My First Million - #119 with Josh Elman - How To Get The Benefits of Entrepreneurship Without Starting a Company
Episode Date: October 14, 2020Sam Parr (@theSamParr) and Shaan Puri (@ShaanVP) are joined by Josh Elman (@joshelman) on the pod today. Elman is a veteran of LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, and Robinhood to name a few. This guy knows ...Silicon Valley and growth better than anyone else. In today’s episode you’ll hear: Shaan asks Josh to give his background (1:00), Sam asks if it’s better to start your own thing or climb your way up in a tech startup (8:25), Elman answers the question “what technology or company has that 10x or 100x potential in the next few years (9:15), Josh explains the “meta-verse” or “the third place” and how AI will lead the way there (18:15), how the TV show Black Mirror has influenced tech (24:55), Elman unpacks his time at Stanford and the power of being around intelligent people and gives some stories on his early days at Unicorn companies (31:00), Sam puts Josh on the spot and asks him how he can 10x his own business (47:35), This episode we are partnering with Square! Square makes it easy for your business to accept payment, and so much more! Check out this week's sponsor at square.com/go/hustle! Joined our private FB group yet? It's a page where people share each others million dollar ideas or what they're already working on: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ourfirstmillion. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Transcript
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I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like no days off.
On the road, let's travel, never looking back.
We're back, and we got a special guest.
We've been on fire with guests lately.
So we had, who do we have?
We had Austin from Lambda School.
We had Harley, who's the president of Shopify,
and now big shoes to fill.
So Josh Elman is here.
Josh is in the house.
You can give your kind of like,
I don't know. You could give your resume a little bit better than I can, but I'll give you the highlights. I'll tell
people what I think about Josh. About every two months or so now, I call Josh for some combination of life
advice, career advice, whatever, because this guy's sort of had kind of a miraculous career at Silicon Valley.
So LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, Robin Hood, was a VC an investor, and just basically has been doing
growth in Silicon Valley for a long, long time, growth in product. So Josh, what did I miss?
Zazzle? Where were you at earlier in?
your career. Look, I started my career at Real Networks in 1997 with the idea of like we could put
audio, video on the internet. And Real was the company that could have grown up to be YouTube
plus Netflix plus everything else. But that's sort of been the pattern in my career. Real was sort of
one of the companies that didn't make it all the way through, but it's always been, if we get this
thing right, it could be so much bigger for the world. LinkedIn was 15 people when I showed up.
We turned into the world's largest professional network. Facebook was like 500 people and they got to
work on the platform and we thought, could we get everybody to log into websites and apps with
their Facebook ID and I launched Facebook Connect and now that's doing it.
Twitter was like 80 people.
We got it from like 10 to 100 million users when I was there to like tune into daily
information.
That's kind of been my kind of pattern is I have jumped around a little more than I thought,
which is part of why I thought I'd be a VC for a while too.
I really like just building products and getting into it with teams and making stuff that matters.
How many people worked at Facebook when you, so LinkedIn you were number 15.
Twitter, you were 30, you said? 80? I forget what he's. No, 80s. In the 80s. And Facebook?
Facebook is like 500 something. It's a little bit bigger. Damn. So you have a good hit rate.
Yeah, he's a good picker. We had a good conversation before you came on. It was like, oh, well,
we talk about. And I thought, okay, there's, you know, the normal brainstorming of cool ideas.
You're actually pretty plugged into, like, consumer in a way that most people aren't. So I think we
will do that. The other thing I thought was interesting was this career path you have, which was like,
something in between, like not the founder and CEO, but not employee number 2,500,
like senior management, but way later, you had this like awesome kind of get on the rocket ship
while there's still, you know, some seats available early enough where you could be like,
hey, I didn't just join a ready made success, but late enough where you weren't like two guys
in a garage, just scratching your balls trying to figure out what's going on. So talk about,
was that intentional or was that accidental that you went on that career path?
Looking back, it was clearly accidental that it turned out as well as it did. But I think my instinct
was always to go jump on those things that I just thought could be a lot bigger for the world.
You know, in college, I interned in Microsoft the summer of Windows 95, which is ancient history
now for most people. But this was like the launch of really personal computing in the home.
And it was already a giant company in 1995. And I was like, you know what, this is too big to work at.
You're working on the smallest piece.
I worked on custom charts within Excel, and I looked around and there was, you know,
tens of thousands of other people working on other minuscule things that added up to this giant Microsoft.
But the next summer, I interned for a 10-person company then called Cartoffel Soft,
and it didn't quite have product market fit, and it was trying to find its way through.
And I was like, oh, that's almost too small.
Like, I want something with a little bit of momentum or like where I'm not,
where I can tell the story to myself of why it can be giant for the world.
world. As I started after graduation and just thought about this in my career, I was always like,
what is that thing that's working enough that if I can go be a part of helping it really grow big,
I can both have a huge impact on the company, an impact on the world because they'll all get
to see this product like audio video on the internet or professional networking or helping your
social identity go with you across the web. And still, look, if you get in early enough,
if the company becomes really big, you can still make an outsized money versus just taking
a larger company salary on a yearly basis.
What's the growth and the absolute threshold of like this can be big?
So it has to grow by this much and it has to have the potential to be what in order to
peak your interest?
So in my mind, it has to be able to get 10x bigger, 10x bigger in users, revenue or market
cap with a shot at 100x.
And so I do that math in my head, which is like if I'm joining this company over the next
three to four years.
Do you remember having that conversation with yourself, either for Twitter or Facebook?
or something at the time?
Like, can you take us, like, do you remember what your thought process was then?
It might have been off.
Do you remember what you talked about then?
So Facebook, when I joined in early 2008, a lot of people had already written it off as giant.
Facebook had, it's called 70 million monthly active users.
It had been valued at 15 billion by Microsoft a few months before I started.
So it wasn't like I was a genius for joining Facebook when it was a couple of college kids
and just networks on college.
I still went back and I said, look, at 15 billion.
I think this can be a 10x.
I think it's a $150 billion market cap company.
And so my stock will grow 10x at least.
And the user base can easily get to 5 to 700 million people as it really connects everybody worldwide.
And it's going to be the dominant platform.
And I was working on the Facebook platform specifically.
And I was like every app, every consumer product is going to need to run through Facebook over the next three to four years in the same way that they all have to run through Google and care about SEO.
I was like, we're going to go from kind of mattering to like, this is just the way the internet works.
And I just saw that possibility.
Which of those projects that you mentioned or ones that you didn't mention, did you make the most money off of?
I was going to ask the same question because the companies all had different outcomes, but, you know, depending on when you joined and who you are,
you might personally benefit more from one that wasn't as big of a success as the other.
Actually have averaged out about the same amount from LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter.
In each one, the time that I got in was either earlier or later, I got a little bit of,
bit more senior. LinkedIn, I was really much earlier in my career, but it was 15 people. So even though
I had a small grant, like it worked out, I was more senior by the time I got to Facebook and then even more
by the time I got to Twitter. And so I got slightly larger grants than what you'd get at that time.
And Facebook was worth, I think, I got in in the, my common stock was worth about $4 billion.
And at Twitter, not my personal share, the company, you know, evaluation. And at Twitter, it was right around a billion.
And so, you know, I got to see, you know, meaningful upside from each of those.
But it's funny.
They kind of averaged out to about the same.
And you probably have made more in this path than a lot of founders who you've invested in
even who hit successes, right?
Because you had four different career journeys where you were able to get that 10x or more.
Even a few hundred thousand dollars of stock turns into a few million dollars every single
time.
That's more than a lot of founders make when they succeed.
Yeah, I would say if you're a founder who manages to sell your company for over
$25 million and still hold a meaningful share, you start to catch up to what I was really fortunate
to do. But he's selling a company for $25 million and still, you know, not being totally
diluted down to like nothing. Like that's not easy for most founders. I have a lot of other friends
that started companies raised $25 million from VCs and ended up making a lot less personally because
they weren't able to find a great outcome. I have a friend who sold his company for $997 million.
He walked away with $3 million.
He spoke at HustleCon.
Someone could probably Google that.
I'm sure they will.
So it's pretty crazy.
Picking back off that, my wife works at Facebook.
And a lot of people ask her because of my job, they're like,
so, would you ever start something?
And in my head, I'm like, no, don't do that.
You're like, you're going to, or sorry, she works at Airbnb now.
I used to work at Facebook.
And I'm like, no.
She's on the bash track to get paid a lot of money probably as an executive.
You probably have way less stress.
No.
So I think the path to wealth,
A lot of people say, I always say it's like starting a small business and not raising money,
becoming a salesperson or climbing your way up at like a fang, a Netflix or a huge tech company.
I think that's true. And I think that's what's really changed over the past decade.
Because 10 years ago, actually the salary difference to being at startups or other things was much less than it is now.
I mean, at the fangs now, I have friends who make three to five times more annually than what people at startups take home with,
hopes that that equity is worth it. But when the equity has to make up a three to five times gap
in like cash to take home, it's even more different than it used to be. So I agree that like those
are exactly the ways that you can make the most money at the lowest stress level. There's
always stress. Josh, give me the companies. Okay, if you were out in the job market today and you're
looking for, okay, you were looking for your next one. That's in that same sweet spot, right? They have
something figured out, but they still have that 10x, 100x potential.
that you know, you don't know if it's going to come true.
Rattle off companies off top of your head that you think would fit, you'd be looking at,
you'd say, okay, I'm going to take a look at these.
I'm going to kick the tires on these companies because I think they have that potential.
Sean, we get asked this all the time.
I know, and we have really shitty answers.
So I think Josh, I'm like, I don't know.
Yeah.
So I'm first going to tell the honest truth, which is this is harder than it ever was
because the companies have gotten funded, all the good companies have gotten funded at valuations
that are the three to five times higher than what they would have been five or seven years ago.
It's already priced in.
So you're getting more of that multiple priced in.
But if we just talk about the companies, I think, can really go public and still be really meaningful.
Like, Roblox, it was just rumored today they're filing for an IPO.
Like, they're a company that is connecting kids around the world in play.
And I think that they have huge legs to be a much bigger sort of metaverse.
Greylock, where I used to work as an investor, so just in case there's, I don't mean to have any conflicts,
but I figured I'd say that.
Discord where I'm on the board, so even more conflict, I think, is just one of the few consumer
companies that's growing and lighting things up in just the way that they connect people
around these sort of shared spaces and shared places, which is one of the biggest trends.
In FinTech, Robin Hood, Coinbase, and Chime are the three companies that I think are
going to come out of this wave and just the massive outcomes.
And then internationally, I'm quite bullish on Revolut and TransferWise as two companies
I think that will still be very significant.
And then when you get into health,
this is an area I wish I knew more about,
but if I were telling somebody to go pick a new trend
that's going to generate these $10 or $100 billion companies in the future,
I would tell them to become an expert on digital health and genomics
because I think that that's actually the category
that the fangs aren't going to own.
There is so much invention and transformation that's about to happen.
And the biggest outcome of this pandemic is going to be us just refreshing and re-looking it
how we handle health and biology and data and information.
Sean, are you an investor in that levels company?
No.
So, Josh, have you heard of the levels?
Everyone, a lot of people talk about it.
Yeah, it's the one where you just like prick yourself.
It's called a continuous glucose monitor.
I got it on it.
There's Sean's thing.
I haven't gotten mine yet.
I need to get it.
So I think that's pretty cool.
That company, and it aligns a little bit of what you're saying.
Another company that I think is interesting is Zapier.
You know Zapier?
Yeah.
They spoke at HustlCon two years ago.
And back then, I would have said,
100%. And if you can get a job somewhere, get a job here. I still think there's a ton of
room to grow. I will bet money that they'll have an Atlassian style exit. And then I would also add
that new thing. Have you seen bubble? The no-code tool bubble? Yeah. Very interested in that.
Is there any of that you would add Sean? Well, I said Flexport last time and you were like,
no, fuck you. It doesn't count. It's out. To Josh's criteria, it does, which is can it become
10 or 100 times bigger? And I would say, yeah, if it's, I think it was valued at $3 billion last
I had heard, if you told me that becomes a $30 billion or $100 billion company, I'd be like,
oh, yeah, freight forwarding, becoming this sort of software stack around freight forwarding.
It's just so boring to bring up.
Everyone knows they're awesome.
You know they're awesome, but a lot of people don't know that they're awesome.
Let's see.
What else?
I'm going to look at the apps on my phone.
Well, we had Lambda School come, and I wasn't convinced the guy, Austin was the
guest.
I wasn't convinced that was an interesting idea.
I actually have changed my opinion.
I think that is quite interesting.
I don't know how expensive, how big the company is now.
Five billion. It's going to become five billion.
Call it it now. Five billion is where it goes.
Paul Graham tweeted this out over the weekend and had a bunch of people talking about it,
which was he goes, all right, you know, the resemblance are too uncanny.
I'm calling it now.
Stripe is the next Google.
Sam, you already reacted.
Give me that.
Dude, it's so boring.
Like it's a big, yeah, duh.
That's so, it's such a easy thing to say.
You're missing his point, though.
His point is it doesn't matter if it's already big.
The question is, can it still grow 100x from here?
Can it still grow, you know, 10x, 20x, 30x from here?
Because all that matters is your entry and your multiple.
It doesn't matter if it's five that becomes 50 or 50 that becomes 500.
It's the same thing.
Whatever.
Great.
I buy into that.
It's just such an obvious answer.
So this company I invested is too early, but I think it will win.
It's this company called DuCon, which is basically Shopify for Indian shopkeepers.
And that company is growing faster than anything I've ever seen.
And so I'm pretty sure that if I was going to go do something, like if I was 25 right now and not like married with a kid, I would be in India.
I would have been working for him for the last.
month and be like, give me whatever job title you want. I'm going to be your right hand, man.
Let's take this thing to, you know, $2 billion, $3 billion, because I think it can get there
in a few years. Josh, you said the trends that interest you, and Sean, chime in whenever
you find your list, but you said that the trends that interest to you are some, what did you
say genome stuff? I said genomics and sort of all that we're going with digital health and data.
So tell people what's going on in those spaces that's, give us some examples, because I think
most people here will hear genomics, but like most people listen to this, don't meet any
genomics companies any day of the week. So give us some examples of what's cool. So I think a lot of
where the interesting company started, like, Grail, which I'm not sure if you guys followed,
just got bought for like $7 billion by a health company. Like they, a bunch of them started by like,
we're going to sequence the genomes and we're going to be able to go and like figure out strains
of cancer and people's propensity to have certain diseases later in life and could take like
precautions against them. Color genomics is another company that I think is really interesting
in the space. They started with being able to detect breast.
cancer gene and be able to help you do that with much cheaper tests with their own lab.
The challenge with companies like that is they had to go make their money by convincing
companies to buy this as more like a medical benefit and buy this is a way to like lower medical
costs.
And so they end up becoming these like challenging enterprise sales companies around these categories.
Where I'm interested in stuff that starts more like levels or starts more like you would
get your own, you know, genomic tests.
And all of a sudden then it would just help you like change your lifestyle.
just a little bit. Start eating this a little bit more than this, or start just doing this type
of exercise that or this and, you know, like levels where you're doing this continuous monitoring,
all of a sudden now you're paying just a little bit of money on a consistent basis for this sort
of like doctor coach that's giving you very, very personalized advice.
Why do you think that that's easier, though? When I think of what's easiest, I would think
hiring a Salesforce would be far easier than dealing with millions of customers.
You know, I think my brain and my whole career has been so B to C that to me, the sales force,
is sort of like you called strike boring.
Like I call that sort of boring and straightforward.
To convince companies to buy something as a benefit
becomes very much a cost-benefit scenario.
Well, they either be able to attract better employees
or they lower their medical costs.
I actually get much more interested.
Can you actually change the lifestyles and millions of people?
If you can do just that a little bit,
you can create a huge business for yourself.
You said that one.
It sounded like you actually had a few more that intrigue you.
I'm really interested in what some people are calling the metaverse
or the third place or basically
where do we go actually spend time online?
I think right now a lot of our online time is spent solo.
We are looking at Netflix or we're viewing our Facebook feeds or our Instagram feeds
and we think we're interacting but we're not.
And we're just starting to see the rise.
I mean, gameplay is obviously a massive phenomenon.
Zoom calls just aren't it, even though that's what everybody's doing right now.
So I think these places that we spend meaningful time together online is about to grow substantially.
And even though we're all going to get back in the real world soon and be able to hang out,
we're still going to realize that like our time at home where we're just scrolling through
Facebook or Instagram can still be much better spent together.
So Roblox, Minecraft are teaching kids to do this young gameplay,
whether it's Among Us, which is the hot game now, or, you know, League of Legends says that
for people who've figured that out.
But I think this is now going to become much more of a everybody habit.
But can I bring two up that are off of that, which is the first, I saw it,
last weekend, I think, and it blew my mind.
It was called Replica. Have you guys seen Replica?
Yes, I was going to mention them.
Oh, my God.
So are you using it, Sam, or you just saw the concept you got excited?
I'm using it. I'm playing with it. It's crazy, fascinating.
Wait, okay. Explain it first.
And then tell us what your experience has been.
I put it as crudely and basic as possible, which is basically, it's like an AI online
girlfriend or online therapist. They call it like your AI best friend.
And so it's smarter child for those AOL, you know, aim people back in the day.
And I don't know if they're just using, what's that GPT3 thing?
They put this off from scratch.
Wow, that's pretty crazy.
So basically you log in, you message, you make your person a girl or a boy or non-binary,
whatever you want to make it.
And you could like pick your avatar.
And then like Megan or whatever you name her or him is going to become your friend.
And you could talk to them about yada, yada, yada.
And the reason why I think it's going to be awesome is because I think that Americans,
are going to be similar to Japan, where they just have less sex, and the guys get addicted to
this type of stuff, and this is like, where it becomes their online girlfriend. I also think that
online therapy is booming right now, and for a lot of therapy, you could use this as your therapist,
and I think you can get kind of an interesting benefit from it. I also think you could use it
for group therapy, but your entire group is fake except for you. And I think that... Sam, let me ask you a
question. If you took all the guys in, let's say, the United States, do you think there's more
sex happening or masturbation?
Masturbation, easy.
Particularly by a factor of what?
Like, would you say 2x, 5x, 10x, 20x?
What do you think it's more?
Well, which generation?
I think that Gen Z is having significantly less sex than...
Okay, let's say, you know, our age and under.
What would you guess?
Is it?
Two or 300% less?
Okay, so you think it's a two or three X difference.
I think it's probably like a 20x difference.
I think there's probably 20x more.
But let's say, there's somewhere in the middle.
And you would think, right, somebody would say, oh, the real thing is better.
And then there's all these reasons why the real thing is either unavailable,
or it's not better, it's less convenient,
it's less, you know, there's less emotion involved,
all these reasons.
So maybe the same thing happens just with relationships.
Like that's kind of the,
that's the bull case for what you're describing,
which is why would I want this, you know,
going and getting a girlfriend, hard,
having somebody who is, you know,
high convenience,
who doesn't cause all this drama
or emotional entanglement.
Maybe this is just the easier way.
And so maybe there's two to three
or 20 times more people who want a relationship
that is the equivalent of masturbation.
What masturbation is to sex,
Maybe there's something like that to having a girlfriend.
What do you think about that?
Josh, you answer.
I mean, I'm still trying to get my opinion shaped around it, but what do you think?
Dude, that was a good theory, I thought.
I thought I put out a good thesis.
It is.
My take is I don't think it's a replacement, but I think it's the training ground.
I actually think that it becomes the way that you get better.
You can practice the skills that you want to have so that when you do encounter the real
relationship, you have that.
Now, the risk is it gets so good that you,
go to have real relationships and they suck compared to how good your virtual replica is.
Right, which is a problem that people have with porn as well.
Porn creates this like idealistic, you know, pseudo fantasy.
And you get so trained on that, the real thing is like hard.
It's like a Ukraine team.
Like when I went and researched them, they're not from America.
Do you know where they are?
Is it good, though, Sam?
Is it like amazing?
Like when you showed me your GPT3 thing, that was like amazing.
Is this amazing?
Not yet.
No.
It's really cool.
but it is not amazing yet.
But they have a Facebook group
where a lot of their users are
and they're fanatical.
So I went and researched all the Facebook users
and they freaking loved it.
So I think it's good enough to be big,
but no, it's not as good.
I actually think it's the opposite of GPD3.
GPT3 is amazing at the demo.
It's not as great the 10th time you use it.
Actually, the replica is one of those things
that gets better over time,
the more that you put in,
the more you get hooked.
Now maybe the like 100th or 1,000th time you use it,
you start realizing what I am talking to a robot, maybe I'm going to detach.
I actually think it's one of those things that ramps up much better,
whereas like I can blow you away with GPT3,
but then you ask me for like a couple of harder things and then it just falls.
That's how I am with the Oculus, right?
Like when I use the quest, I was like, oh my God, you know,
that first hour was mind blowing and now it's collecting dust over there
because am I going to keep doing this, you know, the 10th time that novelty is now worn off
and now it's, you know, just this box in my house.
Josh, do you actually use this replica thing
or are you talking kind of in theory?
It's like it gets better every time.
I used it for a while.
It was like two months
that I was having a lot of fun with it.
And then I started to get to that point
where I would have other conversations
that it couldn't kind of keep growing with me
until I sort of fell out.
I do know the team
and they are in Russia as Sam was asking about.
I looked at investing early
and have kept in touch with them.
I really think they're on to something.
This is the closest company
I've seen to Samantha from her.
If you remember the movie her,
which I still think is the best movie
to predict kind of trends
that should make sense
in the next sort of four to five years.
I'm glad we're on the same wavelength.
That gives me a lot of,
I've just, my confidence level has just been boosted.
Thank you.
Sam's really got a new pep in his step here.
He's like, yeah, I wanted something.
It's also like, you know, another place for ideas
is go watch Black Mirror and then like actually build the startup that does it.
There's a Black Mirror episode where I think somebody's,
her boyfriend, her husband dies,
and then she has this like synthetic replica to hang out with.
But it's like not quite the same, but it's a pretty good echo.
That's actually one of the origin stories of this company replica is the founder had a dear friend pass away,
and they used a lot of the text and messages to actually recreate a bunch of that to train it.
And there's another company that just got like tons of funding that's like these ex-apple, like, OG Apple people.
Like they, you know, they, I forgot, they like designed the iPod and like the Mac or whatever.
Like they designed Steve Jobs, Turtle Neck or something.
And so then they spun out now and they're creating like a new wearable.
And they raised like, I don't know, what was it, like $30 million, $50 million or something straight out the gate.
And there's some patents about what it is.
And it's straight from a Black Mirror episode.
In Black Mirror, there's one episode where it's like you had this wearable implant that basically records your whole day.
And then you like have your memory as like a video, basically.
And these guys have this like wearable clip on thing that you put on your chest.
That's basically kind of like always recording and you're able to go back and look at it or capture it or share it.
or do whatever you want from it.
But I think, yeah, there's a lot of black mirror technology out there.
Josh, you said something, I forget exactly how you phrased it.
You're talking about, like, things happen because of quarantine and working home and where
are people spending the internet.
I've got one that I've been talking about.
I've been talking about this since before COVID.
And it hasn't quite picked up yet, but I just want to be on record as predicting it,
which is new browsers.
There's two or three companies that are in this space.
The first is called the browser company.
I think it's called that.
The second is the guy who started a mixed panel.
He's got this new one called Mighty.
Mighty.
And there's maybe two or three more that are quite fascinating.
What do you think about those?
I don't know about those companies being the ones to do it,
but that trend is quite interesting.
Do you have an opinion?
I mean, I think there's brave too.
I almost feel like the browser is last year's technology
or last decades technology.
And so I'm like a whole new browser.
Like it just takes so much habit to change.
And it takes so much to change.
And then you end up monetizing off of search.
until you then end up beholden to Google.
Now, that said, there was a rumor that the government is going to try to say that Chrome has to be sold by Google as part of all this antitrust stuff.
And if that happened, then I think this trend is wide open because all of a sudden Chrome is a separate company looks a lot less interesting than Chrome is part of Google.
But I feel like it's more like that than we're all waiting for a browser that solves all our problems.
Here's the version of that that I like.
I don't think anybody's doing it.
But there's this trend of, you know, multiplayer software.
So, you know, you have Photoshop, which is like a solo person, you know, photo editing thing.
And then you get Figma, which is like, hey, why don't we all be able to collaborate on the same thing?
And it's in the cloud and all this stuff.
And then you have the same thing for Microsoft Word.
You have Google Docs.
And you have email.
That's a single player experience.
And you have Front, which is like a team, you know, collaborative version of it.
So taking something to a solo player and then making it collaborative is a interesting thing.
And so I wonder if somebody's going to do this with the browser, which is today.
My browser is my solo player experience, and nobody's built the right social or collaborative
version of that, where my team, we all somehow share a browser that's like some good experience.
So that's where I'd be looking more so than what those guys are doing today.
That's interesting.
You think someone's going to, and you're looking to fund that?
If I saw something that was doing that, that I liked, yeah, I'd fund that because you could see
this happening over and over and over again.
And so anytime you take a staple tool that's today used only single player, and if you actually
crack the collaborative use case, it's a recipe for multi-billion-dollar companies. It just keeps happening.
So if I found that around the browser, I'd be excited about it. For browsers, we got to keep our
eyes out on browsers. We both said to our opinions. We're going to find out, I think, in a year
if we're right or wrong. Josh, you said something earlier about selling a company for $25 million
as a bootstrapped or business or owning a lot of it. A lot of people who we have on here,
as well as a lot of the listeners are people who have small businesses that they can hopefully
sell for potentially tens of millions. But it's a very bootstrapy crowd.
my company where we've never raised Metro Capital,
but everything that you've done is definitely the traditional,
like go big or go home type of mentality,
which is neat.
Why have you gone that route versus the smaller business
that can make 10, 20 million revenue and maybe sell for a good,
interesting amount or you just own all of it and pay yourself a lot of money?
I mean, why one over the other?
You know, I think for me,
my orientation has always been on sort of impact to the world
over just a business or things for myself.
And I actually think, and I'm not sure where I got that bug.
Maybe it actually was that summer that I worked at Microsoft where I did realize that, like, hey, this little thing that started up in Seattle.
I'd grown up in the Seattle area.
So Bill Gates was my hero.
Even when I was in sixth grade, I would like, who's your local hero?
And I would always do projects on Bill Gates.
So I think I always wanted to touch the world in that way.
And so everything I've oriented myself to was those go big or go home, get to massive scale.
Can this reach hundreds of millions of people?
which is also like the power of technology.
And local businesses can be amazing
and can be incredible,
the profitable and lucrative
and touch some people's lives a lot.
But I've always wanted to go for that home run.
How old were you when LinkedIn got popular?
Was a base hit or home run or whatever it is for you personally?
It went public in 2011, so I was 35 when it went public.
And I was probably like 27 when I showed up there.
My theory was like, well, maybe you got like a base hit at a young age
and you're like, sick, I have what I need.
Now I can keep doing some of these moonshot ideas,
but that wasn't entirely the case with you.
I grew up that weird version of middle class,
which is my parents had to take out massive loans to send me to college,
and I was really lucky to get to go to Stanford.
But they had to take out massive loans.
We couldn't get financial aid, but they couldn't afford it.
And it was like that really weird middle.
So I had no safety net.
My parents were like, that's it.
You graduate.
We're paying for college, and then you're on your own.
So I didn't have any nest egg or safety net to build.
from. But I also didn't have the sense of like, I didn't grow up with parents who were entrepreneurs.
They always just had good jobs. So I also didn't have that kind of entrepreneurial grit that I'd
just been part of my whole life. And so I also felt like I always just needed a salary.
So I was like, how can I get a good salary at something that has massive potential as opposed to
just going to the big company and selling out already, but also not the confidence to go to zero
or the grit that I totally felt internally. When you were at Stanford, were you there at the
same time as like any of the kind of like Peter Thiel, Max Levichin, Reed Hoffman, like era,
or I'm not sure what the timing was. So I was a little bit after their era, but Marissa Mayer,
who many people know is like a very early Googler and then was CEO of Yahoo for a number of years,
was my neighbor and study base. So I was like right in her era in the late 90s. And, you know,
at that time, Netflix, right before I graduated from Stanford, Netflix had just gone public, eBay
had just gone public, Yahoo had just gone public. Google hadn't even started.
yet. And so it was like right in that sort of middle zone of the internet blowing up all around it.
And could you have looked at her and been like, oh yeah, she might just be the CEO of Yahoo someday?
So I'll be honest. Yes. Like my one last thing is when you're at a place like a Stanford and you still
have the people who are literally 10 times smarter than you become their best friends.
So many of them have gone on to be incredibly self. I even had a class with Larry Page.
And I was an idiot who was, that guy seems like kind of a pompous jerk. I would snicker in the back with
my friends as opposed to, how do I just like, I'm a little undergrad. He was a grad student.
How do I just try to get on his team to do a project and become his best friend?
Right. He was brilliant then and, you know, obviously changed the world. So you hung out with,
or in the same circle, Larry Page at a young age, Marissa Mayer. Let's be clear. I was around.
Physically, geographically. But you were 15 at LinkedIn, so you clearly knew Reid Hoffman,
at least a little bit, new them.
You were 80 at Twitter, so you must have kind of have known.
Jack.
Yeah.
I have not really Jack.
And then you were early enough maybe where you worked with Zuck, right?
A little bit, a little bit.
What?
Well, those people along with some of these other like Titans, these tech nerd Titans,
were there any similarities?
Well, and you're hung out with, you know, the Robin Hood dudes.
Those are those guys.
Yeah, Robin Hood dudes, you know, Discord dudes.
everybody is incredibly thoughtful about what they do. And they people always say like they make fast moves and they go fast and they make snap decisions. And the reality is I like to call it deliberate action, which is they're really deliberate about just about everything they do, whether it's a hire, whether it's a meeting they're going to take, whether it's a person they're going to spend time with. But they do a lot of things. They're kind of voracious. They just are like nonstop accumulating information.
doing things. But if you ask them why, why did you do that? Why did you go here? Why did you
think about that thing? Why did you say that? They actually always have a good reason. And when something
didn't work out, they don't go, they actually can tell you why it didn't work out. They said,
this is what I thought might happen. And I still did it because I was looking for this kind of
outcome. So they're really just deliberate, thoughtful, reflective, and voracious. These are all some of
the hardest workers I've ever been around. That stuck out as like, when
you meet someone that has this attribute, you're like, oh, man, I got a best.
Who or why did somebody remind you of them?
So there's one other thing that they can do that's really unique, which is they can
paint that picture of the success in five or 10 years.
It sounds really, really compelling.
So they can hold that version of the future and sell it really well.
But they can also ground it.
And here's the next five things we're going to do.
And here's why.
And I have met a lot of people that can do one of those things really, really well,
but very few that can do both.
One example, when I met the founder of Musically,
who, you know, that's now become TikTok, which is massive.
I literally met him over a video call over WeChat.
And in one meeting, he was able to paint this incredible picture
of what he was trying to do for creativity for the world
and grounded in exactly what the product had today,
why it had all these flaws,
why he had to build this next thing and this next thing and this next thing to get there.
And I will tell you the fact that TikTok is now just this
massive phenomenon is so much a credit to his original vision.
And yet, you know, he still needed to get it there.
And even they didn't get it there on their own.
They sold it to Bight Dance and were able to bring their vision into all the things
that Bight Dance had to get TikTok to where it is.
Where's that guy now?
He is now one of the, he's still, they sold musically to it.
He's still at Bight Dance.
So right now I'm at Twitch.
And Twitch is probably like a, I don't know, five to $10 billion company.
and Emmett was the original kind of founder, CEO,
and has a lot of these traits you're talking about.
And I know that every time I have an interaction with him,
it's always like this heightened excitement, right?
It's like, oh, I'm going to show him something I'm working on,
or he's going to ask me a bunch of questions.
He's going to grill me, and I don't want to look like a fool in front of this guy.
And, you know, there is this kind of like, you know,
the king of the company type of thing.
And I can kind of vividly remember a lot of the interactions I've had with him
or like when Andy Jassy from AWS is on the call.
It's like, oh, I kind of remember some of these.
Do you have any memorable either in a good?
good way or embarrassingly bad way interactions with Zuck or Reed Hoffman or any of these guys
do that you can tell us a story about? I still remember my interview with Reed Hoffman at LinkedIn
in the fall of 2003. You know, I was in business school at the time. I dropped out to join LinkedIn.
I had just been in my first semester, but I was like, whoa, I could go do this LinkedIn thing.
And we sat down and it was one of the like most intense firing questions. But the question
that he asked me was that I still remember, I was interviewing to be a product manager.
And he said, look, most jobs have an artifact that you create. If you're an engineer,
you're writing the code that runs in the final product. If you're a designer, you were designing
the mockups and the graphics and the exact look and feel that show up in the product.
If you're a business development person, your artifact is the contracts you create. And then
you get the contract details right. So they produce value for the company. If you're a CEO like me,
you know, it's the org chart. It's the financing plan for the company. But the org chart is like one of the
main things that I own. He said, if you're a product manager, what do you actually do? What is actually your
artifact? And this way of reclassifying everybody's work and their job as the actual artifacts that they
produce and what that either means to your customers or means to the company was just such a perfect
crystallization of how precise Reed always thinks about sort of everybody's job and role in the network.
And then I asked him like, explain to me how LinkedIn gets big.
And he replied to me with his theory, he called it growth, then usage, then revenue,
which I then called Ger.
And he said, first we're going to grow and become the largest network.
And it's going to have utility for a few people.
And then for most people, they'll just be latently there.
But we're going to use all the viral mechanics to actually capture the network.
Then then we're going to focus on usage, which is we're going to figure out how to get you
using your network to make you a better professional more every day.
and then we're going to focus on revenue, which is selling some of those engagement services,
selling some of that search to people, whether they're in HR, sales, business development,
or everything.
But the first thing we're doing is we just really have to grow.
And they said, and when it works, he then painted the picture of what LinkedIn's actually
become, which is the only Rolodex you ever need to find you get to anybody you want,
get you information, get you, you know, you hires, do everything else.
And he was able to do that in 2003 when LinkedIn had 14 people.
And that was still the most like the, probably the best.
interview and the luckiest one that I've ever made it through.
Are there any other stories like that with some of these folks?
I love that story, by the way.
That's a good one.
I want more.
Give me more.
I'm at the campfire.
My hands are warm from the fire.
And I'd love to hear another story if you got one.
You know, I remember one with Zuck when we were working on Facebook Connect.
And we were really working on this very first version.
It was a room full of 20-some people because it wasn't that often.
Even at the company at that point, it had, you know, this was like end of 2000,
in the middle of 2008.
It's a company who had eight or 900 people.
So it wasn't like he could review every product every day anymore.
And so it was a rare thing for this platform team to get to present him the thinking
behind Facebook Connect.
There was kind of a whole walkthrough and mock-ups and showing the screens of what
was going to happen.
And Facebook Connect, when you'd go to another website, you'd hit login with Facebook.
It would say, do you want to connect your Facebook account with the account of like Yelp or
the Hustles website or something?
So you do want to actually connect these two things.
And if so, here's the information that you'll share.
And he spent 20 minutes interrogating the designers about why would you put this icon here?
How can we make it easier?
How do we scare users less?
How do we make it so that they really understand what's going on?
And watching the level of detail that he is this sort of CEO got to, but every single element
of this thing.
And then he turned around to the rest of the room.
And he said, if we get this right, this is going to be one of the most transformational pillars for our company.
We have this moment that we can show the world how your identity platform can actually become portable, safe, protected.
You guys have this mission where you have to get this right.
And I will just say that I could see everybody in the room that's sort of like their spine stiffened up.
They kind of sat up.
They look proud.
They were like, we got to go fight to get this right to be one of the most.
important piece of the company. And as I left the room, I realized he has a way to probably do that
with every team that comes through in order to make them understand why that thing they're working
on is there. But it wouldn't have worked if he hadn't been able to get to the level of detail
at the technical level he was asking the engineers, at the pixel level of what he was asking
the designers. And he was going straight more to the product manager would sometimes speak up.
And he would actually turn and focus on the people doing that actual work producing those real
artifact to like drill them on how it needed to work. It was so impressive even at that stage of the
company. That's a great. I feel like we could do a whole podcast on this. That's great. Something that
Sean and I, so we have this guy, we have a, Sean and I have a great friend named Andrew Wilkinson
who comes on all the time and Sean and I are actually similar to him where we're all like
pretty good idea guys. We're pretty good at doing the first iterations, but all three of us,
including a lot of people we have on, aren't always the best at being the day-to-day operator
once it gets past a certain stage.
But you seem like a guy who is that guy.
You seem like an operator through and through.
Have you seen that?
When I think of like Reed,
what's his name,
Reed Hoffman?
I've never met him,
but I'm going to stereotype him.
And I mean this as a compliment,
as this kind of like bumbling artist,
genius who like wears two left shoes and like mixed match socks.
You know what I mean?
Like he comes off as kind of like a genius who like will forget certain things.
Is that stereotype true with some of these Titans that we've,
kind of discussed?
I actually want to address the first part about me being an operator too,
because I actually have a really interesting take on what you said there.
But I'll answer that question about people like Reed.
No, that's patently false.
They are not bumbling geniuses at all.
The ones who really become successful,
I will say everybody I've met who has become a billionaire,
with the exception of one or two who rode somebody else's coattails
and truly got lucky, got there for a reason.
They got there because they had an insight.
They were voracious.
they worked incredibly hard.
And that insight plus the hard work, plus a whole hell of a lot of luck, got them there.
But they got there, I mean, because, you know, lots of people have good insights and hard work and everything else.
But each one of them who did get there got there because all those things came together.
And it wasn't fumbling.
It wasn't absent minded at all.
Sam, I think you asked your question in a weird way.
Is that what you meant?
Like, I don't think you meant did he get lucky.
What did you really mean, Sam?
Let me add one other thing, which is put their.
really specific about the things they spend time on. And there's a lot of things that the rest of
us spend time on, like how we look, what we want to eat, how we feel, wanting to get casual
entertainment. But I will tell you that a lot of these folks completely skip over. We agree then,
Josh, because I, Sean's right, it was a fair criticism. I didn't ask that in a good way.
But what you just said agrees with what I said. What I, the point out, like, if you wear
shoes that don't, or you wear socks that don't match or you aren't like dressed nicely, that's
because you just don't care about that. It's not important to you. Yeah, you're just caring about
something else. It's like, I don't care. Just like, please handle it. So, yeah, a lot of folks like that
literally have food brought to them so they don't have to think about what to eat. They have
clothes set out for them every day or they just wear the same style of clothes every day because they
found something that fits and feels good and they don't want to have to change every day. And I've
seen a lot of people in that group actually go that route so that the brain is more focused on the
problems that matter. That's such a boring life though, right? I mean, can't
that be considered like a pretty, like, at what point you just say, fuck it and you just have fun?
Do you know what I mean? It's like logically buying a Ferrari doesn't make a lot of sense.
Of course, you always buy a Honda Civic. But at what point you just ball out and just have fun,
just for joy's sake? Some of those people, they get different joy. The joy is actually
solving the world's problems, having debates at the highest level of intellectual rigor.
You know, one of the funny things people don't realize about Reed Hoffman is he and Peter Thiel,
were close friends in college, they always were on opposite sides of many things,
Reed being much more of a staunch, fairly liberal person, Peter Thiel being a staunch conservative.
But their fun was debating things of how the world worked.
Their fun was debating what might actually change the world when they were students at Stanford
and have turned out to be some of the most successful billionaires coming out of Silicon Valley.
I could definitely see that.
In fact, I think LinkedIn is a good example where you said something like they have a unique insight.
And Peter Thiel has a different way of saying this.
It's a little catchier, which is just like, what's a secret?
You know that other people, few other people would agree with you on or believe you about.
And I think early on they had done stuff in social, like I think social met or whatever LinkedIn, whatever he did be pre-linked in.
He had done a social network that didn't work or didn't fully work, but was like, oh, shit, this whole like social graph network effects.
I don't know if they had the lingo at the time.
but clearly they knew that was important.
That's why they wrote such a big check-in to Facebook, right?
Because they were like, oh, this kid has figured out that thing that we know is important.
He's figured it out over here.
Hey, kid, here's $500,000 and like, you know, take it from here and then building LinkedIn
afterwards.
So from your interactions at that time, do you have any good stories either about that
or just in general, like being on the pioneering edge of like figuring out this whole
stuff that now is figured out and widely accepted, like network effects and viral growth?
that wasn't as widely known and accepted back then.
Is that right?
No, it wasn't at all.
I mean, it made logical sense when anybody explained it,
even back then.
If Reed would explain to you what network effects were
and why LinkedIn was going to capture the network,
LinkedIn posted their series B pitch, actually,
which if anybody wants to read it,
I was in the room helping Matt Kohler,
who's now over at Benchmark and Reed make that deck,
but it actually goes and talks about how the Web 10,
actually they Google was network effects of the web,
better than Yahoo, which was a directory. PayPal was network effects of spending where you could
detect fraud and move money around a much better way versus banks. And it was like, LinkedIn will be
this versus all job networks and job services. And so it did this incredible job of painting those
pictures. But it took a while for everyone to do it. Like we were figuring out user growth by me
writing a bunch of random queries into the data warehouse that was a 24-hour delay snapshot of the database
from the day before. I'm like, that's how I would figure out what worked, what AD tests work,
what viral mechanics worked. Today, mixed panel and amplitude have a thousand times the power
of my old queries running into data warehouse for people doing growth today. And yet, you know,
and it's like so much more powerful, but it's the same basic queries in the same analyses.
Do you think some of those same secrets exist today are like, you know, in 2020, what are the
versions of those secrets that you've either heard or you believe to be true that,
that is not as widely accepted, but 15 years from now, it's going to be like,
ah, obvious. That was obvious if we had been thinking about it.
I think the secrets are how to get people to pay for things that they value.
And that, like, it's not that unobvious.
And maybe it's already late for me to say that.
Gaming companies have known this for a very long time.
And yet every other industry has said, we'll just build an ads business.
We'll run remnant ads.
And we'll do some direct sales.
And that's how it'll grow.
And you're just starting to see people realize that, like,
actually people are willing to pay for things that they,
enjoy or that activate them or that motivate them, whether that's coaching, training, good content,
subscribing to a specific writer who brings me value every day. But nobody has figured out how to
bring those lessons fully out of the gaming ecosystem. And that's where I think the biggest
untapped secrets are. So that's an interesting say way for what I was going to ask. This is a
very selfish question, but I'm going to put you to the test. So the hustle. We have over
one and a half million subscribers. One of that billion daily users. We've got trends, a eight
figure or over 10,000 paying users. Sean and I have this podcast that he started with has,
let's say, millions of downloads. How do we 10x this business? The best way to 10x the business
is either get yourself onto larger and larger platforms. So as opportunities come to things with
broader reach, whether that's, you know, today TV still does have massive reach or whether that's
other media platforms or you kind of can use those to keep growing your own unique audience. That's
one way to do it. The key is everything you do has to be lead gen to grow your own core unique
audience, but you need to get on these bigger platforms in order for you to then scale up to become
them. So that's one. The second one is you find ways to charge enough money that you funnel it all
back into user acquisition. Paid user acquisition is much less of a dirty tactic than it used to be.
And so you do that. And the third way is you find a way to get lots of cheaper supply. You get people to
spread you virally because they want to be a part of it. So they actually will go and cause you to grow
by spreading your message or by becoming a small part of your community and then lets you grow
and actually manage the whole community. The biggest 10x businesses are marketplaces and networks
because they do a lot less of the work and they're only the connective tissue. So that's the other
path. I asked that question and you kind of had like a little bit of a framework. What can I Google to
and what can the listener at Google to learn where you learn?
wish I had time to write more. I learned most things from Twitter. I read a lot of great blogs from
and, you know, I read more blog posts and more like quick content and insights from people than I do
longer form books. And that's kind of how I keep learning and honing it. And I got really lucky to
learn by doing. Come back to you as question about operator. I am not a scaled operator, but I have been
what I call the second wave at multiple companies, which is take
the thing that works, put in the foundations, and build just enough of the infrastructure
that people who are really good operators can come in and run the trains. I think of this
is like there were pioneers who the founders who found their way over the mountains, and then
there were people who came in and designed and laid the tracks, and then there's people who
run the trains to bring over the hordes. And I was always that sort of track layer, but I learned
so much by getting to do that. And that sort of school is here.
There's a good framework for that, which is called Pioneers, Settlers, and Town Planners, if you've heard it.
That's how we came on, I think, because I tweeted out something like that, Sean.
Your quote, how does someone recruit someone like you?
So you're probably, you don't have to confirm her tonight.
You're probably quite wealthy.
You've had a wonderful career.
You probably could go and start your own thing.
You probably could never have to work again.
How does someone recruit you?
They just pay you a ton of money?
I mean, what do they?
I mean, like, how does someone get a guy like you?
You know, I think a guy like me isn't totally who you want. You actually want the me of 15 years ago for you're a smaller company. But for me now, the chance is impact. It's how can you get me to work on something at massive scale? But if you're recruiting the guy like me 15 years ago, you tell that story of why you believe your thing will grow 10 to 100 X over the next five years. And you figure out how to reveal enough of the secrets so that I go, whoa, I really believe that. And I want in.
Do you think that these founders have to come up with an idea that can 10 or 100x or they have to recruit people who can figure it out?
Like, what comes first?
The 10 or 100x idea or the 10 or 100x people that they hope can figure it out?
I think what comes first is the thing that's working a little bit.
I call that like finding product market fit.
The thing that comes next is the insight into the 10 or 100x from the founder.
And then the thing that comes after that is hiring people like me who are the track layers.
The thing that comes first is finding that thing that you think is.
working, but it's that moment that you have the insight of how much bigger it can be, that's where
you capture all the value. And I think founders often think they need that before they get something
working in the first place, which isn't true. But then a lot of founders skip over that moment.
And like, you guys are at that moment right now, which is, now let's imagine what is the 100x play.
And that gift and that insight is the moment that you then have a chance to go chase it.
I think that that's like an insight that I've had as a leader, which is I'm like, man, in order
to attract these baller people who I want to surround myself with, people who are better than me,
I have to have a big baller image. Like, I have to have a vision that can equal the type of person
that I want to attract. So it's almost like, if you want to surround yourself with these people,
you have to be bold and you have to have this big vision. And I found that to be an incredibly
challenging. I found that to be challenging to understand and grasp. I mean, I think that that's true.
On the other hand, you don't have to do that. You can also just build a great business and be very happy with it.
It's that sort of like two-sided thing.
Like the people who are joiners like me, I'm not a founder, I'm a joiner.
We want to only join the things that are going to be that massive in the world.
Because the other thing is, by the way, joiners never get enough equity that the company
isn't that life-changing if it's not a multi-multivillion dollar outcome.
So joiners are also looking for that.
Are you working right now?
Are you chilling?
What are you doing right now?
What are you going to do next?
I am chilling.
and one of the things I've been exploring is potentially going back and doing more investing,
but one of the things I've been exploring is going to work at billion user scale on some products
that really matter for the world and being able to participate in building something that
the decisions you're making in those rooms matter to a billion people as soon as the product
rolls out.
Okay, what are those?
I mean, look, there's...
It's not hard to figure out.
How many companies have billion users?
Apple, Facebook, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, you know, there aren't that many more than are at that
scale. And, you know, if you look at my whole career, that's the one thing I've never done.
You need to join Twitter, dude. Twitter like succeeds despite itself. I've already been there.
Hard to go back. Cool. Josh, thanks for coming on, man. And where should people find you? So is
Twitter the best way to follow you? That's where I follow you. Twitter's the best place. It's
at Josh Elman on Twitter, 1L. And also I blog when I do blog on Medium. And you have a couple
good presentations. I think people should go check out. There was one. You did at 500 startups called
Weapons of Mass Distribution. Your talk was about,
like how to successfully grow on another platform without like getting swallowed up by the
platform. I thought that's a really specific topic that people should hear because your company will
grow and die if you don't get that right. And it's like one of the best headlines I've read in a
long time. I remember that very distinctly. I don't remember the title, but that was a good,
really good presentation. I think you have one more. I don't remember there's one more, but I would
encourage people to go if they like the way you think of the frameworks you use around product and
growth, like you've put them out there. It's just, it's there to find. Go search his name and find some of
those. My latest one that I've been shopping this year is on onboarding. It's longer onboarding
always makes your product better. Yeah, much to my chagrin as everybody's like, hey, we'd like
to do an onboarding call for an hour. And I'm like, oh, God, can I just use your app? And they're like,
no, the data shows us that if we do this, it's way better. And I'm like, I can find.
What's that one called? I'm going to look it up. Have you put it out or you're tweaking it?
The onboarding, it's called make your product better through onboarding, I think.
It's on the top of my medium right now. That title is not as good as weapons of mass.
distribution.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
All right.
That's a wrap.
We're out of here and we're back in a couple days.
Thanks, guys.
