal wave. But I felt like I was at like a water park,
like in a wave machine came along and like I was heading this direction anyway, floating along and
then just like whoosh. The issue now that you're doing it pretty aggressively is you and I amplify
each other because I have this thing where I'm like, oh, this is a thing that David would say, like,
not worth it. Like, this is probably a good time to talk about this. We did a lot of live stuff
this year. Yeah, let's talk about this. Some of which were super cool. Like,
there were some amazing opportunities we got in 2022. But for lots of reasons,
they're way harder than doing your and my normal thing.
And are they worth it? Are they that much incrementally better for how much harder they
are for us? Probably not in almost all cases. There are cases where it is, but in almost all
cases, no. And so I think this is one of the things where like, you inspire me to be more
persnickety. You ask the question. And then I went to a place of like, oh, well, that's easy.
We should not do anything live because the juice is almost never worth the squeeze, which is probably too far. Like there's probably some middle ground where it's like if PitchBook offers us the ability to do another arena show, like, oh my God, we should do an arena show. But the litany of things that make this way harder and frankly way less listenable after the fact it's actually a worse product most
of the artifacts of so let's recount this sort of like cool live stuff we did this year we did
the arena show it still is like surreal i can't say that without laughing pinch me moment at least
number two of the year yeah yeah wow we did the show. We then also did a big live show in another
country for the first time in Portugal with Solana at Breakpoint. That was a whole nother
crazy set of experience and amazing. Yep. We did the LP show live at the TCV event.
Yep. The benchmark dinner, although it wasn't a live public event, the amount of production effort that-
Totally. I was down in San Francisco for three days. We set up three cameras. We bought a bunch
of new microphones. We tested all the microphones. Big production lift.
Big, big production lift.
I mean, guests. So things that make production harder, guests.
Yes.
Total wildcard. They might cancel on you. They might reschedule, blah, blah, blah.
They might not use the equipment we send them.
Yes. In person changes it way harder. Like you and I are sitting here now,
it took an extra hour to set this up, to have this beautiful roaring fire next to us.
Yeah. We haven't even mentioned, yeah.
These three cameras. Although now that I'm looking at it, there's only two cameras on
because here's a trade-off we make. We don't have an engineer and we don't have a sound person or
a video person who works with us. So if you've been watching this on video for, We don't have an engineer. We don't have a sound person or a video person who works with us.
So if you've been watching this on video for, I don't know how long, the last, like,
I'm going to guess that thing shut off half hour ago. We lost the third camera. So talk about trade-offs. And especially in... I knew I should have brought my camera.
Especially in shooting stuff like live in person, there's a whole new web of things that could go wrong that just don't
happen when it's you and I on Zoom. Now at a live audience, that massively compounds it. First of
all, the sound quality is going to be way worse. So that bothers me as a persnickety person.
The audience gets antsy in their seats because no one can sit still for four hours. No one wants to
attend a four hour. I mean, when you're at a sporting event, you do halftime quarters, you
go get concessions, you whatever. So it makes the product different and I think worse for the 150
plus thousand people who are going to listen after the fact. So it's this interesting compromise
where for all those people, it's a worse product, but for the people in the room, that's what we're optimizing for in the moment.
And I don't even know that we optimized for that. It's so funny. The arena show,
let's just take a step back. It was so cool.
Amazing.
It was so cool. And everybody who came, the fact that so many people came and flew in from
all over the world.
Yep. We did a Brooks run with people in the morning.
It was so cool.
A dinner with some sort of like friends of the show and previous guests and sponsors
the night before at Canlis, who we've had on the show and that adapting episode.
It was so special.
Yeah.
But it's, you know, looking back on it, I went to talk about it because you actually
lived this again yourself this year.
But the farther we get from it, the more in my mind and in my emotions
the space the arena show occupies is just like jenny and my wedding like all the ups all the
amazingness special feelings of it and like my most vivid memories looking back on both events
are just a huge amount of stress and being like, are people having fun right now? Like, is this going well? Like,
you know,
I mostly remember the upside of both of them,
of,
of,
of my wedding.
Oh,
I remember the upside to it,
you know,
but every time I think about it,
I can't not think about,
uh,
you know,
us being on stage in the middle of the show.
And,
uh,
when we got to act two and Anu was on and we didn't have breaks planned and
like people needed to go to the bathroom and get food.
And like,
H book was paying for all the free food and booze and everything up. And so,
of course, people are going to go. Like after the first act ends, it's like, okay,
well, now's a good time to go take advantage of the open bar.
Of course. I was just like, oh, we should have planned that better.
How did we not plan for that? Anyway, all that to say,
some of the live shows we've done are the most special experiences of the year.
They have hidden value for Acquired in a bunch of ways, like getting to actually talk with real
people, like getting to hang out with the thousand people that came to the arena show,
like life-changingly cool to get to meet so many folks. And also...
I will always, always remember that night, especially the after party afterwards.
Yes.
Walking into queen and beer hall was very cool and just hanging out for hours and also at least
10, if not 20 times as much work for a product that I continue to believe was worse for people
who listened to it than our average acquired episode. Yeah. So it's like, again, it's a set
of trade-offs that we just have to be intentional about making
next year rather than being like oh that would be a fun conference to speak at right oh my god
i forgot about capital camp oh capital camp yeah that was so cool that was cool that was a relatively
low trade-off because uh patrick and brent and clayton and the team there they took care of
everything yep absolutely it was different too because we created a talk for
it so it was less issues because there was no guest so there was no sort of like guest risk
but like it was the first time i'm such a like vc those are technology risks because
but the only thing that we had done that was similar was the acquired top 10, the best acquisitions of all time episode that we did. And so we had like a little bit of confidence that you and I could produce a sort of talk about a thing that wasn't. It was a fun switch up, but I think it was an inferior format to the normal show. I was thinking, we can put together a deck for it.
A deck. It was a set of pictures.
A set of pictures, but I haven't made a deck in years. Yeah, that was cool, though. I mean, the nice thing about doing that is then we have a product
we can sort of like take on the road to. I think we can share this publicly. You gave that talk
again at an internal Fundrise event. Yes, which was super cool. I would love to do more of that.
Like I got to meet everybody at Fundrise, like the, you know, our biggest partner for the year.
And like the whole team, like all 300 people at the company were there at the offsite. It was very
cool. All this to say, it leads me to believe that much like all the other trade-offs we make,
we just need to figure out how do we 80-20 it? What are the things that we care the most about
and how do we not do the long tail of stuff? So I think it means pick like one episode per year
to do a massive live show and throw the acquired Superbowl slash wedding. And maybe once a year is even too often because God, it's a lift. But two, then feel free to do
a bunch of in-person stuff with our partners, with our sponsors, with people that we like
work with on the show anyway, and want to just like continue to build deeper relationships with,
but those aren't necessarily episodes. Yep. That has been a huge highlight for me for the year is I think we have found a way,
I don't know that anybody would have thought was like possible as a podcast, as a media business
to like really build deep relationships with our sponsors and our partners. I think almost
every single one of them, we did something like the
Fundrise All Hands or a conference. Most of them now, a very large percentage of our sponsors,
we've invested in. Yeah. What, five of them? I think five, yeah. Vanta, we should talk about
Vanta in a big way. Modern Treasury, Vouch, Mystery, Standard Metrics, we've invested in.
And what was Standard Metrics called when they sponsored?
Quaestor.
Quaestor.
That was their original name.
Yeah.
Back in the day.
Just like we, for our listeners and our audience, you know, we've kind of always thought,
I think it's been one of our core tenets from the beginning of like,
we treat our audience as like equals to like more impressive than us. Like when we started
the show,
especially now, and even the folks who are listening to us are the folks who we want to
invest in. We want to do business with, we want to do. Well, that's what eats me alive when I get
something wrong in an episode and it's a black mark to me and I can't do anything but see it
as like, you know, I'm thinking of the people who I know listen to the show who are listening to
that and thinking, oh, he didn't quite get that right. Cause that's how I envision our audience. Not that we didn't always think this way,
but it's really come to be realized now. We think of our sponsors the same way as our partners,
as like, these are amazing companies. How can we build as deep a relationship with them as possible?
Yep, totally agree. I mean, the sponsorship model is another way that we make a pretty significant trade-off. So we only do six-month, season-long
sponsorships, and we are ridiculously choosy about the people that we do that with.
And because it's a six-month-long thing to an audience of 250,000 people that happen to be probably the most valuable audience in the world
in terms of CEOs, founders, engineers, capital allocators. Certainly the set. I mean, the set,
it would be hubris of us to claim that we singularly at Acquired have the most, but of the,
you know, our niche of media, the listeners to our niche of media, I think unquestionably are the most valuable audience in the world. them. And so it's like a big freaking commitment. And there's a trade-off there in our business
model, which is we're not going to work with that many people when we do, but when we do,
we want to go as deep as possible. And so that means that we can't do things like engage with
agencies or engage with dynamic ad insertion networks or a lot of other things that would
make our lives easier. It probably also means that we can't outsource sales. Like you and I are the ones
talking to the CEOs of the companies who sponsor, which again, lots of trade-offs. They're very busy
people. They're often hard to get ahold of, but they're people that we get to build really real
relationship with. This is one of my favorite trade-offs we've made. Kind of like I've been
saying is like, these are the types of people who we would want anyway to build deep relationships
with. So why wouldn't we lean into that as much as possible?
On the completely opposite end of the spectrum, though, something that I think highlights the tradeoff and that I've really come to appreciate this year.
In the very beginning of Acquired, we did YouTube.
And we've been saying for years and years, we got to redo YouTube.
At this point, it's almost a MacGuffin.
Yeah.
Where like, it's like Seattle's NBA team.
It's like, maybe we should never redo it so we can always talk about the fact that-
Oh, of course Seattle's going to get an NBA team. Of course Acquired is going to redo YouTube.
But I was so negative on YouTube in the episode and the intervening years, I feel like have just
been a journey for me of really coming to appreciate what a incredible product and business YouTube is. And this year, my big
YouTube appreciation has been they enable for many, many creators, people to make their livelihoods
with the exact opposite trade off of what we do. You can just focus on content and you,
if you have an audience and can build an audience, can make a good to great living on YouTube and never engage with business, never engage with
ad sales. This is how I felt as an app developer. I was like, wow, there's a money fountain.
Yeah. I write software, I upload it to the store and money comes out the other side.
Which obviously, that's not the decision we would make. But for the long tail, you know,
and mass market and other niches of media that don't have as valuable an audience as us,
that is an amazing thing. And most creators don't want to be business people. Like we want to be
business people. We want to be entrepreneurs. Right. By the way, I think it makes the content
better that we are because then you get first party insights rather than like if we were journalists sort of shooting from the sidelines.
Like some of the stuff I've already talked about on this episode today is the strategic conversation that came out of a board meeting that I was in earlier.
And so like us engaging in business makes the show what it is, too.
It's funny.
That reminds me of another tradeoff.
One of the things like really this is driven by being a parent,
but yeah, I don't do boards anymore.
I just can't.
Never say never, but man,
thinking back on times in my life
when I was on, you know,
five, six, seven boards
and as you are now.
I'm on three.
Okay, that's more manageable.
It sort of makes it work. It's like
you pick very few companies and you go very deep. I mean, it's a very acquired way of doing it.
Three is a manageable number. But even so, to do it right, you really got to engage.
Yep. All right. What's next on the agenda? Relatedly, show growth.
Show growth.
Show growth.
It was so fun talking to Ben Thompson about this and his growth trajectory and curve.
We pretty amazingly doubled our audience again this year.
Which has basically been true every year
since we started seven years ago.
Which, this is always one of these things where
if a startup is only doubling year over year in the first two or three years, it's like,
okay, well, it's not going to be a breakout company. But if you can actually keep doubling
for seven, eight, nine years, the numbers get pretty big. And so it feels very different
transitioning from 2020 to today, sort of looking over a two-year span where...
Even from last year to today.
So we hit over a quarter million subscribers.
Which was 62,000 just 24 months ago.
I know.
So that's the crazy, like, that's the place where this sort of like out years of compounding is starting to show up for us.
And the thing that's been crazy to me is there still have been some kind of step change.
Like the Amazon episode.
Yeah.
That was a step change for us.
For sure.
Yeah.
I think the previous highest episode to Amazon had gotten just over 100,000 downloads.
And that one got
170,000. Yeah. And the first 90 days, in the first 90 days. And when we say a quarter million,
that is the unique number of people who listen to, it's basically our monthly active listener
account across all platforms who engage with at least one episode. Because not all of you listen to every episode, sadly. The cool thing about podcasts and for us
and that it is an open ecosystem
that's not controlled by algorithms,
it does mean growth takes longer and it's harder.
And you have to do these step change functions,
but then people become subscribers and they stick around.
Amazon was a huge step change moment for us in terms of growth. And many of those new people
subscribed. And so thus the subsequent episodes benchmark Enron. Like the two benchmark episodes
were both way higher than the hundred thousand that we were at before Amazon. And then Enron
now is charting
to look pretty similar to Amazon. Early, we're only five or six days in, but it is unbelievable
how stately- I don't think it's a reflection on the benchmark episodes. I think we're great.
We're such a cool experience, but it's more niche. It's a venture capital firm versus Amazon.
Everybody cares about Amazon. Yes. Yes, exactly. There's also this chronological thing where every
three or four
episodes is our biggest episode ever. And not necessarily because the content is more interesting,
but because when you find a podcast you like, you stick around. So there is this sort of like
cumulative effect where we drop a new episode. If we had dropped this in 2016, it would have gotten
a couple thousand listens. But because it's dropped on top of the entire
base of people who are subscribed to acquired it's really meaningful and i thought ben brought
up this really interesting point where he sort of asserted podcasts are great because they're
really sticky but they're terrible to grow yeah he basically said, I don't know how you would grow a podcast if you didn't also have a writing platform
that was easily forwardable
because podcasts are really hard to share.
And that sort of explains the reason
why no matter how hard we try,
we've really never been able to more than double
in any year
because podcasts are sort of
an inherently unshareable mechanism.
So unless there's something that happens
like you get
feed dropped for free in an NPR podcast that brings you 100,000 new listeners right away,
or we had NVIDIA part two, I think, got a large promotion on Spotify. And that brought us a bunch
of new listeners that were subscribing to Spotify. Spotify has been a great partner to us this year.
They have. We really only started kind of more directly working with them in January with the Taylor Swift episode.
Which is why, what was our stat? 98% of the people who listen on Spotify today were not listeners last year.
And we should be clear about what I mean by directly working with Spotify. We're not owned by Spotify. There's no economic relationship or ad sales or like we've
been saying, we do all that in-house. That's our business model. But-
They assign you a creator manager. There's people that we know that we can contact.
Relationships at Spotify in a way that we don't have with any of the other platforms. I mean,
I think technically we have a manager at Apple. I don't know who that person is.
No, no, no, no, no. We found someone's email address, but they're not assigned there.
Yeah. Spotify has done a great job of, at least from my perspective, you know,
engaging with us as creators. And I think striking good balance between like
podcasting is an open ecosystem with all the benefits and trade-offs that we've just been
talking about. Yep. But you could also like do it better than Apple. Apple has been such a
terrible steward of this industry. You've brought this up before.
Terrible in one respect, but like they're the reason why we have a direct connection with our listeners.
Yeah, it's like they're-
Them abdicating the creation of a platform and an intermediary is the reason why we have
this really sticky relationship with listeners.
Such a good point.
Such a good point.
Their internal strategy failure at Apple and execution too.
Like, I just feel like if you're an Apple shareholder, you should be really angry at
management about how they have mismanaged, like fumbled the ball on podcasting.
But delighted in many other ways.
But delighted in other ways.
You know, for us as, yeah, I agree.
Especially the type of business we have at Acquired is really enabled by the lack of algorithmic stranglehold on this medium. shareable component. And I think we have tried to do this with the acquired website.
Each episode has a page. That page has a bunch of show notes. That page has a transcript. There's
sort of a reason to consume it on that page. You can sign up via email on that page. You can join
the Slack from that page. Which the Slack now has almost 15,000, over 14,000 members. Our preferred way to share an episode is the page because we sort of feel that
that URL is like a nice way to package it up for someone and say, listen to this.
Unfortunately, our episodes are four hours long, so it doesn't come with a deep link.
Like it would be really nice if as you scroll down the page and as you move
through the transcript or as you watch the video or as you consume the audio, that was always
updating the URL so that at any given point you copy the URL. It's like, this is exactly the-
Kind of like Overcast has the share timestamp. Yeah.
And you can do it on YouTube too.
Yeah. But like those are inherently flawed because you don't know if someone likes to use that platform. So like when I share that overcast link with people, I'm like, are they going to be like, what is this podcast player that I don't use? Why are you sharing it to me in this weird way? There's a bunch of reasons that contribute to podcasts being sort of inherently unshareable. Our episodes being really long make them especially hard to share sort of moments, insights. And there's been a zillion sort of like clip apps over the years.
But I do think actually, you know, we have not grown in the same way that like a viral product grows.
But we've had really nice growth as a podcast.
And I think actually growth happens because we infiltrate a network, particularly a company network, and then we get shared within the company, like in a company Slack or Teams or just friend networks
within a company. Yep. It's kind of interesting. I'm not particularly interested in additional
growth. Yeah. Especially at this point. Yeah. I mean, it's great. It would be nice. And I think
Ben was kind of making this same point in the episode we did with him. For all of us, additional growth is great, but not by trading off any of the things that we really care about that drive our business. how many people took the survey? 1,500 people or so that answered the survey, which thank you if you did. Yeah, thank you. That the audience mix stayed pretty much the same from two,
two and a half years ago, the last time we ran a survey, which was awesome. I was like, wow,
we managed to get 200,000 more of basically the same type of person. And it was heartening talking
to Ben because it sounded like he thought that he had bumped up against the market, that he was starting to saturate and then
sort of accelerated through it again. And so it feels like Ben, I think he probably has close to
a million people that consume stratechery.com for free in a given year. And so if he doesn't feel
like he's bumping up against the TAM and we have a reasonably overlapping audience,
that feels like pretty good proxy for us to say, well, we could probably at least 4X from here.
But I don't really have a strong desire to do... I think it would make our lives generally worse if we did. I think it would be neutral. I mean, in some ways it would be better,
in some ways it would be worse, but... If we were a video podcast, it would make it worse
because we're right at the limit right now.
We have all the benefits of when we drop an episode,
it really matters to the people
that we care about it mattering to,
and we don't get recognized on the street.
The episode with Ben was about Stratechery, obviously.
So we didn't really talk about this,
but I kept thinking about him wanting to explore more
and we should do here.
Our business model is very different than Ben's and growth again, like nice to have for us comes with some set of trade-offs.
There's some downsides to it, some upsides neutral to, you know, I don't know, you could argue,
maybe you think it's slightly negative to growth. Maybe I think it's slightly positive, like
it's in the neutral zone. But because of our
business model and everything we were talking about, the deepening of the engagement with the
right people and the right sponsors, that's what drives our excitement about the business and the
business itself. In a way that for Ben, it's different because he actually does need to grow
his business to keep growing the number of consumers because some percentage of them will
convert to paying him right you're saying for his revenue to grow he must grow the number of
subscribers which means if subscribers are always a fraction a fixed fraction of the set of people
audience are reading anything on strategic he must grow the top line whereas what you're saying for us is the revenue is not necessarily directly connected to audience size.
Right.
It's connected, but it's not directly connected.
And as we evolve the business model more, I mean, this is a good place to talk about Vanta.
That's a good point.
One of our couple biggest sponsors and partners on the show this year, we and kind of through kindergarten and you too, invested almost $10 million in the show this year, we, and kind of through kindergarten and you too, invested almost
$10 million in the company this year. So like, that's a very- Mostly kindergarten, very small.
Very small. And most of that capital came from the acquired audience community, like the LP
capital that backed that SPV came in very large part from
the acquired audience. And so that's not like growing the audience, of course, increases the
number of super high quality people. And we care about growing the high quality people in the
audience. And the bigger that size is great, but it's not directly tied to the business.
And that was a transformational moment for us. And obviously,
Vant is an amazing company, but that's a whole new business. It was at least an insight. You could sort of test the hypothesis of like,
because you and I have invested small amounts personally in our sponsors before,
because we get insight into their business from getting to work directly with CEOs on those.
And we're like, that's a really interesting-
And we see what our audience resonates with, with the products.
Right. That's a really interesting thing. We should invest a little bit. But your insight of, okay, this is a growth round. This is a company that's doing
really well. I can sort of see how well they're doing both from getting to look at the investment
pitch, but also the reaction of our community to the sponsorship. Right. Could I invest a meaningful
amount of capital in this? How could we put together a meaningful amount of capital? And
do I, as a host of Acquired, have relationships with the owners of capital, the stewards of capital,
who want to invest in this opportunity? It was a really interesting way for you to sort of like
prove out that hypothesis a little bit. Yeah. There is no strategic plan for kindergarten
ventures, period. It is very much like a... You all may be shocked that there's no
strategic period.
But it's not like we did an offsite.
We didn't do an end-of-year special for kindergarten like we're doing now for Acquired and discuss our strategy and say, you know, I think we should find an opportunity to do a $10 million
SPV this year.
But no, it came naturally from everything we're talking about here on Acquired.
Yep.
And just to put a finer point on the business being
not entirely connected to the audience size,
there were years where the audience would 2x,
but revenue would 10x.
Just because it was a wildly under-monetized asset.
Well, there were several years where revenue was zero.
This was not a business.
That's true.
But who's to say that we necessarily have the business model optimized? Do I think that there should be more sponsorships and episodes? No. In fact, I think we should probably be a
little bit tighter on them and shorter on them and find more ways to make the sponsorship segments
even more differentiated, where we're not just giving the high level pitch on the company, but doing more vouch insurance 101 type stuff where we can sort of like find a key insight
with the company and storytell that together. I think leaning into the strategic differentiation
that we have on, and I know that sounds like jargon, but like we are, I think the only ones
who work this closely with our sponsors.
So what does that enable us to do that no other podcast could do?
I think that's like the lens that I want to keep taking to it.
And so to your point, the business is probably still unoptimized and it will probably grow
directionally with audience, but can grow in other ways too.
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All right, David, what's next on the year in review agenda?
Next, we got to talk about next year, 2023. Yes. Looking ahead. Okay, first question for us.
What episodes, topics, guests are we thinking about?
Oh.
What should we, what's on the docket?
Hang on, let me bust out my list.
One that feels like an obvious one we should do at some point next year is OpenAI.
Yeah, absolutely.
We talked about doing it at various points this year, and especially like fitting in
with the whole NVIDIA series.
But it's funny.
It feels like we got to do it.
We almost did it 12 months ago.
Like I remember last year over the holidays doing some prep work for it.
And that I think would have been kind of disastrous because we would have done it.
And I think way undersold like we wouldn't have been would have been way undersold. Like we wouldn't have been. Would have been way too early. Yeah. If we do end up doing it and do it, you know, relatively early next year.
It's sort of ironic that the next Elon company that we'll cover after our old SpaceX episode
is OpenAI.
We didn't do anything on Twitter.
We haven't done any revisiting of Tesla.
It is crazy.
God, he's got his fingers in everything.
The Twitter is just, oh my gosh, there's just so much drama. There's so much drama. I don't like
having just drama on Acquired. That is true. I think part of the reason why we haven't done a
Twitter episode since we interviewed Dick Costolo in early 2021 maybe. Yeah, way before all this.
Is like the story feels less like a business story and more like a TMZ story, which isn't our cup of
tea. Yes. I don't ever want to feel like TMZ. I won't say that like, I'm not interested in reading
all the TMZ drama about it. It's totally fascinating. And you know, if you can run a
company on 80% less people than you were running it before and nothing goes terribly wrong, that's
super interesting for the world to know. Now,
of course, it does look like all sorts of things are going wrong, but to the extent that they can
turn it around and the business can be generating as much revenue as it was before on a massively
lower cost basis, I'm very curious to know what the second order effects of that are.
But the story that we know so far is TMZ. That is an interesting business discussion. But yeah,
like that's not the, we don't actually know that yet.
Right.
And everything that is being discussed is, yeah, it's just drama.
Okay, so OpenAI, that's a good candidate.
Yep.
I was perusing the world's richest people list the other day and saw-
For acquired ideas or just that's what you do when you freeze that?
You know.
Lots of the names are very familiar to us and acquired listeners.
The one that is not is Bernard Arnault, which one of the world's top five wealthiest people
and not in tech, not in finance, but in luxury brands.
I think it'd be pretty interesting to go down the path of like really deeply unpacking brand
power and brand power over generations and the concept
of a house of brands and what brands mean to people and why you can know that it's the exact
same leather that you're buying elsewhere, but because it has this mark on it, you pay
500 times more for it. I would love to figure out what the right starting place is for luxury
and do that on Acquired. Yeah. The point, the reason to do it
is what you said, the underling brand. Right. How did these amazing, durable brands get built?
Yep. I continue to want to do Epic Healthcare. I think they're like a huge force in the American
economy. And I don't know if that episode will be a hero's journey or a villain. Is it an Enron or a NVIDIA? I suspect without having done any research, I suspect more of an
Enron. Probably not a fraud, but just a... Open question whether it's good for the world.
Yes.
Creates some value, certainly captures a lot of it. Does it capture more than it creates?
Open question.
One thing I definitely want to do more of and figure out
how it's going to evolve is sessions. So we did the session with Jason Calacanis.
Yep. That was really fun and felt like a really cool way to do something orthogonal
to the core acquired approach, but still really fun. Maybe sessions or a format
like sessions ends up being what we do with protagonists of stories after we've done an
episode just us on them. Maybe we keep doing it with interesting people, maybe both, but that felt
like a really cool, different type of interview than just a standard podcast interview. interesting use of the format. That's something that I want to explore because that statement can kind of take two directions. And I think either would make for an interesting sessions
reason for existence. One is talking to the CEO of a Fortune 500 company about things that aren't
their company. They probably think about a lot of really interesting stuff and have a bunch of
really interesting ideas. And they probably can't say a lot of the most interesting thoughts they
have about their company because
they're publicly traded and there's all sorts of SEC stuff involved. But there's other conversations
we can have with them. But they're people and they have feelings and emotions. And those aren't the
reasons people typically are trying to get them to come on podcasts. Yeah. That's one thing actually
that my wife Jenny pointed out to me after listening to the session we did with Jason. And
she was like, it was interesting. It was
good. You guys could have gone way harder on diving into the emotional side of Jason's lived
experience and his feelings. And like, especially when he, he mentioned, you know, Tony Shea's
passing and how that really impacted him and like led to him deciding to make some changes in how he
approached life and his work for the next few years like she was like that was an opportunity
that you just let fall on the floor like you could have gone way deeper into that yeah i think that's
a great point the other thing that i was sort of implying in that statement is we could have people on almost as a prop, like we're not interviewing them, but they're instead
a piece of whatever discussion you and I wanted to have anyway. Like, you know, what if we had
Eric Vishria just like hanging out next to you on the couch and we weren't talking about benchmark,
but Eric was just like chiming in on a lot of this stuff and sharing his ideas.
He's not the subject of the interview. He's a piece of the
show. He's a part of the conversation. He's a foil to bounce ideas off of. I would for sure
do that with Eric. That would be an amazing and a great privilege. You know who would be
truly the most interesting person to have as playing that role would be Peter Fenton.
Oh, yeah. You're right i i sorry
oh my gosh that was the whole benchmarker is amazing that dinner was amazing there were a few
things that peter said that when we were talking about the principal program and blake uh one of
us i can't remember if it was me or you asked you know so why do you guys have a principal you know
like a like a junior investment person when clearly like
your whole ethos is you don't do that and peter's response well it was like uh because forced
consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds which is a famous quote from i can't remember
where it's from that's from some it just like it like leapt out of it just like that was the
immediate response that leapt out of him and it I was like, wow, I never thought that would show
up on a podcast. Yeah. Yeah, that was great. Peter's one of a kind. He is one of a kind.
Other episodes that I want to do, I want to do Into It. I think that's a far more interesting
and successful business than people realize. In the vein of consumer brands, we got to do Nike
at some point. Oh, yeah.
I want to continue going back in time
from Walmart and do Sears.
Nike's one that I really want to do.
I know we said we don't do lives.
I actually don't think
this should be a live show.
I want to go on site.
I want to go to Oregon.
Go to Eugene.
Get a workout in.
But I feel like there's like,
I don't know.
I mean, I may just be curious to see. I've never been, but the facilities there and like because it's such a Get a workout in. for a lot of them like TSMC the episode would have been much better if you and I got to witness
chips being fabbed and feel what it was like to be in a bunny suit the little bit I know I think
it mostly from the last dance but like the one of the key key moments in Nike's history is the
signing of the deal with Michael Jordan yeah but like what did it feel like when Michael came out
to the campus yeah there's feeling the history there has to be a
big thing. All right. So before we get to our extended carve outs in sort of reviewing 2022,
you and I both had big 2022s. So that's probably worth chatting about a little bit.
I love this. We didn't intend it this way. This is becoming much like the benchmark dinner that
we recorded everything, obviously before dinner, because we didn't want it this way. This is becoming much like the benchmark dinner that we recorded everything, obviously, before dinner
because we didn't want to eat dinner before.
We got a lot of good comments of like,
why are they just sitting there with cheese on their plates?
Like, aren't they going to eat?
Aren't they going to eat real food?
And like we did afterwards.
Yeah, yeah.
But like that would not make for good video content.
Clink, clink, clink, clink, clink.
Yeah.
Audio or video content.
We are going to, after we finish recording here,
we're going to go out to uh celebrate celebrate
a holiday dinner for acquired for the two of us but i feel like this is like the pre-recorded
this is the recording version so at which we would definitely talk about our personal lives
well you had i had probably the biggest life event that yeah you had a yes i got married
it was wonderful i was here it was great you here. It was really cool because in some ways I thought it wasn't going
to feel different afterwards. I think a lot of people in our generations would have like
date for a long time and live together and feel like life partners. But there's something totally
different about being married, you know, having the ring on every day as a reminder and the sense
of like longevity associated with it is really cool and a really
totally different psychological place than I thought. Well, and you go through this process
and project together of the wedding, like from the moment you get engaged until the wedding,
is this like a, you know, you're like a butterfly going into like a caterpillar going into cocoon.
It's like a transformational period. Yes. And I say like, I was here. You did the wedding at your house right after moving.
I didn't want to play that 2022 venue game. Two times more people got married this year. It was
just like, you're not getting a venue. And if you are, you're getting a terrible date and you're
paying a lot of money for it and you're not going to get any of the things that you want out of it.
That was probably half of CPI inflation right there was wedding venues.
David was my groomsman. You and I have some great pictures together. Thank you for coming up and
being a part of it.
You did a amazing job given that you two planned it all yourself. You were the venue. It was at
your house. It was...
We're literally sitting where the DJ was DJing onto the dance floor out there.
It's so fun going to weddings after having been married because you're like,
oh good, I just get to enjoy all of the fruits of the couple's labor.
Yeah, it really is.
When people say it's the happiest day of your life, no doubt the happiest day of my life.
And I think the like energy and
love and just overwhelming force that you feel from your closest friends and family when you're
like walking down the aisle and you feel all that energy on you it's crazy and it's an indescribable
moment really yeah um it was super cool that was i think the biggest personal life event what else
for you this year let's see 2022 we took a vacation to italy
i've never been to italy before that was like a absolutely spectacular time rome cinque terra
florence capri god the island of capri is incredible i've never been it's just amazing
have you been to greece i've not. I was curious how it compares to Greece.
I think it's similar to some of the sort of
Grisha islands.
This one has some cool history associated with it
because at one point,
the Roman emperor was sort of fleeing.
And I don't know if it was paranoia or it was legitimate,
but just thought that everyone in Rome
was coming and trying to kill him.
And so he like fled to Capri
and ruled from the island
where he could sort of see
in every direction
to sort of fortify.
It was remote work
before remote work.
Yeah, that's like one of my...
He was a pre-digital nomad.
Yes.
That's the cool thing
about Italy
and every European country
compared to here,
but I feel like especially Italy,
the sense of history, especially you know us two history buffs like yep you know you walk around rome or florence and rome especially florence in its own right is still ancient history
compared to america but like rome like you're talking about the ancient roman times and you
i mean actually walking around the forum is wild because you're like literally looking at pillars
that are 3,000 years old,
at least 2,000 years old.
Yeah.
So we're thinking about
where to go on a honeymoon
probably early to mid next year.
And I like,
I want to go back to Italy.
This is a magical place.
This is the problem
as you get older
and you have cool travel experiences.
You're like,
I want to go back to those places, but you also want to experience new places.
The rest of the world, right? Like I will die without seeing most of the world, no matter how much I travel. And so should I try and put a dent in that as much as possible? Or should I say, you know, there's this one spot in Hawaii that I really like. And so every single year I'm going back there.
Clearly the answer is both.
Maybe you had some other plan for carve outs, but like, I mean, I feel like I'm like decently up on like the latest like tech and gadgets and stuff, but like, you're like, you made some interesting
decisions. Oh, we're going to review my Apple year in review. Yeah. Yeah. Can we do an Apple
year in review for Ben? Yeah, let's do it. So got the iPad mini for acquired. We both are rocking the mini because it's very, very good for
onstage as we did more live stuff. It's just game changing. This is the perfect device for
live events and any kind of where you're not sitting in front of a computer monitor. Yeah.
Easy to hold it in one hand. I really want the big iPad pro, but I have basically no use for it. Like this is actually the device that suits my use case.
I think a little over a year ago, I got the MacBook Pro 16-inch, which is...
Which has the lovely fire.
This is our fire, which is the finest computer I've ever owned.
It's a tank.
The display is amazing.
Yes, the display is unbelievable.
I mean, everything about this thing is nuts.
I do have envy.
The M2 MacBook Air, that thing is sexy.
Like so thin, so light.
A lot of the capability of this one,
but when I'm traveling
and because what we do is so everything intensive,
it's bandwidth intensive, it's storage intensive,
the SD slot, having like,
you just need like a desktop computer with you all the time.
We're transferring hundreds of gigabytes back and forth after we record for all the multiple
camera videos.
I want the good webcam that comes on this computer in case we have to do a remote episode.
I want the screen space because I'm also a venture capitalist and I'm doing spreadsheety
things.
I have a hard time with a travel computer.
So if they made an 18-inch computer and they made it three pounds heavier,
I might buy that one too.
When you're doing purely personal travel,
do you not bring this and just bring the iPad?
No, absolutely not.
Oh, so you still bring this?
Yeah, yeah.
Purely personal travel, what are you talking about?
There's not a single day where I'm on personal vacation
where I'm not also doing something.
Yeah, that's true.
Even for yours truly, that's true.
I mean, we're small business owners.
Yeah, we are small business owners.
There are things every single day where there's no one else that can do it.
And so either it doesn't happen or we have to do it.
Yeah.
And that's on top of me being a professional venture capitalist where there's real obligations
that come with,
and that you don't necessarily need the heaviest computer you can find for,
but you need to be pretty responsive on a lot of things. And sometimes if you're
reviewing a document, you need a real computer.
We need to make edits to an episode or something like that.
I need to bust out an audition.
Yeah.
And I could do that on a smaller computer and maybe this is totally
overkill. Like when you got here today, I had left to go to a board meeting and then a lunch
and then meet someone for coffee for a nonprofit that I'm working with. And none of those things
required a computer, but I brought my backpack with my computer in it to all three, even though
I knew I would never take it out because if something came up, I would need to be able to like get away for five minutes,
do something on my computer, put it back in my bag and then go back to whatever I was doing.
I love it.
You just never know.
You never know.
And I'm probably overly paranoid on that, but it's like the one time you get burned
changes your behavior forever.
Okay. So opposite of this, I'm where I thought you were going to start.
So I really like to take pictures. I'm a very big nerd about like understanding all the physics and
as much of the black box that Apple will let you understand of the computational photography engine.
But I also have like, I think it's tendinosis. Something's up with my wrists. They fatigue
super easily and I get basically tennis elbow. It's probably from having my computer with me
all the time and like constantly being hunched over a computer.
So I have the iPhone 13 mini. It's the correctly sized phone. It's the correct weight for a phone.
It's the correct sort of reachability for a phone, which I know Apple used to name a feature,
which is a stupid feature. And so I was like, gosh, there's no iPhone 14 mini. I would pay
literally anything. I don't know if that is exactly right,
but like four or five X, the current iPhone prices.
You have a high willingness to pay.
For an iPhone 14 pro mini.
Yeah.
Like Apple, if there's a test one in a lab somewhere,
please send it to me.
I will, again, like no price sensitivity around it.
But I was like, I should try the new phone
and just like play with the cameras and stuff.
I got it. As you would suspect, it was too big. It was too heavy. I waited 13 days until the 14
day return deadline, returned it, went back to my 13 mini. And I'm thinking about buying another
13 mini because at some point the battery is going to die on this one. And if they never make
another mini again, like- You'd want to have one like in cold storage.
It's just like my uh nike's upstairs that
i've got stacked in the closet it is the perfect size phone so i have um i have a 12 mini right
now i didn't upgrade to the third i probably should have dude you totally should upgrade
right now before they run out well i realized i finally need to upgrade the 12 mini and the
biggest driving factor for me as a new parent was the camera and so i actually when i haven't
gotten it yet it's because it's on back order, but
I went to the 14 Pro.
Wow.
Which I have never had any of the Pro iPhones.
Like I care about technology a lot, but I was just never compelled by, I don't care
that, didn't, used to not care that much about photography.
Yep.
And so I was just never that compelled by the Pro versions.
And I really cared about size, But now with a little one.
If I was a parent, I think I would buy the 14 Pro also.
Well, it's a double whammy.
What I cared most about size was for portability when out and about.
Which that part of your life has gone away.
That part of my life is particularly like exercising.
Now my exercise is primarily walking a stroller,
which has a lot of carrying capacity.
And I didn't care that much about photo quality.
I took very few photos before.
I mean, now just like some of the best advice.
I love talking to people who have older kids
and being like,
because you just realize time just slips away.
Like when you have a kid.
And almost universally,
I wish I'd taken more photos. universally i wish i'd taken more photos i
especially wish i'd taken more videos uh throughout the and so like like ah all right so the pro i
have on order but i i'm conflicted about it like i'm really gonna miss the form factor you are
you're really gonna miss it yeah it's like not gonna fit in your pocket yeah it's gonna be it's
gonna be a transition and also the camera mountain on this one is so large that the phone actually rocks when
you're leaving it on a table and typing.
It's fascinating to see the set of trade-offs Apple's been okay with in the name of getting
the very best photos that they can out of this thing.
Which as a parent now, I'm like, I see the business reason for doing that.
Right.
Okay.
So keep going on the lineup because you've got another important large device. Yeah. So I bought the Apple Watch. You're having trouble lifting
your arm there. It's really heavy. I was about to say the Apple Watch 14, the Apple Watch Ultra,
which I'm sure next year there's going to be the Apple Watch Ultra 2 or the Apple Watch 2 Ultra.
I'm curious how they'll name it. Apple Watch Ultra second generation, I imagine is what they'll do.
Anyway, this thing is actually super light relative to how large it is. And you've made the joke about lifting your arm. I like don't feel
it anymore. And I think that happens with all watches over time. You sort of like get used to
the weight. But one of the big things that sold me on it is because I thought the reason I was
going to hate it was the weight. I like put it on and I'm like this. I think it's the titanium,
remarkably light for how large it is. It's big. For sure it's big. It's beautiful though. The
screen is super clear. You can look at pictures on it. It's really bright. It's 2000 nits. So
it has a flashlight button because it functions as a fairly effective flashlight. The battery
lasts almost three days, which is totally game changing. I think I've tracked every single night
of sleep for four or five years now. And so that's like a thing that I, that's a use case I really
care about. I haven't done anything extreme in it yet. Like I've climbed Mount St. Helens.
Got this great photo behind me.
Yeah, that's Iceland that I did with my dad. He used to do this big backpacking trip every summer.
And I have not adventured in this thing yet, mostly because I've just been doing less
adventuring over the last year or two. But I totally expect to use it for the stated purposes, but it's been awesome for me, even not for the ultra
type purposes that it's advertised for.
The photo viewing I would imagine is a really, I would never think I want to view photos
on my wrist, but like, actually I think that could be.
There's a good number of times where I'm like, okay, cool.
I saw it clearly enough now where I don't need to also pull it
up on my phone. When you're getting photos in a text chat. Yes, exactly. The other interesting
thing is the screen is just large enough where it kind of feels like a small phone and less like a
big watch. And I think it's the edge to edge display. The fact that they have the like,
you know, raised bezel around it, bezel around it it, yeah. It has an on-screen keyboard that you can use the finger swiping on.
And so I literally can just like swipe on the keyboard to respond to text messages.
So I can't decide if that's like really nerdy and like Casio mid-80s
and like that's not actually useful.
But I've probably done it 30 or 40 times since I've gotten it
to respond to text messages
real quick and that's been pretty nice the one thing i wish they had added that to me would be a
maybe not killer feature but like a really really nice to have would be some sort of biometric
authentication in the watch because what i don't like is when i well maybe with a ultra i wouldn't
have to take it off to charge it as much but But when I put my watch back on after I'm charging it,
then I got to enter my pin code every time, which, you know, like first world problems.
I don't understand why they can't put a Touch ID sensor.
I mean, I know they're trying to save as much space as possible in there, but like...
No, that's good.
You're right.
There's no biometric on it.
But I think a feature that it does have is if you put it on and then you take out your phone
before you need to type in the passcode
on your watch and you face ID on your phone, your watch is auto unlocked.
Yes, that is true. But I found that to be kind of janky.
I have found that to be kind of janky too.
I can't like reliably trust that it's going to work.
Totally agree. I'm like, why do I still need to type in a passcode? I swear I shouldn't
need a passcode right now.
And one of the things I found, maybe I need a different watch band to
solve the problem, but toddlers really like to grab shiny things with screens and especially
ones that are on your wrist while you're changing diapers. And so the amount of times a day that I
enter my passcode on my watch is a lot larger than it used to be, shall we say? All right. So let's
go with your Apple. We'll go reverse order for you. Give me your Apple lineup and then let's get into your year in review. Oh, okay. So I'm
still rocking the 2020 original OG M1 MacBook Air, which there's so much more performant machines
out there like this now, but like I still have tons of headroom. Right. I'm not sure you'd notice
the performance difference. Yeah. And like the leap forward that that M1 chip was, was just incredible. I mean,
performance, battery life, price point.
That's crazy.
I don't know what these 2020 original M1 MacBook Airs are going for on like eBay or
Craigslist or whatnot right now. Whatever they're going for, I bet $500-ish, maybe less.
The amount of performance and longevity that you can get for that dollar amount is crazy.
You're right. If it's only $500, it's way better than... Let's say you have a 2018 or 2019
Intel machine. It's so worth it to trade up to even an old M1 because they're just not
that different after three years. Yep. Totally. I can't imagine anything that a normal human
would need to do on a computer that the M1 MacBook can't handle. Yep. Okay. So keep in that
guy. Okay. So there's that. We talked about my phone.
I'm currently rocking the 12 mini.
Very mixed emotions about transitioning to the 14 Pro.
Yep.
And I'm rocking the original SE Apple Watch.
I forgot they made a watch SE.
They have two now.
There's a new SE2.
I don't know exactly what the SE2 has feature set. I'm very tempted by the
Ultra for all the reasons we discussed. I highly recommend it. My decision for going with the SE
originally was it didn't have the always on screen and I actively did not want the always on screen.
How do you find it? Do you find it distracts you at all? I like it now, especially with the Wayfinder watch face that comes on the Ultra.
When it's off, you still see the watch hands, but everything else, it's a black background.
And then when you turn it, it's got sort of the white face comes on.
So I like it.
Nice.
I did not like the always-on display on the phone when I had the 14 Pro.
It was like loud.
Yeah.
It felt like my phone didn't it's like really on yeah but on
the on the watch it uh yeah it's it's subtle it's not like noticeable i will say too i was in a
coffee meeting today where i did need to call an uber so that i could get back here so that we
could record and like it was quite nice being able to like have the watch at a super what's
the social like thing about uh checking your watch but having it like being able to like have the watch at a super what's the social thing about uh checking your watch
but having it like being able to see the time when i was looking at it at like 170 degree angle
and i used to definitely be the person that's like jerking my wrist or like tapping it to try
to see the time so that's like that is one yeah i'll do like i'll put my hands under the table
and then like tap it like surreptitiously. Yeah.
And then on the iPad side,
the iPad mini,
I had the one really only negative experience besides the just amount of work
that we and PitchBook put into the arena show was my old iPad got stolen after
the arena show.
Criminal.
Literally criminal.
I could still see it on like the map on the find my devices.
It was somewhere up like Northgate or somewhere like north of of seattle and like but it's like one of these
things you're like just because i know where that is it does not mean i should go there and get it
no definitely not oh man but the mini i really like the mini it's not nearly as good for watching
and consuming content i have an old ipad that we keep in the kitchen for when i'm doing the
dishes and stuff and that you have promotion on? Like the minis don't have a ProMotion display, the 120
Hertz. Yeah. Oh no, I've got like an old, old iPad that I don't think has ProMotion.
I feel like you used to have one with a ProMotion display.
You know what? Maybe it does. I think it's an original, the first iPad Pro that they made in
2017. Yeah, that one did.
Okay. You're right. It does have ProMotion. It does have ProMotion.
Because that I actually missed
when I was downgrading
from the new iPhone
down to the 13 mini
because the non-pro iPhones
have never had promotion.
Right, that goes up to 120 hertz
refresh rate on the screen.
Yeah, butter.
The mini is great though for events.
It's also really good.
I've stopped.
I use a Kindle Oasis
that I use for reading fiction at home. But when I travel, I, I use a Kindle Oasis that I use for reading fiction at home.
But when I travel, I no longer bring the Kindle Oasis and I use this as a Kindle.
It's great for that.
I find like for outdoor stuff, you can't beat the Kindle.
Yeah.
I also find that night reading in bed, the iPad, even in the lightest setting is kind of too bright.
That's true. When going to the beach, I'll still bring the Kindle. I wouldn't feel good
bringing this to a beach. Yeah, that's a good point. Because they're not waterproof. Unlike
iPhones, iPads are not waterproof. The device that's still in my lineup that blows my mind is
in 2012, as a college graduation gift, my uncle got me the $70 Kindle. And that is still the
Kindle that I use and take on vacation. It's such a good product. They're like industrial strength.
Yeah. Yeah. And super light. Like I looked at getting the Oasis, but it's actually heavier
than my 2012 model. The nice thing about the Oasis is it's got the page turn buttons, which I like.
And the paperwhite is a really nice.
Yeah.
I'm envious of the paperwhite for sure.
My Kindle is actually worthless in bed because you need to light it with a...
Right.
Jenny and I got the Oasis for that very reason.
Jenny's a night owl and I'm a morning person.
And Jenny is a huge reader.
She has a PhD in literature.
And I'm a huge reader too,
but she puts me to shame.
She would stay up reading
at night with the light on
and then finally I'm just like,
I'm buying you this.
Turn the light off.
It's for you and for me.
It's for you,
but mostly for me.
All right.
So your 2022 personal year.
Oh, 2022 personal year.
Well, this was the year of
adjusting to life as a parent. Our daughter was born towards the end of 2021. So that was like most of the year was preparing. And, you know, then like the first couple months are like, I mean, of course, we're thinking back now on the FTX interview when we had Sam on.
Was that your first interview back it was in there i mean i was still in the fog of war like it was uh i know we released the interview uh oh we switched it
with the michael lovitz episode i think michael we interviewed michael first right that's right
that's right but all of that she was no more than two months old probably less like it's such a fog
yeah those first few months.
But then this year has been, you know, Jenny went back to work and she works in person. She works
at San Francisco ballet. Like it's an in-person physical art form. They put on physical performances.
She needs to be in the office every day and weekends and nights. So yeah, this year was just
about figuring out life, like with a lot of changes, but we met early in college. So we were like
babies, you know, and then we were, you were together for 17 years before having a kid,
16 years, 16 years. Yeah. 16 years before having a kid, which were wonderful 16 years. And I'm
glad we had all that time together pre-baby, but we hadn't had to like really renegotiate
our relationship in a long time. So it was like,
oh, wow, flexing old muscles again. Yeah, I bet. But the last time was when we got married and like
we didn't expect it. You know, it's funny hearing you talk about things are different when you get
married. Like they really are. All your life systems have to change. Your notion of self
is only about one person. But after you're married, your notion of self includes another
person whose emotions you can't actually feel. So like when you're like looking out for yourself,
you have to account for things that you currently don't know, which I think is this like very
interesting phenomenon. Yeah. And that is so true about getting married. But then having a kid,
I think that's like the biggest,
well, there's so many huge things,
but one is like,
you now have this other being.
Like when you get married,
yes, you have to account for the other person
and you're like in it together.
You're no longer just you.
Right.
But that other person is like a responsible adult,
hopefully, you know,
can keep themselves alive. Can like,
if we're going late recording an acquired episode, she'll be fine. You know, when you have a kid,
right. That's very starves. Yeah. Like you can't like 24 seven, somebody needs to have as like a
pretty foreground in their mental processes. Like I need the like algorithm of how
I'm behaving needs to have at the forefront, keep this kid alive and happy. Yeah. And they're
incapable of doing so their own. And you know, you love this person so incredibly much in just
really like unfathomable ways. And so it's like, yeah,
how do you like then integrate that back with your life?
So that was, it's been a lot of figuring that out for us.
And now like, we're now at such a good age.
Not that it's still difficult.
She's a little over a year old now, 14 months.
Like, it's so fun.
Like, it's always been fun.
I've always, I've not been, I think a lot of parents,
and especially a lot of dads,
they don't love their kids immediately.
And like, that's a very normal thing of like like, you know, moms, too, have this.
But, like, kid pops out, and you're like, whoa.
You know?
Right.
But there's no instant love.
I had the instant love.
Like, instant.
Like, very, very powerful.
And I still feel that.
But, like, also, like, as they become more of a person.
Like, she's walking now.
She's talking, like, a little bit.
But she, like, so clearly has a personality. And every day and like oh wow like you are even more of a
person than you were yesterday and like it's so fun and it's like also a lot easier than the just
like the early days are so physically demanding like on everybody especially moms but like any
any caregiver it's one of these things that like you can describe it
but having not experienced it i don't actually know what it's like it's like oh oh there's no
cool words david yeah right exactly highly highly recommend it but uh you know in due time yeah
other stuff for you this year personally it's sort of crazy looking back on it like so much
changes when you parent but um we were both intentional about this but also i think it just naturally happened because it is important and part of our lives we didn't actually travel
any less like we didn't travel in the early early months but we did what did we do eight or nine
trips with the baby in 2022 including going to portugal We made that a family trip when we went for Breakpoint,
which actually was great. Really hard, very different.
It seemed very hard, I gotta say, from the outside.
It was hard. It was hard, but I'm really glad we did it. I'm really glad we did it.
Then the other big thing for us this year, we'd spent a lot of time over the last couple of years
thinking about where we wanted to live in general. And then
in anticipation of having a baby. And then after having the baby, Jenny and I went around the
axle so many times about California. We were pretty sure we're going to stay in California
and probably the Bay area. Jenny's family's there. And we genuinely really love it there.
But do we move to the suburbs? Where do we move? Do we stay in the city? We were in the city before
and we ultimately decided to stay in the city, to stay in the same neighborhood. We moved houses, but the plan for now is we're
just going to stay for the perpetuity in the city, which some people I think are like,
that's crazy. Why would you live in San Francisco, period? Especially post-pandemic.
Why would you raise kids in San Francisco? It's actually great.
Like for us, it's been amazing. We can walk, we don't have to drive. We don't have to get her in
the car. There's so much great stuff. She really enjoys it. Like she's a city kid. Like after
break point, we went out in the countryside in Portugal for a couple of days. The baby was so
bored. She was like, get me back to Lisbon.
Oh, wow.
So it's actually been really great for us staying in the city.
We'll see as she gets older, but that's the plan.
That's great.
We want to thank our longtime friend of the show,
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compliance efforts. So frameworks like SOC 2, ISO 27001, GDPR, and HIPAA compliance and monitoring,
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that we talk about all the time here on Acquired, Jeff Bezos, his idea that a company should only focus on what actually makes your beer taste better, i.e. spend
your time and resources only on what's actually going to move the needle for your product and
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like Vanta's 7,000 customers around the globe,
and go back to making your beer taste better,
head on over to vanta.com slash acquired and just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
And thanks to friend of the show, Christina, Vanta's CEO,
all acquired listeners get $1,000 of free credit. Vanta.com
slash acquired. Carvouts? Carvouts. Let's do it. All right. Should we start with books?
Let's do it. All right. I can't remember if I recommended this one because I read it over the
holidays last year. I think it might've been my first carve out of 2022, Project Hail Mary.
Oh yeah. I think I read it on your recommendation.
That's right.
Ken Vought, very good.
I think it's the best fiction I've ever read. Definitely the best sci-fi I've ever read.
I think it's the best fiction I've ever read. The premise arrives at you in real time as you
read it. So I don't want to give away the premise unless otherwise stated, this is a spoiler free
carve outs. The coolest thing about Project Hail Mary is how it is basically all in our universe.
There's no big leap. Like in Star Trek, you have to take this leap of like, well,
there's warp drive, and you don't really understand how it works, and that's fine.
And now that we accept this black box, now we can go do other stuff. There's not an accepted
black box in Project Hail Mary. There's
just like all the known rules of physics that we know about. And then you go from there.
It's hard sci-fi, I think is the term.
Is that what they call it?
Yeah. Where it's like everything is like laws of physics explanations for everything.
Right. So that was super cool. Another book that I finished about two months ago that I thought was
exceptional and every single person
who listens to acquired should read it. I think it expands even broader than this audience,
but this audience in particular would eat it up called the psychology of money by Morgan Housel.
We got to talk to Morgan recently. That was really fun. And when we hopped on that call
with him, it was like I was two thirds through the book. And so it was really fun, like getting
to talk about some of the concepts with him while I was in real time digesting them but he's unbelievably pithy i need
to read the book i haven't read it i need to read it and yes i agree total class act i suspect it's
a really good one to read now post 2020 and 2021 bubble when like everything was crazy it would
have been great to read it during 2020 right also yeah But it includes, I think I've made it a carve out before the Morgan's essay,
How All This Happened. And every chapter of Psychology of Money is one of his essays.
And so if you read How All This Happened, which is this amazing path of World War II through today,
through the American economy and a lot of politics and
why different things happened and how everything led to the next thing. The psychology of money
is awesome because it incorporates all of that sort of like factual history with just really
good perspectives and some citations of research on what actually makes people happy and what investment strategies
work when your goal is happiness.
I certainly don't account for enough of that in my own financial planning.
Yeah.
Morgan makes a very strong argument in the book to basically put as much into S&P 500
index funds when you're as young as you possibly can and just never sell anything.
It's like the most boring style of investing possible that will probably beat whatever you do.
Yep. I got to pick that up and read it. That'll be good over the holidays.
Book. Anything else you got in books?
I do actually. I'm halfway through it. I was tempted to not talk about it because I want
to use it for a future carve out, but it's already so good. And this is another one where like listeners of the show will especially
eat this up. The Power Law by Sebastian Malady. Is it worth reading even if you're already steeped
in the industry? Yes. You and I have done research on 250 companies and all these venture funds and
talked to the people that started a lot of these venture funds. And Sebastian knows more. He just
goes deeper. I mean, he just talks about these investments that we think we've talked about
the best investments of all time.
There are more.
He cites them all numerically.
He cites returns on early venture capital funds.
He takes you all the way through product venture capital.
There's George Dorio and then Arthur Rock.
He talks about how all those partnerships led to the next ones
and how certain
structures were bad.
And then the invention of the private limited partnership fixed all these problems.
You're going to love it.
Okay.
I might find that under the tree.
That's all I got for books.
Oh, that's all I got.
All right.
My books, I've got two acquired books that I can't believe we did both of these episodes this year.
And we completely whiffed on this very obvious sort of like pun and fun moment.
You know, I don't like whiffs.
I know. I'm embarrassed by this. Like mostly for me, this is like an ultimate, like
David Rosenthal, like dad joke moment, my top two acquired books, and they genuinely are also my top two acquired books for the year, made in Japan and made in America.
I made that joke.
Did you?
Totally made that joke.
Oh, did you? Oh, I can't believe I forgot that.
I swear I did.
Did you? We'll have to go back through the transcripts.
Or at least like observed that in some capacity. Maybe it was a tweet.
Maybe I just have dad brain.
But isn't that crazy that they're both named that?
And they're both so good.
Yeah.
I agree.
Highly recommend.
Non-acquired books
that I read this year.
I think I did this
as a carve-out.
The Godfather series,
the books.
Yep.
Mario Puzo's books.
They are so good.
As good or better
than the movies
and the movies are,
in my opinion,
some of the best of all time.
Yeah.
And then the other one
is Masters of Doom.
I don't know if I talked about that on the show.
We've thought about doing an id episode.
And then Lex did that huge interview with Carmack.
So it felt less urgent for us to do it.
But a really well-written book.
And then the author of Masters of Doom, David Kushner,
just did a follow-up piece, I think in Vanity Fair,
of a follow-up piece, I think in Vanity Fair, of a follow-up interview.
Did you see? I think, did I send this to you? With Stevie Case, who's the CRO at Vanta.
And Stevie is a prominent figure in the book. And she was the first, the first or one of the first
professional female gamers, ended up working. Did she work at id? She may have worked briefly at id,
but then she joined Romero at his next company after Romero and Carmack broke up.
Oh, crazy.
Anyway, crazy story. And then she went on, she came out to Silicon Valley,
ended up working at Twilio, and now is the CRO at Vanta.
Oh, you did tell me about this. I'm not sure I read the article, but I remember hearing, yeah.
Yeah. So good. Both the book and the follow-up article. Great.
Huh, cool.
Stevie's story is amazing.
So that's my article carve out too, which is our next category.
Mine was how all this happened.
Yeah. Perfect.
Podcasts?
Podcasts. I already mentioned Resident Arc, my favorite video game podcast.
Got it all in. Resident Arc and All In are like my go-to must listen every episode.
Yep. and All In are like my go-to must listen every episode. Two shout outs though that I discovered
this year and have become friends, David Tenra and The Founders Podcast, of course, wonderful show.
And we've become close with David and like when you hear David on the show, he is exactly that
same way in real life too. Like it's so great. He's come out to California. We've hung out a
bunch. Love him. The other one, I've been a huge MKBHD fan on YouTube, as I know you have been too. The Waveform podcast
that they do is great. I've started regularly listening. I really like it. And our buddy,
David Immel, who's on the MKBHD team, he's regularly a co-host on that. They rotate through
the team on the Wave podcast. And like,
it's in the same vein as kind of the verge podcasts. Like it's all about the products of tech, but it's really well done. I've become an increasingly large fan of the verge.
I don't know how I sort of slept on it in my head. It was like, Oh, another one of these,
like end gadget Gizmodo type things. But like, that was wrong. It is my, this is like embarrassing to say,
new favorite publication. Like, Nilay is so smart. And I'll basically go listen to Nilay
talk wherever he is. Like, that is a way to for sure get me to go listen to an episode of whatever
the podcast is. So I sort of like first, and over COVID, I think was like, I'll listen to Nilay in
any situation. And then like with
the verge redesign, I sort of, I don't think I realized how unbelievably thoughtful the team
there is and how strategic they are. They're one of the few publications that thinks about the fact
that they're a business too, and thinks about the way to marry their business with their editorial
and how they can uniquely show up in
the world based on what they do differently than other people. And like, I think the new Verge
redesign is genius. Like, I don't know if it'll work or not, but I love the attempt. They're also
one of the few news sites in the world that actually gets a ton of direct traffic. So that's
a huge thing that plays to their advantage that then they can do interesting things with. There's people that come to them to solve a problem in their life or to fill a need.
It's so true. I mean, even me, I mean, you're way deeper in the product side as a fan of the
product side of tech than I am. But anytime there's a new Apple device or there's a couple
places I will go directly, I will go to MKBHD and all the various properties that he and they have
now, and I'll go to the Verge. And I might consume some other stuff will go to MKBHD and all the various properties that he and they have now
and I'll go to the Verge.
And I might consume
some other stuff
that comes to me
on social media,
but like I will directly
go to those two properties.
And I feel like
my impression of Neely
is that like
he is world class
on the product side of tech,
but he also gets
the business side.
Oh yeah, for sure.
For sure.
Which is super rare. Super rare. And like his legal background, he also gets the business side. Oh yeah, for sure. For sure. Which is super rare.
Super rare. And like his, his like legal background, he gets all the like
interesting IP copyright stuff that's going on in technology. I just feel like he's,
there's that Scott Adams aphorism. You don't want to be top 1% at anything. You want to be top 25%
at the right three things and figure out how to marry them together. I feel like that's Eli. I'll also say,
I think the Verge has been the thing that's surprisingly the most helpful for me for
acquired research this year. Like I did a ton of Qualcomm research on the Verge because they've
done so much reporting on Qualcomm over the years. So big Verge fan. I know that's, we don't have
publication as a category, but- They've got podcasts. Yeah, they do. So back to podcasts. I already said the episode
of Tim Ferriss with Jerry Seinfeld from a couple of years ago. So good. The episode of Huberman
lab, what alcohol does to your body. Oh yeah. Dude, it's scary, scary stuff. And like moderation
is also bad. There's no like, well, I only had one drink this week and
that's devastating to your body versus zero. And this is certainly not medical advice, but
go listen to that podcast. It's just unbelievable. The research studies that he's citing
where it's just so much more bad for you in every way than I ever thought.
And I thought it was bad for you. Yeah. You were already starting to drink less, right?
Yeah. I mean, we both opened tonight with cocktails, but well, you got to live.
This is a celebratory event. That's right. That's right. My last podcast recommendation
is Smartless. Any episode. So fun. It's just so fun to go live in their world for an episode.
You've liked that one for a while, right? Last six months or so.
Yeah. I feel like you've been big on that. All right. Music.
Music. I don't think I discovered any new music this year. I listened to a lot of Taylor Swift
Midnights. I did a ton of prep for our wedding, curating a bunch of different playlists for
different segments of the day.
Oh, that's right. You put together all the playlists yourself too, right?
Yeah. I mean, the DJ did all the work that a great DJ does, but I sent him very highly manicured playlists that took several months to put
together with a lot of opinion in it. So, you know, here's the dance, here's the cocktail hour,
here's dinner, here's... So I was looking at my Spotify year in review and I was like,
all this is like my favorite songs from over the course of my life and my wife's life. And that's where most of my music
listening went this year. I'll also say most of my audio time, like even when I'm in the gym now,
is podcasts or audible books, mostly in service of acquired research. I just listen to way less
music than I used to. I feel like you do a large part of your acquired book research via audiobooks,
right? Almost exclusively.
Wow.
It was painful for me to read the whole Qualcomm book,
but the only way to get it was paperback book.
Paperback.
Whereas I've gone the total opposite direction.
I pretty much only do physical paper copies for acquired research.
I admire your attention span.
I'm interested to try it.
I do have an Apple Pencil for our iPad minis,
and I wish i could write
with the apple pencil i find that to be a useless device yeah i bought that and i thought it'd be
so cool and i never use it i agree i agree it's just like i don't know if it's a drm thing or
like a font size thing that changes the page but like really just want to be able to write with
the apple pencil directly on an ebook the same way i do
on a physical book and for whatever reason the tech gods just let me do that i have new music
oh yeah shockingly you would not think that me knowing me and as a new parent would discover new music this year but the baby loves olivia rodrigo
less so now but when uh when she was like i don't know between ages like
two months and six months they'll go through moments right olivia rodrigo almost without fail
turn on driver's license like she would be a wrapped in attention and like immediately calm down.
Amazing.
We're like,
I guess we have a teenager.
Like,
so I listened to a lot of Olivia Rodrigo this year and she's very talented.
Huh?
Very impressive.
All right.
I got out to,
uh,
to my Spotify,
uh,
TV and movies.
Yes.
And, or was my carve out very recently. You got to carry everything here because I did none. I rewatched Black Panther recently. It was just as good. Great movie. But
that's all I got. So Andor, I saw the new Top Gun. That was unbelievably fun. Like put that on a big
4K TV with some surround sound and just enjoy. Jenny and I watched that on a laptop. Yeah, we got to go. I think they're
re-releasing it in theaters for the holidays. Oh, really? Yeah. We can go upstairs after this
and watch it. It's a 75-inch. It's a very good experience. Nice. I watched Everything Everywhere
All at Once, the movie, and that movie gives you all the feels. That is a great, great movie.
Great one to watch together if you're looking for something to watch with your partner.
Weird movie, kind of a sci-fi, kind of a rom-com. It's like a family dynamics movie,
sad parts, happy parts, and visually stunning. And great acting. I don't even really want to
talk about what it's about because it's one of these acting. I don't even really want to talk about
what it's about because it's one of these that I just don't want to spoil it, but basically
everyone will like this movie. Great. Good holiday movie? Great holiday movie. I haven't watched
season one yet because it felt like I just wanted to catch up as soon as possible because everyone
was talking about it. I'm now up to date on White Lotus season two. That is a wild show. It's basically the premise is like you get, I don't know, eight to 10 rich people that
show up at this beautiful hotel, the White Lotus in Sicily.
And they're in three or four different groups.
So the plot sort of follows different groups.
But the thing that runs through everyone is like everyone is extremely set in life,
very wealthy, and like deeply unhappy. And then crazy problematic stuff ensues from there. And
it's visually stunning. And the acting is great. And you're simultaneously very mad at all these
characters for doing stuff that they shouldn't be doing. But you also totally understand
the characters are so well established that you understand based on
their flaws as humans, why they're falling into these traps. Are they real people? Is it reality
or is it fiction? No, fiction. Yeah. Just very, very well-written fiction. And the first one was
in Hawaii. So I think it's almost a completely different cast, but like sort of same general
premise in Italy. So each season is a different set. I think that's what they're doing yeah lastly i watch a lot of
tv this year the vow on netflix is great like trash tv to leave on in the background it is um
two seasons long and it is a documentary about a cult and unbelievably the cult leader is so
wrapped up i mean maybe not unbelievably for a cult leader,
in self-glorification that like-
That sounds very believable for a cult leader.
15, 20 years ago, he started recruiting filmmakers to join the cult so they would
shoot all this footage. So there's all this very, very high production value footage over the entire
life of the cult cult all the way through
the trial which was only a few years ago is the nexium cult and like dude went to prison for life
and a bunch of other people went to prison because like they did terrible cult stuff and the whole
thing is just like perfectly documented the entire time because i think it was like part of the
arrest that like all this document all this
stuff became public footage yeah so or maybe they maybe netflix bought it i don't know but either
way very very good background tv great apps the only new app that i started using this year that
had any meaningful impact was our baby monitor app. I just like everything's ossified.
What about you?
Do you have anything?
I have a few apps since moving houses
that are sort of tied to like IoT type things.
The only one that's not that I really like
that I started using this year is Flighty,
which is Ryan Jones's.
He's an indie developer.
He previously did Weatherline,
which was my favorite weather app.
And Flighty is sort of like the modern TripIt. The best way to explain it is like unbelievably good UI to tell
you real-time information about your flight. And it's tied into like every available API with every
available airline. So you get information from Flighty before the airline notifies you of it.
And often before it even displays on gates when you're in the airport.
Okay, I gotta get this.
I'm gonna push before.
I can get this for flying back in a couple of days.
Dude, when you get like a 30 second heads up on a change
before the mass of people are behind you,
it's very valuable.
That's huge.
Very valuable.
That is an edge.
That's alpha.
That's alpha right there.
That's alpha.
Although now we just gave it to everybody.
I think he was even featured in the Apple keynote.
So we're not giving anybody any distribution here
that they didn't otherwise already earn.
But Ryan's just an amazing indie developer.
It's been really fun to watch.
I haven't met him or anything,
but watch the success of his apps over the years.
And this is just a fantastic experience.
Be fun to do.
Maybe it'd be an LP show or two, but we should
have some indie developers on. Those are interesting business stories. Totally. All right.
Products. I have one that actually comes with an app. Great. Mine is the Roborock S7 Max.
Roborock S7 Max. Can I guess what the, is this a robo vacuum? Yes. It's the competitor to Roomba. And I think it's a Xiaomi company. You know how Xiaomi owns
like large stakes and a whole bunch of companies that they like manufacture for? I think it's that,
but it's just like, I had a Roomba and I actually returned it to get the Roborock instead. And the
S7 Max is the like, I mean, it's like the worst product name of all time, but it's like the souped up self emptying also has a lightweight mop built in. It's the first time I've actually
had like a robot where you actually can say like, this thing is robust enough that it's just going
to make my life easier without failing or getting stuck or needing some kind of intervention. It
just does its job. What's prevented me from ever seriously considering robot vacuums is stairs. So you
just need one for each floor? Exactly. Or you can move it, but I went for two Roborocks.
Given the Xiaomi involvement or potential, I would imagine you could probably get two for
less than the cost of a no they're
very expensive oh they're very expensive oh wow i was expecting that too no they're they're um
they're premium priced oh interesting but great fantastic product yeah i guess that is the
solution you just do one for each floor yep yeah interesting or get used to carrying it it's fine
i mean i guess you're gonna walk upstairs to like go to bed so you may as well just like carry this
thing under your arm and set it down and then start it in the morning or something
that's great i never thought about that just save you a thousand bucks right there
all right that's all i got that's all your product okay let's see i uh i'm intentionally
gonna limit a parenting product to just one i could really do
a whole other show about this yeah like this is maybe i should do a list yeah listeners want this
yeah maybe well i mean not all but it's a subset dude so my just one this is a super pro tip that
i never would have thought of but diaper bags are like big you know uh brilliant idea i wish i could take credit for
this but i can't put the key essentials of a diaper bag which are diapers wipes changing pad
in a pouch you know like you can get like a nice like pouch or whatever like printed or like you
know i don't even know where ours is from and then you could just move that pouch into whatever
bag or you could either carry the pouch
yourself or put it in your backpack or put it in whatever, like rather than having a
dedicated diaper bag, keep the core essentials of the diaper bag in a pouch that you can
then put in other things.
God, dude, this show is getting worse and worse.
Listeners, if you're still listening, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
We'll be back next year with better content.
Oh boy. But by the way, at some point, if I'm ever a parent, I'm totally going to be like,
I'll just do that. I'll make a list for you. Good. On the universal product appeal,
a couple of quick ones. One, I went back actually to the apple keyboard i had a mechanical keyboard
which i really liked but i went back to the apple one for touch id built in like it actually it's
so convenient it is really nice it's so convenient i have the microsoft ergonomic sculpt 2 and i love
it but i think i type my password two dozen times a day more than i would if i just had my i seriously
doubt they'll do this but actually they could sell it for a hundred bucks and make
a ton of margin. A little standalone.
Standalone Touch ID dongle. Yeah, totally. Bunch of Elgato gear, including the sound panel. Their
sound panels are so good, so easy to put up. I don't know if listeners noticed from...
By the way, we have four Elgato lights in
this room right now, an Elgato stream deck. David and I use the Elgato preamps, the Wave XLR.
And then also the camera, the wide camera that somehow turned off again is mounted on the Elgato
boom arm where my mic is normally on my desk. Yep. They make such good stuff. The sound panels in particular are really,
really good.
And really,
they have frames around them and then sticky stuff to mount.
So like,
literally,
I've put up,
I don't know,
probably 12 of them in total took less than an hour.
Oh,
we also use the cam link,
the cam link 4k,
the way that we pipe our cameras into our computer as webcams.
Yep.
Huge, huge Elgato fans.
Nice.
All right.
And then you added to the agenda a final new carve out section of places.
Places.
This year.
Copri.
That was my.
That you already discussed.
Yes.
Any for you?
No, we didn't really go anywhere new
despite all our travels.
We've been to Portugal and Lisbon before.
We went back to Santa Barbara.
We try and go there every year,
at least once a year.
That's the beach for us.
Santa Barbara is just amazing.
Lovely, lovely place.
One of the loveliest places on earth
and very accessible from California.
We got to find more. We did the EA episode down there. We got to find more Acquired
related reasons to go. Yeah, that's right. Trip lives down there. He's got it figured out.
That's right. Well, with that listeners, I think we will see you in 2023. We would love to see you
in the Slack. We'll be hanging out there over the holidays. If you want to listen to the LP show,
we actually just recorded two other great LP shows that'll be coming out soon. You can join and get those
two weeks early at acquired.fm slash LP, or you can search acquired LP show in any podcast player
and get access to them two weeks after LPs get them. Anything else, David?
One very, very important last thing. A big you yeah to all of you we uh we talked about
it a lot on this episode we truly have the best audience in the world the best community in the
world ben and i just pinch ourselves like literally on a weekly if not daily basis that we get to do
this that i get to do this as a living. And it's all thanks to you all.
We just get so much joy out of putting this show together. I mean, clearly we can talk for hours,
just about the year and all the fun. Whether or not that's interesting to other people or
remains to be seen, but every business should know their source of power and their source of
differentiation and ours is all of you. So thank you so much for
being on the journey with us. It's been an amazing seven years and here's to seven more.
Indeed. Happy holidays.
Happy holidays. Bye.