Acquired - Meta
Episode Date: October 28, 2024Meta is a company everyone knows (literally, everyone). But, somehow, it’s also a company that few people feel they actually understand. Their products are used by more humans than any othe...r’s in history — almost half of the entire world’s population daily. But… what is Meta? Why do they do what they do? How do they do what they do? Ask ten people and you’ll likely get ten very different sets of answers.Today, we dive deeper than we’ve ever gone trying to find Acquired’s answers to those questions. And after months of research and 6+ hours of incredible stories about how they (and really “they” being Mark himself) bet it all and win time and time again in the face of overwhelming odds, we arrive at our answers. Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Threads, AI, Oculus, Orion, it’s all here. Tune in for one of the greatest corporate stories of all time: Meta, a Mark Zuckerberg Production.Sponsors:Many thanks to our fantastic Fall ‘24 Season partners:J.P. Morgan PaymentsStatsigCrusoeHuntressLinks:Please take our 2024 Acquired Survey if you have a minute. It'd mean the world to us! https://acquired.fm/surveyOur past episodes on Instagram, WhatsApp, Oculus, Snapchat, the Snap IPO, TikTok, NVIDIA, Microsoft, and the Mark Zuckerberg InterviewWorldly Partners: Meta multi-decade studyEpisode sourcesCarve Outs:Ben Cohen’s piece on NotebookLMMr. McMahonThe Dwarkesh PodcastMore Acquired:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Check out the latest swag in the ACQ Merch Store!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)
All right. So I was up late last night. Late for me as a dad is like 11 p.m. But I'm sitting here
at my computer in my dark basement, you know, pulling notes together. David, what music did
I have on? You have one guess. Oh, I know exactly what you had on. You had Trent Reznor,
Social Network soundtrack. It makes anything you're doing feel twice as important and twice as revolutionary.
And it just felt very apt for this episode.
Oh, man.
So I have been listening the last 24 hours to 50 Cent Into Club because that came out
my freshman year of college, same year as the Facebook.com.
And man, 50 Cent, Facebook.com, can't get any better than that.
Perfect.
Match made in heaven.
Well, I'll check out our wall to wall from the old days and see if they're already posted
about that.
All right, let's do it.
Let's do it.
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 truth now? Is it you, is it you, is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight.
Another story on the way.
Who got the truth?
Welcome to the fall 2024 season of Acquired,
the podcast about great companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rezenthal.
And we are your hosts.
Today, we are studying a company whose products are used by more humans than any other company in history, Meta.
Of course, formerly known as Facebook.
So I figured I would contextualize these numbers a little bit.
Meta has 4 billion monthly active users.
And daily active users are over 3 billion. Yeah, nuts. There are
only 8 billion humans on Earth. So as I started to brainstorm what the closest competitors could be
to serving half of the humans, I thought, surely I can find it in empires or governments from the
past where there is some larger percentage. Yeah, makes sense. Nope.
The Roman Empire at its peak was only 40% of humans, tops.
You know, the data is a little bit hard to actually find from that period of time.
But the British Empire, which we have a little bit better handle on,
at its peak was only 23% of the global human population.
So no government, tech company, utility, etc. has ever addressed so much
of the world. It's just wild. There's no other way to put it. In the over 20 years since its founding,
Meta truly has connected humanity through its apps. Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger,
and now Threads. So today, we're going to study how they did it. There's been a lot of ink spilled writing about Facebook over the years, and for its
first 10 years, most of that writing focused on the many benefits to society with breathless
exuberance over milestone after milestone.
And for the past 10 years, it's kind of seemed like Meta could do nothing right, reporting
focused on its many stumbles, the massive mistakes, the incredible controversies
surrounding the company. And while we will of course discuss these events as part of our story
and analysis, our goal today on this podcast episode is really to understand how it is that
Meta became the dominant fabric that connects the human race and why they've been so successful at
continuing to win over and over again.
No matter what you think of the company, it is undeniably one of the most important institutions
in the world, and their global scale is no accident.
It is the result of careful actions from some of the most motivated and brilliant people
in the world who believe in one mission, connecting as many people as possible.
I hadn't thought about this till now, but almost sort of tautologically, this is like
the most important episode we'll ever do to try and understand this.
Like, it's the biggest company that has ever existed.
It's the biggest thing that's ever existed.
Yeah, by these measures that we're talking about right now.
Right.
Now, of course, the story of how we got here is nuts.
It is the perfect acquired stew, like you're saying, David.
They speed ran their startup phase.
They swerved through multiple disruptive technology waves.
They battled fierce competitors.
They invented or maybe discovered one of the greatest business models ever.
And they're now trying to pull forward the next technology generation through sheer force
of will with AR, VR, and AI. So
finally, listeners, we tackle one of the greatest corporate stories ever, Facebook, the Mark
Zuckerberg production. So listeners, we have one big announcement for you today. It is time for our
annual Acquired survey. If you have three to five minutes, please click the link in the show notes
or go to acquired.fm slash survey to take it. We'll be raffling off a pair of shiny new meta Ray-Bans and giving away a bunch of ACQ dad hats
as well. This is really our one big ask of you all year, and it helps us immensely with making
the show better to hear your suggestions and also to help our sponsors understand just how impactful
the acquired audience is. So go to acquired.fm slash survey,
and David and I are both eternally grateful. After this episode, discuss it in the Slack and check
out ACQ2, our second show where we just had Clem DeLong, the CEO of Hugging Face on, to talk about
his view on how the open source AI ecosystem will play out. And before we dive in, we want to
briefly thank our presenting partner, JP Morgan Payments. Yes, just like how we say every company has a story, every company's story
is powered by payments, and JP Morgan Payments is part of so many companies' journeys from seed
to IPO and beyond. So with that, this show is not investment advice. David and I may have
investments in the companies we discuss, and this show is for informational and entertainment purposes only. David, Roman Empire, like, what's our starting place here?
No, man, we got to start in 1984. We're never going to finish this episode.
And really, I mean, where else can you start? I can make up, you know, Roman Empire, classics,
Aeschylus, whatever t-shirt saying Mark has this day of the week but facebook has always started and ended
with mark zuckerberg so we start in may of 1984 when mark elliot zuckerberg is born as the second
of four children to karen and ed zuckerberg in dobbs ferry new york small little suburban town
suburb of New York City.
Yep. And his mom is a psychologist and his dad is a dentist. Is that right?
That's right. Ed studied dentistry at NYU. He was always like really into math and computers though,
but growing up the son of Jewish immigrants in New York City, you know, the expectation was you're going to be a doctor or a lawyer. So he goes to dentistry school, becomes a dentist.
He meets Karen.
They get married.
After Ed finishes dental school, they move up to Dobbs Ferry in Westchester County.
And Mark and his three sisters grow up as prototypical middle-class suburban American kids in the 90s.
Life is good.
Your grandparents worked really hard to make a bunch of sacrifices for your parents.
Your parents are now professionals. They're also working hard to give opportunity to you and the
family is kind of leveling up in america it's the classic story here you can play sports and you can
hang out with your friends and play video games indeed and for mark and for me growing up and
maybe you too like it's kind of amazing like there's no reason not to just explore your passions.
And for Mark, those passions become threefold.
One, turn-based strategy video games,
most particularly Sid Meier's Civilization.
Two, programming computers.
And three, as you mentioned
and everybody who watched our Chase Center show
knows, ancient Greek and Latin history. Classics. The classics. And pretty much in that order of
importance, both to him personally and the future course of Facebook and meta.
So let's start with Civilization. September 1991. David, I toyed with the intro to this show being, and we are your hosts.
Civilization is a video game upon which, but I decided not to.
Right? I mean, it's kind of laughable, but like, no, this is really important here.
So September 1991, when Mark is seven years old,
Civilization or Civ, as its fans call it, comes out for PCs, and young Mark gets hooked. And for those of you
who haven't played Civ, it is a very particular type of turn-based strategy game, and is probably
the foremost example of what is known as the 4X genre. That's the number four, letter X. And 4X stands for Explore, Expand, Exploit, Exterminate. And despite that sort of
nefarious sounding nature to the last one there especially, Civ and 4X games were kind of this
radical branch of video games at the time where the action of playing and the way to win wasn't
just about like killing all the enemies on screen.
It's a lot more like a board game or like Risk, if you're familiar with that.
It's about strategy.
It's about growing and marshalling your resources effectively.
And most importantly, there are multiple ways to win the game.
Most other games out there, you can win by defeating all the other players, but you can also win by
completing a technology development tree and reaching like the peak of technology, which is
in the game, launching a spaceship to go colonize a new planet. So that's another way to win. And
in modern versions of the game, you can also win by diplomacy, by getting elected the leader of the UN. You can also win by dominating all the
other players on either culture or religious dimensions too. So it's kind of like this amazing
simulation of what it's like to run one of the top 10 market cap mega capitalization companies
in the world today. But to your point, this idea that it's
turn-based, you try to amass resources, figure out how to deploy your resources,
have multiple concurrent strategies so that you, as the roll of the dice of the universe happens
and things unfold before you and you're... And other players make their moves, yep.
Right. To be able to effectively react to it all
and use your resources to win
in whatever way winning means to you.
It's kind of funny.
This is way too simplistic of an analogy
and not fair to Mark on any dimension.
But the whole construct here
sort of reminds me of the book Ender's Game,
where it's these kids growing up playing this game
and they didn't realize all along
it was actually the real game
so playing civ and other video games when he's young pc games leads young mark to want to learn
how to program himself so when he's 10 he has his parents take him to the local barnes and noble one
day and begs them to buy him c++ for dummies. And he dives into the book, learns everything in there,
and he's like, I need more, I need more. So after that, his parents hire a local tutor to come and
tutor him for an hour a week in programming and learning how to write software. And Mark has this
quote that he says later, I'd go to school, and I'd go to class and come home. And the way I'd
think about it was, awesome, I have five whole hours to just sit and play on my computer and write software.
And then Friday afternoon would come along and it would be like, okay, wow, now I have two whole days to sit and write software.
This is amazing.
It really is astonishing as a 10-year-old to be learning C++.
This is not basic.
This is a language where you are thinking
very close to the metal.
You have to be very aware of the constraints of your system,
of manually managing memory.
It's impressive for 14 or 16-year-olds
to be learning simplistic languages.
This is a whole different ballgame.
As it always is with Mark.
So while he's a kid here
in Dobbs Ferry, he codes up all sorts of little projects, including a family chat tool for all
the networked computers in the house. And also his dad's dentistry office is attached to the house.
So he builds this network called ZuckNet, which is family chat between all the computers. Very prescient here. And then, speaking of family and friends chat, in 1997, when Mark is 13 years old, AOL launches AIM and warning my friends and other dynamics of the AIM system
to gang up on people and to have other people gang up on me.
Oh man, punting people off AIM.
Yes, having to create a new screen name and log off and log on and message someone and
pretend you're someone else.
I mean, the whole, this was middle school.
This was middle school for all of us. And
this was middle school for Mark too. The crazy thing about AIM, to go on just a quick little
digression here, I had no idea until doing the research. It was actually like a rogue
skunkworks project within AOL. Did you know this? No. Yeah. So it was a couple engineers that just
went off and built this almost against the wishes of management.
It was not originally intended to really be for social use or for kids at all.
It was more like the idea they had was it was going to be kind of like Slack,
like chat for workplaces.
Oh, wow.
They ended up using it internally at AOL to communicate.
And that's actually where away messages come from.
So they came up with
away messages because people would be in meetings or, you know, this is the days of desktops.
There's no cell phones, barely even laptops. People would go out to lunch and they'd have
to put up a message so that when their colleagues were trying to communicate with them, they'd be
like, no, no, I'm in a meeting. No, I'm away. That's the origin of away messages.
That's fascinating. And it is interesting how you ended up kind of using away messages after a while, even while you were there,
just to indicate status. It was the ultimate emo teenager thing. It was like, I am expressing my
whole self through this one line away message. A hundred percent. So, I mean, for people all of
our age, Mark's age at the time, I mean, that completely changed our social experience when that came out. So the other important thing about AIM when it came out that I had no real conception
of at all as a kid was that it was free. So my family was an AOL family, like we were AOL
subscribers, we had the You Got Mail, et cetera. But you didn't have to be a paying AOL subscriber
to download and use AIM and join the network.
AIM goes on to become this total viral thing
in North America.
I mean, kind of concurrent with Napster
a little bit before Napster.
It's the first piece of consumer viral software.
And so by 2001, a couple of years after launch,
it has 36 million users,
including, as we've been talking about,
basically every middle and high schooler
with access to a computer.
And 36 million users doesn't sound like a lot today,
but you got to remember,
the internet was way smaller back then.
Way, way, way smaller.
Not just in terms of number of people had access, but also number of people who were
literate in how to use it.
Totally.
It's the early broadband era is that era we're talking about.
And you're right.
Tens of millions of people, at least in the US, had internet access at this point in time.
Yep.
And basically, all of them and certainly all the young
people were on AIM. So the other important thing about AIM and AOL here is it was pretty easy to
hack. But like, oh man, there was just a field day that kids and teenagers had with like Abots punting software wares hacking programs if you were someone like me you were
just downloading this stuff off of ftp servers on the internet and installing it on your machine
and it let you kind of be a punk and like kick people off of aim by bombarding them with messages
you know you could do some like teenage punk stuff, but it also let you extend the functionality
of what AOL and AIM was.
You could add graphics.
You could add emojis.
You could draw pictures.
Add links in your profile.
Yeah.
Oh, the ASCII art in your profile
and your away message.
Totally.
And like, this becomes such an important part
of teenage culture on the internet as we're growing up. It's like all this personalization of like, hey, I don't want just what AOL gives me. I want to control this. So for me, I was downloading and using this stuff. You might have been writing it, although you might have been a little young. No, I didn't learn PHP until I was 15 or 16, so call it 2005. Okay, so yeah, a little
later. Yep. Mark is one of the kids that's writing this stuff. And, you know, I think that's where he
got his start. He was doing ZuckNet, he was doing all these little projects, but like, you know,
here's AOL, this sort of unintentionally, infinitely hackable and extensible canvas that he can play around on.
So that's number two for Mark, you know, passion number two, computers and programming.
And then passion number three is classics.
So Mark, when he enters high school, he'd gone to public school all through elementary and middle school there in Dobbs Ferry in Westchester County.
He does two
years at the local public high school at Ardsley High School. And after two years at Ardsley,
Mark is like, well, you know, a couple of things. I'm not sure that this is the right high school
for me for the rest of my high school career. One, I think I would enjoy just being in a sort of like better school, like a
higher level of competition, higher level of learning. You know, he's definitely at the top
of the class at Ardsley. Two is, you know, I'm really into Latin and classics and like I'm going
to tap out on that real fast here at Ardsley. There's got to be a place I can go where I can
really study this. And that takes us to
Phillips Exeter Academy. In New Hampshire, right? Yes, in New Hampshire. And so Exeter is one of
these private boarding high schools that have existed basically as long as Ivy League colleges
have. And they're there just kind of as feeder schools into Ivy League colleges. So Mark applies to Exeter, gets in, and the summer before he's
about to go, the school hosts an event in New York City, in the city, for incoming two years to
meet each other, get to know the school, get ready, etc. And there, Mark meets another kid
who's a lot like himself, who also is really into computers, really into
aim and everything going on there. And Mark's like, yeah, man, I've really made the right
choice. Like everybody here is going to be just like the two of us. And that person is Adam
D'Angelo, future CTO of Facebook. Amazing they met in high school.
Now, the great irony of this story is that
Mark and Adam ended up being like the only two kids
who are really into computers in the class.
It was just the two of them.
They just happened to meet in New York City
at the pre-school event.
Which is probably one of the last few years
that that would be the case.
I'm sure if you went to this school today,
it'd be 80% of the classes,
or 100% of the classes really into computers.
Yes, I think in large part because of Mark and Adam, it's quite different these days.
Yep.
So the two of them, when they get to Exeter, become fast friends.
They work on all sorts of computer projects together, software projects.
And by the end of their senior year, to graduate from Exeter, you have to do a senior project.
And, you know, most people do this
like a mini college thesis or they do something in the community, et cetera, et cetera. Mark and
Adam are like, no, we're going to build some software. This is what we do. So Mark one day
is listening to music on his computer, I think probably on Winamp, which is how everybody
listened to MP3s that you got from Napster back in the day.
I think I listened on SoundJam, but it's just because I had a Mac.
Oh, yeah. Future seeds of iTunes.
Yep, that's right. It got acquired by Apple, and then eventually they,
I think, built off the same code base and turned it into iTunes.
But everyone used Winamp. That was the aim of music players.
And in fact, AOL, I think, would acquire Winamp a couple of years later.
Bring it all into the fold. So Legend has it, Mark is listening to a playlist in Winamp one day
during his senior year, and he gets to the end of the playlist. And he's like,
why did the music stop? I listen to so much music all the time on Winamp. It should just
know what I like and automatically pick the next song. It should just be a DJ. And then inspiration hits and he calls up Adam and he's like, I've got our senior project. We are going to build an AI DJ plugin for Winamp. And they call this Synapse. And like, they did it. These two high school kids, they build an
AI, you know, I wasn't called AI at the time, but like a, you know, a recommender system that looks
at the data of what songs you've consumed on Winamp and predicts what song you're going to
like to consume next. I mean, it's basically Spotify today. What year is this? This would
have been spring of 2002. Yeah, real early days. So they
build this thing and then they release it to the internet and people start using it. It starts
getting some adoption and a couple companies, including Winamp itself, reach out to Mark and
Adam and are like, hey, do you want to come work here? Like, can we buy this? Yeah. And I think
Microsoft was one of them too. It was for like a million dollar acquisition offer or something like that. It
wasn't, you know, crazy, but these are high school kids. Right. In 2002. Yes. But yeah,
this is really important because they're about to graduate. Adam is going to go off to college
at Caltech. Mark is going to go off to college at Harvard in the fall. But Mark is not just like any student coming into Harvard.
He's like, I can build these things and they have value
and big companies are going to be willing to pay me for them.
I don't need to be that worried about getting a job.
Right. He sort of always knew he had a great fallback plan.
So it kind of let him be risk on.
So Mark graduates. He goes off to Harvard.
It's the natural choice on many fronts.
I mean, one, Mark, of course, aces his SATs.
I think he gets a 1600 on the SATs.
There's this great legend about you had to take SAT twos to get into college back then.
I don't know if you still do, but I think you had to have a minimum of three.
Mark doesn't study or prepare for them at all.
He walks in the day of the test, says, I'm going to take all three that I'm going to
take on the same day.
He gets 800s on all of them.
College admissions was not going to be a big deal.
And his older sister, Randy, was already there at Harvard.
So clearly, got to go to Harvard if he wants.
Yes.
And I think he wants enough.
Like, I don't know that it's that important to him, but he's like, yeah, sure.
Harvard, it's the best.
I'm going to go there.
Yep.
In fact, there's a video of that.
That's right.
Have you seen this?
His dad sort of filming his reaction,
and he's pretty measured about it.
It's very, yep, got into Harvard,
and then kind of goes back to doing something else on his computer.
Yep.
And I think for most kids, for most people in the world,
you would look at that and be like, what arrogance?
And look, it's not like 18-year-old Mark is not arrogant, but I think it's also, this is why all
this stuff we've been talking about is important. It's just not that important to him. You know,
he likes building stuff. He likes making stuff. He knows it has value. He knows people will use it.
Whether he goes to Harvard, doesn't go to
Harvard, goes to college, doesn't go to college. It's just not that big a deal to him, I don't
think. Yeah. Reading in between the lines, it seems like the thing that he was most excited about is,
oh good, a challenging environment where I will encounter other really smart people like myself
who are ambitious. Yes, I think that is totally right. So Mark gets to Harvard in fall of 2002. And, you know, like you
said, he goes to class, he does well, but he wants to meet other people and be around other smart
folks. He ends up joining the AEPI fraternity there, like my co-host here, my esteemed colleague,
Ben. Indeed. Also my father while he was in college. Ah, I didn't know that. Yeah, that's
right. That's right. AEPI. Pi. Adam, meanwhile, of course,
goes off to Caltech,
you know, 3,000 miles away
in the opposite corner of the country.
Also, can I just say,
how crazy is it that Adam D'Angelo
would become Facebook's first CTO?
They don't go to college together.
Right.
Well, I was going to get into this in a sec.
Adam has a very different experience at Caltech.
He ends up graduating from Caltech.
I think they probably do not have the same generous leave policy there that Harvard does.
Because Harvard's is weird, right?
It's like you can leave, and if you ever want to come back, it's like you never left.
Oh, we're going to come back to that in one sec.
Put a pin in that.
But for Adam at Caltech, he still finds time while he's there to keep working on these projects.
So during his freshman year, he builds finds time while he's there to keep working on these projects. So during his
freshman year, he builds something called BuddyZoo, you know, kind of building on Synapse and the
success that they had in their senior project. BuddyZoo takes your buddy list from AIM, from AOL,
and effectively turns it into a social network. So you upload your entire buddy list to BuddyZoo,
and then you get your friends to do so too.
BuddyZoo then analyzes and gives you a list of who are the friends of your friends,
how many degrees of separation do you have to them.
It automatically identifies clicks of like,
oh, who of your friends are part of these clicks and who are their friends?
It measures popularity among users.
This is starting to sound pretty familiar here.
And this is pretty advanced stuff for 2002, 2003.
Very advanced stuff, especially for a side project for a very busy Caltech student.
Yep.
So BuddyZoo, pretty quickly in the months after Atom launches it, gets a couple hundred
thousand users. There's gravity to this thing. It's becoming fairly big, especially given how
small the internet was at the time. Yeah. And Atom is like, whoa, okay, this is interesting. So
this is kind of what scale looks like. Synapse was cool, and we had a bunch of people downloading it, but this feels like something more on the order of AIM itself.
Like, this is really interesting.
And the important thing with Synapse was it was a single-user application,
so it could analyze my songs and tell me what to listen to.
This is the first time Adam, Mark, you know, particularly Adam in this case,
is discovering a very different type of application that gets better as more people join it.
Yes. Now, we say Adam, and Adam definitely built and launched it.
But it's not like Mark wasn't involved.
They're staying in touch the whole time and collaborating and working through coding challenges together on, what else, on AIM.
It's kind of serving its original use case. Like they're collaborating
through it across the country. So that summer, 2003, after their freshman year, Adam comes to
Boston and gets an internship at the MIT Media Lab. He discovers this thing called Friendster,
another social network out there. And Adam is like, whoa, this is a dedicated standalone
kind of version of what I just built with
BuddyZoo.
This is like really interesting.
And it's all on the web.
Now, Friendster was based out here in Silicon Valley, had raised money from Kleiner Perkins.
And Benchmark, right?
Oh, Benchmark too?
I didn't know that.
Yep.
Yep.
Which is what tied their hands and why they could not pursue an investment in Facebook.
Oh, that's funny.
Not that I think that was a real possibility anyway, because things were kind of moving
so fast, but you never hear them in any of the discussion about who was pursuing Facebook
and who was iced out.
They just, they had a competitive investment.
That's right.
It's funny.
I never even think about that because obviously Matt Kohler would go on to become an important partner at Benchmark. And of course, Matt was an early
executive at Facebook. Yes, exactly. Interesting. So here's Friendster, this example of like a real
standalone company, social network, growing virally, funded by venture capitalists,
based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Adam's like,
oh, maybe that's sort of what we should be focusing on. And by the end of the summer in 2003,
Friendster had over 3 million users. So like, really interesting, growing really quickly.
Friendster had real scale and grew really fast. That is something that has kind of been lost to history.
Friendster is like the butt of a lot of jokes, but it exploded out of the gates.
True. So Adam's playing around with Friendster, and Friendster had this feature called Testimonials,
which was kind of like a Facebook wall.
But in the long run, one of the core problems with friendster was it positioned itself as a social
network and about friends but really it was kind of intended to be a dating site underneath it all
absolutely that was wink wink not a dating site it was this idea that like there's all these other
things that are dedicated to dating so there's this weird stink about it but if you just naturally meet a friend
of a friend online through a thing that's totally not a dating site then great there's no stigma
around it yep so uh specifically when it comes to testimonials the purpose of testimonials was
supposed to be like why you should date somebody or why they would be a great partner which is
funny so adam while he's playing around with this and he's telling Mark about it, he actually posts on Mark's Friendster profile a testimonial.
And he says that, quote, Mark gets way too lucky.
And he posted this in the summer of 2003.
And Adam was telling me this story and he was like, you know, I have thought about that post
for 20 years since then. Because on the one hand, it was like a stupid throwaway, you know,
double entendre that I put on there because it was a, you know, a dating site. On the other hand,
it is both absolutely true about Mark that he always gets way too lucky and Facebook and Meta always gets way too lucky, but it's not luck. Yeah. It's actually Mark. There's something very different about the way
he operates and all the reasons that Meta and Facebook get lucky over the years. Mark was
always that way. And it's always because of Mark. Mark is unbelievably good at positioning himself
for luck to do its thing. And specifically at this point in time, you know, what Adam talked about is like,
he was always looking around. He was looking at Friendster. He was looking at what we did
with Synapse. He was looking at what I did with BuddyZoo. He was looking about the projects at
Harvard he did that we're about to talk about. And he was always thinking like,
how do I incorporate all of this and make whatever I'm doing better?
This was the stew that Facebook is about to come out of.
So this brings us to fall semester 2003-2004, Mark's sophomore year, and the famous Kirkland House suite H33 with Mark Zuckerberg, Chris Hughes, Dustin Moskovitz, and Billy Olson as the four roommates
there. Three of the four of those names are names you may know as the founders of Facebook.
Yes. So Mark is focused heading into his sophomore year at Harvard,
and he's not focused on classes. He's focused on projects.
And he's done like 10. I mean, this is something that, again, is kind of lost to history. People
talk about, oh, there's the one faceMash thing that he did that led to Facebook.
He did like 10 side projects.
I mean, I remember being in this era of my life where you feel like you have superpowers
as a programmer and you're looking around and you're like, oh, I can make a website
for that.
I can make a website for that.
I had the same thing where the world wasn't saturated with apps yet.
And so you could just like make things
that made your life better or other people's lives better
or cool ways to connect people.
And I distinctly remember feeling like,
how come nobody else realizes you can just do this?
I know what that sort of feels like.
And I know that mentality he was in.
There were 10 things that he had worked on
even before FaceMash.
Yep.
So the first of which,
right as they're getting back to campus that fall,
is Mark builds a tool called CourseMatch.
Oh yeah, that's right.
And this is as students are shopping for classes
for fall semester,
you can upload which classes you're thinking of taking
or which classes you've signed up for,
and you can see who of your friends
have also signed up for that class
or are planning to sign up for that
class. This is just text. All this is is a list of classes and a list of people who sign up.
And it takes Harvard by storm. I mean, think about it, right? Like, it's obvious in hindsight.
A bunch of college undergraduates, yeah, you want to take classes you're interested, but like,
really, you want to make sure you take the classes with the people that you want to be around. I was literally texting
my friend yesterday who was at Harvard at this time. And she said, oh, yeah, people totally
chose their classes based on who was in them. Of course, of course. So Mark sees this and he's
kind of like, you know, again, it's one of these learnings and observation about the world. It's
like, wow, people are spending a lot
of time on this tool. It's literally just lists of people. You click on a class name and people
would spend a lot of time just combing over that list of people. Totally. There's nothing visually
compelling here. So he's like, well, okay, now it's time for my next project. You know, people
have registered for classes. What if there was something visually compelling for people to spend time on?
What if I overstepped a little bit and... Yeah.
And this is FaceMash, well chronicled in all the many books, stories.
The Stephen Levy book, the David Kirkpatrick book.
Movies, you know, whatever.
Movies.
Movie.
Movie.
Mark codes this up in one evening in his dorm in Kirkland House, and it's basically the
website Hot or Not for Harvard, with a couple of actually interesting mechanical twists on it.
Now, the two big problems with it are, one, this is probably just not a good idea or not kind.
Generally, it is a head-to-head voting mechanic on which picture is quote-unquote hotter than the other picture.
The other thing that is really not great is rather than having users upload their own pictures, Mark hacks into the Kirkland House servers and downloads the Facebook photos of all the students to populate the website.
Lowercase face, space, lowercase book.
Yes. So we should probably spend a minute and talk about what a Facebook was before Facebook.
So my big question for you is, did Ohio State have a Facebook?
It did not.
It probably would have been like a telephone book size thing if they did.
I mean, I went to college in the fall
of 2007. And so you could look up people's email addresses. If you had their first and last name,
you might be able to get some other maybe major, but it was a text blob. It wasn't a photo.
Well, I think most, if not all Ivy League schools back in the day had these. Princeton,
where I went, certainly had these when I showed up on campus.
In fact, Phillips Exeter had one.
The private high schools did too.
That's right.
That's right.
So you had to give the university
or in Exeter's case, the high school,
a school photo of you
when you were coming in
before you matriculated.
And then they would literally make a book,
like a printed book
with the names and class years
and photos of all the
incoming students from the freshman class. And I think if I remember right at Princeton, at least,
they would republish the book every year, you know, for your class because some people would
leave, some people would join, et cetera, et cetera. All right. So these are photos stored
digitally that Mark then, while plugged into the campus network from his dorm room, is accessing,
downloading, and then putting up on his own website that he is hosting. Yes, called FaceMash.
Now, a couple interesting things about FaceMash. One, gosh, if Mark was blown away by the
engagement of the Harvard population with CourseMatch, FaceMash takes that to such a whole nother
level that it actually melts down the servers in Kirkland House. And the IT department at Harvard
has to shut off internet within hours of it going live to all of Kirkland House,
lest this continue to spread virally within Harvard and take down all of the servers.
Oh, so maybe he didn't
actually rehost the images. Maybe he was just pointing at the URLs that were hosted by Kirkland
House. Oh, I didn't think about that. Yeah, that might have been how it worked. But either way,
dude knows how to make something that gets engagement. Yes. Yes, he does. So the other
interesting thing from Mark's perspective about FaceMash is that it was the first time he was building
a rich web app as one of these projects,
fully built on the LAMP stack.
And he had probably used the LAMP stack,
Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP for course match.
And so to be clear, that's an operating system,
a web server with Apache, MySQL, the free open source database, PHP, the free open source programming language.
Yes. But this is the first time that he's building like a real rich consumer grade web app on top of the LAMP stack.
Rich consumer grade. It's the technical requirements of course match, but with photos.
Photos and voting.
Sure.
Yeah, you have probably an additional table of information in the database or something.
But the big takeaway here is, A, of course, the use case shouldn't have done it.
B, wow, it gets engagement.
C, this is training wheels of how to use these new open source web technologies.
If you go back two, three, four years, you're going
to have to go to Oracle, you're going to have to go to Microsoft, you're going to have to buy
enterprise-grade, super proprietary systems to do this. And this is all just free and something
you can cobble together and upload onto some Linux web hosting, and boom, there had to be
a hundred times more, a thousand times more web applications
created by the mark zuckerbergs everywhere in this period of time doing whatever random little
project that they thought would be fun or funny or useful yep it's such a perfect example despite
its problematic nature of this is like the first time in history where you need neither money nor permission to launch an application like
this on the internet. Totally. $10 domain, $100 a year web hosting that includes the database,
no licenses required, PHP is all free. Maybe the bandwidth would have been an issue,
but this is on the order of $100 to do this. Yeah. Well, clearly the bandwidth was an issue
because they shut down internet
to Kirkland House. So David, this feels like a thing you should get kicked out of school for
doing. Yeah. Harvard, as you imagine, is not pleased about this. They hallmark in front of
the administrative board, which is a disciplinary committee for students when things like this
happen. He and his fraternity brothers are pretty sure that he's actually going to get thrown out
of school for this.
So the night before the ad board meets to make their final decision,
A.E. Pye, the fraternity, throws a goodbye Mark party that night. And legend has it that this is where Mark and Priscilla Chan meet for the first time.
And Priscilla, of course, is now Mark's wife.
So the ad board meets the next day
and decides not to throw Mark out of school, but to put him on disciplinary probation for
the rest of the year. Basically, don't do this again. Slap on the wrist. Slap on the wrist.
So Mark doesn't end up getting kicked out of Harvard, but he does kind of end up becoming
like the Harvard computer celebrity, even before
Facebook. Right. I mean, this is a big deal. Everyone on campus knew about FaceMash. A lot
of people already knew about CourseMatch anyway. So he's now the guy who can make websites and web
applications here at Harvard that people use. Yeah. And it just so happens that there is a group of upperclassmen at Harvard, led by two twins, the Winklevoss twins, who have an idea to digitize Harvard's Facebook and build an online version of it that they as sort of the broader version. This was not at all a unique idea. Not at all. Lots of people at lots of schools had this exact
same idea. In fact, Harvard itself had this idea. The IT department at Harvard had been promising
for years in talking about how they were going to build a digital version of the Harvard Facebook. And Friendsters out there.
And I looked it up.
Stanford had Club Nexus.
Columbia had CU Community.
Yale had Yale Station.
I'm sorry.
There's a whole movie made about the drama of how novel this idea is.
It's not.
Totally not.
I'm pretty sure Princeton had one, too, when I was there, pre-Facebook.
Yeah, totally not a novel idea.
Lots of people have it.
Nope. The Winklevoss twins, though, you know, Mark is now this celebrity on campus. They need
somebody to be a programmer to write the site. So they talk to Mark, and Mark agrees that he's
going to help them out and help code this site that they're thinking about. Also, again, the
chutzpah to say, we have this idea, you are a programmer, you will program our idea.
Clearly, Mark can come up with his own ideas that get people excited enough to use the stuff he
builds. Now, so far, it's been a little unsavory, but he doesn't have a problem coming up with ideas
with product market fit and executing them end to end. The only thing he hasn't done so far is
made money, made
anything as a business. But what other pieces of the puzzle does he really need from some people
with an idea? None. It's funny, I was going to save this for a little later, but let's talk about it
now. In addition to technically because of open source and the LAMP stack, and also socially
because of AIM and everything going on, the world sort of, for the first time,
something like Facebook being able to be built
for no money and no permission.
Also, this was the first time that a technical person,
because of this, could just do everything.
Like, Mark didn't need anybody.
Mark didn't need a non-technical co-founder.
Mark didn't need a CEO.
He was the CEO.
I remember thinking the same thing when I shipped my first app to the app store.
Co-founder Ian and I in 2009, I think, made something called Seize the Day,
got over a million downloads.
Two programmers uploaded something to the app store.
That's a slightly different era because that's mobile, not web.
But I remember looking around being like, whoa, we like didn't need a business guy. Right. That's the craziest thing. You can make stuff and you can put it in the world.
Totally. So this takes us to Harvard's Christmas break. Now at the time, Harvard did final exams
for the fall semester after Christmas break in January. So the idea is all the students go home
for Christmas break. You come back in January and then there's a week of reading period where you re-familiarize yourself with all the material from your classes. Then you take final exams. Then there's a little break. There's a course shopping period for spring semester, and spring semester starts in February.
So Mark has a few weeks to program a new idea. Exactly. To not study and program a new idea. And during Christmas break,
he had actually come out to Silicon Valley, to the Bay Area, to hang out with some friends out here
and seeing, you know, the physical embodiment of all these great tech companies, Yahoo,
early Google, et cetera, drove by them all. And so he comes back and he's like, extra,
extra motivated. He's like, you know,
this digital Facebook idea, I think this is something that a lot of people want.
I bet I can code this up in a week and just launch it.
And again, not a business, just like a project. He has this gut feeling that people will use this
if he makes it.
Totally. Now, importantly, though, all the stuff he'd been doing throughout the year,
he's like, well, I can incorporate that
into this project too.
It'd be pretty boring if it's just a digital Facebook.
Like, I don't think people want that,
but I've made all this other stuff
that people really, really like and engage with.
And when you say just a digital Facebook,
you mean like essentially the profile page would just be a photo and a name.
Right. Just like the physical version of like, here is a list of all the students in the class,
and here is their, you know, stock profile picture. Yeah. So later, after thefacebook.com
blew up, Mark told the Harvard Crimson in an interview, I don't really know what the next
big thing is because I don't spend my time making big things. I spend time making small things. And then when the time comes, I put them
together. That's the kind of stuff I do. Small little projects, and eventually they all fit
together. And that's what thefacebook.com ends up being. So Mark gets back from reading period.
Instead of studying, he dives in. He IMs his friend Andrew McCollum, who he knows from CS classes, and asks Andrew to do the page design. Andrew says, yeah, sure thing. I'll help you out. Andrew goes and fires up Photoshop. He finds an image on the internet of some guy who looks kind of cool and puts it in the header of the design for the site.
Behind a cloud of ones and zeros because it's cool.
It's like the matrix.
Yes.
It's gradiented, you know, it's sort of white on the left, blue on the right.
And for like, you know, a year or two, however long the Facebook guy was at the header,
everybody's like, who is the Facebook guy?
People think it's Al Pacino.
People think it's a student.
Do you know who the Facebook guy was?
I totally do. I looked this up.
I spent like two hours trying to figure this out. Really? Yeah. It's amazing. Because everyone
always said it's Al Pacino. I'm like, it doesn't really... No. Al Pacino must have looked really
different when he was younger. And it's not. All right. Tell me your answer. I'll tell you
if it matches mine. All right. So there was an 80s song that got really big called Centerfold.
Oh, yes. This is it.
And the image is of Peter Wolfe.
Yep. Who is the lead singer of the Jay Giles Band.
We'll link to that image. There's this great Quora post, which we should say,
Adam D'Angelo, founder and CEO of Quora after Facebook. There's a great Quora post about this
where there's unmistakably the photo of Peter Wolfe that Facebook guy is based on. They just sort of pixelated it and, you know, made it duotone instead of the original photograph. final exams, right when students are coming back, getting into the mode for the new semester,
starting to shop for spring semester courses, Mark Zuckerberg launches thefacebook.com.
And right off the bat, from the moment somebody logs in, the functionality is like awesome.
So the registration page reads, you can use the Facebook to search for people
at your school, find out who are in your classes, course match, look up your friend's friends,
buddy zoo, see a visualization of your entire social network, buddy zoo plus graphics.
And then at the bottom of every page is the famous copyright 2004, the Facebook,
a Mark Zuckerberg production. Awesome. I feel like it's like one of the most infamous screenshots is
the screenshot of that original homepage. So, so great. So importantly, things that did not exist
here yet. Messages, wall posts, even I I don't think pokes were in the original,
very first version. That's a good question. If they weren't in the very first version,
they launched pretty quickly thereafter. Yep. But no Facebook events, no photos other than
your profile photo. I mean, no, I don't even think status updates were in the very first one.
I don't think status updates were there yet, no.
But all the lessons from all the other projects, all the elements of them are coming together here.
So once again, registration is limited to email addresses on the harvard.edu domain. That was
part of the magic of what had made all the other projects so successful is like, it's not randos in here.
It's other people at Harvard. It's your classmates. It's the people you care most about.
Yep. And by the nature of that, it's their real identities.
And that's what makes it different than all these other social networks. MySpace
existed. Friendster existed. But anyone could sign up for these. And in part,
that meant that they had more explosive growth because there was no governor on the growth. And we'll talk about all the problems that sort of come from anyone, anywhere can sign up at any time. But the very core thing here is authenticated people. at the start are people you know go to the same college as you and have to use their real name
matched against a university-issued email address. Identity and authentic identity is a part of the
company from its first moment. Yep. Coupled with super important learning number two from FaceMash,
it's all user-submitted content. So no pre-population with anything from Harvard, no scraping from
Harvard servers, et cetera. And yeah, on the one hand, that prevents Mark from getting into trouble.
On the other hand, though, it sets the expectation and the requirement and trains the behaviors of
the users of, you got to enter all the content into this site yourself. You put in your AIM
screen name, you put in your cell phone,
you put in your interests, you put in your classes.
Also, isn't it crazy that they displayed cell phone numbers for the longest time?
Right.
Well, again, think about the functionality and the utility to the users.
On the one hand, you would never disclose your cell phone number to the general public.
On the other hand, other students and
your friends at Harvard knowing your cell phone number, well, that's actually pretty useful for
getting in touch, for going out, for going to parties, for planning things, et cetera, et cetera.
These are all people you would give your email and phone number and maybe even birthday to if
they just asked. Totally. You would probably also give them your relationship status, which is in there.
Formalizing your relationship status for the first time here on thefacebook.com.
You can add a photo of your own choosing as your profile picture. So big difference from
old school Facebooks where it's whatever the university chooses or it's a stock school photo
or whatever. No, you get to express your personality. You get
to Photoshop it as much as you want. And you can update it whenever you want.
And you can update it whenever you want. So it is amazing how much of the next billion plus
people's source of value comes from this founding moment. The Facebook grows tremendously in
functionality over time, but everything is
like a natural outcropping out of authentic identity, user-submitted content, trust that
the people who are seeing this content are people in your sort of private network. The whole thing
is here in this first few weeks of coding that got done and then threw up the landing page.
I would even go one step further than that.
The actual nature of the seeding of the network here is maybe the most important thing. And here's what I mean by that. Once Mark launches this, it takes off like wildfire within Harvard. Of course,
he's already a celebrity, already known for launching these projects. People are tuned in waiting for the next Mark Zuckerberg production.
Within the first 24 hours, 650 people join.
There's only 2,000 people in a class at Harvard.
So I think there's about 7,000 or 8,000 undergraduates total.
Within two weeks, over half of the entire undergraduate population is active on Facebook. So now here's
what I mean and why the seeding is so important. This initial network is super dense, super engaged
and super active. That not only sets the norms for how you're going to behave on Facebook going
forward, it also means that as the network grows virally,
it radiates out from this nuclear reactor of a base. Contrast that with an approach of something
like Friendster that's default open to everybody, backed by Silicon Valley venture dollars,
trying to grow. They're doing marketing. Okay, let's say somebody in Ohio hears about Friendster
somehow. Maybe they see an ad for it. They sign up. When they join the service, there's no friends
there. There's nothing to do. There's no functionality. It's not alive. When you join
the Facebook, even though it's limited to just Harvard students, you sign up and you're like blown away by how alive
this site is. Right. Almost nobody can use the Facebook, but for the people who can,
it's an unbelievably great experience. As they expanded, that stayed true. It was either you're
not allowed to use it, or if you are, it's blow away great instantly. That's basically always true. And the moments when
Facebook stops growing is when that's not true. And then they sort of refocus on it. And then
that gets the growth back. Yeah. Here's another thing that I think was really important about
this seeding of Facebook was actually that it happened at Harvard. Harvard is the top global brand among universities.
Whatever you personally think about Harvard, it's undeniable, especially back then, that
it was like the top.
If you were a kid or a family pretty much anywhere in the world, you knew what Harvard
was.
This was really important as Facebook expanded because it had this patina to it. It was
like elite, especially as they grew. There were clones. There were lots of other Facebook copies
out there. And even if they were as good as what Mark had built, they didn't start at Harvard.
It's kind of like civilization. Nobody else could ever invade Facebook's turf,
but they could invade other people's turf.
So somebody put it to me in the research.
Like there was a fairly big competitor in Germany, I think maybe called StudyVise or
something like that.
Facebook could really easily go into Germany and people in Germany would be like, oh, Facebook,
I've heard of that.
This is interesting.
StudyVise could never go into Boston, like ever.
Hmm. It's interesting. Yeah, that's a great point. Okay. So like weeks go by and they've
saturated Harvard. And not only that, you start seeing this thing happen, which just to level
set with listeners, this stayed true for several years. This is a crazy stat. 70% of people who ever signed up were active that day.
There are not user engagement retention metrics better than that in the world.
The fact that as they grew, it didn't matter how many more people they added.
It was still the case that 70% of users ever were daily active.
And so you have this crazy situation at Harvard where it's just like, to your point, nuclear reactor levels engaging.
In fact, this term wouldn't get coined till later in the summer,
but this is from The Facebook Effect, David Kirkpatrick's book.
They had coined a term for how students seem to use a site.
Zuckerberg, Moskowitz, and Parker,
Sean Parker, who we'll talk about who
comes in, called it the trance. Once you start combing through the Facebook, it was very easy
to keep going. It was hypnotic. You just kept clicking and clicking and clicking from profile
to profile, viewing the data. And every single one of those clicks is a page view. So yeah, this hits Harvard like an earthquake.
It's face mash all over again, except a good problem, not a bad problem. It's all legit.
The servers are melting down. Even Mark is blown away by how big this thing gets so quickly.
Yep. Right away, they add the wall. So there's a way to publicly post things
like testimonials on your friends' walls. You could view a wall-to-wall so you could see the
public posts that you were making back and forth to each other so that you've got your profile
information, wall posts, and that's it. Yep. But to your point, very quickly, Mark is adding features,
adding functionality, adding things to do to the site. The other thing that he does right off the bat is say, okay, we're taking this to other
colleges too. So he recruits his roommates. Dustin Moskovitz comes on to help maintain the site.
Dustin was actually an econ major. He had no idea how to code. He goes out and buys Pearl for dummies
and Mark's like, uh, that's great that
you read that. The site is written in PHP. So Dustin goes and learns PHP too and helps with
coding the site and keeping up with everything. You know, Perl, you can learn PHP. It's much
easier. Chris Hughes joins too. Andrew McCollum joins. And then they need to keep buying servers to keep up with the
traffic or else everything is going to melt down. So one of Mark's fraternity brothers in AAPI is a
guy named Eduardo Saverin. And Eduardo was, I think, part of the business and investing club
at Harvard. So they recruited Eduardo in. And Eduardo invests $1,000 in infrastructure for the
site. Mark invests another $1,000. So together, there's $2,000 of infrastructure for the site. Mark invests another $1,000. So together there's
$2,000 of investment in the facebook.com. And the deal they strike is that Mark gets two-thirds of
the company and Eduardo gets one-third of the company. And Eduardo sets up a business entity
to formalize all of this as a Florida LLC. Eduardo was from Florida. Right away, as we were saying,
Mark's like, great,
this is not just a Harvard thing. We need to bring it to other colleges. And he specifically chooses Columbia because, Ben, as you said, there was an existing competitor there. And he's like,
I want to see how Facebook competes. And like, I want to know right away, can we displace it?
It's so interesting. He doesn't go to the schools where there's nothing.
He goes to the schools where there is something
and wants to be better than it.
Which is so counterintuitive
to how most people would think.
They say like, oh no, this is a race.
I'm going to go to the white space.
I'm going to gobble everything up
and then wait to take on competitors
when I'm bigger and stronger.
Like Mark's like, nope, right away.
This is a early mindset of
we are going to be globally dominant.
If you're okay splitting the market, you go for the white space and then you say,
let's see how much of the low-hanging fruit we can easily get.
But if you're Facebook, you're going to say, let's go to the hardest possible competitor,
extinguish them, and then we'll have a better shot at owning the whole market.
We can get to the low-hanging fruit later.
By the way, their strategy once they did win at a school like Columbia was to go figure out all the schools that were closest to Columbia in terms of network connections and then win there too to kind of build a moat around their victory. Yep.
So there we have the initial crew.
Mark, Dustin, Chris, Andrew, and Eduardo, the five co-founders of Facebook.
The other interesting thing about going to Columbia, which they do three weeks after the launch at Harvard, 22 days, it was the same month all within February 2004, they set up Columbia as a completely different network
than Harvard. So if you join the Columbia Facebook, you can't then go access all the profiles
of Harvard students. Right. At first, there was zero connectivity between the two.
Which is another sort of counterintuitive thing. You'd think like, oh great, I want to build this as big as possible. Mark clearly wants to conquer all these other
schools. The best way to do that is to have all this alive content come right to them from Harvard.
I think he realized that had he done that, it would have socially inhibited sharing within Harvard.
Yeah. The scarce commodity is trust. That is the important lesson here.
It's also a very convenient infrastructure decision where if these two systems truly
don't need to talk to each other, that's great. Put different servers in different data centers.
Don't worry about overloading the database. Don't worry about number of writes per second
and reads per second. It's great. If every school gets its own server rack, you end up not having some of these issues
that the other social networks have. Friendster is out there trying to compute second-degree
friends of friends, which is this crazy hard computer science problem, especially as the
global number of people growing. It's an N-squared problem. And Facebook is over here, or the Facebook at the time,
in the land where they're keeping N small.
So even anything that's N-squared
is contained within that school,
and their servers aren't falling over
and taking 20-plus seconds to load pages
the way that the Friendsters of the world are.
This is such an interesting point
because technology infrastructure advantage
has always been a core part of Facebook, even back to this very beginning. What's interesting
is that it flips at some point. As Facebook grows and eventually becomes open to everybody,
their competitive advantage becomes their tech is so good and their infra is so good that they can do
everything you were just talking about that Friendster couldn't do and that MySpace couldn't
do. But in these early days, their competitive advantage is actually like, no, we're scale out,
not scale up. And then Mark was totally willing to just flip the bit later.
Right. It's effectively counter-positioning. They're building the Facebook in such a way that the use cases don't require incredibly sophisticated technology to accomplish
those feature sets. There's this funny chicken-of-the-egg thing here, and I think the
answer, like many chicken-of-the-egg, is both. Mark, at the moment he conceives of an idea,
thinks through the technical requirements and the user experience. And they're sort of
co-mingled in the product development process. And so I really do think even at age 19,
he was sort of aware of the scaling benefits in addition to the user experience benefits
of launching in this way. Totally agree. Okay, fun bit of trivia about Harvard's leave policy that we referenced earlier. Do you know what else Mark does on the same evening that they launch Columbia?
No idea. The same night during which speech Bill mentions that he actually felt comfortable dropping out of Harvard because he discovered that Harvard had this really generous leave policy that you could take an infinite leave of absence and pursue something else and come back anytime you want.
And Mark would actually say later that Bill saying that at the event was part of what got him comfortable doing
the same thing. Unbelievable. It is crazy. Tying this back to our Microsoft episode, this would
have been, what, early 2004? And so this would have been right after Bill stopped being CEO,
handed the CEO reins to Steve. He was still the chief architect and still chairman of the board,
but it's sort of this post-DOJ time for Microsoft where Bill is just technically focused and can do things like go speak at Harvard.
Yeah, it is amazing how much influence Microsoft had on Facebook and on Mark.
We have a lot more to talk about on that front. So next couple days after Columbia launches,
Facebook launches at Stanford, at Yale. By the end of the semester, they're in over a hundred schools
in like, you know, what, three, four months? Like the speed they're moving with is crazy.
And they start building these wait lists. I mean, this is the other, there's so many
common startup things that Facebook kind of invented. They built tremendous demand before
they would light up the network. They knew that as soon as you're in Facebook, you want to quickly
get to seven friends or 10 friends or whatever the metric is to create that sort of magic moment
where you're like, oh yeah, Facebook now works for me. So they wanted to wait until they had
sufficient demand to boom, open that school. And then once it's open,
everybody should have the best possible experience. And so you're seeing Facebook basically
say, okay, wherever there's really strong demand, that's where we'll open next. And we're not going
to open anywhere where we see like, you know, middling demand for our product. Yep. Totally.
Meanwhile, here we are at the end of the school year. The Winklevoss twins take the whole ConnectU situation to Harvard's president, Larry Summers,
to adjudicate this dispute between them and Mark.
Larry says, hey, Harvard is not going to get involved here.
This is a business dispute between students.
Eventually, the two twins sue Mark and Facebook.
They settle for $65 million,
$45 million of which is paid in pre-IPO Facebook stock.
Obviously, that grows a large portion of that. Then I think they sell and put into Bitcoin in like 2011, 2012 timeframe.
So they end up pretty fine out of all this.
They did great.
They did great. They did great.
But here we are at the end of the school year.
Summer comes around, and Andrew McCollum has some connections out in the Bay Area.
He had interned at Electronic Arts.
Adam D'Angelo is going to be spending the summer from Caltech.
So the crew all decides, like, hey, great, let's not get internships. Let's go rent a house out in Palo Alto, move to Silicon Valley and work on Facebook there for the summer and see what happens.
And yes, the house did indeed have a pool.
Yes, they did indeed install a zip line off the chimney.
That was not fiction in the movie.
That did actually happen.
And it is important to know, to this point, it is a project.
Mark and Dustin and Chris and everyone who moves out, they are there to work on a project
that they think is cool and seems to be working and get exposure to Silicon Valley and venture
capitalists for when they start their startup having a network. That is literally
the mentality. Facebook is live at how many schools, David? A hundred. A hundred schools.
And they are going out not with the intent to make this a company, but to contemplate what
company they could start and meet people that can help them with that. Yep. Now, when we say crew
who moves out, that crew did not include Eduardo.
Eduardo had an internship in New York and decided that he was not going to move out for the summer.
Yeah. Tough decision. Not a great decision. On the other hand, he ends up with 2% of Facebook,
so he's also fine. Yeah. So to make a long story short, yes, everything you saw in the social
network around this, the result is effectively correct that Eduardo Saverin goes from owning a third of this Florida
based LLC to something like 2% of this C Corp that is a Delaware C Corp based in California
that goes on to become or is Facebook Inc.
And the justification that they effectively use in changing this structure is, hey, a bunch
of us moved to California to start a company together. You stayed back and yes, you sold some
ads in the meantime, but like you didn't come start the company with us. Listener, we leave it
to you to sort of decide how that should have played out and what's fair. None of us were there.
He was a co-founder of Facebook and then ended up with
2% and lived on a different coast. Okay, so they're in California. They get really serious
about the Facebook. They actually are still working on something else called Wirehog concurrently
within the same team, but they're starting to realize, okay, this, the Facebook thing
really, really has legs. And as they're sort of contemplating their next move,
they literally run into someone on the street who will change everything. David, who is this person?
That person is the co-founder of Napster, Sean Parker, who would have a brief but very,
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Check out more payment solutions and stories at j the picture. Here we go. And after the whole Napster saga, Parker ended up starting the email contact list company called Plaxo, which was kind of its own proto-social network and pioneered email address book exploitation and exporting.
Which is how every social company got its start. Facebook did a ton of this. LinkedIn did a ton of this. WhatsApp did this.
Exactly. It pioneered the first bootstrap viral social network mechanic.
Hey, let me see who all the people you know are so that on this new thing that you want to be
connected to all the people you know, you're connected to all the people you know. Oh,
by the way, we might also invite all the people that you've ever contacted. Yep. So Sean and his co-founders at Plaxo raise money for Plaxo
from venture capitalists. And not just any venture capitalists, the best venture capitalists from
Sequoia Capital. And all is going well. Plaxo is going fine. Sir Michael Moritz is on the board
of the company. Anyway, after a couple of years, Sean Parker ends up getting kicked out of the company by the board.
Now, Sean wasn't exactly the most, like, reliable employee and definitely was quirky. But the result of this is Sean's everlasting enmity for Sequoia and paranoid distrust of
all venture capitalists and company boards. This is going to become very, very, very important
here in a sec. So rewind slightly back to the spring of 2004 when the team is still at Harvard.
Sean is living in Palo Alto, and one of his housemates'
girlfriends, who's, I believe, a student at Stanford, pulls up the Facebook.com on her laptop.
And it's kind of like the scene where this happens in the Social Network movie.
Sean is like, holy crap, this is it. This is the winning social network. And Sean, I believe, had actually been an advisor to Friendster as well. So he was like between Plaxo and Napster, Friendster, really believed social networking was going to become a thing.
Totally. And it is kind of crazy to think about, unless you had a student show you on their computer, this is what Facebook is. There's no real way for you to know
other than the signup page. Right. Which you can't get past it and see how alive the thing is. Yep.
So Sean, being the enterprising person that he is, he cold emails the company's business email
address and asked to set up a meeting. And Eduardo Saverin replies to Sean, he's like, oh, cool. You're the
co-founder of Napster. Yeah. They set up a dinner in New York City. This is while the spring semester
is still going on at Harvard. And Mark and Eduardo and Sean all get dinner together. And
Mark and Sean really bond. Mark is super pumped to meet him. But that's about it. Like, there's no,
you know, discussion about, you know, what's Like, there's no, you know, discussion about,
you know, what's cool, a billion dollars, you know, et cetera, et cetera, as dramatized in
the movie. That doesn't happen. They kind of think that they're just going to go their separate ways.
Right. Nice to meet you. I don't think even Mark knows yet that he's moving to California this
summer. No, totally not. So here we are now in June. The Facebook crew has moved out to Palo Alto. They're walking down the street one evening. Sean is also walking down the same street in Palo Alto, sees them, and is a different house, specifically the house of his girlfriend's parents.
Not a good situation.
And he makes a split-second decision right there on the street to insert himself into Facebook and is like, hey, I'm actually looking for a place to stay.
Do you think I can crash with you guys in the crash pad for the summer?
And he joins the crew.
And this is how it all starts.
That is wild.
Yeah, it's like,
you ever play old school,
like Super Nintendo role-playing games,
like Japanese RPGs,
like Final Fantasy or whatnot?
It's been a while.
I mean, it's just like you meet somebody on the street
and they join the party.
And like, you know, you always know the character
on the street that's going to join the party
because their pixel sprite is more highly detailed
than the regular NPC pixel.
This is exactly what it is like here.
Sean Parker had a very detailed pixel sprite.
Yes.
So while he's there, you know, living in the house, crashing with the college students,
he basically takes Mark aside and he's like, look, you've got something really special here.
I have been in your shoes.
Let me tell you exactly what is going to happen this summer.
You have created something magical.
You're now out here in Silicon Valley.
You are going to be
the bell of the ball. All the venture capitalists out here, all the big companies, they're going to
wine and dine you. They're going to court you. They're going to tell you you're great and they're
going to want to invest in your company. And then they're going to turn around and they are going to
screw you. They're going to take control of your board. They're going to force you to bring in quote unquote professional management. They're
going to kill all the magic. Growth is going to slow. Then they're going to blame you. And then
they're going to fire you. And then they're going to put the company up for sale. And here's the
thing. To this point in history, he really wasn't wrong. He was absolutely right. There wasn't
Founders Fund yet. There wasn't A16Z yet. There
wasn't the notion of founder friendliness. What venture capitalists did is they invested in
founders' companies and then brought in management to take them to the next level. It's what happened
at eBay. It's what happened at Google. This is a pattern that happened over and over and over again.
And usually, they would try to do it with of help and support of the entrepreneur to build this like really
great team together. But oftentimes that backfired and they just hot swap the CEO with a big grown
up manager and a nice suit. Yep. And that was not the wrong playbook until this moment in time,
because as we've been talking about, until now,
if you wanted to scale something, you needed money, you needed permission, you needed business
people, you needed deals, you needed contacts. Yeah, that's true. The open web kind of changed
the hard requirement on that. Yes. And I think Sean, as bitter as he was about his own experience, I think he probably also recognized that and recognized that the Facebook and. I am going to take you under my wing and make sure
that that does not happen. And I'm going to help you reset up the company so that you permanently
control the board and no one can ever fire you because you are what is important here.
And I'm going to help you go about fundraising, but I'm going to make sure we find the right
people who are cool with that
stipulation, number one, because if you go try and do it by yourself, like you don't know enough,
you don't know these people, you're not going to find the right folks. And it's kind of wild. I
mean, Sean was also in a position to take advantage of Mark and the company and he didn't.
There was some nice self-interest in all of this.
It's not like this was charitable.
He ends up being the president of Facebook.
And he ends up with a pretty decent chunk for a non-founder,
and he ends up with a board seat.
Now, granted, it's technically Mark's board seat,
but Sean's the one sitting in it.
Totally.
But it would have been really easy for him to do one of two things.
One, obviously take advantage of Mark and the company
and get a lot more for himself.
Two, I think he also could have been so jaded by the Plaxo experience
to say we shouldn't raise venture capital at all.
But actually what he counsels Mark to do is the right thing.
No, we should raise venture capital.
We should professionalize.
And the whole Silicon Valley machinery
really can help us,
but we're going to do it in the right way on our terms.
Yep.
I think he just really wanted to help Mark win the game.
I think you're right.
The other thing that Sean does, by all accounts,
is he makes sure that everyone in the
house that summer gets equity in the company. Okay, so what's Wirehog? What's the second
project that's going on here? Yes. I really would love to know what Sean thought when Mark and the
crew told them about Wirehog. Wirehog was basically going to be a captive Napster to Facebook. Everybody on Facebook in these
private networks, walled gardens, what is something that college students really,
really wanted to do and was happening internally on college servers all the time?
Share files, share music, share movies. Wirehog was going to be a product to make this happen.
And actually, legend has it, I think in Stephen Levy's book, while they're talking about this,
Sean Parker actually comes up with a name for the product. It's like, oh, if you launch this,
you should actually call it Dropbox. No way. Yeah. Like a year before Dropbox,
the actual company gets founded. That's so funny. But they
really are sort of thinking of themselves as this almost like incubator lab. I don't really
understand how this is true, but they really did convince themselves that their current frontrunner
for the product they were most excited about was Wirehog. And Facebook might be like a good
distribution vehicle for it, or maybe at some point they don't even focus on Facebook anymore and they go all in on Wirehog. And they're actively talking about this insanity while speaking with investors about
raising capital. Yes. So to the investors that Sean goes out and helps them find,
Sean at this point knows basically everybody in Silicon Valley. And he's like, okay, I need the pretty tight window of people who A, have money, B, know what they're doing, and C, are okay with our terms that Mark is going to control the board and control the company.
So we need an individual, not an institution. angel investors who he knows pretty well and he thinks might be the right fit. One is Reid Hoffman, who Reid had been running LinkedIn and Sean had been in this early social
networking thing. And he just started LinkedIn. They actually knew each other because Reid was
an early investor in Friendster. So Sean calls up Reid and he also calls up Mark Pincus. Mark
had been Sean's boss at an internship that he had in high school.
And then Mark had gone on to invest in Napster when they started Napster as a company.
And we should say who Mark Pincus is for anyone who doesn't know. Mark would eventually start
Zynga. Yes. Could become a very important person and company in the Facebook ecosystem.
The maker of Farmville. Yes. So Pincus and Reed meet up with
Sean and Mark and they're just blown away by the Facebook. And Ben, as you say, Mark starts talking
about Wirehog and apparently Reed is like, no, no, no, no. Stop talking about this Wirehog thing.
Like I'm running LinkedIn. I can tell you this is special. Like, do the Facebook thing.
Not only do the Facebook thing, but like, music is kryptonite as a space right now because of what Napster did to the music labels. How is Sean not the one being like,
stay a thousand yards away from music, my God?
I mean, amazingly, a couple years later, you know, Sean being so open-minded, I mean,
he was one of the ones who really helped Spotify get going.
Yep.
And really brokered the relationship with Mark for Daniel and Mark to hit it off and obviously Spotify to have a huge amount of growth on Facebook.
Totally.
So, okay, Reed, really excited.
He's like, no, no, the Facebook.
Focus on the Facebook.
Your user numbers are what?
Your engagement is what?
Your retention is what?
Your Dow-Mao ratio is what?
Oh my God.
So Reed's like, look, I'm running LinkedIn.
Pincus and I don't have that much money together.
We'll give you some, but we can't like fund a whole, you know, round for you.
And they're kind of conflicted, both with Friendster and LinkedIn.
But he's like, I think I know the perfect person who can put this together.
I worked with this guy at PayPal.
My old colleague from PayPal, who actually, as luck would have it,
is thinking about starting his own venture capital fund.
This could be a really good fit.
Why don't you meet Peter Thiel?
And Peter, yes, indeed, was just in the process of starting what would become Founders Fund. Ben, you already alluded to this, but like, Founders Fund was such a radical idea when Peter started it. The idea being baked into the name that they will always side with founders and never push a founder out of a company. I was shocked. I mean, it just, it's so easy to forget this, but it was just 20 years
ago. The idea that a venture capitalist makes an investment in a company and they are not the
controlling shareholder was blasphemous just 20 years ago. Totally blasphemous. And of course,
PayPal has its own crazy history where you can understand
why Peter would arrive at this conclusion. But he really was like maybe the only person in Silicon
Valley that hit that Venn diagram that I talked about a minute ago of like super legitimate,
would actually help the company and help them navigate Silicon Valley, had money because the PayPal exit had
just happened, and was going to be cool with Mark controlling the company.
Yeah. It's a one-of-one intro to make. I mean, it probably would have had to be someone else
in the PayPal mafia that kind of fits that.
Yep. But I don't think at that time, you know, Elon wasn't doing investing. I don't think there
was anybody else who really could have done it.
Yeah.
That's a crazy counterfactual thinking about if Elon had invested in Facebook instead of
Peter Thiel.
Right.
What if Elon hadn't started SpaceX?
He wasn't just as good a position.
Totally.
Had Roloff gone to Sequoia yet?
If he had, he would have just started.
This is effectively the pool of financiers who could have done this deal. Right. But Sequoia wasn't going to do this deal under those terms.
So Ruloff couldn't have done it. Yep. It was maybe one of two with the other one
potentially being Elon. Wow. That would be a really different world that we would be living
in today. Yep. Okay. So they take the idea to Peter. In the meeting, Reed brings along a young guy who's
working for him at LinkedIn named Matt Kohler to come help talk to Peter, evaluate this from
an investing standpoint. They strike a deal that Peter's going to lead a round of $500,000. Reed and Mark Pincus are each going to invest $37,500.
Peter's going to do the rest at a $5 million pre-money valuation.
So $5.5 million post.
Which, you know, on the one hand is like laughable now.
On the other hand, at this point in time,
for a bunch of kids who started this a couple months ago, it's crazy that this would be worth $5 million.
Out of $5 million valuation, the multiple since then has been about $250,000x.
So that takes us to the end of the summer.
So everybody now has to make a decision.
Do they stay in Palo Alto and keep working full-time on Facebook, or do they go back to
school? So Eduardo never came out in the first place. So he did his internship in New York. He
goes back to Harvard and starts his junior year. Chris Hughes
also goes back to Harvard, starts his junior year, graduates in 2006, and then rejoins Facebook
after graduation. Andrew McCollum stays in Palo Alto for a couple years and then goes back to
Harvard later and completes his degree. He takes the, you know, Bill Gates road not traveled option.
Dustin never goes back, stays with the company until 2008 when he leaves to start Asana.
And Mark, I think, probably never really even considered going back.
Yeah, at this point, the 70% stat keeps being true. Despite the fact that they keep opening
all these new schools, it keeps being true that 70% of people who have ever signed up are daily active users.
So I think Mark realizes, oh, I have created one of the most engaging technology applications ever.
Yes. And certainly at this point, the combination of Sean, Peter, Reed, Mark Pincus, all advising and being part of the company, they know.
And they have certainly helped him realize that.
Adam D'Angelo does go back to Caltech and then through AIM, I guess, remotely helps
collaborate with the company until he graduates in 2006 and becomes CTO officially.
Got it.
Sean, like we said, his impact on the company was huge.
I really want to underscore this again.
Mark having full control over the company, as we are going to see time and time and time
again as we go through the story here, makes all the difference in the world.
And that is 100% because of Sean Parker.
Yep. So how long is Sean at the company?
Not very long because at some point in time the next spring...
So it's like nine total months at the company.
Yeah, I think about nine total months. Sean ends up leaving the company after charges get filed
against him as a result of some drug incidents at a house party
during a trip to North Carolina. Charges do eventually get dropped, but in the meantime,
the decision is made, hey, this is not something the company is going to get sucked into.
Yep. He immediately joins, where else? Founders Fund, which Peter, partially on the back of this Facebook investment, has now
set up and raised officially. And like we said, Sean goes on to find and fund and really help
nurture Spotify through his role at Founders Fund.
Yep. It's kind of amazing thinking about Founders Fund raising capital on the back of this
investment. One pitch is, we invested in Facebook. The flip
side of it is we just invested in a company. We're currently holding it flat because there's
been no markup yet from any other investors and they're not generating any revenue.
Well, let's talk about other investors. By this point, kind of towards the end of spring semester 2005, Facebook had now dropped the the, become just Facebook.
That was one of Sean Parker's final impacts on the company is he actually negotiated the domain name purchase of Facebook.com.
I didn't know that.
Yeah.
I believe they bought it for $200,000.
Hmm.
Which actually was a good chunk of that venture money that they raised.
Yeah, right.
Because it was $500K that they raised before.
It was $500K, yep.
And they're actively spending that.
The company has never consumed that much capital, but they are having to spend it on servers.
As they stand up new colleges, they are having to go into data centers and rack servers or rent servers on a monthly basis.
And the server bills are starting to add up, especially as they scaled to how many schools were they at in the fall of 2004?
Several hundred.
Well, Sean Parker introduced Mark to Western Technology Investment, WTI.
The debt fund, yeah.
Yeah.
And so they basically invented venture debt. And so they
make a $300,000 loan. It's like, I think like a revolving credit line in the fall of 2004.
And that comes with warrants that if the company ever goes public, that they can then exercise.
They do a deal again the next spring for another $300,000. So they're in for $600,000. I spoke
with someone years ago who told me this ended up being phenomenally, phenomenally successful.
And the warrant exercise on this, I think, is the greatest venture debt deal of all time.
Has to be. Nice. Spring 2005, Excel comes in, leads a Series A, $12.7 million at a $98 million post-money valuation.
That's sort of like crazy in and of itself for the time.
And though, still being okay with Mark having board control.
Yes.
Which, you know, one thing for like, okay, at the angel round, maybe like that's still
pretty crazy, but whatever, this is angel round, but like, no, like a real venture capital firm,
real series, a 2005, a hundred million dollar valuation B being okay with that. That was wild.
Oh, also see getting less than 20% of the company. Like rule of thumb venture investing back in the day was you need at least 20% of the company, ideally more like 25 or 30.
Yes.
So Kevin Afrusi, who ran down the deal and did the diligence at Accel, and Jim Breyer, who was the partner and took the board seat, this is one of the all-time great venture investments.
And so it's worth talking about some of the deal mechanics. It was the very first post.com institutional venture capital deal where the founder maintained
control.
Certainly, the norm was as soon as a VC gets involved, it is a VC-controlled board and
company.
The other thing that's worth noting is this is a company getting a $98 million valuation.
Now, the silly land that we live in now are like, this happens a company getting a $98 million valuation. Now, the silly
land that we live in now, we're like, this happens all the time. This didn't happen. And we were only
just coming out of the dot-com era. So eyeballs and clicks had just had four years of demonization
from everyone, from the press to the public, to limited partners. In fact, Excel had limited partners drop out of this fund who were LPs
previously, including your beloved Princeton, including Harvard. I mean, big and dying Stanford
was one of the only ones that really stuck with them for this $400 million fund. And they're kind
of looking at this, realizing this might be one of the greatest companies of all time. And we are
going to have to do the type of deal that everyone got raked over the coals for five years ago in the mania
for doing and no one is doing this type of deal in this environment but it's facebook so we're
gonna do it i think the level of risk and reputation risk that they took on this cannot be underscored enough. Totally. I was trying to think of, were there any other deals like this that you could even
kind of point to as a comparable from the past? And the only one I can think of was the Google
Series A, which was $25 million at a $100 million post-money valuation split between
Michael Moritz from Sequoia and
John Doerr from Kleiner Perkins. But it was in the dot-com run-up.
Exactly. Exactly. It was a totally, totally different paradigm. And the legend has it,
I don't know if this is apocryphal or not, is that after making the investment,
Moritz told Don Valentine at Sequoia, never have we paid so much for so little. And I think he was actually referring to like the small amount of equity that they got by having to split the deal in Google. So yeah, in the dot-com bubble that happened, but like that this would happen in 2005, Excel went way out on a limb for this. Yeah. So some other interesting deal points, $1.1 million of this
$12.7 million round was done by Jim Breyer personally. Wow. Yeah. The shares were acquired
at 4.5 cents per share. Facebook just recently hit $600 a share. So Excel and their limited
partners and Jim, for anyone who's still holding the shares
after they distributed them, that is a 13,000x return. Another interesting thing on this,
do you know the whole Don Graham dynamic with this deal? Yes. The original deal was that Don
Graham from the Washington Post was going to invest and it wasn't going to be a VC deal. That was at a $60 million valuation. Excel comes in over the top
and in part of the negotiation to get it up to this $98 million deal, there was actually a
secondary. Oh, wow. $3 million went to Mark, Dustin, and Sean as a secondary in this deal. Wow. I had no idea.
Yep. Wow. I mean, add to the litany of things that were not done back then. This is Facebook
having all the leverage and full deal control in negotiating this Series A. Wow. And still,
it was one of the best venture capital
investments of all time. Absolutely. Man, that is freaking wild. Yeah. Wow. Okay. Well, that is a
lot of hype to live up to. Which brings us now to the summer of 2005, where Mark mark motivated by this perhaps i hadn't quite thought about that announces
to the company his product roadmap for the summer and it is a six point product plan
number one a redesign of the site bye-bye. Number two, a photo application.
Which, by the way, photos got written by like one guy in two weeks.
Yes. Move fast and break things.
Yep.
Number three, a personalized newspaper based on all of your friend's activity.
Number four, an events feature.
Number five, a local business product and number six a sort of vague
idea for a feature called i'm bored which would let users on the site who were bored
consume media and play games that's a pretty big feature mandate this This is freaking wild. So now, okay, of that, I think only the redesign and photos would actually ship in 2005.
Maybe events did too.
I'm not entirely sure.
But this is incredible.
Photos, newsfeed, platform, which is really what this I'm bored feature is.
Summer 2005.
It's all right there in the vision.
And Mark thinks they can accomplish all of this
by the end of the summer.
And the wild thing is they do accomplish all of this
in the next two years,
which two big points on this.
For any other company,
these are all like multi-year long development processes.
Well, and each one is its own company.
Exactly.
Photos is Flickr.
There are independent game platform companies out there.
Miniclip, et cetera.
Yeah.
Flash games.
What were some of the other ones?
Events, Eventbrite.
Yep.
Personalized newspaper.
Well, that becomes a true true innovation in newsfeed but i think at the
time there was a lot of buzz and talk about personalized portals and like yahoo was really
big on this and google was even kind of big on this like oh make this your home page oh i google
do you remember i google yes i google exactly and i think that might have been somewhat of the
inspiration although obviously mark was thinking way bigger than that. But like, yeah, again, local business product, Yelp. Each one of
these under the old paradigm was its own company. And Mark was like, no, this is all part of
Facebook. Crazy. Super crazy. And this really, I think, speaks to the genius of Mark as a product
strategist. It's one thing to say, I'm going to add a lot
of random features to my site and I'm going to throw spaghetti against the wall.
This was not a random grouping of features. Everything reinforced one another and drove
the engagement loop of the site. So just as one example, let's take from this roadmap that Mark lays out.
Events. Let's start there.
Events and parties planned on Facebook get tagged with who's going to attend the events.
All of those tags get published out as activity to News Feed.
That drives interest and FOMO among the friend network, so more friends come to the actual event.
At the event, photos get taken, and now there's more people there.
Well, those photos get posted back to the site afterwards, and they all get tagged with the people who were there who are
in the photos. All of that becomes activity that then gets published to newsfeed. That generates
more desire from more people who see that on Facebook in the newsfeed to either engage with
the photos and like and comment on them, or if they're hearing about it from their friends and
they're not yet on Facebook to now register for Facebook and get involved in this loop. All of that now gets published back to
News Feed. So now it's time for the next party. And you can see how this just grows and builds
on itself over and over and over again. It's funny, as you're saying all this,
it sounds like very old hat, like almost boring. Of course it does all of that.
At the time, it was so revolutionary. Everything I just described was there within the next 18 months.
So photos, I think, was like late summer of 05. Interestingly, photos did not originally
include photo tagging. Photo tagging was like a pretty new concept. I think Flickr may have had it,
but the idea that you're tagging a person and then you can go browse that person's profile by photos they've been tagged in, that wasn't brand new innovation.
That is a mechanic that was not thought of in social networks before.
If you think about what Friendster and MySpace were, you could upload a limited set of photos, which by the way, you'd have to delete one to add another.
Yes.
So MySpace only allowed you to have eight photos maximum at the time. And this is, A, Ben, what you're describing of person tagging and photos. Incredible innovation.
Right.
That drives the whole viral loop. are definitionally changes every year. And often Facebook was the one in the early days to push
the envelope and say, this is what it means to be a social network. In the later years,
it was Facebook's competitors that then they had to sort of adopt that functionality. But
the idea that a social network includes an infinite number of photos that you can tag
and give X, Y coordinates on the photo to map to a specific person that is another entity in
the social network, that was actually a new component to what it meant to be a social network. And as
you're saying with News Feed, that wouldn't happen for another, what was that, late summer of 2006
or something? September 2006. Yeah, so another year, year and a half after this. That completely
turned what social media, social networking was
on its head again. Yes. Oh, we're going to talk all about it in a sec. To this point,
a social network is a set of static profile pages that you can navigate to. And if you go to home,
like the root, you know, facebook.com slash instead of slash profile PHP, it's pretty useless.
Like the homepage is actually an uninteresting place to hang out. There is no, hey, let me see what's going on in my network. Yes. Until News Feed.
Okay. But before we get to that, 2005. To your broader point here though,
yeah, for the first six or seven years of its life, Facebook was a change maker,
defining what social networking was. And then after that,
it became a change taker. And we'll talk about this when it happens. But like, again, the mental
flexibility of Mark and the company to be like, okay, I'm not going to have pride about that
anymore. I'm going to adapt and still win is incredible. Very Microsoftian. Very Microsoftian. Okay. So even this, even though it takes
two years to roll out the full roadmap, photos, events, but especially photos, the 2005-2006
school year is just off the charts for growth, sharing, engagement among college students.
Ben, you found an incredible stat about Facebook's page views,
right? Yeah, this stat is crazy. By November of 2005, they were getting 230 million page views
daily, which means that they had passed Google in page views. Wow. Google, the company started
six years earlier. And the reason is because when
you're on Google, you do like one or two searches and then you go to your destination. On Facebook,
you get caught in an hours-long trance of looking at everybody you know and what they're doing.
Right. Which was already the case when it was basically text only. But adding photos, I mean,
oh my God, every photo is a page view. With such a small user base
at that point in time, I think what probably certainly less than 10 million users to have
200 million plus page views every single day and be passing Google in traffic is wild.
I mean, let's say it's 10 million. It's 23 page views per day per person. That's assuming that every single person who is a monthly user is accessing it every day and loading a page 23 times.
Right, right.
In our mobile age now, that doesn't really sound like much. I bet the number of photos that someone scrolls through on Instagram is way higher than that. But for the time, that interactivity was just nuts.
I mean, certainly Flickr, MySpace, Friendster couldn't hold a candle to that
type of engagement. Yeah. So here's their user growth. In June of 05, as you mentioned, they
were at 3 million. By September of 05, they were at 5 million users. That was 10x their user base
just a year ago in September of 04. And almost a third of all U.S. college students were included in that
5 million. So by September of 05, they had a third of U.S. college students. Of their 5 million users
that they had about 18 months in, 70% were daily active, 85% were weekly active, 93% were monthly active.
Wow.
Those are just insane numbers.
Yes.
I could go on and on and on.
But one interesting thing to also point out, at this period of time, October of 05, they
were up to 8.3 million users.
They were the 10th most visited site on the internet.
But the important part is they were doing a million dollars a month in revenue. They had actually started figuring out the advertising
business model. So here we are 19 months after founding. They're no longer burning capital.
Yes. Well, when you say figured out the advertising business model,
they just had such a high volume of page views that they didn't have to figure anything out.
You just plug in some crappy ad networks and print money. such a high volume of page views that they didn't have to figure anything out.
You just plug in some crappy ad networks and like print money.
Fair.
Yeah, you're right.
Actually, I completely misspoke.
I would say that they were nowhere near figuring out the advertising business model,
but they had a traffic machine.
They were able to, through alchemy, turn page views into revenue.
Yeah.
But they had not by any, figured out their business model.
And in this world where startups glorify raising capital, burning huge amounts of money,
delaying monetization, and then having these amazing screamin' returns when they finally do turn on the money faucet, Facebook was just the opposite.
They lost money, and not that much money, for like a year and a half. And then from that point on, they were just profitable. yellow flags, shall we say, that popped up. During that year, Mark, of course, was already
starting to think about, well, how can this keep getting bigger? People graduate from college.
This is great in colleges, but like, I don't want to just build a college site. I want this to be
a lot bigger. And obviously that was what Excel was investing into at that valuation.
So they launched two sort of tests throughout the year. One was opening up Facebook to high
school students. And the other one was opening Facebook up to workplace groups.
And both of them kind of flopped. And for different reasons, right? The workplace ones,
they were like,
the workplace thing is going to be awesome
because it's authenticated email addresses
the same way that the colleges
had authenticated email addresses.
Most high schools don't have
authenticated email addresses.
So we expect these workplace networks
to work better.
Yep.
But the problem was
going into workplace networks,
people didn't want to share
with their colleagues.
I don't want some low-res party photos of me from last night showing up on my workplace.
And I think also just the density wasn't there.
It was violating the principles that got them there of like this thing needs to be alive.
And every way we fractally spread out needs to be bringing that nuclear reactor of what's happening along with it.
Going straight into workplaces, like you've got 60-year-olds and they're like, there's
going to be nothing compelling for them right now.
The extreme bear case on Facebook at this moment in time is you started with the group
of people who are the most social and the most open to share in their entire lives.
You've already saturated a third of them.
Every single cohort
that you add from here is probably going to be worse. Yep. And that was a very rational argument.
Now, high schools, as you say, failed for a different reason. There wasn't the same standardized
email architecture in high schools across the country. It was just way more fragmented,
so you couldn't elegantly set up
these private networks in the same way.
Yep.
And in fact, what they ended up doing,
because I was in high school at this time,
it was technically a different Facebook.
In fact, I will quote the homepage
when you went to sign up.
If you went to facebook.com in 2006,
the title was,
Facebook is an online directory
that connects people through social networks at schools.
Now there are two Facebooks,
one for people in colleges
and one for people in high school.
The site is open to a lot of schools,
but not everywhere yet.
We're working on it.
And so if you signed up as a high schooler,
you got the crappy one.
You had to log into hs.facebook.com
and it looked mostly the same.
It had slightly different features,
but there was this weird thing
where somebody who was already in college had to invite you. It's not like anyone could sign up for high
school Facebook. You needed a college student who went to high school with you to basically
vouch for the fact that you are a real high school student and thus eligible to sign up for hs.facebook.com.
Right. Oh man, I vaguely remember this of my younger friends who are still they had set up for that. It made it all really easy from an infrastructure perspective. I was on hs.facebook.com for a long time as a college student.
Right. Yeah, because there had to just be one hs.facebook.com for all the high schools.
Yes, exactly. And it meant that they needed to manage scale and load balance really differently
because very quickly, the largest network or certainly the largest subdomain was the high school one. And so I think within a month or two of allowing high school signups, high school as a whole was much, much, much, much larger, and they had to solve for the technology constraint of what do we do with this? It doesn't behave like any of our college networks. Yep. So the academic school year in the core college user segment went great. But once you
hit summer 2006, all those kids go on break and college growth stops for the moment. So summer
2006 was kind of a scary moment for the company. The initiatives to expand outside colleges were
not going super well. College growth had stopped for the moment. And yeah, Ben, like you said,
like very rational argument that like, okay, this thing is going to be a really interesting niche
site for college students. And how valuable is that? Well, Viacom, which owned MTV, thought that that was worth $750 million, which is what they offered to buy the company for in the summer of 2006.
Well, there was another party that really, really wanted to own Facebook at this point in time, and that was Yahoo. And Yahoo was willing to top Viacom and pay a billion dollars to buy the company.
So here we are, a billion dollar offer on the table.
And growth is slowing.
Exactly, exactly.
There's this existential question mark about the company.
Growth has slowed a lot. You've got a billion dollars on the table,
which is a lot of money, especially in those days. It was shocking six years later when Facebook
bought Instagram for a billion dollars. This would have made the careers of everybody involved.
And Mark, of course, controls the company, controls the board, thanks to Sean Parker.
He doesn't have to sell. But the whole management team is like, yeah, we should probably
sell. And I think the board, you know, it's hard to know. They obviously know they can't force him
to sell. But I suspect if you had asked all of their opinions, and certainly Mark did, they
probably would have been like, you know, it's been a great run. We should probably
hit this bid. So Mark actually agrees to the Yahoo deal. Billion dollars. It's going to be all in
stock. Yahoo's going to buy the company. In the interim between when they shake hands on the deal and while the docs are being drafted,
Yahoo announces their quarterly earnings and they have a bad quarter and the stock drops 20%.
And Terry Semel, who was the CEO of Yahoo at the time, said,
okay, the deal is for the same amount of stock. So commensurately, the deal is now worth $800 million, not a billion dollars. And that was history turning on a knife point.
And that was all Mark needed to say, you know what? Thanks, but no thanks.
And this part of the story never gets told. The fact that actually, at first,
Mark did not turn down the billion-dollar offer from Yahoo. Mark actually accepted,
or at least said,
let me turn over another card and get one inch closer to the negotiation being final.
You know, it wasn't an outright rejection at first.
It was, yeah, come back with the papers.
Yep, totally.
That is not the way it gets talked about today.
But I think actually makes the story, like, kind of even more powerful.
It almost really did slip away.
Well, it's certainly much more powerful. It almost really did slip away.
Well, it's certainly much more realistic. It's a simple and powerful story to say they just outright rejected it. But that's just never how these things go. It's like,
show me you're real. Yep.
Okay. So analyzing, let's say he just did turn it down outright. Well, here's a reasonable way
to look at it. If what you want to do is run a
great company for the rest of your life, it actually was totally rational. Mark has said
publicly, I mean, it's like 15, 18 years ago, I didn't have any more ideas as good as Facebook.
But that's like way underselling it. There aren't better companies to start.
Right. Yes, it would have been nice to have certainty on a billion dollars or whatever
percent of the billion Mark owned at that point. And also, a year before, MySpace had gotten bought for $580
million. Right, by News Corp. So it's like, geez, okay, twice as much as MySpace. But rationally,
if the optimization function is, I want to run the best company I can for a very long time,
almost nobody has started a better company
since. So if you're looking at the engagement, you're looking at the potential, the rational
thing actually is just keep running this company because I'll never discover something like it
again. Yep. I completely agree with you. And Mark has said so much in so many words to you and me
personally that he's not optimizing for financial
outcome here. He's optimizing for impact. And I think he likes running this company. He would
want to go start a similar company if he didn't have this one. Yes, totally. Also, though, to his
skill as a strategist, even at this very young age, yes, Ben, you and I just made a compelling
argument about why you could have believed Facebook was going to top out with the college market at this point in time.
Mark knew, though, and he had planted the seeds that both newsfeed and open registration were going to be coming later that year.
And he was definitely making that calculus here, too, of like, well, I don't know what the probability necessarily is that those are going to hit. But Mark had the belief like, A, if they do, they're going to be
really big. And B, I think the probability is higher than the people around me think it is.
Yep. That's totally fair. Even if you weren't going to bet on the growth,
the user engagement was still currently great. And you had a lot of reason to believe that it
was going to get even greater. And you compare all the metrics with Friendster and MySpace as time went on got worse. People
churned, their daily active to monthly active would just go down over time, the page loads
times would take forever, especially with, well, actually with both. Friendster just was not
architected properly. It was a software engineering, computer science issue. MySpace was this weird thing that was sort of born out of this
combined media conglomerate, and they just never really had excellent tech architectural talent.
And so as you sort of looked at not the high-level metrics of how many users have ever signed up,
because MySpace and Friendster, I think we're still way ahead at this point.
If you looked at like,
hmm, but how is this going to play out if it sort of keeps compounding?
And you looked at the deeper metrics,
you kind of thought,
oh, I'm running the better company by a lot.
Once especially, you know,
we got to figure out the business,
but I am running the better product by a lot.
Yeah.
So, okay, to figuring out the business,
coming out of this episode with Yahoo.
They say no, the whole management team churns.
The whole management team basically churns over the next set of months.
Mark gets religion on a couple things.
And actually, we should say, not Dustin, but a lot of the people around the table who were expecting a nice cash payout and now aren't getting one or are not pleased.
Yep, totally. So, what are they going to do? The first thing is, I think Mark had always
operated the company this way, but now he gets real religion of like, we need to get more revenue
and we need to focus on becoming truly cashflow positive so that we are never in a position again
where we would even consider doing something like this. So in August
of 2006, they do the first partnership with Microsoft. It's funny that, you know, the
Microsoft-Facebook relationship in some ways is sort of a precursor to the Microsoft-OpenAI
relationship today and how that gets built. Here's what it is. Microsoft says, we're going to
take over selling all of the display ad inventory domestically within the US for Facebook, and we
will give you a guaranteed CPM that we can sell. And then we are going to use this to help bootstrap
our online services division, which, as we talked about in our
Microsoft series, becomes super, super important, not only for their efforts launching Bing and
making that into ultimately a successful business, but even more importantly for Azure that comes out
of it. Microsoft knows they need some scale to bootstrap up and get started with both the ad
business, but also just like the online services division, period.
This is a ton of inventory.
Like you just think about the amount of page views that are happening here.
Suddenly Microsoft's problem is not how do we find enough inventory to sell?
It's how do we go find enough advertisers to actually fill all these slots on Facebook?
Yes.
And Microsoft had been trying to do this.
They tried to do this with MySpace a little bit earlier and they lost that deal to Google. So they really need Facebook.
And on the other hand, this is a great deal for Facebook because Facebook sucks at selling ads,
and Facebook has no targeting or anything, so they really shouldn't justify high CPMs at this point.
Yeah. Outsource it to a good third-party network.
Right.
So this is like basically all of Facebook's revenue
for the next couple of years here.
So Facebook had made $9 million in revenue in 2005
when they were selling themselves.
This has been, as you were saying,
like, hey, they're starting to turn on ads in 2005.
It's starting to work like $9 million.
That's amazing for year two as a company.
Got to cashflow positive.
Got to cashflow positive. Got to cashflow positive.
In 2006, with this Microsoft partnership, that jumps to $48 million in revenue.
Oh, that's where the money spigot is. Now we're talking. And then the next year in 2007, again,
I think almost all of this is Microsoft, that goes to $153 million in revenue. So like, okay, we are way out of
any league where we consider selling ourselves here. We can control our own destiny.
Isn't it wild thinking about you thought it was crazy to turn down a billion dollar offer,
or many people thought you were crazy. And then just two years later,
that is only a 6x revenue multiple, and you're tripling
year over year.
Oh, and by the way, in the second iteration of this Microsoft partnership, which we will
talk about in just a minute, it included an investment from Microsoft at a $15 billion
valuation.
Oh, hold your horses.
Let's finish this great 2006, 2007 arc and then
we'll get there. Yes. Point being though, Mark made the right decision for all shareholders of
Facebook to walk away from the Yahoo deal. I mean, it's at an all-time high. In walking away from
every deal ever, he's made the right decision. Yes. But like within a year, he made the right
decision. Yes. Oh yeah, that's true. This became obviously right fast. Very fast,
very fast. So how does this happen? Okay. Adam D'Angelo finally graduates from Caltech,
joins Facebook full-time as CTO. I love that Adams are like second protagonist here. I know,
I know. I don't know if you did that intentionally, but yeah. Well, he was right there. I mean,
they were at Exeter together. Like, I don't think you can separate it out. Yeah. And, you know, I think here, part of the reason why Adam keeps coming into the story is he is a really, really great technologist.
And even though he's young, same age as Mark, when he now arrives full-time as CTO, this is when Facebook starts to be taking the steps to be building like real technology infrastructure.
So before Adam joins full-time,
the team was shipping new code to the website
like at a high velocity relative to everybody else out there.
You know, it was weekly-ish, maybe every couple days,
you know, maybe even up to daily.
Well, they were a web company.
For the first time in history, you actually could.
All these companies with big clients, I mean, Microsoft would ship every three years with a service pack once a year. It's a whole new era where all you have to do servers in a browser, now that products
are in browsers, meant you could architect your company differently and ship differently.
Yes. And when Adam becomes officially the CTO, he's like, actually, we should probably just
ship multiple times a day. We should just be shipping all the time. And also, we should probably start recruiting like a real top tier engineering team because remember
it's still kind of nuclear winter for startups great tech talent is available so they start
going and recruiting like really really top tier engineering h. And it's a pretty compelling offer. Like, A, we've got real revenue
from this Microsoft partnership. We're the best-funded startup in the Valley. People want
to buy us for a billion dollars. We turn them down. That's all sort of the financial reasons
to take it. For a lot of people, too, it was like such a breath of fresh air. I think Facebook was potentially maybe the first
company, first startup to have an open office plan. Like just everything about how they ran
the company was different. It was the prototypical startup. I mean, to this day, early Facebook is
still what most startup culture is aspiring to be. I think often without knowing it, I mean,
everything from the sort of posters on the walls with your mantras and your values to almost having like an employment brand that you
really care about cultivating to the idea of like we're having just as much fun together socially
as we are working together. I think the modern startup culture, especially when you factor in
the shipping every day, open office.
Y Combinator kind of trains companies to become like Facebook was.
100%. I mean, there was Google out there, which had a lot of this element,
but it was a very different thing.
It was very academic, very wonky.
These guys were hackers and they shipped, you know, and they were all in it together.
The other thing that was basically true is they were not really interested in recruiting industry veterans, especially on
the technical side. And Mark says this in early talks that he was just prioritizing raw intelligence
over experience. So one of those super intelligent, super talented young engineers with a high slope
who joined back in fall of five was an engineer
named Chris Cox, who joined from the Stanford AI lab. And Chris joins a team of other young,
smart engineers led by Ruchi Sangvi and Andrew Boz Bosworth working on Mark's personalized
newspaper product idea. Ruchi was one of Facebook's very first engineers,
and along with her husband Aditya Agarwal,
they run South Park Commons now.
Boz was two years ahead of Mark at Harvard
and had actually been Mark's TA
in the Intro to Artificial Intelligence CS class that he took.
And then he later joined the company.
Which is actually not how he ended up getting a job,
but they did happen to cross paths that way before.
Yes.
Boz went to Microsoft, I think, before joining Facebook.
Yeah.
Just for a few years.
So the three of them start working on News Feed.
And so we've talked about things like photos
and the fundamental architecture of the site.
News Feed required like a whole new level
of engineering
prowess to get this thing to work. Like you're not just going to code this up in PHP. Like photos
also required real engineering, but News Feed was like pushing the state of the art of what was
possible in technology and on the internet. So the first question you have to ask yourself,
if you're a good product designer, developer, capital allocator, someone in Mark's shoes saying, should we do this, is do people want this?
If we build this, will it be valuable?
The reason they knew it would be valuable is because the company is data obsessed and they watch the analytics like a hawk to figure out what are people doing on our site. And they noticed this behavior where people were browsing to other people's profiles just to look at them and see
if anything changed. The user was doing the heavy compute lifting rather than having a personalized
newspaper of just bouncing around to a bunch of people's profiles and saying, anything new here?
So there was an engineer who did something really kind of hacky because they didn't want to, at first, put all the engineering resources into building out something like News Feed, which is, well, when something changes for some period of time, we'll just highlight it in yellow.
Yes.
So it's easy for you, as you're bouncing around to different profiles, to just see, oh, hey, this thing changed.
And that totally worked.
They watched the lift in that, and they were like, oh, it's a good feature.
People like that. So that sort of gave them the confidence of we should find a way to make it more obvious to you when
new updates happen, when things change. Technically, David, for people who aren't
in the sort of tech ecosystem, why is it so difficult to build something like a news feed?
Because now we're all trained to believe that like a feed is, you know, a primitive that is
available to you as a developer when
you're building a product, because feeds are everywhere. Feeds are the core feature of most
products. When you hit the homepage, it's some sort of feed. That was not true at the time.
That was not true in any product. I actually challenge you right now, think back to 2005.
What was a feed on the web? What was sort of an infinite scrolling?
They didn't exist. This was the first one.
Right.
This was the invention of the feed.
Like maybe you've got Reddit and Dig, and you could sort of make an argument that their feeds,
they're paginated rankings of stories. So you could see like, oh, what are the most important
stories? But even that's a pretty different fundamental thing.
I don't think Reddit had launched yet.
Dig maybe exists, but yes, as you said.
Oh yeah, Reddit was in the first YC batch, which was 05.
So it wasn't really, it was right around the same time.
Okay, so how do you make a feed?
Well, if you are an algorithms developer,
the way you would sort of think of it is,
okay, well, first, I need to
pick a point in time. And from that point in time, and let's call that maybe the last time someone
looked at their feed, I need to store that timestamp. And now I need to go look at every
single profile of someone that you are connected to. So this is, and download or cache all of their recent updates since that time period.
So I need to store that somewhere.
I need a new place to store a copy of all of this information that lives on someone's
profile, or at least pointers to that on everybody's profile.
And I need that to happen for every user.
So now it's N squared.
Every single person on the entire Facebook
needs to have something running in the background
that is looking at every other person on Facebook
since a particular time.
And then that compute and storage
all needs to happen fast enough
such that by the time they want to go check the feed again,
it's happened again. And obviously like now that happens in real time. And I think it was something
like every three hours there was like a new batch. Yeah. It was four times a day when it initially
launched. There was like a four X a day refresh. Okay. So every six hours. Yeah. It was a cron job
because they didn't have enough memory to run it in real time. That's right.
They needed to happen on separate boxes to run this process,
cache the results, and then when you loaded your newsfeed, go fetch them.
So this is like a whole new application using the same data
that the company has to build in order to make newsfeed happen.
And so what you just described is all the technical work just making a feed possible.
On the backend, this doesn't really care about, you know,
somebody who I'm tangentially connected to what they had for lunch today,
but I really care about, like, a photo of Ben at the acquired meetup.
Right. So now you're telling me you want to rank order it by something other than...
Chronology.
Make another pass and figure out what I think is going to be the most interesting to you,
which on its own is an incredibly difficult computer science problem. What is interesting to you? What data should we
use to inform that decision? Right. Totally. Who are your close friends? Who do you care about the
most? You know, what general news do you care about the most? What types of stuff do you care
about? Do we have to put weights on every relationship in this entire complex friend
graph between every single entity and how close they are
and then re-rank that very often,
eventually, yeah.
Yes.
So the team spends the better part of 2006 working on this.
By September, it's ready.
And so by September 5th, 2006,
just in time for the new school year,
they launch it.
And people noticed because they launch it
to everybody right away. And this is a massive paradigm shift. Yeah, it's not opt-in or anything.
This is Facebook changing the game of social. Not opt-in. Everybody gets it right away. They get 30,000 angry emails to support on the first day from users who are really upset about this.
10% of the entire global user base signs up for a group, a Facebook group called Students Against Facebook News Feed.
I'm pretty sure I was part of this group.
The irony here is they had only just launched open groups across school networks days or weeks before. So they enabled the tool of their own vitriol here. And also, guess how people are
finding out about this group? Through News Feed. Yes. This is the great irony of the whole situation.
There's a literal panic in the streets. There are people protesting outside the office. There is
somebody trying to use a crane to get into the third story. Basically, a TV truck is trying to
cover what's happening in the pandemonium. And at the same time, despite everyone telling them,
I hate this thing. It's the worst thing ever, if you look at the analytics, people which has always been public to your whole network.
And I think Facebook, for the first time, kind of stepped in it and realized, oh, even though technically this data has always, you know, we didn't change how public or private it is.
It's just as accessible. change the ease of obtaining that information or whether it feels like you are pushing that
information out versus someone is sort of pulling by going to your profile and viewing.
It went from pull to push.
Yes.
So it's the start of the new school year. We've just come off this sort of tumultuous summer.
Growth had slowed, walked away from the Yahoo deal. There's this revolt in the streets against newsfeed,
which to Mark's mind, along with open reg, which was supposed to come like two days later
of opening up Facebook to anybody, they delayed that because of the newsfeed reaction. But to
Mark's mind, the two of these things are like the big growth levers to reignite growth for Facebook. The board, the management team, everybody's like, all right, we got to roll News Feed back. People hate it. This is PR 101. We apologize. We roll it back. But at a kicker, newsfeed actually significantly hurt Facebook's revenue.
Because where do you think all the page views were coming from and all the refreshes?
Oh, loading a new ad.
Yep.
Loading all the profile views and clicking around.
So page views are actually going to go down in this new paradigm.
Every reason is aligned to roll this back.
So Richie and Chris and Boz, though, are
looking at all the data and they're like, holy crap, engagement is through the roof. Yeah, people
can't get enough of this. People say they hate it, but yeah, it looks like they can't get enough of
it. So Mark decides that he is going to write a post on Facebook about this. And it's titled,
Calm Down, Breathe, We Hear You.
And he announces that they're going to launch a set of controls
for you to control what of your activities get published to newsfeed and what don't.
Which, by the way, sounds like something that Mark would say today.
I think this 2006 era
is like the last time
and then you would have had
like a 17-year break
and now we're sort of
getting that Mark again.
Yes.
You can't imagine
Mark circa 2018
saying,
calm down, breathe,
we hear you.
Yes.
So,
it's kind of a brilliant strategy
of like,
hey, I acknowledge that this was surprising. We didn't handle the rollout right. I'm seeing that you all actually like this in the data. Let me give you some controls so that what you're really worried about, you have some control over. And then let's just see what happens. And within two weeks, it's like magic. Everybody
just gets used to it and that this is now the way Facebook and social media operates
and engagement continues to skyrocket. Yep. But it's funny. I did just pull up. We've been getting
a lot of feedback about News Feed. We think they're great products, but we know many of you
are not immediate fans and have found them overwhelming and cluttered.
I don't think clutter was what people were complaining about.
A little bit of redirection there.
Yeah.
It's funny.
We didn't take away any privacy options.
Your privacy options remain the same.
The privacy rules haven't changed.
None of your information is visible to anyone who couldn't see it before the changes.
Blah, blah, blah.
It's like, it is interesting.
It's true and not relevant.
That's not what people are mad about. People are pretty aware that this is the same information.
Well, and I think to sort of set a theme here that we're going to come back to several times, the definition of what social media is, is actually very fluid. And it changes in the consumer's mind. I'd even say before this, there wasn't social media,
or at least Facebook wasn't social media. Facebook was a social network, but this was the first time
they introduced a media component, a thing you would read. Right. Inspired by a newspaper. Right.
And I think when these paradigm shifts happen, people get upset because their expectations are being violated. So it actually doesn't really matter what the privacy is or isn't. It's the expectations.
Right. I'm glad you planted the seed because this will come back over and over again in their history of people now feel differently and the product needs to change with those societal expectations in order for people to not be upset about it. Yep. Unfortunately for the moment, I think the lesson that Mark and the company took from this
experience was, well, we actually know what's best and the user base will just get used to it
whenever we make a change. It just happened to be that that was true with News Feed,
but that wouldn't always be true. So originally, the two big initiatives, News Feed and Open Registration, were supposed
to basically launch together.
And they chose to do News Feed first because it was going to be, A, a little bit easier
to roll out and be more valuable to the core college audience that was just starting back
for the new semester, the fall semester at school.
So they launched that first.
And then, yeah, the original plan was open registration. Facebook is now open to anybody
in the world. It was going to come two days later on September 7th. They obviously put that on the
shelf for a long time, two and a half weeks. At the end of September, open registration launches. Anyone can sign up for Facebook.
This is another major, major change.
Before, all these networks were siloed.
You had to be part of a verified email address network to join Facebook.
Now anyone can sign up.
This is the beginning of, uh-oh, my mom is on Facebook.
Exactly, exactly, exactly.
Which ultimately would be a problem because that's what created room for Instagram, for Snapchat, etc., etc. But that would actually be down the line. In a weird sort of perverse way, I think because of all the controversy around News Feed, when Open Reg launched, there wasn't the same kind of controversy. People were already desensitized,
or they had just been through newsfeed, and they're like, all right, yeah, whatever. Nobody
even really noticed that much, especially because the product experience didn't change
for the already engaged users. And to the extent that you did feel that privacy had changed,
you're now kind of used to anything I put on Facebook gets broadcasted, so who cares
if more randos come in? It's already getting broadcasted. Yep, yep. And now with News Feed,
there is this mechanism that makes sure like, hey, even as randos from your perspective join
Facebook, you're still seeing the updates of people you care about. Well, I don't think at first when it was this like pure chronology.
Yeah, I guess that's a good point.
As they make it more algorithmic.
But this was still a period in time where your friends were your friends.
I mean, Facebook was only two years old.
And so for the vast majority of users, they joined in the last year.
So they didn't have anybody who wasn't really their friend as a friend.
Now, I just
have to treat Facebook posts as if they're public because the group of friends is aged. But in that
period of time, you could trust if something was getting published to your friends that like,
it's just going to your friends. Right. The age of the network itself was only two years. So your friendships hadn't shifted that much. Well,
Open Reg, despite high schools and workplaces not working well, Open Reg works really well.
Yeah. I mean, Facebook has a brand at this point. It's the best social network. It's the fastest
growing social network. It's the one that all the college kids will always be the cool people
in any society at any time.
That's the age group of trendsetting, and they have conquered that market. High school kids want
to be like college students, and people not in college want to be like college students.
Yep. So over the summer, Facebook was adding like 5,000 to 10,000 users a day.
By late fall, after launching open registration, they're now adding 70,000 users a day. By late fall after launching open registration, they're now adding 70,000
users a day. Wow. By fall of 06. Yeah. Wow. Growth really picks up. So this brings us now to spring
of 07 and the final piece of Mark's original product roadmap. I Bored, aka Platform.
And Platform is this kind of forgotten thing right now.
I mean, like, it's Farmville.
It's Zynga.
It's apps on Facebook.
It's quizzes.
It's quizzes, yes.
That will come back up later.
That'll come back. For a period of about four years, from 2007 to 2011, this is the most important thing in the company.
And this is what everybody believes the core and future of the company is.
Facebook has become a platform.
This is the goal of a technology company.
Become a platform.
Be like Microsoft.
This is now Facebook is like Microsoft.
We are a developer
platform and there was this incredible tension at least it seemed like the tech media wanted
to play up this tension are they an advertising company or a platform company because they're
super different business models with very different incentives and users kind of need to know how to
think about it and it was kind of at the same time Cheryl had just joined the company or was about to join the company.
The next year, in 2008.
So yeah, not yet.
And so they really hadn't gotten serious.
She sort of led them to figure out,
hey, let's survey all the business models,
do some work on each of them
and figure out and commit to being an ads company.
At this point in time,
like they were showing ads,
but the whole leadership team,
at least I'm convinced,
believed we are on the way to becoming
a platform. A hundred percent. So May 24th, 2007, Facebook holds its first developer conference
to launch their developer platform, F8, which again, let's take a step back. This whole idea
is kind of wild. A developer platform on the web. The web
is a developer platform. Facebook is now becoming a platform on top of an open developer platform.
But they have two important things that as an application developer you're interested in.
One, user attention, you know, the same way that Microsoft had user attention with PCs because
they had the install base of Windows,
and two, a whole crap ton of data about each person that you could then build into your application to make it really rich and feel personalized. And it turned out that that was
really attractive to developers. So at F8, they announced that the Facebook user base is now
over 20 million, and it is growing by over 100,000 users a day.
So growth is accelerating.
Wait, it's 20 million total and growing by 100,000 a day?
Yes.
I mean, OpenReg had just launched a couple months before.
So like this thing is really taking off.
Oh my God.
Every 10 days, they're adding another 20th of their user base.
And they're growing by five.
What is that?
It's like 7% every two weeks.
It's like 3.5% a week.
Yeah, pretty good.
Wow.
At a scale of over 20 million already.
Wow.
It is the sixth highest trafficked site in the world.
And they're announcing to all the developers in attendance,
the Facebook API, Facebook Graph is now open to
you. You can build apps and publish and run them natively on Facebook. For users, and part of Mark's
original product roadmap from 2005, this is huge. Until this point in time, Facebook was about
digitizing everything that happened in
your offline life. Your real friends, your real parties you went to, the real photos you took.
There wasn't anything detached from your offline reality to do on Facebook.
Now, all of a sudden, you can play games on Facebook. You can take quizzes on Facebook.
You can use apps on Facebook and you can do them all with your friends.
It's pretty compelling.
I remember playing, was it Scrabulous?
Yeah.
I think I was playing with my sister, with my grandma.
I mean, it is a great way to do things digitally with the people that matter to you.
Yep.
And I think it's also an early foreshadowing of the job that mobile and the smartphone would really do in people's lives, which is, hey, there's actually like a lot of white space where you're just bored during your day.
I mean, Mark's original title of the feature of I'm bored was perfect.
This is the cure for boredom.
It just so happened that it was on a desktop. And so when you were bored at your desk
or bored at your home, mobile then opened that up to like, hey, I'm bored anywhere.
Right. And it gave Facebook, from a business perspective, it sort of gave them another
stakeholder. Hey, developers are someone who can keep people on the platform longer so we can show
them more ads. They might do their own advertising, so they might drive traffic to Facebook. They could help grow the core platform itself. It gives
us sort of more lock-in as people develop for us and as users seek out applications on us.
They're hoping for sort of that Microsoft playbook of platforms get really epic lock-in.
Yep. Oh, and by the way, developers on the platform will probably have their own business models
where they'll make revenue.
And especially if we ultimately introduce our own virtual currency, we can probably
make revenue from their revenue too.
Yeah.
So the internal goal of the company was to get 5,000 developers in the first year who would be making social apps on the platform.
How many did they get?
They got 5,000 in two days.
Developers went freaking nuts.
It was a great keynote.
It was a great keynote, yes. Yes. You know, they went nuts because, yeah, Ben, as you say, like, oh, distribution to a lot of people and then like bringing along your friends and data on them.
Like that's very powerful incentive as a developer to go and go make an app or a game for the platform.
You're building a web app that has an unbelievably rich set of data that you can hook into. to the thing that i was i don't think i could have put into words then but i can now is has a
successful scale durable platform ever been built that wasn't an operating system
like it always felt weird to me in that moment that facebook thought they could be a platform
because i was like well it's a website i mean it's a web app and I have profile and I have all this rich information, but
it's not like running on my device.
Well, Ben, turns out you would have been right.
If only I had the words.
But what do you do with that information?
What was I going to be bearish on the company?
That would have been a super wrong call.
Right.
Well, this is the amazing story that we're telling here of like they keep surviving and thriving
despite not having the operating system.
Yeah.
Listeners, write in if you can think of one,
a successful, scaled, durable platform
where the platform is able to make money
and they're able to make a lot of money for developers,
for people on the platform
that is not an operating system that runs on hardware. Hardware. Either captively controlled hardware like Apple or open
hardware like Android and Microsoft. And this gets into the question of what is a platform? Because
let's say I make a web app that I run on my own website, I do my own marketing, I do my own
monetization, but I let users authenticate Facebook so I can pull some
information out of their profile. It's like it's not really built on the Facebook platform. It's
not like the core APIs that enable my application to run are using Facebook's APIs. I'm using
Facebook's APIs to grab some data. The core API set that allows it to run is the browser.
It's almost like if you think about the intermediation
layers, Facebook was trying to build a platform on top of a browser that was a platform on top
of an operating system that was a platform. And the reason why we aren't all using rich Facebook
apps all the time today and think of it as the default platform, it was just too many layers
of abstraction away from the hardware to win. I think that is totally right. But for the moment, thousands and thousands
of both indie devs and venture-backed companies flock to the platform. But what this does tease
out is Facebook, and now we can talk about this 15 plus years later, has kind of a weak position
for launching a platform since they don't control the OS or the hardware. And so they have to make a little bit more of an appealing sale to a developer. And that includes
big distribution for you, but it also includes a ton of access to data. And I remember being an
early Facebook developer and after user authenticates, looking at that JSON and being
like, okay, so it's their whole profile. Oh, it's their whole friends list. Wow, I get a lot of stuff here.
And Facebook was incentivized to do that
because they almost had to sell harder
than other platforms who controlled hardware
historically would have had to.
Yep, it's a super great point.
Now, also the reality was at the time,
I think developers were getting plenty of value
just out of the distribution.
And that was coming from newsfeed.
If a user starts using your Facebook app,
and then the activity that they're doing on your app
is getting published to the newsfeeds of all their friends.
Oh, yeah.
You could build a whole Zynga on that interaction paradigm.
Oh, yes, you can.
There's this great quote from Josh Ellman in the Stephen Levy book.
Josh says, if you're a developer and you can get someone to bother 10 friends to get one
more user to join, you're very happy because you just got one more user. Facebook, though,
has nine other people who've just gotten bothered. And he doesn't say that and are
quite unhappy about that.
And that's the tradeoff they have to weigh. That's sort of their, in the type of platform they are trying to build, they have set up that incentive set and they need
to figure out what to do with it. Yep. So for a year or two, that is the state of play,
Facebook, brilliantly for them, eventually pulls back on organic newsfeed distribution for apps.
Says, hey, like, we got to stop this. We got to take care of the
problem. You don't need to know every time there's a new mafia war move by so-and-so showing up in
your newsfeed. And that does effectively kill a large percentage of developers and apps on the
platform. Yep. But it's the right long-term move. That was the right thing to do for Facebook with
a 20-year view. Absolutely. And it doesn't kill the platform, though.
It actually makes it even more valuable to Facebook.
Because for the developers and apps who have gotten to scale,
they kind of look at this and they say,
okay, my organic distribution just got kneecapped,
but Facebook is still this pretty powerful platform. What if I
just buy ads? How well would that work? Can I generate positive ROI if I buy ads to effectively
accomplish the same thing natively on the platform and drive usage back to my app?
Turns out that there was a very profitable arbitrage there
still for many years to come. And for Facebook, they're like, well, hell yeah. Okay. We're
monetizing the platform through user engagement and ads that we're showing on the right rail
while people are using Facebook apps. We are also monetizing through currency and commerce that is happening in the apps where we're taking a cut of that through payments.
Now we're going to monetize platform in a third way, which is the biggest scale developers and app distributors on the platform are going to use our native advertising as their primary form of distribution. I mean,
you can see why for a couple of years here, Facebook is like, well, this is it. We've won.
You know, we are a platform. This is it. Yep. And then mobile comes along.
Oh, mobile. That is quite the chapter in the Facebook story. But before we do that,
now is a great time to tell you about one of our favorite companies, the climate-aligned
AI infrastructure company, Crusoe. Yes, Crusoe is a vertically integrated cloud platform built
specifically for AI workloads that was recently named the gold standard of AI cloud providers by Dylan Patel
over at Semi Analysis. And something that's new and really cool since we started working with
Crusoe last year, they've opened up the raw metal in their data centers to customers. So let's say
you're a large enterprise who wants to run your own infrastructure and not use a cloud layer.
You could actually now do that with Crusoe directly
as a data center customer, which several of the largest companies in the world are now doing.
Yep. They've totally reimagined traditional data center architecture to support the
huge power, cooling, and compute density needs of AI.
Yep. That's important because power demand in GPUs is increasing dramatically,
which means the traditional data center design and engineering
of the hyperscalers is no longer optimal. So Crusoe's infrastructure, built from the ground
up for GPUs with elements like high-density racks, direct liquid-to-chip cooling, that enables them
to support the most demanding AI workloads that traditional data centers just can't handle.
And at the same time, as GPU cluster sizes continue to increase,
there's an ever-increasing demand for energy. Crusoe has 15 gigawatts in its development pipeline,
which is an astronomical amount of power. Their Abilene, Texas facility alone has over 1.2
gigawatts planned, which will make it one of the largest clusters in the world. Yep, and it's also
not just about the amount of capacity in the pipeline,
it's about how fast it can come online.
Crusoe's team has decades of experience constructing and operating data centers,
which enables them to bring these new data centers online super fast.
As many of you already know,
Crusoe sources the energy for these data centers
in the most efficient and climate-aligned way in the entire industry,
through clean, low-cost, and abundant energy that otherwise goes to waste. For example, in oil fields where
natural gas is flared, in congested parts of the grid where renewable power is curtailed,
or other areas where energy is stranded. Which, actually accomplishing that is a crazy hard thing.
Crusoe's energy-first approach means they can build data centers in some of the
most challenging locations on Earth, bringing computing to the energy rather than the other
way around. Yep. The net of all of this is that Crusoe can provide nuclear levels of power for
far less cost than other providers and with low, or in some cases actually negative, emissions.
And that's super important because the biggest bottleneck to AI progress
is actually energy.
It's not compute.
Yep.
So anyway, they're just a great company.
We're super proud to work with them and to be investors.
So to learn more about Crusoe,
you can go to crusoe.ai slash acquired.
That's C-R-U-S-O-E dot AI slash acquired,
or click the link in the show notes
and just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
Thanks, Crusoe.
All right, so David, we're here in the era of and just tell them that Ben and David sent you. Thanks, Crusoe.
All right, so David, we're here in the era of mobile, right?
This is January 2007.
Steve Jobs just announced the iPhone.
The whole world changed, right?
Well, actually, ironically, no.
Or at least not for quite a while.
Yes, January 2007, Steve Jobs announces the iPhone.
People forget, though,
it took five years for mobile and smartphone adoption to really ramp up and actually change the world. There was no SDK in that first iPhone and iOS. That didn't come until 2008.
It was $700. Android was a BlackBerry clone at the time, not an iPhone clone.
The Droid Does campaign wouldn't be another year or two.
Yep. Yeah, I think two years. I think that was 2009, if I remember right.
Yeah.
So yeah, I mean, hell, Facebook platform didn't even launch until May 2007. So after
the iPhone announcement.
Yep.
So for the moment, platform is rocking and rolling. Like we were just talking about,
Facebook is becoming the next Microsoft, which brings us to the second Microsoft partnership in October of 2007. So just five months after F8 and platform launch, Facebook now has like all of the leverage. Dan Rose has some great stories on Twitter about how this negotiation goes down. Oh yeah, you spent time with Dan, didn't you, prepping for this? Yep, and I chatted with Dan about this. This is great. So Microsoft, perhaps obvious now in retrospect
to everybody, really just wants to buy the company. But Mark's, of course, not going to do
that after the whole Yahoo experience, etc. Microsoft is also happy, though, to just keep
the partnership going and expand it. Because one, it is really helping them spin up their online services division and
get really good at online ad sales and ad serving. And two, they know they made a huge error in
missing search and letting Google get big. And social sure seems like it's going to be the next
search-sized platform. So they're happy to just be in bed with Facebook in a way that they never
will be with Google. As long as they can keep it going.
I mean, for them, I think the thing that shocked them about Google is,
oh my god, the business model of the web is advertising.
Search and browsers and everything are monetized by advertising,
and that's completely orthogonal to our traditional license-based business model.
Social sure looks like where all the page views are going and is
going to monetize exactly the same way as search. So actually the thing that's important to them
is locking in those page views. To the extent that they can participate in this market,
it kind of has to be either we own you or we are the long-term ad provider,
which they didn't end up being. Or we're a big equity holder.
Yep.
So enter this second partnership negotiation.
October 2007, Microsoft comes down to Palo Alto.
Facebook tells them that, hey, Google is actually really interested in taking this partnership over.
Larry and Sergey have been banging down the door, and we've been trying to hold them off,
but they're coming to meet with us tomorrow to talk about switching our Facebook ad serving partnership over to Google.
And this has been great.
We love working with y'all.
You are our preference, our preferred partner,
and we want to keep it going with you.
But we need to get the deal done tonight.
So they lock themselves all in a conference room.
They start negotiating.
It's getting late.
10 o'clock goes by, 11 o'clock.
The Microsoft team, by Facebook standards, is all old guys.
They're getting tired.
And then old guys, like 40.
It's so old.
And then at midnight, this is amazing. You can't make this up.
Facebook probably planned this. All of a sudden, this really loud, like, house music starts
blaring, like, with, like, heavy bass in the office. And the office is hopping. Like,
everybody's there. The whole company's there. It's midnight. The Microsoft guy's like, what's going on? And the Facebook
side's like, oh yeah, we have a hackathon scheduled tonight. And actually, Javier Olivan
had just started at Facebook. Who's now COO. Who is now the COO of Meta, had just started at
Facebook as an engineer. And he had organized this hackathon
to begin work on internationalizing the site. So tonight is the beginning of internationalization,
which is a critical, critical part of Facebook's next chapter of growth.
And it is beginning at the same time that this Microsoft partnership is happening in
a conference room.
And didn't this Microsoft deal end up being about international?
Yes.
Yes, it did.
So they keep going.
At one point during the night, one of the Microsoft guys, according to Dan, looks at him and says, wow, this is awesome.
This is just like the old days of Microsoft.
So they finish the negotiation at 6 a.m. They announced
the new partnership that very same day, as promised with the threat of Google. Microsoft
becomes the worldwide exclusive third-party advertising network for all display ads on
Facebook. So it was domestic in the U.S. before. Now it's international too and domestic everywhere around the world. Facebook, of course, can still also sell their
own inventory themselves. But anything that they don't want to sell themselves or that is excess
inventory, Microsoft gets exclusive access to be the only ad network where you can access it. And the big kicker, Microsoft is going to invest $240 million in Facebook at a $15
billion valuation. This is like 13 or 14 months after the failed Yahoo deal for $1 billion.
That is the thing that no one talks about here. I'm so glad you brought this up because before
they started this negotiation, the attempt was to buy Facebook. The highest offer floated. We talked about this in the
Microsoft episode. It was a complicated set of deal terms that basically netted out to a $24
billion offer. And that was less than two years after the $1 billion offer that everyone talks
about with Yahoo. Oh, remember the time where Mark Zuckerberg turned down a billion dollars?
Less than two years later, he turned down $24 billion.
And they were really good for the money.
It's Microsoft.
But turned it around into an investment at $15 billion.
Yeah, it's crazy.
The great thing is, like all great partnerships, everyone makes out wonderfully here.
Except maybe the venture capitalists in Silicon Valley,
because this just breaks everyone's brain.
It was the high watermark for Facebook's valuation for a while,
because the great financial crisis would happen after this,
valuations would all reset,
and then Facebook's next deal would get done,
I think with Yuri Milner at $10 billion?
$10 billion valuation with Yuri, yep.
And Yuri would actually also buy common stock
through a secondary tender offer in that. So his dollar cost average would get down to more like
six. So he got a screaming deal. But for the moment, there are no comps to this ever. Dotcom
bubble, you name it, never has been a comp like this for an investment in a private technology startup.
The closest comp that I can even sort of think of was Google's market cap at IPO was $23 billion.
So higher, but not that much higher.
And Google at IPO was a $2 billion revenue run rate, spitting off hundreds of millions of dollars in free cash flow annually. Facebook at this point in time is basically breakeven and doing $150 million in revenue,
most of which is Microsoft itself. All that said, Microsoft, this is a home freaking run.
Like we've been saying all along, helps them spin up Bing, doing all the ad serving for this,
getting into like real online services.
And then B, you know,
Microsoft is not a hedge fund
as we talked about on that episode,
but that $240 million investment,
by the time they start selling it down
years after Facebook is public,
ends up being worth $8 billion.
Wow.
And then maybe the most important benefit to Microsoft out of all of this
is like Microsoft and Facebook have always had a good relationship, unlike Microsoft has with
Google and Apple. I remember Facebook events. Like when you look at the page, it was a Bing map,
not a Google map that always like felt emblematic of the partnership to me.
Yeah. Every single place it could be a Microsoft product.
It was.
Yes.
And it wasn't a Google product.
Yep.
Okay.
So interestingly,
here we are 2007,
Facebook is still saying we don't need to be in control of the core revenue
creator for us.
Like we think platform is the future.
Microsoft,
you're our preferred partner to handle making the money. Yes. And I
think, you know, there's two things here. Yes, I think that is true specifically at this moment in
time. But this is where, you know, again, Mark is just master strategist, you know, kind of like
calling it all the way back to civilization and the 4x strategy game. He's got multiple bets he's
placing on the chessboard one as you said
is like platform like hey platform is rocking and rolling we think we're building the next great
technology company and the next great business model just on platform also yeah we're a social
media company that involves a lot of page views and engagement and like the right way to monetize that is advertising. So yes, we've just continued this big Microsoft partnership, but we have the
right to sell our own inventory and we should probably start building that muscle too. The
other thing that's happening here is Mark still kind of thought ads were gross at this point in
history. So the things he cared about were product and engineering
and design, and he kind of wanted to outsource everything else, or at least have someone else
at the company think about it. And having Microsoft take care of the ads was, I think,
in his mind, kind of a win-win. That way, the commodity stuff can happen elsewhere,
and I can focus on the thing that really matters. And the company really did not have the insight yet. Oh, we can do ads different and better than anyone has ever done them before.
Well, I'm smiling as you're saying that because in practice for this moment, yeah, in reality,
they were trying to build their own native Facebook advertising unit, so to speak. It was
just Beacon. Yeah. Beacon is one of the most epic failures in Facebook's whole history. Yeah. Okay.
So Beacon. Well, first off, you were totally right. And I think you were foreshadowing Sheryl
Sandberg there of like, Mark wants somebody within the company to just, you know, run and manage this thing and build it. Great. World class. Before Sheryl, do you know which Facebook executive led Beacon?
I do not.
Chamath Palihapitiya.
No way. He always talks about the growth team. I never knew he was in charge of
Beacon first. This was Chamath's big thing before growth. And actually the epic failure here of
Beacon leads directly to growth as we shall see in a sec. Now, what was Beacon? So like you said,
Mark is kind of allergic to traditional advertising, but he's like, well, we have this incredible social activity happening on Facebook and we know through newsfeed that people engage with and they love it.
What if there were a way for a native ad baked into the very fabric of the product itself that brands could sort of control and monetize. Well, if we gave brands a
way to essentially boost how people are already engaging with them, that might be the way to do
this. And what this ends up being in practice is brands publishing your friend's e-commerce activity into your newsfeed. Now,
to be fair to Mark and Chamath and the company, we didn't know yet what the right advertising unit
on Facebook was going to be. And this is probably as good an idea as any, because like the core
thing that you do on Facebook is you engage with your
friends and you engage with their stories on newsfeed. There's kind of no evidence really
that people would want to do anything else but that. And so you're trying to kind of think of
like how do we shoehorn advertising and brands into this? I actually, I don't buy it at all.
The obvious thing is show an image that people can click on and take them to a website. It's display ads. And like, I don't understand why they needed to try to way overthink it and say our ad format has to be something that no one's ever thought of before. Like just offer advertisers to do the thing that they know how to buy.
Well, I was trying to like think of how to be the most charitable possible to the company and how they can come up with it.
But yeah, I have next in my notes here.
To be clear, this was a truly, truly terrible head up your rear end idea.
These are actually two different things, I think. There was Beacon, which was JavaScript that an advertiser could embed on their website,
on an e-commerce provider's website, that would do exactly what you're talking about,
publish into the newsfeed purchases that people were making.
And this was at the point where you wanted to publish all sorts of interesting different
things on social media.
I don't think we knew for sure that purchases wasn't going to be one of them.
Like people still keep their Venmo history public.
You don't know what people are going to do.
The second thing that I think is in your description there a little bit is the idea of social ads.
Yep.
That brands could take interactions that happen on pages and boost them, but they couldn't just take out a regular old ad.
Yep.
So it was this weird thing where, like,
you could only advertise as a brand
to people where someone in their network
had interacted with your brand page.
Yep.
Pretty convoluted.
I get that it's, like, this super natively social thing,
but again, it did feel
like they started in this place where like, let's get way too clever for our own good first and then
work backward to the most basic ad unit. Yep. Totally agree. That said, like, as soon as it's
live, it becomes clear, like one, nobody wants this, either of these things. Yep. Users don't
want it. Users are confused why they're seeing
i mean certainly there's instant blowback against their publishing my purchases someone i think
had a engagement spoiled by a diamond ring getting broadcast yes oh yeah i was gonna say i mean this
is number two like the privacy implications here actually are like horrific yes like spoiling
engagements like that's the wholesome horrific
privacy things like you can imagine the non-wholesome publishing stuff that you're buying
versions of this yep and then of course advertisers are confused and people don't really understand
what's an ad what's not an ad they just burned credibility everywhere by launching both of these
things yep totally and mark and the company is coming
off the newsfeed experience where they're like, yeah, if we just give it enough time, users will
get used to it. So they let it run for a couple of weeks. They run the newsfeed playbook of like,
yeah, yeah, yeah, we hear you, you know, but you'll get used to it. Here's some more controls.
Oh, the social ads was years and years, but the purchases, you're right. That was just, I think a couple of weeks. Yeah. For beacon. Ultimately after a few weeks, they do
acquiesce and they say like, okay, we will turn beacon off. We'll make it opt in as opposed to
opt out. And you can have a way to like completely turn off all beacon tracking permanently from your
profile. A lot of people do that. Beacon activity
basically drops to zero. And then yeah, two years later, it's like completely killed off.
And this sets the stage for Cheryl joining the company. Because I think, you know, Mark's takeaway
from this is like, okay, maybe I don't understand, you know, advertising as well as I thought I did.
Like I thought I didn't like
it, but I thought I could be clever and engineer this new thing. And like, actually, let's bring
in somebody who like, really, really does understand this. And Cheryl was the perfect
person coming from Google. Cheryl joined Google in 2001, right as they were figuring out AdWords.
I mean, that's like three years after the company was founded. Totally. Well, and the company didn't figure out AdWords for a couple of years. So it
was like, that was like the key moment. And then Cheryl built and ran the whole self-serve business
at Google, which was the most important and the most technology-enabled part of what they were
doing. She had built the greatest digital advertising system in the world and mark was like oh i'm trying to
build the greatest digital advertising system in the world who could i ever get to do that with me
and wouldn't it be great if that person was also a good like manager and leader who could teach me
how to manage and lead yes yes and i think that really is the quote-unquote deal they make and they say and Cheryl agrees too, it's. And when she comes on board,
like you referenced this earlier, Ben, there's basically no ad targeting that's happening
natively on Facebook. Like there probably is targeting that's happening through the third
party Microsoft advertising network, but none of that is like technology that Facebook's building
or value that's accruing to Facebook. And so the first thing Mark and Cheryl did when she joined was like,
okay, Beacon was such a disaster. We've got this great partnership with Microsoft. Like,
let's just do a full exploration. Should we be in the ads business at all?
Yeah, she definitely famously kind of led the exploration of what business are we actually in here.
Yep.
And, you know, ultimately they decide, yes, we are in a media business.
Thus, we should be in the advertising business.
And we should do it right and we should make it work.
And, like, ultimately that is going to be building a really, really, really great targeting engine.
Which is the thing that Facebook is like uniquely capable of doing.
Yep.
So though, back to here where we are in 2008, two, you know, seemingly unrelated but about to get very related things are going on.
One, after the beacon fiasco when Cheryl joined, Chamath kind of needs a new job at the company. And, you know, like total
credit to Mark, to Cheryl, to Facebook as a company. I think at most places, like Chamath
would have been fired immediately for what happened with Beacon. But the culture at Facebook
is like, nope, we move fast, we break things. And like, we're always on offense and this didn't work
and let's find the right thing for you to do. And thank
goodness, because that brings us to number two, right around this time, once again, user growth
slows at Facebook. Yeah. So it's funny that I don't feel like in the public eye, we really knew
these things, but as you kind of dig into the company history, you're like, oh, there are these
moments in time where growth really did stall out. And Chamath has said on stage since then, oh, I
totally thought that growth was done. And there's a few things to note about the growth team.
One is it was effectively the first growth team. Yes. I think it was the first growth team.
Yeah. Everyone who wants to get into growth now, I don't think really fully grasps
that is a brand new discipline invented in 2008. And the way they sort of defined it at Facebook
was there's marketing, there's product, but marketing and product both touch customers
in different ways. And so the left hand needs to talk to the right hand. So for example,
you should not have a marketing team that is sending out emails through an email marketing system and a product team that is
sending out notifications to users through the product with no notion of how they're speaking
to each other. You should, A, unify those efforts through one team, and B, that team should live
within product, or at least that team should be tightly coupled to product with the general
belief or reason for being that your product is the best lever to grow. No amount of marketing
you could ever throw at something that is not integrated into your product will be as effective
as your product doing a good job with features, hitting the right users with the right message
and the right value at the right time in a native way to the core feature set of the product.
And so you've got Shamath, you've got Alex Schultz, you've got Naomi Gleit and Javier
Olivan. And so you've got this core early team, it's four people people and then it expands to kind of six or seven folks that
are formed really on this agreement between chamath and mark of we are going to have this
dedicated growth team and our mission is going to be to grow facebook using facebook itself
not through extrinsic measures yep and this was like an incredible insight and was so perfect for Facebook because like,
I think this growth insight of growth through product can apply to any company,
but it especially applies to a virally growing social network like Facebook.
Yes.
There's these interesting things that make it tick.
The first of which is this has to be the most data-obsessed team in the company.
Every team should be data-obsessed, blah, blah, blah.
But the growth team is really the one who sort of discovers, oh, here are the obvious
places where users are deriving value.
Here are the obvious places where users are getting confused.
Here are the obvious opportunities to find new users.
Here are the obvious opportunities to reduce friction.
Analytics is the answer for
that. And I think that there's a lot of really interesting stories, especially around
internationalization of the growth team and partnering with other product teams around the
company to say, what is an engineering and product approach to something that traditionally has been done other ways. Like the way most people would translate their product is by hiring translation servicing firms or by hiring a dedicated person to go through string by string and edit. just, you know, when we're launching in Spain, surface different words to Spanish speakers and
say, okay, is this the right word for Spanish or not? Hey, can you translate this and crowdsource
it and double check it with everyone? And that way you can not just translate five or 10 of the
top languages in the world. You can be in every language all the time up to date using Facebook
itself. Cause Oh, by the way, when you translate the product,
way more people can use it. And so translation itself, internationalization is a growth lever,
and we have product ways to do the translation with our users.
Yep. And that's what actually started even before the official growth team with Javi in that first
hackathon. But that was the seed of this idea of like, oh, actually, the way to get past this growth wall, as people refer to it in these new markets, they're so much more bought
in and feel a sense of ownership over it versus like, oh, I'm just airdropping this translated
American product onto your country here. So it's not just that it's a better translation.
It's that you're actually seeding those first power users who are going to be deeply engaged and feel ownership over the product.
And then two, the nuance in the local markets that might even be in the same language.
I mean, Spanish is the perfect example.
Spanish is spoken in so many places around the world, but the local nuances and needs in Spain are like super different than Mexico or Argentina or
Latin America, et cetera. That's exactly right. And I think my point with all of this is a growth
is a pretty new discipline in our industry to growth is not marketing. It's very tempting.
You see, especially with incumbents like big fortune 500 companies who have someone whose
title is growth. And then you ask them what they do and you're like oh no that's not growth that's marketing you don't actually modify the
product at all so that's a different thing and it's important to realize like not only did facebook
kind of invent the discipline they are perhaps still the best at it they really eat sleep and
breathe the idea that growth comes from product yep it was It was that core initial team, all of them, of which
Javi. Javi's now the COO. Alex. Alex is now the CMO of Meta. Naomi. Naomi is now Meta's longest
tenured employee besides Mark and runs a ton of stuff at the company. And Chamath, who deserves
so much credit for starting the team, pulling it together, protecting it, advocating for it within
the rest of product in the way
that only Chamath can. Man, it really is crazy, the Facebook diaspora. We're going to keep
seeing this as we go along. There's other names where people will be like,
whoa, I didn't realize they were at Facebook. But many of the names that have come up so far,
yeah, the diaspora is pretty talented. Yeah. So there were a million things that Growth did
over the years within the Blue app and then ultimately within all the apps at Facebook.
Growth today is a core center of excellence discipline that spreads across all the products at the company at Meta.
But the other big thing in the early days besides internationalization is people you may know, which crazy, like the carousel of people you may know on Facebook is still a core part of the blue app to this day. Dude, I just got lost in it. Did you know that that's what I was looking at right now?
No, I was sanity checking. I was like, Oh, is that person part of the original growth team?
And I opened Facebook. The newsfeed distracted me. I scrolled down. There were stories at the top.
I scrolled down one post below that first post was an ad below that is people you may know. And I am
like three panels over in people you may know and i am like three
panels over in people you may know because i was like oh my gosh i'm not friends with them
we're doing a podcast together live and i just had that experience totally people you may know
become such an important lever and
i love it i love it. I love it.
Okay.
So people you may know become such an important lever.
Yes.
For a whole bunch of reasons.
The growth team discovers you were talking about analytics and data and really understanding
what's happening.
The key thing that they discover for new years, there's joining Facebook about whether they
become an engaged, active, you know, evangelizing
user or not is how many friends they get in the first, like, I think it's 24 hours or 48 hours
or like short period that they're joining the network. And there's like a certain number of
active friends that you need. Oh, this is funny, by the way, I watched two different talks by
people on the early growth team, and one of them cited
10 friends in 14 days.
The other cited seven friends in 10 days of, you know, how do you create the magic moment?
Alex Schultz, who's now the CMO, gives this great talk, gosh, a decade ago at startup
school with Sam Altman.
And he makes the point, look, it's kind of a linear thing.
Yes, you want as many friends as possible in the least amount of time.
It's not like, oh, magically at 10 friends in 14 days, it's like super different
than nine friends in 14 days. But you just set a threshold somewhere and you set the threshold and
then you're like, okay, if we can deliver this delightful experience where now people have a
rich newsfeed and the people they care the most about in the world to interact with, they're
going to retain. Yep, totally. The other thing is it marries perfectly with all of the investment that is going into the algorithmization
of newsfeed because choosing who to show you in that carousel of people you may know is like
all the difference in the world, you know, show you seven randos and like, you're going to churn,
show you your seven best friends and you're going to friend them all and become an engaged user.
I'm so excited for, I guarantee you, at least one of the people that I just friended
is going to be listening to this podcast and realize what just happened because I haven't
friended anyone on Facebook in years. And I just sent out like three or four.
They just re-engaged you as a user.
I love it. Yes. They just have to new growth tactic, have people do podcasts about the company. And then I think people caught on to that one a while ago. Yes. But yeah, like that's a super
hard data problem of like cold new user coming into the network. How are you going to accurately predict who their best
friends are who are already on Facebook? Well, if you're on the web and this is the late 2000s,
you ask them to authenticate their web-based mail service of choice and then find out who
they've been emailing and then use that to figure out who their friends are.
Magic. Magic. You know, there's other less nefarious ways,
you know, see who has sent them links in the past,
who are also logged in Facebook users.
There's all sorts of stuff you can do, but yes.
So by the end of 2008, thanks to the growth team,
growth is like really going again.
They go from like just barely getting to 100 million users in August of 2008
to almost 150 million by the end of the year. So 50% growth in the last four months of the year.
And then 2009 is just like lights out. They grow 250% in 2009 to 350 million users globally.
Internationalization is like really firing on all cylinders here.
That's right.
They went from 150 million users to 350 million.
No, in like one year.
Isn't that wild?
Crazy.
The other core piece of the stat whenever you're looking at growth is to look at engagement.
Engagement in 2008 was also in the doldrums.
50% of monthly
actives were daily actives. And from what I can tell, that basically was just an artifact of,
as the company got bigger, every marginal user they added was sort of less engaged than the
early core users. When they went from colleges to high schools to open registration, it just was
going to have slightly less product market fit.
But growth team is focused not just on growing new users, actually an even better lever. Every
long-term goal is retaining your existing users and the best lever for retention is engagement.
And so that was where a huge amount of their energy went. So this is really interesting. 50%
of monthly actives were daily actives in 08. Since then, they have basically improved that
metric every year. There's been a little bit of variance, but it is now almost 70% today.
Been a maniacal focus on how do we make as many monthly actives, daily actives as possible
year over year over year over year. That's wild. And that figure is just in the blue app in Facebook?
That is just in the blue app.
Yep, exactly.
Wow.
Well, on the engagement front in 2009, the big thing that happens there is...
Like button.
You know where I'm going with this.
Like button.
Yep.
And I know you know who invented the like button.
Because it wasn't Facebook.
I don't know.
Friend feed.
Oh, no way.
Brett Taylor and Paul Bucke.
Invented the like button.
How did that work?
Because friend feed would just federate stories
from other social networks into one aggregated feed.
Yep.
I don't recall exactly.
Did it only store that information on friend feed
and not propagate it back? I suspect that's probably it. Like they probably felt like they
needed some sort of like, hey, native mechanic on friend feed. Man, friend feed was so awesome.
It's funny in this era where I'm now checking multiple feeds every day, Twitter, threads,
Instagram, all the messaging services to catch
up on my messages, occasionally the Blue app. I kind of need Friend Feed again. That was like
the most amazing product. I know, I know. The world is so balkanized. It'll never happen.
But yeah, I mean, talk about another amazing part of the Facebook diaspora.
Facebook would later acquire Friend Feed. Brett Taylor would become CTO
when Adam D'Angelo left to go start Quora.
And then when Facebook acquired FriendFeed,
Brett became CTO.
And then famously,
Brett becomes the co-president of Salesforce
by way of acquisition.
And then eventually board chair at Twitter
when the whole X thing was going on.
And now he's on the board at OpenAI. Yep, board chair, I when the whole X thing was going on.
And now he's on the board at OpenAI.
Yep, board chair, I think, at OpenAI.
Crazy.
And he's got a new startup of his own. So I'm telling you, the talent that moved through that place.
Totally.
Well, and Paul Buchheit, the other FriendFeed founder.
Invented Gmail.
Created Gmail within Google.
Yeah.
So he ended up at Facebook for a while then after.
I forgot about Paul, too.
It's unbelievable. Yeah, he must not have stayed very long, if at all. Yeah. Because he went to at Facebook for a while then after, I forgot about Paul too. That's unbelievable. Yeah. He must not have stayed very long if at all. Yeah. Because he went to YC,
I think after that. Okay. So FriendFeed invents the like button. Facebook, I believe was going
to call it the awesome button. And then at some point right before launching, I think Mark
personally made the call. It's just too weird.
Let's go with like. Yes. The story as I understand it is that Facebook had been considering something
like this for a long time. I mean, the benefits are obvious, right? Like if you have a lightweight
way to engage and feed more data about vote, positive votes on posts into the newsfeed algorithm.
That's going to really turbocharge things.
On the flip side, the concern was that it would actually decrease meaningful engagement.
There'd be less comments.
Exactly. And so ultimately, they started running some tests with small user groups and
specific geographies, and they found that it actually often boosted engagement of comments. Fascinating. That's why you test things. You never know. Exactly. So yes, they
launched the like button and that becomes huge for overall engagement, but also more importantly,
for just improving the algorithm, which is now starting to kick in in News Feed and making sure
you're seeing stories that you really care about.
And the like button then also got used for pages.
It became this sort of form of capital among brands of how many Facebook likes does your company have,
which for a while actually meant you could organically get messages out to them.
Every time you posted, it was as if a company was a person,
and you just show up in the feed before Facebook ultimately was like, eh, those are advertisements. You're
going to pay us for those. Yes. You're exactly on the right track. Let's flip back now to Cheryl
and building the advertising business. Right around this same time, we've decided like, okay,
yes, we're going to be in the advertising business. And to do that right,
to do that natively, to do that in a way that generates defensible, sustainable value for
Facebook, that means targeting. And the like button is the perfect gift to this. Because all
of a sudden, there's this really lightweight way to engage with things to signal your preferences
about what you like.
Yep. And the like button ended up being the perfect Trojan horse to move Facebook platform off of Facebook. So there was a reason for third-party websites to embed Facebook's JavaScript
in their pages. Because of course you'd want to be able to like an article
or like a brand all up on their website. How many Facebook likes do you have? If that's what
matters, we want people clicking like on our website too, not just over on Facebook. And so
suddenly now every company on earth has some Facebook and has a reason to embed some Facebook
JavaScript right there on their page, which my goodness, that's going to serve as a great signal back to the advertising algorithm where we can drop cookies
and we can see who is moving around the web in what ways. So it's perfect for platform,
but it's also perfect for feeding data into their advertising system now that they have something
that brands and third-party websites are incentivized to drop right on their page. in a good way. So platform still rocking and rolling. Microsoft display ad partnership
still growing strong as growth is happening. Now under Sheryl, you finally got real native,
highly targeted ads coming online in Facebook. In 2008, the company had done 280 million in revenue
up from 153 the year before in 2007. 2009, they do almost 800 million in revenue.
He's crushing it. 2010, an even 2 billion in revenue.
They're now very, very cash flow positive.
Yes. Reaching the scale that Google was at their IPO. 2010, they hit 600 million users. 2011, 850 million users. 2011, revenue grows almost another 100%, 3.7 billion. It's like, all right, time to start thinking about taking this company public. It's also time to start thinking about what is our biggest existential threat. It's so funny that we're talking about, and the existential threats are over. We've won.
We have platform going well. We have this advertising business going well. We're getting
data from the open web because we have like buttons everywhere. Everything is going our way.
We finally have it dialed. And none of that matters
in a mobile world. As people shift from spending time on the web to other apps, that open web data
used as signal goes away. All of your ability to take payments. By the way, Facebook had launched
payments. At some point, they started requiring apps to use their virtual currency.
Facebook credits.
Facebook credits, that's right. All of these amazing pillars that they've built
were for the open web and created the most incredible business known to man,
and mobile is a completely different thing.
Yep. That seed from five years ago that has been growing of mobile, is finally going to turn into a big,
big, big problem for the company. All right, so let's just get into it. I thought it would be fun.
I listed out all of the ways that I could think of that mobile was a big problem for Facebook.
One, and I think this is kind of like the Uber problem that everything else is downstream of. iOS and Android are closed,
proprietary ecosystems,
not controlled by Facebook.
Yeah, you can argue Android is open source and all that,
but for all intents and purposes,
Google controls it and they control the Play Store.
Put another way,
the web is the only open platform in history.
Yes.
And Facebook was born on the web is the only open platform in history. And Facebook was born on the web.
I mean, how crazy is it that they could build Facebook
on entirely free technologies at the beginning
and then get distribution just by people sharing URLs around?
Browsers are interchangeable.
Operating systems are interchangeable.
It works on any device that anyone wants.
Yeah, if you live on the web,
you have infinite degrees of freedom and flexibility to control your own destiny.
Yeah. And Facebook had kind of built this, you know, walled garden on the web and it was pretty
nice. Yep. And walled gardens are great as long as the foundation under you can't shift.
Yes. Build your walled garden directly on the earth, not on someone else's foundation.
But, okay, specifically, why is iOS and Android being closed proprietary ecosystems such a problem?
That means my number two reason, platform, which is, you know, 50% or more of the value of Facebook in their minds at this point in time, no longer works at all. Like full stop, flip a switch, does not work,
will never work at all ever again on these platforms.
And why is that?
The whole premise of platform
is you can run apps inside of Facebook.
On mobile, you will never be able to run an app
inside another app.
Just not gonna happen.
Apple's never gonna let it happen and app. Just not going to happen. Apple's
never going to let it happen, and Google's never going to let it happen. And that's primarily
because of that thing around you can't launch an alternative app store. Right, yeah. I mean,
it's the core part of their business model are the app stores. Not to mention, if you are paying for
things on their phone, you have to use their payment system. So Facebook credits ain't going
to work because you can't charge 30% on top of 30%.
Yeah.
And there's technical aspects to this too, right?
Like code runs in native code on these devices
as opposed to open HTML on the web.
Right.
You get told what your development environment is.
This is the language.
These are the frameworks.
These are the APIs you're allowed to call.
Yep.
So, okay.
Greater than 50% of, you know, the revenue and the sort of like...
Theoretical future value.
Inherent theoretical value and strategy of the business.
Kneecapped.
It gets worse.
Facebook and Mark and Cheryl have been hard at work building the other core pillar of
the business, this new, super sexy, targeted ads business. Well, guess what? All
of the ads that are running on Facebook at this point in time are running on the right-hand column
on the website. There is no right-hand column on a mobile app. There's only room for a feed,
which to this point in time has never had advertising in it. And in fact, there's like a cultural allergy to the idea of polluting the beautiful,
pristine, organic news feed with an ad. It'll require a big cultural change.
This is why you can't make up this stuff in these stories that we tell. Facebook has,
I kid you not, no way to make money at all on mobile. Here is an actual honest to God statement
that is in Facebook's S1 that they filed before the IPO in 2012. I am reading as a quote,
we had more than 425 million monthly active users who used Facebook mobile products in December 2011.
We anticipate that the rate of
growth in mobile users will continue to exceed the growth rate of our overall MAUs for the foreseeable
future, and our users could decide to increasingly access our products primarily through mobile
devices. Which, let's be clear, comparing those growth rates, another way to simplify that and
say it is, our user base is shifting to mobile from desktop. Another way to simplify that and say it is our user base is shifting to mobile from desktop. Another way
to simplify that is our desktop business is going to zero. Yes. Now, the kicker. This is a statement
in the S1. We do not currently directly generate any meaningful revenue from the use of Facebook
mobile products, and our ability to do so successfully is unproven. Accordingly...
Buy our stock. Yeah. Accordingly, Buy our stock.
Yeah.
Accordingly,
if users continue
to increasingly access
Facebook mobile products
as a substitute for access
through personal computers,
and if we are unable
to successfully implement
monetization strategies
for our mobile users,
our revenue and financial results
may be negatively impacted.
Yeah.
No kidding.
Oh, my God.
I'm still not done.
That's only reason number three. Okay, reason number four.
Another benefit of the open web is that you can push code whenever you want.
You can make changes rapidly.
You can move fast.
You can break things, and then you can fix them rapidly. You can move fast. You can break things,
and then you can fix them rapidly. This is how Facebook has always operated. On mobile apps,
you can push code when Apple and Google tell you that you can push code.
And at this point in time, there was approximately a two-week
delay between pushing an update and it being reviewed and accepted.
Not only was there a two-week delay, during that two weeks, Apple and Google are reviewing,
and if they see anything that they don't like for whatever reason, they are telling you,
no, you cannot push that code.
Or your company could be in a fight with that company, and they could decide,
eh, I don't think you should push any updates for a while until we resolve our fight.
Yep. Okay, so that's number four. And then that brings me to number five
reason that I could think of, of why this is really bad for Facebook. The competitive field
is about to get a total reset on the web. Facebook is dominant. Network effects are super real.
Everything we talked about in this whole first part of the episode, if they can suck up
all of the new social functionality that they or anyone else invents, they can put it into the main Facebook app.
Photos, chat, platform, news feed, etc.
On mobile, though, Facebook is just one icon of many on the home screen.
Exactly.
And the wisdom at the time was that mobile apps should be narrow in their functionality, and you did not expect a single app to bundle in a ton of different use cases.
It's super easy for users to be like, hmm, okay, I get this utility from Facebook, but like,
well, I don't know, here's this Instagram thing. Like, that's kind of cool. I get great photo
utility from that, which also lives on my home screen right there. And I'll still use Facebook
for seeing when my friends get married,
but like photos, cool.
And messaging, you know,
this WhatsApp thing is super cool.
Like maybe I'll just use the app for messaging.
It's super easy to use one app for one thing and other apps for others.
And you can see why Facebook adopted
that sort of early 2010s constellation of apps strategy.
For a while, they had Slingshot, Poke, Messenger, Paper, Rooms, Riff.
Camera.
The belief by a lot of companies for the direction mobile was going was there's going to be
specialized apps each for their own tiny little purpose. And that's not great if a lot of your
value is we bundle a lot of stuff in to create the most user engagement to all feed into each
other for people to use all these different components of our application. Yep, totally. Okay, those are my
short list of five reasons of why the shift to mobile is dangerous to Facebook. Anything else
you would add? No. So they're going public right into this. For the first time since our business
is founded, we face a real existential threat completely out of our control that is going to make the next few years look really bad.
Let's go public.
Yeah.
Well, let's talk about that IPO.
Yes.
But first, it is time to talk about one of our favorite companies, Statsig.
A phrase that many of you will know from Facebook's early days is move fast and break things.
But despite instilling this in Facebook's engineering days is move fast and break things. But despite
instilling this in Facebook's engineering culture, Facebook didn't actually break very often. And it
essentially never goes down now. How? Well, Facebook invested hundreds of thousands of
engineering hours in a set of internal tools. These tools let any engineer set up new metrics,
ship new features, and measure performance in real time. This meant
that anyone could just ship a new feature. But they always had metrics to use as guardrails,
and they could always roll back the feature if anything broke. They took this so far
that they have every new engineer ship a feature on their first day at the company.
Wild. You might wish your team could build products like Facebook, right? Ship fast,
make data-informed decisions, iterate rapidly. But you don build products like Facebook, right? Ship fast, make data-informed decisions,
iterate rapidly. But you don't work at Facebook and you don't have those tools. So you're stuck,
right? Well, not anymore, thanks to Statsig. Statsig was founded by an ex-Meta team three
years ago with a mission to make these same tools that Facebook has available to any company.
Could there be a better sponsor for this episode, David? This is insane. I know, it's perfect.
It's perfect.
Today, they've done it,
combining tools like feature flags,
product analytics, experimentation,
and observability into one connected platform
that runs off one set of data and infrastructure.
No more stringing together expensive point solutions
and internal builds.
And no more using technology vendors
built five or 10 years ago
when the needs of modern product teams
have grown by leaps and bounds.
And they've also gotten some crazy traction
over there at Statsig.
Many of the world's leading tech companies
rely on them, including OpenAI,
Microsoft, Notion, Anthropic, Figma,
plus thousands of early stage startups.
In fact, their scale has gotten so crazy
that they process over a trillion events per day. For any engineers listening, they have a great blog post about
how they do this. And best of all, Statsig is pretty affordable. They have an insanely
generous free tier for small companies, a startup program with 1 billion free events,
which is $50,000 in value, and significant discounts for enterprise customers. To get
started, just go to statsig.com slash acquired and remember to tell them that Ben and David sent you.
Thanks, Statsig. All right, so David, here we are. We're going public despite everything you
just listed that is wrong with the future of mobile and this company. Oh man, which seems
like a not very smart idea, right? And,
you know, look, one thing about Mark Zuckerberg, you could say lots of things about him, but one
thing I don't think anybody could say is that he's not smart. So what gives? Why are they doing this?
Well, back then, once a company crossed 500 shareholders, the SEC actually mandated by law that you had to start reporting
quarterly like a public company. Whether or not you were traded on an exchange. Whether or not
you were traded on an exchange. And at the end of 2011, Facebook crossed 500 shareholders.
So for Facebook, this means that they were going to have to report like a public company anyway.
And in practice, the common wisdom was you have to go public as part of this anyway,
because otherwise you're going to report and then, you know, you're going to lose all the
momentum and excitement about having an IPO and doing an S1 and having a big roadshow,
et cetera, et cetera.
So you might as well just do the IPO as long as you're going to have to do this. And I think Mark and Cheryl and the team really debated, well, should we skip
the IPO? But like, well, shoot, then we're going to be reporting as a public company and heading
into all of these headwinds without having actually gone public and raised the money that we might need
to be able to make these investments. So they're like, nope, we got to just do it and go public. Yes, it is a odd time to go public,
given everything with mobile. And of course, they're being forced into it. There actually
are a couple of kind of tailwinds that they have that are probably worth touching on here.
The first of which is they had just beat Google+. That's right.
Facebook treated this like a total existential threat.
We laugh about Google+, now.
It's a butt of jokes.
But that's because Facebook was so effective in competing against it.
I'm not saying the product itself was amazing and it would have been fine without Facebook,
but Google did not end up executing that well on that product.
That actually is a really good point, though.
Google+, may or may not have been a good product and may or may not have succeeded,
but the Facebook competitive response was like...
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
I mean, this is like the growth team plus Facebook's engineering culture at its finest
in defeating this.
Whether or not they executed the product well, Google was the big web tech company at the time, and they put a ton of resources and a lot
of their best people on it. And they had Gmail. And they had Gmail, right. So it's interesting
to look at this because Google basically is Facebook's biggest business model comp.
They show ads on the web, and they monetize that really well. This theoretically could have been in their wheelhouse.
This is just more real estate to show ads on the web.
And they've already got all these people with user accounts.
You can see why Facebook took this really seriously.
We've talked a lot about Facebook's technical prowess.
Well, here is an example of where it really kicks in when you need it to, to be a key
competitive advantage.
So they structured themselves in a way
that encouraged flexibility of engineers. And they really broke from the tide of microservices in
this era. They had one monolithic code base that everyone worked out of. And you might say, well,
that's stupid. Why would they? That's not the way the world was going. But what they basically did
was they wanted to encourage portability of teams.
If you're an engineer, you get hired into the company, not onto a team.
You learn the company's code base, you learn the company's conventions,
and you can easily sort of move around after that.
You do have to deal with the trade-off then of you have this big monolithic code base
with gigabytes of PHP code for thousands of engineers.
What do you do about that?
Well, then they just had their cake and eat it too.
They would go and have the infrastructure team figure out how to deal with that problem rather than saying, oh,
everyone can just work in their little silos. And so that meant that engineers could kind of be
quickly reorged. They could have this company-wide lockdown to fight Google Plus. And they did all
sorts of things. They launched video calls to compete with Hangouts. They launched something
to compete with Google Circles. But either way, they could really quickly reallocate resources and people who sort of knew how to work together to defeat what could have really been an existential threat from their biggest similar company.
Oh, man. Mark famously in an internal speech around this referenced, what was it, I think Cato the Elder?
Yes.
From ancient Rome of Carthage must be destroyed.
Yep. There is a second way in which things had settled down and now was a good time to go public,
and that's around privacy. Facebook had just been, I mean, playing way too fast and loose
with user privacy for years, and it had finally caught up with them by 2011.
And just to jog your memories,
I'm sure people may remember a lot of these.
Some of these included,
even though users could restrict the audience
of their posts with a setting,
this apparently didn't apply to apps,
which could access these posts
regardless of how you restricted the audience.
And for a time, this even included
when your friends installed an app too,
you didn't even have to grant the permission yourselves. Similarly, they made friend lists
public without user consent at one point. Facebook could decide without user consent to change
private fields of your profile to be public, and this wasn't always messaged as clearly as it could
have been to users. So to remedy this, they had just signed what is called a consent decree
with the FTC, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, in 2011,
and they promised to make a bunch of changes
regarding user privacy issues going forward.
And so all this was behind them now.
And interestingly, David, an FTC consent decree
is the same thing that Microsoft signed.
Yeah, hark back to the Microsoft episode. Yes, the FTC consent decree is the same thing that Microsoft signed. Yeah, hark back to the Microsoft episode.
Yes, the FTC consent decree with Microsoft was the predecessor to the big DOJ suit. In this case,
the FTC consent decree is the predecessors to what eventually would become the Cambridge Analytica
settlement. So here in 2011, the way that they settle this is there's a bunch of provisions
that with Facebook promising they'll be tighter on making sure user data is treated in a very particular way. They're subject to audit every year for two
years for the next 20 years. You know, there's all these things that they sort of agree to.
But, you know, once you sign a consent decree, it's like, okay, we're through it. We don't have
this thing hanging over our heads. We can go public and say, oh yeah, that's in the past.
We've taken care of it. That's another reason to go public right now. Yep. It's such a good point. There actually was this little window here at the beginning of 2012
where desktop revenue hadn't yet been impaired so badly that they could still show growth.
They had these couple little wins they could point to and say like, all right,
not great, but like, if we're going to do it, we got to do it now.
Yep. You could almost look at it like a little bit of a win of everyone knows us as the company that
is a little bit dodgy on privacy practices. Like at least the public perception is this,
that they're constantly- Changing the terms of the game, shall we say.
Yes, to the company's advantage when it was confusing or misleading to users.
And now you can say, look, not only did we sign that, we have these five product initiatives in place where we're just buttoned up now.
I actually think that's pretty true.
I think they became a company that had rigorous privacy practices because of some government regulation when they otherwise
may not have. I mean, if you look at the early days of what you could do as a developer on
platform, it was pretty wild west. And so I'm not saying it's fully because of the consent decree,
but they could definitely tell a story around, look, we made some mistakes. We got some things
wrong in privacy and going forward, we're in good shape. We're all good. Yeah. Well, we'll come back to that in a little bit. But for the moment,
the IPO. February 1st, 2012, they filed the S-1. They entered the traditional quiet period before
the IPO where legally, according to the SEC, once you have filed for an IPO, all material
information about the company needs to be included in the S-1
registration statement. You can't go give interviews. You can't go talk to the press.
You can't say anything meaningful about the company besides what is fully publicly disclosed
to any potential investor in the S-1 statement. And then a week later on April 9th, 2012,
during the quiet period, Facebook acquires Instagram for a billion dollars.
Time's now, baby.
The time is now. And they can't say anything about it besides what they file in the amended S-1
because they're in the quiet period.
Amazing.
The company's previous largest acquisition was $70 million.
Obviously, this is a way different thing. Now, sitting here today, you might be really tempted to say, oh, well, there's the fix for mobile. They just bought Instagram. That solved all the problems. Except not because Instagram didn't have any revenue on mobile either. It's like, you know, you're tying one anchor to another here.
Well, not to mention, Instagram had 27 million users.
Facebook had 900 million users.
This was potentially a problem for future Facebook, but this was not currently a problem.
Totally.
I was just about to say that too. Yeah.
Also, not currently a fix to Facebook's major problem of
the shift to mobile. And I mean, my God, talk about the chutzpah of Mark to do this. You're
already in a really challenging period for the company, a really challenging IPO process. You
just entered the quiet period and you decide to spend a billion dollars on something with 27
million users and no revenue. And you're not going to be able to talk about it except what you file entered the quiet period and you decide to spend a billion dollars on something with 27 million
users and no revenue and you're not going to be able to talk about it except what you file with
the sec wow you got a really really really freaking believe in the future potential of
your company and the combined companies of facebook and instagram here to make this move
not to mention on top of it all we're not going to go into it here because we had a whole episode on Facebook and Instagram, but this was done over two days,
over the course of a weekend. Mark didn't do a whole lot of socializing this before pulling
the trigger. He just knew it was the right thing to do and did it. Yep. And that ended up working
out pretty well in the long run. In the short run, yet another question mark to add to the already very large pile
around this company. Finally, long roadshow process. By the week of May 14th, they're ready
to price the IPO. Pricing is set for Thursday night, May 17th, 2012. On Tuesday, May 15th,
General Motors, GM, who by the way was not a particularly large Facebook advertiser, announces publicly to the world that they are pulling all their spend off of the Facebook platform because it's not effective.
Not really what you want to have happen two nights before you price your IPO.
Was that motivated by someone? That feels like a hit.
It feels like a hit. at the very top end of the range after the roadshow, again, the chutzpah here,
they raise $16 billion at a $104 billion market cap,
making it, I think, the third largest IPO of all time at that point behind Visa and, ironically, General Motors
coming out of the bankruptcy during 2008.
Which both of those are mature companies
that are going public under weird circumstances.
Those are not comps.
Totally.
Yes.
By far the largest IPO of a new startup company in history.
On Friday morning, trading starts.
The NASDAQ is overloaded with so many orders for buying and selling Facebook
that trading in Facebook stock doesn't actually
open until 1130 a.m., which is, you know, two plus hours after the open of the markets.
Got to be terrifying if you're a big Facebook shareholder.
Yeah, that's pretty terrifying. Initially, it looks like, oh, that delay might have been good
because the price shoots up to $45 a share from 38. But then it crashes back down. It is one of the most volatile trading days in
any stock, I think, in history on any exchange. Facebook shares end the day at $38.23, up $0.23
from the IPO price, but only because all of the underwriting banks in the IPO stepped in
to buy shares and support
the price, which was totally crashing throughout the day. Thank God they did it on a Friday,
so everybody had the weekend to breathe. Once trading starts again the following week,
the price falls on nine of the next 13 trading days and ends up, by the end of May,
down 25% from the initial IPO price of $38. Kind of in free fall
at this point, the stock continues going lower and lower and lower, ultimately bottoms out on
September 4th, 2012 at $17.68, down 53.5% from the IPO price.
So market cap cut in, you know,
over half in, what's that,
five months since the IPO.
It wouldn't end up reaching IPO price again until August 2013.
Anyone who bought at the IPO
was underwater for 16 months.
Underwater for 16 months.
And five months later had lost
half their money on Facebook.
So you have to have nerds of steel to even just keep holding. I'm sure anybody who got back to
even at 16 months was delighted. Totally. You've also got the employee lockup coming up around
November. So like now you're staring down the gun of, shoot, I've already lost half of my value as
a public company. And pretty soon all the employees in the company are going to be able to sell it.
That's going to put more selling pressure on the stock.
Holy crap, this is pretty darn bad.
Yes, that is horrible.
I mean, losing 50% of your value as any company, public or private,
but especially a public company, is a disaster of epic proportions.
Having that happen immediately following your IPO, for most companies, there's no way to come
back from that. You're entering a death spiral. You're going to end up being acquired or,
you know, you're just going to get driven to zero basically.
Yep.
And just to be super clear, desktop revenue wasn't going to go to zero immediately,
but Wall Street investors are really worried that like, hey, the world is transitioning to mobile. And just to be super clear, desktop revenue wasn't going to go to zero immediately.
But Wall Street investors are really worried that like, hey, the world is transitioning to mobile.
Eventually growth will start slowing and it will start declining, which it does fairly quickly here.
And so like if you can't show me that you're going to replace that with mobile revenue, why should I value your stock at anything?
Yep. And so here is where founder control matters.
This is, David, it's interesting you're explaining the mechanics of a death spiral.
That would presume there's a board of directors who feels a strong desire to do whatever is best in the interest of the shareholder.
And they might think that it's these short-term things.
But if you have a CEO who has a 20-year view and believes deep, deep in his heart that
the best is yet to come, and that this is just a temporary problem, and that person controls the
company and owns the majority of voting shares, you can withstand things like this. You just
better be right. Yes. So a little fun anecdote for everyone. David and I, among the 20 other people we talked to to prep for this episode, one of
them was Sheryl Sandberg.
And we were asking Sheryl, in particular, how did you start the monetization effort
on mobile?
They were in the third column.
There's no third column on mobile.
What did you do?
And her comment to us was, oh, we just stopped caring about the right side ads on desktop.
And we took every engineering resource we could off of that, and we put it on mobile.
And we knew we were going to miss the current quarter.
I think they missed a lot of quarters right after their IPO.
But this was us trading the present for the future.
And all we cared about was our future.
And she said, this is a great quote.
This is up there with one of the best quotes on Acquired of all time.
She was sitting there with Mark late at night.
And when they sort of arrived at this plan of we are going to forego a lot of desktop revenue to basically bet it all on figuring out mobile revenue.
She said, well, Mark, nobody can fire you and only you can fire me.
So if you're in, I'm in.
And we buckled our seatbelt and we said,
here we go. And it's amazing. I mean, that can only happen in a founder controlled company.
And it really did force them to figure out mobile advertising. If they really are saying like,
this is the new first class product. This is where we're going to point all advertisers toward.
If they're wrong on that, they're wrong across the whole board. Because if ads suck on mobile, since it's the only thing and it's filling up your whole screen,
user engagement is also going to nosedive. And so it's basically a bet-it-all moment where the ads
are front and center, so they must be good. It is essential for the mobile product, and thus your
company, for them to be good.
Users' attention will be pointed at these ads like no other ads you have ever run before.
And actually, the flip side of this is it ended up being the best thing ever for the company.
Because the ads are front and center, the value per ad is actually higher. So they ended up
creating a much, much more valuable ad unit
than they ever had on desktop purely because of this incredible attention on them when you're
scrolling in feed on mobile. Necessity is the absolute mother of invention. Yes, totally. You
have no choice but to do your best work. Boy, did it work out fabulously. Yeah. Ben, nobody can fire
you. Well, I guess you can't fire me either, but
either way, if you're in, I'm in. The corporate structure required is still a little,
it's unclear. But yes, totally. So when we say taking your best, most trusted engineers,
taking them off, whatever they're doing and putting them on ads, there's actually an amazing
story around this. So Mark goes to someone within the company who he knows can just ship and get stuff done.
And that is Boz, Andrew Bosworth, his old TA from Harvard.
Boz at this point is running the core profile and timeline within Facebook.
And Mark goes and talks to him and says,
Boz, I think you should come work on ads. To which Boz replies, okay. I mean, like I get we're in this situation, but you know, Mark, like I can't do this for too long because remember I'm getting
married this fall and I've got this six month sabbatical plan for my honeymoon. And my wife and I, we're going to travel the world.
It's all like booked and paid for.
We're going to be out of the country.
And Mark is like, yes.
Well, we've got a few months until then.
I think you should come over and work on ads.
But I was like, okay, okay.
I will do that.
I will come up with something here before the wedding.
So he teams up with Will Cathcart from the News Feed team from chris cox's team and they go get to work by the way will is the head of
whatsapp today and boss of course is the cto of meta and head of reality labs yep and the first
thing they do during these couple months is like all right we just need like a band-aid to stop the
bleeding and at least produce some mobile revenue and what what they decide to do is like, hey, we do have on mobile the carousel of people you may like.
What if we just slot some brands into that carousel and say, hey, in addition to people you may like here,
here are some brand pages you may like.
A reasonable first step.
And look, they knew that this wasn't going to be the long-term solution and solve all
the problems, but it did start to produce some mobile revenue that they could report. And this
was super important because as I alluded to the lockup on employees and insiders selling their
shares expired in November, they had to get something out that was going to prop the stock
price up a little bit before naturally employees are going to start
selling here and that's going to put downward pressure on the stock price.
Yep. Also, bummer if you are an employee selling six months after that IPO.
Hopefully as many people held as they could to get through it.
Yes, hopefully. And I think most people who were at Facebook at this time really did believe in
the future of the company. At the same time,
you have life circumstances. You might need to buy a house. You might need to
do things for your family, etc. It's a tough spot. So fall rolls around. They've launched
sponsored pages you may like. Boz gets married. They're still grinding on the big project,
which is called Project Whale Shark. And that is getting real, honest-to-God native ads in the newsfeed, which, frankly, they should have done years ago on desktop.
But now the gun is to their head.
There is nothing in the mobile app except newsfeed.
We got to put ads in newsfeed.
So finally, at the end of the year, they launch it.
Boz is like, whew, okay, mission accomplished. I can now leave on my sabbatical. We can go on our honeymoon. But there's just one
problem. Shipping this thing is only like 20% of the battle. Now you have to go sell it to
advertisers, which this is a whole new ad paradigm. You got to like educate brands on why
this is going to work for them, especially when your overall brand as a company and effectiveness
of your advertising is kind of in the dumps right now. And it's an iterative process where you're
going to hear a bunch of feedback from brands and you're going to say, Ooh, we got to modify the ad
products, which still continues to this day. They roll out and modify ad products. It's not like a,
all right, we now have ads in the newsfeed. We're good. The job is never done here. So of course,
quarterbacking all this is going to fall to Cheryl and her team. But again, as you said, Ben, this is
an iterative process. You can't divorce product from the feedback from advertisers and the big
advertisers are sure as hell going to expect
someone from product who is leading this thing to show up and tell them about it.
Yep. So Boz kind of needs to come along to these meetings. So on December 18th,
Boz remembers the exact day. Mark calls him up and is like, Boz, great job working on ads.
Hey, I really still need you to come back and work on ads. And Boz
is like, no way, man. I did the past six months for you. I just got married. I'm going on my
honeymoon. I'm out. Mark's like, okay, okay, okay. The next day, calls him back December 19th,
and he's like, Boz, I just want to say really, really great job again. And you know, the company's in a really tough spot. And like,
I really think that you should come keep running ads here.
And, uh, Bob's like, okay, all right. I will reduce my sabbatical from six months
to six weeks. I'll take the holidays, the beginning of the year. I'm going to cancel
the last four months of my trip. I will do six weeks with my wife and then we'll fly her friends out to the last two weeks with her.
And then I'm going to go fly around the world with Cheryl on a very different kind of trip here.
So that's what they do. And for most of 2013, Baz and Cheryl are out on the road. They're
pitching advertisers. They're explaining sponsored
stories in the newsfeed on mobile, why this is so important. Not only do advertisers need education
about this new Facebook ad unit, they also need education about mobile advertising in general.
They'd only just gotten used to digital advertising on desktop.
Totally. Do you remember those Mary Meeker decks that used to go around where they would show the mobile advertising,
basically the shortcoming?
Look at all this attention that has shifted to mobile
and yet the monetization just isn't there.
And that was a story every year for like a decade.
Yep, totally.
And it was the same story with desktop on the web
for a decade before that.
Yep.
So what's interesting is like,
as they're getting going here, of course, advertisers
don't come in right away, but also the ones that do come in early are kind of, as you would imagine,
not the best advertisers. And so the whole effort starts to have this real problem where the ads
that are now showing up in newsfeed are like pretty freaking crappy ads. And Mark keeps getting
more and more pissed because like, obviously this is really important, but he's like, Boz, Cheryl,
like why the hell is all this crap showing up in my feed? Like if this keeps happening, I get that
we have to save the business, but like I care more about the user experience and like, I'm going to
dial this back. This is the most interesting thing. At this point in history, Mark is putting pressure on Boz and Cheryl
to show fewer ads.
Yes.
And Boz is the one with the contrarian view
who comes to Mark and says,
we're thinking about this all wrong.
We actually need way more ads.
Not just a little more ads,
huge amounts more ads.
Because a great ad is on par with content. And if you have tons and tons of ads,
then we can do way better targeting. Like you have this beautiful liquid marketplace
of hundreds of thousands of advertisers, billions of users, and at any given time,
somebody can see the optimal ad for them and get recommended an amazing product
that perfectly fits their needs in that moment with messaging that's perfectly tailored for them
great advertising can be great but you need a really really liquid marketplace and you need
fantastic algorithms which you can only have if you train them on tons and tons of data so like
we actually need 10,000 times more ads
than we have right now, not less.
It's almost like the only way out is through.
We're going down this path.
We must be extremely successful
in order to be successful at all.
This was such a contrarian view and also right.
And I think only could have come
from someone like Boz being focused on this problem,
because as a product person and an engineer, it's the only way that you're going to have that
insight that like, oh, this is the same problem we had when we launched News Feed. The way to fix
News Feed and to make it really
really awesome is more newsfeed you know is more data right like the only way out is through yeah
if somebody had purely come i think from the advertising world they would have been like
well you know that's just the nature of advertising right it's a tax on the users and that's the way
monetization of media works. But like,
Baz was like, no, no, no, actually, this is a relevance problem and we can make this awesome. And in order to make it awesome, we need a lot more of it.
Yep. And basically, like, that's what happened. I mean, flash forward 10 years,
I opened Instagram to get great product recommendations.
Totally. It's actually kind of wild. I believe this is true. There are markets in the world today where
I think meta has run this test, where if you turn off ads in the meta family of apps products,
engagement in those products actually goes down, which is just like freaking wild. You would think
like, oh, wow, now I get to use meta products without advertising. No tax on me. I'm going
to engage more. No, no, it goes down.
That's the definition of ads as content,
if that's actually the case.
Totally wild.
So by the fourth quarter of 2013,
which honestly in the scheme of things
is pretty freaking fast,
the whole thing finally flips.
Facebook announces that mobile advertising
is now 53% of revenue
and total ad revenue for the company grew 76% year over year in the fourth quarter, which of course is the most important quarter of the year.
Which means, I did all the math on that, that means that all of desktop revenue, all of it, so the old platform business, the old ad business, the Microsoft third-party ad serving, all of that
actually shrank in the fourth quarter of 2013. So that's the counterfactual here. If Facebook had
not gotten mobile monetization right, that's what would have happened is Q4 2013, all of the growth
momentum that it had would have flipped and it would have started the downward spiral. And probably not that early if... I guess that's right, because all the resources got pulled
off of it. Exactly. But that's what would have happened eventually to it. Eventually. Yep. Yep.
So man, it's like this wild 18-month journey, but it totally saved the company because now here they are,
they've built this unique, pioneering,
and totally defensible native mobile ad unit in the feed.
They defined the whole generation of monetization here.
It's the best ad unit in history.
It's an ad that completely fills the screen on your device
and that users are okay with.
So this is the most insanely captivating, engaging ad unit that you could possibly ask for.
And it came out of necessity. It's wild. The fact that they thought their backs were against the
wall, they were totally screwed. And instead, actually, it's the thing that monetizes better
and is better for advertisers than any other advertising product they've ever had. And, you know, I know we keep saying this and it sounds maybe sort of
silly, but like really better for users too. Before this paradigm that they invent here of,
you know, algorithmically driven ads in the feed, the biggest monetizing thing on mobile was an interstitial like pop-up freaking display ad
that took over your screen right like what an awful freaking experience for a user right right
around this time too the other thing that's happening is kind of glossed over this for time
but facebook's initial attempt at a mobile app was to try to work around all the constraints of the mobile app ecosystem.
And they thought, well, that's nice that the app stores are going to try and box us in,
but we'll just ship our mobile web views inside of a thin little app wrapper. And that way we can
deploy multiple times a day. You know, we're Facebook. This is what we do. It's part of our
culture. HTML5, woo! Provided a horrible user experience. I mean, the engagement on the app was low. Time spent was low. It was a risk to start
selling these ads because people don't want to spend any time in the app, even without ads,
let alone when you start layering these in. And so they're finally starting to sort of pull out
of this tailspin. They basically spent a year completely rewriting all their mobile clients to be these rich, beautiful native experiences. This is a thing
that Facebook has always been good at. Whenever they decide to do something, they go and recruit
like the actual best talent in the world to do it. And this group of people that they pulled
together from Joe Hewitt forward to write their original iOS app, it's just like some of the best
iOS developers and designers in the world.
They hired Mike Mattis and the Pushpop Press team
when they acquired them.
That's right, that's right.
That became, I think it was Creative Labs, is that right?
Facebook Creative Labs.
But a huge amount of that talent worked on their mobile apps.
And so while they had the wrong strategy at first,
once they got religion around native,
they really created
something, probably one of the best apps ever on mobile. Totally. It's funny. I'm laughing.
You know, the version of history that we just told is maybe slightly too charitable to Facebook
and to Mark because yes, it's absolutely true. They did the really hard thing. They took the pain.
They invested in the future.
They built, you know, everything that would become Facebook and Meta today out of it.
But the first reaction was to bet on hope as a strategy and bury your head in the sand
and say, HTML5 is going to save us.
I don't know that it was hope as a strategy.
I think it was more like if this can work it's
going to solve a lot of our problems and i don't think they correctly estimated how wide the user
experience chasm is between web apps and native apps and i think they had to like have an app in
market where users were actually using it to realize oh man the, the state-of-the-art in native that the platform vendors have developed,
iOS and Android, is really, really good. And they have brought very little of that to the web
experiences, partially because of standards bodies, but also partially because it's not
really in their interest to make web apps great when they can force everything through an app
store that they have more control over.
So, okay, after the Q4 2013 earnings announcement, the stock pops way, way, way up to like $175 billion-ish market cap. So up 75% from IPO, you know, what is that year and a half earlier.
And from there, it's basically, if you look at the market cap chart, kind of a straight line journey from $175 up to half a trillion over the next couple of years.
They eventually bring this whole native feed monetization engine over to Instagram.
And that works, obviously, incredibly well there, probably better than even on the Blue app. And that in particular, I mean, everyone's going to laugh when we say this word,
the legitimate synergy between going to an advertiser and saying,
you can use this dashboard to get placements on Facebook and on Instagram is massive.
Both of those products monetize better than they ever could without that single channel
that the advertiser only
has to go through and use one dashboard to place on both products. If you flash all the way forward
to today, the lion's share of Meta's revenue comes from the ads that run on Facebook and Instagram.
Their whole business today can just be summarized as that. Totally. There's another element for a
couple of years that's a big part of the native mobile revenue story, and that is app install ads. And actually is worth calling out because it plants
the seeds of this much larger struggle that's going to come in a little bit. But a very large
percentage of the inventory that they were selling, and especially the revenue of these native mobile
ads in the beginning, was actually for app install ads that game developers and other folks were buying on Facebook.
So it was kind of like our old platform business all over again.
Facebook is actually the best place to discover apps on mobile.
Yeah, it's a pretty interesting realization where
the big brand advertisers may not move to this new type of ad format right away,
but the people that are going to be really hungry
to move to that ad format are a game developer
who makes a mobile app and wants to market their mobile app
to people who are A, on that platform,
and B, in a leanback experience
where they're open for some entertainment.
And when you are scrolling through a feed
of your friends and brands,
and you are open to, oh, hey, look at this, a game where I could click one button and then boom, install a game and play it. Is there a better moment and channel to reach someone for an app? No. I mean, even if you're Apple, Apple doesn't have a better way to do this. People don't search the App Store for apps that often, so you'd have to show them like a pop-up ad or something. Facebook just has this
opportunity where you're in an experience where you're open to some new form of entertainment,
and they have the ability to place a button there with rigorous targeting and incredible ad
sales force. Facebook was almost built to be the monetizable front end to the app store.
Oh boy. All right. Put a pin in that.
Am I leading the witness too much, David?
Put a pin in that. We are going to talk about Apple and Facebook in just a little bit here.
Now, I said a minute ago that the journey to $500 billion in market cap from here is a straight line. If you look at the market cap chart, that's true. Internally within the company, I think almost certainly not. There are a couple of big challenges that come up along the way. During this period, you've got Snap and you've got WhatsApp, both of which are like pretty big deals. We've covered both of those pretty fully on
separate episodes that you can go listen to. But I think ultimately what they represent,
and obviously Snap was more a competitor and WhatsApp turned into an acquisition and is now a
big part of Meta and part of the company. But I think together what they represent was this next fundamental shift in the consumer social landscape, which Mark totally picked up on and ultimately announced as the core of the company's product strategy in 2019, which was the default social behavior was moving from town square, which was the old facebook paradigm of like hey we're all in this
together this is our college network this is our friends hey network or public here's what i think
yep and in many ways instagram was also town square totally the instagram team noticed over
time that even before snap started eating their lunch that engagement would decrease the longer
you stayed an instagram user because you over, being done with these permanent posts and you sort of saved it for the
big announcements in your life, that there wasn't a natural way to just effortlessly share. Because
when these platforms all started, everyone was in debt sharing with the town square the whole time,
and everyone was getting a little bit more clammy about that as time went on.
Yeah.
As the stage got bigger in the town square, it's like, well, I'm not going to take the stage unless I, like, really have a great performance that I'm going to give.
And so every piece of data and metric that they had, you're right, they sort of realized, oh, the world is shifting from town square to— To living room is the way that Mark put it.
That social was shifting from town square to living room.
Right. And by living room, he means small private groups of super close relationships.
Yep.
And Snap and WhatsApp were both really interesting data points about this.
WhatsApp, obviously, with private messaging.
Snap also in its own way, there was the original Snapchat use case of disappearing one-to-one photo messaging.
But Stories really is where it became clear,
hey, this is widespread and this is a big problem
that is going to threaten Instagram, Facebook,
the whole default motion of like sharing
beyond just a one-to-one messaging platform.
I want that to be much more private and locked down too.
If you own an engagement platform and someone figures out a new mechanic to make them much
more willing to freeform share, and your platform seems to encourage them to stay back, be quiet,
only post once in a while, maybe lurk, it's not good. Content creation on the platform going down
is really, really bad if you are an engagement company.
You know, Snap represents the idea that people are sharing way more if it's ephemeral.
And WhatsApp represented the idea that people are shifting the places they communicate from more public to more private and from larger groups to smaller groups, both of which are concerning if you are a Facebook Blue app.
Okay, so now here's an interesting question, though. How would Facebook know that attention
is really shifting to these apps? Because remember, we're now in the mobile paradigm,
not on the open web where services like Comscore and Alexa and whatnot exist, and you can see
traffic and engagement competitively on other apps.
In the mobile ecosystem, it's all siloed and locked down.
No, just Apple and Google really have that information.
Yep. But somehow Facebook was able to get
pretty good insights on what was happening in the landscape.
Well, to have that, you would either need to have some kind of SDK that gets bundled into apps,
like an analytics provider, or you would need like VPN where the traffic was going through it so you could see the traffic.
Well, in 2013, Facebook acquired a small Israeli company called Onavo.
And Onavo was exactly what you just said, Ben.
A VPN.
Actually, I think it initially started as like a data compression tool. So if
you were worried about your data plan, which was really important in many parts of the world,
you could install Onavo on your device and it would compress the data and then serve it to
your apps. Eventually that morphed into a VPN tool. The net of that is that they could actually
see traffic and usage data going into specific apps on mobile phones in their network.
Yeah, I think they looked at it as we need some way to level the playing field if we're competing
against Apple and Google in different ways, and they have this data because they own the platforms.
We kind of need to be able to see those same trends. On the other hand, there is another way
to view this. If you're looking for examples where Facebook, you know, may have considered their own interests
over being forthright with users over how their data is used, well, this could be another
big example.
Users who were using Onavo didn't download it with the intent of sharing, you know, their
app usage data with Facebook.
Right.
They were just looking to compress their data or for a VPN service.
Either way,
Onavo ended up being like a hugely important acquisition for Facebook because it really
tipped them off to WhatsApp and Snap too. Yeah. So obviously they fought those two
companies in very different ways. One thing they learned from fighting Twitter over the years
is that there are these social mechanics, or perhaps an interaction
paradigm might be the right way to talk about it. A post, or a like, or a retweet, or a disappearing
photo message. And the thing that kind of matters is owning a valuable network. The idea that people
are going to come and give you their attention and you own
the place that they connect with other people that they authentically, verifiably know. That's
the scarce commodity in order to kind of win the engagement game. And the mechanics are actually
kind of fungible. And they're totally a means to an end. So if you discover some mechanic and you build this whole multi-hundred million user network platform,
ad platform based on it,
that's great as long as no one comes up with a better mechanic than you
and then goes and rebuilds the network somewhere else.
So one thing they learned with Twitter was,
hmm, they seem to be growing really fast with this status update thing.
We need to look a lot more like status updates.
And that worked pretty well.
There were a lot of people that basically never switched to Twitter
because they thought, oh, I can just use Facebook for this.
Yep. And I already have my network in here.
I already have my friends. I already have my connections. Totally.
And it also has photos.
So like Twitter is this weird esoteric text sharing thing.
I'm not really all about that. I'm just going to keep using Facebook.
Oh, Ben, Twitter did have photos for a while. It was called Instagram.
Well, yeah, that API got turned off fast.
Yep.
So as they're looking around at Snap, hey, someone has discovered this new stories mechanic. My goodness, that is suddenly obvious that that is what the future is.
It now feels old to do anything else. It's kind of like when you got a retina iPhone for the first
time and you're like holding your non-retina iPhone and you're like, this is instantly a
piece of crap. Like I'm not ever going to touch this disgusting thing again. I think when someone
invents a new interaction paradigm, it's one of these things where like you have to adopt it because otherwise people are just going to flee.
And of course, your business depends on you adopting it because you can't let someone
use this new discovered mechanic that's perfectly timed for this moment in history with these
set of cultural acceptances and this new set of technologies to go rebuild the network
somewhere else.
And so I think the thing that they sort of discover is either through buying or through copying a mechanic, we need to protect our network by bringing these interactions into
our family of apps, either by, as Ben Thompson would put it, the audacity of copying well,
or of course, by buying them.
Yes. Copying well or buying well. Yes. So listeners, of course, we don't actually ever know what anybody's intent is or what they're thinking when they decide to buy a company or something
like that. This is just sort of David and I guessing at strategy from the outside. We do have,
thanks to a court case, an actual email from Mark Zuckerberg on February 28th.
Oh, yeah.
This is so good.
2012 to their then CFO talking about the time they're sort of discussing the Instagram acquisition, but laying out the idea behind an acquisition strategy. The basic plan would be to buy these companies and leave their products running while, over time, incorporating the social dynamics they've invented into our core products.
One thing that may make neutralizing a potential competitor more reasonable here is that there are
network effects around social products and a finite number of different social mechanics to
invent. Once someone wins at a specific mechanic, it's difficult for others
to supplant them without doing something different. It's possible someone beats Instagram by building
something that is better to the point where they get network migration, but this is harder as long
as Instagram keeps running as a product. Pause. Which is pretty interesting. That is the argument
of why to keep Instagram separate and running as its own product is because Instagram's
already discovered this fascinating new mechanic around publishing one image at a time with these
beautiful filters. If anybody else tries to come after them, they're already ahead. So actually,
the best thing to do is own Instagram and let it keeps doing its thing. Anyway, resuming,
integrating their products with ours to improve the service is also a factor,
but in reality, we already know these companies' social mechanics and we will integrate them
over the next 12 to 24 months anyway.
The integration plan involves building their mechanics into our products rather than directly
integrating their products, if that makes sense.
By a combination of these two things, neutralizing a potential competitor, integrating their
products with ours to improve the service, one way of looking at this is that what we're really buying is
time.
Even if some new competitor springs up, buying Instagram, Path, Foursquare, etc., now will
give us a year or more to integrate their dynamics before anyone can get close to their
scale again.
Within that time, if we incorporate the social mechanics they are using, those new products won't get much traction because we will already have their
mechanics deployed at scale. It is goddamn brilliant, David. Here's my commentary based
on all this. It is so smart to basically say, well, if we buy them, we basically get two strategies that we get to
execute at the same time. One, we just leave them alone and let it keep succeeding. It's actually
not a current potential threat. We don't know if it will turn into a potential threat. Hell,
Instagram wasn't making any money yet. WhatsApp didn't have a feed. It was just a way people
connected. It's not like just because they had a network, they were going to turn it into a feed. So there's this idea that it's not a competitor
now. By buying it, we basically get this option on if it becomes a competitor, if we completely
leave them alone and let them decide what to do. But then there's also, look, we will integrate
those mechanics into our core product, Facebook, the blue app that already has well-built out network effects. And by owning this thing that could become a competitor,
there isn't white space in the middle. Anyone just like us is also going to take time and they're not
going to do it as good as the original and they don't have our network. Therefore, whether the
winner turns out to be the original product or us incorporating the mechanic into
the blue app, we've won either way. And probably what's going to happen is both.
Yes. So brilliant.
And that is what happened with Instagram. WhatsApp is actually kind of different. It
never really turned into a competitor. It just serves a completely different use case and is
also owned by Meta. And then with Snap, they tried to buy Snap over and over again,
and it didn't work. And so they basically figured out how to bring those mechanics into Facebook's
core products with Stories in a way that Snap kept doing their thing, but there was really no
reason to leave being an Instagram user because you already had that functionality with your own
network anyway. And here's what's really interesting about the stories, quote unquote,
story in Instagram and then ultimately coming to the Blue app. Stories as initially launched
by Snap in the Snapchat app was a separate tab with a list of your friends who had published stories.
It was literally like a table, like a list.
Oh, I don't remember that, really.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, it wasn't, you know, the paradigm we all think of today as like
the heads in the row at the top of your app.
Instagram did that.
So when Instagram copied quote-unquote stories and launched stories,
they launched it as the algorithmically ordered
row of heads at the top of your app. And here's where the internal advantages that Facebook,
the family of apps, had. They already had this world-class ranking algorithmic expertise within
the company that was being applied to News Feed, that was being applied to ads, that was already starting to incorporate early ML and early AI. The beginning
of FAIR, Facebook AI Research Lab, had already happened here. This was coming into the product.
Well, now when you're launching a new feature like this, in this case stories, you can say,
oh great, is this going to be made better by our algorithmic and AI expertise? Of course it is. Let's do that. Right. That's interesting. Basically,
even if you copy the feature wholesale, it's actually even better, not just because you have
the network, but because your algorithm tech is very advanced, you can make sure it's the most
possible engaging version of that particular interaction design. Yes. So when Instagram, in those early days when it was launching stories, they were optimizing
the ranking of heads at the top of the app by how likely you are to tap on that person's head.
Of course. Of course they're doing that. I do want to jump forward to TikTok.
Yes, let's do it. Because it's a continuation of this story in a very different way.
In the mid-20-teens here, there's a bunch of other stuff that we got to get to. But TikTok
is particularly interesting because it kind of blindsided Facebook.
Yes.
If you believe that the asset that matters is the authenticated, real-name network of people
you actually know or people you care about following, you kind of think,
oh, I always have a lead as long as I can incorporate someone's mechanic. What if engagement
is possible on an app that has nothing to do with your social network? That's terrifying because this
big asset that you've built, this durable competitive advantage of we already have all the
people, so why would you want to go anywhere
where your friends aren't? The magic of
TikTok was AI
suddenly, in the late 20-teens,
became sufficiently advanced
that it could show you the optimal
thing created by anyone in the world.
Most of the time, you don't actually
know that person. So suddenly,
the only competitive advantage that Facebook,
the company, has is people
have a habit of tapping on their apps when they're bored. But that's a pretty thin competitive
advantage. That's really easy to break. Habits are changeable, especially on a mobile phone where
another app is just an icon away. Totally. And so if someone is a great competitor like TikTok, who is incredibly well-funded, very good at strategically buying ads, has created their own growth function that is, they're just a Chinese company, that created a competitor for Facebook
that is more significant than anything they've ever faced. This wasn't like, oh, there might be
an existential threat from this in the future. This was like, oh, crap. As soon as people form
a habit around, oh, I just opened this black app with the white little music note on it,
we have no more competitive advantages to throw at that problem.
So we must as fast as possible make something like Reels just to stem the bleeding. And then
we can figure out what to do from there and hopefully get to a market stalemate with them.
Yeah. Which is basically what has happened. But interestingly, TikTok and ByteDance, its parent company, as you point out, Ben, was so completely orthogonal to everything that Facebook had learned over the past 15 years.
Because, yes, number one, most importantly, it's not social media.
It's media.
There's no social.
And your graph doesn't matter anymore.
That's a great point. Right. It's digital media. It's user-created media. It's mobile media. There's no social. And your graph doesn't matter anymore. That's a great point. Right. It's digital media. It's user-created media. It's mobile media. But it's really not social media.
Yep. Doesn't matter who your friends are on TikTok. What matters is in the first 10 videos
you look at, is their AI pretty good at picking up the stuff that you care about and the stuff
that you don't? It's not, can you find a whole bunch of other people you know? Yep. And I really want to keep hitting on this insight, again, that Mark correctly identified
of social shifting from the town square to the living room. This is a second order effect of
that shift that the company didn't see coming. Because once you shift social from the town
square to the living room, it now becomes possible to divorce
media from social. You're already getting your social now in private in your digital living room.
The town square can become something that is completely not social.
Right. It's turned into this pretty interesting dual-pronged approach that they now have, which is
you open Instagram and you have Reels. So the job to be done by TikTok is now
done by a thing that you already have habit around. It's bundled into the place where you
actually consume your social media. Great. That's step one. Step two is this is where it's nice to
have WhatsApp. This is where it's nice to have Messenger. For these living room style conversations
with just a few of your friends, the new user behavior is, I see a thing that got millions of views.
I can think of one or five people to share that with, and then I have a private conversation about this public object in private.
I will share that on WhatsApp, or I will share that on iMessage, or I will share that on, you know, whatever my actual friend living room network of choice is.
And from where social networking started back in 2004 and ending up now in this reasonably complex interaction paradigm of I get AI-served videos from people I don't know tailored to me,
and then I privately share those in multiple groups with those who I love and care about.
That is a huge evolution.
It's crazy that we use the term social network
or social media for these two things
that are like light years apart.
Totally.
The social and the media is now completely divorced.
And that is because of the shift
from town square to living room.
Yeah, we really need to evolve our language
around all this stuff.
Okay, so that I think is dimension one that TikTok is completely orthogonal to Facebook.
Dimension two is actually organizationally. So TikTok, as we chronicled on our episode about it a couple years ago, came out of ByteDance. Well, it was an acquisition of Musical.ly by
ByteDance and then ByteDance turned it into TikTok. ByteDance had Toutiao before having TikTok.
ByteDance is an AI company. ByteDance is not a product company. And the core product that
ByteDance makes is its AI, along with all sorts of other stuff. TikTok is like the product vector, one of many and the
biggest, by which they deploy their actual product, which is AI. This is very, very different from
Facebook, which has always been a product company. And so like organizationally, the way ByteDance
is set up is there are these centers of excellence within the company where the algorithms, the AI, that is controlled by a centralized team within the company.
At least that's my perception of how they're different organizationally from how Facebook used to be.
Facebook and Facebook leadership was obviously watching this very, very closely.
And if you look at how Meta is organized now, it looks a hell of a lot
more like that. So Meta today is organized. There are centers of excellence across the company,
same way that I was just talking about ByteDance. There's FAIR. That's the fundamental AI research
team. There's infrastructure shared across the whole company deployed to all the products and
apps. There's revenue and monetization shared across the whole company deployed to all the products and apps. There's revenue and monetization shared across the whole company deployed to all the products and apps.
There's growth shared across the whole company deployed across the various products and apps.
There's integrity and safety, which is a big, big, big advantage that Facebook has. They've
reorganized how the whole company looks. There's still all the individual products
in the family of apps.
Those all have their own heads
and they all roll up to Chris Cox
who has had a product for the whole company
and AI too actually reports to him.
But all the infrastructure, all the revenue,
all the growth, all the integrity and safety
are decoupled from those actual products now
and live in these centers
of excellence across the company. Fascinating. And I think there's a lot of ByteDance influence
in that. Makes sense. It's the most formidable competitor they've ever faced, and they really
have no way to neutralize it. Yep. All right. So all this talk of TikTok, them being an AI-first
company, clearly Meta today is an AI-obsessed company. How did that start?
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huntress.com slash acquired or click the link in the show notes and just make sure to tell them that Ben and David sent you. Okay, so David,
Meta Today, clearly an AI-obsessed company. How did that start?
Yeah. So I mentioned this organization FAIR a couple times. I think it's
FAIR to go back and tell the actual origin of that because it's really interesting.
Hey-oh. It's Fundamental AI Research.
Originally, it was Facebook AI research and now
it's fundamental AI research given the company is now meta. So back in like 2013 timeline,
when the company was finally fixing mobile, coming out of the hellscape of 2012 of going
through that transition during the IPO and the shift to mobile. Mark and the company's VP of engineering, Mike Schreppfer, or Schrepp as he's known,
were trying to figure out like, okay, we've finally got a little moment to breathe here.
The tiger isn't chasing us at the moment.
Can we take a step back and try and figure out like,
when is the tiger going to jump out next and try and get us?
Yeah, or all these crazy things are happening
because we've been having to play defense
as user attention shifts with this new paradigm of mobile.
How do we not let that happen next time?
Like, how do we play a more active role
in whatever the future of technology is
so we're not getting whiplashed around
and we can kind of control our own destiny a little more?
Yeah.
Basically, not actually owning the platform control our own destiny a little more. Yeah. Basically, not actually
owning the platform sucks. We've realized this now. How do we make sure this never happens again?
Yes. And that spawns some of the early work on AR and VR. Come back to that in a sec. And
even this early in 2013 on AI. And AlexNet had just happened right at this time. And for the whole history of AlexNet,
go check out our NVIDIA series where we talk all about that and the importance to AI and ML.
And Facebook actually had a small ML team already at this point.
They were mostly doing computer vision. The early machine learning folks at Facebook were mostly
looking at, can we do
automatic image tagging to reduce the... You remember how cumbersome it used to be when you'd
upload a big batch of photos, then you had to go tag every single one. And then somehow magically,
I don't remember the exact year, it was all pre-suggested. And you were like, whoa,
this is pretty cool. That was what the original ML folks at Facebook were doing. Yep. And AlexNet and those big AI ML breakthroughs in that era were all around image recognition.
And so Facebook was kind of already attuned to this and like, oh, okay, there's like some pretty big technological stuff happening.
Maybe this is going to be like the next platform vector of the future.
We should get serious about this ai stuff yep so summer 2013
mark and shrep go out to recruit jan lacoon and convince him to come start an ai research lab
at facebook and jan was then and is now one of the top ai luminaries in the field top academics
out there and jan says like well i'm flattered that you would want me
to come work here. That's interesting. But like, I live in New York. I teach at NYU. I don't want
to leave. I don't want to quit teaching at NYU. And I'm pretty darn committed to open source and
publishing all the work that we do. And Mark and Shrepp are like, one, sounds good. You can stay
in New York. Two, okay, you can stay at NYU too. Three, yeah,
we love open source. We were built on the LAMP stack. Great, publish everything.
We haven't talked about this at all, this very long episode so far, but Facebook had been doing
a ton of open source publishing in basically everything they were doing. They were open
sourcing things like Cassandra in their backend. They were open sourcing front-end frameworks, both on mobile and on web.
React, React Native. Yep.
Exactly. They'd been open sourcing a lot of the language modifications they were making.
I don't think Open Compute had started yet, but that was right around this time where they were
starting to open source their data center designs.
Data center architecture, yep.
Facebook definitely has a very particular open source strategy that we're going to talk about in analysis.
But needless to say, they have been advocates of open source
since the very beginning.
Yep.
So Jan is like, wow, well, okay, when you put it that way, sure.
And what's really important about how they do this is
this is not Microsoft research.
This is not blue sky.
Yeah, let's go focus on anything.
This is a highly focused AI research group.
We are going to research AI.
And I think that has kind of made all the difference.
It is super clear exactly how that is going to translate
into helping
Facebook and Facebook's products. This was pretty, I don't want to say contrarian,
that would have been wrong, but it's one of a dozen specializations of computing that you
could have sort of glimpsed into for the future. Yep. And it was one of those earned secrets that Facebook had and Google had at this time, you know, 2013, 14, 15 of like,
oh, we can very, very profitably apply this work to our current products in social media feed
recommenders. Yes. So it's very funny that the rest of the world is having their AI moment now
because Meta had theirs in 2013-14. Before language models,
like long before LLMs, Facebook realized they could profitably spend billions of dollars on
AI systems to recommend, A, what post you should see next in your feed, and B, what ad out of the
entire inventory of ads we could show you, what is the best one for you at this moment in time for that advertiser's spend.
And today, there's a lot of companies who are spending on AI in hopes that the use case
materializes in the future. Facebook's is like wildly proven and has been for a decade and is
incredibly profitable for them. So that's just like something to keep in mind whenever you're
looking at Facebook talking about AI today. Yeah, there's a lot of future-looking stuff they're talking about, but it is already super
at scale and a great business and has been for a long time. And they've just been,
you know, it's like they've been quiet about it, but no one cared until now.
It's one of the fundamental advantages that Facebook has today relative to all other AI companies is that they are guaranteed profitable
ROI on all of their AI spend, all of their research, all their infrastructure, all their GPUs.
They have highly, highly profitable ways to put it to work today.
Right. It is a nice to have for meta if the next form factor of computing is an AI assistant like Meta AI, but it's not essential. That's, you know, one of many things that they could do profitably with AI technology.
Yep. wasn't top-notch. Like, everyone knew that they were a up-and-coming, great startup that went
public, but they weren't necessarily reputable in the computer science community as these people
are Microsoft-level researchers to advance the state of the art.
Or Google-level in the way that Google always was from the beginning.
Yes. And I think Mark and Shrepp had to make this point to Jan. And then when Jan joined,
it kind of made the point to the rest of the industry that this is not something that's
going to like wax and wane with our financial results. We're in for a decade on this particular
area of research. It's kind of amazing. It really only took like two years to bear fruit for them
before they had profitably deployed AI systems in production.
Because most of the time,
these research projects take much, much longer.
It's funny, actually, thinking through this now,
I think there are three dimensions to the payoffs
from this investment in AI and FAIR back in 2013.
One is the near-term and immediately
and ongoing profitable paybacks to incorporating AI in existing Facebook products and social media feed recommenders.
Highly, highly, highly profitable.
It just makes every ad that's displayed more likely to make money, and it makes every feed post that is displayed more likely to get engagement.
Yes, 100%.
Okay, then there's two, which is this like, hey, AI might be the next
computing platform. There's a lot of interesting stuff going on. This allows us to have a piece
on the chessboard and be a player in the next platform transition, should it be to AI.
And this is just like what Meta did with threads, with WhatsApp. With threads,
they've said, we're not monetizing it right now. We're going to see if it becomes a big, close to billion user platform.
And if it does, then great.
We'll figure out
the right monetization strategy,
just like we did with WhatsApp.
It may or may not be ads specifically,
but we build things that get engagement
and then we later figure out
how to make money on them.
Yeah.
And then three,
they had no way of seeing this at the time.
But fair and AI actually becomes
the way that they can catch up
and re-architect to compete with TikTok via Reels. No AI, no Reels. That's such a good point. If not
for FAIR, TikTok could have disrupted Facebook. Totally. I mean, Reels would not have come out
as fast as it did. Right. Facebook would not have had that near-term weapon to go,
huh, we need something that kind of stops our users from leaking out and jumping over to this
other app, you know, for a use case that we basically can't match. I mean, it is magic
how the Reels and TikTok algorithms work, and now YouTube with Shorts, that very quickly they do figure out how to put things in front of you that are incredibly engaging just for you.
I mean, they call it the For You page.
And that have no social connection to you.
Yes, exactly.
You're right.
The decision looks more prescient than ever given that.
Totally.
Okay, so that's fair and AI.
Let's jump forward now to 2016, 2017, 2018. And I think for our purposes here today, it's interesting to view the 2016 election, Cambridge Analytica, all the fallout that comes out of that, which much, much, much ink has been spilled, through this lens of the consumer social transition from town square to
living room because i think it actually explains a lot oh all right i'm curious to hear what you're
thinking here but to catch us up here's kind of what happened until 2015 ish facebook could kind
of do no wrong other than all the data privacy issues that they had sort of worked through with the FTC in 2011. But they are now increasingly finding themselves in very
controversial situations that they are ill-prepared for, as sort of all of humanity is now joining the
network. First of all, content moderation is becoming an issue. Oh, yeah, for sure.
Facebook is trying to figure out their role in this. Are they a neutral platform? Do they need to kind of police what is said on their
platform? On top of that, actually defining what is allowable speech on their platform is becoming
trickier than ever, and it is hard to create one set of rules and abide by them globally,
and Facebook was just caught flat-footed in a big way by the
firehose of questionable content that people would post. Ultimately, they end up throwing
huge amounts of people at this, hiring tens of thousands of contractors to deal with content
moderation, building out really sophisticated kind of policies and programs and escalation and
review processes. They have an ever-escalating set of posts, videos,
and live streams shared around the platform. That's right, because it's not just text anymore.
It's obviously photos, but like videos now too. Reviewing real-time video, absolutely. And as you
would imagine, they are not perfect at this. So they're creating headlines left and right about
objectionable things being shared on the network. In building technology that enables
everyone around the world to communicate with each other and organize, they also have the flip side
of anyone can share anything, and if it's engaging enough, there's a ton of eyeballs that see it.
So misinformation is starting to become a big deal too. Ultimately, this comes to a head in the 2016
to 2018 period after they have whittled away
a lot of the public's goodwill. And we're just going to zoom in on this moment for the company.
The 2016 election happens, and a lot of people are looking around for an answer to,
wait a minute. Yeah, this isn't the outcome that I expected. What happened? Exactly. There's a lot
of people who feel this couldn't have
happened on its own legitimately. You know, somebody did something. And one thing that
absolutely did happen is there was a firm called Cambridge Analytica that sold their services
to the Trump campaign and had a methodology to create psychographic profiles that they believed would work that were derived from a Facebook quiz application. This ends up being an absolute honeypot of a story for anyone who is fired up about a big change to the country that they are not excited about. four stories concurrently happening of how Facebook was involved in the election. One,
there was Russian interference. Two, people are spinning up fake news sites, not necessarily
for politics, but actually for the ad dollars generated on them. Three, Cambridge Analytica.
Four, the Trump campaign may have been really good at using
Facebook's digital marketing tools. Yes, I think that is like undeniably true. Yeah, so there's
been years of investigation into each. It seems like that last one is actually the biggest lever.
Yes, Russians did spin up fake pages and accounts with pretty modest spend, and people absolutely
spun up fake news sites and generated fake viral
stories for politics and also profit. Cambridge Analytica, yes, it was a thing, but they ended up
with actually pretty crappy derivative data from a quiz, not the treasure trove of raw Facebook data
on you and your friends that everyone feared. But David, to your point, really what happened is the Trump 2016 campaign just actually took
meta platforms seriously and got really, really good at using the tools.
Yeah.
Quite ironic in that Obama totally doubled down on Facebook as a strategy and used it
to great effect to win the 2008 and 2012 elections.
Yes.
So as you can imagine, I'm preparing for this episode and I'm
like, okay, I just heard Mark Zuckerberg say on another podcast, by the way, great interview with
Alex Heath at The Verge after MetaConnect about this, he dropped this line, people thought that
all this data had been taken and it had been used in this campaign. And it turned out the data
wasn't. And the data wasn't even accessible to the developer.
So David, I'm listening to that. And I stop because I'm thinking, well, that's not what
anybody thinks. Because there was a ton of reporting on the fact that they did. So what
actually happened here? So here are the chain of events. Back in the 2010s, Facebook built the
platform that we talked about that was incredibly permissive in the early days when you authed your
profile against an app. You gave it all of your profile data, and in those earliest days, it could
actually see your whole friend list too. Facebook eventually made their API much more closed off,
but it took a couple years to do that. Now, there was a terms of service that required app developers
to delete any data they had after a period of time and only use it for very specific purposes.
But of course, Facebook couldn't actually guarantee that people were complying with the terms of service. It was just,
you know, you were breaching contract. So at some point, a developer made an app that was a quiz.
Users could opt into taking that quiz. The quiz asked you questions, and by combining the answers
to those questions with the profile data you authenticated from Facebook, that app developer
then tried to label you with a
pretty basic psychographic profile. And then ultimately that derivative data, the labels of
personality characteristics that were derived from Facebook data and your quiz answers, is what
Cambridge Analytica had, as best I could tell. So I read a good amount of the report that the UK
government put out about this. The conclusion was that the quiz was taken by 320,000 people. Since those people had access to friends, the total surface area was the public profile data of anything derived from the Facebook data back in 2015 before the election even started. So it was, yes, true, an application got access to Facebook data on a lot
of users. It is also true that it violated terms of service to use that data for other purposes,
and they did not comply with a delete request, or they may not have complied. It's kind of
difficult to reconstruct. On top of all this, it supposes that Cambridge Analytica's method of
taking these quiz answers and translating them into something that could impact voting
worked, like it was effective. And that's pretty thin.
Right. That's kind of the most thin thing of all of it.
Right. So here's what the UK report concluded, and this is in government speak, so it's all very
hedged. While the models showed some success in correctly predicting attributes on individuals whose data was used in the training of the model,
the real-world accuracy of these predictions, when used on individuals whose data had not been
used in the generating of the models, was likely much lower. Through our analysis of internal
company communications, the investigation identified there was a degree of skepticism
within Cambridge Analytica as to the accuracy or the reliability of the processing being undertaken.
There appeared to be concern internally about the external messaging when set against the reality
of their processing. So at the end of the day, the Cambridge Analytica thing in particular
was kind of a nothing burger. But that is not the story that gets told. The UK
regulator was given full access to this and ended up being quite skeptical that the methodology even
worked in the first place. So they've got this like kind of crappy derivative data not complying
with terms of service requests to delete it, and the method may not actually work. Now this doesn't
exonerate Facebook in any way from what could have happened.
They had an incredible treasure trove of data that apps could slurp up in the early 2010s,
but the actual narrative of Facebook data that Cambridge Analytica had impacted election results
is, like, wildly oversold.
Yep. All that aside, as we were wading through all of this
and trying to make sense of
it and think about how we're going to talk about this on Acquired, there is such an enormous,
enormous disconnect between reading what actually happened and then how people felt and what the
lived reality of the brand impact on Facebook was, which that was huge.
Nothing could have been huger.
To me, the story here is there sure was a lot of ill will and discontent with the Facebook brand
that people were willing to dive in headfirst on. It's almost like Facebook isn't guilty of
whatever the heck people think happened with
Cambridge Analytica all these years later. But something is very, very wrong that like
hundreds of millions of people believe that. Yeah. And it's not just wrong with the system.
They definitely, in behaviors along the way, managed to earn people's distrust. I think that's
the issue. effects of it. The quiz that was the app on Facebook, that happened way back in the early
platform days, totally solidly in the town square days. And then the election happened in 2016,
when things are already starting to transition. WhatsApp exists, Snap exists, Snap has launched
stories. Instagram has now copied Snap and launched stories in that very same year. Two more years go by. The Cambridge Analytica news doesn't actually hit until 2018.
By 2018, we are solidly in the living room era. So all of the supposed real or imagined
impacts of this Cambridge Analytica thing had their roots back in the town square era.
We're now here in the living room era, and that is what people's expectations are of Facebook,
of social media, of everything that they are sharing in their lives. And I think this is,
to my mind at least, where the disconnect is. People's expectations shifted, but now all of a
sudden all this stuff from the past becomes
really, really relevant to the present. And when you look back at the past through this lens of
what the present is, you're like, well, this is really effed up. Like, how the hell did the
company do this? Right. And, you know, the answer was they were trying desperately to grow. They
were trying to will a platform into existence. Of course, the cultural norms were a little bit more
permissive, but like the cultural norms were really never permissive to the point to say, sure, you should download and store a big JSON dump of my whole do that and then violate terms of service and store it forever, then it just kind of becomes this
ticking time bomb that's out there. Exactly. It's like this weird temporal and cultural
mismatch of it all landing in 2018 when the world is a very, very different place.
In part, you can see why Facebook massively prefers the ad-based business model of, we never even expose any information to you, advertiser. You target, and then we just deliver the ads. You never get to know anything about who the users are on our platform, we don't sell data. They don't. They sell the opportunity to target users. But in fact, if they did sell data, it would be a bad thing because someone
that could then build a competitor, like the asset that they have is actually their data
that they choose not to sell for business reasons. Yep, totally. Then there's this whole other layer
to hear of like, well, why did they do this in the first place? Why did developers have access
to so much data?
They were building platform.
They were building an entirely different business with a different strategy.
Now they are an advertising and media-based business.
We're almost talking about two totally different companies here, as I think we've told in the story.
Yeah. I search my heart of hearts, though, when I was developing apps in the 2010 period and would let people use Facebook Connect or whatever the current branding of accessing Facebook accounts was at the time.
I was always like, whoa, this is a lot of data that comes with someone clicking that button.
Well, I think you made the point, right, of like Facebook had to kind of sell the platform to developers.
Totally did. They didn't have the underlying hardware
and technology and operating system to offer,
so there had to be a really big sweetener.
Yep.
I just can't believe it, though.
After all these years and all this writing
and all these headlines,
if Cambridge Analytica were more competent,
they probably could have had more impact.
But as it stands, I just can't believe
there's not a big story on the front page of major newspapers with big headlines saying,
actually, Cambridge Analytica didn't really have that much in the first place. Their methodology
appears to have not worked. And mea culpa. Sorry for getting y'all all riled up. If you don't want
to like Facebook, sure, but go pick a different reason. Okay, so
what happened with all this? It is worth knowing, to finish the story earlier from the consent
decree in 2011 that said Facebook is going to be carefully monitored for privacy concerns,
as you can imagine, the Cambridge Analytica News coming out put a gigantic bullseye on Facebook,
and the FTC said, aha, you guys signed a consent decree a mere seven years
ago. What the hell? This is exactly what we're talking about. And Facebook just decides, you
know what, what's the big dollar sign that check that we can write here? Because it seems like we
just want this to be done. We want this to be buried. We're a different company now. We kind
of want to put that to bed. The whole settlement here was not specifically about Cambridge Analytica. There were a bunch of other
things that are privacy-related, but the number is $5 billion. And, David, there is one thing that
it comes with, and that is a 20-year window that they are monitoring Facebook. And that is exactly matching to the words that Mark
gave us on stage that Cambridge Analytica, the way they handled it was a 20-year mistake.
Yep. Now, I think by the 20-year mistake, he meant much more of like the damage to
Facebook's brand that came out of this than specifically the FTC settlement.
Yep.
It is funny.
I was thinking,
this is a very Facebook appropriate comment.
If we had subtitles for this episode,
this one would be,
it's complicated.
Yes.
So great.
It really is.
It really is.
It really is.
And what it comes down to is,
I think there is an ethos at Facebook that at many steps along the way, there was an opportunity to grow, to win, to compete. And what mattered was winning. And then when the dust settles, you can kind be really careful and ask permission. Facebook fell into the first camp, and they probably wouldn't be here today, or certainly at least wouldn't be a global player with 4 billion users today if they hadn't fallen into the first camp. But by falling into that first camp, you have stuff that comes up where you're like, ah, crap, I wish we hadn't done that. And this is one of them.
Right. The time bombs, totally.
Okay, so what actually happens?
Facebook becomes a lot less valuable
after all of this comes out.
The company announces in their July 2018 earnings call
that they're gonna be more focused on user privacy
and that revenue may slow as they make this intense focus.
They dropped 19% in one day. They wiped out $119
billion in market value, which was the largest single day loss for any company in history at
that time. At that time. Save at that time. Yeah. To be exceeded in the future. So this whole privacy
issue, the $5 billion settlement, all this stuff that just
happens with meta, it has big ripples for the whole tech industry. There's a phrase that is
known on the lips of every American somewhere in the neighborhood of Cambridge Analytica,
election interference, fake news, I hate social media, Facebook did this, YouTube did that, blah, blah.
And this is a persistent drumbeat that is underneath the whole national discourse.
There is an opportunity to be the anti-Facebook here, if you want to be, to be the company that says we are so unbelievably, incredibly about privacy, even more than we ever have been before.
David, who does that?
That is Tim Cook's Apple.
Yes. So Apple, a company that I love and adore and was actually wearing an Apple t-shirt earlier
today and had to take it off before recording because I felt like it was weird to be wearing
my Apple t-shirt when recording the Facebook episode. Apple is a company that has always been incredibly privacy conscious. They both use that as something they believe deeply in their
soul and design into their products and is amazing for all of us who use their products to get that
privacy and have that trust. They also, to use Ben Thompson's parlance, use it as a strategy credit.
There are areas in which it really behooves them because they don't need to do server-side stuff. They don't need to do advertising because they
make a lot of advertising indirectly from Google, and they don't need to do a lot of other things.
So they can tout, hey, we're unbelievably secure with your data. We take privacy incredibly
seriously. No one takes it more seriously than us. They start really beating this drum, and by 2021,
they decide, you know what? In iOS 14.6, we are going to launch a new policy called App Tracking Transparency. Yep, ATT. And what that means is a few years ago, we mandated that anybody who is tracking you across apps start using something called the IDFA,
the Identifier for Advertisers. Now, in the past, Apple had let you just actually reach in and grab
the device's unique identifier, which was pretty cool because as a developer, it was unrelated to
advertising. Think of it almost like a serial number of this device. And you could use that for things like, hey, is this the same user across multiple applications?
I've got my SDK and my code running in multiple developers' applications, so I can do interesting
things like say, hey, this person both takes runs with Strava, and they also use Google
Maps, and you can just kind of gather data across apps.
Kind of similar to how Facebook was gathering across the web with like buttons everywhere
or with Facebook Connect everywhere.
So they could build this holistic profile of things you do off of Facebook.
Yep.
So Apple stops letting you use the device identifier.
They force you into using this IDFA.
And then with iOS 14.6 in 2021, they say, hey, if you're using IDFA, part of that API is that now whenever
someone launches an app for the first time, it's going to ask them in this really aggressive
language, are you OK with getting tracked or do you want to ask this app not to track?
What do you think people are going to click? Yeah, There's a default answer to that question.
Yes.
So what actually ends up happening, most people click ask app not to track.
A whole lot of Facebook's targeting basically falls apart.
They no longer have a picture of you outside of apps that they actually own.
And a lot of the reason why advertisers can get so good at targeting is
because of this holistic picture that is built for you across your phone. David, this is the example
kind of manifest in practice of the thing you were talking about all the way at the launch of mobile
of what's one of the reasons why Facebook's beautifully constructed business model doesn't
work in the mobile walled garden ecosystem. It's because the operating system maker can make a change like this that just kind of affects core functionality that you were relying on.
And now you don't have access to that data, so you can't run as effective of an advertising service.
Totally. And a minute ago, when you asked the question of who is banging the privacy drum,
and I said, it's Tim Cook's Apple. One of the reasons I said that is that actually, I didn't know this till doing the
research, Mark and Steve Jobs had a great relationship, which makes this story all that
much more interesting. Mark is very Steve-like. Very, very Steve-like. And they actually met for
the first time in 2007, right as all of this is coming together. And the first meeting was that Steve
actually reached out to Mark and wanted to meet him and build a relationship, which I don't think
Steve did that with too many people. And then so on the back of that, the next year in 2008,
when the iPhone SDK was launching and people were building apps, Mark and Facebook actually
go to Apple and meet with Steve and they pitch Steve on exactly what you were just talking about, Ben.
Like, hey, how about you let us bring our platform that we've just built that has all these developers into iOS, into your platform?
Really? Oh, to make Facebook platform part of the iOS developer? Whoa.
Yes. Which, you know, from Facebook's part is kind of like a Hail Mary. Like,
yeah, they're probably not going to say yes here, but this is really big risk to us. We
might as well try. But they did have enough of a relationship where Facebook and Twitter both
were privileged citizens on an early version of the iPhone OS. Like in the settings screen,
even before you installed any apps, there was like a Facebook and
a Twitter settings for, I guess, like native integration between the operating system and
those networks. And social networks. Yes, totally. So Steve, supposedly the legend goes, you know,
kind of Mark and the Facebook team make this whole pitch. And at the end of it, Steve just
looks at Mark and is almost a little sheepish. And it's just like, thank you.
We're just not going to let somebody else build a platform on top of our platform.
And then he sort of pushes back in his chair and it's like clear that's the end.
And he's like, hey, so by the way, what do you guys think about Microsoft and working
with them?
And then they just like have a really nice conversation supposedly for the next couple
hours and shoot the shit and talk about Microsoft and computing history. It's this very cordial relationship. And I think the sense I get
is that Steve really liked Mark and respected him. Well, they're both like pretty product
visionaries and they're both like very stubborn about their views of the future. And they both
were very right about their views of the future. I can see it. Totally. And clearly that is not the feeling today
between the two companies.
And I think what happened since,
okay, if it had just ended,
Apple isn't going to let Facebook build a platform
on top of their platform,
that might've been it.
But then when mobile app installs happened
and Facebook all of a sudden-
Facebook was making billions of dollars
off of deciding what apps in the App Store get downloaded.
Apple had to have felt like, hey, this is actually...
This is our turf.
Ours, yeah.
Yeah.
And so then after everything that happened in 2016, 2018,
Cambridge Analytica, privacy, to your point, Ben,
part of this is that Apple has always cared about privacy
and it's always worked
well for them and it's part of their main product strategy part of it too is like oh great here is
kind of the ultimate competitive vector that we can have against somebody we really don't like
who we feel has profited off of our platform unfairly yeah you end up with Apple feeling like
everything that happens on our platforms is ours, and
these are our users to protect, and no one's going to do wrong by our users in any way.
So you have Apple, who is protective as all hell, and then you have Facebook, where Mark
Zuckerberg, more than anything in the world, wants as much freedom to operate as possible.
And you have Apple trying to constrain and you have Mark who hates feeling
held captive. Yep. So now here we are in 2021 and Apple's like, we're making our move. Yeah.
Facebook's been reeling. We've been beating the privacy jump for the last couple of years since
2018 in Cambridge Analytica. Now it's time to make the move. So what ends up happening? Actually,
the first couple of quarters, not much.
Facebook's talking about it on earnings calls. Hey, we think this is going to have impact.
It's not huge. But then February 2022, which is technically the end of year 2021 earnings call
for Meta, they drop the bomb. Interestingly, in question and answer, I listened to the whole
earnings call and the CFO kind of casually says in a response to someone, oh, we think that the impact from ATT to our ad business will end up
costing us on the order of $10 billion for 2022. What? That is eye-popping. Like, okay.
So what ends up happening is there's a 26% drawdown in a single day.
Remember we said to put a pin in the single day drawdown records?
The market cap went from $900 billion to $700 billion.
The actual number is they lost $232 billion in market cap,
the new largest in history, surpassing their previous record.
Also, on this call, they announced their first ever
quarter-over-quarter user decline. Keep in mind, what's happening is, on top of meta basically
saturating most of the internet-connected world by this point, TikTok is also really, really peaking.
So it has some marginal users kind of using the app less because they're moving to TikTok,
and Facebook is reacting to TikTok and trying to put Reels in.
So they're cannibalizing their own revenue by encouraging people to watch these short-form
AI-recommended videos that actually don't yet monetize as well as the newsfeed.
There's kind of three fronts that are destroying them here.
There's ATT, there's TikTok competition, and they're making revenue cannibalizing changes in their own app. So the hit continues. It traded all the way down 46% by April 27th, and then ultimately it bottomed on Halloween that year. So this is, what, eight months later with a 72% drawdown. They lost 72% of their value between February
and Halloween. All in the year 2022. It's crazy. And that is like NVIDIA levels of drawdown back
in the crazy NVIDIA journey that we talked about. It's totally insane. The interesting thing is, at this time,
the real threat wasn't actually ATT. The biggest of those three threats was TikTok stealing users.
Yes. The whole ATT thing is about how much money can we make off of an ad because it is so well
targeted. That's an optimization that is useless if you do not have users
to advertise to in the first place.
Yes.
So the actual real existential threat is TikTok.
And Ben Thompson makes this really great point.
And I know I've quoted Ben over and over this episode,
but I think he's just been so astute on Facebook
at many points throughout history.
This decision to make these product changes
to respond to the TikTok threat in the face of ATT to make these product changes to respond to the
TikTok threat in the face of ATT to do these at the same time is a founder-led decision.
If you had a professional CEO, the correct thing to do to preserve your job and shareholder value
is to wait six, 12 months before you start reacting to TikTok to let the whole ATT thing
blow over. Mark's like, I can't get fired. I think the right thing to do is react to TikTok to let the whole ATT thing blow over. Mark's like, I can't get fired.
I think the right thing to do is react to TikTok now because every day this problem compounds and
gets absolutely worse. I don't care that there's this horrible narrative going on right now with
ATT that is going to cause us apparently to lose $10 billion of revenue we otherwise would have
gotten this year. We must cannibalize revenue in addition to that to make these product changes. What it ends up with is a 72% drawdown. And what it also
ends up with is the chance for it to 5x from there, which is what has happened. The company
saved itself by acting correctly in this, and they had to go through this wild, tumultuous two-year journey in the process.
It's just another episode
of Mark making these sets of decisions
because he's Mark,
because he controls the company,
and because he has the stomach to withstand it.
Yep.
And what ended up actually happening from ATT?
It's been value destructive overall
because I don't think the amount of money
that has shifted away from Facebook has been captured by Apple. I get the sense that the
app install business for the app store, those search ads, is going great, but it's not equivalent
to what the monetization over at Meta is on app install ads or was on app install ads.
I think Apple was sort of hoping in
its heart of hearts that this would shift a lot of those dollars into ads in the app store.
And the reality is people just don't go to the app store searching for apps anymore.
Not to mention this kneecapped meta on a lot of ads that are not app install ads. This kneecapped
a lot of the, like we have a friend that's in the
retail business who was saying that their ads doubled in price in 2022 when this happened,
and they were sort of scratching their head, and they have nothing to do with the app store.
So all that kind of happened is that entrepreneur said, I guess I'm going to keep advertising on
Facebook as a platform. I hope it gets better. I'll pick some other platforms, but like I can't advertise with Apple. There's nothing for me to do. It's a retail
good. It's a physical item. So I guess I'll just pay more money to acquire customers now. Like it
ends up actually hurting the business when go-to-market channels get less efficient, unless
you can sort of shift that spend to a place where your customer is also hanging out. In practice, meta's fine.
When a shift like this happens, the most scale player with the most engineers and the most
data, turns out they're still the winner.
Meta launched this thing called Advantage Plus, and now if you're an advertiser, they
use a whole bunch of other data signals, and you still have a customer acquisition budget,
you're going to spend it, you're probably going to go spend it on Meta the same way where you were before, and it's just not
quite as efficient as it was. Oh, and by the way, anyone else that got hurt from the changes with
ATT just doesn't have the ability to react and build around it the way that Meta had because
they don't have the resources Meta does. Yep. So all of this finally brings us to the last piece of the story here that i'm sure listeners
at this point you're probably saying like what the heck where however many hours in you guys
haven't said the words reality labs or oculus or ar or vr once oh is Facebook in that industry? Yeah. Yeah. You know, I guess they are.
All right. So what happened here? Way back in 2012, Facebook starts getting interested around
the same time that they're starting FAIR for AI in what is the platform of the future. They start
doing some hardware prototyping on their own. They're not really set up for that yet, but they
do want to do the
same sort of approach that they did with AI, which is focused research, not general research. Pick a
particular thing where we have an opinion about something we think is going to be the future,
and then invest deeply in it. So a crazy thing happened. In February of 2014,
they opened up the purse strings and paid $19 billion for WhatsApp. They had so much
conviction that the future was AR and VR that 34 days later, they paid another $2 billion for
Oculus. I had no recollection that these things were a month apart. No, I didn't. I knew they
were both in 2014, but I didn't realize they were a month apart. It's wild. I think Mark got the demo of Oculus and was just like, oh, this has the most credible
potential to be the future out of anything that I've ever tried. So yes.
But I think actually the right way to think about this is through the same lens as FAIR.
It's a research lab in the same way that FAIR is a research lab. And it was like, oh, great,
$2 billion to kickstart the research lab.
Fantastic.
All right.
So you and I have both tried Orion.
It is unbelievable, fantastic, very clearly a path to the next generation of computing device.
I don't know if this is going to be the winning company.
I don't know if that's going to be the exact winning device. I don't know if this is going to be the winning company. I don't know if that's going to be the exact winning device. But never have I been so sure that a mainframe very far
away from me to converting to a PC, which lives three feet from me, converting to a phone that
lives an arm's length from me, the next logical step is glasses that live on my face. And that
used to sound ridiculous. And then you and I tried Orion. and now I'm like, oh, yep, that is going to replace or augment my phone in whenever these things are commercially
available and consumer-grade. I'm glad we waited to do this episode because I think I would have
had a pretty different take having only tried VR headsets and Vision Pro and big goggly things
over the years. I think I would have been unconvinced,
frankly, because I didn't think it was possible
to put something in that small of a form factor.
So that is the current product experience
that you and I have recently had.
Now let's look at the business strategy
and the financials of how we have gotten here and why.
So there are two ways to look at Reality Labs.
The first way is to answer
the question, what would have to be true about the business to be great on its own and justify
all this investment? And let's level set on how much investment has gone into it. Yes. So based
on their spend already, since they started reporting Reality Labs as a separate segment in 2019,
they've spent right around $60 billion. That is in operating losses for the segment.
And does that include the $2 billion for Oculus? I mean, either way, it's a rounding error.
Who cares? I don't think it does. With that level of investment, it already needs to be
essentially the most successful and profitable consumer product in history to pay
itself back. That is the only possible outcome here where we even get our money back. I know
this sounds wild, but like, that is the bet. No other outcomes are acceptable. Fortunately,
if we want to model this out, we know the financials of a product like that, the most
successful and profitable consumer product in history, the iPhone. So a product like that, the most successful and profitable consumer product
in history, the iPhone. So as a thought experiment, what if Meta managed to launch such a product,
say the Orion glasses, tomorrow, and say that such a product grew at the exact same rate and
with the exact same profit stream as the iPhone? Well, I did that napkin math. And if 2024 this year was Apple's 2007,
so you just take all the iPhone's cash flows and you start the clock right now,
Meta's cumulative cash flows from Reality Labs would be net negative until at least 2035.
Okay. Okay. So we're talking 11 years. You would get back to break even on your investment
11 years from now if starting tomorrow they managed to create the most profitable and widely
adopted product in human history. Which obviously is not happening tomorrow. That also assumes
generously that Meta could build a services business attached to it the size of Apple's
services business, which probably generates
right around an equal amount of profit. So basically, take all the profits from iPhone
and double it. That's actually what you would need. It's actually fair to attach a similar
size services business. I think that's very fair, knowing Meta and all of its capabilities and
everything that we just talked about. Yes, that is the bet. Let's just be super clear. Anything else is a complete incineration of cash.
Well, okay. That is the bet looking at through the lens that you posited of a purely financial
investment perspective. Yes. The second way is actually kind of financial too. I think there's
probably a third more emotional way. The second way though is if you're Mark and you constantly live under the thumb of
platform control, you'd do almost anything to get out of it.
And that's not irrational.
I mean, Apple made a $10 billion dent in their revenue just two years ago with AT&T.
And I mean, they could, I don't think they would, but they could at any given moment
just pull you out of the app store and you'd have little recourse.
That is a existential business risk. And it's an unlikely one, but every day you could wake up and all of
your access to all Apple customers could be over. Which, by the way, we haven't talked about it,
but Google could do the same thing. Google could totally do the same thing. They have the right to
distribute or not distribute anyone's app in their store at any given time. Look at Apple and Epic with Fortnite. Totally. So there
is actually an expected value calculation you can run, which is my entire company's market cap
times the likelihood that it could happen, which, you know, it's extremely low likelihood, but
because the market cap is $1.5 trillion, the expected value is still a very big number.
So then if you're thinking this way, what is a reasonable percent of your market cap
to invest every year in a hedge that might, might get you out from under the thumb of
big tech platforms?
And at Meta being worth $1.5 trillion, if they're spending $15, $20 billion a year on
Reality Labs losses,
that's a little over 1%. Right.
Is that worth it?
If you truly believe that this is the most effective way to offset your most existential
risk in the next two decades, hell yeah, it is.
Hell yeah, it is.
Now, am I certain that this is the best way to hedge that risk?
No, I don't know.
And like, is there a huge amount of execution risk along the way well they're running many
hedges on this of course i mean this is part of what fair is this is what llama is etc etc
but it's a one percent tax on your i mean it's generous to frame it off of market cap you
probably should frame it off of revenue but still a one percent tax off of your entire enterprise
value every year, meh.
I think there is also potentially a third way to frame it.
And it's funny, I think you put it in the emotional lens.
I actually think less emotional, but more upside-oriented of Facebook did have the taste of being a platform for those couple years there from 2007 to call it 2010, 2011. And
if they own the next platform, not only will they do everything that you're just talking about of
like, oh, they'll have an iPhone size business because if it turns into be glasses and reality
labs, they're going to be selling the hardware and maybe they can make that profitable. Like
the iPhone is profitable, et cetera, et cetera. Then there's also your point number two,
which is like, this is a defensive play. Our core business right now is at risk because it's built
on somebody else's platform. And Mark made the comment on stage with us that they've run the
analysis. They think they could be twice as profitable in their core media products if they
were on their own platform. Sure, great. But then there's like
the big, big play is the third part of like, well, what if we actually built a platform again,
where we have millions of developers who are developing on us and we are participating in
their business in the way that we used to participate when they were developing on us
in the past? That's an even bigger play. And to underscore your point, David, just a few weeks before we recorded this episode, Meta held a multi-hour keynote at Connect
in September 2024. And of those multiple hours, zero minutes were dedicated to their core products
of social media apps, their $100 billion business of selling advertisements on these social media products.
So at least with developers, it's not about any of that at all. Literally the entire keynote.
Yeah, I did. It was great.
It's Meta AI. It's the Lama models underneath it. It's the open source strategy. It's developers
building for the quest. It's announcing new products like the next iteration of the Ray-Ban Metaglasses.
It's revealing Orion.
Zero minutes to their current products or business.
And they're one of the biggest businesses in the world.
Yeah, wild, right?
They are all about this platform future.
So here we are trying to make the case of like, they did it.
They decided they were an ads business and they built one of the two greatest advertising systems ever known to man and one of the most amazing business models ever.
And at their annual developer keynote, they're talking about how they're going to one day become a platform company.
There we have it.
That is the story of Meta.
I should probably say for a minute here too,
my experience using Orion,
you were talking about yours a minute ago,
I thought it was unbelievably compelling.
And before trying it,
I never would have believed that any type of AR or VR
would really have been the platform of the future.
And then after trying Orion, I was like, oh yeah, I could wear these on my face all day. And like,
I could replace a lot of what I do on the phone with just these lenses being in front of me all
the time. And it would be way more efficient, way more enjoyable. I would never have guessed
that in this year you could fit that into glasses.
Glasses and a wireless puck.
Totally.
Yeah.
Listeners, we never shared our impressions on this.
It is wildly compelling.
And if you asked Mark, he probably would frame this whole thing differently than we have.
It's not about this hedge and he would say some things about platform control.
But I think for him is just this general
belief that we want to make awesome products and i believe there's an awesome product to be made
here and i'm going to assemble the best people i can to go work on it and i think that's the like
most interesting duality of this company is it's both it's what is the best strategic move to make
to marshal my resources and a much more touchy
feely like i want to make products that are great and bring people closer together because that's
the mission of the company yep well well put should we wrap the story there we should all
right so we will catch you up on the business today just to put some numbers to all of this
and then we will move into analysis. So as of the end of
reporting last quarter, there are 3.3 billion daily active people across the whole family of apps.
Okay, astonishing. That's up 7% year over year. The family of apps revenue per person is about $12. The end of year stats from last year,
when you just look at the Facebook app, not the whole family of apps, the daily active users are
2.1 billion. So of those 3.3 billion daily active people across all the apps, 2.1 billion are on Facebook, and the monthly number of Facebook is 3.1 billion monthly active
users. So 2.1 daily, 3.1 monthly. Wow. WhatsApp and Instagram are in the neighborhood of 2 billion
monthly active users. WhatsApp has 100 million now in the U.S., which this is sort of a big
narrative violation that WhatsApp will never catch on in the U.S., which this is sort of a big narrative violation that WhatsApp will never
catch on in the U.S., and iMessage is dominant, and even after that, it's, you know, text message.
This is crazy. 100 million people a month in the U.S. use WhatsApp now. I mean, it's been a slow
burn over time, growing and growing and growing, but to me, that kind of came out of nowhere.
The other narrative violation here, there actually is a lot of growth among young adults using the Facebook app itself in the US. I think a lot of people think that's a
sort of boomer thing. It's funny. One thing that may be contributing to that, which we didn't put
in the story, is Marketplace. I mean, for me personally, I have totally boomeranged all the
way back around on the Facebook Blue app, and I am now a loyal DAU because of Marketplace.
It's awesome. Which is crazy because you don't use any other form of social media besides like
posting on Twitter for acquired, right? Correct. They've announced that Meta AI is on track to be
the most used AI assistant by the end of the year. It's worth disambiguating Meta AI from Lama. Lama is the
name of their family of open source models. Those models do power Meta AI, but Meta AI itself is a
branded consumer experience that lives both standalone and in a bunch of Meta's apps.
Their revenue in 2023 at the end of the year was $135 billion, operating income of $47 billion. So that's a 35% operating
margin. Worth knowing, just like all tech companies, they have become CapEx heavy the
last few years. They now, last year, spent $28 billion in CapEx, which you should mostly read
as data centers. They operate a hyperscaler-sized data center footprint,
give or take.
You think AWS, Azure, Microsoft, and Google Cloud.
Meta is the fourth one.
They just don't sell it to anyone else.
It's only consumed by internal teams.
So huge amounts of investment in AI hardware
and just other data center expansion.
The balance sheet is Fortress. They have $50 billion in cash and $58 billion including cash
equivalents and marketable securities. They have 71,000 employees and their market cap is $1.5
trillion, up from $230 billion in just October of 22. Wow. Incredible.
Totally incredible.
So two really insane observations
about the state of the company today.
All of their products seem to increase
user engagement over time.
And all of these products have different use cases.
And it happens across geographies.
There is something in the water at this company. Why is it that WhatsApp and Instagram are both increasing in user engagement
over time? It's the growth function. I mean, it's this purpose-built, heat-seeking missile
of attention and metrics that the company pays attention to, where across a whole broad product
suite,
engagement increases. It's not like they have one thing that happens to do really well.
It's a process. I would say it's a whole set of things as these, you know, the company calls them
centers of excellence internally. It's the growth function, it's AI, it's the ads the revenue team all of this contributes to it yep fair the second insane
thing at ipo the u.s and canada market had an average revenue per user of 11 that number is
now 227 wow yeah and globally that average revenue per user when you include all the
emerging markets and less valuable markets for them is $44.
So they really, really monetize now.
So how much of the world does Meta really have left?
To kind of put a bookend on this.
I almost asked you this question all the way in the beginning when you were teeing up the episode, but I'm glad we'll save it for here.
So according to the UN, last year, there were 5.4 billion people online.
This includes China.
Right.
So they're basically saying two-thirds of humans are online.
And Meta does not include China.
Yes.
Meta has 4 billion monthly active people
across the family of apps.
China alone is 1.4 billion.
And while this isn't like totally exact,
I think you just apply the same multiple to China and say, well, two-thirds of humans are online, two-thirds of China is 1.4 billion. And while this isn't like totally exact, I think you just apply the same multiple
to China and say, well, two-thirds of humans are online, two-thirds of China is online.
So that means that there's 940 million people online in China.
I mean, that's probably being conservative. I think you could probably argue a much higher
percentage of China is online. Yeah. But let's be conservative.
That leaves about 450 million people, or 6% of the human population, who have
access to the internet but are not yet meta monthly actives. That doesn't mean they're not
meta users. That just means they weren't monthly active users as of the end of the last reporting
period. So meta's addressable users who aren't yet users is less than 6% of humans.
Just wild, just wild. And then still, I think the craziest thing about the company
is that if you look at the daily active user figure, it's not that much lower.
Right. And across all products. And so once you frame it this way and you're like, huh,
there's only 6% of the population left either through reactivation or signing up that they could get, you sort of understand why they put so much effort behind emerging markets, behind doing things like zero rating, doing custom deals with telcos, rolling out fiber, bringing countries online for the first time, even when they have no near-term monetization potential. Internet.org was the name of their initiative for a long time around this to basically say, look, we are saturating humans. We got to figure
out how to get more humans on the internet. Yep. Move on to analysis.
Yep. Okay. So in the analysis, the first thing we're going to do is power and then playbook.
So we are going to do a seven powers analysis of what enables meta to achieve persistent
differential returns, or, you know, to put it another way, to be more profitable than their
closest competitor and do so sustainably. This is interesting. Who is their closest competitor?
I think that's probably worth defining first and foremost. Ultimately, they are in the business of
selling advertising. So I think their closest competitor is Google. Yeah, they are in the business of selling advertising. So I think their closest
competitor is Google. Yeah, they are certainly the most similar looking businesses in their
current forms. But like, who do they compete against for the same profits or the same potential
profits? Right. I'm not sure that it's actually Google. I mean, it almost certainly is YouTube within Google,
but I actually think it is other social platforms. Yeah, you're right. I suppose it's other places
people spend time. Yeah, it's where people spend their time. Right. Online and offline. Right.
And I think really what has to happen here is an analysis of each set of stakeholders individually.
Like you almost kind of want to do a seven powers analysis on the user side also of why would someone pick a meta product
over a snap product?
And even though they're not voting with dollars,
it's almost like their attention is a proxy for dollars
because you just assume that those companies
should do a comparable job monetizing the attention.
Yeah.
But what makes sense, I think, is to just walk through each of them.
So counter-positioning, they probably don't have much counter-positioning in the current
state of meta and hold on AI for the moment.
In their startup days, they did a lot of counter-positioning against other global social
networks.
By being a college-only authenticated social network, they were accepting lower growth. They were accepting a capped ceiling of number of users.
And they were doing that because they wanted to make the trade that they felt,
you know, a closed community is more important.
Yeah, with higher engagement.
Scale economies?
Scale economies, 100%. Absolutely.
This company's in the business of scale economies.
Yes, and I think that scale economies on the infrastructure side, on the GPU investment side.
I think that scale economy's on the advertiser side and on the ad experience side.
Just by having so much more scale, they are the default standard way to spend money for advertisers.
Think about on the tooling side. Think about the experience of being an engineer at Meta and the thousand engineer years of work that comes out of that company every year
on making the developer experience of working there better. I mean, it's crazy with the revenue
scale that they have, how much they can amortize these fixed costs. Totally. Everything at this company is scale economies.
Yes.
Okay.
Scale economies for sure.
Switching costs.
As a user, you're pretty locked in once you have followers.
Oh, I hadn't thought about that.
Yeah, that really speaks to, again, another shift we didn't really talk about in the evolution of what we call social media is the creator aspect
of all of this. The whole idea of like a creator and influencer didn't exist in the early days of
social media and Facebook. But now you and me, our platform on the podcasting platform, like we have
incredible switching costs. Somebody who has a ton of Instagram followers has incredible switching
costs. Yep. Now, fortunately in the land of creators, you don't actually need to switch. It's just an
and. You know, it's not like you're ripping out one vendor and putting another vendor in.
I do have a sunk cost in building a following on a given platform, but that doesn't actually
prevent me from also launching on another platform if you have the time to kind of do that.
Yep. I think there might actually be process power.
Normally there's not, but I keep kind of going back to this like there's something in the
water.
Their products grow in engagement over time.
Their growth team does 10,000 little things to open up every step of the funnel as wide
as it can be and make the most frictionless fluid experience for users.
Interesting. Yeah. I was actually having this discussion with Hamilton recently about the
difference between process power and cornered resource. And a good test for this is when you
bring somebody brand new into the organization and plug them in, does the power transfer to them as
well? If no, then it's a cornered resource. If yes, then it's process power.
And in this case, I think that's potentially true. Yeah, you can bring in new engineers,
you can bring in new product people and transfer the advantage to them.
You know, for a while, they had legitimate process power in how they shipped. I mean,
Statsig has started on the premise of this. It blew my mind when
someone from Facebook came and gave a talk at Microsoft in 2014 on how they ship product and
how it rolls out. And not only the feature flagging elements of it, but they can sort of like
watch performance, auto roll things back if they're causing negative performance metrics,
how like there's just deployed
code all the time with a whole bunch of experiments turned off, how there's these experiments that
are running in different ways in different markets, and they can statistically significantly
disentangle which results are from which experiment when they have multiple experiments
that are concurrently running with the same user base. I mean, that was like real voodoo that only Facebook did for feels like a decade.
Yep. And I suppose Google probably does similar type things in different ways,
but nobody else really does. I think OpenAI kind of does. I think OpenAI has so much former
Facebook DNA and kind of thinks the same way that
I think they do a lot of this sort of thing too. Yeah. Okay. I can buy that there's some process
power here. Yeah. Branding. Branding is such an interesting one. I mean, can they have negative
brand power? Yeah. Right. Anti-power. Branding weakness. There's no love for the brand meta.
There's no love for the brand Facebook. There is love for the brand Instagram.
Yeah, but diminishing as it gets larger. Certainly not like it once was.
Yeah. There's like reliability with it all. Like I feel pretty, I mean, there's branding that comes with being any big company that you're sort of like large and trusted and institutional. Yep. But no, I think this is a clear example
of how strong the other powers in this company are
that like despite the brand taking a 20-year hit
in Mark's parlance,
they're still today a $1.5 trillion company.
Yeah.
And then cornered resource,
unless you're going to call Mark one,
which always feels a little bit too cute to name the founder.
I actually think there are some cornered resources here within Meta. And ironically, I think one of the biggest ones is the integrity and safety team and all of the privacy controls and work and security that they have done.
That they've had to harden over the years. Yeah.
Yeah. Even though this is also the source of so many criticisms about the company.
It's now pretty robust.
If you think about anybody that would start up to try and compete with them,
somebody I was talking to put this to me like,
imagine a startup trying to build a hate
speech classifier in Farsi. Meta's got that. And trying to have the relationships with the public
policy people in 200 countries to understand what is acceptable speech in each of those countries.
Yep. So while probably, you know, YouTube, to a certain extent, TikTok perhaps also have
similar strengths here. I doubt there is any other company in the world capable of actually
operating privacy, integrity, and security. And within that is also anti-spam stuff too,
which is super, super, super huge at the level that is also anti-spam stuff too, which is super,
super, super huge at the level that Facebook is. It's interesting. Okay. So in looking at this,
why does Meta do $47 billion a year in operating income? And why do we all believe that's going
to continue for a while? Like what actually is the defensibility here? Is it the network economies?
Because they're so tautological that, I mean, I would argue it's not that. Because what we've seen is TikTok showed us there's a way without initial strong network effects to go capture people's attention and thus eventually the ad dollars.
Yep. And they competed very successfully with Meta in doing so. Yeah. If this were five years ago, I would have been like, why even talk about the rest? Network economies. Once you have the network, then, you know, it doesn't,
the rest doesn't matter. That's just not true anymore. Yeah. Well, I think the network economies
are still true relative to anybody who would compete in a social product. Yes. Which still
exists. Totally. Social is just now divorced from media. Right. And most people do use both.
And sometimes they even use
different apps for it. But it's two different modes of let me, it may be the same session on
the couch, but you do need both use cases of show me who the people that I intentionally follow,
what they're doing, and then show me entertaining things.
Yeah, totally. So part of their business is defensible from the network economies. But the
other part, honestly, it kind of feels like habit. Well, habit, but I think scale economies are
really big for that too, especially in AI. I think the only way that this new paradigm exists is
because of AI and because of GPUs specifically. And I'm not even talking about generative AI.
I'm talking about feed recommender systems and personalization systems. And so'm not even talking about generative AI. I'm talking about feed recommender
systems and personalization systems. And so there is a very, very large minimum barrier to entry
there that keeps going higher as ByteDance and Meta keep investing in it.
Yep. That's a great point. Okay. Playbook?
Playbook. Let's do it.
Okay. So let's talk about what Meta is doing with AI.
And that will lead us into our first Playbook theme,
because we've talked about so far the beginning of FAIR,
them starting all this AI research,
the early 2014 on use of feed recommenders
and the AI for the ad matching system.
But there's a lot going on with Facebook
and AI right now that we really haven't talked about. So there are two words for you to know.
One is LAMA, and this is the family of foundational models that Meta has developed. And these are
competitive with OpenAI and Anthropx,ropix Cloud and Google Gemini, etc.
Yeah. And then there's MetaAI. And MetaAI is a consumer brand that is the way that you interact
with Meta's self-hosted version of Lama, or maybe give it a little bit more credence than that.
It is an application that Meta has that uses Lama in the background,
but provides Meta-specific AI experiences, some of them bundled into apps like in WhatsApp chat or
in Instagram. The Blue app or whatever. Yep. Yeah. But also there's a Meta AI website that you can
go to and interact with it directly. But Lama is the models themselves. Meta AI is the consumer product. And Lama, they have spent billions and billions of dollars, huge amounts of R&D, huge GPU clusters to train, big data centers. Interestingly, it is all open source.
Mark makes a big think about why. It's not open source in the same way,
really, that, oh, Linux is open source, and this is the free standard that everybody uses,
and there's just sort of a foundation behind it all. Meta is putting huge amounts of CapEx and
OpEx, like huge amount of dollars, into willing Lama into existence. It's very different than
these sort of cheap grassroots
open source projects of the past. Yeah, it's open source like Android is open source.
Yes. And so why are they doing this? Well, if you ask Mark why they have an AI model at all,
and I'm quoting from a great blog post that he put out about this,
we must ensure that we always have access to the best technology and that we're not locking into a competitor's closed ecosystem where they restrict
what we build. Okay, I understand that. You believe that the most important thing is to
control the key technologies that make your products possible. Okay, that last bit is important.
Basically, what Mark is saying here is,
we're going to spend a lot of money training these foundational models,
but unlike all of the competitors in the AI space,
we actually don't have a business model
around making money on this.
So we're going to spend all the money,
we're going to give it away free.
Why does that make sense?
It's Open Compute Project all over again.
Yes.
So for anybody who's not familiar,
Facebook made this move in the early 2010s
where they realized they were spending tons and tons of money
on their data center infrastructure.
And the vendors who they were paying,
these integration partners and the server companies
and the networking companies, were making fat margins.
And they were thinking, this is dumb.
We're a really big customer.
Why is everybody else making so much money on us?
And they looked around and they saw all these other big data center companies and they're like,
geez, all those people are paying big margins too. What if we just publish the specs for the
billions of dollars of work that we have done to make our data centers and then we start this
thing called the Open Compute Project and we just get a bunch of other people to adopt it too,
well, suddenly then the Open Compute Project
is this standard by which all the hardware manufacturers
and integrators actually have to snap to
because all the customers are saying,
this is what we want.
And it's a pretty genius way to drive margins down
for these suppliers.
And also a way to guard against somebody in your supply chain kind of building platform power. Yes. So what they basically learn
from this is, oh, we open source this thing. A lot of our costs went down because the whole ecosystem
started using the thing that we open sourced. So even though we're not making money, you know,
they're not a cloud company. They're not selling access to their data centers to anyone. Right, they're not a hyperscaler.
It pays back in the form of saving them money. It can do the same thing in AI. They publish
a really expensive open source foundational model that is in the conversation to be as good as these
other closed source ones. Well, now there's a lot of developers out there
who are just going to build on the open source free one.
It kind of becomes something that the community can build on
and improve and make better.
As Mark said in our conversation with us on stage,
there's a lot more smart people outside your company
than inside it.
But effectively what it does is it puts pricing pressure
on the AI model companies.
To the extent that Mark views it as a super important key ingredient
to the product experiences he wants to build in the future,
it's super bad if there's a few closed source providers
who can provide that experience,
and they A, lock him into controlling,
here's what you can build, here's what you can't build,
but B, take his margin.
Basically say, it's really expensive every time you want to make a call to
one of our proprietary services. When you think about it, it's actually a form of operating
leverage where he's basically saying there's a big fixed cost I'm willing to bear in order to
bootstrap this ecosystem and commoditize all of these complements, commoditize all of these other
closed source AI models. And in exchange, what I'm going to get for that is just pricing pressure on all of them so that in the future,
my variable costs are lower. I just get to keep more of the dollars that we bring in rather than
having to pay them out to proprietary model providers in the future. It's a pretty novel
business strategy. Yeah, totally. So I said, commoditize your compliments. This notion was
dreamed up and named by Joel Spolsky in 2002. There's a great blog post about it. And he makes
this analogy. Think about cars and gasoline. These are compliments. When sales increase in one,
sales increases in the other. You have a car, you need gasoline. Well, AI models end up being a
complement to Meta's products in order for them to build Meta AI or even the feed recommendation
stuff we talked about. They need best-in-class AI models. And just because cars increase the
sales of gasoline, that doesn't tell you about how profitable an automaker gets to be versus
a gasoline maker. So imagine the automaker decided that they want to get into the gas business so
that their customers could have access to low-cost gasoline. Or even further, let's say the automaker
decided to make low-cost gasoline just to drive all the other gasoline prices down. Well, if gas
is cheaper and you're the automaker, you can actually charge more for cars since consumer
willingness to pay is around the total cost of ownership, not about a car or gasoline
specifically. Right. As a consumer, you're always buying a solution. You're buying transportation
or you're buying a technology product doing a job for you. And if AI is a required input to that
solution, then like, yeah, you're thinking about that as a total purchase decision. Yes. Or an advertiser is not going to pay you more or less,
depending on how much you have to pay the AI model provider.
They're going to pay you an amount.
And if you want to maximize the amount of that you get to keep,
it behooves you for you to not have to pay as much money to AI model providers.
Yes.
Better put.
Okay, so how does this apply to Playbook? Better put. We could just let them take care of that as their core competency, and we'll just buy off the shelf from them.
But that's not how meta works, especially with everything they've been through with
Apple.
They have gotten true religion, and I think always kind of wanted to be in this position,
and they just have the capital to do it now.
They will control the key technologies that matter to them, both for getting to own and
dictate product roadmaps and products decisions, but also for the financial upside of making sure that they control their own destiny
and no one in the ecosystem has extreme leverage over them.
Right. Only a company of the scale of Meta can kind of run this playbook in quotes
because no startup is going to be like,
oh, okay, what is my strategy to make sure that open AI and Anthropic don't get leverage over me?
Good luck with that.
Yep, totally.
So my first big playbook theme is meta discovers commoditize your compliment and is now looking
for ways to use it everywhere.
I love it.
Well put.
Okay, great.
I think my first one is almost a different way of putting that which is really like mark and specifically
his superpower of placing multiple bets on multiple chess boards never wanting to be backed
in to a corner yeah and i think he has done incredibly well and i think the story of meta
shows all throughout even in the very very beginning as a tiny project, not even a startup
where degrees of freedom were limited. He was always making choices and playing the game
such that there were multiple options of how things could go right.
Totally. Mark is a master at maximizing his degrees of freedom and setting up the board
such that in an uncertain future, there
are multiple paths to victory no matter how the world unfolds.
Which is unbelievably Gatesian.
I feel like we said the exact same line about Bill Gates in our Microsoft episodes.
The real comp for this company is Microsoft.
I think that's right.
That was actually my next one.
They do iterative
product development. They put the first version out just to kind of get feedback and see how they
need to rev it and get better for the future. The early days are characterized by hiring all the
smartest people and prioritizing IQ over everything else, commoditizing your compliment, obsession
with building a platform that other developers build on top of, this whole thing about multiple
bets in an uncertain future.
I mean, it's funny that just look at,
they were building Messenger internally.
They bought WhatsApp.
I bet they're glad that they had that dual-prong strategy.
They were developing an app called Photos at the same time that they bought Instagram.
That's what they do.
It's Gatesian.
And the most interesting thing that I think is like,
hit me in the face like a ton of bricks.
Zuck, after all the
2016 election fallout and the shift in public perception and having to do all this testifying
is like watching an alternate future for Microsoft where Bill Gates had decided to stay at the helm
instead of leaving after the DOJ case. That is the biggest difference is they both went through
this hellish period.
Yep.
And Mark came out of it and said, I'm more bought in than ever.
Yep.
And Bill came out of it and said, Steve, you're the CEO now.
Yep.
That's exactly it.
Yep.
Are you going to talk about Mark's amazing line from the Harvard CS50 lecture in like 2005?
I'm not, but lay it on me.
Oh, it's so great.
Mark's what, 20 years old at this point, maybe? He spent the summer out in Palo Alto. He gets invited back to do a guest
lecture as like a practitioner in the field at Harvard CS50 class. And he's talking about product
strategy and he talks about how he really admires Microsoft's product strategy. And he thinks it
makes a lot of sense of the first version is getting something out there and it's usually
not very good but by the third or fourth version it's pretty darn good and that makes a lot of
sense to me as a good product strategy. It is amazing. He lays it out right there. We don't
have to like speculate on it. It is explicitly stated. In this same vein it is painfully obvious
when you look at this company that companies are just founders extended.
The culture of this company is just Mark, and it's a huge lever for Mark to act.
This has been true over and over again.
Microsoft, NVIDIA, Nike.
It's just how great companies are in the world. It's very hard for me to point to a truly great company
where the DNA isn't like a lever on the founder's personality.
I think that is right.
And I think it is doubly so with Meta
because of Sean Parker
and because it was set up from the very, very beginning
that nobody could ever get rid of Mark,
that it was always going to be his decision.
And there's got to be a lot of companies out there that like, we're looking at the success case.
Yeah. This works if the founder is really, really, really smart and right almost all of the time.
Right. As we talk to people, here are the traits that we heard over and over again.
Mark is a genius, a really good listener, a fast learner. He goes from knowing zero to mastery in months or
years. He has low ego about being right. That's not to say that he has a low ego, but he has a
low ego about being right. He is obsessed with finding truth and open to being wrong. He's
intensely competitive. He's relentless. He's actually a very good product designer and
understanding the computer architecture that will be required to accomplish such a product experience at scale.
I mean, all these things, like if you have these characteristics and you're then empowered to singularly control the company at massive scale,
yeah, it's going to go well.
But the first thing is actually much harder than the second thing.
Yes, yes.
It's not a causal relationship here that having founder control will lead to the right decisions.
Right. This is my regular reminder that in studying these episodes with extreme survivorship bias, we are looking at the most extreme outliers who, in every dimension you can multiply by, they're at the edge of the distribution. Mark is, I don't know, six or seven standard deviations from the mean human across the important traits that mattered
to making Facebook. Oh, and by the way, with the right timing and the right luck and the
right circumstance and the right know-how, my biggest lesson from doing Unacquired is these
things are unrecreatable. I agree. All right, what's the next one? Durable executive team.
It's kind of shocking how many of the people that are Mark's direct reports and their directs have
just been there for a really long time. This team knows how to work together. Oh, yes. I was actually
talking about this with one of the execs at Meta the other day. And he brought this up and
was saying that like, this really feels like something very, very unique to Meta. And I thought
about it for a minute and I was like, actually, no, I think this is something that is unique to
all great companies. If you look across the landscape out there. Apple's certainly like this.
If you look at Nvidia, if you look at Apple,
if you look at Microsoft in recent years, if you look at the original Microsoft. Costco.
You look at Costco. This is almost always true, really is true in every great company that I can think of. The core senior most executive team are all people who came up in the company or have been
there for a very, very long time. It's not a whole bunch of mercenaries there at the top.
Yeah, that's interesting. Okay, that brings me to this next one, which is something we talked a
little bit about with Mark on stage. And I'm curious to hear your answer to this now that
we've had all this time and space to think about it. Here are all the battles where Meta has either won by buying the
company, won by beating the company, won by copying, or gotten to some kind of sustainable
stalemate. MySpace and Friendster, Google+, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp. We didn't talk
about this one, but Meerkat and Periscope. Oh, yeah. They launched Facebook Live when that was supposed to be the next big thing.
Yep.
Snapchat and TikTok.
That's like seven, eight.
Why do they keep winning?
I have some thoughts.
It's funny.
As we were preparing to interview Mark at Chase Center last month,
this was the question that we kept asking people.
In some ways, I think it's a little bit of a Rorschach test.
Everybody's answer was different
and it was always like what they think
is the most important thing.
Yep.
I think my answer for this
is going to be a version of Mark as the answer.
Yeah.
And it kind of goes back to Adam D'Angelo's
Friendster testimonial about him being way too lucky
and then realizing it's not luck at all.
And I think it is that, you know,
as Adam was telling me as he's reflected on this,
it's a very specific way of carrying yourself through the world where you don't hold too tightly to the path you're on.
Obviously, Mark is incredibly driven to the goal of connecting all the people in the world and doing that through meta.
But he's very, very open and flexible to like the exact path
that it's going to take to get there yes and that combination i think has led over and over and over
again to these threats emerging and mark and the whole team there at meta saying like okay what is
the way that we can neutralize this threat or defeat it?
And we are open to anything on that front.
And I think they are open to being whatever they need to be to make that happen.
I think meta might look extremely different 20 years from now than it is today,
almost like unrecognizably, because this company moves like water
in response to whatever the new shape
of the world is. I mean, hell, after trying Orion, I think there's a very plausible reality five years
from now where this company looks very, very different than it does today. Yeah. I mean,
it really is this idea of Meta is a technology company through and through, and then they
leverage that technology to be whatever the hell they need to be to adapt to the new world. Which is so different from all of the
other big technology companies out there. They are all wedded to a particular vision of what they are.
Totally, because these are all different strengths. Like, they aren't afraid of copying. Okay, that
is a strength. But that's also a completely different thing than I'm going to place bets
on what I think is going to be the big technology wave of the future
and spend tens of billions of dollars on that. That's a different way of winning. Or in some
cases, I'm going to try to leverage my existing network effect to make sure I adopt someone else's
social mechanic. Okay, that worked in a handful of these scenarios, but that's not at all what
works in others.
They don't just have one singular playbook that they run over and over again.
Right, right.
This company moves like water, and product is an act of discovery there.
I'm convinced it's not pure invention.
You asked Mark that on stage.
And there's some stuff they have to invent.
Like Orion, you have to invent, like Orion you have to invent,
but software where you can ship and quickly respond to user feedback and iterate, it's like
they're chiseling away at the marble to find David. I don't think they have David in mind when
they're starting. Most of the time. There are a few moments where they did. News feed is completely
one of them. Inventing the social feed is a completely distinct
and brand new thing
that Meta created.
It's actually one of the few.
When I was a little bit more bearish
on the future of Reality Labs,
I was trying to come up with,
has Meta ever successfully
created something new
that has become a profit center for them
that is like not adopted
from someone else?
Well, I think the tagging of photos was pretty novel. Yes. new that has become a profit center for them that is like not adopted from someone else.
Well, I think the tagging of photos was pretty novel.
Yes. And newsfeed.
Yep.
But it's like kind of funny that we're naming those things as... Platform as short-lived as it was.
No, that was a, we wish we had an operating system, but we don't. So let's see if we can
convince people that this is a sufficient platform.
Well, I think building a real honest-to-God platform with hundreds of thousands,
if not millions of developers making money on it
on the open web.
Okay, fair pushback.
It was totally novel.
Like nobody had done it
without an operating system before.
And like-
Maybe there was going to be a social platform
in this new era.
Yeah.
Maybe that was an operating system of sorts or on par with operating systems to be able to create a platform on top of.
But I take your point. It's certainly not every turn of the game where they're inventing. They're
doing a lot of discovery here. Right. And maybe all companies do, and there's not something
distinct to meta here and everybody learns from each other other and that's fine too but that was something that i was racking my head on
thinking through in fact there's even a testimony this is kind of funny in the mark zuckerberg
versus the winklevoss case from way way way back when mark even makes some comment about well
actually the idea for facebook wasn't even new because myspace and friendster existed so it's
like this interesting positioning of the whole thing itself is actually a borrowed
idea, which of course served him well in that particular case.
But the point sort of stands is like so much of this is borrowed and we just live in a
world, especially in social, where you do kind of have to just, maybe this is media
as a whole, observe what the new format is and adopt it as quickly as possible.
Yep.
So speaking of trying things,
I just wanted to take a moment
to honor all the failures.
I kept a running list as I was-
Pour one out for the failures.
As I was doing my research
on products that either died
or just didn't live up to the hype.
Facebook Live,
Facebook Watch,
the drone, the solar-powered drone that they developed
to provide internet access.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
That was like a whole big thing for a while.
Yeah, that's right.
Mark was actually two for three on,
he was forecasting like in 2015,
what are we going to be focused on 10 years from now?
That was one of them.
The other two were augmented reality and AI. It was kind of an impressive call. Portal,
Portal TV, Workplace, which as far as I can tell, Facebook is the only company in the world that
actually uses Workplace. No other enterprise has ever adopted it. I'm sure that's not exactly true,
but that feels approximately true. Beacon,
Facebook deals, which was their Groupon clone. Oh, that's right. Think about how nimble Facebook is that they're like, Ooh, Oh, this social deals thing seems to be gaining traction. Maybe that's
a core part of the platform that needs to be a piece of this in the future. I mean,
they just had zillions of these Facebook gifts. Do you remember gifting and you could use Facebook
credits to pay for them? Facebook credits. I mean, on top of Facebook credits, Libra. Oh boy. Yeah. Wow. We didn't even
talk about that whole chapter on crypto. Yeah. They invented a whole new cryptocurrency and a
big consortium around it and a huge set of investors and other fortune 500s originally facebook messages was
going to be a gmail killer you could email people into facebook messages and use that as an email
suite facebook places when i mean foursquare was almost on par for a period of time with instagram
and twitter as plausibly the next social mechanic checking in places. And Facebook Places was a
real effort. Hey, now it just turns into tagging locations on posts. But like a first class post
in newsfeed for a while was a check in on Facebook Places. Yep. And then there's all the independent
apps, Lasso, Poke, Slingshot, Photos, Hello, Facebook Gaming, Life Stage, Moments, Notify, photos hello facebook gaming life stage moments notify facebook watch moves all the things they
acquired tbh beluga they launched igtv this company tries everything yep they move like water
to discover what they need to be through an ever-changing environment so true
all right that's it on the failures what What else you got? Well, almost sort of
the opposite of the failures. It's quite ironic that Facebook became the prototypical startup,
given that the goal was never to be a startup. Yes. The goal was first to be a project and then
to build like a A very profitable business.
The largest empire in the world.
Yes.
There was no in-between of like, we are building a startup here.
It was like, college project, oh, let's connect all the people in the world and let's get big really, really, really fast and skip this whole small company thing.
Right.
That's such a good point. And all this whole generation, multiple generations now of startup founders that have really embraced
and romanticized this whole startup thing. On the one hand, it's great. Silicon Valley is so much
bigger and there's so much more investment and there's so many more VCs and all that.
But it's also just all kind of ironic that it's glorifying this startup phase when that is not
the point.
Deeply. Okay. So then we've touched on this one a bunch, but I kind of want to put a pin in it.
Why has Facebook always been in a precarious position? Why do they need to keep fighting
these existential battles? Why are they so obsessed with building a platform?
I think the answer is they want to be as durable as a company that makes hardware with an operating
system that
all the users use and all the developers have to target because all the users are there.
I think that's like what they really want.
But because they've never had quite that much defensibility, you know, like, oh, a network
effect is good, but it's not as good as that incredible platform durability.
They're always trying to expand and be more. Every time they bump up against someone else,
it kind of creates a problem for them. And so I'm using a bunch of weird metaphors here,
but it just seems like the place that they occupy in the technology stack is just not
quite privileged enough to do the things that they want to do. And so they're always at the
whim of someone else knocking them around. Yeah, I think want to do. And so they're always at the whim of someone else
knocking them around. Yeah, I think that's right. And it will be very interesting to revisit this
again in five years or 10 years. Yep. Part two in 10 years. Yeah, right. And then as we drift to a
close here, the engineering culture and being a technology company at their core has been essential. Early on, they really did manage to hire only A+, and then stay A+, after that. Forever and ever and ever, it was just this badge of honor if you were an engineer at Facebook. For product design, too. I mean, they just had such a great talent density. The set of things that they did on the technical side were over and
over again a way to have their cake and eat it too. If you can move faster, you can learn more
through your multiple iterations. And so speed of development comes from having great tools.
One very great shining example of this is something
called hip hop for PHP. I know this is very esoteric, but in the late 2000s, they had this
crazy idea that what we should do instead of switching to C or C++ or Java, we want our
engineers to keep writing PHP. So they wrote a compiler to C. So they didn't have
to take the performance hit from running PHP, which was an interpreted language. But it also
solved this scalability problem because then they didn't need to go hire all these systems-level
programmers. They could hire web developers who wanted to move with that pace and flexibility
while also having the infrastructure to run these massive systems
and scale really efficiently. And then that solved the scaling and performance problem.
But again, in 2014, they realized, oh crap, we're big enough and we don't have enough sensitive data
that we really should switch to a statically typed language like Java or C sharp. But again,
they didn't want to force their engineers to learn that. They didn't want to, people who code in
those languages have a different culture than existed at Facebook,
too. They couldn't really recruit people. So they invented a new language called hack that was very
similar to PHP, but had static typing over and over again. I mean, tau was another example,
this NoSQL database, they just keep finding ways where they like invent new technology to solve a
problem that probably only exists for
them and then they create this like whole boutique system that allows a having world-class talent b
to have a ton of them c everyone gets to move fast but then d it's all unbelievably performant
and efficient and they just don't have to make trade-offs. It is wild. Yep. Okay. Then my second technical one, in addition to this, is they are their own customer. We've
talked about this. They're a AWS-scale technology company, but they don't take outside customers,
so they only have to build for their own internal use cases. Now, this sounds great,
but it actually does have these big trade-offs. You can't
dramatically change what your infrastructure is used for. It is purpose-built. But it does let
you be incredibly efficient and have high performance if you have good communication
between the customer, sort of the app team or the backend service, and the designers of that
data center. This is completely the opposite of Amazon. Amazon uses interface so teams don't
have to talk to each other. At Meta, they require incredibly tight communication. It's a very
different organizational philosophy where they're like, no, no, no, not only do we not have external
customers, we want this insane type coupling between our infrastructure and our internal customers. Anyway, my last one, this is a company that grows
intentionally. It would be easy to look at this company and say, wow, what a viral product.
What a universally applicable product. That is not the case. It is unnatural to have connected
4 billion humans. This is a freak of nature. This is not just
something that people adopted. And so while I think it is totally fair to say, wow, it just
blew up at Harvard, Facebook is the story of 50 different growth tactics in different eras,
all carefully constructed and iterated upon. Waitlists at colleges, strategically launching
at every
single college, picking each one for a reason, translation, internationalization, zero rating
with carriers to bring new people online, figuring out when they need to do acquire versus build,
carefully split testing every change, aligning the whole company on specific networks,
on specific metrics. I mean, building relationships with governments in all these different countries
and at the very least complying with local laws on where should we have certain speech laws versus
not. I mean, it is completely unnatural for them to have done what they've done.
And it's all been very, very intentional to connect the world.
Yep. Okay. Last playbook theme I've got, there's always another battle for meta.
Yeah, it's funny. I think you could be listening and think like, oh, yes, there's always another
platform battle ahead for meta. And that's probably true. But I think you actually mean
like another societal battle ahead for meta, right? Totally. Yeah. Now that they're through
the user privacy issues and the many years of the whole 2016
election conversation we talked about, and I'm not going to list them all here, the many,
many societal conflicts that they've had over and over again, the current issue for them
is around the impact of social media on mental health, and in particular, teen mental health.
Yep.
Totally.
And it feels fitting to put this near the conclusion of the
episode because while going deep on this wasn't a part of our understanding of how and why meta as
a business works so well, it is a really important topic. There's a lot of people making arguments
that social media is bad for our brains and the consequences if that ends up being globally true
is catastrophic for Meta.
Probably a bigger challenge than they've ever faced at any other point in history. So if you're
asking yourself, what are the things to keep an eye on going forward for them, it is of course
all the product innovation and the growth of the existing business and trying to invent the next
platform and everything we've talked about. Orion and everything, Yep. Yeah. But it's also how the mental health issue, understanding all that unfolds and how they handle it. Yep. Totally.
All right. Time to land the plane. Let's land the plane. How are you liking this, by the way,
this land the plane way of finishing episodes? Ah, well, I actually have a proposal for you,
Ben. Ooh. I don't think we have landed
pun intended on the right nomenclature here or the right um construct so i actually we've been
calling this land the plane take away the splinter in our minds like what's the one thing that's
knocking around for you yeah what is the essence of this company? So I propose that we change the name of this final segment to Quintessence.
What is the Quintessence?
Yes, this is my inner French literature major coming to bear here on Acquired listeners.
What is the essence of this company?
We've just spent all this time, all these months studying this company.
What is the very essence of this company that makes it different from any other out there?
All right.
I like it.
The quintessence.
Ultimately, my big takeaway is the company moves like water.
It is the company that has connected the world that will always gear up for the next battle
and be whatever they need to be in the next era.
And whether it's them defining the next generation of computing
or creating all these AI experiences
or fending off the next TikTok or the current TikTok,
they just move like water.
Yep. I totally agree.
I can't think of a better characterization of this company and how
they got to be so darn important in the world. Perfect place to end it.
And ultimately, it is still very much a Mark Zuckerberg production.
Yes, that too.
All right, quick carve-outs?
Quick carve-outs. My quick carve-out is a Google product, actually. Notebook LM.
This is freaking wild.
Our friend Ben Cohen over at the Wall Street Journal
who wrote the great piece on Acquired a few months back
texted us, what was this, two weeks ago maybe?
Yeah.
A week ago.
And was like, have you guys tried this thing, Notebook LM?
And I think you had, and me being me, I hadn't.
I was like, no, let me check it out.
I uploaded just the links to the sources that I used for my side
of the research for the Microsoft part one episode, just links. And when it spat back out
at me, I was like, holy crap. Yeah. At this point, I think we're well past the Turing test,
but it is sort of the most convinced that something is actually a person I've ever been.
And if I didn't upload all the
sources and know that it was like unbelievably tailored content the thing that i just uploaded
i'm not sure i would know that it was ai it's pretty amazing i have two one is a documentary
on netflix called mr mcmahon i was not a pro wrestling person growing up i kind of want to
go be a pro wrestling person now this documentary documentary is incredible. It is some of the best
storytelling I've ever seen. And interestingly, it's a documentary that is told with no narrator.
So there is story arc all throughout the episode exclusively with interview answers.
And you almost don't notice. At some point, you finish an episode and you're like,
wait, there was no narration in
that there was no cheesiness it was all first party accounts and then cuts to like old footage
of things that aired on tv and then you the credits come up and of course it's a ringer
production bill simmons is the executive producer it is remarkable and uh mr mcmahon is a singular
figure in the world,
certainly not to be glorified,
but one to try and understand.
Oh man, be fun to do a WWE episode someday.
Yes, yes.
My second quick one is the Dwarkesh podcast.
I love the Dwarkesh podcast.
I also love Dwarkesh.
And I think that if you like this show,
you'll love listening to the interviews he does.
Most recent one,
or maybe it was a couple ago, is with Daniel Yergin, who is the author of The Prize,
which is a book, David, you and I almost read a whole bunch of it for Standard Oil,
and then we realized Standard Oil is sort of over, at least the chapter of Standard Oil that
we were covering within the first two chapters of his book. And so it's basically everything from the end of our Standard Oil episode forward on the geopolitics of oil that end up shaping and
forming our world today. And Dwarkesh is just an amazing interviewer and conversationalist.
All right. Well, with that, listeners, a huge thank you to our partners, JP Morgan Payments,
Crusoe, Statsig, and Huntress. You can click the link in the show notes to learn more.
We talked to a ton of people for research on this one. And while we can't mention everyone,
in part because the list would just be too long, in other part, some folks asked not to be thanked,
we do have some specific ones that we want to give a shout out to. So Alex Schultz, the CMO, Head of growth analytics internationalization. Great to talk with.
Baz, Andrew Bosworth, the CTO. Stephen Levy, who wrote the book Facebook, The Inside Story,
was generous with his time. Jim Breyer, who led Excel's Series A investment in Facebook.
Jan LeCun met his chief AI scientist, Alex Heath, at The Verge for spending his time with me.
To a friend of the show, Arvind Navarathnam
from Worldly Partners, who wrote an excellent research report kind of chronicling everything.
Well, it's almost like a written version of this podcast. It's like a 100-page PDF
that was awesome to consume, kind of to help me remember all the big beats of the story,
and that his research report is linked in the show notes. To Arielle Zuckerberg, Mark's sister, Cheryl Sandberg, obviously longtime COO.
Mike Schrepfer, the former CTO and now senior fellow.
To Pete Hunt, early engineer who transferred from Facebook to Instagram post-acquisition.
Naomi Gleit, who we talked about, founding member of the growth team and the longest employee.
Longest tenured meta-employee at this point besides Mark.
Yep.
To Mike Vernal, former Meta VP of Product and Engineering,
and former Sequoia partner Vijay Raji,
former engineer and VP, now of course CEO of Statsig.
Aparna Ramani, a VP in AI, data, and developer infrastructure at Meta.
To Owen Van Nade, Facebook's early COO.
And David, I know you have a few as well.
Yeah, a few for me. To Adam D'Angelo, obviously Facebook's early COO. And David, I know you have a few as well. Yeah, a few for me to Adam D'Angelo,
obviously Facebook's first CTO,
Dan Rose, early partnerships at Facebook,
and big, big final thank you
that we owe to Chris Cox,
Meta's chief product officer
and leader of the entire family of apps over there.
Really, this whole past couple months at Acquired would not have happened
without Chris cold emailing us, what, about a year ago, maybe, and saying,
hey guys, I love the Nintendo episodes. And because of that, we met Chris. And because of Chris,
Mark joined us on stage at Chase Center. And now here we are doing this episode. So
thank you, Chris, for making it all happen. Yes. Essentially, this episode came about because we had done too much research for
the Mark interview, and we were like, we probably should do the actual meta episode too.
Listeners, it is time for our acquired annual survey. So if you have three to five minutes,
please click the link in the show notes or go to acquired.fm slash survey. You might win meta
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and to help show sponsors just how impactful the acquired audience is. That is acquired.fm
slash survey. Check out ACQ2 and any podcast player. If you liked this episode, listen to
our NVIDIA series. listen to our Microsoft series.
I don't know.
Maybe go listen to our standard oil series.
A lot of great acquired in the back catalog and discuss it with us in the
Slack acquired.
Dot.
FM slash Slack with that listeners.
We'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time.
Who got the truth?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you? Who got the truth? We'll see you next time.