In Good Company with Nicolai Tangen - Snap CEO: Building Snapchat, AR Glasses and the Future of Communication
Episode Date: June 3, 2026In this episode, Nicolai Tangen speaks with Evan Spiegel, co-founder and CEO of Snap, the company behind Snapchat. Evan reflects on building Snapchat from a Stanford dorm room idea into a platform use...d by nearly a billion people worldwide. They discuss why Evan turned down a $3 billion offer from Mark Zuckerberg, Snap's bold bet on augmented reality glasses, and how AI is transforming software development from the inside out. Evan also shares his leadership philosophy, built around kindness, creativity, and long-term thinking. Don't miss this conversation with one of Silicon Valley's most unconventional builders. In Good Company is hosted by Nicolai Tangen, CEO of Norges Bank Investment Management. New full episodes every Wednesday, and don't miss our Highlight episodes every Friday. The production team for this episode includes Isabelle Karlsson and PLAN-B's Niklas Figenschau Johansen. Background research was conducted by Une Solheim. Watch the episode on YouTube: Norges Bank Investment Management - YouTubeWant to learn more about the fund? The fund | Norges Bank Investment Management (nbim.no)Follow Nicolai Tangen on LinkedIn: Nicolai Tangen | LinkedInFollow NBIM on LinkedIn: Norges Bank Investment Management: Administrator for bedriftsside | LinkedInFollow NBIM on Instagram: Explore Norges Bank Investment Management on Instagram Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everybody. I'm Nicola Tangen, the CEO of the Norwegian sovereign month fund.
And today I'm really thrilled. I'm here with Evan Spiegel, the co-founder and CEO of Snap,
the company behind the very popular Snapchat.
Now, it's used by nearly a billion people every day.
He was 22 years old, turned down a $3 billion offer from Mark Zuckerberg,
and has continued to build a company, which, by the way, in Norway of all places,
was one of your first really, really big market.
So fantastic to have you here.
Thanks so much, Nicole. It's great to be on the show. And yeah, we now reach more than 3 million Norwegians. So very proud to serve the Norwegian people.
Now, it started as an idea that most people were thought was like totally ridiculous, a photo that disappears just after you look at it. So where the heck did that idea come from?
Well, Bobby and I had grown up with social media. And on social media, everything was saved forever. It was public. It was like a big competition to see how many friends you had or likes you could get.
on your photos. And so it meant that people were only posting pretty and perfect moments,
not the full set of emotions or full set of experiences they have that are really important
to relationships. So I think the most important thing Snapchat did was created a new way of
communicating with visual messaging. That was really the foundation of the service. Now today,
it's diversified across a map that lets you see what your friends are up to or augmented reality
lenses, of course, content with stories and spotlight. But the core of the service is really
visual messaging between friends and family.
So where do you go? You're like 22 years old, no money, no app, no nothing. I mean, how do you
start? Well, I was in school at the time, and Bobby and I actually lived across the hall from each other.
And so we started working on some projects together, one of which was called Future Freshman,
which was a service designed to help people get into college. That was a total failure.
Only my mom signed up for our service, despite both of our siblings applying for college at the time.
So we got some strong customer feedback in the early days.
We ended up shutting down future freshmen, trying a few other things,
and ultimately creating Piccaboo, as Snapchat was called at the time,
which I presented to my class in junior year.
When did you understand that you were onto something big?
Oh, gosh.
I mean, it probably wasn't until about a year after we launched the service
when there were enough folks using it and continuing to use it,
in a way that we thought maybe we could build a business.
But I think the most important thing for us is that we loved using it together with our friends.
And so that really gave us the conviction to stick with it, continue evolving Snapchat,
because we were having so much fun using Snapchat to message with our friends.
Now, in the beginning, people kind of thought it was a bit secretive, right?
Stuff is disappearing.
There is no record of anything.
So how did you think about the kind of reputation side of it?
You're right.
Back then, people didn't really think about or prioritize privacy the way they do now.
I mean, if you remember at the time, everyone was talking about the world being open and connected
and everyone was going to share everything permanently.
And I don't think people had yet realized the downside, you know, of saving everything forever
or allowing companies to access and store such large amounts of data.
And so it was unusual for Snapchat, I guess now 15 years ago, to say privacy is really important
to us.
And, you know, we think that privacy is actually the foundation of self-expression, right?
unless you feel like you can express yourself with your friends and family without fear of that
being recorded and broadcast publicly, it's very hard to feel comfortable expressing yourself.
So I think we were early to explain the connection between privacy and self-expression,
which I think now is obviously very well understood and widely accepted.
You had a pretty healthy offer to sell the company early on.
Now, in Europe, we typically take the money and run.
you thought differently how come well we really loved what we were doing we saw a huge long-term
opportunity i mean now the service reaches nearly a billion people around the world back then it was
still very small and so we believed that you know we had a vision that was unique and different
than traditional social media that was much more focused on close friends and family on messaging
and self-expression and so we decided to pursue our own vision and you know i think the thing that
that really helped us make the decision was just how much we love what we do.
Now, you've been at the forefront of a lot of innovations, right? Disappearing messages,
stories, augmented reality, filters and so on. How do you build a company that comes up with
these kind of ideas? Well, I think what's so important is to continue to create a culture
where great ideas can come from anywhere, where people put good ideas before hierarchy. One of
the challenges with companies as they grow is they become much large organizations, people become
more fixated on promotions or making more money rather than taking risks. And so one of the things
that we've done is kept a very, very small design team. It's about nine people. It's a totally flat
structure. So there's no fancy titles or anything like that. And the entire idea is to iterate
really quickly to try new things. You know, we look at hundreds of ideas on a weekly basis. And every
now and then we have a good idea. But I think, you know, the most important thing is to create a culture
that rewards creativity and risk-taking rather than a culture that rewards promotion, for example.
What's the craziest idea you looked at lately?
Oh, my goodness. The craziest idea I've looked at lately.
We had all sorts of wild ideas for April Fool's jokes on Snapchat, most of which, actually, all of which I think we discarded,
except for we briefly renamed Spotlight Reels, R-E-A-L-S, because we're so focused on the authenticity of videos made on Snapchat.
So when you sit around the table, how does it work?
Do you have a screen? You put things on a screen.
You have a whiteboard.
Just what do you do?
Yeah, we've got a screen.
Sometimes we draw stuff.
Sometimes we use a whiteboard.
Most of the time, you know, we're just debating stuff and laughing.
I mean, I think one of the things that's so important is creating a culture where everyone can speak up and share their point of view.
And part of the things that, you know, part of what makes that, you know, enjoyable is to make sure that it's fun.
Right.
I think fundamentally, unless you can have fun with design, it's very hard to be creative.
So I think the levity of those design meetings is something that I always really enjoy
and something that brings out the best in people and creates a space where everyone can share their
perspective.
How did you guys come up with stories?
Well, that was actually an outgrowth of people asking for a send-to-all button.
And so in the early days of Snapchat, people said, oh, gosh, it's such a pain to go select
at each one of my friends when I want to send them a snap.
I'd rather just have a send-to-all button so I can blast snaps to everyone who's my friend on Snapchat.
And we were really concerned that that would end up with people spamming each other all day long, rather than intentionally communicating.
But we did understand that people wanted to share snaps with all of their friends.
So we asked them a lot about how they were using social media at the time, and they complained that the feed was in reverse chronological order.
They complained about likes and comments and feeling the pressure when they were posting.
And they, of course, were frustrated that their feed ultimately or their profile when they went back and looked at it felt like it didn't really.
reflect who they were currently because it had all these old images and photos of them.
And so for us, we took a lot of those learnings and what we heard and we created a product
that disappears after 24 hours.
You can start fresh the next day that doesn't have public likes and comments that's in
chronological order so people can follow you through your day instead of, you know,
experiencing your day in reverse.
And we released stories.
And the early uptake was minimal.
I mean, people were just discovering the future and there wasn't a lot of growth early on.
but as people figured it out and started using stories to share with their friends,
it became a very large success for us.
How many stories do you put out?
Do I personally put out?
Oh, I put a couple snaps on my story a week, I would say, for my friends and family.
Now, people just copy what you do, right?
So Instagram, copied stories, TikTok, took the short term, kind of short form video,
WhatsApp, disappearing messages.
I mean, is it depressing that people take your ideas?
So do you think it's going to flattering or how do you look at it?
Well, it's a heck of a lot better than coming up with ideas that nobody wants to take, right?
So I think certainly prefer it to the alternative.
But it means we have to be really thoughtful about how we build our business for the long term,
how we continue to build a mode and make Snapchat very resilient, right?
And it's what's helped us think a lot about our future-looking investments like an augmented reality
where we have, you know, I think the largest augmented reality platform today and advanced
developer tools and really this ecosystem we've developed because we found that, you know,
as you build an ecosystem, that's much harder to copy than an app feature, for example.
Now, the biggest bet now for you seems to be the augmented reality glasses, and I believe you're on,
you are on Generation 5. Do you think the world is ready for this now?
I think the world is so ready. I think the world is so ready. I think the 10.
technology has been trying to catch up to where the world is. I think folks are exhausted by what their
computers and their phones demand of them. I mean, people are spending seven or eight hours a day
hunched over a screen. They feel like it distracts them from the real world, takes them away from
their friends and family, but yet this technology is so useful and so powerful, right, that we don't
want to just put our laptops away. We need to fundamentally change what a computer is. And that's
really what specs do. They take computing and they actually integrate it in the world around you.
They make it something you can share together with your friends.
So you and your friends can participate in the same computing experience in the same place at the same time.
That's really, really powerful.
And it represents a whole new direction for computing that I think the world has wanted for a long time, but the technology hasn't been ready.
Some pretty big players have tried already and they failed.
So why should you succeed here?
Well, I do think we have unique customer insight that we've been able to translate into very innovative,
products in the past. And I think staying close to our customers, what they really want and building
products that really delight them is core to who we are. And I think that's been combined with the
ability to really invest consistently over the long term. I think a lot of companies that have
tried and experimented in this place, you know, in this space have turned their initiatives on and
off abruptly, which is really damaging for long-term research and development. They've sort of
chase different market opportunities, you know, pivoting back and forth between consumer and
enterprise. And so these pivots and these sort of starts and stops are really, really harmful
to long-term research and development. And I think that's where we're very different because now,
I think for what, more than 12 years, we've invested very consistently and very deliberately
against this vision, starting with, you know, just normal camera glasses, adding a second camera,
adding a display, building out our own proprietary operating system and the developer ecosystem,
and now launching a bit later this year, full-fledged consumer-grade specs that fit all of that
capability into a normal pair of glasses.
So I think it's really that focus and long-term consistency that's going to differentiate us
in this space.
How far into the future do you think you can see?
So, I mean, what I mean is that I have a question, where do you see Snap in 10 years' time?
And then I thought, you know, 10 years time.
I mean, my, that's like 100 years for this guy.
So, but I mean, do you can you see like, well, two to three or just what are you, what is your
timeframe when you, when you plan and when you look at your visions?
Well, the, the hardware time horizon is obviously far longer than the software time horizon.
So, you know, in the hardware space, we plan through, I'd say now we're, we plan through 2030, right?
So we have a general idea of the tech tracks and product capability and what we need to land over
that timeframe and what the consumer value proposition.
needs to be in the price point. So I think, you know, one of the great things about hardware,
actually, is that we get to benefit from our long-term vision because, you know, by the time
we've released a product, we're already years ahead in terms of the next generation of the product
and our investment cycle. So it makes it harder for our competitors to catch up because they're
only seeing what we worked on several years ago when we launch a new, launch a new hardware
product. On the software side, I'd say the cycles are a lot faster and we can pivot and make changes
much more quickly.
And of course, the software on specs, for example, even after we launch the hardware,
continues to develop at a really rapid clip.
So it depends, you know, hardware versus software.
But I think, you know, taking a step back big picture, looking out over the next three to five
years, Snapchat will, you know, reach more than a billion people.
It'll have a diversified set of revenue streams across subscriptions and direct revenue,
as well as our advertising business.
And then we'll be layering in the development of this specs ecosystem and the specs
hardware products, starting first with early adopters and enthusiasts, but by the end of the
decade, I think really having a mass market glasses product out there.
In terms of augmented reality, is it the hardware, which is the slowest now, or is it
software? If you look at what could make it move faster?
Well, hardware is always harder than software. That's why it's one of the most compelling
places to invest. I think it's so important if you want to create long-term value to do really
difficult things and to solve really difficult problems. And certainly the hardware space for
glasses is difficult because you have to combine so much capability into a very, very lightweight
and wearable product. So I think, you know, looking at the history of our augmented reality
development, we already have an AR platform that's used by hundreds of millions of people
inside Snapchat. And the question will be how that evolves as the, you know, the glasses hardware
ultimately is released later this year. And, you know, we've seen a lot of promising signs from the
24 edition of specs, which was developer focused. People have built hundreds of lenses for that
device. And I'm really excited to see what the developer community builds on this next generation.
Moving on to culture, what are the non-negotiable part of your copaculture?
We've got three values, very simple, kind, smart, and creative, all non-negotiable.
And the most important thing, I think, actually, is the relationship between kindness and
creativity. And what we really learned over the years is that unless you have a culture where people feel
supported, feel like they can bring their full selves to work and experiment with crazy ideas,
it's very, very hard to develop a consistently creative culture. So the relationship between kindness
and creativity is very important to us. How kind are you? I try to be as kind as I can. Certainly,
I'm more kind after a cup of coffee. Hierarchy. What about it? Have we got it? Hierarchy?
Well, I think hierarchy is a function of a larger organization.
One of the things that's exciting I think about the way that AI is changing the workplace is that I would expect there to be less and less hierarchy, much larger spans of control.
Most of the management process, I think, will be largely automated by AI and it will free up leaders to spend more time leading.
But hierarchy does end up being a function of larger companies.
I think the question is, you know, how fast is bad news travel within that hierarchy are people lifted up for highlighting things that aren't working?
working that are broken so the organization can fix it quickly, or are people more focused on,
you know, managing up and more, more self-interested in their own promotion and appearing,
you know, like they're making progress rather than delivering real results for the business.
And I think SNAP's culture, especially at our sort of startup scale, you know, is a very high-impact
culture and very much focused on, you know, finding the best ideas wherever they may be,
rather than trying to enforce some, you know, hierarchy.
Why will AI reduce hierarchy in an organization?
I think ultimately AI creates a huge amount of leverage for managers to take on a lot of the
managerial work that they used to have to do in the past.
So, for example, in the past, as a manager, you had to spend a lot of time staying very close
to what your team members were doing, working to provide very actionable feedback, gathering
all that feedback from their peers.
Today, you know, I can use our systems at Snap to see everything there.
actually doing without them having to report anything. I can just understand based on the work
product they've actually contributed whether or not they're meeting their goals. I can easily
gather peer feedback right from their interactions with their peers and feedback from their peers
and ultimately turn that into very, very actionable feedback without having to do much managerial
work to get that outcome. So I think if you look at a lot of the, you know, things like career
planning, career conversations, feedback, a lot of the day-to-day work,
required of management. Most of that, I think, is going to be automated in the not too distant future,
and that's going to free up managers to lead. What do you think is going to happen to the number of
reports that a manager have? I think it could very meaningfully increase, and I think, you know,
that's certainly a benefit that, you know, rather than maybe a more traditional seven to 10 directs
or something like that, you could even see that number double, you know, over time as more of that
managerial work is automated. Now, you went through every structuring in 2022, took down the
number of people by some 20%. What did that do to the culture? Did you see any significant impact?
Well, I think it's always difficult to manage through change like that, mostly because our colleagues
are our friends. There are people we really enjoy spending time with. The folks here are incredibly
high impact. And so those decisions are always incredibly difficult and painful. And it does take time for
the culture to recover. There's a real sadness that comes along with saying goodbye to colleagues
who we really love and admire working with. And so I think, you know, understanding that and
empathizing with that and also recognizing that, you know, we do, you know, have to adapt as a business
and make changes so that we can continue to work towards our long-term goals. You also say that the
firm, that as a firm, you need to work faster and leaner. What are the type of things that you have
changed to achieve that? Well, I think the thing making the most profound impact,
impact is AI. We're a software company. And so the entire way that software is written now has
changed profoundly. It's mostly written by agents. I would be stunned if humans are writing any
code at all by next year, whether it's bug fixes or testing. I mean, all of these processes
now that required a huge amount of human engineering work are being automated very quickly. And so
for a company like ours that's predominantly in the business of software, that's hugely impactful.
It'll let us move way faster to serve our customers.
It'll help us resolve issues much more quickly.
And that's a really inspiring change that's happening right now in software.
Now, you got more data on how young people communicate than, you know, most of the firms.
When you look at the data, what are the kind of things that surprise you?
I wouldn't say it's surprising so much as it's reassuring.
What we see over and over again is the reason why people love using Snapchat is to talk with their close friends and their family.
and to do so in a way that's really authentic.
So I think at a moment when everyone's preoccupied with social media and public performance
and these sorts of things, Snapchat represents something very different.
And what we continue to see and hear from young people is just that desire for real
relationships and connection.
And, you know, what a positive impact those close relationships have on their lives.
I mean, our friends and our family are the most important thing in our lives.
And so making it easy to stay in touch with them in a really authentic and fast way is just so
important.
Do men and women use it differently?
That's a great question.
You know, in the early days, you know, a lot of the early adoption was women communicating
with other women, you know, and over time, you know, the user base has become more diversified,
more balanced in terms of, you know, user engagement.
How do you make sure that young people stay on the platform when they grow up?
I think it really comes down to providing utility around those close friends and friend and family
relationships. One of the things that's fascinating, you know, when we get older, our friend groups actually
get smaller. And so Snapchat's really well positioned for that because it's built around this close
friends and family dynamic. And so as you go from caring about, you know, staying in touch with maybe
hundreds of people when you're in college to staying just close to your, you know, few best friends
or your family or, you know, the grandparents, I think Snapchat's a really, really useful tool as
we all grow older and ultimately, you know, choose to stay in touch with that small group of close
friends that really matter.
And what's the trade-off between keeping it small and authentic versus becoming very big and like Instagram and TikTok?
I think there are lots of trade-offs.
I mean, the first thing is that communication services just grow slower than social media
because social media is broadcast-based, and Snapchat is based on communication.
And so that does mean there are some trade-offs, and we've seen historically in terms
of our rate of growth because it's dependent on people communicating with a smaller group of
friends rather than blasting out content to thousands of folks or people they may not know.
And so I do think that ultimately that trade-offs is balanced with the real.
resilience of building a communication service because the durability of communication services
and the importance of that in people's lives is something that's helped us build long-term value.
Talking of which, how long do you think these podcasts should be for the audience to continue
to hang in there? Well, I guess it's a function of how interesting it is, right? You'd probably
have more interesting. I think it's super interesting, but you know, you know your audience better than I do.
Well, I think the more important thing is to have a great clipping team, right, and to cut it up and to
awesome 15 to 30 second moments.
We'll work on that.
Now, you've been CEO since you were 21.
It's pretty amazing.
And now you are 30, what is it, 34?
35.
Wow.
How have you changed as a leader?
You know, it's so interesting.
In the early days, right, I had to wear so many different hats,
whether it was, you know, answering customer support emails or, you know,
getting the legal work done, the financing.
So much of, you know, my grandparents.
has been about leading people and the evolution necessary to, you know, primarily focus on making
sure we have the right folks in the right roles and that I'm helping them grow and develop,
and that being much more important than, you know, any individual task or function we have
here at our company. So I think so much of the job really becomes, you know, about people.
And that is certainly the most important thing to me. I think, you know, the one thing that's
been really helpful through all of this is because we started the company and when we're so
young, we've been able to really think long term. I mean, I'm sure you're aware the tenure of
public company CEOs is incredibly short today. And it's very hard to do anything of real
significance in such a short period of time. If that's four years or seven years, anything that
requires real technical development and research and development happens over very, very long
periods of time. And so I think, you know, as I've gotten older, I've been able to better appreciate
what a strategic advantage that is to really be able to invest consistently over a long period
of time. How do you communicate with the rest of the firm? What are the methods you use?
I typically do company-wide Q&As pretty frequently every other week, I'd say, and then we also
have team-wide meetings where we have folks present on what's going on in the company. A lot of
what we've been doing lately is highlighting all the amazing AI adoption and work that's happening
across SNAP, because that's just so critical to the way that we're working today. But yeah,
I think my favorite format is just open Q&A because I learn a lot.
Based on what people are asking, what people care about, I'm constantly hearing what's top of mind for our team.
And that helps me stay close to issues across the company.
What are the most interesting ways you are using AI now, which you didn't, let's say, three, four months ago?
Well, I think the most profound shift is really in software development.
I think that's where the capability has increased so dramatically.
Even, you know, as I reflect on the end of last year to today, you know, the notion of, you know,
really evolving, right, from AI being a tool that engineers use to now, you know, really agentic
development and developers overseeing agents who are completing this work, that changes happen
in basically six months. And that's a really, a really big deal for us. And, you know, it also
means that as a smaller company, sometimes we haven't had the capacity or the resources to invest
in new tooling. So, for example, we have all these amazing creators on Snapchat. They're constantly
creating content about brands or, you know, new snaps that companies might want to, you know,
use to promote their services.
But historically, we didn't have a tool that made it easy to find those creators and collaborate
with those creators.
And we were having a hard time resourcing and funding that work.
And now, you know, in just a matter of weeks, we've created an awesome tool.
It's already out in the market.
We're getting great feedback from our partners and advertisers.
And so for a company like us that's resource constrained, AI is letting us accelerate.
in such meaningful ways that just weren't possible before.
Even just some personal things at the end there, what do you do when you don't work?
Well, we've got four boys at home, 15, an eight-year-old, a six-year-old and a two-year-old.
So that consumes virtually all my free time.
We were just at Lego Land for our eight-year-old's birthday.
That was pretty fun.
But yeah, that's what I enjoy doing.
What is your screen time policy for your boys?
It really depends on their ages.
So the 15-year-old, I don't think he's allowed to use it after what I think the latest rule is 10 p.m.
So we like him to put his device away at 10 p.m.
But otherwise, it's so important for him to stay in touch with friends and get work done and all that kind of thing now that he's in high school.
For the little ones, we really minimize screen time.
Obviously, they can watch a movie every now and then.
And then for the two-year-old, it's virtually never, you know, except for when he's getting his haircut because he has a hard time sit and stay.
still for that.
Sounds good. We've got lots of young listeners, as you can imagine, and in particular
for this episode, what is your advice to young people?
I think what's so important, especially when you're younger, is to take risk by trying
lots of new things. I think there's sort of this narrative that, you know, find your passion,
right, or whatever you're passionate about, chase after it, it's hard to know what that is
unless you try a bunch of different things. And so I would really encourage folks to try different
things to see what really resonates if they're not enjoying something to stop doing it and find
something else because there's there's never sort of a lower risk time to experiment with finding
your interest than when you're young and when the switching costs are very low. So that would really
be my my advice to young people. Fantastic. Very good. It's been great talking to you.
All the best of luck and, you know, keep up the good work. Thanks so much. I really appreciate it.
Thanks for having me on. Thank you.
