Lenny's Podcast: Product | Career | Growth - AI is critical for humanity’s survival: Cisco president on the AI revolution | Jeetu Patel
Episode Date: February 26, 2026Jeetu Patel is the president and chief product officer at Cisco, where he leads a team of 30,000 people and is playing a central role in the massive AI infrastructure buildout happening right now. Pre...viously, he spent five years as CPO at Box and 17 years running his own startup. Recently Jeetu organized an AI summit featuring industry leaders like Jensen Huang, Sam Altman, Marc Andreessen, and Fei-Fei Li.We discuss:1. How Cisco went AI-first across 90,000 employees2. His six-part framework for building great companies: timing, market, team, product, brand, distribution3. Why he says he couldn’t have done this job without AI4. His “right to win” strategic framework5. His communication framework for preventing “packet loss” across an organization6. Why he flips “praise in public, criticize in private” and does the exact opposite7. The important communication lesson his mother taught him—Brought to you by:Sentry—Code breaks, fix it faster: https://sentry.io/lennyFramer—Build better websites faster: https://framer.com/lennySamsara—Saving lives with AI built for physical operations: https://samsara.com/lenny—Episode transcript: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/ai-is-critical-for-humanitys-survival—Archive of all Lenny's Podcast transcripts: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/yxi4s2w998p1gvtpu4193/AMdNPR8AOw0lMklwtnC0TrQ?rlkey=j06x0nipoti519e0xgm23zsn9&st=ahz0fj11&dl=0—Where to find Jeetu Patel:• X: https://x.com/jpatel41• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeetupatel• Website: https://blogs.cisco.com/author/jeetupatel—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• X: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Introduction and welcome(04:15) Insights from Cisco’s Al summit(08:45) Transforming Cisco into an Al-first company(15:33) What Cisco actually does in the Al infrastructure stack(19:09) The future of Al(24:36) Raising kids in the AI era(29:46) “Permission to play” framework(36:50) Lessons from great CEOs(42:02) Leading at scale(50:54) Why Jeetu inverts the ‘praise in public, criticize in private’ rule(57:45) Surrounding yourself with good human beings(58:35) Lessons from loss(01:03:21) Career advice: platforms, hunger, and preparation(01:10:21) The six-part framework for building great companies(01:19:05) Lightning round and final thoughts—Resources and episode mentions: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/ai-is-critical-for-humanitys-survival—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed. To hear more, visit www.lennysnewsletter.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Survival of humanity depends on a successful AI.
Birth rates are going down.
If you have 60% of your population where you don't have enough people to take care of them,
that could cause a lot of human suffering.
When I got this new job, there's zero chance I would have been able to do it if AI wasn't there.
Because I didn't know anything about so many domains that we were in.
A lot of companies are trying to adjust to this new world.
You have to know the difference between a megatrend and hype cycle.
When there's a megatrend, don't fight it.
AI is a megatrend.
one of the most foundational movements that we have seen in human history.
To turn Cisco from an older, slower, more traditional enterprise to a very AI forward company.
This is very difficult to do.
AI is moving so fast.
One of the things I tell my team is fast forward six months from now, get prepared for that world.
You manage 30,000 people.
Every management book that you read will tell you praise in public, criticize in private.
I fundamentally disagree with that notion.
What you have to do is establish enough trust among the team so that you are comfortable critiquing.
and debating in public.
What's something that you wish you'd known before taking on this role?
Stamina trumps intellect.
It's very important to have smart people,
but you can become smart if you have curiosity and hunger
and staying power and persistence.
You can't teach hunger.
Today, my guest is G2 Patel,
chief product officer and president at Cisco.
Cisco is not a brand that mostly people think about
when they think about AI,
but not only are they a massive part of the AI infrastructure buildout
that is happening right now all over the world.
What G2 has achieved internally at Cisco in terms of transforming their culture and waves of working
to be AI-first is something that most big company leaders only dream about.
G2 is also an incredible human with so much warmth and wisdom to share.
I am very excited to be sharing his story.
Don't forget to check out Lenny's ProductPass.com for an incredible set of deals
available exclusively to Lenny's newsletter subscribers.
Let's get into it after a short word from our wonderful sponsors.
Applications break in all kinds of ways, crashes, slowdowns, regressions,
and the stuff that you only see once real users show up.
Sentry catches at all.
See what happened, where, and why.
Down to the commit that introduced the error, the developer who shipped it,
and the exact line of code all in one connected view.
I've definitely tried the five tabs and Slack Threat approach to debugging.
This is better.
Sentry shows you how the request moved, what ran, what slowed down,
and what users saw.
Sear, Sentry's AI debugging agent, takes it from there.
It uses all of that Sentry context to tell you the root cause,
suggest a fix, and even opens a PR for you.
It also reviews your PRs and flags any breaking changes with fixes ready to go.
Try Century and Seer for free at Century.io.
And use code Lenny for $100 in Century credits.
That's S-C-N-T-R-Y.io slash Lenny.
Your marketing website sets the tone for your brand and is the one touch point that every single one of your customers sees.
In today's age, if you're still having a hard time making small changes and simple updates to it, you're doing something wrong.
That is why so many companies from early stage startups to Fortune 500s, including companies like DoorDash, Zapier, Proplexity, and 11 Labs turn to Framer, the website builder that turns your dot com from a formality into a tool for growth.
Framer works like your team's favorite design tool
and comes with real-time collaboration,
a robust CMS, with everything you need for great SEO,
and advanced analytics that includes integrated A-B testing.
Changes to your Framer site go live to the web in seconds
with a single click and without any help from engineering.
Whether you want to launch a new site, test a few landing pages,
or migrate your full.com.
Framer has programs for startups, scale-ups,
and large enterprises to make going from idea to live site
as easy and fast as possible.
Learn how to turn your website into a growth engine from a Framer expert
or just get started building for free today at framer.com slash Lenny.
And if you're a Lenny's product pass subscriber,
you get an entire year of Framer pro for free.
Check it out at framer.com slash Lenny.
Rules and restrictions may apply.
G2, thank you so much for being here.
Welcome to the podcast.
Lenny, I'm excited. Good to see you.
The timing on this conversation.
is so amazing. You're just coming off running the most insane assembling of AI thought leaders
and tech leaders I've ever seen. Let me just read a few of the names that you guys had at the
summit that just happened a couple days ago. You had Jensen, you had Samom and you had Mark Andresen,
you had Faye Faye Lee, you had the CEO of Intel, AWS, Mike Krieger, Kevin Wheel. That's just like
a third of the guests you guys had. I don't know. I did this. But it feels like you had this
fire hose of information coming at you. You interviewed a lot of these people on stage. And so while
it's fresh in your mind, I want to ask you, after doing the summit, after hearing from these folks,
what's something that you've changed your mind about? Or what's just like an insight that has been
lodged in your head ever since doing the summit? It was an amazing thing to pull off because
we never thought we'd be able to do it and we were really worried going into it, thinking, well,
we're trying to do fireside chats for 12 hours.
And there's a capacity of human absorption that we're trying to challenge.
And so we tried to put a lot of breaks in there.
We started at 9 a.m. and we ended at 9 p.m.
and we had a couple hour break in the middle.
But everyone stayed.
And everyone was engaged.
And we could have gone until 11 and it would have been fine.
And it's because the quality of the conversations and the caliber of the guests that were there
made a world of a difference.
What was the takeaway from it?
I'd say a few things.
One is, you know, the capabilities overhang is real.
I think there's more functionality.
On one end, there's kind of this paradox of progress.
On one end, we are like, you know,
we're solving all these amazing problems with science.
On the other end, you talk to the enterprises.
They're like we're struggling with adoption.
And I feel like there's help that's going to be needed
within organizations.
And the reason we pull this thing together,
the goal was what is happening in the industry
and how can we help customers make sure
that they can make the most of it
because we are in one of the most foundational movements
that we have seen in human industry.
And it's, we got to make sure
that we make the most of it.
So that was one is the capabilities overhang is real.
The second area is I'd say that it's harder
when you go beyond some of the most more obvious use cases.
Like, for example, coding is a very, very good use case
that, you know, you're starting to get a lot of success in.
I mean, we just had our first product that we think we'll be in the next two weeks,
100% written with AI, right?
I don't think that's as easy when you go into every other function of the business,
and that was actually very apparent that, hey, this is going to require some nuance
and understanding of how every business works.
And then the third one, which is a really interesting takeaway.
And Mark Andreessen talked about this in your podcast a few days ago.
In fact, when I talked to him, I actually started.
it with your podcast because it was so interesting.
And then we dug into it a little bit more.
And then Kevin Scott was also talking about this.
But this notion of the fact that birth rates are going down
and we have a demographic shift that's happening in the world
and there's going to be more people that are in the older age bracket
than the younger age bracket.
And those older people are going to need folks to take care of them.
And historically in society, that's actually always been the case.
But we might be at a point where that might not be the case.
and when that's not the case, you know, we worry about AI taking our jobs.
I think that survival of humanity depends on a successful AI because at some point,
if you have, you know, 60% of your population that's in a demographic where you don't have
enough people to take care of them, that could cause a lot of human suffering.
So I don't think people talk about this enough.
And that's something that we have to take a moment and digest that.
This is so important for our collective success moving forward.
Something I was going to say during that my chat with Mark
when he talked about that AI is basically coming just in time
to save us because there aren't going to be enough people
to do the jobs.
I was in my head, I was thinking this is like another signal
that we are in a simulation.
Things are working out just right for us.
What are the chances?
The older I get, the more I believe
that we are actually in a simulation.
The first time I heard that concept,
I thought it was such an absurd concept.
Now I'm like, you know, this might actually be happening.
Never know. Following this thread, a lot of companies are trying to adjust to this new world.
You are doing an incredible job at actually doing this. We got connected through Kevin Wheel,
who is former CPO at Open AI, now head of science at Open AI. And the way he described it is the work
that you have done to turn Cisco, the way he described it from an older, slower, more traditional
enterprise to a very AI forward company. How many employees do you guys have? You said 45,000.
We have 90,000 employees, 43,000 watch the stream.
So the big question for you is, like, this is, it feels like it's really working,
and this is very difficult to do at a company of that scale.
A lot of leaders are trying to make it work.
What are two or three things that you've done that you think have been most impactful
and effective in helping Cisco lean into AI, not be scared of it, not,
and actually, you know, embrace the future?
You know, innovation in my mind is a choice.
So, like, you know, I always find it interesting with people,
say, well, you know, you're a large company you can innovate.
You're a small company you can innovate.
It's like, no, it's just a choice.
Every day you come into work and you can choose to be thinking about being creative or you can
choose to not be creative.
It's like a little binary.
It's a binary choice you can make every hour, right, every minute of every day.
And so we made that choice that says Cisco is going to be not just an iconic company and
not, you know, Chuck Robbins, our CEO says this very eloquently.
He's like, I want Cisco not just to be an iconic.
I want Cisco to also be an iconic and innovative company.
And so we got to make sure that we are actually innovating with the set of constraints
that we are dealt with.
You know, like every company has their own set of constraints and we have our own set
of constraints and we have to make sure that given those constraints, we have to actually
innovate really well.
Now, what has, what are the two or three things that have happened that have really helped
this out. One was being very clear on what is up for debate and what is not up for debate. Because
what can end up happening is you can always have a pocket veto in a large company where if you
ask enough number of people, people say, no, if you're a large company, ask enough number of people,
someone's going to say no. Right. And so when you have conviction about something that's happening
that is going to be a bet that you need to place, like, you know, what most people think in large
companies is large companies don't experiment. That is in fact not true. Large companies experiment a lot.
What large companies don't do is when an experiment works, they don't go all in and double down.
They try to keep hedging. We didn't hedge on AI. We said we're going to go all in. That was number
one. What that meant was we had to get people to understand that their personal success and the success of the
company are very aligned in us getting dexterous with the use of AI. That means that if they feel
like for some reason, AI is going to take their job or AI is going to be negative for them,
we had to reassure them that that was not the case, but the reverse was guaranteed to be the
case, that if you didn't use AI, if you weren't going to be dexterous in whatever job function
you're doing, then your job is probably not going to be that relevant over here in the long run.
So that was the first thing that we did.
That was a, I'm not a big fan of top down hierarchy of going out and doing things.
In fact, I deep down inside, I don't respect hierarchy as much.
I feel like it can constrain you at times.
But I wanted to make sure on this one, we were very, very deliberate.
The entire company is on the same page.
We are an AI first company.
And this happened.
We were kind of working towards it even prior to Chad GPT,
but chat GPT became that seminal moment
in November 22
that we actually did that.
So that was one.
Number two was we had to make sure
that we defined
what success looked like.
The way that individual success was defined
was everyone wanted to be a GM at Cisco.
They wanted to own their own fiefdom,
be a general manager
because they felt like in order for me
to move up the ranks,
I need to be a general manager.
Which means I need to have my own sales team.
I need to have my own marketing team.
I need to have my own product team.
I need to have my own engineering team.
I'm going to make sure I run my own silo.
And if you're a $40 billion business in product revenues,
45 billion or whatever we were at the time,
and then all of a sudden your goal is
that you're going to just run a bunch of $40 million businesses
and break it up into a series of $40 million businesses,
that's actually not a good thing for the company.
So the thing we did was we said,
we have to become not a holding company of 251 acquisitions
and thousands of different products, we have to become a platform company.
And the characteristic of the platform is you have to be tightly integrated,
where the customer feels the same emotion, no matter what product of ours they use.
There's the same set of expectations that can be served.
Reliability, trust, elegance and design, solving a problem in the most efficient way.
Those are the things we want to strive to do.
But you don't have to buy everything all at once, because we also,
want to be realistic about the fact that not every customer only uses Cisco top to bottom.
There's an ecosystem.
So loosely coupled, but tightly integrated.
You don't have to buy everything all at once, but boy, when you do buy two things together,
they work like magic.
So that was the second big thing we did.
And then the third one we did was we said, let's make sure that we have a mental model shift
in the company.
And we did this about five, five and a half years ago.
when I first joined, this was a very deliberate decision, which was
we cannot operate in a walled garden.
We have to make sure that we operate in an open ecosystem,
which means we have to be completely comfortable
with having a competitor that we're going to partner with.
And that's okay.
You know, we don't have to think about this in a zero-sum manner
in order for me to win, someone has to lose.
We can partner.
Because if a customer has made a,
choice of going with company A and company B, and we happen to be one of those two companies,
we owe it to the customer to invest in their success in that other company because if the customer
succeeds, that success has a flow-through rate to you. That's going to be pretty high. And so that's
what we did. And I think that's been those principles of building great products, but making sure
that it operates like a platform and having an open ecosystem, I think has been kind of central. And
then not being confused about the fact that you'll be AI first from the top down.
I want to take a tangent and make sure people understand what Cisco even does these days.
I think as a layperson, you'll think about Cisco and you're like, okay, WebEx, yes, they make maybe some routers.
You guys are key to this massive AI infrastructure build out that's happening right now.
You're a major player in this.
I don't think people realize this, people listening to this podcast.
Give us just like a quick glimpse into how Cisco fits into this.
this massive build-out and just like, what does Cisco these days?
Cisco is a critical infrastructure company for the AI era.
What does that mean?
If you think about where the constraints are right now,
if you think that AI is going to be one of the biggest movements,
and then you ask yourself the question, what could hold AI back?
There's three things where we feel like we can have a direct impact that can hold AI back.
Number one is there's an infrastructure constraint.
There's just not enough power compute and network bandwidth in the world to go out
and satiate the needs of AI.
Number two is there's a trust deficit.
If people don't trust these systems, they're not going to use them.
And right now there's a lot of mistrust in these systems.
You know, hallucination is a feature when you're writing poetry, but when you're trying
to go out and run predictable systems, hallucination can be a bad thing.
And these models are unpredictable.
They're nondeterministic.
And so they have to make sure that they have safety and security kind of factored into them.
And then the third area is a data gap.
So far, we've trained these models.
with, you know, human-generated data publicly available on the Internet,
but we are running out of human-generated data publicly available on the Internet
to train the models.
And every company is going to differentiate based on their own proprietary enterprise data
being used to train the models, synthetic data and machine data,
which is where the most amount of growth is.
And the third category of machine data, we can play a massive role in that's Cisco.
So what does Cisco do then?
If you think about a GPU, which is what everyone now has is very clear because of the great job that Jensen has done,
that here is what a GPU's core contribution is to AI.
If these GPUs aren't networked together, you don't have AI.
Because it used to be that you could train a model on a single GPU,
but then what happened was the model got too big to be put on a single GPUs.
Then you had a server with eight GPUs that got connected together,
so you could train a model with eight GPs.
But then that wasn't good enough.
So then what happened was you said,
I'm going to have a rack of servers
that I'm going to network together.
That at some point wasn't big enough.
And so then they said,
I'm going to have a cluster of racks
that are connected together.
And those, that connected together
is the operative word.
That's what we end up doing is,
Nvidia makes the GPUs and we connect those GPs together.
AMD makes the GPs.
We connect them together.
And now what's happened,
money is you have these data centers that might be hundreds of kilometers apart that need to
operate like one coherent cluster, which means that they're completely in sync. Every GPU is in sync
with each other when you're doing a training run. And that requires a very sophisticated
set of technologies that we build to make sure that you could have two data centers 800 kilometers
apart, but boy, they run like completely in sync with each other. And that's what Cisco does. We provide
the networking, we provide the optics technology, we provide the safety and security technology,
we provide the observability, we provide, you know, the data platform, all of those things together
for making sure that we provide critical infrastructure for the AI era. So being on the inside of this
massive investment that is happening across the world, what do you think isn't being priced
in into where things are heading into how much life will change or just like the scale of this
have this build out. Years ago, I'd had a chance to meet with Ray Kurzweil. You know,
as a chief scientist at Google for a while, and I think he still is. And he had talked about,
he was writing this book called, um, live long enough to live forever. And so I was talking to him,
I'm like, what is the impact to human population if all of a sudden you can have 15 generations
living simultaneously because we have an indefinite span of life? Because now all of a sudden,
you know, everything has to change. Like, how does housing work? How's housing?
work, how does agriculture work, how does transportation work, how does everything changes.
And he looked at me and he had the most profound answer. And he said, you know, most people
can't think exponentially because they always think exponentially maybe on a single dimension.
But what ends up happening in these things is you can sometimes, you have to keep in mind that
exponentiality happens across multiple dimensions all at once. So if you do have an indefinite
span of life, you have to assume that humans are creative enough that they're going to find a way
to have a three-day crop cycle. And they probably will have 5,000-story, you know, skyscrapers.
And there will be a bunch of things in society that we have assumed are not solvable,
that will now be solvable. So when you go back to your question and say, what changes in this
entire equation that has not been factored in well? I think today,
AI is looked at largely as a productivity tool and an aggregation mechanism.
I have data all over and I'm going to be able to make sure that language can be used
to compose the data in a way that I can give you, Lenny, the answer to the question that you're looking for.
That I think is like the point zero zero zero zero one percent of the tip of the iceberg.
Right.
The reality is, is we will have original insights generated
that don't exist in the human corpus of knowledge,
and we will have the physical world get augmented to language
where capacity is augmented to humans.
And what we have to be careful of
is that that capacity is working on behalf of humans.
But if that capacity is augmented to humans,
you can now do things that you really care to do
and not do things that you don't care to do.
And so our biggest realization that we had when we were using Codex, for example,
when we were writing code with OpenAI's kind of model and development tool
was the first three months we were screwing around with this.
And then there was this light bulb that runoffs.
In fact, there was a forward-deployed engineer from OpenAI that told us about this.
Which is, hey, stop trying to think of this as a tool.
Think of this as a teammate that got added to your team
and your framing will change
and the way in which you actually use the technology will change
and that essentially if you compound that to how society operates
that's going to be pretty profound as an implication
while keeping in mind that these safety and security risks are non-trivial
and they're real and you can't be completely flippant about them
because how an AI identifies its own success and its own ambition will really matter.
And we have to make sure that we actually keep guardrails around that.
Because it is in service of humans.
It is not to go out and build a society by itself.
And I do think that those are important kind of checks and balances you have to keep in mind.
But the thing that people sometimes miss out in this very,
polarized narrative, which is we are either going to have nothing to do in society or this is going
to be completely useless as a piece of technology. I think that's not a helpful narrative. In fact,
what is helpful is saying, as we reconstruct society for the next phase, how can we make sure
that life gets infinitely better? How can we make sure that diseases get solved? How can we make sure
that poverty gets eradicated? How can we make sure that how people learn and find excitement and joy out
of life gets compounded meaningfully.
If that happens, I think there's goodness that comes out of this.
A line that I often think about is Elon has had this thought that the best case scenario
with AI, because he was a very like AI dumer for a long time.
And I think the reason he got leaned into AI is like, I need to help steer this in a
direction that isn't going to harm the world.
The way he described it is the best case scenario for humanity is where the house cat,
where AI is just like, okay, nice, just keep sitting here with me and I'll take care of you.
By the way, the things that he is doing right now are nothing short of extraordinary.
And, you know, for all the critique that one can have, like the level of kind of deep thinking that's going on with his company, it's just crazy.
So as you've been thinking about where things are heading, I've been liking to ask this question with people with kids.
Is there anything you're kind of shifting in how you raise your daughter, keeping in mind?
where things are heading.
Like, are there skills you're trying to instill in her values.
You're trying to instill in her that will help her thrive in this future.
We made a choice, and I didn't know how that choice was going to go.
That was actually not even an active choice.
It was a passive choice.
Frankly, even might have been slightly intellectually lazy in the way that we did it,
but it actually worked out pretty well in the sense that we didn't really deprive her of the use
of technology.
Like, as a school of thought that says keep technology away from the kids for a while,
we didn't do that.
And frankly, I didn't know how it was going to work out
because there are things about the way that the generation
is, and by the way, all of us,
not just a new generation,
but this kind of constantly being glued to your phone all the time
and not being able to actually put that down
and have a conversation, you know,
I think it's an important skill in humans to have and preserve over time.
And in fact, as AI does more for us,
we should be able to have more of this time.
I don't have to worry about every notification
that's coming on my phone every minute of the day
because maybe I can be more present
in the moment that I'm in.
She just turned 15.
And the night before she was turning 15,
what I realized is she is so emotionally mature.
We were sitting down one night
and she's like, hey, dad, just so you know,
I feel really good right now
about having a very strong,
value system.
I'm like, oh, okay.
What does that mean?
And say more.
And she's like, well, can you name five things that you feel so convicted about that if the
entire world disagreed with you, this is the day before she's turning 15, okay?
The entire world disagreed with you.
You would still feel like you were right on that and that would not waver you.
She's like, I have a certain core set of things that I believe in.
where I am completely confident that if everyone disagreed with me, I'm still good.
Now, by the way, I have to kind of coach her on the, hey, when you get new data, be open-minded
to changing your mind.
But it was actually a very interesting dynamic, which is, you know, if we can have them be
exposed to technology but have the right value system, you might actually have the best of both
worlds. And, you know, the day ain't over yet. She's 15. There's a lot of, you know, chances for her
getting influenced by external factors and all of that. But what you have to do is make sure that
you instill the right values, but then also expose them to the reality of what the world is today
and not completely insulate them from that. And so I, the way that it worked out, it did end up
working well. And we were lucky, for no credit to us, she,
She was able to use technology to get her EQ higher and higher.
And we were lucky on that front.
And we know it can go sideways the other way too.
But I do feel like right now, at least for my one daughter, what we try to do is get
her exposed to the technology, but make sure to refocus a lot more on the values that we
need to have that govern us on a day-to-day basis.
You know, kindness, you know, not being arrogant, hard work, work ethic.
Those things matter.
And I don't think, those are timeless in my mind.
I don't think those change because, you know, take risks, be creative, that kind of stuff.
G2, these are parenting goals.
As I hear this, I have a two and a half-year-old.
This sounds like you've done an amazing job raising your daughter.
I would take zero credit for it.
I think she deserves a lot of credit for growing up to be who she's become, and her mother.
You got a shout out, mom.
What's interesting is that I know Anthropic is really big, like this idea of
values and just like how you operate. Anthropic has this constitution they released of how
the values essentially of Claude. And it's so interesting how much similarity there is to how to
raise a great person and to how to steer an AI correctly. That's right. And by the way, it's
some of your beliefs and your system around you might change, but values tend to be pretty long
lasting. And culture in a company tends to be pretty long lasting. Like, you know, and we,
Ben Horowitz talks about this very eloquently. The culture is just a set of norms that a company
actually, it's not, it's not a set of beliefs, it's a set of behaviors that you exude within
the company. And it's actually very, very true because when things aren't going right, how do people
behave to go solve problems and come together? And that actually forms your cultural norms. And I think
those cultural norms. It's very important to be intentional about it. And as you have more automation
in the world, being intentional not just with humans, but also with machines and what you want to do
to create the guardrails, I think is pretty important. I'm going to take us in a different direction.
I talked to Aaron Levy, your former boss at Mox, Seahoeuvres, and friend. So I asked him just
what should I ask you about? What's something that he learned from you that has stuck with him
ever since working with you.
And he share this concept of the right to win,
which he says has informed the way he thinks about strategy ever since.
Talk about what this is and how folks might use this
when they're thinking about product strategy, company strategy.
One of the things that we would always talk about is in the areas that we're going to
participate, do we have permission to play?
Every company, you know, has to make sure.
that the way in which they provide points of insertion and logical entry into a market is a lot
of times dependent on, do you have the permission to play in that market? Do you have an avenue to get
to your, to have a route to market to be able to take that product? Just by building a product
that is amazing in some area, you don't end up actually getting it to mass scale distribution.
And so one of the things that we would always do is ask ourselves a question, we're building this new category or we're building this new capability.
Is it going to be logical for people that box built it versus another company building it?
You know, is it going to be logical for people that Cisco built it versus another company building it?
So that's this notion of permission to play, the right to win.
Do we have a right to win in that area because we have permission to play?
and do we have the route to market to be able to take that product and get it to mass scale distribution?
And if you can do those things right, then actually your dollars that you expend on building product actually have an outsized return.
If not, then you can actually spend up, end up spending a lot of money on product where the product people think,
ah, these sales guys don't get it, they don't know how to sell it, especially in enterprise software.
And the salespeople think these product guys don't get it, they don't know how to build it.
And so I think in order to stop that, what you have to do is you have to actually use your scale as an advantage.
And you have to use the areas where you've got the ability to have permission to play where people feel like this is very logical for a company like Cisco.
Like when we say we are going to network the GPUs and make sure that we actually have a trusted system in AI,
that is not far-fetched for someone to go out and think about
because it's a very natural thing for us to do
because for the past 40 years,
we've been doing it for the rest of the infrastructure that was not AI.
And so that's not a far cry to say,
okay, we'll now do it for AI, you know.
And I think that was an area that Aaron and I spent a fair.
And by the way, you know, I'm glad that he took that out of me.
There's so much I've learned from him.
The biggest area I've learned from him is you never give up
and persistence beats intellect
and stamina beats intellect
any day of the week twice on Sunday
and that guy is as smart as they come.
But that is not the why,
that's not the biggest reason he's successful.
The biggest reason he's successful is he has an enormous amount
of staying power in the game.
You know, moving back to my daughter's comment
of no matter what everyone else says,
his convictions and belief,
he will actually stick by them
and actually get through the hardest times.
I totally believe that.
I feel like I'm not the smartest person in the room, usually, and I succeed in large
far because I just work really hard.
You're pretty smart, though.
Like, I've been watching your podcast for a while.
Like, you've done a pretty amazing job.
I appreciate it.
So in this permission to win concept, the reason I think it's so important is it's so easy
to build stuff now.
Everyone's just building, building, building, building, launching, launching, launching,
it feels like this is an increasingly important lever is why will we win in this space.
I'm curious if there's an example
you can share either from Box or Cisco
where it's just like, okay, this is like
we're going to do this because we
have the permission to play here.
I agree with you in the sense that
if generating code
is something that becomes abundant,
that doesn't mean you're going to have
better technology just because you can generate
a lot of code. You still need
human judgment. You still need
a level of intuition on what problems are the right ones to solve.
You still, and yes, AI can help you with all of that,
but it's not something that,
like that's where humans have a superpower.
They have instinct,
and they can actually make sure that they can, you know,
fulfill out a vision that says,
this is what I think this could be in the fullness of time.
And so that, that I think is pretty important.
So the more, the easier it gets for us to get,
the bottlenecks out to generate code, the harder it gets for us to make sure that there's not
AI slop in the market and that we actually are very selective on what are the things that are going
to be the most important things that solve the most important problems moving forward.
Example of permission to play is, I mean, there's so many ideas that a company the size of Cisco,
we have constantly new ideas that keep coming up.
you know and then in those new ideas that keep coming up people will always oh my goodness this
company is doing so well we should just go into that market or we should just go into this market
and 90% of the times 99% of the times I find myself saying no and the reason for that is you
have to be extremely selective of where you expend your calories and that caloric expenditure
is is where you know if you expend your calories in a very focused way
way, the results you'll get from that focus area tend to be outsized and disproportionate.
If you dissipate that caloric burn across multitude of different areas, nothing gets enough girth
to be able to go out and drive it all the way through. And so, like, you know, why are we not
in business to consumer tech at Cisco? Right? Like, why are we not going out and building things
that are very, very B to C,
because I don't think we have a distribution channel
that actually is within our DNA.
I don't think that we've got permission to play there.
That's an area where it would be extremely hard for people to grow up
that Cisco should be the one who's participating in that.
Now, can we do it?
Of course we can do it.
Is that where we want to go,
or do we want to go where there's so much opportunity
in the areas where we can actually prosecute
with the ability to,
ability to have, you know, operate from a position of strength that you'll just get a much better
return for the dollar that you invest.
You mentioned Aaron as a CEO that you learned a lot from.
I'm curious what other CEOs you've learned a lot from and what's something you learn from
them.
Chuck Robbins is one of my favorite humans and not just because I work for him.
I work for him because he's one of my favorite humans.
And what I've learned.
from him, he had this kind of great line. There was this, you know, piece of press that
our media is very sensationalist by definition, right? They will try to create a very polarized
view about the world where there actually isn't one. Most things in my life, things are not
as extreme as you hear of the headlines of the media. You know, it's somewhere in the middle,
right? And there was one time that there was
this article that ran.
And it was about like, you know, giving me an unnecessary amount of credit.
And frankly, not giving Chuck as much credit about something that he has actually done.
Like a lot of the movements that we've had internally wouldn't have happened if he had
not hired me and given me agency to go do the things that I needed to get done.
And he was very much completely in sync with me on what needed to happen.
And so, you know, when I saw this article, I had no idea with the report.
I reached out, I'm like, hey, I just want to let you know.
This was not me saying it's someone.
I said, cheat it.
Don't worry about it, man.
What I've learned in life is, if you don't care about who gets the credit, you just go a lot
farther in life.
And it's so profound, right, in so many ways that he's just way too confident to let
anything. And so the thing I've learned from Chuck is the importance of confidence and the importance
of knowing what you're good at and where you're not good at and when you're not good. You're
going to assemble the team of people around you. He's just masterful in that. And it happens...
By the way, he's the CEO of Cisco in case people... That's right. He's the CEO of Cisco. He's the
chair of the business roundtable. He's a very dear friend of mine. And I feel like there's a lot to learn
from that kind of mental model and mindset.
And I've been lucky enough, many, that, and this is just dumb luck, the people that I've worked
with and four are all very, very close to me. And I just don't let them go from my life.
And so one of the things, for example, is I worked with Aaron and then when I was leaving,
it was very emotional, but I wanted to do something different, but we committed to you.
each other that we're going to have dinner every six weeks. And Aaron and there's another co-founder
Jeff Kweiser and I, three of us, every six weeks in Palo Alto, we have dinner. You know, and it's one of
the most special things that I still do. And it's a tradition now. It's been going on for six years.
And I love it. You know, you look at someone like Chuck. We have, I start with my David talking to him
in the morning, we text each other, and then I end the day, talking to him in the evening,
and we probably touch base at least four or five times a day. They're not long conversations
at all points in time, but we're constantly in contact with each other. And I feel like that
only happens when you've established enough trust. My first boss when I moved to California
is this guy named Rick Devenuti, and then another guy named Jeremy Burton. You know,
Rick Devenuti is still my coach. I see him every two weeks.
Jeremy is someone that's a very dear friend of mine and your neighbors and be moved and bought a place next to his just so that we could be close to him.
And these are like special people in your life that have enriched your life in very different ways that I think you just have to make sure that you treasure.
Today's episode is brought to you by Somsara.
If you listen to this podcast, you know that we spend a lot of time talking about building things that sit on a screen, onboarding funnels, mobile apps, and checkout flows.
SomeSara is building products for the physical world.
First responders racing to emergencies, truck drivers carrying critical supplies, construction workers building our cities and data centers.
These are people who put everything on the line every single day and Somsara's technology protects them.
Somsara is solving complex problems at the intersection of hardware, software, and edge AI.
And their AI doesn't just detect events.
It reasons about the intent and answers questions like,
did that truck driver break abruptly because they were distracted?
or was that a heroic act?
If you want to ground LLMs in messy real-world telemetry
or solve edge-a-i constraints at a planetary scale,
Somsara wants to talk to you.
If you like playing with enormous datasets,
moving fast and working in small teams,
come help build the technology
that makes the physical world safer and more efficient.
Visit somsara.com slash lenny to learn more.
That's S-A-M-S-A-R-A-com slash Lenny.
So you're currently CPO at Cisco,
know you, I think the team under you, is it 25,000 people?
Is that the right number?
About 30,000, but...
30,000 people, okay.
Yeah.
What's something that you wish you'd known before taking on this role?
I don't know if it was, I mean, I instinctively kind of knew it, but it was very, very
accentuated at Cisco, because when you, like, you know, when people say, oh, is,
is scale hard?
And my perspective has always been that the absence of...
scale is way harder than scale, what do I mean by that? Like, if I have a startup with three people
and we need to prosecute another idea and that idea requires, you know, five people working on it,
I have to go raise money, right? It's an, or I have to pivot my entire business. If you have
30,000 people and you have an idea that requires five people, you just figure out a way that you
allocate the dollars internally and say, let's go prosecute this idea.
So in my mind, I always felt like absence of scale was way harder than the presence of scale.
And operating within scale seemed like it was like, yeah, you have more opportunity to do it.
What I found over the years, not just at Cisco, but even when I'm, because I ran a small
startup in, in, um, in Chicago for like 17 years before I moved over to the,
Valley. What I found in the large companies is the communication framework and the lossiness of
communication, the telephone game, so to say, has a profoundly negative effect if you're not
intentional about it and if you're not careful of it. And there was this board member that we
had. There's a couple board members. Our lead director, Michael Capellis is amazing. There's this other
board member. Kevin is amazing. And then there's this one board member, Westbush, who,
We recently rolled off, but he used to be on our board.
And when I got this job, he pulled me aside.
He said, Gico, I'm going to tell you something.
I'm going to give you some advice and take it or leave it,
but I think it's going to be important for you to keep it in mind.
I'm like, what's that?
And he goes, whatever you do, don't think about your story of the company as a marketing exercise.
Think about it as the most intrinsic foundational exercise.
of the company and always be the custodian of the message.
Don't delegate that to someone else to give it.
Because if you have three, four, five, six, seven layers
between you and the person who's actually doing the job
in the front line, what you don't want to do is play the telephone game
and assume that people will just cascade it
when you go to your team and then say, okay,
that team will cascade to the next team,
cascade to the next team, cascade to the next team.
Every one of them will add a flavor with,
well-intentioned, and then by the time it gets to the end, people won't know what it is.
So always own telling the story.
And I'm like, that seems like it's a lot because, like, we have a very broad portfolio.
We do all of these events.
It's, you know, like, I'm going to have to stand on stage for 90 minutes and just talk about.
He's like, please do that.
Make sure you don't.
And I initially, the hidden benefit that came out of it that I did not realize is it massively
Lenny simplified our business. And you know why? Because we have such a broad business with so many
different industries. It's impossible for someone to be a deep expert in every single one of them
across the board. There's just way too much surface area. But the things that we want to convey
to the market that the market should take away from us, if that story is not something
that I understand well enough to be able to convey it, how do I first expect 20,000 of my sellers
to be able to go tell it to the market.
And how do I expect my customers
to be able to digest that story?
There's zero chance that would happen.
Right?
And so that was my kind of big takeaway from this,
which is don't delegate the storytelling.
And the storytelling is not a marketing exercise
after you built the product.
The story is why you build the product,
the story come real. And so make sure that the story is there first, and then that story has
evidence and proof based on the products that you're building. I had a conversation with Matt McGinnis,
who's C-O, now CPO at Rippling, and hit a similar piece of advice, which I think is also,
it's like a adjacent advice, which is the intensity of an idea or a plan drops at every level
that it goes from CO to the next layer and layer. And your job,
as a leader is to maintain that intensity, not to buffer it from the employees, but to maintain
exactly the same intensity. And it feels like that's in addition to also just keep the story
the same. Like don't filter it, don't change it. Although your advice is even different,
just like you actually go to the team working on it and tell the story yourself. Don't even let it.
I want to make sure that they hear it from me directly so that there's no lossiness.
You know, like we have this concept in networking called packet loss when you, you know, you actually
send packets over a wire. And then, you know, you know,
you have a loss of packet, then actually there's loss of data.
You don't want to have packet loss in your storytelling from you to the person on the
front line.
The direct Ethernet Cat 5 connections.
This is just a direct connection.
There's no packet loss of this one.
You got to make sure it gets to the intended audience.
And I think the reason for that is as companies get large, they can lose touch with the
front lines.
Like everyone gets really good with the math of the business, but they don't really always
preserve the soul of the business.
And there's a lossiness that happens because,
you know, if you have seven, eight layers between you and the front line,
even the message that's coming back to you from them
is actually getting lossy.
And so what you have to do is just preserve,
and I think what was said earlier about the intensity is the same way,
which is you've got to preserve the intensity,
you've got to preserve the sanctity of the message,
and you've got to preserve the clarity of the message
so that everyone is clear on the direction we're going down.
you can stay clear and stay motivated about that direction and make sure that everyone's on the same
page and what needs to be done to execute, you will have success. If not, you will actually have
guaranteed failure. How do you actually operationalize this without just being overloaded with
the work and constantly having to meet with every team and remind them of the story?
The first thing I feel is you have to have very clear thinking because the clarity of thought
is what brings clarity of communication.
So you have to spend the time with your team
in sweating the details
on what it is that you want to do
and why you want to do it.
The context of why is so lost
and constantly reminding people why it's important
and having the least amount of asymmetry
between the topmost layer and the organization
and the bottom most layer is super...
Now, by the way, you know, I'm a section
16 officer, there are certain things that, for example, you're in a quiet period, you can't go
talk about to someone else during that time period.
Like that you, you know, that's not allowed.
However, the most amount of context that you can provide them in the way that you can,
because you're allowed to, the better off you are.
And always treat people like adults, you know.
Like what I've found is oftentimes when you go into corporate environments, like people start
becoming very sterile in the facts that they provide.
And sometimes it's okay to just say, hey, we screwed up here.
This was really bad.
That's not meant to, you know, like one of the things that I found to be very counterintuitive
because every management book that you read will tell you otherwise.
What do they say?
Praise in public and criticize in private.
I fundamentally disagree with that notion.
I think what you have to do is establish enough trust among the team so that you are comfortable
critiquing and debating in public.
But when you're in private, take that moment to build a trust.
Because if you build that trust and you tell them that you've got their back and you create
a level of safety there, in public, you don't want to be in a mode of posturing.
you want to be in a mode of problem solving.
When you're just giving people
perfunctory compliments all the time
and everything is just hunky dory,
rose-carred glasses, great,
all your dashboards look green,
but you're growing the business at like one and a half percent.
Like there's an asymmetry there.
Something's broken.
You know, it's like, what do we need to do over here?
And so what I tend to do is use the exact opposite approach.
I tend to be very, very direct in public.
You know, be respectful,
but be direct in public.
This is not working.
Let me tell you why it's not working.
We got to face the facts.
And then be very, very kind of clear with people that you got their back in private.
And don't be stingy with words on that front.
You know, because I feel like there are times when people are very stingy with words with people in private.
You can't be stingy with words over there.
And don't be, don't be stingy with critique in public because I think people need to be.
make sure that we're solving problems together. And if we don't know the play that we're executing,
if we don't know the things that we're going to need to do, then I'm not really certain
if you're making collective progress. And I think it's not going to be fulfilling to either you
or the recipient at some point. And those compliments will feel hollow because you didn't mean
them. Because you were trying to put it in between, you know, like Ben Horowitz says and hard things
about hard things that you have a shit sandwich, you say something really nice to someone,
then you say something that's not really nice, and then you put, no, just treat people like adults.
Tell them the facts, watch your tone. I still have to work on that. There are times and I get
very passionate, people think like, you know, but watch your tone and make sure that you debate,
conflict is a necessary condition of business, but the only way that you can have productive
conflict is if you've established trust. And the only way that you can establish trust, and the only way
that you can establish trust is by making sure that you spend the time to establish the trust.
So spend the time to establish the trust, but then focus on the best idea winning and actually
having the debate.
Is there maybe one more lesson that you learned from this?
Or I guess it's something you wish you'd known before getting into this role.
Is there anything else that comes to mind?
I was an apps guy.
You know, I operated in the apps layer.
I worked at Box.
And even when I was at EMC, I was building apps.
that you build for the end user.
Infrastructure is a different game.
And the thing that I learned about infrastructure is
you don't always get the glory,
but you always get the blame.
Perfect.
And you have to be comfortable with the fact
that you are working in a way that other people get the glory.
Great infrastructure companies,
the application companies get the glory.
when they're running on that infrastructure.
You know, and so you have to be hardwired in infrastructure
to orient on your ecosystem's success, not just your own success.
And that is probably one of the lessons that I learned at Cisco
in a very stark way, which I didn't fully appreciate it until I got into the details
of the infrastructure going, wow, if this thing doesn't work,
you know, like we were, um, uh,
Every single time our infrastructure doesn't work.
This morning I was with a medical institution.
I was with the healthcare company this morning.
And they were telling me that they were very complimentary.
They were thanking us on the partnership.
I asked them, why are you doubling down with us?
And they're like, because when the infrastructure doesn't work, people die.
someone doesn't get dialysis, someone doesn't get a surgery done, and we need to make sure that
we're working with someone with the infrastructure is working.
And so I feel like at that point in time, you can't be navel gazing too much about look
how cool you are because you did something.
You have to just make sure that you're really immediately shifting your focus to what does
the customer do and what does the ecosystem do with your infrastructure so that the outcome
is achieved. And you have to get very outcome oriented. And I feel like that was something
that I always intellectually knew, but I didn't fully realize it until I came here on how important
of a mindset shift that is. You are not talking about yourself. You're talking about the system just
working. No one will come and tell you, hey, Githu, thank you so much my network work today.
right. But the moment it doesn't work, they're going to call you and say, you know what? My network's not working and my people can't work and patients are dying in the hospital. And I think you just have to be comfortable with that.
It's so interesting how this lesson connects so directly to the lesson you learned from Chuck, the CEO of Cisco, which is don't expect the praise and the credit. You need to be comfortable with other people getting credit for your work.
That's right.
And by the way, it's not surprising given that he spent like, I don't know, 26, 28 years over here.
Like, you know, why that, you know, he's conditioned with the fact that he's focused on other people succeeding from it.
From his pituitary work, you know.
It feels like there's so many metaphors and correlaries to networking as a way to think about leadership and living life.
There really is.
Oh, man. I bet you guys have all kinds of examples.
It's a good exercise to actually go through and create the corollary of parallelism between life and networks.
I'm thinking about just like how many friends, like Dunbar's number, like how many notes can you have in a network before it starts to slow down?
Yeah, yeah.
Maybe 150.
Oh, man.
Okay.
Anyway, I like that you're mind spinning.
I'm thinking like how many can you have?
I think more than 150 for sure.
I also was thinking about the whole Intel and side move was such a clever way to break
through that where, you know, no one had no Intel.
So they're just like slap a stick or Intel inside.
And by the way, they are, you know, Lipu is a very dear friend.
Pat Gelsinger used to be my mentor at EMC.
And so both those people that have had such a profound contribution to that industry in general,
like when you start thinking about them, they're very, very much.
on that mode.
I could see how you pull together this insane collection of humans.
It feels like you're just friends with everybody.
I feel like it's life's too short not to be.
And I'm only friends with people that I feel are good human beings.
Like what I try not to do is I try to minimize my time,
no matter how successful they are,
with people whose energy I don't vibe with,
because I think life's too short.
You know, and in my mind,
one of the most off-putting things is,
look, all of us have a healthy,
There are times when ego gets manifested with insecurity and you have to make sure that you're
at least self-aware enough to know when your ego is starting to take over your behavior
in a way that's counterproductive and all of those things are super important.
But what I think is extremely important is that you, like, life is just fun to live when you
love the people you are around. Can I digress for a second in this one story that I'll,
so I'll tell you the story that was, so my mother was, um, you know, she passed away
two and a half years ago, but she was extremely sick in the hospital for like, um, eight weeks
before she passed away. And I was very close to my mom, like that she was my, my everything,
you know, and, and you were only child. I grew up with a rough childhood.
I had to, you know, my dad was a high-stakes kind of con man like Bernie Madoff.
I didn't want to be any part of that.
So I'd actually left India, come over here, hadn't seen him.
And so he was very abusive to my mom.
So like there was a bunch of that that had happened.
And so we had had a very, you know, kind of difficult early childhood life for me.
And her and I had bonded during that time very, very, you know, at a very deep level.
And so when she came to America, you know, we kind of, she always wanted to have her own place,
but she kind of lived very close by, and she was very dependent on me, on, you know, emotionally and
in every way.
And so I had almost become apparent to her.
And at the last eight weeks, things flipped.
And she was, she became a parent again.
And so we were, you know, kind of, we were getting to the point where she was ending her journey.
And I was sitting like one in the morning at the bedside by her in the hospital.
I was living in the hospital at the time.
And she was sleeping and I was just crying profusely.
And she wakes up and she knows why I'm crying because she's going to be gone soon.
And she looks at me, Lenny, and she's like all perplexed.
And she's like, I had no idea that you loved me so much.
Now, by the way, this is like the most abnormal thing for me to hear because I'm like,
what are you talking about, mom?
Like I, like, you're one of the most important people in my life.
And I was, like, everything that I did was to make sure that my mom was okay.
Why did I, why did it feel that way to her?
Because she didn't know how I was thinking.
And that kind of notion of people don't know what's going on in your mind is so important that
my biggest lesson from that was don't be stingy with words. Because even my mother that knows me
inside and out didn't know how much I loved her, that there's no chance that people in the business
world are going to know how you feel if you're not explicit with them. And so I'm actually
very clear with people when I find them and when I find them rewarding, I let them know how much
they mean because I genuinely find a lot of energy coming out of that and be the circle of
friends just keeps getting bigger and bigger and bigger and I've found that to be like a super
rewarding thing in life and and you're right most of the people that were at the AI summit are
our dear friends you know and isn't that just a better way to live life I've I think we've
uncovered one of the secrets of your success which is just tell people how you feel and
help them see that you appreciate them, make it clear that you appreciate them, that you value them,
which is a lot of people don't do.
They just kind of assume they know that, yeah, that they like you.
And don't make it fake.
And don't make it fake.
Don't make it fake.
You know, if you don't love someone, don't tell them, you love them.
It's like, that's the other thing that I have.
Like, you know.
It's so interesting.
I just, um, we just did a little interview kind of thing with my mother-in-law,
meant for our, our son, just like for him to have when he's old.
they just interviewed her about her story and stuff and they asked her at the end of it
what's something you want Jude which is his name to to know a lesson to learn from you
and it's to just if you love someone tell them you love them as much as you can yeah it's so true
you're so intentional about the way in which you do these things i wish i'd done like uh
i should do that now now i think about it like you're a podcast for my daughter that's
only for her when she gets older
I'll send you these, this group, they do this.
I think they're in the Bay Area, but it's incredible.
It's like a whole documentary thing where they interview you, film all your life for a little bit,
and then make a whole documentary.
Oh, really?
Oh, wow, I'd love that, actually.
Yes.
Oh, man, they're going to get a lot of business right now.
There you go.
Let me end with a question around just your journey.
So today you lead product at a 90,000 person company.
You manage 30,000 people.
Like you said, you.
You grew up in India and Bombay, very far outside Silicon Valley.
A lot of people hearing this today are kind of in a similar boat.
They're way outside of the valley.
They're maybe don't have a lot of obvious way to break in.
They don't have a lot of opportunity.
And they see someone like you, and that's their dream.
What would your advice be to someone in that place right now?
The platform that you choose and the quality of problems that you pick to solve,
actually determine a lot of the path of success for you.
And typically like harder problems have a higher likelihood of success
because the harder problems are the ones that attract better people
to that problem and business is a team sport.
And if you attract people to the problems that are hard and important enough to solve,
then you get the best team.
And the best team, your odds of winning just go up exponentially.
So most people think I'm going to go out and pick an easy enough problem to solve.
And it's like you don't get the best team attracted to you to start up a lemonade stand.
Very important job, but that might not be the thing that actually gets the best team to come to you.
But if you actually pick a hard enough problem to solve, you'll get the best team to come.
So that's one.
Number two, I'd say that you can teach and learn a lot of things in life.
I don't think you can learn hunger.
where you can't teach hunger.
So find what you're intrinsically hungry about
and make sure that you try to pursue that area.
And that's different from passion about something.
It's like in everything that you do in work,
you have to just understand the formula
that there's going to be 30% of the stuff
that you do at work that you're just going to hate.
And you have to get used to things that you hate
that you have to do.
You know, but for the,
but find something that you're really hungry about
that makes you want to come in
to work every day
because the mission is worth
the expenditure of energy
that you're putting into it.
And I'll leave you with a story which was like
I hadn't gone to India in a long time
when I left India, I didn't go back,
I left in 91 and I hadn't gone back
in any kind of meaningful way until 2017.
you know, because of all the trauma and childhood, I was like, you know, I was,
for whatever reason I hadn't gone back.
I took my daughter and we went to Augra to see the Taj Mahal and we went there.
There was this tour guide.
His name was Raj.
And this tour guide was like he understood so much about the product that he was selling,
which was the tour of the Taj Mahal.
I don't know if he was making this shit up or not, but it sounded really good.
and he seemed like he was kind of really on it.
But when we were walking back,
all these people,
and he would just start talking to them,
and he'd bust out in different languages.
You'd talk to someone in German,
talk to someone in French,
someone in Spanish, someone in Hindi,
someone in, you know,
at some point in time, in Mandarin,
and at some point in time,
I kind of start,
dude, how many languages do you speak?
He's like, oh, I speak like, I don't know,
12 or 14 or some ridiculous number.
But I try to learn a new language every year.
I'm like, oh, why is that?
and he goes, well, I just want to honor the people that come here and not be presumptuous that they will speak in the language that I know.
I want to speak in their language.
And I'm thinking to myself, I was a box at the time.
I'm like, this guy is smarter than every person on the executive team and probably just as smart as every salesperson we have.
But he's making $10 a day.
And all of us are enjoying this amazing life.
And it's because we have access to a platform and he doesn't.
So when people start confusing life thinking that everything that I've earned is because of my amazing abilities,
I always kind of question that because there's a lot of luck in this thing.
But when luck does present itself, be extremely prepared to capitalize on it
and make sure that you picked the platform that can actually give you that springboard
because platforms really matter. And if we, like I had the platform and better,
benefit of America, of education, of being in tech, of having great friends and mentors.
All of those things created compounding value, right?
But I intentionally sought out those platforms.
Seek out the platform, be obsessed about being extremely prepared, and don't be intellectually
lazy. Laisiness is not a good trait. So do the preparation that's needed. And then, you know,
just make sure that during that time period that you're doing, if you build a community
around you of people that are vested in your success, I think it's just because life is just a
more fun way to live it rather than being the lone wolf that's going out of by themselves.
And that's why I always feel like making sure that you are expressive and communicative
and don't try to carry the entire world's burden on your shoulders, but actually share it
with people with you.
The people that you share it with actually appreciate that you're sharing it with them.
And most people in the world love to help.
So ask for the help.
But make sure that that help is not transactional.
And don't just go to them when you need something.
actually try to add value first for a long enough amount of time,
not because at some point you might need something from them.
Just hardwire yourself into adding value to others,
and then eventually that value starts showing up.
And life's just a better way to live life.
And I do feel like right now it's hard for kids getting into the workforce and all of that.
So don't lose hope and stay persistent and have stamina
because these things go up and down.
but if you kind of stick with it, the people that have the most amount of persistence,
it's very seldom that they don't end up winning.
Something that comes to me as you share this advice,
Arnold Schwarzenegger's has this book that he put out.
And I feel like the title of the book is the best piece of advice
and the simplest way to describe how to be successful in life,
which is be useful.
That is so good.
Gigi, this was incredible.
is there anything that we didn't cover
that you wanted to share anything
you want to leave listeners with
before we get to our very exciting lightning room?
I think there's a framework that I use
for great companies that might be worth
kind of sharing with people.
Yes.
There's a six-part framework that I have
which is like, you know,
in descending order of importance
and on how to build great companies.
This is...
Amazing.
You get it for free.
You get what you pay.
for it so that take it with a grain of salt, but here's the way I think about it. The most important
thing is timing. The six things you need in a company, if you don't have all these six, you don't
win, but they're stack ranked and descending order of importance, but you have to have all six.
Number one is timing. It's the most important. It's the thing that you control the least.
And there's a lot of companies that have built amazing products, amazing services at the wrong time
in the right market and not one. Right. And so timing really, really.
matters, you don't control timing, but if you don't have timing, you don't win. Number two is
the market. You have to be able to go after a large enough market, a chunk at a time. And if you're
not able to go out and prosecute a market a chunk at a time, but make sure that that keeps getting
bigger and bigger, it's very hard to win. So market tends to be the second most important thing in
my mind after timing. The third one then is team. You know, he have to have the right team. And the
team does not mean just people liking each other.
Team means that it is actually well-rounded.
That means the things that you suck at,
someone else is really good at,
and you've both accepted that of each other.
Like, for example, I have a person that I never go to another job without,
and she is my partner in crime.
And the reason I have her is because she is so good at things that I'm not good at.
You know, and so she's able to,
any job I've taken since I've,
been working with her. It's always, it's a combined deal. Like if we don't have two offers, we don't go,
right? And so team is really important, a well-rounded team where people understand how to,
how to complement each other. And by the way, in the team, sometimes people say, well, isn't a team
more important than market? No, if you have a great market mediocre team, the market pulls you up.
If you have a shitty market and a great team, the market drags you down. The market always wins.
So no, timing, market team. Number four.
Four is product. I think product is a soul of a company. That's the place where people seek
value is what are you delivering to me? What problem are you solving to me gets manifested through
the delivery of a product? So you have to make sure that you build a great product. I actually
think it's unethical to have a mediocre product sold in the market. So timing, market, team,
product. Number five is brand. I had a mentor one time that told me, Mark Lewis, he said,
Githu, don't ever go to a company who's lost their brand mojo because it's very hard to resurrect it back.
If they have lost their product and you can fix the product, but do you think Sybase is coming back?
No.
Once you lose your brand, once you lose the trust, people don't come back to you that much.
It's very hard to do.
And the number six is distribution.
Just because you build it, they will not come.
You have to make sure that you figure out a scaled mechanism of getting that offering to many, many people.
And so timing
Trump's market, market
Trump's team,
team Trump's product,
product trumps brand,
brand trumps distribution.
You don't have all six.
You don't win.
What an amazing nugget to have
at the end here.
Just so I understand
how you think about this
is do you have like a template
that you work through
when you're thinking about a new
business unit or new product
to launch?
Is it like what's timing right?
Is market?
What market do we start with?
How do you actually operationalize?
It's actually exactly like that.
I will ask myself
the question on,
is this the right
time for us to go out and double triple, triple down. We might still be in experimentation mode,
but do I need to double down on this right now? Because this might not manifest for another seven
years. And then it's going to be too early. And by the way, you have to know the difference
between a megatrend and hype cycle. When there's a megatrend, don't fight it.
And don't succumb to the temptation of trying to go out and do vanity.
worked for a hype cycle. And there's a big difference between the two. And I think having the judgment,
the older you get, the better that judgment gets, it's just miles. But having that judgment is really
important because you see a pattern recognition at some point. I imagine AI megatrend.
AI is a megatrend in my mind. And, you know, there's a bunch of hype cycles we've had where
I don't, I never particularly subscribe to them. And the easiest way for me to tell is,
but the way it's described, is it easy to understand what this could do in its ultimate form for most people?
Or do you need to have a PhD to understand what someone's saying?
When you feel like you need a PhD to understand what someone's saying, chances are it ain't going to be a megatrend.
Because by definition, a megatrend is it's going to impact a large population of the world.
And if the thing is too complicated, chances are it's not going to have that level of outside effect.
That's an awesome heuristic.
I imagine you're thinking Web3 as a classic example.
Yes, Book 3 was the one that I actually cite all the time.
Like this is like, I couldn't understand what it did.
And like all of these people were kind of like, oh, Web 3, Web 3.
I'm like, I couldn't make heads of tails out of a use case.
But with AI, it's like you go to chat, GPT, you ask it a question, you get an answer.
I get this.
This is easy, you know.
So going back to your framework just to kind of close loop there, it's really interesting that timing is the first variable you look at.
This could be an amazing idea.
you got the right team.
Amazing product that works really well.
But the timing may just not be right.
And no matter how awesome it is, it's not going to work.
Steve Jobs put away the iPad because he thought that the iPhone was a better idea.
And timing wise, he actually made exactly the right call.
You know, the iPad became successful because of the iPhone success.
The reverse order might have not had the same effect.
But he had to make sure that he focused on one thing.
and he actually puts the other, he said,
the timing's not right, but I'm going to get back to it.
So by the way, when timing is wrong,
it doesn't mean that you scrap the idea.
It just means that you might put it on ice for a bit.
There's a lot of that happening right now
where people try to do a thing,
and now AI actually makes it possible.
And now they're like, oh, shit.
Yeah.
It was way too early.
And the other thing you have to keep in mind is,
you have to also be good enough to know that
when something is going to be ready in six months,
you can't think about what it's doing today.
Like, AI is moving so fast right now.
Like, one of the things I tell my team is,
fast forward six months from now and anticipate what that's going to do and get prepared for
that world, don't get prepared for the world of today thinking that you're not going to be
able to get there because in six months, your assumption sets are going to be different.
And please don't actually then bias yourself with the assumption sets you have right now to not
move forward. Like one of the worst things I think companies do sometimes is they put too much
emphasis solely on experience. And I think experience is good, but experience can actually be
meaningfully bad in some areas where you get too biased.
And so you almost have to say that I have to have the ability to unlearn.
And combination of experience with complete inexperience is what creates the magic.
Because the inexperience allows you to ask questions that you might have never had
with experience.
And the combo of those two gives you the best of the pattern recognition, plus the charting
new territory that's never been kind of walked on before.
Yeah, this is a trend
I've been hearing on this podcast
that people worry about young people
and people graduating out of college right now
and jobs and AI,
but they're the people that are most open-minded
about what AI can do for them
and how to harness AI
and not code in the way people have always coded.
It's just like, okay, this is the way it works now.
Experience Lenny can jade us, right?
And I always say, when people say,
oh, entry-level people will never be hired again,
that's the stupidest thing a company can do
because now what you've done
is you have completely shut the door to new fresh ideas.
Like, I cannot think today the way I thought when I was 19.
There is just no way that I can do that.
But what I can try to do is I can try to make sure I surround myself
for enough amount of my time to get exposed to that thinking
and then couple it with what I know
and maybe have something better
than what either of those two could have had by themselves.
Yes.
Well, with that G2,
we have reached our very exciting lightning round.
I've got five questions for you.
All right.
First question, what are two or three books that you find yourself recommending most to other people?
The Bible and tech in my mind is Innovators, Dilemma, and Innovator's Solutions from Clayton Christensen.
I think you have to read that book.
And I'd say I'd recommend people that read it every few years.
And the other one that I love is Ben Horowitz's book, Hard Thing About Hard Things,
really talks about how you manage your psychology when things get hard.
I think those are the ones.
I'm not a big believer that you keep reading
thousands of books all the time
because I think, like, to me, retention really matters.
And my brain is just not that big
that I can retain that much.
So I tend to distill the essence
of a few things quite a bit more.
At least the older I've gotten,
I've actually used that pattern more.
Favorite recent movie or TV show
that you've really enjoyed?
I don't remember the name of it,
but the Brad Pitt F-1 movie
that I saw that was pretty cool.
The way, it was a recent Brad Pitt movie?
Yeah.
Was it F1?
It was F1, I think.
I think it was called F1.
It was pretty cool.
Yeah.
I think that's a nominee for best picks.
Zach Brown is a good friend of mine
and we're a big supporter of McLaren
and so it was actually pretty cool
to watch that movie.
Oh man, I bet so many stories I haven't tapped into.
Okay.
Favorite product you recently discovered that you really love?
I mean, it's cliche,
but I feel like what
chat GPT, Gemini and Claude have done
because it's changed lives
it's changed my life in the way that I learn
in some ridiculous ways.
So I actually feel like
when I got this new job to run all product for Cisco,
there's zero chance
I would have been able to do it if AI wasn't there
because I didn't know anything about
so many domains that we were in
and I had to get an accelerated
you know,
a training course
within a matter of three months.
And, I mean,
I worked around the clock during that time,
but I could have worked around the clock
without the tooling,
and I would have been nowhere near as effective.
So I feel like those three have done an amazing thing.
And Grok, even.
And what you're seeing with Grok tied to Twitter
is pretty amazing.
Wow. That's a profound statement.
I've never heard that before.
someone at your level that you feel like you wouldn't be able to have done this job without
AI.
It's your chance.
Especially for someone without the background in networking and hardware.
Yeah.
That is so interesting.
It's amazing how just like at every level AI is helping, like at the most bottom end and
also in your level.
Most people don't like realize like I fundamentally believe this is the reason that I'm
able to enjoy some of the experiences I have.
Like, I was lucky enough that I'd made enough money before this job.
That was not, that was not the thing that was actually holding us back.
But the reason I'm able to experience some of the things that this job afforded me to experience
would have not even been remotely possible without AI.
Like, no chance that would have happened.
Unreal.
Okay, two more questions.
Do you have a favorite life motto that you often come back to and work your life?
You already shared a couple, but is there anything else?
you want to double down on when you've already shared.
Stamina trumps intellect.
I feel like it's very important to have smart people,
but you can become smart if you have curiosity and hunger
and staying power and persistence.
And so I think that trait of like learning to learn
and constantly being hungry and having the stamina and persistence
is far more important than the absolute measure of intellect
that you might have because that is very, very, very.
trainable and learnable over time and improvable over time. But hunger is very, it's not
teachable is what I've found. I 100% agree with that. Interestingly, when you watch AI work,
it's just like, partly the reason it's so good is it just keeps trying. It's just like, okay,
this didn't work. Let me just keep going. What else can we? Just keep trying. Just give me a half an
hour. I'll figure this out. Okay. Last question. So when you were younger, you worked at Sizzler
Steakhouse making $4 an hour.
That's what I read.
2.25, not four.
It was below minimum wage.
But we got tips, we got tips, though.
So that was nice.
Okay, I see.
Did you have a favorite dish at Sizzler, is my question?
Yes, they used to have this Malibu chicken dish.
It was like magic.
And then it was probably, I don't know if people know this,
and I know this is rapid fire,
but I used to stutter when I started working.
at Sizzler and Sizzler is what allowed me to break out of my shell and not stutter
because, you know, something changed in my brain.
I'm like, I have to entertain people.
And if I don't, then they're not going to give me a good tip.
And so the stuttering went away at Sizzler.
So I have an immense debt of gratitude.
And I think everyone should work in hospitality for a while in the younger years.
And I'm kind of sad that my daughter has no interest in doing that because I'm like,
wish she just worked as a waitress somewhere for a bit. And it's just so important to just,
there's so many lessons on, you know, I, I, I cleaned toilets at the restaurant. I actually
washed dishes. I actually rated on tables. And it was, it was the best experience I had. Like,
it shaped me for what was to come in the most profound way. G2, you're just endlessly full of
wisdom. Two final questions. Where can folks find you? Where do you want to point people to
to learn more about you, what you're up to, and how can listeners be useful to you?
Where you can find me is I tend to, a lot of people will ask, you know, the more
success you encounter, the more people want to get mentored by you and learn from the experiences
you've had. And I have run out of cycles to be able to do that on a one-on-one basis. So what I
try to do is do a lot of that on LinkedIn and Twitter, but largely I do a lot of that
LinkedIn. And so find me on LinkedIn. I tend to be very open about not just the work stuff,
but the non-work stuff to do that. How can people be useful to me? Was that the question?
What was the last question? That is. How can listeners be useful to you? How can listeners be
useful to me? If there is, I would say that if you got something out of this session and if you get
something out of whatever you learn from social media, just pay it forward and help the next
person out a little bit more. Yesterday I was at a talk and someone pulled me aside and said,
hey, I saw your LinkedIn post about this, don't be stingy with words. And Jitu, since then, I've
been going to see my parents once every two months or so in India. And when I see them, I tell
them that I love them all the time.
Literally, what could be more rewarding to me than that?
It was amazing that they were able to go out and have joy brought to their lives
as a result of something they got inspired by something that I learned in my life.
That's like paid forward.
I'm excited to hear the stories that come out of this conversation.
G2, thank you so much for being here.
Thank you for having me.
It was great.
Bye, everyone.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you found this valuable, you can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review, as that really helps other listeners find the podcast.
You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at Lenny's Podcast.com.
See you in the next episode.
