Leap Academy with Ilana Golan - Gil Shwed: Building Check Point into a $20B Empire and Defining the Future of Cybersecurity
Episode Date: February 20, 2025Gil Shwed built Check Point into a $20 billion cybersecurity giant, but it all began with a flaw he spotted as a programmer in the Israeli military. Tasked with connecting classified networks, he unco...vered a vulnerability, and the idea for a firewall was born. A few years later, he launched Check Point, betting on internet security before the web even existed. At 26 years old, he took the company public despite his doubts. Three decades later, he stepped down as CEO, having reshaped cybersecurity forever. In this episode, Gil joins Ilana to share how he built a problem-solving mindset, landed game-changing deals, scaled a startup from nothing, and led a multibillion-dollar company for 30 years. Gil Shwed is the co-founder and Executive Chairman of Check Point Software Technologies, one of Israel's largest tech companies and the world’s top cybersecurity firm. He was the CEO for 30 years, the longest of any CEO on Nasdaq, and still helps guide the company today. In this episode, Ilana and Gil will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:32) Early Programming Passion (02:17) Gaining Problem-Solving Skills in the Military (06:25) The Security Flaw That Inspired Check Point (07:45) How Early Jobs Shaped His Path to Check Point (12:26) Realizing the Need for Firewalls Ahead of Time (15:12) Raising Capital Without VC Funding (17:47) Convincing Companies to Adopt Firewalls (21:06) Closing a $1M Deal After 100 Days of Hustle (28:34) Why Gil Reluctantly Took Check Point Public (33:03) The Secret to His Leadership Success (36:03) Navigating Market Changes and Stress (41:08) How Gil Stays Ahead in Business (44:05) Stepping Down as CEO After 30 Years (49:00) Minimizing Risks in Business (52:13) Building a Startup That Lasts Gil Shwed is the co-founder and Executive Chairman of Check Point Software Technologies, one of Israel's largest tech companies and the world’s top cybersecurity firm. He saw early on how important cybersecurity would be as the world became more connected, helping Check Point grow into a leader in the industry. Gil was the CEO for 30 years, the longest of any CEO on Nasdaq, and still helps guide the company today. Connect with Gil: Gil’s Website: https://www.checkpoint.com/ Leap Academy: Ready to make the LEAP in your career? There is a NEW way for professionals to Advance Their Careers & Make 5-6 figures of EXTRA INCOME in Record Time. Check out our free training today at leapacademy.com/training
Transcript
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Wow, this is going to be such an incredible show today.
But before we start the show, I want to ask you for a favor.
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it. Plus, it really, really, really helps me continue to bring amazing guests. So let's
dive in.
Even if you're excellent, you need to push it further. Excellent is seeing always what's
wrong and what you need to improve. It's not sitting and saying how great we are. Gil Schwedt, founder and executive chairman of Checkpoint,
the longest-serving CEO of any Nasdaq-traded company.
It's roughly a $20 billion company,
the pioneer in cybersecurity
and probably the largest company in Israel.
I knew that I wanted to be an entrepreneur.
I dreamt about it since I was 17.
When we started, there wasn't even the web.
So we are three guys in Israel.
We have product.
We believe in it.
And then a few months later, my partners told me,
Gil, how do we sell this stuff?
They said, you go now to the US,
and don't come back without a million dollar check.
But after 100 days, I returned from that trip
with a million dollar check.
You don't start a company because you want to have a company.
You start a company when you have...
Gilschvecht, founder and executive chairman of Checkpoint.
Gil Shvet was the longest serving CEO of any NASDAQ traded company.
How cool is that?
He founded Checkpoint in Israel.
It's roughly a $20 billion company, the pioneer in cybersecurity and probably the largest
company in Israel.
Gil, you began programming at a very, very young age.
You were curious about computers when we barely knew what it is.
So why?
It's a good question why,
but I think it's mid-70s.
I think it might have been something to do with my dad that was like a system analyst
in computers and one of the early programmers. Very different technologies, very different
environments, but probably triggered me. And I don't know, maybe also as a kid, my parents
sent me to all these sorts of classes. And actually I didn't like most of them. And computing
was the first one I registered myself.
Nobody sent me, so that's maybe one of the reasons.
Wow.
So something sparked that interest very, very early on.
And in the military, you got into a very elite unit.
Those who know, it's called 8200.
It's in the Israeli Deferred Force,
and it is more around intelligence, etc.
What did that early experience did for you, Gil?
I know I always talk about how we've had more responsibility at age 18, 20
than I had many, many years later, but talk to me a little bit about that for you.
First, I've started being a professional sort of quote unquote at the age of like
14, 15. And I worked as an employee at the Hebrew University and then at several
other companies, national semiconductors and few others back in the days.
And when I got to the army, I actually, even though I was 18 and really young, I
was recruited
quote on this an expert.
And when you think about it, by the way, it's hard to realize that in the Israeli army,
first there are some of the smartest people and they know a lot.
But when you think about it, the army only recruits people at the age of 18 with zero
experience.
So I was brought into a open systems, unique system, which everybody is using today, the
Linux-based systems.
And in the Army, I was surrounded by super, super smart people.
Many people did their PhD at the age of 17 or 18, and I had to find my own way and how
do I contribute to that system with such smart people.
And I think one of the interesting things in the Israeli army that these 18, 20 and
maybe the old guys or the mature guys are 24, 25 years old get a lot of responsibilities.
So I got a lot of interesting tasks and nothing was impossible.
So it's incredibly inspiring, but I think also the military lets you dive into areas
that maybe on the day to day, you usually don't dive in.
Where did that hit you in terms of cyber?
What did you learn there that you took later on?
So first back when I was there, it was 37, 38 years ago, there was no cyber.
I mean, when we think about the cyber industry, it's all around the internet,
and that all started around 30 years ago, so a few years before that.
And now it became a power-off of cyber, but that's way past my time.
I mean, maybe I was one of the few that started some of the technologies, but not cyber,
because there wasn't any cyber warfare in the late 80s,
which were these years.
But I think I've learned a lot.
And by the way, in the army, you learn a lot.
You learn some of the bad stuff.
It's a huge system with a lot of bureaucracy,
with hierarchy and so on.
You learn some of the good stuff,
which is how you get 19 years old kids take any task, break any barrier, break any rule
just to get the work done and to achieve the goal.
And that's something that is actually very common to startups without the part about
a big bureaucratic system.
So when I'm in Checkpoint today, and one of the first things I said to people, guys, we
need rules and in order to build a scalable company and a big system, you need rules, you need all
these sorts of things, but we are small enough so if the rules are not good, we don't go
around them, we don't break them, we change them because we can.
And that's some of the differences between what you learn in a system like the Army and
a system like a startup company.
Or even now, Checkpoint Now is 7,000 people,
it's not a small system, it's a pretty big one.
It is a pretty big one, and I wanna go into that.
So you don't really deal with cyber yet, that's true.
Although I think intelligence overall teaches you
how to solve problems in a certain way.
And I think that's also in the military, like you say, you take 19 year olds, 20 year olds,
and they need to solve problems.
You know, you don't train for four years to learn it, you just figure it out.
Do you feel like there's a story for you that latched on to what happened in checkpointing
later or do you think there's something there?
First there is a connection because the idea for the technology
that later became checkpoint came to me in the army
and it came from something completely different.
I was in a very classified unit.
Computer networks were in the very early days
and we had to connect our network to a separate network,
a separate network which was literally over
the wall. But for us, it was a big issue from a security. And that's where I got the idea
and the challenge to connect two networks securely. Moving fast forward three, four
years later, that became the original technology behind our stateful inspection and securing
the internet. But again, it's completely different environment
and different technology,
but that's where the original idea came from.
Other than that, I think the fact
that you can achieve everything and you can do everything
is something that I've learned there
and it's a good thing to take into life.
It's actually critical, I think,
is that level of confidence that no matter what you have
and what you face, you can figure it out, which I think is a big part of something that no matter what you have and what you face, you can figure it out,
which I think is a big part of something that sometimes as adults we lose in life at some
point. And I think it's important to see how to get that back, which I think a lot of our listeners
will resonate. But you leave the military, you don't necessarily start Checkpoint right off the
bat. You do have a few more jobs. What did you gain from some of those experiences and what do you think that
helped you in terms of founding Checkpoint later?
So first when I left the army, I had the idea and I knew that I
want to be an entrepreneur.
I'm an entrepreneur from the stand, but I want to build my product.
I dreamt about it since I was 17.
At that point I was like 21, 22. So I already
knew that I want that and I was looking for ideas. And I'll just say the word entrepreneur didn't
even exist and you already knew that you want to start something. Go for it. Okay. And I looked at
that idea, network security, and I said, you know, it's actually a good technology. It's quite simple. It solves a real problem.
So it has all the characteristics of a good basis
for a startup or for a company.
But I didn't find an exciting market for it.
I said, if I want to send it to, you know,
big government organization that need their network
to be classified or compartmentalized,
it can be done, but it's not an exciting market.
I actually decided to do other things.
I've actually worked initially as
a consultant for several projects,
which was great because I moved from one company to another.
I learned how different markets behave and different company behave.
Then I worked at one company in the company was in called Optrotech,
was in the PCB industry,
but I actually worked on a small startup within that company. It was on printing.
A year later, I started another company with my previous boss at that company that we were
developing software for an American company as an Israeli kind of subsidiary. And through all of his learning, I've learned so much.
In Optotech, which was back in the days,
it was a few hundred people to me,
it looks like a giant company.
I've learned how, not how the army works,
but how a commercial company works.
And I've traveled the world and did meta sites
in Indianapolis and trade show in Chicago and Frankfurt.
So I've learned a lot about that, what it's like to meet
with salespeople, what it's like to meet with customers. At the next startup, I've learned
some good things, some less good things, for example, how to build a company, how to recruit
people. Within a year, I've recruited a team of over a dozen programmers, I've built a business plan, I've presented to our shareholders and customers from New
York and so on, all within, by the way, a budget that you can't imagine today.
I'm talking about recruiting 13 people with a budget of less than $300,000.
You think about how over today's budget for less than one person.
So I've learned a lot about what it's like to start a company.
By the way, what I learned that was less ideal is that you don't start a company because
you want to have a company.
You start a company when you have a huge market opportunity, a great idea, a good team of
people and not because you want to have a company.
And a year later, then I saw actually the internet coming
and as a young person, especially as a remote country,
I said, wow, the fact that we can be connected
will change the world.
And again, today we can't imagine what it's like
to be not connected, but I think for the,
I'm sure that there are some listeners here who remember
and some listeners who can't
imagine their life, but think about a life that if you want to know about the latest
computer, you wait until a big magazine, Byte Magazine, that's like this heavy arrives to
the local news store and you buy it and you learn about a product that was launched six
months ago and you actually can't even get it because it's not shipping in your country.
So when you can actually register and when we started Checkpoint in 93, it was before
the web.
So I'm saying getting access to information is not surfing the web.
It's being subscribed to a mailing list and getting a daily mail that says this is new,
this is exciting, and then you can even respond and ask more questions.
That looks like something that can change the world,
at least my world.
And I think that vision was correct.
I think where I was wrong is that I probably undersized the opportunity
by a factor of a hundred or a thousand.
I thought that we'll have a great idea, a nice market for it,
and we will be a few dozen people and we'll sell for a few million dollars,
and that will be a great business to be in.
And here we are 32 years later with something that's probably a thousand times bigger.
Changed the world.
And I want to take you there for a second because I was probably in the military and the Air Force at that time.
And I think we kind of saw the wave of internet starting.
But you and it kind of moved from being this academic tool to being companies starting to see,
you know, how they can do something with this.
And you somehow latched on and decided to not only companies will need this,
but they'll need a firewall or they'll need literally a door to protect them, right?
And by the way, I love this explanation.
You know, I think you explain it really, really well.
So can you explain what you've seen and what you decided to solve?
Now, I've saw dozens of companies back in the days,
and they all want to connect to the internet and get email and log in remotely and do all these things.
And then they say, but what about all these students in 15,000 universities that were
already connected to the internet?
They can go now into my computing system and they can look at everything because things
are generally wide open.
It's like, you know, putting your house, not just opening the door,
but putting it in the middle of the central station in Times Square and being
open to the entire world and everybody can just walk in.
So the first question is, okay, that's great.
I want to be on Times Square.
I want to see everyone,
but how do I make sure that people,
I can go out but they cannot come into my store.
And that's what the firewall does.
It's like this door that looks at who's going out, by the way, which is not always allowed
to, and who's coming in and is that allowed or that's the right service and right person
and creates the security for that.
And of course, doing it at the wire speed, thinking about future communication
protocols, because when we started, there wasn't even the web. So we needed to imagine what will
be in the future. And that's what we started doing. And by the way, the response was very high,
because every company that's connected to the internet asked the same question. Now,
today we're talking about malicious actors that are huge criminal groups and
state actors and hacktivist and all sorts.
Back when it was the students from MIT attacking Caltech and defacing their
internet and vice versa and putting files on one another.
But again, when you think about it, it's like being on main street, wide open.
And that's every expert that's connected to the internet thought about that.
You realize it's going to be a real issue, which is pretty incredible because I
think both of us were just dazzled by the idea, but you were already looking a few
steps ahead, which I want to talk about because that's a theme in your life.
looking a few steps ahead, which I want to talk about because that's a theme in your life.
But you also decide to raise an extraordinary amount of money.
We'll talk about it.
This is a joke.
When VCs, I mean, the whole concept of venture capital
wasn't really there.
And I am joking because you built this company
from basically nothing, how you started.
So can you share a little bit?
So again, we thought, how should we finance ourselves?
Now today, the ecosystem for that in Silicon Valley and in Tel Aviv is very clear versus,
you know, VCs and there's the entire ecosystem, what you need to be supported and what you
need to do.
Back then, it wasn't that simple.
Again, we weren't the first tech company in the world and we weren't the first tech company
in Israel, but there were like two or three VCs in Israel and we didn't even think that
we can call them.
Maybe we should have, but we didn't.
And we thought maybe we should finance ourselves by working the day and developing the software
at night, which is quite common.
And actually we did a lot of thinking that days, we didn't have an experience.
So when we said the internet is moving really fast, we can't afford wasting time. If it will take us too long to build
the product, then we might miss the market. And we decided that we need to raise money.
We built some plan that says we need like $100,000 to buy computers, fly to the US,
and these things. And we started looking for different alternatives for raising money from different software
companies to people in the finance world and others.
And we approached five or six groups.
And at the end of the day, we decided we ended up with a software company from Jerusalem.
We knew some of the founders of that company
that back then looked to us like the role model
that we can learn from because they were 30 people
selling software.
So it looked to us like the role model.
Like a big company.
And we actually ended up raising $250,000
twice as what we actually thought we need.
And that's where we got started.
And by the way, we never used all that money.
And we never raised more money. Because from that amount of money, we built a product,
we started selling it, and we became profitable.
And if I'm correct, they got about 50% of the company for 250.
Yeah, for $250,000.
It's probably one of the best investments on the planet ever.
So if somebody wants to calculate, if the company right now is worth about 20 billion,
you can make your calculation.
But first of all, you start with a few beta sites, you start with a few companies.
Tell us a story of a company that wanted to adopt this, but also I'm sure you had companies
that didn't want to adopt this or didn't want to adopt the internet altogether.
Share some stories because I'm sure the beginning, it sounds glamorous, like, oh
my God, you're on this hockey stick, you raised capital, everything is amazing.
Share some stories, Gil.
So first, the challenging part was actually not just, I mean, we built the software
with three months later, we had the prototype, we ran it.
We didn't have an internet connection.
It was too expensive.
So we actually ran it on our parent company, the investors in Jerusalem.
And they were, as I said, a rich company.
So they got an internet link and we installed the software.
And the first hour I installed the software and suddenly I see that I get alerts on the console.
Somebody's trying to break into the network.
The immediate reaction is that maybe that's a, you know, a bug in the software.
But I've checked it and all the IP address looks right.
They were of companies I knew and the internet community in Israel back then
was very small, so I started calling up the companies that were trying to break in and one of them which I also worked with just told me come
here and check our network and I found out that somebody was all over their network and I found
traces from other again not many companies because not many companies were on the internet but that
were all connected and in a few later, the police was able to arrest
two teenagers in Israel that basically broke to all the places in Israel that had internet connection,
including, you know, utility and infrastructure companies and multinational companies from
Silicon Valley with branches in Israel. So that shows us first that it's real. It's not theoretical.
It's not something that you might think of.
Even if nobody knows who you are and how you're on the internet, you're a target.
Fast forward now, how do you sell that product?
We are three guys in Israel.
We have product.
We believe in it.
But how do you find the market?
So we established some connection.
I did a few trips to the US.
We realized, by the way, that if you want to be successful in tech, it's a global market, you need to be successful in the US.
If you're successful in America, the entire world will follow. So I've traveled to the US,
mainly to all parts of it, but mainly to Boston and New York. And we found a few beta sites that
were ready to test the software. And again, the reaction was very positive.
Out of like 19 companies that I met with in a period of a few months, out of 20 companies,
19 said, we want it, we want to buy it.
They didn't know how much it cost.
We didn't know how much should it cost.
But that's a very high success rate.
One company, if you're talking about somebody that didn't want it says,
you know what, the software is really cool,
but connecting to the internet is not safe enough.
We would never connect to the internet.
By the way, that company was a Lotus from Boston,
the one that invented the spreadsheet.
And by the way, I'm not using this against them
because they knew that there is a risk and
they knew about the internet.
Interestingly enough, a year later, they purchased like 10 or 20 copies of our software.
It took them a year from 1994 to 1995, but then they became big customers.
Then a few months later, my partners told me, Gil, we're working for a year now.
We have 20 or 19 active beta sites.
The internet is moving in the same direction than we anticipated. But how do we sell this stuff?
How do we establish distribution channels? We are in Israel, the market is in the US. And again,
today there's a market. I mean, sometimes you can imitate the market and say, that's the market.
I put it on the website. That's the channel. There was not selling on the web. I go through
these kinds of resellers, but they weren't internet resellers. They were PC resellers.
They were networking, but not the internet. And then they sent me off a road trip. And
my goal was very simple. They said, you go now to the US and don't come back without a million dollar check.
Scheduled, I had like a 10 day itinerary in the East Coast, in the West Coast, all over. Very interesting trip. Again, there's a lot of stories. I wouldn't use the full hour to tell the stories,
but the end of the stories that I returned from that trip with a million dollar check,
it didn't take me 10 days.
It took me about 100 days.
Every time I wanted to come back home and then there was this new opportunity that I should fly into tomorrow
and I didn't return and I changed my ticket.
My parents came to pick me from the airport two or three times and I didn't show up.
Again, remember, there wasn't a cell phone that you can call and say, I'm not coming.
It's like you call home once a week and you said,
and suddenly I didn't show up.
But after a hundred days, I came back.
We had few customers, we had few resellers,
and we signed the giant contract with Sun Microsystems
that was the main server vendor of the internet.
If you're, For those who remember,
in 2000, Sun was like the slogan was, we are the dot in dot com. And they were the giants of the
internet. And they became our OEMs or our distributors, which was a giant thing for us
because we moved from three people or four or five people at that stage to securing
a million dollar commitment per year. And our run rate was no spending a hundred thousand,
two hundred thousand dollars a year. And suddenly we had secured a million dollars in the deals.
So we started from that to build the company, hire people, this build sales and marketing.
We realized that we cannot rely on a single distributor or
a single partner to take care of our destiny.
So the nice thing we did, which was smart, is saying, okay, we will support them as much
as we can because they are the future, but we will build the bigger future because we
cannot rely just on one channel.
And that was a great success because we worked with Sun
for like five or six years and it was a great success.
But when the contract ended, instead of going down,
we went drastically up because we moved all the Sun channels
directly to us and we became actually even bigger with that.
What a story.
And I wanna talk about those hundred days, first of all, because a lot of people, this is where
they would give up.
Like they would basically say, well, you know, a week or two have passed.
I didn't make it.
Does this even make sense?
Is it going to create anything?
And you had no problem continuing, I think, that level of conviction, I guess, of what you're building and that this is gonna be a real thing.
But what kept you motivated and not just pull the towel?
First, I had the mission.
And second, I didn't necessarily reach my goal
and I saw that the road to get to it is slightly longer,
but we were on the right track.
I mean, every day I found new opportunities. Every day there was
this next great meeting that can be the bridge for the future. The relationship we've done,
of course, weren't created in one day. I had some meetings there in an earlier trip, and then I
started establishing relationships, and then I built the relationship with the people I
were working for. So like every week I would come back to Silicon Valley, to Mountain View and meet with them
and actually even spend with them some weekends in all these places.
And by the way, a month or two later, and we played all these tricks to get into a business.
For example, we presented one of the opportunities we met with an internet service provider from
Princeton University.
And they told us, you know, there's a big trade show in Las Vegas next week. We don't know if
your product has potential. Come show the product at our booth and we'll see what's the potential.
It was a big deal for us. How do you create a stand in a trade show in a week, create banners,
signs, again, many stories about that.
We ended up that show when we won the best of show award
in network interop, May 1994.
And by the way, we created a lot of connections.
So the guys from Sun Microsystem wanted to come
and see the product in our booth.
So the trick that I did for them, I don't know if they know,
is that I called on the same time some people from Cisco and Digital, which was back then a big computer company.
Now the guys from Cisco and Digital, it was like the first introduction, they didn't know anything.
And the reason I called them on the same time, so the people from Sun see that there's other people interested.
People in Sun for like the second or third meeting.
People in Sanford were like the second or third meeting. And it worked because they came, you know, I didn't say anything, but they realized that
the booth is busy.
The other people there had badges and they were their competitors.
So they realized that they need to move.
And again, it took them a lot of time.
The next story is that after like a month or two of dancing back and forth like that,
they said, you know, we are ready.
We want to sign a contract.
There are no business terms.
Let's meet.
So I consulted with one of my mentors,
actually our lawyer, our lawyer.
And he says, tactically, don't schedule the meeting
in Mountain View because you're never going
to end the negotiation.
They will always ask for more.
And for them, they are not in a hurry.
They can only always meet next week.
They are not rushing.
They said we'll come to Tel Aviv.
I said no way because they'll come to Tel Aviv and they see no matter that you know
that you are three or four people, they'll come and they see that you have one room.
No way you're going to get a lot from that deal.
So we ended up doing the meeting in New York.
We were three people at the company.
Sun, of course, was this giant company.
We ended up bringing 10 people from Checkpoint and three people from Sun.
They brought product manager, business development, and the lawyer.
We brought three lawyers, three board members, two consultants, the three of us.
So we kind of had 10 people in the room.
They were showing up like Silicon Valley guys
with jeans and T-shirt.
We were with suits and ties.
We spent an entire week in that conference room.
I was the youngest person by far in the room,
25, 26 years old,
running the meeting with these big lawyers
from New York and so on.
And we ended up the week with understanding of what the deal would look like.
And that's where things started rolling.
Hey, I'm pausing here for a second.
I hope you're enjoying this amazing conversation.
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Now let's get back to the show.
There's the book chutzpah or the word chutzpah.
You know, I mean, there's something about knowing how to create our own luck. I think that is playing a really important role here.
Um, and I love these examples.
Now I think, and correct me if I'm wrong, Gil, but only after about three years,
you decided to go public with checkpoint.
You're super young.
Why did you decide it?
How did you know how to do it?
Talk to us a little bit bit because that's a big deal
in every perspective.
So first I didn't want to go public.
My shareholder really pushed me.
And back then the hurdle to go public
was much lower than today.
Today it's like at least a hundred million dollar.
Back then growing at $10 million was good enough.
And at that point we were more than $10 million in sales.
We were super profitable, which by the way,
very high there and doesn't exist today.
We were like making $10 million of sales or five or $6 million in profit.
So we were very lean and so on.
And even a year earlier, my shareholder told me, you know, Gil,
it's time to go public. We have bankers here.
Let's go.
And I said, guys, no way.
I'm building a company.
I'm not trying to do an exit.
I don't need the money.
I want to be busy in building a real product and a real business and the real
distribution channels and so on.
And I said no, which wasn't easy.
A year later in 96 96 when we went public,
it was less than three years after we started formally,
they asked me again, and at this point
I didn't have too many excuses.
We were like a few dozen people, our sales were growing.
Again, still very, very small,
but at this point I freed myself.
And by the way, I was very lucky
because I had two partners, two equal partners
that are amazing, Marius and Schlomo. So I said, I mean the thinking there was going public or any by the way
initiative of raising money really distracts you from running the business. And by the way I see
so many entrepreneurs today, most of them today, that measure themselves of how much money they
raised and the next valuation and that's actually a distraction from building a business.
It's not building a business.
So I said to my partners,
you're going to build a product, sell the event.
I'm going in the next six months to focus on going public
and you're going to run the show.
And that's what we did.
I'm going to seclude you from most of the financing activity.
I'm going to update you. I'm going to share everything you from most of the financing activity. I'm going to update you.
I'm going to share everything.
But I don't want all of us to be distracted.
I want somebody to run the business.
And that's what I did.
And going public, it's like basic training in the army in some aspects.
You do a road show and you're repeating the same presentation five, six times a day, and
you're asking the same questions.
And you need to appear in every meeting like it's the first meeting that you have and answer all the
questions genuinely, which is part of that. It's putting you under a lot of pressure and seeing
that you don't break. We did that and then in June of 96, at the end of June, we became public company,
traded on Nasdaq, which was a big thing.
And by the way, the shocking thing, the next morning I met, I already had the head of sales
in the US and the head of market sales and marketing, a very smart woman in the US.
And we met the next morning in New York and everybody was amazed that we are public, it's
worth a lot of money, like half a billion dollars, and
our stock popped from 14 to 24 on the first trading day, and they were all excited.
And that day I looked at them and I said, guys, we screwed up big time because it's
now June 30th, it's the end of the quarter.
The quarter is going to be good, but you didn't make your number.
It's coming from our old channels. You were supposed to bring, I don't know, half a million dollars
of new business from new channels and you didn't make that number. And we can't be happy
about the financing. Wall Street expects us to deliver the numbers. We need to build it.
They were shocked. They were feeling that they were all happy and celebrating. And I
was on the same day, 11am in the morning,
when the stock started trading on the first day, I was actually screaming at them.
I hope I'd learned better since then, but still I think that was the spirit that I had
back then, which is we always have to look future, we always have to push harder.
Even if you're very good and even if you think that you're excellent,
you need to push it further.
Excellent is seeing always what's wrong and what you need to improve.
It's not sitting and saying how great we are.
And I think that's what we did.
First of all, I would love to hear how your leadership morphed, right?
Because you're starting from such a small company
to 7,000, whatever, employee company.
That's a huge transition,
and there's a lot of phases that go through this growth.
What is that for you?
How did you learn how to morph yourself,
or what are some of the mistakes
that you feel like you've made and you needed to learn how to do better or what are some of the mistakes that you feel like you've made
and you needed to learn how to do better in terms of leadership?
So first, that's the reason why I survived for so many years, because I get bored easily.
And I think my task as the CEO was every year to learn something new.
On one hand, I built on what I knew. I was a programmer. The first product,
it's not that we hired a bunch of programmers. The fourth product we wrote ourselves.
We were free.
Two of us were programmers and Shlomo and I,
and we wrote the software.
And then we needed to sell it.
And again, we realized, yes,
we need to hire professional sales and marketing people,
but it will take us probably a year to build a team.
In this year, we need to sell.
So we became the sales people and we became the salespeople and we became
the support people and we became the marketing people. And behind us, we built the infrastructure.
So there was a constant learning. Again, I've described going public, tons of learning what
it's like, how to navigate that. And that was an amazing six months for me of learning about the
public markets. And we made, of course, mistakes, but for me, it was growth.
And in like 97, we were already a company with probably a few hundred or over a hundred
employees.
We need to learn how to build a company out of it, how to create hierarchies, how to create
departments, work processes, what's product management and what's product development
and how do we interact with sales and with marketing. And by the way, it was not coming
from weakness. It was coming, I mean, our sales were at the sky, our marketing did very well,
but it wasn't connected. So we needed to connect all the dots to build the infrastructure.
And at least for me,
again, maybe it's my background as a programmer, that's what you think about the programmer,
how to build new elements and how to make them work together. And by the way, of course,
we brought a lot of people that also taught us how to build these things. That was kind of the
learning process for me. And every year in my ex career, I had to reinvent myself.
And by the way, it was a huge task because when you're growing that fast, you're
never doing all the things you want to do.
You never have enough people.
We all want to grow fast.
And today our main challenge is how to grow faster, but it's not an easy place to
be in and by the way, then we finished seven years, we reached half a billion dollars of sales.
At that time, by the way, we were worth more than Apple computers in 2000.
Apple was in very down and we were in our max.
And then came the dot com bubble and suddenly the entire environment changed.
Instead of hyper growth, the market is actually declining, not growing. So how do you manage? And that was a huge learning experience for me.
And by the way, an amazing one, because it's not no matter what you do, you're growing.
It's now if you invest in that, it creates growth. If you don't invest in that, it doesn't create
growth or create losses. So we navigated through that period. I think we were probably
one of the only companies in the market that never did any layoffs through that period,
even though our sales went down for at least one year, 2002. And each learning experience
was an interesting learning experience. So we organized things, we created more organized
budgets and the flow of things, and we became more, even more efficient, by the things, we created more organized budgets and the flow of things,
and we became even more efficient, by the way.
We reached the maximum profitability at the time because we realized that suddenly we have enough resources.
We don't need to invest more in growth, at least in certain years.
Like if we stay in with 2002 for a second before we move forward. I mean, you're a public company.
You need to report everything.
Unlike a private company where you can hit the losses, right?
Like now it's all public.
There's a lot of stress.
How do you handle the stress?
It's a good question.
First, I always believed in what I'm doing. And we always had good results in Checkpoint.
We always knew that our product delivers the best security.
We always benchmarked ourselves.
And that's the defining line.
We need to deliver the best security.
We always had good customers and the customers believed in us.
And by the way, we also always generated profit.
So we never had this pressure of, we are going to run out of money or that something is going
to happen.
By the way, even in those days, we could have continued in auto mode and just invest more
and more and hire more people.
No, we didn't.
We stopped and we said, the market stopped growing.
We need to change our behavior.
And we changed our behavior and we adopted different methodologies, which worked.
So I think it's mainly keeping your focus
and always asking yourself, am I on the right path?
Is what am I doing is right and what do I need to change?
It's not slapping yourself, I did wrong.
By the way, it wasn't us, it was the market.
So that's part of the analysis.
When we are wrong, we are saying,
we are wrong, we need to fix it.
If it's the market, we need to react to it,
we can't change it. It's like, market, we need to react to it, we can't
change it. It's like a YouTube movie I started seeing. I didn't see it talks about strategy. And it says strategy is how where's the market going, what the competition is doing, how is the
world behaving, all the things you don't control. So actually the most important thing, your strategy
you don't control. That's the external factor. You control how you
assume that something has happened and how you build yourself. And I think that we always need
to build ourselves to the unknown. By the way, it's in Checkpoint, I think both the operation and I
think it's also the product. We need to be ready for the unknown attacks. The attack that happened
last year, we know how to react to them and we should do it. The attack that happened last year,
we know how to react to them and we should do it.
We're doing it and we should always do it.
What we need to build is something that would protect
ourselves against the threats of tomorrow
and the threats we don't know.
We can imagine some of them,
but we're not going to know about the new attack vector.
So we either need to protect it in a preventative mode ahead of time,
or we need to be able to react very fast because things might change. And that's true in security,
that's also true in the business operation. And I think that's the lifeline of our life. It's not
just a business. I mean, I know we look at politics, it shows us all over the world so many things that
you cannot imagine and they are happening. So you can say, I give up, it's us all over the world so many things that you cannot imagine and they
are happening. So you can say, I give up, it's not my strategy, or you can say I react and
I change, I adapt, I'm not changing my strategy, I still believe in the same values, I still
believe in a good company and providing the best security and working with a great group
of people, I can change my people overnight, I can improve, I can hire more people to adapt,
but I can't change my people
because the market is changing.
I need to work with good people that are good athletes,
that are flexible.
And I think that's what we have in Check Point.
We have an amazing group of people
that on one end are very professional,
on the other end are flexible.
That's maybe by the way,
one of the good characteristics of
Israelis. We know how to improvise. We know, and I think I started with that, we need to work
with the book, we need to work throughout the rules, but we also know how to change and how
to adapt and so on. And my experience, it came because I have no background. We had to learn
how to do everything. So that's some of the, I think, values and qualities that we bring to it,
to the limits that we have.
And we are limited.
We are human beings.
One of my favorite quotes is,
you can't change the wind, but you can adjust the sail, right?
And I think there's a little bit of what you're talking about,
of how you're adjusting the sail according to where the wind is blowing.
But I do want to talk about this for a second, because you need to get ahead
of trends in the cybersecurity world, which is changing so fast.
How do you anticipate the future?
What are some of the ways, Gil, that you can even start predicting the future?
So first, the one thing I would say, I don't know the future,
and I don't think nobody knows the future, and definitely not me.
And I even start every earnings call with that,
by saying, my projection for the next quarter is that,
but nobody can predict the future and things can change,
because they do.
It's not that I have a magic wand and things do change.
What we know is we can collect a lot of know-how,
intelligence, thinking, beliefs,
and combine all of them to one coherent picture
and understand that the picture is not perfect.
Now, some of that comes from evolutionary or organic sources,
like you have a lot of customers, they tell you what they want.
So you know that if you give them what they want, it's likely that they'll stick to you and buy more and you'll solve the problems because they know what's painful for them.
So that's one vector.
The other vector is understanding that you need to think what your customers will want three years from now or two years from now, and they don't know it yet.
Because if they knew how to build the product and design future products, they
weren't the customers, they would become me.
Now, again, part of it is ideas that people have and you compare them to what you see.
Part of it is what other companies are doing.
Part of what external analysts and sources are saying.
And that's part of my job.
And also many other people in checkpoint is to view that.
Now, at the high level, it used to be my job as a CEO.
At the micro level, each product manager,
each product owner, even each group manager in R&D
needs to understand that.
They need to ask themselves,
how does technology change and what can I do with it?
What do customers ask me? And challenge change and what can I do with it? What do customers ask me and challenge themselves?
What can I do better?
And sometimes it's just evolutionary, actually most of the time.
And sometimes you come up with a revolutionary idea.
80, 90% of what we do at the end is coming from this feedback.
And so it pays off.
Some ideas you develop and they never make it. Some ideas,
you come up with great ideas and the market don't need them. We are today in many markets
that I still believe in and they are not happening. The customers are not buying. And again, when
we ask ourselves, is it because of our execution? Some markets we didn't succeed because others
built better products or did better sales
and marketing or whatever, better execution.
And some markets I look and I see, and I see that there were a few competitors and none
of them were successful.
So maybe it's the market and not our execution.
Customers never realized that they actually need it.
Wow.
Okay.
But you managed to somehow reinvent yourself, even as a CEO, again, again, again,
you delegate more, communicate better. Like you learn how to steer a ship that is really,
really big and very, you know, disruptive in this world, that really revolutionized the
security industry. And at some point, only I think last year, you decide to step down as CEO. Can you take us through, Gil, your decision? Was that a hard decision? Was that a fun decision? And again, you were the longest standing CEO of any public company in Nasdaq. So that's incredible. But take us through that decision.
Take us through that decision. So first it was a very hard decision.
And by the way, I've been asked, people ask you why now?
It's a good question because I've been asked since 1996, since we went public,
to say, okay, you succeeded in what you do.
You made some money.
Why don't you retire?
You can, you know, live the dream and retire.
And by the way, the answer was very simple.
My dream was running a software company.
I'm now living the dream.
Why wake up? I'm not going to wake up to a better dream.
And I did that for like 26, 27 years until I made the decision to change that.
And part of it because I was challenging myself and growing and changing processes and delegating.
Six years ago, I did a certain amount of work every day.
Two years ago I did completely different work and I delegated a lot of the things I did.
And first I became very confident that we have an amazing group of people in Checkpoint
and they know how to run this huge ship.
And second I felt that we needed a little bit that I can try something else in my life,
not working 10 hours a day or more or traveling
or it's not even the time because it's not that I miss time, it's the pressure. It's
knowing that somebody else has to solve all these problems, not you. And again, my responsibility
is when one of my people come to my room and to a weekly meeting and share their experience,
I feel that my job is to help them solve the problem,
not to tell nice. It's to either challenge them because there's bigger problems or help them solve
a problem. And it can be a giant problem like what's the strategy or how to solve a technological
problem. Or it can be somebody upsets them how to deal with that person. And sometimes the answer is
that's a, that was pretty
annoying, but this is a long standing, amazing and employees. So be patient. And sometimes it's a,
this is an problematic person. It's hard, but don't accept something. And somehow I said, you
know, why don't I try something else? You know, waking up in the morning when you have no pressure
and it's somebody else to solve the problem.
And I realized that both CheckPoint can use somebody
who comes with far more energy to take it to the next phase.
And I can try something else.
Now I'm involved in CheckPoint.
I'm now the chairman for a month or a month and a half.
I'm coming to work every day, but again, not for 10 hours.
And it's so refreshing that I meet with Nadav Safri or our new CEO,
which is an amazing guy.
And I meet with him every day.
We consult, we brainstorm.
He challenges me, I challenges him, and so on.
But I don't need to solve the problem.
Right.
He solves it. And that's...
And so, it's suddenly great to see that.
And maybe I would do the best comparison is when you have kids.
And on one hand, you want them to succeed
and you want to take care of every aspect of their life.
And on the other hand, you understand
that what will make them really successful
is that will become independent.
So, my kids are quite young. My older son is just 18 and a half now.
The youngest one are seven, first grade in school.
So I have the range and I do the same exercise that says my goal is to build them that will
become independent.
We will always be part of my life.
I will always want them to be successful.
I need to find a way why should they come to me and speak to me because it's not simple.
And again, everybody with kids understands that when they become even 10 years old, they
don't need you anymore.
So how to create that intimacy that they listen to you and how to be proud of them.
They are independent.
So that's kind of the analogy that I draw.
I'm learning it now in my private life with my kids, with my family, and I'm learning
it with my older family or my bigger family, which is checkpoint.
I love the example, it's so true.
And Gil, maybe one last question.
If you're looking back in time, I mean, you grew from this engineer the left to right
code to somebody who invented and disrupted this huge market and led huge teams.
So what would be an advice to yourself?
And I want the listeners to hear they might be in the stage of stress or trying to figure
out what's next for them
or how to grow in their career,
what would you say to your younger self?
So first, don't be afraid to listen,
but you need to know that you own your future.
You own your destiny and you need to make your decisions.
You know, people think that the CEOs or leaders
need to make a lot of decisions. That's not true.
You need to make few decisions, but the right decisions.
So sometimes if you can't make a good decision,
don't make it.
Wait, collect more information.
I do believe by the way, that collecting more information,
thinking more and avoiding a mistake is always better.
And every hour that we spent on learning and understanding
save us 10 hours or a 100 hours by avoiding a mistake.
I mean, we're smart human beings.
And when you say, okay, that's the right direction.
Okay, great.
By the way, when I believe in something,
that's where the problem starts.
If somebody come to me with an idea
and I don't believe with the idea,
I'm not going to argue with that too much.
I mean, I challenge it because I'm thinking about every idea that people bring to me, but very quickly I say, let's ignore it and move
on because there's another meeting. If somebody comes to me with a really intriguing ideas of
what to do, and whether it's a new technology or organizational change or anything, I start to think,
I said, okay, now we have to take the risk. We have to do something different.
Now my goal is to think about all the possible challenges and problems and think about the
possible solutions, because I want it to be as smooth as possible.
And when you do that, every second that you spend, every hour that you spend will save
you 100 hours later.
And again, it's not just for you.
If you're building a product and it's going to be a higher quality,
it's thousands of hours of customers and salespeople
and sales engineer and support people.
Now, of course you have to do it with a limit.
You can't spend unlimited amount of time
on launching a product.
So you have a deadline and you need to make the deadline.
But I'm just saying think things through
and think about when you take a risk,
how to minimize the risk and focus on the right things.
Again, in our day we're busy and by the way,
that's the job of a CEO.
I used to do 15 meetings of half an hour every day
and you can't really deep dive into any subject.
And now as a chairman, suddenly I can think,
I can spend hours on the same subject.
So that would be a refreshing change
that after so many years of saying,
okay, here's the idea you brought me,
that's what you need to think about.
Let's meet again tomorrow or next week
and think about the next phase.
Now we can say, let's spend a few hours
brainstorming about it.
Wow, that should be a refreshing change for you.
Gil, your story is incredibly inspiring.
What you created is amazing.
Right now, cybersecurity is one of the biggest trends and things that people deal with.
But you somehow created this incredible organization way ahead of time.
So I want to thank you for coming to the show
and sharing all your insights.
Anything last that you wanna share with the listeners.
They wanna build something incredible
or they wanna be part of a company
that does something incredible.
I think first, thank you very much.
You had amazing questions
and guided me through the right way. I think it's
at the end of the day, you know, it's our life. I think that by the way, every person
can do three X of what they do. And for me, I see it every time when I get into a time
which requires a lot of focus. And then suddenly I see that my productivity goes up three X
or four X than I what I usually do. And it happened to me in the first years of checkpoint.
It happens to me once in a while when there is something important.
It happened to me, by the way, four or five years ago when COVID hit our life and suddenly
we had to change the complete way we work.
And for a few months it was like a new way of learning everything from scratch.
So first, I think everybody should know
that they can do it.
Second, I think it's not many people want to build
a company and want to build a startup.
I don't think that people should do it lightly.
It's an amazing experience, but you should only do it
when you have a really, really amazing idea
that can change the world,
that you have a market that wants that.
Again, there's so many great ideas that don't have a market
and that you have the unique group of people
that you can do it with.
It's not easy to do it alone.
And especially in a new environment, you need to change.
And I mean, the job of an entrepreneur
is to change themselves every time
and to morph and to create new things
because you don't have the time
until the new department is ready.
That takes a year.
So you need to be that department until you build it.
So you need to have a unique set of people
that are super flexible that you can work with.
And it doesn't happen very often.
And sometimes you miss because the market
is not what you expect it to be.
Or the product is not turns out to be more complicated
than you thought.
But at least in Check Point, I had this amazing luck to be with amazing
people all over the years up to now.
I mean, it's not a started with two unbelievable founders, but now we have
a lot of people in checkpoint that demonstrate many of these values.
And we had the unprecedented market opportunity with the internet that's maybe
now repeated with AI, maybe not, we don't know yet. And we have a simple idea, a unique idea that
nobody had, but very simple because trying to think about overly complicated idea also doesn't
work. You need something simple that solves a real problem and the real problem that defines the market.
And you look to do something, think about that.
And if not, by the way, at least for me, working in some bigger companies before it was a great
experience because that taught me all the things.
Many of them I implemented as business processes and many of them I learned what to avoid.
Most of them I learned from my previous companies.
So I mean, it was a great experience from that standpoint.
Gil, I could probably ask you a million more questions,
but thank you so much for your time and for your knowledge and for what you
created and what you're demonstrating and mentoring all of us. Thank you.
Wonderful. Great to meet you. And maybe I'll see you in real life too.
Thank you very much.
Wow, what an incredible conversation. I am so inspired.
I hope you are too.
And if you enjoyed it as much as I did,
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And if you at some point want to take yourself and your career to the next level, watch our
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And I will see you in the next show of Leap Academy with Ilana Golan.