Acquired - Special: Sequoia Capital's Investment Playbook (with Alfred Lin)
Episode Date: February 1, 2021We cover Sequoia Capital a lot on this show. Not only across our now four(!) dedicated episodes, but across a stunning nearly 50% of recent season companies where Sequoia was a primary or onl...y investor — the most of any venture firm by an enormous margin. Today in this very special episode, we dive into the principles that have led to the firm's 49 years of unparalleled success in venture, and the playbook behind how they identify markets and companies that create outcomes worthy of the firm's namesake tree.Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!The Sequoia Capital Playbook is available on our website at https://www.acquired.fm/episodes/special-sequoia-capitals-investment-playbook-with-alfred-linLinks:Our two-part Sequoia history: Part I: https://www.acquired.fm/episodes/sequoia-capital-part-1Part II:  https://www.acquired.fm/episodes/sequoia-capital-part-ii-with-doug-leoneDon Valentine's talk at Stanford GSB: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKN-abRJMEw&t=2555sOur conversation about Sequoia's Black Swan Memo with Roelof Botha: https://www.acquired.fm/episodes/sequoias-black-swan-memo
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Ben Gilbert, and I am the co-founder of Pioneer Square Labs, a startup studio and
venture capital firm in Seattle.
Oh, that's me.
David.
And I'm David Rosenthal.
Welcome to this special episode of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them. I'm Ben Gilbert, and I'm the co-founder of
Pioneer Square Labs, a startup studio and venture capital firm in Seattle.
And I'm David Rosenthal, and I am an angel investor based in San Francisco.
And we are your hosts. Sequoia Capital needs almost no introduction.
When we did the comprehensive two-part series on their history, we noted that they had invested
early in companies that went on to be worth over $3.3 trillion. At the time, the market cap of the
entire NASDAQ was about $10 trillion. I'm sure both of these numbers are dramatically higher
right now as we record this in January of 2021. At the end of last year, we saw a Sequoia double
header in the two enormous IPOs of DoorDash and Airbnb. Alfred Lin, a partner at Sequoia,
sits on not one, but both of these boards. And as pointed out by Dan Primack at Axios,
these were his first two IPOs after his
decade at Sequoia. It certainly pays to be patient. So after that, we couldn't help ourselves but
reach out to Alfred to have him back on Acquired and ask the questions. How does Sequoia identify
these investment opportunities? What is the internal playbook for creating their famous
prepared mind to evaluate such opportunities when they come along. And today we dive into what this all means in practice at Sequoia. And we take a few lessons
from what they've learned in over 49 years of finding and building great companies. So David,
who is Alfred? 49 years. It's incredible. So Alfred, as we covered with you on our Zappos episode,
Alfred, you were the CFO of LinkExchange and TellMeNetworks, the co-founder of VentureFrogs
with Tony Hsieh, and then of course, the COO and chairman of Zappos until its sale to Amazon.
Today, Alfred is a partner at Sequoia, where he manages the early
stage business in the US and sits on the boards of Airbnb, DoorDash, Fair, Houzz, Instacart, Reddit,
Zipline, and more. And of course, I know, Alfred, you're going to shrug this off and use the
Robert Louis Stevenson quote that you love about judging each day by the seeds you plant, not the harvest
you reap. But we have to congratulate you on those two IPOs, DoorDash and Airbnb last month.
Truly amazing. Well, thank you. And thank you for having me on the show. I would point out that
this is a team effort. Many of the companies that we work with, I may represent Sequoia on the board,
but it is the whole partnership that brings the weight of Sequoia on the board, but it is the whole partnership that
brings the weight of Sequoia to the table and helps those companies become legendary companies.
And we couldn't have done that without the spectacular founders that we partner with.
So the kudos goes to them for having the courage to start those companies and wanting to put a
ding in the universe. Love it. Well, that is everything that we are going to talk about here today.
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So Alfred, to kick things off, can you give us a little bit of the history of how this idea at Sequoia of wanting to have a prepared mind going into markets and investments and meeting teams came to be?
Well, I think it all started with Don thinking about the market.
I think the thing that we look for is a combination of great founding team and a great market and great
founding teams find great markets or they find a wedge into that market or they find what's wrong
with the market and then they discover that there's a problem that the world has gotten wrong
and they want to go fix that problem and we've always had to sort of listen to founders because
they come from the problem of solving their own pain.
And they may not be thinking about the market per se, they're thinking about the problem that
they have. And so to pair up and to work with and partner with these great founders,
we had to come prepared, thinking about the market and thinking about what the market can become.
Because nobody's gonna to sort of wake
up one day and suddenly know, oh, yeah, lots of people were going to share their bedrooms or their
couches with a total stranger. Nobody's going to think that if you don't have density in the
suburbs that you can actually make a delivery service work. But you do have to sort of think
about this from a sort of perspective of being prepared,
and thinking about both the market and the ability of the market to grow and change.
We often talk a lot about prepared mind, because chance favors the prepared mind,
as Louis Pasteur would say. And when Jim Getz joined Sequoia, he had identified a lot of
interesting areas to invest in. And he you know, he was he pioneered
some of our thinking of having landscapes and having a prepared mind for the mobile landscape
for the rise of the developer. And he would work and try to understand the landscape of what was
possible, where were the white spaces, where were the places that you can actually build a company,
because the incumbents, the legendary companies of the past, were not so much focused on those areas? that hotels were slowly being aggregated and they were sort of being aggregated onto global online
travel platforms. But that wasn't quite true with timeshares and vacation rentals to the same extent.
And it didn't lead necessarily immediately to an investment, but it gave us a sort of prepared mind
on localized listings didn't really exist. BRBOs and HomeAway, which made most of its revenue,
was from advertising rather than booking it and the transaction itself. So when we saw Airbnb,
it's like a completely different vector and a different way of thinking about the business.
And in DoorDash's case, since you asked about DoorDash, between 2011 and 2013, with the rise
of the on-demand economy, we actually evaluated a variety
of investments opportunities in this space. And we met with Grubhub, we met with Caviar,
we met with Postmates. And each time we pass, not because we were uncertain about the market size,
we noticed that this required a very, very operational founder. This business is going to be won by both
having a differentiated strategy, but also a person and a team that was going to be very,
very focused on operations. And when we met Tony, that was a combination we saw. He had a
differentiated approach. And the differentiation for him was the strategy of focusing on the merchants and in the suburbs.
And the thing that he also brought was his keen eye for operations.
And so we unfortunately decided to pass on the seed.
And that's my fault.
It took time for us to sort of understand that Tony was a different character.
He had both the strategy side, as well as the
operational side that brought what we consider founder market fit. And we invest in their series
A and in every single round after that. And as you think about the way that you had previously
thought about this food delivery market, the way that, you know, Greg had been thinking about
the timeshare market and all that was wrong with it and aggregating it. How does something bubble up within Sequoia from someone's sort of personal fascination with
something to doing proactive work to come with a prepared mind when you do start to see pitches?
Yeah, so I think the answer, the simple answer is there's no straight formula for any of this. I
think the way that it has bubbled up has come through because we identify a trend through just reading.
We're curious about vacation rentals.
We start reading about it.
We start digging into it.
And nothing may come out of it for that particular point in time.
And then later on, it becomes more important.
It can be a full-blown landscape that you sort of plot out and write up a memo about
exactly what's going on in the landscape.
Who are the players?
What's going on?
Where do we see white space?
And it could be anywhere in between.
Mention it to your partners.
What do you think about this idea?
What do you think about that idea?
We have blue sky sessions every quarter where we sort of just try to dream.
This business is about inspiration
just as much as about perspiration.
We need to both hustle, but at the same time,
we need to be able to sort of think
and be inspired about the world.
And some of it comes from reading
and some of it comes from just talking to founders.
Other landscapes have started
because we met an interesting founder
with an interesting idea. They're actually still riffing on the idea with us, and we go deep with
them, as well as go deep with other founders who are in that space trying to sort of make sense of
what's going on. And so I think the sort of the ways that this has come about has come from complete randomness and serendipity to very, very structured thinking.
The great part about Sequoia is we have a partnership and we have people who love to be proactive and think structurally.
And we have partners who love to be in the ecosystems, meeting lots of people and riffing ideas with lots of people in an
imaginary way and dream up ideas with others. So this is a business that you can do well with both
someone who's an introvert as well as someone who's an extrovert.
When you get to the landscape stage, whether that's as you're looking at a space as part of
a team at the firm, or maybe you're looking at a space as part of a team at the firm, or maybe
you're looking at a specific investment and you're doing diligence on that investment.
What are the key things you're trying to understand? I mean, Don, in some of the old
talk at GSB and the oral history with him, he talks about needing to understand what the change
is that's occurring in the market, needing to have a very specific problem that the
company is solving, needing the timing to be right? What are these key features that you guys are
focused on? The simple questions are, you've heard before, is why now? Many of these ideas
people have thought of in the past. It's not the first time that someone has decided that we should
deliver food. In 1999, there was a company called Cosmo that opened up in New York.
So that didn't work.
Why is Instacart in a much better position today than they were when Webvan started and Webvan didn't work?
I think there are specific good reasons for why now.
And then there are times when there's not a good why now. And in Instacart's
case, or in DoorDash's case, the why now has a lot to do with mobile and the on demand economy.
People have always wanted instant gratification. But the ability to get a sort of a on demand
workforce was not available in 1999, because not everybody was carrying a mobile phone. So there are sort of
situations where you have good why nows for a particular company to be able to sort of take off.
The other question we ask all the time is in 10 years, why, who cares about this company?
Don used to ask, who cares? And it applies to who cares today, but it also, because we're investing early and we partner early, we partner at the idea stage, at the seed stage, and the venture stage at the Series A.
The company has to be an important company 10 years from now.
So who cares 10 years from now?
And what does this company become 10 years from now?
So imagination about that and what happens when everything goes right is really important.
So we do ask, if everything goes right, what does this company become?
In the early stages, it's easy to spot why the company may fail.
And it's quite easy to write the pre-mortem of a company.
What will go wrong?
What are the major risks?
It sometimes is very hard to really write about what this company can become.
Do you find that founders know this at the seed stage?
I mean, David and I know this from meeting with very early stage founders
that so much is going to change in the dynamic market over the next 10 years.
Do great founders know what could go right picture looks like?
Does the Brian Chesky of today, are they able to fully articulate that they'll overtake
hotels?
I think it's easy to sort of look back from now and it was obvious.
At the time, it was not always obvious.
And I think what they will articulate is that people should do this this way.
The way I view the future is a far superior future.
And I think that that's the dream that you have to be able to riff on and whether if
that's the future, can you build a really large company?
And in some cases, it's more obvious because the market is so large.
If you get just even a slice of the market, you'll be in good position.
In other cases, it's less easy because you actually have to dream that the market gets
bigger, that you're going to change behavior.
You're going to take away from a different way that people used to do something.
And both can happen.
And we generally like the more non-obvious markets where there are good tailwinds and
the markets could be small at the beginning and it can grow over time.
Everybody knows where all the large markets are, and it's generally a bloodbath when you
enter those markets.
And so I'm not saying that competition is not going to happen in any company.
In every company, if you're afraid of competition, you should just get out, because if you're
at all successful,
someone's going to come after you.
But I think for a startup, you kind of want some air cover at the beginning.
You don't want to go into a competitive market and go head on with a large competitor on day one because they'll just crush you.
And so you need areas of white space.
You need a market entry strategy where people think you know you're
that's that little company oh wow you know that's kind of cute go ahead you can take that you know
in innovators dilemma they talk about all the low margin stuff they owe it the big companies always
give the low margin stuff to the startups because the startups yeah who cares there's not a lot of
margin and that they get really really good at, because they figured out how to make money with low margin,
and they go up market to the higher margin stuff. And then eventually, they overtake the industry.
That is one way, obviously, of entering a market, there are other ways of entering the market just
with a superior product. So you get more and more people to sort of talk about you. And you know,
if it's 10 times or 20 times better product, then everybody's going to talk about you and
will migrate to you. There are other ways by having a completely different strategy.
If you think that everybody thinks this is a feature, it may be someone else's bug.
Not everybody is the same, you're not going to to capture 100 of the market and some something as
big as travel but it's the ability to differentiate yourself from a current trend sometimes that makes
you successful and i think in both air bb's case and doordash's case that is exactly what happened
i'm super curious and i'm sure everybody listening is too right now. When you're debating that question within Sequoia, like,
is Brian right? Is this going to move beyond airbeds? When the conventional wisdom is,
this is cute, and you're debating, is this going to be more than cute?
What does that look like inside the firm? It has a lot to do with the sponsor in Airbnb's case, Greg, and in DoorDash's case, me sort
of painting a picture of the world and showing the conviction of why you believe that this
is going to be the case.
And it happens over and over again, right?
Like if you might be an investor in the seed like we were in Airbnb, and it happens over and over again, right? Like if you, you might be an investor in
the seed, like we were in Airbnb. And then in the A, you still have to sort of paint the picture
again. And maybe is it bigger? Sometimes, these companies, it's easy to dream with them, because
they, every single point along the way, they've outstripped everybody's expectations, not just because there's more usage or more revenue,
but the sort of the way the world has reacted to the company is just phenomenal.
You know, we just, Doug Leone used to always say, don't fight the tape.
And sometimes the evidence is just in the tape where like,
they just keep growing.
They keep doing well. They attract great talent, people love the service, and they continue
to sort of broaden their vision.
Every single one of these companies had challenges.
Airbnb had a PR crisis with EJ.
They also had a crisis where people were fighting tooth and nail with them and copying every
single pixel of their website in Europe. And they decided
that they wanted to win Europe and they were either going to potentially buy Wemdo or merge
with them or have to go down the path of a pretty expensive ground war. They decided to do that and
won. And so like some of these things have to do with just being crafty
and being smart about exactly how you go about winning and coming out on top.
I'm curious to dive in on that a little bit. So they decided to do the very expensive ground war
with Wimdu. And you know, part of that financing came from you. How did you think about evaluating
whether that was a good use of capital versus any other place that you could place that marginal dollar as Sequoia? global network effects business. And maybe not today during the pandemic, it's more localized,
but we're going to get past the pandemic, we're all going to get vaccinated, people will go back
to traveling, traveling won't be the same as before. But we all love visiting different parts
of the world. And what is true is that you want to travel to different parts of the world and more than you do locally. And if you win that,
if you win the supply, you will most likely get all the demand. And that was the reason why we
had conviction on investing more in later rounds. Makes sense. I'm curious in that specific case
with Airbnb, you know, of course, we've covered it so many times on this show, the Airbnb episode,
many others, that global network effect is so powerful. You know, one of the reasons why
Airbnb has, you know, been able to build so much power in the Hamilton Helmer sense over the years.
When did you guys realize that at Sequoia? Like, was that part of the thesis going in? Like,
if this works, if we can build up supply and demand globally, like there is an opportunity for a global network effect here. Or is that something
that revealed itself over time as, as you were saying? I think part of dreaming is that you can
create one. It's not that we, it's not that it got realized on the first, on our seed investment.
At the seed investment, they had a listing service, right? They had
2000 or so listings, they had a few transactions, it was definitely not a network effects business
at that time. But you have to dream that if you get enough of the supply, it should be a network
effects business. That's part of having a prepared mind. The sort of concept of a marketplace has been around for a while,
pioneered by eBay on the internet, but it wasn't the only marketplace. We've had other marketplaces
and a stock exchange as a marketplace. And so having a prepared mind allows you to think about
these conceptually into the future, even though it may not ring true the day you make the investment.
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I want to switch gears a little bit here and talk about market size, which for any
early stage entrepreneurs listening who are currently in a small market but are dreaming,
as the way you put it, Alfred, could be a big market, they've encountered the experience of
banging their head against a wall because they keep getting these pass emails from venture
capitalists that say, market's too small, market's too small, market's too small.
How do you think about, as a great investor, whether the
market is small today and will stay small, or whether the market 5-10 years from now could be
enormous? And how do you work that into your investment decision? That's a great question.
I think the reason why there's a lot of passes on market size is, you know, Warren Buffett famously
said, when a management team with a reputation for brilliance tackles
a business with a reputation for bad economics, it is the reputation of the business that
remains intact.
And it is good advice.
And it's not advice that I often talk about with founders, because I think the one thing
that is a little different at the early stages is that you're going after
non-obvious markets.
So if you go after an obvious market, as we talked about, and it's a very large market,
there's intense competition because it's obvious.
And then if you go after a small market and it's obviously a small market, that's also
a bad idea.
The question is, are you actually in a small
market that looks small today, but it's actually going to be a big market in the future? And that's
how I kind of would like to have that conversation with the founder. Why is this market going to be
large in the future? And there's a bit of the founder doing some work, there's a bit of the
investor doing some work, and we certainly do our own work at Sequoia. And then we work with the founders to think about it. And some of it has to do with what are the
trends that are carrying you in this business? It's not hard to know that mobile is going to be
a big trend back when mobile was a big thing. But mobile had some fits and starts as well. We thought
we could build mobile just on a StarTAC phone, but the user experience
wasn't great. And so mobile really started to take off because the smartphone started to take off.
And it was a full functioning computer. That sort of was what carried mobile through
for many, many years. The move to SaaS was actually identified way before this current wave,
because as soon as you saw people moving racks
into co location spaces, you could kind of see that more and more software is going to be written
and put in the cloud, you know, it took AWS coming around where developers are starting to build for
the first time, right straight into someone else's racks, not your own, that you're like, okay, well, this is going to carry
for a long period of time because, you know what?
It lowered the cost of starting a company.
A developer, Jim Goetz, who talked about having a prepared mind,
he talked about the rise of the developer as a landscape
because the developers didn't have to rack their own racks anymore.
They didn't have to sort of go raise a bunch of money to buy the servers and put it in their own colo. What they needed was just be able to have a credit card and start coding and put of launched AWS to startups was the startup school that Brian, Nate and Joe went and attended before they did YC. these little things happen and then you realize it's going to unlock an explosion because otherwise
Brian, Joe and Nate would have had to rack their own servers, right? Like that that's for them,
that's no fun because there are two designers and someone who wrote code. And I don't think
Brian or Joe, maybe Nate would be okay with going into a colo and racking racks, but I don't think
Brian or Joe pretty particularly happy doing that. They want to
dream about what... Right. But yeah, the company might have been like DOA if they had to do that.
Yeah, exactly. Those trends that carry you are quite important. I often talk about,
there are three components of a pitch and some founders do all three well, and most founders do
the first one well, which is like, what's your vision of the world?
And so the beginning is you paint this picture of what you want the world to become.
You've experienced personal pain that this is not the right way to do this.
You show how passionate you are.
You have a vision of the future of how the world's going to be different.
Then you have the realities of today.
Paint the pictures of what's going to be different. Then you have the realities of today, paint the pictures
of what's going on, and why this is broken, how you can fix it, how many customers you think you
can get, because they face the same pain that you do. And then to connect the dots between those
two worlds, you kind of have to sort of, you won't have to paint the whole picture, the whole path of
how you get from where you are today into the future. But you do have to sort of show us like,
how exactly you're going to get from a few 1000 listings at Airbnb to more than that,
you do have to sort of talk about, okay, well, if you're not going to focus on the cities where all
the volume is, and all the density is, how do you win in the suburbs? If you want us to believe in the
suburbs strategy, how do you win the suburbs? And in both cases, they had very good answers to
these questions. The sort of notion was, it didn't work outside of New York City, because the only
reason it worked in New York City is because of the density. And that was a false assumption.
It was not backed up in fact.
And Tony was very, very good at pushing on that.
It's like, does it only really work in New York City or does it work elsewhere?
And how can it work elsewhere?
Right.
Well, it's funny, we've danced from this idea,
this question around market size
to this topic in unit economics of,
will it work in a given market?
And Don,
among only a few other factors, early Sequoia days would say that the very important things in evaluating an opportunity are the market size, because no one ever started a huge business in a
small market, and the potential for large gross margins. And I'm curious, as you come with this
proactive stance and a prepared mind when
you're meeting with entrepreneurs, how do you apply that thinking in unit economics? And is
it still important today to be able to start a business with high gross margin ability in sort
of your eyes? The answer is nuanced. I think high gross margin, as Bezos would say, it's not about margin percent, it's about margin dollars.
If you have large margin dollars, that can be okay, even though the gross margin percent
is not as high.
If you're going after a low gross margin percent business, you just need a ton of volume.
So you need high repeatability.
And the notion of gross margin
is a strange thing. If you look at DoorDash from a GMV standpoint, then their gross margin is really
low. But if you just look at their take, if you net out everything else, then their margins are
decent. And the same is true with Airbnb. People don't think about this, but nobody measures
Airbnb's margins off of their GMV, they measure it off of their take rate. And so some of this
stuff is a little more more nuanced than that. Software businesses, you're paying for just the
software, you're not looking at all the sort of transactions that happen on the software.
The reason why unit economics is important is because eventually, this has to be a business.
To be able to be valued highly, eventually you'll be valued off of your profits and a
multiple off of your profits.
And the confusion, I think, is the availability of capital.
In the last few years, a lot of people have complained there's too much capital in the
system.
There's always been too much capital in the system.
When I started 10 years ago, I was frustrated there was too much capital in the system. There's always been too much capital in the system. When I started 10 years ago, I was frustrated there was too much capital in the system. I remember sitting, my desk was right
next to Mike Moritz's and I said, hey, there's just too much money in the venture ecosystem.
He was like, yeah, thanks for observing that, you know, go back to work. And your job is to figure
that out. And I was like, that's not a satisfying answer. And he's like, well, there's too much
capital in the system. I agree with you.
Well, you know what?
10 years before you, there was too much capital.
And 20 years before you, when I started in the venture business, there was too much money in the system.
There'll always be too much money in the system.
And the thing that we've learned over time is that the winners get a disproportionate
amount of the market cap. And if that's true, then they also will, by just simple logic,
investors then want to invest in the winners.
And so the winners get more and more of the capital.
And if there's more money in the system today, the winners will get more money.
And that allows them to do things slightly differently. And I use the sort of case
where in e-commerce, when I was at Zappos, we needed to make sure that the payback on the CAC
was on the first order. Well, I don't think any company today in e-commerce does that.
If you have more capital, if you know it works on the first order, then if I give you a little bit more capital, maybe you can extend it to seven days or a month or six months or a year.
I do think that this transitive property doesn't always work.
It's not like if it works with zero cap, you can do it for a year, two years, three years, four years.
At some point, it breaks because at some point, you won't be able to raise enough capital
to keep you afloat.
But I do think there is more willingness to see unit economics pay back over a longer
period of time if the market is large.
Yeah, that makes total sense.
So unlike the early days of Sequoia,
for sure, you have different entry points where you can partner with companies now, whether it's
dreaming with the entrepreneur at a seed stage or partnering at the growth stage with more
established companies that have already answered some of these questions. As you're thinking about
a given market, how do you decide what the right, you know,
is that winner that you mentioned that's going to get the lion's share of the market cap in a space?
How do you decide if it already exists and you should go invest at the growth stage?
Or there's still an opportunity for a new entrant at the seed stage?
I think the simple answer is that we at Sequoia want to identify the most important companies of tomorrow as early as possible. So we do want
to partner with them at the seed stage and be there for them from idea to IPO and beyond.
I would point out that there's so much going on in the world. There's so much innovation that
we're not going to get to every great company at the seed stage. And so there are going to be
companies that we miss at the seed that we'll do at the A. There are companies that we miss at the seed stage. And so there are going to be companies that we miss at the seed that we'll do
at the A, there are companies that we miss at the A that hopefully we do at the B, and companies that
we miss at the B that hopefully we pick up at a growth round. So in some sense, we can enter at
many different levels. But also, what's an interesting company at the seed is going to
look very different than a company at the A or the company at a growth round. You know, just a simple sort of idea like what's happening at the seed,
identifying new markets, you have this view that the market will be very, very different a few
years from now is different than a growth round. You may be looking for a developing market that
continues to grow, but it is somewhat established, if not already developed when you make an investment at the growth round. That makes total sense. That also brings up a question I've been
dying to ask you guys. The other dimension that's changed over the years at Sequoia is not just
stage at which you invest, but geography too. And obviously you have a very robust practice in China
and India, and now you're building one in Europe, everywhere around the globe. How do insights and learnings from each of those geographies
influence your thinking back here in the US and each other?
I think that the fact of the matter is you can start a company almost anywhere in the world,
and talent is evenly distributed and opportunity is not, is a quote that lots of people have said. We're
doing this, we're sort of expanding around the world because we want to be a global partnership
and we do learn from each other. And so their observations around the world are that people
are pretty similar. They do things slightly differently because of cultural reasons or how
they grow up. But we kind of want similar things. From a consumer standpoint, if something
works in one geo, it's likely to work, maybe not the same exact sort of formation, but it's likely
to work somewhere else, and vice versa. And if you come up with a great, interesting, sort of
efficient way of doing things on the enterprise side, it's probably going to be wanted in
different parts of the region. And just as an example, with DoorDash, we're investors in Meituan
in China, and there are a lot of learnings back and forth about what works, what doesn't,
how much market share you need to get, how much the unit economics changes when you get to scale,
etc. So the growth path, the sort of
viability of the business, those things can be learned across the world. And then the other
thing related to the pandemic, I think there was a lot of learning China faced this virus first.
And so Tony called up people around the world that were facing the same issues. And Tony realized the
most important thing was to keep the restaurants open. There are parts of the world where the restaurants are closed.
So long as you keep the restaurant open, then you can fix some of the other issues. So they
onboarded restaurants as much as they could. Once you did that, then you needed to solve the
issue related to drivers. We'll provide them with masks and PPE, and also worked on contactless deliveries. And
if you did that, and you got the food safely to the customer, the customers obviously wanted to
order. Yeah, I'm curious, you brought up this idea that we keep in touch and we learn from
each other around the world. As Sequoia grew from a few partners to, you know, several pieces of a
larger partnership in these global offices, obviously you increase
the overhead. You could spend all your time communicating with each other. It's a large
organization with sort of communication networks like any other. So how do you find that fine line?
I'm curious if you have a meeting cadence or anything like that where you do get to learn
from each other, but you're not spending all your time communicating with each other.
No, it's very lightweight. Sequoia is structured in a very decentralized way. Each group makes
their own investment decisions. Each geo makes their own investment decisions. And we do that
on purpose because what's on the ground is way more important than the global themes and the
global trends. You can think about the global themes and the global trends on a quarterly basis, but you're acting locally every single day.
So we try to think globally, but act locally.
And that's the mantra that we have inside of Sequoia.
What do the different operating teams sort of look like, just so people get a sense of scale?
I mean, they're not very large, right?
Like how big is the U.S. early stage practice?
The early stage team is about 15 people. It's just not a big team. But you know,
the way we think about it is, while there's a lot of opportunity, each one of us are only going to
make one or two seed investments or one or two venture investments a year. And the reason we
keep it small is because what we enjoy is to partner with the founders as early as possible
and help them and their companies reach their full potential. And that is an enormous amount of work.
And we enjoy that part just as much as meeting new founders and thinking about the future. But
once we make an investment, we want to bring the future to fruition. It's not just about making the investment.
We don't really think about buying low and selling high.
We think about helping founders reach their full potential, bring the future that they
envision to reality.
The next thing I wanted to ask, in many ways, it's Sequoia's history that has sparked me
thinking a lot about this over the past year.
And the Apple investment that we've covered so many times of, you know, that was an early example of, I think, buying low and selling
high that in the long run probably served Sequoia not nearly as well as it could have. I think you
guys made $6 million in net profit on the early pre-IPO Apple investment. How do you guys think
about time horizon? Like, obviously you need a long time
horizon as you're talking about and that's the way to compound capital at the same time you are a
fund structure a series of funds you have limited partners they want distributions at some point
when do you guys think about the right time to start to distribute out your investments we think
about whether the company has brighter prospects
in the future than they do today.
And if that's the case, then we continue to hold.
We don't actively think about distributions
from a IRR, money on money perspective.
Yes, obviously we are a fund and we get measured that way,
but we're very proud of the fact
that our as held multiples are higher than
our net multiples of the stock that we distribute. It's a deliberate strategy that that's the case.
And so the reason that that is, is because we both pick the right founders who want to build
long lasting companies, and we help them focus on what's enduring about their business. You know,
you're just a lot better off focusing on the long run than on any short run swings up or down in the market. And so when we distribute,
yes, it's because it's maybe the end of the life of a fund, but it's more about even when we
distribute, we hope that the company has much longer prospects than the day we sort of send
the shares to our LPs. We distribute shares
and let our LPs decide whether they want to sell or not. We generally don't sell the stock.
It's funny. It's a nice thing to say, to say, you know, we're long run focused over short term
focused, but in the business that we're in, it's quite literally and mathematically just a much,
much better strategy given how much of the area under the curve of a compounding returns business
shows up in those later years. I think I heard a stat recently that was Amazon made
more money in its 21st year after IPO than in the entirety of the 20 cents IPO. And so it's just
funny to think about these businesses that we're in, like the opportunity to invest where you're
investing does come early, but the real returns do come much, much, much later.
It's a testament to compounding.
The thing that people don't get right, and it's hard for us to understand compounding
because we're human and we like linear projections as opposed to exponential projections.
We get it wrong in the beginning and in the end.
I think the things you get wrong at the beginning is it looks linear.
It's not, it doesn't look like it's compounding. Well, actually, early years of compounding look
very linear. And in fact, at any single point in time, at any point, compounding, it still looks
linear exactly where you are. The tangent of it looks very linear, and it's not that far off from being linear, or you draw the line wrong. It's almost always more obvious after the fact that you're in a compounding situation. I hope that after people take more precautions over a longer period of time, because compounding sticks, it's a hard thing to reverse. We want to thank our longtime friend of the show, Vanta, the leading trust management platform.
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Well, I have one more sort of structural question here before we start to wind toward the end of
our episode. So a lot of people who are building firms or building enduring institutions of any type, look to Sequoia as
an example of 49 years high performance at almost every, if not every stage along the journey,
building from a small group of people into a globally distributed team that
runs like a well-oiled machine, at least perception from the outside.
And I'm curious, what are some of the practices that have contributed to allowing you to learn
and get better and become that enduring institution instead of something that flames out at some
point?
And I'm thinking, you know, do you do postmortems?
How do you think about learning from your mistakes, learning from your successes?
How does that all happen?
Well, this is going to sound trite, but it had to do with Don starting out and calling
it Sequoia Capital instead of Valentine Capital. He had set the culture right at the beginning.
And this is a people business. We hire partners that then interface with our founders. There's
very little secret sauce in this business. And the simple fact of basically calling it Sequoia Capital because he wanted to build the tallest tree inside of venture capital makes a statement.
It also makes a statement that the firm is not his, that he's around to start the firm,
and then he's going to hand it over to Mike and Doug. And it's their job to sort of keep Sequoia
going. And at some point, they're going to go and they're going to hand it off to the next generation and the next generation after that.
And you're pointing out that he didn't put some high value on the management company because it had been so successful to sell to the next generation. He literally just said, you now own the management company at Sequoia. The GPs sort of manage the management company,
and we don't view it as owning it.
We view it as we inherited it from the last generation,
and it's our job to make sure that we pass it on to the next generation in better hands.
All of us come to Sequoia being able to stand on the shoulder of giants,
and we want to make sure that this place is better
off for the next generation. And just coming off of that is a huge base to be able to build upon.
In terms of like constant learning, this business, you need three key ingredients. And I think I've
said this before, which is you need, you know, you need high IQ, high EQ, and high hustle.
And then you need to apply it appropriately.
If you're just super smart, but you can't influence your founders or have them influence
their management team to do the right things, that's not really going to work.
Just because you can identify something wrong with the company.
This is a business of influence.
You got to influence
people to take your money because your money is just as green as everybody else's. But more
importantly, after you make the investments and you become partners with the founders, you have
to influence them to do a bunch of things that they may not like because most founders that
have strengths and have weaknesses and they're really good at certain areas, and then you have to influence them to sort of round out and build a company and
not just the product or feature.
And this business is high hustle.
You hustle every single day going after a theme or trend.
How do I think about that and turn it into understanding the whole landscape of what's
going on and then picking the right founder to partner with to build a
company in that space. Those things require enormous amount of effort and time. It requires
being both a skeptic about what's going to go wrong. It also requires a lot of imagination for
what can go right. And back to there's no secret sauce is if you want to be good at this business,
you don't have to be a constant learning machine. You gotta think about every single day
what you can improve for the next day.
In terms of compounding,
that's probably the most important thing.
If you can just improve a little bit every single day,
you wanna suck less tomorrow
is the way sort of one way to think about it.
And this is a humbling business.
When I joined, I remember Mike saying a line, which was like jarring, that this is a humbling business. When I joined, I remember Mike saying a line,
which was like jarring, that this is a humbling business because you can make money even if you
got the investment thesis wrong, and you can lose money even though if you got the investment thesis
right. If you don't get cognitive dissonance hearing that, you have to be both excited by
that and also know that you're not going to get things right every single day.
And this is why people who are in this business for a long time continue to love it.
There's the element of meeting founders that they just, even if you don't agree with them, it's infectious to hear them speak because they're painting a future of the world that's just different.
And then there's the element of like,
gosh, I got that wrong. Gosh, I got this wrong. Gosh, I made money on this, but I still got
most of everything wrong. Was I actually good? Or was I just lucky? I always tell people if they
want to join venture capital, like I'm going to try to convince you not to join. And then after
all of the reasons why you shouldn't join, you still want to join, I'll tell
you more about it. Because it will take a decade or longer for you to figure out whether you're
good at this business or not. Maybe you'll find out you're bad at it because you can't get in
front of interesting opportunities, you don't dream enough. You can find that out relatively
quickly, but you won't know that you're good at this for
a long time. You're now in a position where you're doing a lot of hiring, I assume, at Sequoia in a
way that, you know, Don famously in the GSP view from the top lecture, he held up your resume
the day you joined Sequoia. When you're evaluating people to join the firm, what qualities do you
look for that give you an inkling that they might
be good at this? High IQ, high EQ, and high hustle.
David, weren't you listening at all? Obviously not.
There are no real requirements for this job, right? You can put anybody's resume up and
they can become a great venture capitalist. There's an element of those raw ingredients
and then there's an element of desire
and sticking to a sort of business
that it pays you to be in it for the long run.
Like you're not gonna get your biggest gains on day one.
You're gonna see all your losses earlier in your career
and your gains take a long time to develop.
So, you know, maybe the other element is just the focus on the enduring, which is one of our
tenets. Well, Alfred, I can't think of a better place than that to leave it. I do want to give
you the floor and say, if founders are thinking about reaching out to you, who should reach out
and how can they get in touch? Yeah, just simply email me.
I'm at lynn, L-I-N, at sequoiacap.com
if they want to reach out to me.
Another word of encouragement for founders,
you're doing good work and keep at it.
Keep thinking about every single day
about how you can build a sustainable business
because your business model and your business plan
is the strategic weapon.
We provide capital, which is fuel, but you need the strategic business plan first before
you can do anything with that fuel.
I love it.
Well, Alfred, thank you so much for joining us.
All right.
Thank you.
Listeners, thank you for joining us.
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