Conversations with Tyler - Shruti Rajagopalan talks to Daniel Gross and Tyler about Identifying and Predicting Talent
Episode Date: September 1, 2022How can one identify and predict talent? On a search to answer this question and others like it, Tyler Cowen joined venture capitalist and entrepreneur Daniel Gross to explore the art and science of f...inding talent in their new book Talent: How to Identify Energizers, Creatives, and Winners Around the World. In a panel discussion hosted by Shruti Rajagopalan, Cowen and Gross discuss the applications of their new book, particularly how lifestyle characteristics can indicate an individual is capable of great creativity and talent. Daniel and Tyler also discuss undervalued talents and skills, what talents they look for in the start-up and investment world, why there is no good chocolate ice cream to be found in San Francisco, what their exercise preferences indicate about their personalities, how they approach identifying talent in different countries and industries, how immigration impacts entrepreneurialism, the short-comings to Zoom interviews, what a messy desk reveals about a person, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded June 29th, 2022 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Daniel on Twitter Follow Shruti on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox. Photo credit: Drew Bird Photo
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University,
bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems.
Learn more at Mercadis.org.
For a full transcript of every conversation, enhanced with helpful links,
visit Conversationswithtyler.com.
Welcome, everyone. It's a pleasure to be here.
Hi, Tyler. Hi, hi Daniel.
So I'll start right away.
What is a talent that you think you possess that is underrated by everyone else?
Daniel, I think that's for you first.
Well, pausing before answering a question is definitely a rare skill these days.
But I think something has been helpful for me that I've kind of realized I have that I think many people have.
I don't know if it's totally ubiquitous is in the process of an interview, which you know, you do in venture a lot, like, you know, hundreds and thousands of times a year, being able to sort of build a grid of, you know, the person who's talking to.
you who they most kind of remind you of and the outcomes that those people have had is I think
a pretty important skill. And I think it's a pretty important skill for, you know, anyone,
you know, searching for talent, but certainly in the venture world, that's kind of what you're
doing when you meet these early stage businesses is you're kind of trying to build like some
type of search map in your head that's more intuitive than it is rational. It's sometimes a bit
hard to explain why X might remind you of why. But that's a skill I think a lot of people have.
The benefit I've had is I got inculcated in this world at a very young age, and so I've had many,
many hours of reps, you know, just getting it in and mostly making mistakes, but occasionally
getting it right. I don't think I have the talent of hesitating before answering a question.
But I think one thing I'm good at is turning problems into combinatorials.
And then within my head, very rapidly searching for all possible combinations of factors that
might somehow fit together and spitting that out in well under a second.
I'm not even sure that's an underrated talent,
but I think it's a way to think about some of the talents I have,
that if it's an area where I can turn it into that,
I will typically do quite well.
But if it's like trying to work the microwave at home,
which I cannot turn into some kind of combinatorial, factorial analysis,
then I'm like way below average at trying to work the microwave at home.
That's true.
So Daniel, if you're looking for talent in investing or finance,
how does that look different from the talent in the startup world?
What makes a good investor is very different for one makes a good founder.
And if you were to kind of make a scatterplot of it, some of the attributes are, you know,
completely diametrically opposed.
You know, for example, I think very good investors are the kind of right degree of optimistic
but also realistic, whereas founders are too optimistic, which they should be.
I mean, at the end of the day, like, you know, startups are a very funny activity when you
think about it from a probability standpoint, like most companies fail, like almost all
companies fail. And yet people keep to be seemingly doing this activity over and over. They're jumping
off a cliff over and over again. You look over the cliff and like everyone who jumped out of the cliff
is just like on the ground dead. But people keep on jumping off the cliff. And so founders are kind of,
you know, almost too optimistic. But I think when you're evaluating a business, especially at later
and later stages, I think optimism can be your enemy. And often you see when a lot of founders later on
in life, and I am such a person who started a business, sold it and then became an investor,
you actually have to be able to wear very different kind of psychometric hats.
And one of them is this continuum of realism and optimism.
And I'd probably say that's the starkest difference between kind of what makes a good
startup investor and a good founder.
There are probably many others.
But that's kind of the main thing that you look for.
Who's more likely to drink Diet Coke, the two groups?
That's a good question.
Yeah, I'd say both I think are pretty likely to be of the whatever Diet Coke signals.
I don't know if some, you know, obviously here in San Francisco, it's quite a good question.
it's quadruple espresso, you know, $25 coffee and, you know, maybe the rest of America, it's a Diet Coke.
But, you know, both are, I think, in the people that want more stimulants as opposed to depressants.
And that just depends on the stage at which they're at?
Yeah, I think so.
I think stage, location, whatnot.
But, you know, the bit about it's very funny that they have the great gift of writing a book with someone like Tyler Cohen on a topic is expansive, as talent.
And, of course, what comes out of it is everyone wants to talk to us about soft drinks.
And so, you know, sometimes I feel like we're like Michael Pollan wrote a book about dieting or something,
and everyone wants to talk about Diet Coke. But yeah, I think it's probably a very common trait across all kind of active people.
Investors need more red wine, don't they? To regulate the mood?
Maybe. Yeah, maybe they're more totally trying to operate their amygdala with opposing, you know, drugs, uppers and downers.
But there's some skill to evaluating the wine that reflects skill in evaluating investments more than perhaps startups.
That is probably true. The startup founder would probably be the type that does not care what they're drinking.
as long as it gets them hydrated and in the right mood.
And the investor definitely has all sorts of theories about the colors and the vintages
and the countries and all that.
We also have to do with disposable income at that stage, right?
Yes, it may also have to do with the fact that one is not free.
Tyler, both of us are at George Mason.
You've been a professor there for more than 30 years.
You've been involved in a lot of hiring decisions.
And it's a strange place for more reasons than just that both of us are there.
It's a large state school.
It's newish.
It's not an Ivy League school, but it's had an exceptional economics department.
You know, we've had a couple of Nobel laureates.
We've had people like you.
What is the secret source at George Mason that it manages to attract that kind of talent,
that other schools of comparable level are not able to?
I like to look for people who believe something very strongly.
That can't be the only qualification.
But other economics departments tend not to do that.
They look for people who can execute flawless 90-page papers with every population.
possible robustness check. Now that too is important and useful, but it's not what we do. If you decide
you will specialize in people who believe in something and pursue it passionately and want to sit
around and argue and talk ideas and read books, you will end up with one of the most interesting
economics departments, and we've built a sufficiently strong consensus that we just keep on
hiring people who believe things. So they turn out being a little wacky, right? You're selecting
for that, but that in turn keeps you different.
So how do you know how to screen for that?
What's a question you are likely to ask at the AEA meetings
that you know that someone is like technically not unsound,
but they're also very interesting and they can't game it?
Oh, I don't think you have to ask questions.
If they believe in stuff, they will ask you questions.
You just have to show up in the room, right?
So it's one case where you don't have to agonize
over optimal interview questions.
And in fact, the way we're supposed to interview now,
supposed to, but too, is we're to ask everyone the same questions.
and we do, but that doesn't matter.
It's not actually a handicap.
It would be a handicap in almost any other situation.
But you can ask everyone the same questions,
and it will just come out.
Who believes in something?
So, Daniel, at Pioneer,
one of the things you have tried to do
is gamify the experience, right?
So when it comes to gamification,
do competitive games work better,
or do cooperative games work better,
you know, to test for ambition and aspiration?
So Pioneer is, I mean,
principally a website, but it's an online startup accelerator, kind of pre-YC, which I would have to
explain in most cities, but not in this one. Yeah, and so there's many ways in where it's kind of
different and unique, and one of them is that everyone on the platform gets a score every week for the
work that they do, and so you're sort of incentivized to make your score go up. And so kind of the broad
idea there is trying to really address a question somewhat related to talent, which is why aren't there
more startups and many answers to this question, but one of the reasons why there aren't more startups
is, as we were saying earlier, the act of starting a company is completely irrational.
And you tend to get a lot of negative stimulus before you get positive stimulus.
You know, you start working at a new job.
You have a boss.
That boss kind of wants to hopefully make it a good experience for you.
They tend to like build a map and a game for you, basic game in quotes here.
Startup doesn't have that.
And so, you know, you tend to hear no, no, no, no, fail.
And then finally you might get somewhere.
But a lot of people don't crest beyond the J curve, really.
And they just drop it than a deer.
And so gamification in a way or some way to make something compelling, you know,
ultimately with the goal of basically creating more startups is kind of the theory behind Pioneer.
And someone like how, you know, Peloton gets more people to cycle. And heck, I mean, people in South
Korea are literally dying of exhaustion because they're playing video games to death. So like,
there is something very powerful about that effect, whether it's used positively or,
or negatively. Now, you ask the question of what creates kind of more goodness, basically,
competition or cooperation. You know, we think competition broadly is what creates greatness. And like,
The answer is both, obviously, because competition creates cooperation within small groups that compete against each other.
Now, it is true that not everyone who signs up for Pioneer, like, wants to compete on a global leaderboard against everyone else in the world.
You know, very good competitors, I think, tend to have, even the best, most competitive people tend to have a predictive model of like, I'm only going to enter games I can win, or at least games where I have, like, maybe a 40% chance of winning.
And so, but I strongly believe whether you want to compete globally or not, everyone wants to improve every single day.
And so it's very similar to Peloton in the sense that you can have a score and you could be playing against yourself.
I mean, you could just be trying to grow your revenue week over week or the amount of active users you have or any one of different metrics and KPIs or you could be competing globally.
And I think that kind of affords us all modalities because I really think there are very few people that don't want to improve at least themselves, if not want to, you know, compete against others.
But of course, every form of competition, I mean, usually will intend some form of local cooperation.
And I think it's a very good thing because ultimately I think a lot of what our free moment,
market enables is for people to get excited about the idea of competing, building a better product,
trying a new experience. And, you know, many of those fail, but occasionally those work.
And it creates, you know, the microphones that we're using, the building that we're in and
the city and world that we live in. So I think both are necessary. On a day-to-day basis, though,
you're trying to create a community, right? So does the leader board sort of trade that off a little
bit because people are just trying to go further up? Does it turn it into a zero-sum game instead
of forming a community? It's a good question. And we try to do is make the game not necessarily
appears your sum. So it is true that for every ending week at the end of the day, if you have a
sorted list, someone will be at the top and someone, you know, won't. But there's no direct reward
function for being number one versus number two. There is the glory of it. And a lot of our founders
love, you know, just send us and tweet screenshots of, you know, their position on the lead board is,
whatever. It's, it's great for them. But there's no like direct reward. The guarantee pioneer gives you is that if
you're in the top decile, we will review your application. But like, you could be 25th or, you know,
32nd. It doesn't matter. So review your application. And so it just helps us, in that case,
get a broad sort. And because the game is not that zero sum, I think people still tend to at least
cooperate on non-business related things. And I think on business related matters, like,
founders should either merge their companies or like compete and not cooperate. That's totally fine.
And so, you know, I think we managed to have best of both worlds. But I do think, you
when constructing these universes and whatnot, it's quite important for it to not feel necessarily
zero-stop. You know, you could go compete with someone on a running track, and it really doesn't,
like, ultimately, they're running faster than you, doesn't eat away at any of your pie, so to
speak. And I think that's important because, you know, like everything, it's a spectrum. And I mean,
a lot of these startup communities ultimately, and San Francisco is one for better or worse. It's basically
a giant startup campus. They sort of work because people do, at the end of the day, feel some
form of, even if it's not directly related to their business, but some form of kinship with
each other. And, you know, Silicon Valley lore is obviously littered with stories of the person
who let me sleep on their couch and, you know, one thing led to the next. So we have both, I hope.
How much of your time in Israel, like growing up in Israel and sort of watching different kind
of experimentation with community building, different kinds of communes inform how you decided to build
a pioneering? I'd love to be able to answer yes to your question, that that was somehow
extremely informative to me. I, you know, I grew up in a, you know, dark seclucal.
corner of Jerusalem right outside the old city. And so I can't really say had the most expansive view. But in
reality, the real place I experienced growing up is the internet. And many people now like to talk about
how, you know, kind of bad social media is and how bad these online communities are. But, you know,
that's a very nice thing to say when you're kind of looking out into, you know, the rolling hills of
Sonoma and this beautiful world that we live in here today. And look, obviously, a place where I grew up is
certainly not a third world country. But it's very different and isolating, to be honest. And I think
there are many people who immigrate to San Francisco and California who feel similarly. And the idea of
growing up on the internet does let you see all sorts of experiments. And I grew up in the open source
community writing code. And so that, you know, to me was an interesting example of a very different
organizational model than many different companies where the leadership in some of these open source
projects is actually quite undefined. You really tend to see those struggle versus ones that have
a defined leader. And I mean, there's an infinite variety of, you know, forms of cooperation. But I can't
really credit Israel to that. I'd probably really credit the time, you know, 56,
by dial-up internet connection I had.
Speaking of internet connection, so, Tyler, you're an early adopter.
One of the things that you've done, which is a little bit niche, but very fun, is the
ethnic dining guide.
That's your way of looking at the world through food.
You're not so good at desserts.
You sort of go straight for chocolate ice cream.
You know, that's your go-to move.
Is there something fundamentally different about people who write about food or, you know,
who are food critics versus people who write about dessert?
Is there such a category?
There should be, right?
Desert critics?
I don't quite consider desserts to be food.
So I think in a town like San Francisco, there will be many dozens, hundreds of places that are quite good.
There will be very few good desserts.
So in my perhaps backward view, there are excellent desserts at Michelin-Stard restaurants, most of all in Europe.
There are superb desserts in India, and then there's very good chocolate ice cream.
And all other desserts basically are bad.
And most chocolate ice cream is not good, including in the city of San Francisco.
the fact that desserts tend to be sweet, right? That was like a decision made in Western cuisine.
The French decided to segregate out the sweet stuff and make it separate from the meal, or say
Arabic food or even food still in Sicily today. The sweets are integrated into the main
courses much more readily, parts of the Middle East as well. When you put all the sweet stuff
in one place, it's not going to be good unless it has a very high level of ingredient quality
and composition. So it is a different kind of taste palette for someone to be able to appreciate
desserts. I think so, and I don't cover desserts because I don't live in Kolkata. I'm not covering
Michelin-starred restaurants and chocolate ice cream. There's not really that much to say about.
We all know where it's good and it's bad, right? And it's good in Italy, Argentina, Brazil,
some parts of the U.S., most of all, the Northeast. Very good in France, actually, especially Paris,
but mostly it's bad. Again, too sweet. We went to Joe's ice cream last night. It was just
awful. You know, I googled Best Chocolate Ice Cream San Francisco. One of the top lists
once you get past the Google ads, it's like, well, G.R. Delis is listed three times in the top ten. What kind of insanity is that? And then Swenson's is in the top ten. And then there's some place called Mocha, which is like not even ice cream. And then there was Joe's, which was horrible. And that was like five of the top ten. So the internet has failed us. San Francisco has failed us. Some combination of all those things. I'd rather eat, you know, in Israel, in Tel Aviv, there's excellent chocolate ice cream. That's definitely. Better than in Jerusalem, I think.
I don't know what the locals make of this.
My explanation for the bad chocolate ice cream last night
was that San Francisco doesn't have enough kids.
Like, not enough people are having enough kids.
And that's the reason for it,
aside from the benefit of torturing Tyler
and not getting him good chocolate ice cream.
So one of the things I want to learn about
is how you've influenced each other.
So one is exercise.
You both have, like, different ideas of exercise,
both very regular.
Daniel, you run marathons,
I believe, on every continent,
and you've run one in Antarctica.
Is that right?
I mean, you know, in a city like San Francisco where, you know,
it's hard to go out and not see someone running.
I don't think it's particularly remarkable to be a runner.
But yes, I think we have very different philosophies
when it comes to exercise.
That is a fair statement.
Okay.
The last time I went on a hike with Tyler,
he brought his book bag along with a lot of books.
So have you influenced each other on exercise at all?
Do you talk about it?
Have you changed your philosophy on exercise?
I very much enjoy games of stuff.
skill, such as tennis and basketball.
And those are exercise.
If it's sheer exercise, I'm bored,
but YouTube plus Peloton
to the rescue, that works for me.
So I very much like Peloton, that's your influence.
And Peloton with YouTube is great.
So you can watch Magnus Carlson and pedal away,
and Magnus is highly entertaining.
Yeah, that's definitely not what I do,
but I appreciate the sentiment.
How much do you think
the gamification in
exercise and like sort of the personalized, customized version of exercise has helped you or form
the way you think about running. Yeah, I mean, definitely it's formed to the way our product is built.
I think everyone who works on our team is either kind of want to be competitive athlete or
want to be competitive chess player. And so everyone is in a way, you know, getting scores in their
hobbies all the time and want to improve. And so, you know, that obviously drives product ideation
forward. So I think Palaton was an interesting case study and it's an ongoing case study, I guess,
that's being evaluated every day in the market positively. But an interesting case study in how much
gamification kind of matters at all. It does seem like people are actually quite motivated by like
whatever leaderboard and power mechanics they have out there. And on the contrary side,
they released this thing that totally flopped. I thought it was fascinating that it didn't work.
A prior, if I were to describe to you here some type of thing you can use on an exercise bike and
what it does is it responds to the music that you're listening.
to and you know as the tempo of the music increases you pedal faster and as the tempo of the music
decrease whatever it's all synchronized and it's fun like if i was pitching not at like a venture
firm i think people would say wow sounds great peloton built this and they launched it in this
particular thing totally flopped so i think people tend to really overcomplicated i mean i think
there are psychometric personalities i imagine like mine that are like relentlessly interested in improving
and for that the getting of tight feedback loop with any type of numerical score is very good
and very simple. I think they're people that don't really care about that and want to watch YouTube
and get the work in and move on. But ultimately, yeah, I think it probably helps a certain type of
personality. Tyler, do you think this kind of gamification would have made you a different chess player
when you were young? I think one significant difference between Daniel and myself, Daniel, I see
is much more competitive than I am, and I think I'm somewhat more obsessive than he is, though he's
quite obsessive. So the areas I operate in, for better or worse, I'm never asking myself where I am on the
leaderboard. For instance, there's no other person where I could tell you how many Twitter followers
they have. I just have no idea. But I can wake up every morning, do my thing, practice at it,
try to progress, and just relentlessly, endlessly, do that forever, as I've actually done now for
the last basically 46 years. So that's a kind of obsessiveness. But I'm not competing very much at all.
And I don't know what my leaderboards are, and I'm fine with that. You could describe yourself better than I could
you. But I think your experience is one of the world of gaming more fundamentally. And I quit
chess when I was 15, because in a way, I found competing a little boring, actually. It wasn't
obsessive enough in a funny way. And the thing always comes to an end, whereas what I do now,
it never comes to an end. It's like a true extreme of relentlessness. Does that make sense to you?
Yeah, yeah, definitely, definitely. Do you think if you were kind of starting out in the era of, you know,
the internet where things are much more interconnected and reflexive.
The whole chess thing is just much more in your face.
Do you think you'd play chess longer?
No, I think I would have quit sooner.
Interesting.
Because I would have accelerated to the point of frustration and boredom
more rapidly and I quit at 13 rather than 15.
Is it because when you were growing up,
there was still a chance that humans had against computers while playing chess
and now that's just, it's over?
No, I never thought about that.
Computers didn't worry about.
There was a chess playing computer back then called Tinkerbell.
people lugged it around to tournaments. It was quite large. Like you had to pull on it. It was on a cart. You needed more than one person to pull on the cart. It was a standing joke. You had the option of not playing it, but you knew that if you played it, you would beat it. So a very different mentality. At the time, I thought just playing computers was a very far off thing that they would ever be good. Obviously, I was totally wrong. I didn't understand how they would manage to copy intuition in different ways. But I think that kind of Borges notion of the infinite, unendent
system. You know, the infinite library is what really appeals to me. And with the internet,
I would have found that more quickly, indeed in the internet itself, as I have in a sense now.
Ben Casanooga once made to me the interesting point, I'm the last generation to have lived in
both worlds in a significant way with internet and without internet. And I've lived to like
22, 23 years with a lot of internet. And then I lived well over 30 years without any internet at all.
And that's just not going to be a thing anymore.
I feel very privileged, actually, to have grown up in libraries and not the internet,
but tend to have had the internet.
So one of the things I want to ask you is since we're in San Francisco and everything is Elon Musk,
and we're always talking about what we're going to do when we end up on Mars.
How do we screen or select for the first group of settlers?
What are the interview questions we should ask them?
That's a great question, by the way.
I'll throw out a few ideas while you think.
You know, I think the sort of interesting question for Martian settlers is, so, I mean, any form of settler, I mean, anyone who wants to do that is saying a lot by self-selecting into it. And that I think has been the case for people that have gone to new continents and to settle new nations and existing continents and whatnot. So you're going to get a lot of free selection effect by virtue of the person wanting to be an astronaut, let alone, you know, a interplanetary settler. It's quite the LinkedIn. And I think an interesting broader question for that colony will be what's going to keep people together,
during the hard times. And if you look at like successful countries that were settled,
there were very strong religious ties that built that lore that helped create fabric. And look,
maybe the conditions will be so harsh that alone will create ties. But I'd sort of be looking
and asking for groups of people. I wouldn't make no case on kind of what form of religion is the
best, but groups of people that are very connected on some very deep level. Because otherwise,
I think you can end up with something that it sort of blows up. But Tyler, what do you think?
Diet Coke drinking? There's no diabetes.
Honestly, I'm an American, and I'm personally very influenced by Puritan culture in my country's own background.
So I would look first and foremost for religion, but it's a bit like the GMU hires.
If you have to ask someone, like, do you believe in some idea?
It's already a bit hopeless.
You know, you need to know that they already do before you have to ask them.
So in that sense, it's not an internet question.
But I think simply whether the person is American is to me of critical import for settling Mars.
I think Americans are fairly well situated to settle Mars.
pretty high level of trust, frontier mentality.
A lot of us are crazy.
We're relatively religious.
The notion of settling a hostile territory obviously is in our cultural DNA.
Israelis, possibly.
It's a little more complicated because for Israel,
it's a bit more about settling a specific place, which Mars is not.
But nonetheless, there's the sense of raving the hostile elements.
Religious Americans and Israelis would be my first cut at it.
And I would even consider, you know, LDS, Mormons, who tend to have
beliefs about other worlds and that human beings should have some role in colonizing other worlds,
that might help. I don't know if that's the strongest LDS belief, but it's not going to hurt any.
I want to double down on the Americans and not, say, the Belgians, nothing against the Belgians.
They have amazing chocolate ice cream and French fries and some other things. But I'm not really
going to send them to Mars. I'm sorry. Is there like a screening question? One screening question for me
would be like do they want to have kids how do they think about how many children they want to have
and raise them i think that would be like a key question right anything else we should screen for
before we pack them up i think there's probably a lot of physical stamina that would be necessary
just good old like can you do 10 push-ups or whatnot like i think it's probably non-trivial physically
to get to mars let alone settle it so that probably be an important one people who are careful with
airlocks would be high on my list yes but just not making very stupid mistakes
states with physical items.
Yeah.
So people who are like bad at operating their vacuum cleaner, I wouldn't take to Mars.
Certain type of like, almost like a carpentry skill, that would be very useful.
Even though you don't need them to build things, maybe the robots do that, but you don't
want them really pressing the wrong button very much.
Yeah, you need a kind of McGiver skill.
Yeah.
But it's also a little bit like selecting your condo association board or something, right?
Like you don't want really annoying people, for instance, or like people who just want to be
contrarian for the sake of being.
Conrad. I mean, it's sort of also the same way you hire for tenure in an econ department. You're
to have lunch with these people the rest of your life. We're in the Puritan somewhat annoying. Like,
my intuition is you actually would want a lot of annoying people. Because...
Ned Flanders from the Simpsons, basically. Yeah. Yeah. That friction would somehow keep them going.
Yeah. And it's the people who don't argue with each other who could end up very badly off track
on Mars that you need people who are arguing every day, I think. Yeah. I think you didn't ask,
like, are we going or just they going?
We want them to, like, set stuff up.
Well, I'm not going anymore after the answers you guys have given me.
All these annoying carpenters who know how to run a vacuum,
I'm fine on earth.
Chocolate ice cream aside.
I don't find space that interesting.
Aliens, I find interesting.
But just to put me somewhere empty where most prices are infinity,
you know, I'll say no to that.
Coming back to the talent market,
do you think, Tyler, it is in disicilibrium
or there's some kind of market failure?
there's different kinds of talent markets and some are in this equilibrium, some have a failure.
This book sounds like there is this equilibrium in the talent market and a lot of the suggestions
that you have given can kind of push it towards that equilibrium.
I think there's massive market failure in most parts of the talent market, but it's worth
asking which parts work very well.
And I think actually many parts of gaming doesn't cost that much to access.
Not that everyone in the world can play games, but really a considerable number of people can.
performance can be measured. There's leaderboards. It's sort of obvious how well you're doing.
If you want to learn, there's a lot of ways you can learn and get better. I think chess is a pretty
efficient market, especially now that many more people in India and China are playing. Well,
you play with computers. You can become as good as quickly as you're able to. But when it's
intangibles, I think there's a common situation where when the time comes to make a higher, you feel
rather stuck. But ex-ante, hardly anyone is doing all the right things in terms of, you know, investing in
existing networks, honing their own abilities, making themselves sufficiently inspiring,
sort of figuring out how to attract the talented people to come to them. Those are the more difficult
tasks, not like you sit on your throne and three candidates show up and you point to the one.
You're only going to get so much better at that. You can get better at that. But I don't view that
as the way to think about the market failure. In most general terms, if you find a great person,
you make them a lot better, but they capture a lot of that value. So you understand.
underinvest in doing that. That's the fundamental problem. So whoever first spotted Elon Musk has
basically no share in Elon's riches. You could say, well, Peter T.L. at some modestly later stage
spotted Elon and, you know, earned some money from spotting Elon. But that's the actual problem.
You can help people a lot and get nothing for it. How much of the sort of insights in the book
have either of you managed to implement in your own organizations? Well, when you write a book
With a title of talent, you certainly walk into every interview you do in your life, realizing that guy's thinking, he's chatting with the guy who wrote a book called talent. So you pretty much want to be on point in the interview. So I think, look, we obviously already experienced some heightened awareness around an act, which most people, I think, are not sufficiently focused on, which is the interview itself. And so that only increases, I think, after something like the book comes out. I think we have always kind of been trying different interview questions. I mean, the book is really just like a cut.
from a very long list that keeps on growing. And so I think we'll, we continue to kind of iterate on that
over time. But I'd say the biggest shift in my thinking and talent as a byproduct of working with Tyler
has been on the value of things like energy and sturdiness and industriousness over raw intellect and IQ,
which I don't think is properly, certainly wasn't in my mindset a couple of years ago. And I still don't
think is kind of in the global mindset. And, you know, we're certainly not saying that horsepower and
IQ, you know, don't matter. They certainly do. But there is a clearing bar at which point for most
roles, I think people tend to overvaluate and kind of don't realize the logarithmic nature of the
curve and assume it's kind of linear. But I actually think more early than many people realize
you sort of want to switch to caring about just how vigorous and how energetic that person is.
I think that might be because I'd be curious if you'd agree that it's because for most
task doing, gleanes far more information than thinking. Exactly. Yeah. And so you'd rather have someone
that will just do much more. Their learning rate should be much higher. I mean, speaking for myself,
I hired you, right? So you were in academia. I think in academia, there's quite a few people who are
significantly undervalued. You can't wait too long, or they're just totally ruined. But if they're
given freedom to operate and actually do things, there's already, you know, reasonable positive
of selection for smarts, right? And there's some people who really are thirsty to do things
and run things and create and make a difference. And those people are trapped in academia
because a lot of them can't see a way of supporting themselves doing a different thing. So if you can
set up structures where they have that support, you can just find a lot of people who can become
like 50, 100x more productive by simply not just being academics all the time. Your exhibit,
whatever, I don't know what letter, but that's you. You run, you know, a, you know,
Mergent Ventures, India, and you identify people in India and give them support and get them going
with their own startups and projects and intellectual endeavors. And that's like phenomenally way
more productive. And like, are you smarter now than then? Well, probably somewhat, but that's not the
difference. The difference is this ability to see like there's a difference you can make and really
want to do it and be in a structure that allows that to happen. So this is an example of how, like,
the market for talent can be way more efficient, not by like 2x, but by like 100x or more in many,
many cases.
Yeah, but I actually use the insights in the book for what I do.
But you did it before you read the book, too.
So I'm asking you if you do the same.
Like outside of EV, is it easy to bring insights like this to like a university system,
the way we hire, I mean, not just an econ at George Mason or at Mercators?
Because these are institutionally kind of set in their ways.
talent issues I think about all the time. I said before I'm an obsessive person. If I'm waiting in line for my chocolate ice cream, whatever. I'm thinking about like how's the staff organized, who's doing a good job, why, why not? It's sort of pointless in a way, but you can't help but do it. And it's some form of practicing is just to always be on and processing and thinking through like, how is this working and why? And I find that useful. But I know it's weird. Like does it make a person happy? I'm not unhappy doing it. It's part of being.
being obsessive.
Fair. Daniel, how do you think this interview or conversation is going?
Oh, thank you for asking.
I say it's going well. I appreciate the questions are very colorful,
better than some of the questions we've gotten.
I think no one has to date asked us how to screen for human Martian settlers.
So I've been enjoying it.
What about you?
Better than I thought.
Oh, that's good.
Yeah, I had this whole secret plan when they were plugging the mic.
There was some loose buyers, and I was like, it'll come in handy if things are going badly.
So we're all still here.
How do you think about immigrants and talent?
So the more specific question is,
how are immigrants different from children of immigrants?
Is there anything that differentiates them?
I see a lot of differences in the Indian community,
but I'd like to know more from how you think about that.
Tyler.
I'm a big fan of immigration for countries that can manage it.
For me, that definitely includes the United States.
I think immigrants bring more energy.
There's plenty of data.
They do startups at higher rate.
but immigrant parents often are in difficult positions.
They come without networks.
They're starting all over.
Immigration can be much harder for men than women.
There's a literature on this.
Because if the woman is raising children,
her position in the family more or less remains intact.
But the man is starting all over again
and very likely is underplaced in some significant way
and spends quite a few years
just working to achieve like a decent middle-class income.
But if you see persistence within families,
whether you think it's, you know,
genetic or upbringing or social, cultural, whatever, but I strongly believe in persistence
in families. The children of the immigrants will start off, like usually in decent enough
schools, often in the suburbs, could be Northern Virginia, could be Ontario. They'll develop
sort of normally North American networks. They'll be completely fluent in English in a very
useful way. And it can just be full speed ahead. They're still not taking prosperity for granted.
Their parents often are, you know, kicking their butt like you've got to succeed.
which is useful, though not always happiness-inducing.
It's just a general group of people I'm extremely bullish upon,
and I think there's a lot of good reasons, both sort of intuitively,
but that also show up in plenty of actual data and research studies,
why we should be bullish on immigrants and try as a nation to take in more immigrants
than what we're doing right now.
To what extent is the kind of positive effect of immigrants true of people that
immigrate within the United States?
I don't think it's very true anymore.
I think it was a long time ago, say people who went to California, people who settled Utah.
But now to move across the United States, there's always Internet, supermarkets are the same.
There are definitely different things politically.
But if you're a dentist who lives in Denver rather than Columbus, Ohio, it doesn't feel that brave to me.
Like, fine, maybe there's some very modest, positive selection.
It's weakened considerably.
It's quite weak, I think.
Maybe people who never move.
But if a person only moves once and not that far, I don't feel that's negative selection.
Yeah.
Like I grew up in New Jersey, moved to Northern Virginia, which is like, what, four-hour car trip away?
It's not really such a brave thing to do.
I move to more trees.
But still, that seems fine.
Yeah.
A marker.
Yeah.
So an interesting thing that I see in the Indian diaspora is sort of the first generation
immigrants, especially probably the ones you're familiar within the Bay Area.
They are not very risk-taking an entrepreneurial in the sense of they're not doing
startups and stuff like that.
but they're very good at doing very well in big tech firms and sort of, you know, like very good
at navigating a particular system. It's the next generation sort of, you know, American-born
from Indian families who end up being very, very entrepreneurial. Is that a good way of
thinking about all children of immigrants or there's something funky going on with the Indian
immigrants? Mostly children of immigrants just aren't that risk-taking? I think there's something
interesting going on with Indian immigrants in particular if you look at the exact,
executive leadership bench in tech. There's massive overrepresentation of Indian immigrants or children
of Indian immigrants. And I don't really know. I don't know if you have a view, but there's something
interesting going on there. I think that's an interesting effect on one ought to study. Certainly with
startup founders, which is maybe the area most studied in, you tend to see first generation immigrants,
but these are people that come to the United States, usually not out of kind of sheer desperation to
have some basic form of economic success because they were somewhat suppressed in their origin country, but more
people in search of some sort of spiritual belonging that they believe they found and whatever
technology they're working on. They look much more like kind of religious migrants, I think,
than your kind of typical immigrant I'm trying to make it. The founders, at least that I meet,
to come out to San Francisco. Some of them actually, you know, are American and just immigrating
from, you know, Iowa to SF. Obviously, many of them international too. The best ones are not
necessarily that worried about making a buck tomorrow. They're technical. They found an interesting
scene and they kind of want to belong. I think it's actually quite different from the kind of immigrant
persona of, you know, we took our whole family into the U.S. We have two, you know, screaming, crying
babies, and we're just trying to survive. I think those people for very obvious reasons are very risk-averse.
I'm strongly of the view that right now is a kind of golden age for the Indian diaspora and also India.
So if you look, say, at Florence during the Renaissance, or you look at Central Europe in the early
decades of the 20th century, you see remarkable, truly remarkable levels of achievement that don't
happen before, don't happen after. You know, it's not some kind of genetic thing, but somehow
everything is coming together just right. And I think part of talent is to realize when you hit
these mother loads and then to figure, well, we're just going to try to do a lot here as much as we
possibly can. So investing in, you know, potential mathematicians in Hungarian high schools in 1916
was a really good thing to do. You don't even have to be that.
good at picking talent. So today, for whatever reason, I do think it's India, possibly South Asia,
more broadly. I see the potential for parts of Nigeria kind of joining that club. It's further away,
maybe still contingent. But for whatever reason, right now, something remarkable is happening,
combination of level of aspiration, internet is good enough, enough people with enough English fluency,
some kind of underlying flexibility of worldview that I think has made Indians relatively well-suited,
say to be CEOs and American companies in a way we might not have expected, say, 30 years ago.
So I think something extraordinary is going on.
And it won't last forever.
And it was not the same, say, 40 years ago.
Maybe it started 20, 30 years ago.
But now we're seeing it all blossom.
So to me, it's very exciting.
I would agree.
Ev India is a lot of fun.
For those of you who are investing or thinking of investing in India, there are a lot of
low-hanging fruit.
A lot of the people that we picked for Evie India, if they were in the United States or Canada,
they would have been in incubator programs and accelerator programs and magnet schools and
teal fellowship or something like that but none of that exists in india the scouting or the incubation
infrastructure doesn't exist so actually tyler and i are in competition usually and i get far better
quality of applications a higher average and low variance than the ones that tyler gets from from the
rest of the world but that's my simple explanation for what's happening in india so one of the things that
both startups and economics departments have in common as failure. I mean, startups, it's
fairly obvious, but in economics, you know, most people who start their PhDs don't finish,
or even the people, you know, the sorts that Tyler is hiring, as professors in the econ
department, they may stop publishing or they may give up at some point. What is a good way to
screen for who will handle failure well, or at least better than the others in the running?
I think in science we've allowed institutions to evolve to the point where people have options of not failing at all.
So science ought to be more like startups.
Like most ideas do fail.
Even published research papers and top journals.
If you ask researchers who really know and they're willing to speak honestly with you, like what's the chance that paper is actually true?
You'll get answers like 20%, 30%.
You don't get answers of 50%.
But we've created this veneer or cloak of, if you do all the right things in terms of process,
we'll sort of all pretend to take this paper seriously.
You'll get tenure somewhere, maybe not at Harvard or MIT, but like it at some tier one research university.
And you'll be given all these bureaucratic duties, and you have to referee a lot of papers and hire other people.
And it's this self-replicating thing that insulates people from truly failing,
but also means that fewer people than ever before pursue true success.
and I think it's an example of gross talent misallocation, and it is a better lifestyle if you become an academic,
and if you work hard enough and you're smart enough, you can't fail. But we're doing ourselves a gross disservice,
and I think a lot of our sciences are badly out of whack for this reason, and they should become more like startups again.
But structures tend to ossify, and academia certainly is no exception to that.
Yeah. Look, there's kind of classical answers to your question of, you know, how do you look for stories,
early on in someone's life, a failure and whatnot, and all that stuff is true. There is, I think, a great
emotion to be on the lookout for in an interview, in particular when assessing founders,
is fear. And sometimes you meet people and you just get their kind of naked ambition is so large
and vast that I don't feel fear from my life, but I definitely feel a little bit of fear
being in the room with them. And I think that's a very promising sign when one feels that emotion.
And that I think is a good proxy towards, you know, will the person handle failure?
I think a lot of the best founders I've had the pleasure of working with don't even really
experience like setbacks and failure the same way most people do or the degree of badness of the
news for something to register in their mind as a true failure is much higher than it is for
most people.
A lot of bad news is immediately misinterpreted as great news.
You know, oh, market's down, great.
You know, a lot of talent, you know, will be fired and we'll be able to hire them or creative
destruction and whatnot. So I think a lot of that comes kind of out of just a general sense of
vigorousness and vitality that I think is somewhat correlated with this kind of sense of ambition
too. So I think about that a lot. Generally, I think about kind of reflexively, I try to think
about how I feel when I interview someone. And I imagine actually everyone's doing that. Some
awareness to the process is quite helpful though. Yeah, resilience is somehow hard to test for, right?
It just needs to be observed. It's one of those things you can figure out fairly quickly. I just don't know if there's an interview question to figure it out.
Yeah, I mean, one of the reasons founders, I think, who are not strictly economically motivated and are motivated by some deeper belief or better is the underlying barometer of what they're going to be resilient about is much greater than the local game of like, oh, this fundraising round fell through.
There's a much deeper game going on is basically, oh, I never felt like I ever fit into anywhere in life. I've now gone around, told,
all my friends, family, that I'm doing this company thing. So, like, I'm doing the company thing.
The company thing cannot fail. And every single great startup has had these dark moments of
death or near death. And obviously, everyone's talking about SpaceX, you know, famously failed
three launches, couldn't fail the fourth. But like every startup has that narrative. And so you
often need someone that's powered by a deeper reserve currency than like dollars in order to see through
that. Is your office messy or neat? And when you walk into someone's office or workspace,
Do you judge them one way or another on how talent they are, depending on how messy it is?
You know, Steve Jobs famously said, someone asked him that question.
You said, you know, everyone says organized desk is an organized mind, but most desks that I've seen that are organized are empty.
So would you say an empty desk is a what mind?
He famously had a very messy desk.
So I do think Zoom has created this kind of, although it has reduced the amount of entropy or information you're getting from someone in an interview,
I think everyone here can probably attest that a Zoom interview is not as enticing, exciting,
revealing or interesting as a real world interview, but it does reveal other information.
Net, you're still getting less, but you're suddenly getting this new interesting information
to the background, you know, where they are.
There's like the cats, you know, wandering around.
Okay, that's interesting.
And I don't know, you know, I don't know that are all of our mental models, you know,
decades of calibrating on real world interviews where you don't get that information.
Now suddenly have to be readjusted to that.
And so I think it's a good question.
You know, generally the desk is a reflection of the conscientiousness, I think, of an individual.
I think for some roles, conscientiousness, to the extent it moves at a continuum that pulls down openness,
which, you know, the big psychometric theories would disagree with you,
meaning they would say the big five aspect scale are totally independent of each other.
But you do really sort of wonder the person who's hyper-conscious, who really dots every eye and crosses every teeth.
It's exceedingly rare, I think, to find someone that is really, really conscientious.
and also really open.
And so I kind of do tend to believe that they kind of affect each other a bit more than we realize.
And so, you know, I think that can be a revealing thing in either direction.
I mean, I don't know that you necessarily want, say, your product designer,
to have the most organized desk that, you know, to Steve Jobs, parlance is also quite empty.
I don't know that I would want to see my accountant have an incredibly disorganized desk
with all sorts of returns and post-its and, you know, papers flying around.
So much depends on the role.
What about your court? And Tyler, you know why I'm asking you this question.
I like the messy desk now. I'm biased to be clear. But when I see the desk isn't messy,
it just looks to me like there's an input that's not being used, that there's a lot of slack in the system,
and that the person tolerates slack without thinking, well, how can I put this desk to better work?
And then I get suspicious, well, what other inputs is there a lot of slack on, their own labor,
their own effort, their own intelligence? I don't know. I do know some very successful
people with very neat desks. But it rubs me the wrong way. And I think of the messy desk is quite
organized, of course. There's like, what's the average quality of organization versus what's
the total amount of organization that went into this event of the desk? And the messy desk is
going to have more total organization, almost always, even if the average quality has higher variance.
There'd be an inefficiency in the symmetry required of a perfectly organized desk,
meaning like everything can now only fit into squares, which means you have less total
space, sort of like a bin packing
problem. That's right. And to me it's also
a sign. Yes, then there's the floor, which
Tyler uses very well for the packing
problem. But
there's a sign they're not using the physical
dimension somehow in their thinking.
And I'm a big fan of the physical
dimension. Sort of thinking with
your body, thinking with what you put on
the floor, sort of filling out, like
every computing device available to you. Space
is a computing device. And if you're not
using space, your computer
is lying there passive, fallow.
Who wants that?
Me.
Now I know what you think when you walk into my office, because there's nothing on any surface.
It's pretty neat.
But I assume at home it's some huge sprawling mess, right?
No?
Yeah, and I don't walk into Tyler's office because there's no room to walk into and the door
doesn't fully open and other such things.
No, the one thing that Tyler's office does reveal is the obsessiveness.
It's like everything that is being read or worked on in that moment is right there.
So it is very much like a picture of what you're doing at that time.
And it's like a test for people.
Like how will you react to this unbelievable mess?
And you'll see things that don't even seem like they should belong in an office, like a voodoo flag.
So you see a voodoo flag in an office and what does the person say?
What do they think?
That's useful too, right?
Do they even notice it?
I'm always interested in people who don't seem to notice the mess at all.
The repeat visitors may not notice it anymore.
But people who go there for the first time and talk to me like I'm a normal human being,
that's fascinating. It's like, what's with them?
I don't think anyone talks to you like your normal human being, but it has nothing to do with
the mess in your office.
One of the things that I'm curious about is a lot of us are looking for good mentors.
What is a good way to figure out if someone will be a good mentor, especially long-term?
Is there a way to interview for a good mentor?
I grew up outside of Silicon Valley, and I was very interested in tech, and there weren't really...
I mean, my father taught computer science for a living, so I didn't really teach me out of code,
but he set up a home with a lot of coding books, and that was the only thing to read. So that's what I did. But that aside, I remember a time before YouTube, so I'm old enough to say that. But I'm also young enough to say that I remember once YouTube came online, I just never stopped kind of watching content and lectures on it. And so I find it's sort of interesting. A lot of people here want, you know, the best real world mentors. But we do have this amazing product that, you know, I think 50 years ago, no people could barely dream of where we have.
effectively an infinite amount of content from the world's best teachers, investors, mathematicians.
And for me, you know, when I was running my business, it was actually very helpful in specific
ways, like you learn specific tricks, but also in ways that just like watching, you know,
very charismatic leaders talk is definitely a great thing to do the night before you have your
all hands. And so I think the amazing thing about the reality we live in today is, yeah,
you can interview literally millions of mentors on YouTube for free, basically anywhere in the world.
And I found for me that was a huge thing. You know, Silicon Valley in particular, obviously it's a very
porous place and people are generally very helpful to each other. And so you tend to have, I wouldn't
call them mentors, but, you know, people who take a step of, you know, goodwill based on limited
information they have on you, they, you know, go out of their way to help you. And someone did the
same thing to them. And in many ways, I wouldn't be here without someone taking a bed and funding me.
And, you know, now I'm kind of trying to pay it forward to others. And so those things kind of
of come into your lap. I do worry a little bit when I meet people who are overtly searching
for mentors for the sake of finding mentors. I'm sort of wondering whatever you're looking for,
like I don't think that's quite going to satisfy it. And to the extent one wants just like
good mental models of like what is like a really good salesperson look like or what does a
really good math professor look like? That's available online in unlimited fashion. So Tyler,
I don't know if you have a different view, but if you want to find good mentors, I would say focus on
yourself. Don't focus too much on finding the manner. So if I'm thinking of someone I might
usefully manner, they would in turn, you know, teach me things. But I would wonder, well, if this person
as curious as I am, something like that would be a starting point. And I do figure they can't fake that.
And they can't even like set out to become more curious. There's something a little forced about that.
But if they actually are very curious and just allow that to grow, they will end up in a position
where maybe I will end up having a connection with them. So for it to happen organically,
and figure out what your strengths are and let those blossom and then just be out there.
But again, don't try to force the mentoring thing too much because potential mentors can sniff that out.
And that to them is very boring.
Someone who wants to be mentored is like the most boring thing you can imagine.
Someone who wants to learn something can be very interesting, however.
Tyler, you're a very good mentor and I think that has something to do with how generous you are.
How do you rate generosity on the scale for a good mentor?
I don't know that I'm generous.
I think of myself is pretty selfish.
And like people I mentor in some ways mentor me and I learn from them.
And I'm like always trying to think obsessively.
How can I learn from them?
So I'm open to the notion of kind of selfishly a bit exploiting them and like for me to stay in touch or like stay violent.
You run an organization that gives out money to people around the world.
Yeah.
How would you square that with the idea of you purporting to be selfish?
First, it's fun.
Yeah. Second, it is a source of social capital, which is very valuable. I'm not paid at the margin to do it, but I learn really an incredible amount, and I get some sense of where the world is going. And that to me is exciting. I feel I have a higher, like, living standard than just about anyone I know. And I know a lot of people with, like, very high net wealth. I don't really think of them as richer than I am in terms of like time usage, memories I have, like art, music, consumption of desserts, whatever. I think of my money. I think of my money. I think of my money.
myself is like wealthier than them in human capital terms for the most part. So I'm pretty selfish.
All right. And I think I'm good at it at being selfish. Well, for me, it wasn't the fact that you give
money away. It's the time. I mean, it's an extraordinary time investment, both in EV and everyone,
you know, as the EV family grows, more and more time is spent solving their problems and
helping them figure their life out. But people are fun, right? And I certainly have enough time on my own,
you know locked in closets reading books and the like so i'm not giving that up if anything i still
have too much of that and should spend more time with people well here's your chance here we are yeah
so i think there's a good time to hear some questions from you if you have any you can just come up
to the mic there's one on either side and just state your name and ask your question we also have
questions on the ipad i believe hi owen evans from oxford so i'm going to give a science fiction
type scenario that maybe has some relevance to talent. So imagine that, say, half of all people
had an identical twin and some people have like 10 identical twins. So we're in this very
different world. And talent identification in some sense is much easier. What kind of impact
would that have on, say, startups or like maybe other spheres where talent is important?
I think there's somewhat less information contained in identical twins than many people in the
Bay Area would suppose. I think maybe like America, like America.
as a whole might underrate the role of genetic factors in talent, but the people who think about it
at all, I think tend to overrate significantly how much it matters. And there are plenty of identical
twins with like very different outcomes. There's quite a few of them. Oh, they're both law partners
in Cincinnati. But at the highest levels, those very small differences, there's like a multiplicative
model. You need to have like eight or nine very definite things go to an A or A plus level for you. And it
might happen for you and not for your identical twin. So I think at the highest levels of achievement,
identical twins do not contain a lot of information, and they would not be that useful in talent search.
And I wouldn't go around like, oh, like did someone clone Bill Gates, sort of like an identical twin,
whereas like the eight-year-old who was the clone Bill Gates, I want to support that person with some VC money.
It's still a better than average bet, obviously, but that would not be my obsession. Absolutely not.
There's some weird confluence of environment and genes and circumstance that maybe you know it when you see it.
But ex ante trying to predict that by looking at any one of the factors.
I don't think you'll get very far.
Hi, Andy.
I see you again.
I'm Andy.
From Emergent Ventures, one of the many.
You talk a lot about energy and vigor.
I'm really struck by that.
And it makes me wonder, where do you think that comes from?
Why is it so variable?
Why is so different between people?
How plastic is it?
That's an awesome question, isn't it?
You know, there's all those, like, toy studies about gait.
you know, walking gate and all other health, you know, telemetry with people generally
correlate with longevity and whatnot. And I don't know that anyone's run the regression on that
and income, but I think it would be interesting. I don't know. I mean, I think it sort of is
energy plastic, Tyler, I don't know if you'd have a different view, which I think is an awesome
question is sort of a bit of a nature, nurture biology-esque question. Like, there is some
basic, you know, mitochondrial factory thing going on that seems like more efficient in some people
than others. And so I think that just leads to more hours in the day of work, more chance is taken.
You know, if you assume the batting average is roughly even, there's just higher chance of home run.
But like, like, when you read the interviews of Paul McCartney or the documentary, and he's just like,
George Harrison is like, again, we have to go again. He's like 10 p.m. again. And there's thousands of
those stories, you know, Steve Jobs, whatnot, of just people that are more shots on goal. And so I think
that's sort of must compound. Tyler, do you think energy is plastic? I've never read a
serious research paper on this question. But my intuition is that energy and that kind of vitality
is one of the most heritable of characteristics. So I'm not saying you will be a copy of your parents,
but whatever was plugged into you at birth is what you have. And if I think of myself or the other
people I've known their entire lives, which is not that many people, but I just don't see that much
change. And the way I am, my sense is I was that way at three or four, at age two, I don't
Remember, my mother always told me that, always kind of antsy wanting the next book, something.
And I just don't think it's something I taught myself.
Once you're that way, learn how to use your environment to make yourself better at that
and get the genes environment interaction going.
And that is very much something you learn rather than something you're born with.
How to, like, multiply your interaction effects.
But that core something or other, Paul McCartney was composing songs at age 14.
He's finished computer now.
he's 80, he doesn't need the money, puts out an album every two years, takes on massive projects,
art, books, everything. Incredible. You just read biographies of Paul. It just clearly seems he was
born with it. Why do you think human core body temperature is dropping? In 2018, there was a famous
study put out by the United States, I think military army that captured a human core body temperature
longitudinally over time, and the U.S. core body temperature, at least is like dropping. Now,
you could say it's some type of odd measurement effect,
thermometers have changed, you know,
since the 1930s or whatnot,
but to the extent that's like an odd proxy towards energy.
I think we are declining in energy as a country,
putting immigrants aside,
which is going to be a complex story of its own
and may not be the same from all other places,
but the country, to me, seems to have much less energy
than even it did earlier in my lifetime,
just anecdotally.
So I worry about that.
Yeah.
Hi, I'm Spencer.
What, if anything, do you think we're doing wrong
at a national level with our talent
evaluation of politicians.
You're closer to D.C. than me, so.
I don't know where to start with that.
I would just say, in my basic
view of politics, the main problem
usually is the voters. Not always,
but typically it's the voters. I think
we're saying, talking about this before in the green room,
I think senators as a whole are
actually fairly impressive. It doesn't mean I
agree with what they do or say
or changes they push for,
but just as sort of raw studies and talent.
They seem to me pretty good.
I live right outside of Washington, D.C.,
I know or have met really very large numbers of people in politics, chiefs of staff, military agencies, people on the board of the Fed.
I think our talent in those slots is pretty good, not perfect, but that is not our national problem, in my opinion, at all.
I can name plenty of individual politicians who I think are just absolute train wrecks.
But again, I would think in terms of the main problem being the voter, I think our political system does better at bringing in some talent than you would think.
And it's striking to me if you live in the D.C. area. In how many families, almost every family,
there's some notion of like doing national service that I actually find strikingly absent in the Bay Area.
Maybe in the whole U.S. its weakest tier and strongest where I live.
But that sense of obligation to national service, it kind of actually works, I think.
And U.S. government still has done a whole bunch of things properly.
We did Operation Warp Speed. That would be one example. We had a lot of talent there.
the economist heading it, Michael Kramer, Nobel laureate,
one of the very best economists alive on planet Earth.
And he was running that side of Operation Warp Speed.
Well, how'd that happen?
Like, we're doing something right.
But at the end of the day, you know, the voting inputs,
I don't know, I really do worry.
I'd love to hear two or three anecdotes from the two of you
on, like, specific moments in which you've really made a difference
in somebody's ambition or aspiration.
You talk about that of the back end of the book,
and I'd love to get a couple of case studies of, like, how you did it.
how he's zipped in there.
I think it's important not to self-deceive.
I've had, like, really quite a large number of people I know,
some of whom are in this room, tell me I made a big difference.
I'm quite convinced they're sincere,
but I'm not sure they know.
And I think there's something quite useful to just being obsessive
and continuing and almost not trying to figure out too much.
There's some odd ways in which I think our society is too data-driven.
And just keep on trying to do it and repeat and try to be a good example.
and if you're trying too hard to measure your marginal product, you'll maybe end up conforming too much
or doing too many things that are measurable.
And at the margin, maybe the way to have an impact is to not worry too much about measuring your success.
I don't think that answer can work for everyone, but it's how I've approached the problem.
I sort of feel without measuring it that it's worked pretty well for me.
I think that is a very good philosophy.
I mean, oddly, I think the simplest thing, I don't know about EV, but certainly I find I've done over the course of my career that people seem to say,
been useful for them is just either funding or at least encouraging people to move to Silicon Valley,
ideally if they're in tech, but even just a new city. They tend to like misproprogate that at me,
let go. You do cause, but it's actually, I think like, well, first of all, anyone hopefully would
have nudged them at some point, but it's really just that that movement and that immigration
pattern is, I think, really important. Trudy, what's your answer? I don't have a very good one.
So one of the answers that people give me when I talk to them and tell them, oh, you received the
EV Grant in India is they say, oh, you believe me, like not believe in me, but they can't even
believe that someone actually trust them with the money and like really trust the story that they're
selling to me and so on. And the first thing they say is, I won't let you down. So that's like
the only thing I can pinpoint like a moment when I feel like something is changing here. I don't
think I'm responsible for it. I think it would have happened anyway. Someone else would have
given them funding or believed in them.
But pretty much almost all of them say that.
I mean, that tells you more about how broken things are in India than about me, right?
But I can't think of that as a tangible thing where my faith in someone is somehow such a big signal to them that, you know, even if it's marginally higher self-belief, it's worth it.
Hello, my name is Riley.
Tyler, you got a conversation with Mark Andreessen and you asked why Peter Thiel could spot talent so well.
And he countered that this is a concept of the bad signal.
You know, he throws up the bat signal and people come.
And you have your own bat signal.
You have your own bat signal.
There's a portfolio of ideas through your blog, all your books.
With Pioneer might be the egalitarian aspect of gaming, whatnot.
I'm curious, what components of that bat signal do you think are the most effective?
People come to you and say, oh, man, I really love this about your portfolio.
I really love this about Pioneer.
I think the bigger and more globalized, more network the world gets, the higher the returns to the bat signal.
And bat signals are still one of the most underrated ways to be effective.
that we have some kind of weighted average of how effective they were in the past,
and we apply the weighted average.
But their importance is just rising very, very sharply,
I think even over the last five years.
So I think the world likes some kind of authenticity in bat signals.
So, like, don't think too hard about your bad signals, maybe.
Now, if they're bad to begin with and you don't think too hard,
I guess they'll stay bad.
But, like, that's great, because then more people like my bat signal,
and maybe, like, they should be coming to me.
I don't know.
I try not to overthink the bat signal.
And if I write a blog post, like I was working on a post earlier today, like, what's the difference
in the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment and Irish Enlightenment?
Like, that makes no sense as a topic.
Like, maybe someone in Ireland will read it.
Like, okay.
But there's no way you could come up with an argument that that's what I should be sending
out as my bat signal.
But like that will be the bat signal.
And I actually think it's fine.
The one thing I'd add to that is the best people are ones that view you as a way to
gain advantage for themselves.
And so they're not attracted to
you as the bat signal because they
like want to be near you.
They're going to step on you to get somewhere else.
And that's great. I think it's
important nuance that some people miss when they set
out their bad signals. I would say
Tyler's bat signal is not the
difference between Irish and Scottish
Enlightenment, though that's interesting. I think it's
consistency. I just recently found out
that he's blogged every single day on
marginal revolution for 19 plus years.
So I think that's the bat signal.
right? That's part of it, yeah. And no day has that been hard. I think it gets to the authenticity
point. There's no day where I've said, I have to blog today or I'll break the streak.
Hey, I'm Josh. Thank you for speaking. This is an awesome conversation. One big topic in SF especially
is on automation. Are there any parts of the talent process that you think could be automated?
Obviously, you know, ATS is a thing. And with the rise of automation, maybe it's pretty industry
specific, but are there any changes in how people seek talent that will come as things get more
and more automated? I run a company that, you know, principally has, I think, for our little
corner of talent, meaning venture, tried everything under the sun in order to automate it.
And I think you can, like many processes, you basically split things into two. There's basically
the spam filtering process of basically weaving out people that don't make any sense for us,
for whatever reason. Like, what they're working on is non-economic or they don't have the
qualified, like that you can probably do with software. There's a second step of it of basically,
okay, it's like, imagine this is Gmail, right? So you've got rid of the spam, but now it's like you've got to
pick what in the inbox is important. That's a much harder task. I'm sure it can be done in software,
but I think it's a bit more nuanced. And like with the really tricky thing in kind of
in venture in particular is regressing on success is pretty hard, just because the data points are
pretty sparse, like what great founders look like. Maybe you have like 10, which is not
that helpful machine learning scale, but also because everything changes all the time. So, like,
the psychometric makeup of a great founder in, say, 2015 SaaS era, is someone like, you know,
Frank Lutty, who started service now is basically a sales machine, started a sales empire. It's
very different from who's going to be a very good founder, say, working on transformer models,
who's going to be much more like was than Steve. Everything kind of is shifting constantly. So
it's tricky. I assume a lot of automation can be done for that first step. I think for the second step,
you could, but the final thing I'd say is, I guess, in venture in particular, you are rewarded so aggressively
for making the right calls that you will be able to always, you know, afford the salary for people to review it.
And you're penalized, of course, very aggressively by errors of omission, not commission. So I think
you're going to always end up with an economic model where you can have people. This is obviously
very different if you're like, you know, McDonald's and whatnot. You're trying to figure out, okay,
who's going to be able to flip burgers a year in.
But I don't know enough about that feel to opine there.
Thank you.
Thank you for attending.
Thank you, Tyler.
Thank you, Daniel.
This was fun.
Thank you, Shruti.
Thank you, Shudy.
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler.
You can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
If you like this podcast, please consider giving us a rating on leaving a review.
This helps other listeners find the show.
On Twitter, I'm at Tyler Cowen.
and the show is at Cow and Convo's.
Until next time, please keep listening and learning.
