Investing Billions - E401: Einstein Was Wrong About What Actually Compounds
Episode Date: July 10, 2026After more than 400 conversations with investors, founders, CIOs, and capital allocators managing over $10 trillion, the tables finally turn. In this special episode, Curtis Pierce, Co-Founder of Wei...sburd Pierce and the How I Invest podcast, interviews host David Weisburd about the biggest ideas that have permanently changed his thinking. David argues that the greatest compounding force isn't capital. It's relationships, reputation, access to information, and the ability to surround yourself with excellence early in your career. From venture capital and family offices to LP-GP relationships and organizational culture, he shares the principles shaping how Weisburd Pierce invests and builds enduring partnerships.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Albert Einstein famously called compound interest the eighth wonder of the world.
Today's guest is your host, David Weisberg, and he believes Einstein was wrong.
After more than 400 conversations with some of the world's greatest investors, founders, and capital allocators, he's come to a different conclusion.
The thing that compounds the most aren't financial.
Their relationships, their reputation, their access.
Today, the table's turn.
I'm Curtis Pierce, David's co-founder and business partner for the second time in over 400,
episodes, David is taking the guest seat. We discuss why relationships may be the highest
return investment you'll ever make, why the best opportunities are rarely available to everyone,
and what actually compounds over the course of a career. After 400 conversations with some of the
world's top investors managing over 10 trillion in assets, what's one belief that you now hold
more firmly that many people in finance still underappreciate? Einstein was wrong. Einstein famously said
compound interest was the eighth wonder of the world, but he was wrong.
What really is the eighth wonder of the world is the compounding of other things,
specifically brand and access to information.
Give me a specific example of what you're talking about.
Let's take two people.
Same IQ, same pedigree.
One starts at IBM.
One starts at Goldman Sachs.
The one starting at IBM has a one in 100,000 chance to become a billionaire.
The one that starts at Goldman Sachs has a one in three thousand chance of becoming a billion.
Why? The answer is the compounding of several things. One is brand and one is information. Let's talk about brand. Why is brand such a big compounding force?
Brand leads to more know-how. Know-how leads to better access to information. Access to information leads to better know-how and so it continues the cycle.
Where you start your career is one of the most important aspects of whether you become successful.
And that is far more important than just the compounding of capital.
So another way, it's famously known that billionaires by the third generation,
95% of those families no longer are wealthy.
Why is that?
It is because compound interest, despite Einstein saying this,
is not as powerful of a force as other factors.
How would you steal man that argument?
Try to take the other side of it.
I wouldn't actually steal man the argument.
I would straw man the argument.
if you think about wealth, if wealth was truly this compounding force and you had a billionaire family,
think about the advantages that that billionaire family has. Why is it that 95% of those families
by the third generation no longer have any wealth? And the answer is because it's not as important
as other things, such as brand and access to information. You could also look at the 5% of family
offices. Why do some family offices like the DuPont family, which we've had on, how do they make
the 10th generation or the Pritzker family that we've had on as well now on their fourth generation
and more wealthy than ever? And the answer is they're able to instill the right culture,
the right know-how into their kids and they're able to raise them in a way that compounds much more
effectively than finances compound by themselves. But maybe just to test you on that a little bit,
Couldn't you make the argument that someone born into a wealthy family has brand and has access information
and therefore should also have those positive elements in addition to the financial compounding?
Yes, and I think that's why you see this dichotomy in families.
And for whatever reason, they're always extreme outcomes.
I've talked about NEPA babies multiple times on the podcast.
I know a lot of these billionaire families I've probably interviewed more than anyone else on the face of the planet.
and the kids tend to fall into two different camps.
One is the camp of the Nepo baby,
which is this baby that goes around and buys Ferraris
and parties all the time and blows capital.
And the second one is somebody that wants to succeed
and wants to surpass the family
and continue the family's legacy.
In many ways, this is the A-B test of the compounding of wealth.
If I were to reframe what you're saying,
those that simply pass down money, those are the families that tend to run out of money.
They go from sure sleeves to sure sleeves in three generations.
The families that pass down the institutional knowledge, the networks, the relationships,
how to manage them, how to cultivate them, in addition to all of these other financial elements,
are the ones that are successful over long periods of time.
The one solved that I found for every family is what I call finance boot camp, which is going into investment banking.
When you have a billionaire son go into investment banking, he ends up being with other very privileged people, and they end up beating this entitlement out of them.
And alongside that beating of the entitlement out of them, they also get many skills that compound through their entire generation.
I interviewed Jason Pritzker. He started his career at Goldman Sachs. He was a huge.
able to learn all the know-how and everything that he needed to then become vice-chairman of
the Pritzker organization and become a big force in the business world versus somebody that went
and, let's say, worked for the family business. They're going to struggle because they never
have to go through that gauntland, that challenge of getting those skills and getting that work
ethic that you need to succeed. If you were to take a generous view, I think beyond work ethic,
you get to sort of see what excellence looks like in other contexts.
And so you gain better perspective.
And I think that helps.
And some families kind of have this mantra of they want people to go and work in industry for a while before returning to the family business ultimately.
You said something extremely important.
Seeing what excellence looks like is the number one predictor of whether somebody will be successful in their craft.
Seeing excellence is one of these things that you can't unsee.
when you see an excellent founder if you're a venture capitalist,
when you see an excellent company as a private equity executive,
you now have that standard of excellence,
and now you know what it takes to be successful in that craft.
And the sooner you could compress that,
the faster you could get to what excellence looks like
is more predictive of success in the career than any other factor.
That sounds kind of obvious,
and people would probably agree with that,
but I think practically implementing it,
is what's, I think, challenging.
Most people, you start a career, you get an entry-level job.
Sure, if you're at Goldman or some of these elite organizations, you have elite competency
up and down the stack.
But I think a lot of people end up in a junior role.
It's hard to find the right situations to put yourself in.
So what practical advice would you give people that are maybe earlier in their career
trying to figure out how to get themselves around other people that exude excellence?
I have very practical piece of advice, and almost no one will take it,
but that is to go to the most competent person in the profession that you want to be in
and to either volunteer or work for them as their executive assistant or their chief of staff.
It's extremely humbling, but the closest you could get to that excellence,
where you're literally observing it on day-to-day basis, again,
that is the most predictable path to actually succeeding in that craft.
It reminds me of sort of the classic stereotype of,
you're trying to get a job, an elite organization, be willing to be the janitor or be willing to do
literally anything just to get your foot in the door because as much as it is about your job, your day-to-day
tasks, yes, that's part of it. But just being around excellence, I think, is the other part of it
and kind of why that mantra sticks. There's such a gravitational pull that's pulling everybody
away from excellence towards the norm. So if you think about what is excellence?
Excellence is, let's define it, the top 5% in a given field.
So you want to be an excellent investment banker.
You have to be top 5%.
You want to be an excellent private equity executive.
You want to be top 5%.
It also means that you are doing something dramatically different than the average person.
What does that mean?
That means that people are always going to be seeing you as weird and as different.
And they're not going to like that.
If you think about Steve Jobs, everybody today worships him.
At the time, a lot of people hated Steve Jobs,
especially before he had the brand,
because they didn't understand why he worked so hard,
they didn't understand why you were so obsessive,
almost to an extreme.
They're famously, Steve Jobs didn't put on his license plate on his car.
He would always get fines because he was so meticulously focused on the craft
and not damaging his car.
He saw it as a masterpiece.
You need that level of craziness,
and you need to have that level of commitment.
And in order to do that, one big hack is you want to be in a number,
organization that embraces that. So you might be odd when you're at Thanksgiving with your cousins and
with your uncles and they might be thinking, well, David, why are you working on Thanksgiving? It's
Thanksgiving. Oh, take it easy. But within your organization, it's normative behavior. So that's why it's so
important to be within an organization because it gives you the space and the time to build that muscle
of excellence. This is an underappreciated point, this concept of social norms. Yes, it's important to be
around people that have high IQs that are very smart, that may be well studied in a certain
field. But just getting around certain cultural norms is very important because to your point,
we're all humans, we all have emotions and these other things. And so standing out from the
group that you're in is challenging. People look at you weird. They question, why are you doing this?
So if you get yourself into a culture where maybe working longer hours or being obsessive about
product or whatever it is is the norm, then it's much easier to do those things. You sort of get the
implicit or explicit permission to work harder, pursue excellence, do these things that you would
otherwise face social frictions if you were in another setting or another organization.
Social friction, not IQ, is the thing that keeps most people from being successful. I'll give you
one example. A lot of people reach out to me and they say, I want to be a better podcaster.
Always give them the same piece of advice. Wear makeup. Why? Because I want to see whether they're
committed to being a great podcaster. And of course, they say, well, I don't want to wear makeup,
but I'll do anything else. And that's the point. The point is that most people don't have what it
takes to sacrifice to be the best in their craft. And yes, you could do it solo. You could try to figure it out
yourself. But if you could be within an organization that embraces that, that's so much more
powerful. If you think about investment banking, is it odd that on Friday night at 11 o'clock when your
friends are texting you to go out as a 24-year-old that you tell them that you're working on
investment making. No, in fact, this entire culture that makes this behavior normative. That's why
these systems are so effective in getting the very best out of them. Same with the military. Is it odd
that you can't go drinking because you're now deployed into a war? No, that's completely normal
behavior versus the person that wants to work on themselves and wants to build a business. That's very
not normal for them to say that, to say, I can't go out because I need to work on my business.
It reminds me of a story that Alex Formosie told us when we had him in the studio last year. He had an
employee, I believe, who was saying, I really I'll do anything to improve. I want to get a
promotion or there was a pay increase or something he was seeking and basically saying he would do
anything. And Alex finally gave in and said, okay, let's have a meeting to talk about your
performance and what you can do to get to the next level. And then the person was late
to that meeting. So it's this funny thing where people will say, oh, I'll do anything, but then
even the simplest thing, like being on time to the performance review,
sometimes those execution steps fall through the cracks.
People will do anything, quote-unquote,
but they won't do the simplest things if it's not normative.
In other words, they're completely short-term in their approach.
They won't do anything that hurts in the short-term,
and that leads to success in the long-term.
So we talked a bit about the compounding of brand,
the compounding of information,
the importance of being around great cultures and excellence.
But let's talk a little bit about relationships.
What are the important of relationships in a career?
Across almost all 400 episodes,
I always ask what is one piece of advice
that you wish you'd give a younger self
before you start your career?
And by a wide range,
people say,
I wish I had focused more on the compounding of relationships.
And everybody says that,
And yet, when you go out in the business world, it's extremely rare to find somebody that's truly focused on the compounding of relationships.
And people fail to truly internalize this belief.
I think one of the reasons that it's difficult to internalize that belief is, like anything, that compounds, all the returns are on the back end.
When you start your career or start anything or pursue anything in life, and you start building relationships,
Sometimes it can be many years before you really start to see that what I like to call positive relationship equity coming back and bearing fruit in other ways.
I do think that's one reason why practically it's easier to appreciate when you're further in your career and you've started to see those things paying off.
And then in hindsight you say, well, now that the garden is blooming, I wish I had planted more seeds.
Do you agree with that perspective?
Yes and no.
Like any compounding, you're going to see most results.
happen over long periods of time.
But I believe that people are so short-term greedy
that if they were even what I would call mid-term greedy,
they would be far more successful.
Let me give you a specific example.
Rahul McDahl, two-time podcast guest,
has raised more capital than anybody that I'm aware of
over $100 billion across his career.
And he tells a story where University of Virginia
invested into his fund $3 million.
Three years later, they invested $400 million
because of the work that he and his fund did.
that's three years.
That's not 30 years.
That's not 10 years.
It came back in three years.
A lot of opportunities
that we've been involved in me and you
as business partners,
sometimes we'll see if you treat somebody well,
even for three to six months,
it ricochets back.
And yet, people are still so focused
on this optimization of the short term
that it's highly detrimental
to the compounding
of what at least they claim
is their most valuable asset.
I actually have a theory
on why many people are very short-term-oriented,
but before I give mine,
why do you think people in general are so short-term-oriented?
It's a bit of a paradox,
because if you look at the people that run the biggest financial organizations,
they're oftentimes extremely long-term greedy
and not short-term greedy at all.
And then you think about, well, then why is it that 95% by my estimates
probably more are short-term greedy?
And that's by, I believe, as a result of the incentives of the financial system.
So in order to become successful from analysts to associate to VP requires a very different skill set, an analytical skill set, which requires you to be good at spreadsheets, analysis, just grinding.
Doesn't require any social skills, doesn't require any relationship skills.
So for somebody that's extremely relationship focused and not as analytical, in theory, one could be great at both, but it's a rare person.
that's great at both. So for somebody that's on the relationship side, they're not going to be
able to stomach the five years in the traditional finance route that takes to get out of that
birth canal into the other side for them to be extremely successful. So yes, 95% in lower level
positions are short-term greedy. When you look at the people running the organizations, I would say
at least 75% are long-term greedy. I agree with elements of what you're saying. And it's actually
I think it's a paradox in bold direction. You have the problem where
a certain set of skills is needed to be successful at the beginning of your career,
and a very different set of skills are needed to be successful in the latter part of your career.
And the people that have maybe not the skills to be successful in the early part,
never make it in or never make it to the later part.
But then the inverse is true as well.
Those that have the skills at the junior level that do get in,
sometimes have a hard time sort of getting over the hump of being in those more
relationship-oriented positions and roles.
and it's a skill set they have to develop over time,
and if they don't, then they don't always make it.
But my theory, it doesn't actually conflict with yours,
but it's maybe another layer on top of the cake.
I think it's easy to talk about time objectively.
A year is a year is a year or two years or five years.
But actually, time is relative to one owns life experience.
So when you say three years,
there's a specific example you gave with Rahul.
It doesn't sound like a long time.
But if you're 30 years old, that's 10% of your entire life.
And if you take away the first 10 years of your life, which you know, you're not really doing that much, you're still very, you know, formative, it's an even greater percentage of your life.
So why three years may objectively sound like not that long period of time, and maybe if you're 60, it's not because relative to your entire life, it's a much lower percentage.
But when you're young, three years actually can be a meaningful portion of your life.
Expert calls have always been one of the most powerful ways to build conviction.
but today, investors are asked to cover more companies, move faster, and do it with leaner teams.
With Alpha Sense AI-led expert calls, their Tegis call service team sources experts based on your research
criteria and lets the AI interviewer get to work. The magic is in the AI interviewer,
purpose-built and knowledgeable-based information to conduct high-quality context-rich conversations on your behalf,
acting as a trusted extension of your team. Then they take it one step further. Your call transcripts
flow natively into your Alpha Sense experience and become querable, searchable, and comparable,
so your primary insights plug directly into earnings prep, digital work streams, and pitchbooks
with zero tool switching. And with Alpha Sense expert call services, the AI-led expert calls are just
one option because we know the importance of a hybrid expert research approach.
AI for coverage and efficiency, humans for complexity and conviction. It's the institutional edge
that scales research without scaling headcount. For hedge funds, that means validating these
assumptions across dozens of experts before earnings instead of a handful. For private equity,
it means faster pre-IOI scans and deeper commercial diligence. For investment banks and asset managers,
it means pulling real operator perspectives straight into models and sector positioning without
disconnected tools or manual handoffs. All of it lives inside the Alpha Sense platform,
trusted by 75% of the world's top hedge funds alongside filings, broker research, news,
and more than 240,000 expert call transcripts,
turning raw conversations into comparable, auditable insight.
Take advantage of Alpha Sense AI-led expert calls now.
The first to see wins.
The rest follow.
Learn more at Alpha-sense.com slash how I invest.
Another reason is the system,
at least in the short-term,
rewards short-termism over long-termism,
almost by definition.
Instead of giving you an example,
I'm going to give you a counter example.
Dan Federer University of Michigan, one of the top allocators in the endowment space.
When I was talking to him and I asked him, what kind of fees do you get from first-time fund managers?
What kind of fee savings? He oftentimes likes to come in early.
And first-time fund managers are in their most desperate time.
They really need LPs. They need all the credibility.
And he interrupted me and he said, it's not fees that I'm looking for.
I'm looking for the relationships.
I want to support them in their most vulnerable time so that I could build that relationships over many decades.
you kind of stop back and think, well, that's kind of a nice thing.
That sounds like a nice thing to do.
What are the second order effects of that?
And the second order of effects is it's publicly disclosed.
University of Michigan has a $2 billion position in Open AI.
And how did they get that $2 billion position in Open AI?
Do you think other people wouldn't want to invest on a co-invest at the time?
Even in the early stages, that was a great investment.
And the answer was because he got the first call.
And why did he get the first call?
and the answer is he was a good partner.
And what's crazy about these incentive systems
is let's say that he didn't get the first call on OpenAI,
and let's say he got it at the fourth or fifth best company in the space.
And let's say he beat them down on fees.
So instead of paying $200,000, he paid $100,000.
Now he could go to the CIO and said,
look, I saved us $100,000 in co-invest fees.
Now the CIO could go to the board and say,
I saved us $100,000 on co-invest.
And everybody's patting each other on the back.
little do they know that they lost a $2 billion opportunity.
And what's crazy about that is they may never know because it's opportunity costs.
And this is why incentives at the organizational level are so important.
It's not just the long-termism or long-term relationship orientation of the individual.
It's at the organization level as well.
Because if an organization in this example really prioritizes fee savings, as we know some LPs do, a lot of the pension funds do,
they may make the wrong decisions.
They may create an incentive system
where, to your point,
their relationship managers
or their investors, their allocators
are trying to save on fees
may be missing on the opportunity cost
of some of these other investments
that they never see
because they're so focused on minimizing fees
that they're not the first call
when the great co-investment opportunities arise.
This is why I say,
despite the most common answer
on the interview of the one thing they regret,
everybody says,
I wish I realized the compounding of relationships sooner.
I think probably more than 50%,
probably close to 60, 70% of people say the same thing.
And yet they don't internalize it.
What does that mean?
They don't build systems around this belief.
It's another way they don't truly believe it
or else they would act differently.
As I started to truly believe this,
I changed my behavior in both obvious and non-obvious ways.
I'll just give you one example.
I had a banker reach out to me,
fine banker, very transactional, very effective at doing deals,
it's a deal that I could have made a couple million dollars on.
And it would take work, it would take opportunity costs,
but I had done business with this person,
and I'm sure I could have gotten a couple million dollars.
At the same time, I had Danielle Polly from Oak Tree reach out
and said that she was in town if I wanted to meet up with her.
It's unclear what business I could do in the next year,
in the next three years, and the next five years, or ever.
But I know that if I was ever to do something with Danielle, it would be significantly bigger and it would be something that compounds.
I also know that I want Danielle in my life for the next 10, 20, 30 years.
She's that kind of person.
This banker, the best case is we do this deal, we make a couple million dollars.
And then a couple years later, we do another deal where we make a couple of million dollars.
Because of the transactional nature of this banker, he's not compounding his relationships.
And as a second order effect of that, I can't compound the deal size and the relationships with this person.
with Danielle, she's constantly compounding her relationships with the most important people in the world.
And I know that second order effect of that, at one point, there's some business to do.
And even beyond that, even if there wasn't business to do it, she's just somebody that I want to spend more time with.
There's an embedded point here, which I think is worth highlighting.
And we've touched it lightly so far, but I want to double click on it, which is opportunity cost and the other hidden costs that exist.
one is within relationships.
I think you already mentioned this.
You don't see what you don't see.
So by definition, it's a hidden cost.
If you have a weak relationship
and you don't get the OpenAI co-investment call,
you may never know that you miss that opportunity.
But also with relationship,
the time you spend, there's opportunity cost
and the energy that it takes
to do something, meet with someone,
because all of these things are finite, time, energy, maybe talk a little bit about that.
Famous number, Dunbar's number, the amount of relationships you can manage in your life at a
single time. It's 150 people. So another way, if you put somebody in this roster of 150 people,
you have to kick somebody out. Now, you could bury your head in the sand and pretend that's not a thing,
but it's been proven across multiple studies. So second order to the compounding of relationships
is a very practical question, which is,
which relationships do you want to manage in your life
that will lead to this compounding?
In other words, you can't be about the compounding of relationships
in the abstract.
You have to apply to a certain subset of people,
and whether you explicitly think of these 150 people
or whether you pretend like there's no such thing as 150 people,
you're still under the same constraint of 150 people
that'll determine whether your career is successful or not.
It's a really great point.
It's hard to internalize because in the moment, you don't necessarily see the roster of your
relationships flicker in the back of your mind and have to make a conscious choice.
Everyone's meeting new people, trying to build new relationships.
And so I think it really does take a lot of discipline to always be thinking, and frankly,
it can sound a little transactional, should I invest in this relationship?
Should I invest in this person?
Is it worthwhile?
or should I pursue a relationship with somebody else?
It may sound transactional.
I would call it mechanical.
In other words, if you have 150 people that you interact with,
the subset of opportunities is going to be a subset of those 150 people.
It's just mechanical.
You could call it transactional.
What's more important is to think about the criteria of those 150 people.
Let's look at it on a business lens versus a personal lens.
What do you want from these 150 people?
one is going back to the Rahul Mukdal example
one of the non-obvious takeaways
is that you want to take small checks
from very important people
a lot of people think about this thought experiment
which somebody invests $100,000
and then 10 years later they invests $10 million.
When in this case, there's a real example.
University of Virginia invested $3 million,
three years later they invested $400 million.
What's the tradeoff of that?
Perhaps it's a high net worth,
that today is willing to write you a $5 million check,
but might have a net worth of $100, $200 million,
and that $5 million check will never turn into a $20 million check
or $100 million check.
That's one layer of it.
The second layer of that is network centrality.
We talk about wanting to be ourselves nodes in the network.
You also want to partner with other people that are nodes in the network.
Good friends of the pod like Jeremy here,
one of the most connected people in the endowment world.
Jeremy is one of these people that if you know Jeremy,
you now know 400, 500 people in the industry.
So being around nodes, sometimes it's not the person with the largest check or the person
with the largest check capacity.
Another factor is information.
If you think about access to information is the thing that compounds.
Who has the best source of information?
Through the podcast, we've created ourselves as a node of information.
I've talked to over a thousand LPs to date about their best practice is what they're doing.
So a lot of LPs, even though they don't want to go on the podcast, they reach out.
to me and they want to talk about best practices.
This is how I got to know Dan Fedder.
He still hasn't been on the podcast, but he wants to trade notes.
So having other people in your network that also are nodes and access to information is also
really great.
I completely agree with that.
And I think many people listening to this conversation will agree with a lot of what's been
said.
Relationships are important and they compound.
Brand is important.
Access to information is important, all of these things.
But one question that we haven't really answered.
is why is it the case that these relationships compound over time?
There's two reasons they compound, and both make a lot of sense once you think about it.
The first is, why do University of Virginia go from a $3 million check to a $400 million check?
And the answer is extremely rational for LPs to test relationships.
If you think about endowment, you could only write a check once.
Once you write that check, especially in a blind pool fund, it's pretty much gone.
it's extremely rational to make smaller relationship bets
and to see how somebody behaves after you give them money.
Everybody says, I'm going to be the best investor, I'm going to work hard.
It goes back to the Hermosie thing, which is, I'm willing to do whatever it takes to be successful.
Everybody says that.
How do you actually know whether they're going to do what you want them to do?
There's only really one way to find out, and that's to be an investor.
It's a Stanley Drunken Miller, invest and investigate.
gate. So it's extremely rational for LPs to write small checks to start that relationship and then
to write large checks. And by the way, even to be one of these relationship checks, takes a lot
of effort and time just to even have them track you as one of their 150 relationships. So if you think
about it from the LP side, they also have 150 GPs that they can manage. The second aspect to this,
and we've seen this already in three years of doing the podcast, is if you follow the very
very top talent, the market becomes very efficient. This top talent ends up being in the very best
positions. If you follow somebody that's extremely good at their craft, eventually the market
figures this out, the market becomes efficient, and now they could go from running a billion
dollar family office to running a hundred billion dollar institutional portfolio. So if you
pick your relationships well, they themselves will compound their career. And because you're
compounding the relationship with them, you're now in a position to benefit.
support for today's episode comes from Square.
It's all in one way for business owners to take payments, book appointments,
manned staff, and keep everything running in one place.
Whether you're selling lattes, cutting hair, running boutique, or managing a service
business, Square helps you run your business without running yourself into the ground.
It's actually thinking about this the other day when I stopped by a local cafe here.
They use Square and everything just works.
Check out as fast, receipts are instant and sometimes I get loyalty rewards automatically.
There's something about businesses that use Square.
They just feel more put together.
The experience is smoother for them.
and it's smoother for me as a customer.
Square makes it easy to sell wherever your customers are,
in store, online, on your phone, or even at pop-ups,
and everything stays synced in real time.
You could track sales, manage inventory, book appointments,
and see reports instantly whether you're in your shop or on the go.
And when you make a sale, you don't have to wait days to get paid.
Square gives you fast access to your earnings through Square checking.
They also have built-in tools like loyalty and marketing,
so your best customers keep coming back.
And right now, you could get up to $200 off Square hardware,
when you sign up at square.com slash go slash how I invest.
That's SQUA-R-E.com slash go slash how I invest.
With Square, you get all the tools to run your business with none of the contracts or complexity.
Run your business smarter with Square.
Get started today.
Support for today's episode comes from Square.
It's all in one way for business owners to take payments, book appointments,
manned staff, and keep everything running in one place.
Whether you're selling lattes, cutting hair, running a boutique,
or managing a service business, Square helps you run your business without running
yourself into the ground. It's actually thinking about this other day when I stopped by a local
cafe here. They use Square and everything just works. Check out as fast, receipts are instant,
and sometimes I get loyalty rewards automatically. There's something about businesses that
use Square. They just feel more put together. The experience is smoother for them and it's
smoother for me as a customer. Square makes it easy to sell wherever your customers are, in store,
online, on your phone, or even at pop-ups and everything stay synced in real time. You could track
sales, manage inventory, book appointments, and see reports instantly whether you're in your shop
or on the go. And when you make a sale, you don't have to wait days to get paid. Square gives you
fast access to your earnings through Square checking. They also have built-in tools like loyalty and
marketing so your best customers keep coming back. And right now, you can get up to $200 off Square hardware
when you sign up at Square.com slash go slash how I invest. That's SQU-A-R-E dot com slash go slash how I invest.
With Square, you get all the tools to run your business with none of the contracts or complexity.
Run your business smarter with Square.
Support for today's episode comes from Square.
It's all in one way for business owners to take payments, book appointments, manned staff,
and keep everything running in one place.
Whether you're selling lattes, cutting hair, running a boutique, or managing a service business,
Square helps you run your business without running yourself into the ground.
It's actually thinking about this the other day when I stopped by a local cafe here.
They use Square and everything just works.
Check out as fast, receipts are instant, and sometimes I get loyalty rewards automatically.
There's something about businesses that use Square. They just feel more put together.
The experience is smoother for them and it's smoother for me as a customer.
Square makes it easy to sell wherever your customers are, in store, online, on your phone,
or even at pop-ups and everything stay synced in real-time. You could track sales, manage inventory,
book appointments, and see reports instantly whether you're in your shop or on the go.
And when you make a sale, you don't have to wait days to get paid.
Square gives you fast access to your earnings through Square checking.
They also have built-in tools like loyalty and marketing so your best customers keep coming back.
And right now, you can get up to $200 off Square hardware when you sign up at Square.com
slash go slash how I invest.
That's S-Q-U-A-R-E.com slash go slash how I invest.
With Square, you get all the tools to run your business with none of the contracts or complexity.
Run your business smarter with Square.
Get started today.
It makes complete sense.
and on this topic of long-termism and all the other things that we've talked about,
it makes me think of someone who we recently had on the podcast, Eric Becker,
who wrote a book called The Long Game,
where he explores why some companies survive for 100-plus years.
When you think about this question of what leads to companies, organizations,
enduring for the long-term,
what elements of what we've talked about already,
or maybe what have we not yet talked about
that plays into building enduring organizations?
Eric Becker, after he sold his previous company,
and before starting, what is now,
one of the five largest RAs in the country,
he traveled all across the world
and interviewed companies that have been around for hundreds of years.
He traveled to Italy.
He had a couple of companies in Baltimore,
and he asked him the same question,
which is, how in the world did you guys make it to 300 years
through all these generations,
with all these frictions.
Much of the S&P 500 doesn't even make it through 50 years.
And what he figured out is that the only thing that really endures
through generation to generation is culture.
In other words, if you zoom out and you look at a company,
the only competitive advantage over time is people,
and what's upstream of people is culture,
having the right culture that attracts
and incentivizes people in the right way.
And how do people build cultures that actually last?
Is it about the types of things that they say, the processes they have, the incentives they set?
What is it that actually creates cultures that last?
What's tricky about creating cultures that last is that it can't be done in a vacuum.
They have to have a comparative advantage.
We always joke about this in finance.
Nobody thinks of a venture capital firm of a private equity firm as a business.
They think of all their portfolio companies as a business, but themselves as a business.
And few people are willing to look in the mirror and ask themselves, what is my right to exist?
Venture capital is famous. Every merging manager has the same pedigree. They're ex-Uber.
They add product managers. They have a bunch of relationships in the space. None of these are differentiated.
So you have to think about it from a comparative advantage standpoint. I'll give you a couple of examples.
Andresen Horowitz, I got to pitch to Mark Andreessen when I was 25 years old.
Andresen Horowitz revolutionized venture capital by saying we're going to be founder-friendly,
we're going to give people feedback, we're going to treat them with respect,
because we're building this compounding asset that even if that person's not successful in that company,
we want them to come back.
And true their word, they treated me extremely well.
I was 25 years old.
I didn't really know what I was doing.
But I got feedback.
I got a response, all these things, that now I'm in.
debted to the firm for many years, and I've still retained a great relationship with them.
For our firm, we're backing GP's top opportunities.
We thought of a similar thought experiment, which is, it's now five years from now.
It's the next Anthropic or OpenAI.
As you know, we invested in the Series C for Anthropic.
We got that first call.
So now it's five years from now.
And a manager could call three people for their best opportunity.
How do we become one of those first three calls, that first call alpha, what I talked about with Dan Federer and University of Michigan?
And the answer is how you treated them the previous five years, meaning were you responsive when they had other opportunities?
Did you treat them right economically?
Were you generous with how you shared track record?
Were you a good partner over five years?
That's how you earned that first call.
One of our big insights in starting Weisford Pierce was that despite everyone saying that relationships,
compound in finance. No one had actually built an organization that aligns with this belief.
And that's what we're building, but it would only work because the rest of the industry has a
different belief. And we believe that that's a sustainable advantage over many decades. Why?
Because going back to what we talked about, that's birth canal. Finance does not select for
relationship-driven people. Finance selects for the people that are very much in their spreadsheets,
that are focused on their numbers that make it through that five years of finance boot camp,
not by being relationship-oriented, but by getting their spreadsheets and their PowerPoints done.
So we believe that that's a sustainable competitive advantage.
The other key insight is that although many people and many organizations would espouse
many of the things that we've discussed around the importance of relationships
and building those relationships
over long periods of time.
I can't really think of any organizations
that actually incentivize that behavior
at the organizational level.
Individuals can take it upon themselves
to build relationships over time,
but I can't think of any incentive systems
at the institutional level
that actually incentivize individuals
to build long-term.
relationships. One of the most underappreciated aspects of culture as a competitive advantage
is that the human capital markets start to reorganize themselves in ways that play to their
strengths. In other words, if you're known as a place that values relationships, the top relationship
people in the industry will coalesce and want to work for you. Why? Because it's in their
nature. Why are people a relationship oriented? It's not necessarily because they woke up and thought
that is the most Pareto optimal strategy in the capital markets,
it's because that's naturally how they are.
So human beings reorient themselves around their strengths, the smart ones.
So you're able to build this cultural moat.
And you see this across different spaces,
which is why when you ask, how do you build a culture?
You can't just answer in terms of a great culture has these three factors.
It's all comparative.
Airbnb famously was one of the first design-driven organization
to value design over engineering.
So all the top designers went to Airbnb.
Facebook's, you could argue, was the exact opposite.
They were extremely data-driven, so all the top data scientists went to Facebook.
SpaceX was a place for this crazy culture of responsible engineer.
I call SpaceX the operationalization of the Ernest Shackleton trip to Antarctica.
Ernest Shackleton famously wrote a newspaper ad saying that he was looking for people to go on this grueling journey where they're likely going to die,
they're going to get glory. This is kind of the SpaceX of today, where it gets people that want
that crazy culture, similar to investment banking, it attracts people that are willing to make that
two-year sacrifice. There's certainly traits that are consistent across great cultures, like
excellence, but most of the traits of the really great cultures have tradeoffs versus some of the
other players in the space. Said another way, there's no one correct culture to rule them all. There
are cultures that can do well relative to whatever their unique advantage is that's contextual
both to themselves, the group itself, and the organization they're building and maybe even
the product or service that they're delivering to their customers.
There's also cultures that build around specific market opportunities, and there's also
cultures that build around something much more human. For example, I'm thinking about
renaissance technology, the top quant trade.
in the world. They just brought in the very top PhDs across the world. And they've been able to
sustain, I think at some point 40% compounding returns for over 30 years. Some people think because
they had the secret sauce algorithm, but really that algorithm was constantly evolving with the
world's greatest thinkers and greatest PhDs. So in other words, they were amalgamating talent.
Think about SpaceX. SpaceX amalgamates talent. Think about even open AI versus Anthropic. It's an
interesting to organizations where Anthropic is really amalgamating people that truly care about
AI and responsible AI.
It doesn't mean that every top engineer cares about it, but that's their right to win in
terms of the highly competitive capital markets.
The best companies not only compound around a specific market opportunity, but something
extremely human that allows them to attract the very best people, that invariably build
out and create that moat for that business.
in some ways I think you could think about that as a specialization of culture.
You build an organization for someone who has a specific shared set of beliefs and values.
You're not necessarily trying to build something that fits for all people.
Do you think that that's a correct way to think about the framing?
Absolutely.
Mike Maples, one of the top 10 greatest seat investors of all time.
He went on the podcast and he said something quite astounding,
which is he doesn't invest in companies,
he invests in movements.
He looks for movements that care about a specific thing
and then build a business around that.
His example, he was early in Airbnb.
They believed in local culture should be experienced
by meeting locals.
That was the original premise of the business.
If you look at Uber and Lyft,
the disruption of the taxi market
and being able to be more mobile,
The best opportunities are not actually around business models or not driven by MBAs putting up spreadsheets.
It's based on some fundamental belief and some fundamental hole in the market that a small dedicated group of people can solve and then build a business around.
Another thing that Mike Maples talks about, which I really like, is when he thinks about the types of investors and LPs that he partners with, he doesn't just look for someone that he can,
convince what he's doing will generate great returns. He talks about his LPs as co-conspirators who believe
in the same future state of the world that he believes in and want to positively conspire with him
to achieve that future state of the world. And I think that's a really, really good perspective.
And maybe he takes it a touch too far, and I'm paraphrasing, but he says something along the lines
that he won't even accept LP Capital from an investor that he met during the fundraising process.
It's only people that he's been able to build relationships with over time
so that he can find these true co-conspirators.
You're touching on something extremely subtle.
This is what the greatest salespeople do,
especially when they're building enduring organizations,
is they vet the customers as much as the customers are vetting them.
And why is that important?
It's extremely important as a management,
because like all market cycles,
they go from bull markets to bear markets.
And oftentimes the returns are driven
and what a firm does during bear markets.
And by having limited partners that believe in that general partner
and believe in that business model,
they're able to almost borrow conviction from their limited partners
and get the support of limited partners during difficult times
to not only not make really bad decisions,
which behaviorally a lot of investors during times of crisis sell at the absolute bottom.
But oftentimes the top GPs actually use that time to partner with LPs
to buy into the dip
and own more great assets
by virtue of their relationship base.
It's extremely subtle,
and I believe the GP's role
is to sell to the LP
up until the LP understands the vision
and can articulate the GP's right to win
and then kind of sit back
and see if that LP is aligned with that mission
and that vision or whether the LP has a different worldview.
This is actually something you're not talking
talked about many times, which is this concept of conviction and rootedness.
And one way I would rephrase what you're saying is those LPs that truly understand and
truly believe in the fund, the strategy, the people deploying the strategy, they will avoid
maybe some of the behavioral mistakes or some of the things that may be counterproductive
like exiting the strategy at the exact wrong time. But the opposite is also true. If you have
strong conviction and rootedness and believe in a certain version of the future, then you won't
be as susceptible to those pitfalls. One example that you and I have talked about is pick any
asset that's appreciated massively in the last five or ten years. I think Bitcoin's one we talk
about occasionally. If you had been an early investor and it had gone up five or 10x and you weren't
truly rooted in the thesis, you didn't truly understand what it was or what version of the future
that included it, you would probably sell after five or 10x return. But then you probably left another
950x return on the table due to that conviction. This also can apply to some of the great
power law outcomes and venture, look at SpaceX as an example.
There are many opportunities where firms, individuals, employees, others did or could have sold
when now with perfect hindsight, the correct decision was always to continue to hold.
SpaceX is one of the most extraordinary examples of this.
As the SpaceX S1 came out, it was revealed that Antonio Gracius had invested 30 times into the company.
and even on its face it sounds very impressive.
I had previously thought that conviction was investing three, four times at the company.
I was very proud to do this three, four times in some great companies.
But he had invested 30 times.
The more I started thinking about what that meant, the more I became amazed by it.
To give you an example, let's say he invested at a $500 million valuation the first time.
And now went up to $2 billion.
So his first investment is up $4.4.
So, of course, he doesn't sell.
He invests again at $1,000.
$2 billion. Now he invested at $500 million and $2 billion. Now it goes up to $5 billion. Now his original
investment is up 10x. Does he sell the original investment? No. Does he sell the second investment?
No. He invests a third time. And now a fourth time, and a fifth time, and a six time, and
seven times, up to 30 times without ever selling. And when I asked one of his friends,
Ron Discardi, about this very point, he said, yes. And Antonio understood the mechanics and
the operations of SpaceX better than almost anybody on the cap table.
Said another way, he wasn't just going crazy.
He wasn't on the roulette wheel, just constantly doubling and tripling up.
And you could argue he wasn't even necessarily lucky, although, of course, there's many things
that could have gone wrong and it could have all went to zero.
But he had just such a fundamental conviction on that business.
And this was a result of the amount of work and effort he put into,
understanding the company. There is no free lunch. If you want to build that kind of conviction,
whether you're investing in a company or whether you're investing in a manager, you have to really
understand that position better than anybody else. In other words, true conviction versus bravado
comes from knowledge, not comes from just thumping up your chest and saying, I know better than
everybody else. The other important thing, though, in that example, is the fact that his LPs
supported him in all 30 of those investments. So yes, he had the conviction, but he also had the
relationships, which I'm sure he compounded over many years. He had the status, the brand,
the access to information to your point. He knew the business better than anyone else.
He had each of the elements that we've discussed throughout this conversation today,
and the culmination of all of those allowed him to do this incredible once-in-a-generation
investment 30 times and do what is now one of the largest companies,
the world and maybe someday will be the largest company in the world. And so I think that's a really
nice encapsulation of all the things we've discussed in one kind of perfect example.
Such a good point. His conviction was not in a vacuum. If he had the wrong LPs, they would have
influenced him to sell even if he didn't want to. And certainly they would keep him from investing 30
times. There's actually a point here which we've also discussed in the past, which is LP
capture, which sounds kind of funny, but
it is true. Your LPs can influence you both positively and negatively. So when you're selecting
partners, when you're selecting where you should invest your time, your energy, all these things we've
talked about, it actually is so critical because had he had the wrong LPs or the wrong relationships
or the wrong partnerships, they could have influenced him either not to invest additional capital,
either to sell prematurely or do other things that would have been adverse to the outcome.
And picking the right LPs, kind of like the compounding of relationships,
is a very non-controversial thing to talk about.
In fact, I've never met a GP that wouldn't say that they want to pick the right LPs.
But again, it's not internalized.
And what's internalized is how long it takes to do that fundraise for the 10-year fund.
So all things being equals, GPs want to go and fundraise for six months
versus 12 months or 18 months, which of course is rational.
But what if fundraising for another six months allowed you to date the LPs better,
to get to know whether they truly believe in your vision,
or perhaps to have so much demand that you could choose which LPs you wanted into your fund,
who truly aligned with your vision?
But again, it goes back to the short-termism,
which is people want to go out in the market, raise in six months,
get the headline, tell everybody that they raised in six months.
And lo and behold, they don't realize they signed up to a minimum 10-year relationship,
really a 20-year relationship, three times the length of the average U.S. marriage,
because they were so focused on closing the fund in six months.
It's an excellent point.
On the topic of SpaceX and other venture-backed companies,
let's pivot to the venture asset class.
What are the first principles of getting exposure to the venture asset class today?
I've had more venture LPs than anybody on the planet on podcast last.
couple years. And interestingly enough, there's one theme that LPs are repeating over and over,
and specifically the very top LPs, which is venture has changed dramatically in the last year.
And many of the beliefs that they had before, they are now re-underwriting. What are those beliefs?
There's a famous graph that came out from Thomas Lafant from Code 2. And in it, he showed that the
odds of going from a Deca Unicorn, a $10 billion company to $100 billion company,
was higher than going from a $1 billion company, $10 billion company,
and the odds of going from $100 billion company to a trillion dollar company were even higher
than going from a $10 billion to $100 billion company.
What does that mean?
That means that the world of venture is becoming extremely consensus at the later stage.
We believe internally that this is the series B and beyond.
that at the time of the Series B,
it's no longer a secret
who the best companies are.
So another way,
every single investor in the world
wants to get in the same
several hundred Series B, Series C companies
every single year.
We believe that to be the case,
and we believe that to become
more and more of the case,
because now there's so many venture firms,
there's no longer this company
that no one had met in private equity.
You still have hundreds of and hundreds of thousands
of small businesses in private equity,
so you still have that there.
But in venture capital,
pretty much everything is known.
Said another way, there's no billion-dollar venture-back company that comes out of nowhere.
So if you take that to be true, question becomes access.
One of the other themes on the podcast that's come up is it's all about access-to-ac-ac-ac-sac-sac-sac-sus.
Venture capital is not an asset class, it's an access class.
If you get into top 25%, historically over the last 50 years,
50% of those funds have again become top quartal,
and more than 75% are then the next top 50% firm.
it's all about access. So we believe that you could gain that access by getting the first call,
and we believe that you could get that first call by sharing economics with GPs. So we've built
an entire model by getting the first call with hundreds of emerging managers that look for us
to be the capital for their best opportunities. But maybe even taking a slight step back,
if you're advising an LP that is just getting exposure to the venture asset class,
or maybe already has some exposure, but is growing that exposure over?
over time, what first principle insights from all your conversations would you share on how to approach
that problem set of gaining access to these best companies, consensus winners, or whatever other
advice you would have for them to get exposure and venture?
Professor Steve Kaplan, previous guest on the podcast, did this famous study about venture
capital and the persistence of return. Venture capital, more than any asset class in the history
of the world persist in its returns.
Meaning if you get in the top quartile, as I mentioned, you have a 50% chance to be in
the top quartile.
Again, you have a more than 75% chance to be in the top 50%.
So every LP is trying to get access to top quartal funds.
The problem is 95% of those funds, it's impossible to get into because every LP wants to do
the same thing, and they have existing LPs as well.
So the question becomes, and this is a difficult question, what should LPs do that can't
access to top quartile.
Now, some LPs might think, well, let's go to the second quartile.
But if you look at venture capital, the returns dramatically go down in the second quartile.
And there's an argument that if you go after the second quartile returns, you might as well
be in lower middle market, which has similar returns with less volatility than second quartile
VC.
But when you say second quartile, what you really mean is a manager that has not previously had a
quartile fund. So obviously some LPs would say, well, I'm really great at picking managers and
this manager will have a top quartile fund in the future. But what you're really saying is this is
just the subset of managers that have not already had a historically top quartile fund.
Well, there's a meme that every venture capital is a top quartel fund. And when somebody asks
me, what is your definition of a second quartile fund? It's, are they top quartile? Are they one of
these 15 firms if they're not their second quartile? It's highly controversial.
but that's just the reality of the situation.
Now, there are some free lunches,
especially if you do your work.
As you know, I love spin-outs, spin-outs from top firms.
We had Nico Bonatzis, who spun out of General Catalyst,
was there for 15 years, built out their seed practice.
People like that, as they spin out, create amazing opportunities.
But those are a few and far between,
and those require you to go into first of vintages.
which a lot of LPs are not willing to do.
The other historical solution to this
has been going into emerging managers.
The problem with that is no one has ever shown me a data set
that shows that on average emerging managers,
I perform even second quartal VC.
So on average, emerging managers do not do well.
Now, there's clearly really good emerging managers,
but there's thousands and thousands of them.
You have to build out pretty large teams
in order to go after that market.
Set another way,
really have to be managing a minimum of $10 billion to effectively cover emerging managers.
So that becomes not really workable for a lot of people.
You've talked about basically three ways you can get access to the venture asset class.
One is investing behind the Tier 1 name brand consistently top quartile firms,
the Sequoias, the benchmarks, the Andresens, excels of the world.
another approach is to back the GPs that have been at those firms that are now leaving to pursue
either solo GP or smaller firms with fund ones or early stage funds.
A third bucket is these sort of rising star emerging managers that maybe didn't necessarily come out of the
tier one firms but have some unique edge and right to win and that obviously takes a lot of manpower
because there's two plus thousand of these emerging manager funds out there that you have to sift through
and then you have to be really, really good at picking because there's no clear data that shows on
average they're going to outperform. In fact, the inverse. They underperform on average.
The one other way that we haven't discussed is the concept of direct investing. When you think about
direct investing, what are some of the pitfalls that people often run into?
I've talked to multiple Ivy League endowments, and I was very surprised by this, all things being equal.
they no longer want to invest into blind pool funds.
In other words, they see blind pool funds as liabilities on their balance sheet.
They only want to do it if they're already in a top quartile fund
or they want to build relationships for direct investing.
We've built our business around that.
Our firm view is that by the Series V, these opportunities are consensus.
So we're able to access these opportunities
and we partner with institutional investors
in order to access these opportunities.
And we believe a basket of companies backed by top.
quartile funds will on average return and actually beat the top quartile index.
And the reason for that is because of the fee savings today.
The average top quartile fund is two and a half and 30.
And there's a world where top quartile funds continue to persist on that basis.
They're actually second quartile returns.
We solve that issue through having lower fee structure.
And anyone listening to this may be thinking, that sounds nice.
but the number one question on their mind should be adverse selection and avoiding adverse selection.
How do you think about adverse selection? Adverse selection is the most important question in venture capital.
Much more so in private equity. Private equity, a lot of the co-invest opportunities come when the manager is investing for the first time and you're co-investing with them.
Venture capital is not always the case. Oftentimes you have a fund that invests at the series A and now they're offering the series D as a co-invest.
It's the most common case for large co-invest.
For us, we limit our adverse selection through multiple things.
One is we only partner with emerging managers that have very high conviction in their existing portfolio.
In other words, where we've applied the Peter Drucken-Miller and Best Investigate,
we're leveraging the relationships and the insider information of cap table members
in order to access their best assets.
Two is we only invest
when Top Quartal Fund is investing for the first time.
This is really critical.
There's a tradeoff there.
We miss opportunities where they might be investing
for a second time.
Sometimes those are great opportunities.
Famously, Sequoia backed WhatsApp
and every single round made phenomenal returns.
And then three, of course,
we're diligent the company themselves.
But most of these opportunities,
although you can never predict
which opportunities are going to be
the next SpaceX,
the next OpenAI, the next Anthropic.
If you have the right portfolio construction,
you could design a portfolio in such a way
that you are capturing those winners.
Bringing everything together,
what's one lesson from now 400 episodes of how I invest
that you hope our own firm never forgets?
You get status and asset management by being a good partner.
And I've gotten to interview a lot of the top firm founders
in the space, and they still keep this ethos.
But when you talk to people within the firm, as you gain status, as you get more assets
under management, oftentimes the firms lose the essence of what made them special.
That is because good partnerships lead to status, but status doesn't always lead to good
partnerships.
As we grow their organization, I think it's extremely important for us to continue to recruit
people that truly believe in the compounding of relationships.
and perhaps most importantly, incentivize them to execute on this vision of the compounding of relationships.
We're now at seven people. We've been able to manage that today. I think that's going to become one of the
challenges as we scale. And what's one thing you believe about investing, relationships, or firm building
that you think is true today and will also be true in 100 years?
If you want to predict the future, you look at the past. You look at Eric Becker and a
book the long game, markets will always fluctuate. You have bull markets, you have bear markets,
you have global financial crises, you have COVID. And the only competitive advantage zooming out
over many decades is people. And the moment that you stop recruiting the very best people,
you start a timer on the half-life of the organization. Some organizations make it 10 years,
some organizations make it 20 years. And once in a while, you have organizations that make it 100 years.
In those cases, these incentives are codified in the very governance of the organization,
and they're passed down from generation to generation.
For someone listening to this conversation,
if they can only remember and take away one key thing, what should that be?
Get as close as humanly possible to excellence in your field as quickly as possible,
and that will compound your career better than any other factor.
Couldn't agree more.
David, thank you so much.
Really enjoyed the conversation
and looking forward to doing again soon.
And thank you for yourself being so excellent
for being such a great partner.
