My First Million - I was offered $200M at 24 and I turned it down
Episode Date: January 31, 2025Get our Business Monetization Playbook: Episode 672: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk to Matt Mullenweg ( https://x.com/photomatt ), the founder ...of WordPress and Automattic. — Show Notes: (0:00) Turning down $200M at 24 (6:04) WordPress's 1000 days of irrelevance (9:24) Turning a small South African company into $3B (13:40) The battle of giants - WooCommerce vs Shopify (18:37) Matt's Villain Arc (30:07) Auditions > Interviews (36:04) Putting every employee on the front line (42:56) Matt on Deepseek — Links: • Automattic - https://automattic.com/ • WordPress - https://wordpress.com/ — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by The HubSpot Podcast Network // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, today's episode is special. We've got Matt Mullenweg. Matt founded a company called
WordPress, which is used by something like 45% of all websites on the internet. So it's just
huge thing. And we talked to Matt about a bunch of interesting things. Sean, what have we talked
to him about? He had an offer to sell his company for $200 million when he was 24 years old. He
turned it down. We asked him what that was like. We talked to him about some of the recent drama
that they've had. We talked about how they've been acquiring companies. They bought the small
company in South Africa and how it turned out to be a huge thing for their business, like a,
you know, a billion dollar plus win. And he's just a student of the game. He's been doing it for
like 20 years. This guy started this company when he was 19 years old and is still doing it and it's
become this absolute juggernaut. So enjoy this episode with Matt Mollinger. Let's travel never looking back.
Tell me if this is right, because this sounded like almost too good to be true. But I'd read that in
2008, you had an acquisition offer. I think you were only 24 years old for $200 million.
At that point, I think you'd only raised a million dollars. And I think you raised a million
at $3 million in valuation, something like relatively, you're 24, you're going to be worth
nine figures, something crazy like that. You turn it down. But then you talk about how you didn't
have control of the company because you were young and maybe just like made some mistakes with
funding, something like that. What's the conversation like with yourself when you're like,
I'm turning down something that might make me worth over $100 million at the age of 24?
You talked about, and you named the first million. It's kind of funny. Like, I guess technically
on paper, my first million was that first one.
Monday ground, right? In theory, I owned like half the company that was now worth $4 million.
But as you know, like that's paper money. I was still, you know, eating ramen and, and Mountain Dew and Beats a, like, living, you know, a very broke San Francisco college kid's life.
But it was in 2008, that we had this acquisition offer. And you're right. It was about two and a half years in this company.
Someone tried to buy us for $200 million. And the investors at the time did something, which now is quite common, but at the time was,
was pretty forward-looking, which is a secondary.
So they said, wow, we're 20 people.
We've been doing this for two and a half years.
A $200 million exit would be pretty amazing.
Like I said, I would walk away personally with a lot of money.
But we think this could be actually way bigger.
So let's build that.
And so we took that acquisition, made an evaluation,
turn that into a funding round where we put a lot more capital into the company,
so we could really build things out.
And I sold some stock myself.
So that was my first, that was my first million.
Liquid was kind of in 2008.
I think I was 24.
And that was a step change.
You know, I was able to pay off my credit cards and buy mom on my house and like, you know,
all that sort of stuff that you want to do that you dream up.
And it sort of removed some of those sort of early economic things.
And I was really able to focus on just the business and swinging for the fences, which is what they wanted me to do.
You know, I hear these stories like Zuck turns down a billion dollars from Yavis.
who or whatever this story about you at such a young age turning down the opportunity to exit
and have this huge payday. I think you're a better man than me. I don't think I would have
been able to resist that. Was that an easy decision for you? Was that a hard decision? Like what?
And like you're like, I think this could be bigger. Let's go for it. Is that just like,
not blind faith, but just like an extreme amount of self confidence and faith? Like, how do you even
or did you even want to do it? And the investors were like, no, too bad. No, it wasn't an easy
decision at all, of course. To really seriously consider these things. Also as a fiduciary,
you know, like you have a responsibility to shareholders. Consider every acquisition. And we've had
other acquisition offers and people trying to buy automatic. As recently as this year, I think you have
to ask yourself with any acquisition, like will the mission that we're doing be accelerated
by this transaction or will it be hampered? It's like we acquire a lot of companies. It's like WooCommerce,
I think, did a lot better because we acquired it than they would have,
on their own. But there's probably other things that we tried to buy that we didn't buy that
did really well on their own. Reddit was one actually. We looked at Reddit at one point.
Did you look at them in their Condi Ness, $10 million valuation days? I actually really wanted
to buy Reddit. I couldn't convince my board. They thought it was like two outside of our early stuff.
So we never got that far on the discussions or anything. But yeah, there was a point when they were
like four employees and for sale and kind of in the wired offices on third tree.
in San Francisco. I just thought it was really cool. So obviously they, they're so much sure
very well. But when you created WordPress, it seemed like it took off like within a year.
I forget which year you started it. But like I said earlier, I think I was using it starting in like
10 or 11, 2010, 2010, like pretty early on. And I at the time was like a Tennessee college kid.
So if I had heard about it, then a lot of people had heard about it. What was the first version of
WordPress like? 2003. Oh, wow. Okay. I wrote a blog post on this called like meaningful overnight
success. Because basically, like, what people see is overnight success is often a thousand days
of irrelevance or people haven't heard of you. At one point, there was a joke that WordPress
had more developers than users. The first few blogs were just ones I set up for my friends
in high school, you know, because the one was using software. So I just kind of like would manually
set it up for people. You know, early, we used to do these upgrade parties where just, I'd say,
like a new version of word dress would come out.
I just open up my apartment,
you know, go to Costco, bought some booze
or it's a pizza and said, hey, just come to my apartment
and it'll upgrade your site for you.
So, you know, really, you know,
the early days were very much bootstrap, you know,
just doing everything.
It looks like an overnight success later.
We had some breakout points, you know,
when moval type changed our license and other things.
I think fortune favors to prepare.
It was because we had put in a lot of grind
and a lot of work, a lot of community building,
a lot of contributions, a lot of
code or a lot of everything in the many, many days before that.
But what's crazy to me is I remember like four, six years ago, it said that WordPress
was used by something like 30 or 20% of all the websites on the internet.
Then recently I went and looked at it.
Now it's like 40%.
And like the thing that struck me, I was like, are you the most under monetized business
on earth?
How are you not like the biggest company on earth?
Because I used WordPress and I used WooCommerce, which you also own at my old company.
My Wu current commerce license, Sean, I think it was a $300 lifetime or $300 a year.
And the product that I was using it was making many millions of dollars.
And I've got a friend, Sean, you and I both have a friend, who made $100 million
off of the $300 a year license or whatever it was.
It was like nothing.
You guys have to be like the least monetized company there is.
I think the way I put it is WordPress is almost like kind of the dark matter of the web.
you know, when you build like a list of like what's the top website, you know, we're not going to show up.
I mean, WordPress.com will be in the top 100 or whatever.
The beauty of it is that, you know, the ecosystem of WordPress is probably like $10 billion a year, at least of revenue.
Now, my company, automatic is, you know, 5% of that.
But if you add up all the companies and all the people, I'm not even counting, like, all the stuff that you talked about, like people selling things on WooCommerce, which we know is like, I think last year was over 30 billion of goods and.
services sold through WooCommerce. But actually more than half of automatic revenue comes from
things that aren't just WordPress. So we have a variety of different businesses, some really cool
mobile apps like Day One or PocketCast, a new one called Beeper. Well, we're like the top two
acquisitions, right? Like even Buffett, for example, if you study Buffett's portfolio, it's like a
huge amount of the gains came from like a couple of like really key acquisitions at key time, right?
Seas Candy at a specific time has given them over a billion dollars, I think, of free cash flow
over the years. What's the revenue number that you can say the whole company does?
We've publicly saved. We're over half a billion in revenue revenue now.
Okay, got it. All right. So, yeah, to answer the challenge question, what's been the surprising
thing? What are like the Crown Jewel, like best acquisitions that you feel proud of?
Our most successful is probably WooCars. And so this came a lot from, you know, WordPress is a
platform. And so I did a lot of study of platforms. And so that led me to do a lot of deep reading
on Microsoft, actually. And it was funny. Like, if you look at some of the press around Windows
95 coming out. They talked about how for every dollar that Microsoft made from Windows, there
was $20 made by the Windows ecosystem. By the way, that ratio is similar to what I talked
about earlier where automatic makes about 5% of the money in the Workplace ecosystem. I sort of
found that platforms often do this. They create a lot more value, a true platform.
Have you heard that story of Bill Gates talking about when he meets Mark Zuckerberg, he talks
about the Facebook platform? Have you heard this? There's like a quote I remember reading
which was like, Gates was like, this is not a platform.
He goes, a platform is when the companies built on top of it
generate far more value than the host platform.
Whereas the Facebook platform at the time was like Facebook was this gargantuan thing,
all the small things on top.
And Facebook was just sucking a lot of the value back in.
And he kind of famously was like, that's not what a platform is.
I would agree with that assessment.
And also that's not a platform which now a lot of businesses are built on.
And there were some that sort of came up in the early days like Zeng or whatever
or Spotify even, but it's now not something that like every business is built on because you can get work pulled.
Like a not true platform, they might give you some distribution early on when you align with their interests,
but then they can easily pull the rug on you, which I think Facebook ended up doing to a number of companies.
So yeah, I wanted to build a true platform.
But of course, Microsoft famously had Microsoft's office.
So they had an application built on top of Windows, which ended up being very lucrative.
So it was like, what's going to be, you know, I have this platform WordPress, which is now becoming like an operating.
system for the web. We were obsessed about backwards compatibility and auto updates and things like that,
learning a lot from civil operating systems the past. What's our Microsoft office? And that ended up
being WooCommerce, which was a sort of small company, like I think 40 people based out of South
Africa, a plugin for WordPress. It actually started as a theme company. It's called Wu Themes.
They developed this actually a fork of another open source e-commerce thing. And they started doing it
just to sell more themes, because themes were kind of the big business.
for WordPress at the time.
And this e-conference plugin took off a bit.
Actually, we looked up buying it years prior.
You know, candidly, the code was really crappy.
And so we were like, oh, this is like really crappy code.
We were, you know, automatics very much like engineering-led, like technology R&D companies.
So we're like, oh, this is.
But it just kept taking off because they did such a good job, like building something people want.
So even though the code wasn't scalable, well organized, you know, they built something.
They were really great at that product market fit.
So WooCommerce was taking off.
So that was an early acquisition that we did.
Funnily enough, the competitor there was there were, there's some private equity that was trying to buy this plugin.
So we kind of won over the private equity because they wanted to join like our culture and everything like that.
And Wu, you know, like I said at the time, it was 40 people pretty small.
They only had like four engineers, by the way.
So a lot of those people were like customer support or other things.
We were able to take what we were really great at, which is like engineering, scalability, all that sort of stuff.
and apply it to what they had done really brilliantly,
which is, like, great, this thing that people love to use.
And that's, like I said, I think last year,
I did over $30 billion of goods and services sold.
So that's definitely one of our best acquisitions that we've done.
But also that e-commerce is an incredibly competitive space.
And, you know, we're blessed to have an incredible competitor Shopify,
which is a company I have a ton of respect for, you know,
the founders and entrepreneurs and the whole thing.
They're actually a really, really great company.
Toby and I think have a lot of mutual respect for each other.
You know, drive each other be better.
So do you look at that?
This is, again, like we're kind of giving you a compliment and an insult at the same time.
So the backhanded compliment is in full effect here.
So on one hand, we're saying, oh, my God, there's 43% of the internet uses WordPress or y'all's products.
There's 500 million websites using WordPress.
Like that is just such a mind-boggling number.
And so on one hand, that's absolutely incredible.
And on the other hand, Sam was saying, are you the most like under monetized?
Given that, are you the most under monetized?
Because you look at like a Shopify, Shopify alone right now, market cap is 150 billion.
The ruthless capitalist could say, Matt, you're doing all this work.
Your whole company, including WooCommerce and all this stuff, is going to be worth several billion dollars.
But the closed source Shopify, like variant of the e-commerce side is worth 150 billion.
What should I take away from that?
And what do you take away from that?
What meaning do you put on that?
There's definitely some things that are easier in a proprietary sort of closed ecosystem
software model.
You know, it's easier to, you know, Shopify is really great at forcing people to use their
payments, for example.
And in WooCommerce, you know, you can use ours, but you can also use a lot of other
stuff.
I think there's sort of average revenue per subscriber is like 10X, what WooCommerce is this.
How I think about it is very much sort of short-term,
versus long term. So one, we have this philosophy of open source. I want all of the work I do,
all of my creative output, to increase the amount of freedom and liberty in the world. It's just
something I believe very morally. So that's why I've dedicated my life to open source. Because
open source software, you sort of have a bill of rights attached to it, right? The freedom to use
the software for any purpose, to see how it works, to modify it, to redistribute this, modifications,
the fourth reasons of the GPL. To me, that's a moral decision. The software I create, I want
not to have a proprietary license.
Shopify is amazing.
If Shopify changed your policies tomorrow,
their customers are stuck with it.
They have their recourse or their proprietary license.
We're with open source,
we could change our policies tomorrow.
I could become evil or whatever.
And automatic could be, you know, sell or be a terrible company.
You would still own all the code.
You know, WordPress and WooCommerce, et cetera,
belong just as much to you as they do to me.
And that sort of freedom and liberty,
is, I think, better in the long term.
So I'd say open source has a slow burn.
So it often is kind of slower to start up.
But then over time, it builds sort of this compounding momentum that is a bit unstoppable.
And there's two things.
One, it can be very successful in a zone, right, as WordPress has.
You know, it's 10x, the number two in the market.
But two, one great thing it does is it forces the proprietary folks to be a bit more open.
So I use proprietary stuff myself.
And a lot of Apple things are proprietary.
and I really love their products.
I think Apple is probably a bit more open than they would be otherwise because Android exists.
There's an open competitor, which is, by the way, open source.
And that it kind of influences the market.
So even if we don't have make as much money as Shopify or don't have the market share of Shopify in the e-commerce space yet,
although, you know, check in 10, 20 years, let's see where we are, we force the proprietary folks to be a bit more open with how they do things.
The short answer there is basically, I do it because that's what I believe.
I believe in open source.
I just believe that the moral decision comes first.
And secondly, in the long run, let's see.
In the long run, we'll see.
Is that a good, good summary?
It's just as easy to have a failure of a proprietary company as it is an open source.
So I think being proprietary open source is a little bit of orthogonal or not causal to
like whether you're a successful product or not.
People get really attached to it.
But I would say in the short term, it's definitely usually a bit easier to monetize purely proprietary stack.
But over long term, you can create a much, much bigger thing if you have this kind of like flywheel of an open source, a community adoption, et cetera.
Innovation, you know, a ton of innovation happens with open source.
By the way, Sam, isn't it nuts that Matt is clearly like this thoughtful, almost like soulful entrepreneur who has been building this thing since he was literally like a kid,
19 years old.
Like a guy you'd call wise when he was 21.
Yeah, exactly.
Like,
oh,
he's an old soul type of thing.
Works on open source software.
Like you said,
it's widely used.
It's almost free.
It's like only good.
All I hear is like only good.
And then you had this like random villain arc that people tried to paint on you in the last,
you know,
year with this like drama that's going on.
I couldn't believe it.
I was like,
if I was going to put money on who's like the least drama attracting founder,
it might have been you.
So I,
I thought that was nuts. Sam, your reaction to that real quick, and then I want to hear Matt's lots on it.
So I didn't follow it too much.
I'm a WordPress user, and I'm friends with Jason Cohen of WP Engine.
You guys had a fight, but I was actually shocked, Matt.
I thought that some of the stuff that you said, I was shot.
People were insulting you, and you felt like insulted them back.
I was like, I've read a lot about Matt's work.
I don't know Matt, and I've listened to him.
He doesn't seem like someone who would ever, like, insult someone.
And I was actually surprised that you were going as hard as you were.
And I guess your perspective is like they're coming after everything.
made or they don't contribute, whatever.
But I was actually surprised that you were pissed off and I didn't think that you would
be the type of guy that would come off pissed off.
You know, a failure mode and I think that can kill many open source projects is when they
get taken advantage of.
And so just like a schoolyard bully, like you kind of have to stand up for yourself.
It's kind of funny because you say you don't think of me of doing this.
But actually, if you look at the history of WordPress, there has been maybe four or five times.
in the history where I had this kind of villain arc. People were like, we had a fight to protect
like our principles and like the sustainability and like the future of WordPress. Can you give
the one minute summary of what happened? Because I even half followed it and I'm sure there's a
bunch of people listening that don't even know what we're talking about. Could you give like the one
minute and try to be objective with this like not just the your side of the story? But what happened?
Can you explain? You know, it's an ongoing legal battle so I can only say so much. Basically,
there's a company called a WB Engine.
Started off like very positive in the community.
Jason Cohen, I think it's awesome, by the way.
But in 2019, they were bought by a private equity firm called Silver Lake.
And sort of in the subsequent five years started becoming, I would say, more parasitic of WordPress.
Also creating with how they were marketing themselves and branding themselves, a lot of confusion in the marketplace in a way that was threatening our trademark.
The WordPress trademark.
So people would sort of say, oh, it's a lot of confusing.
WordPress Engine and they wouldn't correct them.
They would think it was official.
I even had very close friends who were WP Engine customers who thought that was my company.
And I would frequently get support requests for WPengin, like my site's down and things
like that.
You know, for a long period of time and, you know, two years prior to this fight started,
it was doing our best to partner with them and resolve all these things and resolve the
trademark stuff.
They just weren't responding.
And basically WP Engine is a web hosting service, maybe only for,
WordPress sites. And the accusation, I believe, was that you felt they weren't contributing
to the project as much as they should have been, given that they make a lot of money.
And also people confused the two companies. On the contribution thing, is that like, I guess,
like what's your leg to stand on on that? For example, does somebody have to contribute? Is that like
a rule or is that a suggestion, right? Is this like you're at church, you should put something
in the tray, but you don't have to technically, but it's frowned upon. Like, what is the take there?
So in WordPress, we do have this program we call Five for the Future.
By the way, this is all voluntary.
The open source license, you don't have to do anything.
You do whatever you want.
But we say that if you're building a business on WordPress, if you can allocate,
now somewhere between 0, 1 and 5%, profit or revenue.
It doesn't matter.
However you want to define it.
It could be time, could be hours, could be whatever.
And put that back into what we call core, core WordPress,
which is something that belongs in the open source project.
So it's accessible to everyone.
It doesn't just benefit your company.
That's part of what's made us so sustainable
and allowed us to be a open-source project,
which has really thrived more than some of other great CMSs
that were open-source that came up at the same time,
like Jumler or Drupul or something like that,
which haven't had as much assesses us.
By the way, I think this is great self-interest as well.
WP Engine is fairly unique in that pretty much
every other company in the WordPress ecosystem does this quite a bit.
And in fact, if you look at old versions of WB Engines' website, they were very supportive of this.
And actually even say on their website, they would dedicate two or four full-time people and everything like that.
Fast forward to 2024, they had less than that on core.
So I think that's a whole like sustainability, health of the ecosystem, health of the product issue.
That's not a legal issue at all.
The trademark abuse, not just the WordPress, but also the WooCommerce trademark.
So you could argue that WordPress, WP, whatever, but they're also abusing the WooCommerce trademark, which is fully owned by automatic.
You have to protect that.
If you don't protect your trademarks, you lose them.
And so we're having discussions around that.
We have trademark licenses with other web posts.
Great relations with every other.
And they're just a web post.
They're not a tech company.
They don't really create a lot of IP.
And they're a webpost, which people think is the largest, but they're actually,
You know, probably the sixth or seventh largest WordPress web post.
There's a lot of bigger ones.
They're a single-digit percentage of all the WordPresses in the world.
They probably have like 700,000, 800,000 or something.
So people have made this into a bigger deal that is, you know,
some of these previous controversies that got mainstream media coverage.
You know, CNN.
I had this hot nacho scandal in the first couple of years of WordPress or a thesis fight
or the Easter Massacre of themes.
Like all these things I'm mentioning, you probably haven't heard of.
It used to be like half my Wikipedia page.
Now it's not.
Today, if you go to my Wikipedia page, their PR firm has the whole paragraph about this.
I think at five years, maybe it'll be a sentence or not even out there at all.
So it's not my first rodeo.
Sometimes you have to fight to protect your open source ideals and the community,
and your trademark, by the way.
I expect this to resolve in the next few months.
Although it's easy to find, like, if you go on Reddit or Twitter, I get a lot of hate.
A lot of people were pissed at you.
I tweeted out that you were coming on to the pod yesterday.
if there was a lot of angry people. And I was a little surprised by that, to be honest.
Yeah. And, you know, some of the people are uncomfortable with, you know, us having to fight protect ourselves.
You know, WP Engine took some of a very aggressive legal action. So it turned out when we thought we were sort of good face negotiating, they were preparing a legal case to attack us because, you know, three days after I gave this presentation, they launched this huge lawsuit with Quinn Emmanuel.
It's kind of like one of the biggest nastiest law firms. And, you know, private equity is so far.
famously like goes in, hollows out businesses, extracts all the value, kind of kills it.
There's this crazy story.
I know if you saw it recently where like one of the reason there was like shortages of
fire trucks in LA was like the fire truck manufacturers have been like rolled up by private
equity.
And they've been like jacking the prices and that was like huge waiting list for like fire,
new fire trucks and fire truck repairs.
There's lots of examples.
Not all private equity is bad.
There's good investors and bad investors in every asset class.
Look, I didn't follow the story.
in depth. I didn't need to. I'm not a lawyer. Don't need to be. It's common sense to me.
Whose side have I going to be on? The private equity backed company that sounds almost like it's
made by you guys, but it's not. Or the founder who's been working on this for like 20 plus years
of his life, open sourced it is used by everybody. It's kind of like a staple of the internet
and captures like a tiny bit of the value along the way. It's pretty obvious to me, which side I
was going to come down on. So I think it was actually a common sense test, I think, for most people.
And I can't believe how many people are like, you know, on the PE side. It actually reminds me
a little bit of like the AI stuff right now. Wait, Sean, we did a whole podcast about the founder
of this PE firm though and how like fascinated we were with them. We do profiles on ruthless killers.
And then we're at the end, we're like, isn't that awesome? I'm like, yeah, do you want to be
that way? Hell no. Like, that's not me. But like, I'm glad that these people exist. Like,
you need all these people in an ecosystem. Like, it's not, they're not all bad. And there's
impressive things about how, I think, as an example, Egan Durbin or whatever, I think that's the guy
that we talked about. You know, it's impressive in the same way that David Goggins is impressive,
but I'm not going to go out there and run until my toenails bleed. Like, I like that he exists.
That doesn't mean I want to be like him or even that I think that's the right thing for most people
to do. I think it was on your blog. It could have been on the Tim Ferriss podcast. You wrote about
how I think WordPress or Automatic has like roughly 2,000 people. And I think you wrote about how
you tried a bunch of different ways to hire people.
You did all these tests like Google does,
these like brain teasers,
and you tried a bunch of other stuff.
And you said two interesting things that stood out.
You said,
what I found is that the people who are the best writers,
oftentimes are the best people who we hire,
not PhDs, not master degrees.
It was a correlation between your ability to write
and communicate via the written word.
And then the second thing you said,
that was pretty wild.
You used to hire people just by, like, emailing or texting.
Like it was like just through chat, not ever face to face, not phone calls, things like that.
Do you still hire people strictly through text communication?
You know, for some roles we might do Zoom, if it's a sales rule or something like that, you know,
obviously it's important to see how someone interacts.
But basically, you know, for a lot of our roles, you know, written communication is going to be the primary thing.
But also like people want to talk to someone.
Like we're not going to be like, no, you can't.
Yeah.
A lot of our hiring process can be completely asynchronous and completely text.
And for the first thousand or so higher, as I did the final chat for every single person.
Is your chat like slacking or G-chatting or something?
Yeah, it ended up being on Slack when Slack was invented.
You know, before that, I think it was on like Skype or A or something, you know, in the early
days or IRC.
I think the way you said it was we do auditions, not interviews.
So what does that mean?
How do you do auditions?
Well, we do a trial project.
So we actually hire people on a standard sort of 25 an hour contract.
And so we pay them.
to do, you know, we have screens with, you know, resumes and a little interview with stuff,
but then we say, like, let's actually do some work together. And there's various versions of
this for different roles. We've done sandbox versions. We've also done it where they were actually
talking to real customers, you know, like a support person was actually like answering real tickets.
We've always been smaller than a lot of the big tech, but we compete with them. And so we need
to have like the same caliber or better of talent. So part of, I think, automatic's advantage is we've
created an environment and also sort of a way of hiring that finds people who might be overlooked
by sort of a meta or Google or something like that. And we give them an opportunity not just to
be hired, but also to participate in a company in a way that they can still be just as influential
and have as much impact. Because even like, you know, there's other companies that might have
remote workers. But if you're not at headquarters, you're not going to be, you know, close to the
sun, you're not going to be next to see you, you're not going to be able to grow or have an impact.
But we've tried to create it where our center of gravity, our headquarters is really on the internet.
And, you know, I have colleagues in 90 countries, 90, even though we're only, you know, 750 people.
And another sort of innovative thing we do, we didn't do this in the beginning, but we moved to it probably like 2012, 2013, is we pay people the same salaries regardless of the location.
So it's kind of funny because we all like the equality, DEI stuff, whatever.
So much of I feel like is virtue signaling.
Because if you ask these companies and say like, hey, you know, I'm not going to call anyone out by name, but let's say big tech company.
Do you pay someone in Pakistan the same that you pay them in California?
Usually the answer is no.
If they're doing the same job, you know, the same like code wrangler, engineer or whatever like that.
And they usually say no.
And they usually have some reason like cost of living or local markets or whatever.
But we sort of move to where we say, hey, same work, same pay.
You know, it's kind of something that, you know, that's kind of something that, you know,
the past hundred years, that wasn't always true for men and women even, or racial things or
something like that. So I think the same more reasons where you say like same work for same pay
of people of different skin colors or something like that within a country, I think you should
do that globally. And I think that's the future of work actually because to the extent that you can
be equally as valuable and generate as much value for a customer wherever you are, you should receive
the equal pay for equal work.
Have you guys read American Kingpin, the story of Ross Oldbright, the Silk Road?
Have you read that, Matt?
I don't know.
I think I've read some of the long-form wild articles, but I've never read the whole book.
Yeah.
Oh, you've got to read this book, man.
I'm rereading it now because he just got released, and it's like the best book I've ever read.
It's like a total page turner.
The story of it for listeners, basically Ross Oldwright was accused, and I think he did it,
where he started Silk Road, which was eBay for drugs.
In two years, it did $2 billion in sales, gross sales, something like that.
But what's crazy is it kind of sucks because this whole.
business was documented because he chatted with everyone. Like he had 12 coworkers. And he did two things
that were interesting that I actually think are going to be common. The first thing is that he,
obviously because it was an illegal enterprise, he never, they didn't know the identity of the
workers. It was just their username. Like one guy's name was like chronic pain. That was his username.
So he just, he didn't know this guy's real name. He just knew chronic pain as like the guy.
Ross knew everybody's name. They didn't know each other's names or his. He made them send a license
so that he could basically have that,
like, you know, always have that in his back pocket,
have leverage.
But chronic pain didn't know Ross's.
Sorry, I forgot.
That was actually important detail.
That's actually very similar to, like, early hacker culture.
You know, everyone was sort of known by their username.
There's, like, interesting merits to that.
And then the other thing was that they only communicated via messaging.
I was reading this book.
I'm rereading it now.
And I was like, those two attributes are kind of interesting for a company,
which is, like, anonymous workers.
But you're still oddly friends.
Like he developed relationships with his coworkers.
This is a great LinkedIn post for you, Sam.
Like 13 management lessons I learned from the Silk Road.
Here you go.
I believe that he did murder for hire four times.
He did a lot of bad shit.
But he was actually an inspiring leader.
Like when he read like some of his like like stuff.
Well, he was very idealistic, right?
Like he had certain beliefs that drove him.
He didn't intend like he didn't necessarily intend like for example.
He wasn't super interested in selling guns on the platform.
But he believed that.
people should be able to sell what they want. And his team was like, no, no, you shouldn't do this.
This is going to increase the target on our back. Like, you're cool with the drug side, but you don't
care about this. So let's just ban it. It's going to cause problems. And he was like, well, no,
that's not the ethos of what we're doing. Like, we wrote a creed of what we stand for and why we're
doing this. And therefore, we got to stand by it. And they called them captain. You know,
it was very much as like, we are revolutionizing thing. And that's like a really interesting thing.
Matt has a, you don't get called captain, but what is your like a benevolent dictator for life, right? BDFL.
It's a term in open source that's applied to like Linus Alynix or Greta, Python or something like that, David Hammer or Hanson at Rails.
It's sort of a joking thing and one that I think none of us like really attached ourselves to, just kind of like an internet lower thing.
Well, you do a couple other interesting things, right? Because you got this like multi-billion dollar company used by most of the internet, but you run your company these interesting ways where remote work, I think, is,
You're famously, we're early and heavy into remote work, and you've talked a lot about that.
But you do a couple other interesting things.
So we talked about auditions instead of interviews, but you also do everybody in the company,
including yourself, works customer support, I think one or two weeks out of the year.
Can you talk about that one?
Yeah, part of our hiring process is your first two weeks are doing customer support for every single hire,
whether you're like our new CFO or chief legal officer or whatever role it is.
And then once a week a year, you rotate back and doing customer support.
By the way, lots of companies have versions of this.
So it's definitely not anymore the first to do this or anything like that.
Why should a company do that?
If you look at every successful business, the closer they are to customers,
generally the more successful they are.
And so it's very easy, especially when you're running something on the internet
and distributed for people to become numbers or stats or something on your lurker dashboard
or something like that.
And so, you know, getting back to like every individual, every number of your signups,
you might have 5,000 signups in a day.
But each one of those people has a story.
You just learn a lot about your product.
And it's, I think, the best way to sort of do iterative customer developments.
I think Eric Gris talked about this or Steve Blank, you know, they're kind of like,
get out of the office and go meet the customers.
And I'm very inspired by like leaders at Salesforce, talk to Mark Breenoff or someone like that.
They'll typically spend a quarter to a third of their time with customers, even at that scale.
Is there a story or any epiphany you had from doing this?
You've probably done this now, you know, for decades.
So is there like an insight that came from this?
Just the other day, a few days ago, I spent like 30, 45 minutes with the gentleman who kind of checks expenses at the company.
You know, because we have like these ramp cards and people who dispense things and stuff like that.
You know, sometimes we like say, you need a receipt for this or we question it at expense.
I just call it to understand more about this and also make sure that the way we were doing this was the most hated man at the company, by the way.
Well, I had gotten some feedback from folks.
They felt, you know, some of the questions they were getting felt a little aggressive.
And so, you know, we want to talk about, one, I just kind of want to see, like, the tools he used and how the work did and stuff like that.
So some of that was just shadowing.
So I was like, okay, because I wanted to say the interfaces.
This was also really helpful, like, going through support.
I realize that some of our internal tools, like, don't represent, you know, best practices in design or usability.
you know, sometimes, you know, so the internal stuff doesn't get the love that your external stuff does.
But then also, you know, we just sort of talked about, like, the culture of automatic bedside manner,
if you will, like, how can we like, you know, hold these principles?
Like, we need to really enforce our policies and make sure we do, you know, we get audited and everything.
So, like, we need to have these things from, like, a good accounting principles point of view.
But also doing it a way that, like, when we have these conversations, we're talking about the principles of it.
you know, the reason why.
So it's not just like, I'm giving you Sean a hard time because you didn't have a receipt,
but like, hey, if we don't have this receipts, you know, it's an art of firm might question this.
And then, you know, that might create an issue for XYZ or something like that.
When I first moved to Silicon Valley, I came to work with this guy, Michael Birch.
And he was, he represented everything I wanted.
He had already built like successful tech companies and he had made it.
And I was a 23 year old kid who wanted to make it.
And so I'm super excited to go into the,
work the first day and I'm like I'm going to learn so much from this guy because he's not just
done it one time he's built like four successful companies I'm ready for him to teach me
kind of like the dark arts I'm like what's the strategies to growth hacks what this like super
like high level strategic thinking and the very first week he puts me on not the new shit
like the oldest company that he had started something he had started back in 2001 it's like
birthday calendar or something yeah birthday alarm is that still going birthday alarm still going and so I as
like 25 year old company now. So I, at the time, I was like, oh, man, like I got to do this like,
whatever. And he tells me the story. So I actually learned this really valuable lesson in it.
I go, so what's the, I got curious because instead of just like being bored at doing like
birthday alarm, which, you know, seemed like this old outdated product at the time, I had a little
curious. So I started asking him like, where did this come from? Like, how did you even come up
with this idea? Why did you build this product? And what he told me was he goes, my very first startup,
I had quit my job. I wanted to like build a successful.
tech company, like do an internet company. Internet was like the new thing back in 99, 2000.
And he quit a high paying insurance job while his wife was pregnant and was like, I'm going to make
it. So he tried to create something really fancy. So he's like, oh, with the internet, he created
something that many people have tried, like Sean Parker tried to create this, a self-updating address
book, which is like, you know, I have your information, I have your name, your address, but you move,
Matt. Now, I don't know that you moved. So wouldn't it be cool if you could just update your
info in one place and it updated in all your friends address books. So we now have your
latest and greatest address. So that's what he wanted to build. And he's spending like nine months
heads down, like doesn't leave the bedroom coding this thing. And it's not really going anywhere.
But because he was a one man show, he was also doing, you know, he was the designer, he was the
developer. He was the ops guy. He was the customer service guy. Like he did all of it. And he was
like, it's the customer service that was actually the key because he was answering support tickets.
And he's like over and over again. He's like, I spent like, you know, seven hours a day banging my head
against the wall trying to figure out why nobody wants to use our product. I think it's so cool,
but nobody wants it. And then in the hour I was doing customer support, he's like,
I noticed that a bunch of people kept thanking me for the birthday reminder feature I had built in.
Like just the one feature, which was like a throwaway idea, which was just, if, you know, forget
the address. If it was someone's birthday, I would just tell you, you know, hey, it's our birthday
today. Remember that. This is before Facebook existed, right? So you didn't have Facebook or a bunch
of other ways that people could do this. So he just threw away the whole product and renamed the
company,
birthday alarm.com.
And he's like,
I expected to go nowhere.
And that was the thing
that took off.
And at that time,
birthday alarm had generated for him
and his wife personally,
like probably $20 million of pure profit by that time.
Because it was just every year was just generating a few million
dollars of profit.
And it's still,
to this day generating a few million dollars a year of profit.
Like,
it's this incredible business.
This is the gift that keeps on giving that only came because he was
answering the support tickets.
And he got curious like,
huh, like, why are they keep talking about this birthday reminder thing?
Is that actually, maybe I should do that.
And he did it on a whim.
And then in two days had built the product that actually people wanted, you know?
That's awesome.
I have one last question for you.
And it's on AI.
So there's a lot of stuff you could talk about with AI, but I just am curious on your
quick take about Deepseek because it's also, you know, they came out with this open source
thing.
There's a lot of people on either side of, you know, how much they believe about the story.
but like what's your quick reaction to what you saw with deep seek deep seek's a really cool model so
you know every model has like kind of a vibe and the way it's tuned and everything like that and so it's a
really fun one to play with and i would say you know the thing i tell people with all this air stuff
just like use it play with it you know because it's such early days and there's kind of uh you know
the way to prompt it the way to interact with it there's a a skill there that you'll learn and the vibes
of the deep seek model are very cool.
I think what's I'm most excited about as an open source guy
is that they actually open source the model
were really amazing papers about how they built it
and they opened weights.
Like for example, at my company,
I would say don't use like deepseek.com
for various reasons that's hosted in China and stuff like that.
But like we can run the model ourselves, you know, locally.
And that's pretty cool.
Or you can get it through perplexity, which hosted in the U.S.
So there's lots of ways to access it.
It's a really fun model.
So all these models are like good at different things.
They have a coding version.
They just released a cool image thing.
And so think of these as like little entities that you can interact with and run and spin up a boot.
And you should just learn the nuances and kind of flavors of each one.
Matt, do you guys actually believe that they've only taken the amount of funding that they've said?
Didn't they say something like $5 or $10 million?
They said that's what it cost to run the final training.
That might be true for like some something, but obviously like I'm sure they've spent,
invested a ton in and other things.
So and I know there's kind of this theory that maybe that's like a PR or sciop or
whatever like that.
When I started reading about them, I got fearful.
It was pretty insane, right, that the market reacted the way it did that, you know,
it wiped out a trillion dollars of value in.
24 hours. It was pretty wild how big that announcement was. I didn't think that was going to happen.
And I think you called it, Matt. Didn't you like tweet about this during Christmas time?
Well, Andre Capathy, so full credit, like tweeted about this like the day after Christmas and I saw his tweet and retweeted it.
So that's why I first learned about Deep Sea. Start playing with it. Yeah, I think that with all these things.
There's some, you can verify all the things. They made some amazing advancements and like how they train things and how they run
things and how they did memory interconnects and working with the constraints.
That has some really cool engineering breakthroughs.
And they shared it.
And this is stuff that I think OpenAI had also figured out, but they hadn't like shared it
publicly.
And so what I love about the deep seat guys is they, uh, they're open sourcing at all.
So, uh, and it's all available under like a true open source license.
It's not like the Lama license where it's free to have 700 million users or something.
Or, or I think Quinn, Alibaba one, which is also a really great model that people are
sleeping on.
So check out Quinn and some of the.
of the models coming out of China. They're really, really good. But it's a true open source license.
So that's awesome. Matt, thanks for coming on, Matt. It's good to see you again.
And thanks for sharing everything you did about WordPress. It's been a pleasure.
Yeah, we appreciate you, man. All right, that's the pod.
I feel like I could rule the world. I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like no days on point of old. Let's travel, never looking back.
