TBPN Live - Intel & Apple, The American Economic Rollercoaster | Brian Chesky, Josh Reeves, Jonathan Neman, Zal Bilimoria

Episode Date: May 8, 2026

(01:34) - Apple and Intel Reach Chip Deal (10:05) - The American Economic Rollercoaster (27:52) - Timeline Reactions (43:48) - Josh Reeves, CEO and co-founder of Gusto, a company specializ...ing in payroll, benefits, and HR solutions for small businesses, discusses the company's recent milestone of surpassing $1 billion in trailing revenue, attributing this achievement to their commitment to assisting small businesses. He emphasizes Gusto's focus on execution and support for small businesses, noting that while they have no immediate plans to go public, they are closely monitoring market conditions. Reeves also highlights the impact of AI on business growth rates and the increase in new business formations, expressing optimism about the potential for AI to empower more individuals to become business owners. (55:59) - Jonathan Neman, co-founder and CEO of Sweetgreen, discusses the company's recent nationwide launch of wraps, marking its most significant menu expansion to date. After a year of development, Sweetgreen introduced four signature wraps featuring a custom four-ingredient tortilla, aiming to offer a portable, healthy, and craveable option for customers. Neman emphasizes the importance of customer feedback in this innovation, highlighting the use of social listening tools and direct interactions to meet consumer demands for convenient and satisfying meals. (01:32:00) - Zal Bilimoria is the solo general partner at Refactor Capital, a seed-stage venture capital firm he founded in 2016, focusing on hard tech startups in sectors like bio, climate, and aerospace. In the conversation, he reflects on his journey from product management roles at Microsoft, Google, YouTube, Netflix, and LinkedIn to becoming a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, where he co-launched their Bio Fund, before establishing Refactor Capital. Bilimoria discusses his investment philosophy, emphasizing a concentrated portfolio strategy, writing $1-2 million checks to 20-25 companies per fund, and highlights recent successes such as Astranis' $450 million Series E raise and PathAI's $1 billion acquisition by Roche. (01:56:27) - Brian Chesky, co-founder and CEO of Airbnb, is an American businessman and industrial designer who has led the company since its inception in 2007. In the conversation, he discusses Airbnb's accelerated growth post-pandemic, attributing it to a renewed startup intensity and a focus on enhancing the guest experience. Chesky also highlights the significant role of AI in the company's operations, noting that 60% of Airbnb's code is now written by AI, which has improved customer service efficiency and reduced costs. Follow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You're watching TVPN. Today's Friday, May 8th, 236, we're live from the TVPN off the dome. The Temple of Technology, the Fortress of Finance, the capital of capital. Jordy has some new buttons. I got some new buttons. That's why we had to be off for a couple days.
Starting point is 00:00:18 Yes. Deep engineering work. The Great Lock-in continues. The Great Lock-in. No, we will go into a review of the last few days, but first we'll give you a review of the next three hours. because we have Josh Reeves from Gusto coming on. Jonathan Neiman from Sweet Green.
Starting point is 00:00:34 Zol. The Wayfactor. And then Brian Chesky from Airbnb coming in to the TVPN Ultradown. We're very excited. Lighter schedule. It's Friday. We're having fun. We're going to be hanging out here on the screen.
Starting point is 00:00:49 Telling you about the American Economic Roller Coaster. You've heard this story before. It's just nonstop. Okay, so the American economic role minister. It's good to be back. We miss you guys. It's good to be back. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:07 You got a bunch of stuff going on. So, the whole bunch of economic news over the last couple of days, stock market is absolutely ripping. We should be in white suits. Intel's up 20% today, almost. And there's this split between the AI economy and the real economy, the American economy. And there's a whole bunch of different things that, like, you need to puzzle together to get a picture of what's going on. And then I'm discovering that there are K shapes within the K shapes, even in the real economy. There's a divide between different companies.
Starting point is 00:01:36 And so I wanted to walk through that. So let's start with the Intel News. It's up almost 20% today on the news that they will be making chips for Apple. There's a report in the Wall Street Journal about this. They've reached a preliminary chip making agreement. It's not completely locked in. But there's a whole bunch of extra context here that we've been tracking for the last six months, 12 months, as some of this was expected.
Starting point is 00:02:00 The revitalization of Intel was something that a lot of folks were clamoring for, Ben Thompson, myself, a lot of folks, Leopold Aschenbrenner, were all hoping for something, and plans are starting to come together. So the talks have been described as intensive, intensive talks between the two companies have been ongoing. For more than a year, Apple's been talking to Intel. Interesting, of course, Intel and Apple have been long-term partners for the 90s, 2000s,
Starting point is 00:02:28 up until the Apple Silicon program where they started going, Apple started going direct to TSM. Can they get them back? It seems like potentially in some form factors, but we're gonna dig into it. So they have hammered out a former deal in recent months. And it's still unclear which exact Apple products Intel would make chips for and manufacture them,
Starting point is 00:02:49 both its own designs. So Intel has two main businesses. It's both a design shop and a manufacturer. They have a fab and a, and a design. unit. And in its Foundry Unit, both businesses have been underperforming for years before Lip Butan came in as the new CEO and was vowing to revitalize them. And so the last summer, the Trump administration struck a deal to convert nearly $9 billion in federal grants into Intel stock, giving the U.S. 10% stake. At roughly $2021 a share, it's now at $125 a share.
Starting point is 00:03:25 So White House has got to be feeling pretty good. Yeah, huge. I mean, I'm pretty sure Jensen has made over billion dollars on the $5 billion investment. I mean, just today, if it's up 20%, and he must have seen a big growth in that position since then. So just today, probably a one or $2 billion print. And so the reporting here in the journal says that
Starting point is 00:03:48 the Trump administration was actually key in bringing Apple to the table, putting pressure on sort of both sides to say, hey let's think about the future of American manufacturing resiliency reducing Taiwanese dependence on a foreign supply chain and and giving Intel a real shot at underwriting the next big fad that they want to build it. Yeah, and Vita got in at $23 a share with their $5 billion investments. So up around a 5x.
Starting point is 00:04:16 Not bad. That's not bad at all. The guy really needed it. He paid for Grock with that. That's pretty sick. Oh, yeah. He just paid for... They were dropped perfectly.
Starting point is 00:04:25 That's why he wired before they actually close. Yeah, he's like, I'm up. I got gains. I need to offset these. So Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik has met repeatedly over the last year with high ranking Apple officials, including CEO Tim Cook, as well as SpaceX chief Elon Musk, NVIDIA chief Jensen Wong, to try and convince them to get into business with Intel. There was a discussion about should Nvidia dual source, the grace CPUs from Intel, SpaceX,
Starting point is 00:04:50 and Elon's been with Samsung for a lot of Tesla chips. But there's been discussion there. There was that rumor about global foundries. And Elon's always been in the in and around the fab world. And he's obviously going a lot deeper with the long-term TerraFab project. So Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik was trying to convince them to get into business with Intel. Some of the people familiar with the matter said with the Apple deal, Intel is now signed partnerships with all three.
Starting point is 00:05:16 So over the last decade, Intel fell badly behind rivals. This is from the Wall Street Journal, such as TSM and Samsung Electronics. after a series of technical mishaps, leadership changes, and failed attempts at consolidation led outside Foundry customers to pull or curb their businesses. When Intel hired Tan in March of 2025, wow, just a year ago, I guess a year in two months, to replace ousted Chief Executive Pell Gelsinger, President Trump raised concerns that Tan's close ties with China would compromise him and called for his ouster. It was a very, very dramatic moment, but Tan won Trump over with a charm offensive.
Starting point is 00:05:53 I like that. And the government announced its 10% investment in Intel shortly after. Following the investment, Intel's price rose sharply on Friday morning it rose 7.5% to an all-time high of nearly $118 per share. It's up more now. Tan has been reshaping Intel's top leadership ranks in recent months, including hiring former TSM executive, WeeGen Lowe, a move that prompted a lawsuit from TSMC. So they're not friends anymore. has also ousted his head of product and hired new executives to lead the company's data center processor and client computing units, as well as newly formed custom silicon business.
Starting point is 00:06:34 He's also invested heavily in Intel's most advanced manufacturing process known as 14A, and that is the node that Intel is hoping that all of the potential customers will jump together and say, hey, we're going to buy from this if you make it. If you build it, we will come. President Trump personally advocated for Intel to cook in a meeting, which is funny because it sounds like he's advocating for Intel just to cook generally. But he's, no, he's advocating for Intel to Tim Cook in a meeting at the White House, according to people familiar with the matter. Trump said, I like Intel in January. He said that the government made tens of billions of dollars from Intel deal and that the government's backing of the company had attracted important partners to Intel.
Starting point is 00:07:17 As soon as we went in, Apple went in, Nvidia went in, a lot of smart people went in, Trump said, Nvidia, the world's largest chip firm invested $5 billion in Intel in September and the two companies announced a partnership under which Intel would build custom data center CPUs, the processing brains for most computer systems for Nvidia.
Starting point is 00:07:34 And last month, Elon, of course, announced the TerraFab project. And so Apple relies on TSMC to make chips for iPhones, iPads, Macs, and other devices, and is under pressure to find additional chip suppliers. There's also chip short. So it could be good to dual source independent of the geopolitical discussion on Apple's last two earnings conference calls Cook blamed a lack of availability of advanced chips for Apple's inability to meet customer demands for iPhones the constraints are expected to continue in the current quarter affecting several Mac models Cook said quote we think looking forward that the Mac Mini in the Mac Studio may take several months to reach supply demand balance and after the earnings call
Starting point is 00:08:17 Apple raised the Mac Mini starting price. And so TSM's manufacturing capacities, capabilities far surpass those of Samsung and Intel. Makers of other kinds of chips for memory and storage, for example, are more competitive with one another, giving Apple multiple sources of supply, although, of course, they are memory-constrained. Apple's long been TSM's top customer, but skyrocketing demand for its manufacturing capacity from Nvidia and other designers of AI chips means Apple's no longer has as much less to secure the supplies that it needs. Starting in 2006, Apple used Intel design CPUs
Starting point is 00:08:52 as its main processor of its personal computers, but switched to its own custom CPUs based on arm design in 2020. That's the dawn of Apple Silicon. And so there's been an incredible economic and financial performance concentrated in just a handful of trillion dollar tech companies. Intel's starting to join and starting to perform like that.
Starting point is 00:09:16 There's a few memory stock. I saw one report that referred to it as the Mag 10, and they'd added a few other AI names to that group. But there's just a few companies that are driving the vast majority returns in the stock market. There's a couple slides that we can pull up that show the scope of what they're calling. It is now a bubble. The concentration? Yeah, the concentration. Yeah, we went through.
Starting point is 00:09:42 We had three sort of beautiful weeks where pretty much. much everyone started saying there's no way it's a bubble. Look at the revenue growth. There's no way it's a bubble. But now people, Steve, over at Bloomberg, we can pull this chart up since you mentioned it. Which one is this? This is the concentration. Sure.
Starting point is 00:10:03 Yeah, I've seen this. The market. You can see the AI Big 10. So Mag 7 plus AMD Broadcom and one other. Who is that? Micron. and now make up 40% of the market. Railroads, for reference, during 1835 to 1910, were 63% of the market, and he comps it to Japan,
Starting point is 00:10:30 the nifty 50, tech and telecom throughout various periods of time. And, yeah, it's an interesting dynamic. And so I was reading this post by, or this piece by Greg Ipp in the Wall Street Journal, And he was trying to disentangle what's happening in the overall American economy from the AI economy. Where is the growth coming from? He sort of back the envelope did. He said the AI economy grew 31% while the non-AI economy just 0.1%. And he cites a few economic statistics that are recent.
Starting point is 00:11:07 Personal consumption, the biggest component of GDP grew a relatively muted 1.6%. investment fell in housing, business structures. I think we're spending more in data centers than housing now or office buildings, I guess. I think it eclipsed office buildings and factories and transportation equipment like trucks and aircrafts. Meanwhile, investment soared, 43% in tech equipment, obviously that's chips and GPUs. 23% in software, surprising. And 22% in data center. Yeah, SaaS has had a pretty meaningful bounce back.
Starting point is 00:11:38 Certainly on the revenue side. Data dog, Atlassian. Yeah. There's been some acceleration. It really was extremely widespread where you had, I mean, you had like DoorDash and companies with strong network effects where the software was not their moat. They still had to go an answer to the market. And some of them got in and out of that in a week or a month and some of them it took a quarter
Starting point is 00:12:01 or two to show that there's resiliency. Some of them are still beaten down. But overall, you know, software is still doing very well. And so on the flip side, there's another headline that hit the, Journal yesterday, U.S. adds 115,000 jobs in April with solid hiring across sectors, retail, transportation, warehousing, and health care, all short, all showed strong growth and led to expectation beating jobs growth. And so this is the weird dynamic that, you know, you're seeing all of this growth in the, in the AI economy, and yet the overall employment is,
Starting point is 00:12:43 still chugging along. We can pull up the chart from the Wall Street Journal, but the U.S. job market blew past expectations in April, buoyed by gains in industries, including retail, transportation, warehousing, health care. Not completely unexpected, given that those are not particularly AI targeted areas, whereas you might see, you know, the layoffs in the tech community, but that doesn't, it's just not enough because the U.S. employs over 100 million people. And so a layoff of 4,000 people at some tech company just doesn't really move the needle when you're talking about.
Starting point is 00:13:17 Breaking news from Gabe in the chat. Texas Roadhouse is up. What? He says 20%. I'm seeing 15%. Why is it up so high? He says, you're not bullish enough on Texas Roadhouse. I have never been.
Starting point is 00:13:31 Maybe they beat, uh, yeah. Everyone says this is a Kyriaku, uh, filter. It really, it really is. It's crazy how viral that, that, that meme format has gone. I thought that was just like a thing that I sent to you because I'd be dying laughing about. Yeah, yeah. No, no, it's quite popular. We're quite popular.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Broken containment fully. So the American economy added 115,000 jobs in April. This was down from a net gain of 185,000 jobs in March, but it was much better than what expectations were for April. Analysts polled by the Wall Street Journal were expecting 55,000 jobs. And the real number came in more than twice that, which is like, it just breaks the narrative a lot. And it's this, there's this disconnect between like the AI economy and the real economy. I was talking to Sager about this. It's like, in some ways it's like AI is, NVIDIA earnings is holding up the global economy.
Starting point is 00:14:28 And it's holding up the global stock market. It's not actually holding up the economy. If you view the economy as all of the different jobs and activities that happen, even if there isn't incredible growth there, there's actually a surprising amount of strength and resiliency. So the unemployment race stayed. I'm waiting to hit the gong until we see what the revisions come in at. We haven't seen any revisions from March this time. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:14:56 It comes like over six months later. Yeah, but that's why I wanted to have Josh from Gusto on today, because I think that Gusto has data on hiring that is very different from what the labor department, what's going on at the labor department. It's just a completely different dynamic. And you can look at like what's actually going on in small businesses. We've talked to folks at Stripe about this. And and and and and and and and and and there are a lot of other data sources that ADP payrolls and there's there's there's plenty of like pretty standardized, uh, formats for reporting. And uh, while there might be revisions to to to some government stats, it's, it feels like there's
Starting point is 00:15:34 plenty of places to get data and it's all pointing in the same direction, which is not. Oh, So yeah, they said they beat twice, they delivered twice as many jobs as were projected, and it was actually down. No one's really, you know, suggesting that. So the April report coming in after strong job gains in March shows how the labor market is holding up better this year than last. While health care is still leading the way in job gains, other sectors now appear to be picking up. Businesses are seeing conditions stabilizing, and they have weathered the tariffs so many are hiring. It's looking somewhat better than it did last year. In the first four months of the year, monthly payrolls have averaged 76,000 up from an average of 42,000 during the same period last year.
Starting point is 00:16:16 Still, the U.S. has shed jobs over the past six months, and many companies are reluctant to bring on new workers and masks. Companies gripling with changes in everything from trade to immigration to tax policy have, for the most part, held off on large-scale hiring and firing. But it does seem like the chaos of the tariffs and all of the early EOs, like, that creates a lot of business uncertainty. that settles eventually, and then you get back to, okay, there were a bunch of changes, but at least we know that there aren't wild changes coming in the future, at least that are expected. So Diane Swank, chief economist at KPMG says it's still a high anxiety job market. Those who have a job are clearly clinging on while those who are looking for a job are feeling frozen out. And so I was digging into, you know, where is their strength within the real economy once you go outside of AI, what is going on?
Starting point is 00:17:14 And there were two recent earnings reports that were sort of disconnected, but showed a little bit of the picture of what's going on. So it was Whirlpool and Six Flags. Both had very different reports. So Whirlpool, you probably know from refrigeration and washing machines. machines, dryers, that type of appliance. They've been making an appliance for over 100 years. And they've also been paying a dividend since the 1950s consistently. They've never suspended their dividend, even through all the great recession, the dot-com crash.
Starting point is 00:17:47 Every year they've been able to pay that dividend. They just cut their dividend, which is a really, really big deal for this company since it's a dividend stock. The stock traded down on the news. And the stock is down 80% of the past five years. and they're in some financial trouble. Like they have a lot of debt and they have a lot of competition. But you could play that as like, okay, this, like the real economy is like completely chugging to a halt.
Starting point is 00:18:14 At the same time, you had six flags, which should be the thing that is the most discretionary. Like, do you go to the roller coaster theme park or not? And six flags just reported higher first quarter revenue. They're growing. and they're growing attendance and customer spending. And so now Six Flags, it's not exactly a juggernaut of business. It's only worth $2.3 billion. And the stock is down over the past two years, about 50%.
Starting point is 00:18:40 But the business is growing, and you wouldn't expect that during a time of deep economic weakness. And so there's something odd going on there where, as you think of refrigeration is extremely necessary, roller coasters as the ultimate, like, you don't, you can definitely skip it if you are cash strapped. But the actual dynamics of the market are very different. So Whirlpool sells big ticket necessities, these refrigerators, but they are deferrable. So you can put off getting a new refrigerator. You can repair an old refrigerator if money is tight.
Starting point is 00:19:14 But your kids are only really roller coaster age for a limited time. And Whirlpool also faces brutal global competition and existing home sales are down 3% month over month. And so all of that drives fewer appliance upgrades and they are not and they are not necessarily beneficiary of all the international competition that they face from LG and Samsung and other international players. And so I've sort of. Quick correction. Six Flags or new information.
Starting point is 00:19:43 Six Flags has been up since around the, around November. It's sort of bottom. Travis, I remember I was thinking of this because one, they have. of the ticker fund, which is fantastic. The stock has not been having fun. But Travis Kelsey and a group put in 200 million. That's right. We talked about that.
Starting point is 00:20:04 The stock traded down pretty substantially. Yeah, I remember that. After the investment, but it's basically recovered to where it was. Yeah. And it's still down over the past like five years. Yeah, two years ago, it was like a $5 billion company. Yeah, down big. But what's interesting is that at this time of like economic uncertainty and all these
Starting point is 00:20:24 questions about hiring, questions about economic resilience, they are increasing revenues, increasing attendance, increasing customer spend. And that's what's driving the stock today. And so there's this, I was looking at these two companies and I was like, they sort of fit into this barbell thesis of the AI future, which I've been seeing pop up more and more. And the two examples that I always give are one, the Ellison family is both like long slop and long anti-slop. They have a ton of infrastructure investments in AI through Oracle, and then they own legacy media, like Batman, Superman, through Warner Brothers. And then Josh Kushner's doing a similar thing with Open AI and the San Francisco Giants, like two completely opposite ends of the
Starting point is 00:21:07 spectrum. And so you can think of roller coasters as potentially like anti-slop because you can't vibe code Space Mountain. But it's interesting to sort of like dig into the weeds of what's going on in the global economy and the American economy and seeing like where the unsuspecting winners are. Ryan Peterson shared a post from the chart from the Financial Times that perfectly illustrates our possible futures. This is so funny that this is in the financial times, but they fully embraced what happens in the human extinction tech singularity and the end of scarcity tech singularity. In the bull case, real GDP per capita goes north of a million dollars. And in the human extinction scenario, it goes to zero, of course.
Starting point is 00:22:01 But the AI boosted growth path is a steady trend upwards. And that is the goal that I think everyone should be working for, potentially the end of scarcity outcome as well. But it is fascinating. And I think this chart that Ryan shares is sort of, I think, why there's anxiety in the market, because there's this, like, you know, the whole, like, you're not prepared if it's not a bubble concept, but there's, there's like a dual anxiety where, like, if AI gets too good, there's mass unemployment, everyone's worried about that,
Starting point is 00:22:37 but if AI is a bubble and it collapses, you go into a recession and everyone loses their job, and, like, you're in a similar scenario of, like, economic anxiety for both the, not necessarily the true doomers. I mean, obviously they face a similar opinion. But even if you're just like in the, it's overheated camp, there's real risk to the stability. And I think that's where a lot of the bubble concerns come from. Although we're certainly not seeing very many signs of the bubble.
Starting point is 00:23:11 I mean, obviously the evaluations are high, but so are the revenue growth charts. So we can go through some of the folks that are. Are you more of a back of the envelope guy or a napkin math guy? Oh, that's interesting. I have a napkin here from Wonderco from the event. Oh, would you look at that? A little souvenir. I like a napkin.
Starting point is 00:23:34 Actually, now that I'm thinking about it, napkin math is insane. It's extremely hard to write on a napkin. It's way easier to write on the back of an envelope. And you can get a big envelope. You can get an envelope that's eight and a half by it's effectively. An envelope is sophisticated. An envelope is kind of a core business utility.
Starting point is 00:23:55 Yeah. Napkins can be used for anything. Yeah, if you're in napkin math, you've got to pivot. I will say I'm much more of an napkin math guy. Why? I can't. I mean, just, just, just, spiritually, spiritually and the phrase that I pulled. But if I can't get excited about an opportunity based on what can fit on a napkin,
Starting point is 00:24:14 then I'm never going to get excited about it, right? There's usually like three. So you think a napkin is is definitionally smaller? It's a less amount. Totally. It's not, it's not, it's a, it's a lesser vehicle than an envelope. Yeah. Because a big envelope, you could do a full spreadsheet on.
Starting point is 00:24:32 Totally. You could write out comms and have multiple cells. No, so I'm, I'm, in practice, I'm a napkin math guy. But if something was really serious, I would probably trade that. Hold out. Yeah, we've been doing too much napkin math around here. It's time to pull out the big guns. Let's get out the envelope.
Starting point is 00:24:52 Speaking of envelopes, so this morning, I was telling Tyler, I'm incredibly overwhelmed with slacks, emails, you know, DMs on every platform, LinkedIn DMs, Instagram DMs, X DMs, all the different messaging apps. And I was thinking, how cool would it be if there was a service where you connected all your inboxes to and then every day they would print out all of the messages and then bring them to you and you could put like a box. You could put a box outside of your house and they would just put them in there and then at a specific time, you know, maybe in the roughly like two hour window, you could go out and grab all the printed out messages and sort of like leaf through them, decide what you need
Starting point is 00:25:40 to respond to. You would potentially, because you're only getting messages, once a day, you would probably be a lot more intentional about what you wrote back and forth, right? And I think that could be... Sort of the opposite of Earth Class mail, those virtual mailboxes, because they'll take your physical mail scan. Yeah, but I want everything, I want everything coming in this box. I want to put a box outside of my house that people put, and I think there's something there. Yeah. Trump, I mean, Trump literally does this. He does that, right? Yeah. He gets emails printed out, and then he'll write with a big marker, his response, and then his assistant will scan it, and then email it back.
Starting point is 00:26:15 Yeah. More on C-Fri says a napkin is more available than an envelope. Very true. Often the best business meetings were not scheduled as a business meeting. So there aren't envelopes around. There's no envelopes around, but there's plenty of napkins. Also, I mean, you're saying napkins are smaller, but if you're at a restaurant and you have like a fabric napkin and you unfold, those can be pretty big.
Starting point is 00:26:37 So you're supposed, but I feel like it's bad form to be at a restaurant. Like, you're not supposed to ruin the napkins. Or do you carry a pen that has washable ink? You have the crayons for the kids, right? People are... The chat is saying, they don't ask you to... The chat is saying I could call my service
Starting point is 00:26:53 the United States Postal. That's a good name. Thank you, Alex. That's a great name. That's sort of like the San Francisco artificial intelligence company or something like that. Yeah, the browser company of New York.
Starting point is 00:27:04 It would be inspired by that, yeah. I think that even with the crans of the kids. He uses crann, closed-fisted grip, right on the table. Tablecloth, okay. Yeah, I feel like if you give, if you're given crans, you are expected to maintain that the child uses the crans only on the children's menu, which is typically made out of paper, very disposable. If you see the child using the crans on a cloth napkin, you are expected as a patron to intervene. Jackson says digitize this service and call it email.
Starting point is 00:27:40 There we go. We got to get, we got to establish the mail box. first. We got an idea. But then we can go there. But I like where you're going. I got an idea. Well, there's some other posts about the markets. Justin
Starting point is 00:27:55 Spittler says them. Be careful buying semis here. Obviously, the market's very overheated. Let's play this video. Oh, this is Travis Pristrana? Yes. That's amazing. Nitro Circus. We mentioned many times on the show.
Starting point is 00:28:12 Is he drinking a Red Bull? Yeah, no parachute. Oh, no parachute. Yeah, so he jumps out of the plane, no parachute. That's crazy. Drinking a red ball. That's actually. And then he connects.
Starting point is 00:28:23 He's got to do some tricks. He's really taking his time here. The tension is building, building, building. And so he connects with someone who wraps him up. And then do they pull the parachute? They connect to each other. Or do they? They strap him to them.
Starting point is 00:28:38 Oh, okay. There is a strap. They strap themselves to him. Because it seems sort of crazy just a bear hug and hope for the best. I don't think you're paranoid. I don't know. It's Red Bull. Anything could happen. I would, I would, I would expect him to be delivered a full parachute, his own parachute that he then, you know, dawns. And, and, and, but he made it. Wow. Well, that's what it's like investing in semiconductors right now, I guess.
Starting point is 00:29:02 Anyway, um, how was your last two days, Tyler? What did you get up to? It was sick. I was at the, uh, I went to the trial. You went to the trial. Opening on Elon trial. Okay, walk me through it. You left the studio on Tuesday. Yes, right before this, the chat is still going. They said, if Gary Tan gets a hold of this service, he's going to call it Gmail. Gmail is good.
Starting point is 00:29:23 There's something there. Gmail. If he vibe codes a full Gmail replacement, anything's possible. So you leave the office two after we wrap the show on Tuesday. You went straight to the airport? I did. Okay. And then what time did you go to bed?
Starting point is 00:29:40 because you woke up really early, right? Yeah, so I got to the trial, so it's in Oakland. I got the courthouse at, I think, like, something around like 5.30. 530. Yeah, because you got to get in line. So basically, you know, it's a public, because it's like a federal case. Yeah, yeah. There, like, has to be some room for the public.
Starting point is 00:29:57 But there's only, like, I think the number is somewhere like 20 or 30. Because I think it's close to 20 because I think part of the 30 is reserved just for media. Okay. And when you got there at 530, were there already people standing in line? Yeah. So they were, I think there were like three or four people there already. Okay. In line.
Starting point is 00:30:14 Early bird getting the worm. But yeah, because I didn't want to be late, obviously. Yeah, yeah, of course. Did you talk to the other people? A few of them. Were you there before Mike Isaac? I was there before Mike Isaac. But he is a media pass.
Starting point is 00:30:25 So, yeah, because last time when Mike Isaac came on the show, he said that, because each, like, news. Yeah. New York Times got one pass, and he was splitting it with Cade Mets. And so they were sort of going back and forth. And I guess he had a media pass that day. Yeah, so that day he had a media pass. He got there pretty late. He got there at like 7.30 or 8. Okay. So you're there from 5.30. He gets there at 8. What time does the trial actually start? I think around 8.30. Okay. So basically I'm just posting up for like three hours. Okay.
Starting point is 00:30:56 And then this is Wednesday. So walk this one's like what, what are you seeing? There's these opening remarks from the judge. They sort of welcome everyone in. Yeah, jury comes in. Okay. So there are basically three main like segments. So basically I'll say it starts 830s. 30 ends at, I think, 2 p.m. There's two breaks, two 20-minute breaks. Okay. So starts off and we watch like the deposition of Miramarotti. So this is all live screened, right? Yeah. The audio is live. The audio is live. So you're seeing a video. We're watching the video of her deposition. Okay. It's mostly covering the, the, the timeline of the ousting. And this is where, this is where all the texts came out. Yeah, yeah. And were they showing you the actual text? Were they playing a video or were they playing the AI reenactment of the text? Because we have this. Someone turned Sam Altman's text to Miramaradi into a 2011 style emo teenage heartthrob anthem.
Starting point is 00:31:54 Did this make it into the courtroom or no? Let's play this. We have the audio. Good motion graphics too. Whoever made this? It's talented. This is very bad. What is this Suno?
Starting point is 00:32:24 Can you put in text into Suno? I like the show, play this for an AI skeptic. Yeah. And see what their reaction is. Yeah. How do you see this and not want to build? I've seen these before and I've always really enjoyed them.
Starting point is 00:32:39 But with most of the AI music tools, I've never found a great way to put in a full script that I've written to get the results. But does, you know, have that? So the author said his steps to make this. So first, the OCRed the images and turn them into plain text. So images of the actual text messages. And then remove the names from the dialogue, paste it into Suno and iterated like 20 to 30 times. And then finally I thought this one was catchy. Okay.
Starting point is 00:33:04 Yeah. So I think it's still, like this is still Suno, but I think he's still iterated by it. I like this. I like this. Yash is really having fun with this. Put up a version of this with the Gen Z. Brain Rout slang. Yo, fam, can you give me a vibe check on? Am I cooked or nah for real, for real?
Starting point is 00:33:21 Sotcha and the gang low-key stressing. Miramaradi, yeah, you're skibbitty. This isn't a rare L. This is an Ohio-level generational oral loss, little bro. Who ratioed me, Sam Haltman says. Miramaradi. some rando zesty NPC Twitch looks maxing Sigma I'm not even going to go further but yosh is having fun lots of people having fun uh what else happened did someone actually get on the stand or was it all
Starting point is 00:33:49 video yes so the first like it's straight up teacher played a movie it's movie day no i mean the the judge actually did get angry uh because like she was like oh the jury's going to get bored and like she was like offering them coffee and stuff okay so basically yeah the first like maybe hour was um mirror deposition video and And then we go through some of the actual documents again of the text messages. And then Chavon Zillis is testifying. So she is physically there. Okay.
Starting point is 00:34:14 She was a open-eyed board member 2020 to 2023. And she steps down when Elon started XAI. Yep. So that was, I have no idea how long there was. That was the majority of the- It was during the whole conflict. Yeah. Perfect person to testify.
Starting point is 00:34:30 Well, no. So she actually left the board before the ousting. So she left in February, 23. ousting is November. Oh, okay. Interesting. I didn't. The timeline always gets so jumbled up because there's like
Starting point is 00:34:42 2018 battles between Sam and Greg and Ilya and Elon and then there's the board. Yeah, because all throughout this hearing, there's like, yeah, there's basically two main, like moments, right? Yeah. Yeah. And we're sort of clicking back and forth between them. Yeah. Chat wants to know what kind of wambos were being thrown around.
Starting point is 00:35:01 Was Lorraine being used? People saying, can you please Lorraine this email? Shavon was actually dropping some good lingo. I don't know if I can remember anything. There's something like Mike Isaac always talks about, like they keep referencing Dota and they keep everyone on the stand is using a ton of jargon. How jargony was it? Was it like Dwar Keshe Patel podcast level jargon or like actual like researchers
Starting point is 00:35:26 like talking to each other jargon? I would say it was not very sophisticated, especially among the lawyers, right? Okay. Yeah, Chavon, she did drop. some good lingo. Okay. Yeah, it was some referencing some, like why she got into AI. Sure.
Starting point is 00:35:41 But, you know, acceleration and all this. Okay, okay. And then after that, we watched another, like, hour-long video of Helen Toner's deposition. Wow. That was just about the ousting. Okay. Yeah, it was very fun. I enjoyed a lot.
Starting point is 00:35:53 Like, basically, you know, almost everyone, like, sitting in my section, which was basically the public in the media. Yeah. Like, everyone that came as the public were basically also media. They just didn't get the media pass. Sure, sure. So everyone surrounding me is on their laptop, like typing, basically. Yeah, just like taking down what's being said.
Starting point is 00:36:11 Yeah, yeah. And then I'm just sitting there enjoying it because it's like, you know, it's good stuff. How would you rate Mike Isaac's like snack and overall food supplies for the day? Did he burn? It looked pretty good. I believe he did bring the butt pillow. It seems like he's not making progress on the food front. I would expect by day seven of this he would have a smorgasbord in front of him, a full Thanksgiving.
Starting point is 00:36:31 I mean, honestly, like, Nathan for you where he's best chili into the. the chili suit. You should bring chili suit. I fasted the whole time. I was kind of, I just talked it out. Why didn't you figure it? We have talked about the food situation so many times. How did you not think ahead there?
Starting point is 00:36:47 I just wanted to make it more challenging. Okay. Yeah, I was like, this is going to be too easy. Inspire you to grow up. Should we play this chili, the chili man? If you have it, we can also play, what's the other video?
Starting point is 00:36:58 The, the Hamilton musical has been adapted. People are taking this in all different ways. Has anyone done a... I have a video here. A corn remix of it. The Hamilton one is good.
Starting point is 00:37:11 Let's play the... Let's play the Hamilton one. Altman, an AI music experiment from... Well, let's start with chili, because I think that the trial is going for another couple weeks. Robert was on board. So later that week, I hired a professional tailor to help design the chili suit based on a detailed sketch I had drawn.
Starting point is 00:37:30 The easiest way is probably to put the chili in. Tag my guy's This is how he can make a third Our plan was to have the chili reservoirs mimic the distribution of fat on a larger man's body So it wouldn't look suspicious under clothing And with the help of the guy from Christless Is he going into us? No, he's helping a local business
Starting point is 00:37:51 Sell chili Sell chili in the stadium Ill legally in the stadium That's right You can probably do like a cup there Yeah All right skip ahead Skip ahead
Starting point is 00:38:01 to hold over a hundred servings of fresh chilling. A hundred servings. The individual reservoirs would be linked by a network of tubes that would all lead to a battery-powered aerostaltic pump for dispensing the chilling. If somebody doesn't do that, the trial is going for another couple weeks. If somebody is not.
Starting point is 00:38:16 I think you might, I think the bailiff might actually just send you straight to jail if you did this. There were surprisingly little hijinks going on. Yeah? I thought there would be way more hijinks. Like, you know, like no one dressed up in a costume or a new. We, uh, were there Elon?
Starting point is 00:38:29 I mean, it actually is, quite possible someone is doing this and we just don't know because it's such a good idea and they're they're just being enjoying chilling uh were were there Elon fans that was something uh Mike Isaac was talking about like people oh I guess Elon's not on the stand so like why would the fans go right yeah I don't think they're now it's like purely he was not even there okay yeah yeah so okay so no one there I think there's going to be more testimonials soon with with some higher named you know higher profile yeah I think I'll get on the stand so that'll be a big moment yeah I believe Ilya is is early next week, maybe Monday or Tuesday.
Starting point is 00:39:02 That'd be interesting. And did you go two days in a row? Or just one? I just went one day because Wednesday, the people testifying, I think we're not going to be as interesting. Oh. But maybe that's a day, so I apologize. Okay.
Starting point is 00:39:13 I think everyone's equally deserving of some attention, especially if there's a nice warm bowl of chili being served in the courtroom. Anyway, should we play this Altman AI music experiment from Daniel Green, the Hamilton recreation of the, The texts, everyone has enumerated their various techniques. Ryan says, John, you should go to the trial dressed as Ilya. Ooh, yeah, I do have the costume. Ready to rock.
Starting point is 00:39:43 It only takes five hours to set up. Get up at 2 a.m. then go stand in line. I think I'd get kicked out immediately. Anyway, let's play this. I want to hear this. How does a startup founder, late stage, get fired by a board on a Sunday. Oh, so it's actually like... Can you please officially invite me to the office for a meeting?
Starting point is 00:40:06 So it's not the direct quotes from the text. Or maybe it is? He is now saying they need till end of day, Satya and I said that doesn't work and we need to start preparing for plans. This is much more uncanny valley for me. This doesn't sound like a real musical in the same way that the pop punk one
Starting point is 00:40:25 sounded pretty accurate. I don't know. Um, Anyway, we can move on to some other news. We can move on to some other news. Deep Seek is raising a monster $7 billion round at $50 billion valuation making it China's largest ever AI raise. But what shocks a Jaws here, Cryptopunk, the most is the founder. He's personally contributing 40% of the round himself. Wow. $3 billion coming from the founder directly. owns 90% of the company unheard of at this valuation. Deep Seek was founded inside of his hedge fund, one of China's most successful fund. What a beast. He's got to acquire as much compute to push out new deep seek models. You know, we saw that chart that showed that Chinese open source models were sort of falling behind a little bit on a different growth curve in terms of performance. But, you know, he's certainly betting on getting
Starting point is 00:41:15 back in line, having a, you know, frontier model within a couple months. Oh, Tess has an interesting idea. If I was running a frontier lab, I would have the model versions count down. ominous extremely on ominous be like yes we're excited version three now and next year version two
Starting point is 00:41:39 somebody would do that well folks over on Amazon are reviewing the art of war by one star nothing but common sense how this became a classic is beyond me so much of it is common sense
Starting point is 00:41:54 to the point where it brought out my snarky no kidding reflex like If an enemy leaves a door open, you must rush it. Wow, that was deep. Keep your money if you're thinking of buying it. That's very funny. Leaving a bad review so my enemies don't read it. Yeah, that's the game theory. Zach Brock says, congrats to Anthropic for defeating Grok in the market and feasting upon the compute of their fallen enemy. Yeah, basically every time we take a day off the show, like something big happens. Yeah. And that on Wednesday was the X-A-I or SpaceX Anthropic deal.
Starting point is 00:42:34 A lot of people have been predicting that. I was not simply because I thought it was like the rational decision for the parties, but I thought that the tension between, you know, Elon who had only a couple months ago been, you know, hurling insults at the anthropic team, I didn't think they would be able to uncover that those cultural differences. Totally. But demand for compute finds a way. Yeah, I think that you and others had identified the possibility of becoming a NeoCloud, selling the compute, renting the compute. Last year, I was talking about that a lot all the time.
Starting point is 00:43:11 I was like, look, they're incredible at building infrastructure, really, really fast, bringing power online. This feels like a very strong use for Elon Inc. Yes. And, but I, but, but as things evolved, I just didn't see, I didn't see this coming together. I didn't see this coming together specifically because of the cursor deal. I thought the cursor deal was the long-term solution for all that compute and then the compute sort of got sold twice maybe, but of course, there are multiple clusters, multiple colossus data centers. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:41 And plenty of work to be done as SpaceX continues to grow their ambitions and our artificial intelligence. Well, we have our next guest, our first guest of the show, Josh Reeves. and gusto in the waiting room. That's big news. How are you doing? Good to see you guys. Welcome back to the show. Always great having to be here.
Starting point is 00:44:02 It's a fun time to talk tech. It's a lot of big moves happening, huh? A ton of big moves. Yeah, Intel up today. The last year, we've had a decade's worth of big moves. Yeah. Progress. There was a time when Slickham Valley was a cottage industry, not anymore.
Starting point is 00:44:19 Yeah, a garage industry. And now the largest companies in the, in the world for sure. Well, your business is growing. You're quickly becoming one of the largest businesses in the world. And you also power tons and tons of American businesses. Give us the update.
Starting point is 00:44:34 How are things going? Yeah, excited to be here. I think probably what you're leading to, we shared a milestone. To me, it's all a byproduct of helping customers, helping small businesses. But yeah, we passed actually a few months back a billion dollars of trailing revenue.
Starting point is 00:44:50 So, 20 cents for it. Whoa. hear that, John, trailing. That's not something you see very often. People want to take today's revenue, multiply it by 365, and lead with that number. Obviously, yeah, AAR is much higher, but yeah, trailing. Yeah, yeah, talk about that.
Starting point is 00:45:08 Talk about that decision. Yeah, I think for us, I mean, when we started this company now over a decade ago, you know, I said you always start with a problem, something you need to go fix. You have to create a solution, actually show it works. But then you have to have a business model where you're a unit economics, how much it costs you to serve them, how much it costs you to acquire them, make sense. Otherwise, it's kind of like gambling. So at Gusto, you know, we've been free cash flow positive too for a number of years. We reinvest that money to build more product. But we knew the potential was there to be at this milestone. And frankly, much, much further, there are six million employers in America and two thirds of them are less than five employees. Small businesses are a huge part of the economy. So, Yeah, we're excited to make this milestone, but much, much more work ahead. So cash flow positive, reporting, trailing 12-month revenues instead of ARR. These all feel like real strengths to eventually go public around at the same time.
Starting point is 00:46:07 Monday, you should report ARR. Come back on Monday. Yeah. But at the same time, like, it's an incredibly tumultuous time in the public markets. There's winners and new favorites every day. Everyone, SaaSpocalypse narratives. Like, how are you thinking about the benefits of being private, right? now versus potential future in the public markets.
Starting point is 00:46:27 Yeah, I mean, our focus is on just execution. I would not expect Guster to be private in the near term. Do you mean public? Sorry, public in the near term. Yeah, correct. What are you announcing here? No, no, not announcing. I would not expect us to stay present.
Starting point is 00:46:42 I will leave that all to like the SpaceX and Anthropics and opening eyes in the world. There's lots of good noise in that. I would say like we're going through this massive paradigm. shift and how AI effects, not just like our product, for example, and how we help small business, but also how a company's run, how a company's built. And so that is where I'm spending all my time. It's an exciting time to be spending focus there. It actually is a net net pretty big tailwind to gusto. But like absolutely no plans to be public in the near term. Super focused on small businesses and execution. And at some point, the timing will make sense. But yeah, we haven't
Starting point is 00:47:19 had any of that process get started. We covered the April jobs report this morning. It surprised a lot of people to the upside. What are you guys seeing in your data? You guys basically have a forward view, at least on the future. Yeah, to set the table, the Wall Street Journal had pulled analysts, expectations were at 55,000 new jobs. And the number came in at 115,000 after a very strong March. as well.
Starting point is 00:47:52 And so things are, although there's so much anxiety, so much uncertainty about the future of the American economy, at least over the last few months, things have been looking strong. But we've seen revisions before. I think there's a lot of questions about, as you dig into that data, what's going on. And so we'd love to know what you're seeing internally. Yeah, so two stats we look at quite a bit. There's the kind of state of new businesses being formed, new employers. Obviously, companies can exist before having an employee.
Starting point is 00:48:23 And then there's the state of hiring across the base of customers. I would say, you know, on the customer small business hiring front, things are more depressed over the last few years, and that's continued relative to call it the last decade, if you will. We think there's many parts of that, including some of the effect of AI on, frankly, company growth rates. On the flip side, we are seeing a lot more new businesses being formed and new employers out there. And that's showing up in our data, that's showing up in a bunch of third-party data.
Starting point is 00:48:59 We think that's a really good thing. There's a scenario with what's happening in AI. We call it the Happy Path where a lot of people decide to take the plunge and become business owners. The non-happy path to me is the Pixar movie Wally, which is a future I hope we avoid. Yeah. How have you been thinking about getting things? to customers and small businesses earlier? Like, have you ever explored trying to meet customers
Starting point is 00:49:26 before they incorporate, help them with incorporation, anything that gets you into the system? Because Gusto, I feel like, is always one of the first tools, but it sometimes happens like a month after incorporation. I mean, one really powerful dynamic is you're paying, you know, millions of employees, many of whom will go and leave companies. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:47 Like, I had a good experience on guest. Yeah, yeah. Should I pay myself? I'll use Gusto. Yeah, I mean, first off, the biggest way we grow is word of mouth, and often it is from, not just the employer, but the employee. Also, we'll have people join Gusto and ask how you heard of us, and they're like, I was paid through Gusto. So we don't try to recruit from our customers, but sometimes it happens, and it's a wonderful
Starting point is 00:50:07 dynamic where they truly, truly get the value of the product. To answer your question directly, absolutely. Like, we think payroll is one of the best products out there when you're hiring someone. Obviously, if you don't pay them, they quit. So it's a really important front door for that interaction. But there's a lot of companies that exist as one person, the founder, for some period of time. And so we have an offering we call Gusto Solo that's very focused on that. Turns out, you know, the founder still needs to pay themselves.
Starting point is 00:50:32 There's specific tax dynamics at play. There's a lot of compliance requirements. We acquired MoZ to help with expanding our work around business compliance. So all those kind of headache compliance things that you still have to do as a one-person company, Gusto is going to be increasingly a great, great partner to help with. And then when that business owner decides to hire an employee, obviously we hope they continue their relationship with Gusto. But stay tuned.
Starting point is 00:50:56 We're going to be launching some more products in the next several months, really focused on building that relationship more deeply with employers or even businesses before they become employers. Do you think the, are you expecting the velocity of new product releases from Gusto to go up an order of magnitude in the next few years? or do you see it as a smaller family of products with a bunch of and higher velocity of like new feature creation?
Starting point is 00:51:24 Yeah, it's a few years, give me the next few months. It's fun to be accelerating. I think of it as this is the most amazing time to build. People can smaller teams, self-serve, iterate faster, maintain high quality, but just literally velocity is increasing dramatically. So we apply that to both breadth and depth to answer your question. So within the world of what we're going to be. we do, whether it's 401K, health benefits, payroll, people are getting paid when they want,
Starting point is 00:51:50 how they want, where they want faster. We're excited to be doing a lot more work there. But absolutely, expanding the breadth of the product, it's still way too hard to be a small business owner. So you will see a lot more new product launches coming from Gusto in the coming several months, things that we maybe thought of as like the next two to three years. I now think of as the next three to six months. And it's really fun to say that and actually then back it up and see it happening.
Starting point is 00:52:13 Do you, one question that I've been having, as we've seen, like, LLM usage exploding, is the shape of LLM spend across a software engineer who fires off a coding agent build something that's new, but it is deterministic code that runs in perpetuity, new features, new designs, new copy, versus LLMs that are baked into an existing workstream, where every time payroll runs, there is a trigger, and it is not something that's fired off by an employee. It is, and I don't know if one of those is more agentic or we need a different word for those, but can you kind of characterize the shape of those two applications for AI right now? Yeah, I mean, maybe a couple cuts on that.
Starting point is 00:53:02 I think new product development generally, more accelerated, dramatically higher velocity with AI. If you have an existing product, existing code base. There's just by definition more the dynamic of building the train, rebuilding the train, running the train at the same time, accelerating the train, laying the tracks kind of all
Starting point is 00:53:21 in parallel. So I think it's more complex on existing product surface area. So that's one cut. I think on the kind of cut around the ongoing interaction dynamic, I guess we've always believed since we're serving small business that what we do, it's
Starting point is 00:53:37 mostly compliance-centric. It's just better done by technology, you think about the potential for human error, whether it's from the customer or a gusty, we want to have as much of that as possible be codified into software, into a system that can scale, they can do it repeatedly, they can do it in millions and millions of situations. To your point, some of the newer technology is obviously not fully deterministic. So then having the right evals, having the right feedback loops, having the right review and audit process is super, super critical. So as we do all this velocity acceleration, you can imagine there's a lot of focus at gusto on.
Starting point is 00:54:11 not just maintaining, but actually improving the quality of what we do and the accuracy and the reliability for our customers. And it does feel like it can have a win-win-win outcome here where the product gets easier to use. It gets even more accurate and reliable. And actually we can build and ship it faster. Yeah. Do you have a feeling for which bucket is bigger? Because I can imagine LLMs being very useful to scan every PDF and do translation and do things on an ongoing basis baked into the system. that you've built versus, you know,
Starting point is 00:54:44 augmentation and amplification of engineering efforts and design efforts. Do you have an idea of, like, in terms of spend, which one's bigger or where it goes? Yeah. I mean, I would say for us, most of the ongoing systems and how they run, if you're talking about the backend,
Starting point is 00:55:01 don't generally involve a lot of LLM technology. And then those are probably efficient too, right? Because even if you do use an LLM to process a PDF, well, you can pretty efficiently get to some sort of, you know, small language model that's tailored and probably pretty cheap. Yeah. Yeah. And that's a world where you want accuracy or liability and it's pretty deterministic.
Starting point is 00:55:24 I think like if you look at risk, if you look at things where you have to make more judgment, that's where I think L.Oms can actually complement humans quite a bit. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Jordy, anything else? Incredible update. Yeah. Congratulations. The focus and everything is incredible.
Starting point is 00:55:40 The intentionality. the humbleness of looking backwards versus forwards. I love it all. I love it. Great to catch up, Josh. Well, thank you so much for taking the time to come on the show. We'll talk to you soon. Yeah, I have pleasure.
Starting point is 00:55:53 Talk soon. Have a good one. Bye, guys. And up next, we have Jonathan Neiman from Sweet Green. Live with us in the TVT and Ultram. Welcome to the show. How are you doing? What did you bring us today?
Starting point is 00:56:05 What did you bring us today? You brought lunch? You lunch? Fantastic. What is it? What are you launching? Give us the update. So this week we launched probably our biggest new category in company history.
Starting point is 00:56:17 We launched wraps we've done in our own way. So we spent about a year designing a custom tortilla with four ingredients. Most wraps in the market, about 22 ingredients, full of seed oils, preservatives, et cetera. So really wanted... Yeah, I had a devastating moment yesterday where I was eating a box of crackers, like the sort of default cracker in my household. And they updated the ingredient list. without me realizing, because like when I bought them, they were seed oil free, and then
Starting point is 00:56:46 some point in the last like two years, they added it. And so I looked down at the ingredients list. And I was like, no. I just walked over to the trash and, um, devastating. But anyways, continue. Four ingredients. Yeah. So we created a tortilla, four ingredients and launch wraps this week. So we launched with four signature wraps. Anything can be customized. The response so far has It's been awesome. We launched it on Wednesday. We brought you three of them to try. If you guys want to give them a taste. Fantastic. On air, on air taste. Yeah. We'll give it a try. Was this customer pull? Was there demand for this? Like, how do you measure that like now is the right time to launch a new product? Yeah, so we wanted to reach kind of different customers and
Starting point is 00:57:34 different occasions. And one of the things we heard from our, from our guests, is they wanted something that was portable. They also wanted food that, you know, was healthy, but a little bit more cravable. And so this was one way to get into that. Yeah, there's like a state adverse revealed preference. Yeah. It's like you want to eat healthy. Maybe you want to eat a salad, but sometimes you just need something that feels like a bit more dense. Exactly. And how does that feedback actually get to you in practice? Is this like interactions with cashiers and they're taking notes or are you sending out surveys afterwards, polling customers, doing like, you know, some in-store marketing that someone's standing there and they're asking people about their experiences?
Starting point is 00:58:14 Yeah, we do a lot of things in order to get feedback. One is, let's see what you got there. This is the chicken jalapeno ranch. There's a little dipping sauce on the side. Fantastic. We got here. Hmm, fantastic. We never get a lunch break.
Starting point is 00:58:30 We don't. We don't. This is chicken Caesar. Chicken Caesar? And then you got a Cali Chicken Club. Fantastic. So a lot of ways. You know, one thing I say all the time is all the restaurants, all the answers are in the restaurant.
Starting point is 00:58:41 Okay. Spending time in the restaurant, actually talking to guests. We also do a lot of, you know, traditional things like focus groups, et cetera. Recently. Do you ever go undercover? I do go undercover a lot. Like behind the counter? Oh, all the time.
Starting point is 00:58:54 All the time. I spend a lot. Do you wear a mustache? I spent about, you know, a third, probably like a quarter of my time in restaurants. talking to customers, talking to team members. I get all, really, I get all my best feedback there, both how to make the experience better for guests, but also how do you make it easier to run from a team member perspective?
Starting point is 00:59:13 We do a lot of social listening from a feedback perspective. And recently, about a year ago, we started working with a company I think you featured here, Listen Labs. Oh, yeah. We were one of their first customers, and it's helped us accelerate our time to feedback by about 10x and about half the price.
Starting point is 00:59:30 And so, you know, this is actually one of the first things we worked at them. It's been a while since we've had Listen Labs on, but basically there's like a, like, what are the core features of the product again? It's social listening, but then also, like, surveying. It's surveying focus groups and insight. So, you know, typically when you do a focus group, it takes a long, really a long time to get it set up. And, you know, it can take weeks to get that feedback. With Listen Labs, we can get a diverse cut of customers. by demo, you know, age, psychographic group, geography.
Starting point is 01:00:04 I feel so rude. No, come on. And so that's been a really powerful way as well. And then social listening is huge, you know, just seeing what people are saying online. And then you look at the competitive landscape and where the business need is. You know, we do really, our business does really well,
Starting point is 01:00:23 Monday through Thursday, you know, when people are looking to be healthy. And then you see it on Friday. Oh, wow. It falls off a little bit on Saturday. Yeah. So it's, how do we have that cheat meal that you could still feel good about it? Oh, sure, sure.
Starting point is 01:00:34 Where, and in social listening, like, where is the sweet green community? Where are people actually having conversations that are valuable? TikTok and Instagram. TikTok and Instagram. TikTok. I mean, and. Not Reddit. You know, Reddit as well.
Starting point is 01:00:44 You'd be surprised how much juicy information is on Reddit. Yeah. So social listening, how manual is that versus like scrape TikTok and transcribe everything and roll it up? It's not manual at all anymore. Okay. So a lot of software. Interesting. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:03 Huh. There's a lot of companies that are offering this now. Yeah. We've looked at it. We've tested a bunch of them. Sure, sure, sure. And is it valuable to find stuff that's not viral but still on TikTok? Like the TikTok creator or just like person that expresses themselves through TikToks or vertical
Starting point is 01:01:20 video to loosely just their friend group. Like they don't have a following. They're not a professional creator. They're not making any money on it. But like when like someone would post a photo on Instagram. they post a front-facing TikTok, is that as valuable as the big creator that goes viral for some, like, dunk or stunt or te hot take or something?
Starting point is 01:01:41 You want to find it before it goes viral. You know, like, there's this thing going on viral on TikTok right now about this, like, Chimmy Cherey Steak Bowl. Okay. Like the Jimbrough pool. Yeah, yeah. And, you know, we should have done something with that, but we should have done it a month ago.
Starting point is 01:01:54 What is there to do with something like that? Like, I feel like a lot of times, if there's something that's good, that's organic that's happening, and you step in as the brand or the corporation, you risk making it uncool and corporate. Well, for us, if it's something we could actually serve, like that happened to be something that we can put on our menu. Oh, sure, sure.
Starting point is 01:02:09 Okay, so you make a change on your world. You're not trying to go and create your own content around it. We would create the content and then I can serve it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So we put a video out this week on it to see what happens. And the reaction's good. We'll actually put that on the menu. We have all the ingredients.
Starting point is 01:02:23 Yeah, that's cool. It's effectively a bowl without lettuce or any grains. It's just steak. John's kind of. Yeah, John's got a bowl. I'm into it. Steak, cucumber,
Starting point is 01:02:31 tomato, onion, you know, that's great. I've seen random videos of focus groups. Do they really do a one-way mirror or two-way mirror, whatever that is?
Starting point is 01:02:43 We're like, they can't see you, but you can see them. Is that a thing? Have you ever built one of those? When I do them, I actually like to sit in. Okay, so just sitting in a conference room.
Starting point is 01:02:51 Yeah, you just sit in a conference room. Okay. When we tested wraps, we brought in, we brought in customers every day for a week, different groups of customers. and just tasted them, taste them a few different ways, really to understand, you know,
Starting point is 01:03:04 how important was the sauce on the side, how important was it to get cut, like little details, like for example, we decided the rap was best when you had it mixed first and cut. It sounds like such a stupid little detail, but it has huge operational implications. You mean the ingredients mix?
Starting point is 01:03:19 Yeah, so yeah, because that's a worst, that's my least favorite part about any wrap or burrito is you get in there and it's all like spaced out, so you have like an avocado bunched over here, all the chicken over here and then like rice or whatever, and it's like you want to be having the full blend with every bite. That's exactly right. So it sounds like such a small minor detail,
Starting point is 01:03:39 but it's huge operational implications. We also had to figure out how to make this work in our infinite kitchens. You know, over 10% of our fleet and growing is powered by the infinite kitchens. How do you make this work in that operation as well? How are you thinking about other verticals? Like, I don't even know what you call it. like prepackaged in other grocery stores or consumer package goods or like product like extensions outside of the retail stores?
Starting point is 01:04:08 We're really focused on our retail stores and the experience. We don't, you know, so much of what we do is based off of the scratch cooking we do at a restaurant. So we're really afraid of extending that out in retail. But you don't want to get into like salad dressing at the grocery store? CPG is something we will eventually get. Okay, you'll, you will. Yeah, we think CPG like, you know, dressing being an obvious category.
Starting point is 01:04:28 Yeah. You know, right now really focus on the core business, but eventually that's definitely a category. Oops. Was, my immediate reaction to this is it's incredible. We'll add it to our reoccurring lunch orders. It reminds me of Chipotle in like 20, 2005 to 2010, like some of the best vintages. Yeah. Like seriously, back then it was, I yearn for that.
Starting point is 01:04:58 time when you could just go into any Chipotle and eat something that actually felt that tasted like fresh and clean and a small number of ingredients and they had such an extreme commitment to that and somewhere along the way I just I just stopped going because it didn't it didn't feel like that anymore but but that's that's my review to me to me the best food the best prepared food product that was widely available in history was that you know 2005 to 2010-era Chipotle. It's funny, that was kind of the inspiration for Sweetgren in a lot
Starting point is 01:05:34 of ways. I was in college, you know, 2005, seeing Chipotle take off, eating Chipotle all the time, and the idea was to create just kind of a healthier, fresher version of that. And the one you ate, the chicken jalapeno ranch, is, you know, it's effectively a burrito. Some of the other ones are more, it have lettuce
Starting point is 01:05:50 in them. That one is, you know, rice, avocado, chicken, corn. Saved you a half. And I brought you guys more as well. Amazing. And the other thing, about the wraps is they start at 11 bucks. So we were also, you know, given where the consumer is today, really trying to create something that can, you know, meet their needs today can be something that you can eat every day. So the chicken Caesar in some markets is all the way, you know, all the way
Starting point is 01:06:11 down to $10.45 and no wrap is above $15. Yeah, let's talk about that because we have consumer sentiment rate over, I think there was some reporting over the last couple of days. It's like as bad as it's been in like a really long time stock market at all time highs. Like, insane disconnect there. Jobs report today came in better than expected, but ultimately consumers aren't feeling great. Part of, I guess, part of the approach there is introducing products like this that are high calorie, or not high, I don't know if you describe them as high calorie, but maybe higher calorie and great value. But what else are you doing across the business? I think the key is around the experience.
Starting point is 01:06:57 You know, in restaurants, fundamentals wins championships. So it's really about delivering a consistent experience around quality and hospitality. And that gives you the opportunity to layer in the menu innovation. So right now, you know, we've been very focused on innovation for a while. And right now we're really just trying to dial in the basics. It's what you talked about, Chipola. Yeah. It's like what made you love it.
Starting point is 01:07:17 It wasn't all the new stuff that they're now doing. Yeah. It's just being really excellent at the basics. Yeah, consistent. It's consistent. It's making sure the quality. There's quality's there, you're not out of stock on things, you're staffed at peak, people are, you know, smiling, friendly and warm. It's all of those little things, which create, you know, the system behind that is highly complex, but it's all of that that really creates.
Starting point is 01:07:38 Yeah, so put another way, Sweet Green, you know, started, you know, as, like, my view is, like, it's, it has the DNA of a technology company, and maybe that drove you guys at some point to focus too much on, on, on, like, on the things that ultimately don't. drive, always drive that consistency? Does that feel like somewhat? Yeah, I'd say the, you know, early on in like the 2010s, the technology side of the business from a consumer perspective was an advantage. It was a competitive advantage. We were the first ones to have digital ordering, delivery, mobile payment, all that stuff. It's, it's pretty much been commoditized. For the most part, all restaurants have it. You know, I think our digital experience is better than most, but at the end of the day, you can order online anywhere. We do have a, technology infrastructure that allows us to scale. So if you look at like our
Starting point is 01:08:28 DNA, it's been flattered down for five years. So as we continue to scale, a lot of the tools we've put in place and now with how we're leveraging AI, like we can continue to scale without adding headcount and our data and reporting and all the tools we have to manage our kitchens are really incredible. Like we have tools that, you know, kind of predictive ordering for how we order food, you know, predictive apps that teach us, teach our teams or guide our teams, as they make the hot food and the cold food, because what's different about Sweet Green is we pretty much make everything in the store every single day.
Starting point is 01:09:00 Yeah. But to your point, at the end of the day, you know, it's about. But you can't get, you can't start spending, maybe you're spending half your time on innovation, half your time on like the basics. Yeah, it's probably even more so on the basics right now. Yeah. It's on delivering on a great consumer experience. Someone asked me the other day about how we build our brand.
Starting point is 01:09:20 And, you know, we do a lot of stuff, culture, social media, events. all great. But the way we build our brand at the heart of it is just creating an experience that people love. It's an environment, a store that looks beautiful, clean. It's a team member that goes out of their way and is friendly. It's a culture of like saying yes when someone wants something that's a little bit weird. Just figuring out, you know, how to say yes to that customer. No, there's nothing worse as a customer if you're in like a fast, casual experience and you can see everything that's in the store. You can see all the ingredients. And then you ask for something. thing and they say, well, that's not available.
Starting point is 01:09:55 And it's like, well, you're just making a call on the fly not to combine those things in the way that I. Put the pizza in the deep fry. I know you have both. So our team knows it's a culture of saying yes. Just figure out a way to say yes. Take, you know, take care of the guests. And I remind our team all the time, our number one marketing channel is word of mouth.
Starting point is 01:10:17 80% of people find out about Sweet Green through a friend family. You know, they walk by a store. they had a good experience and they come back. Like our critical metric that we use in tracking like the health of how we're doing is what we call our comeback rate. So of customers that come in, what percentage come in within 30? What percentage come back within 30 days? And we can now track that across analog and digital customers.
Starting point is 01:10:43 And we've kind of gotten the whole organization aligned around, you know, from the people making the menu, people running our loyalty in CRM and most importantly the people in the restaurants. It's like your number one job is delivering a great experience where that guest comes back, because that's what drives that lifetime value. Where was the first store? First store was in D.C. in Georgetown. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:11:04 What was the key to making it work? Key to making it work, I think, originally was probably the simplicity of it. You know, originally the idea was create a healthy fast food restaurant, but the size of the first store was 500 square feet. So a small store, but great location? Small store, good location. Good traffic. Had to keep the operation pretty simple in order to execute it.
Starting point is 01:11:29 And I think just, you know, we were maybe lucky in the naivete. We had never worked in restaurants. And so we were able to approach things a little bit differently and create a brand that just didn't look like the other brands, whether it be how we source, you know, how we went to market in the early days. It's, you know, like one of the things that helped build the brand was we threw a big music festival for eight years. It was like, you know, we threw a 25,000 person music festival with
Starting point is 01:11:52 You know, like the strokes headlining, and the idea was how do you make healthy eating cool? Is that within reach for some brands? Like, what's the cost to throw a 25,000 person music festival? Did you charge tickets? We charge tickets, yeah. So it was effectively a break-even event. Oh, that's cool. Okay.
Starting point is 01:12:06 Yeah. It was called the Sweet Life Festival. Okay, great, yeah. Any plans to bring it back? We are looking at it. We have our 20-year anniversary next year, and so we have some ideas. Yeah, where's the store footprint these days? Almost 300.
Starting point is 01:12:20 We'll end this year with about 300 restaurants. And do you have a target? Do you want to grow that? Yeah. If you look at Chipotle, they're at about 4,000. They give a target of 7,500 stores in the U.S. So, you know, our first target is 1,000 stores, but we think over time should be able to get to about 5,000 units in the United States. Yeah, I always appreciate looking at the forecast for some of these brands, whether it be Starbucks or Chipotle,
Starting point is 01:12:47 because in our chaotic modern world, everyone's like, it's so hard to plan more than two years out, especially in tech. Everyone's like, it's hard to see two years out. And if you look at like the forecasts of store growth, it's like, Chipotle's like, in 2030, we will deliver exactly, you know, 200 new doors across these GEOs. It's like, you actually can, like, think long term. Like consumers are still going to want to eat food.
Starting point is 01:13:13 They're going to want to eat healthy food in 2030, 2035, 2040. And, you know, taking that long view, I think, is super. In the Adams development world, like you were already building our 2028 pipeline and we're looking at 2029. You have to get ahead of it, especially when you do a lot of ground up development, building drive-thrus. That sort of thing. You're about two years ahead. You're doing drive-thrus now? We do. Yeah, we have a handful of drive-thrus. They do really well. We actually just opened our first drive-thru featuring an Infinite Kitchen.
Starting point is 01:13:42 It's close by. It's in Costa Mesa here. Yeah, nice. And it's awesome because now you have the power of the Infinite Kitchen from a speed perspective with the drive-thru. And stores doing awesome. So it's a model for the future. Why have you never done anything in Malibu? I would love to do Malibu. It's probably my favorite place in the world.
Starting point is 01:14:01 It doesn't really have the density from a consumer perspective. That's been my, so I've lived there for coming up on five years. And early on, every time I would leave Malibu and go to somewhere else, I go to Montecito. There's like much better restaurants in my opinion in Montecito, San Francisco. Barbara, some of these other beach towns. And I was trying to figure out why. And it's entirely because the town is spread out, like you said, the density, it's spread out on this huge line. That was my intuition. Obviously, I don't have a restaurant experience, but you can put a restaurant in Malibu, but it's still like 40 minutes in the car for like the average person in town, potentially,
Starting point is 01:14:40 because you have to like get on PCH and drive like miles and miles and miles. And if there's a little bit of traffic, then it's 20 minutes there, 20 minutes back. And then it's like, I'm not, you know, people are just like, I'm not driving 40 minutes for... The bigger challenge in Malibu is actually the staffing side of it. Yeah. Oh, interesting. Like, nobody in Malibu wants to work for $20, $25 an hour. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:04 And so the people that are going to be coming there are coming from really far away. Yeah. And that's what becomes a problem. You can probably feel it in a lot of the places you go to. Yeah. I'm sure you can see the staffing. Yeah, like labor, you know, turnover will be higher. General.
Starting point is 01:15:17 You just have to pay significantly more for somebody to be. We're willing to spend the money. But that's somewhat limited. Yeah, limited on the mall of the kids. Yeah, working at the restaurant. What, how do you, like, I'm curious how you spend your time with, with like the capital markets and investors today. You've been public for a while now.
Starting point is 01:15:41 I'm sure you have had investors come and go, but also something that you've developed, like, you know, really meaningful relationships with. What is that like as a, you know, public company CEO. Yeah, you know, I think we were fortunate. Before we went public, we had a lot of these kind of crossover investors. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:59 Investors like T-Roe or Fidelity, Bailey Gifford, that we were able to build those relationships with and, you know, took long-term positions, believed in what we were doing. So that really helped us as we made that transition. You know, I talked to them about, you know, our large investors every quarter. Yeah. And it's, like I always say with investors or with anything, it's really the people behind it, than just like the name on the door. Totally.
Starting point is 01:16:23 And building trust and confidence in what we're doing. And, you know, I think there's investors that are looking for short-term results, and there's other investors that really, you know, kind of believe in the long-term, believe in the management team. And the goal is to just build trust with them over time. Yeah. Makes sense. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:40 So no, no, no, we can't expect that like an all-birds, like local inference provider out of sweet green. I was going to ask if he was going to fit on eBay. I mean, that's an amazing story to watch right now. You got a couple hundred stores. You could go to Sweet Green and verify your baseball cards to auction them off on eBay. It's funny. Our COO, Jason, who's been with us about a year, spent a long time of his career working at game.
Starting point is 01:17:05 He was actually the CEO at GameStop for a while. He ended up, more recently he was at Chippola. But before that, he was at GameStop from like 300 stores to 3,000 stores. Yeah. Wow. So it's been fun watching all. of the developments now and talking to whom about it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:23 Yeah, we were looking up. It seems like GameStop has shrunk the store footprint a ton, about half since Ryan took over five or six years ago. But like wildly different business because of digital distribution. Like there's a direct competitor. You can't download a wrap on your phone. Like you can't a game. And so they've had to change the business model a significant amount.
Starting point is 01:17:45 For me, it was interesting learning how much of that business model was dependent, all the margin was dependent on the trade business. So the new releases they didn't really make as much money on. It was all about the leverage. The, yeah, the margin came from the GameStop's famous for being like, oh, you bought that $60 game, we'll give you $5 for it. Exactly. And they sell it for 20 and that's not bad. And that was the business. Yeah, yeah, what are general real estate trends, not just restaurants, but that you're seeing across different markets across the U.S.? Um, drive-thrus are hot.
Starting point is 01:18:21 Yeah, what makes for a good drive-thru? Like, there's a few in L.A., but it doesn't feel like a drive-through city. L.A. is more about zoning. Okay. And getting the right permits for it, and they're not adding more drive-thrus. Oh, interesting. So you have to take over an existing drive-thru in order to get one. I typically only see big chains.
Starting point is 01:18:38 And, yeah, and so you're competing with, you know, like some of the drive-thrues that we've taken recently have been like old jack-in-the-boxes, for example. Sure, sure. But, you know, who are you competing with? Chick-fil-A, Raisin-Kanes, and they have very high AUVs. You know, some of these, you know, Chick-fil-A, I think, that's $8 or so million for restaurant. So they can just out-bid you. They can out-bid you.
Starting point is 01:19:00 And they need, you know, the acre lot with the union, with the egress for the parking. Sure. So drive-thrus are really hard to come by, but we do see a pretty significant lift when we put a drive-thru. And people are really looking for convenience, and that's only accelerated since COVID. And do delivery?
Starting point is 01:19:18 drivers prefer drive-through? Is that faster for them? No, we actually, most people actually don't want the delivery drivers going through it, so you have to build a model where you have a separate area. So if you go to, like, McDonald's or any places. Because they're not doing the ordering. They're just doing the pick-out. Oh, sure, sure. Sure.
Starting point is 01:19:31 Yeah, so you have like separate parking spots for the delivery drivers, having them come in. Some places are experimenting with the double drive-thru. I was going to say, is that possible? It's possible, but you need so much space in order to do it. Okay. Don't have a lot of space in California. And you don't have the space in California. Other, you know, I think the thing about what we see in retail is the best streets continue to be the best streets.
Starting point is 01:19:56 So like, you know, and we see it, like if you look at L.A., like, you know, Melrose Place, just like rents continue to go up. Because there's more customers and there's more profit. More customers. It's like there's this thing about like these moments and these, you know, this condensed attention and traffic. in these great high streets. And so on those areas, prices have only gone up everywhere else. The market's been pretty stable. We haven't seen things, you know, collapse.
Starting point is 01:20:27 We have seen that the biggest challenge we've seen is around what's happened with interest rates because landlords have left less money to give from a tenant improvement perspective. Oh, interesting. So that's been, you know, the issue there, even though there's probably less demand, you know, when their, you know, interest rates from zero to where they are today, they're not giving you as much improvement allowance. Last question.
Starting point is 01:20:50 How is the drone delivery market evolving from your view as an operator, as a brand? Like, are you, do you expect drone delivery to be, you know, double-digit percentage of delivery orders nationally or in specific markets? Like, how do you see it evolving? I think what Keller and Supply is doing is really interesting. thing. We've done some early work with them looking at it. It's not something we're hugely focused on right now, but they have had some breakthroughs. And so I, you know, if you said 10% in the next year or two, I probably don't see that, but over time, absolutely. Yeah. It's very market dependent, right? You have to be like, let's work on something in Texas.
Starting point is 01:21:34 It's, yeah, it's Texas, more suburban. You do have to change how you build your restaurants a little bit, having like the portal where you put the food in. But when you think about the speed. ground portal. Yeah, you need like a drone portal. But when you think about the speed of delivery, you know, for delivery, getting sub 30 minutes is, huge. That's like kind of like the number. When people are opening the app, you want to be sub 30 minutes.
Starting point is 01:21:57 And what you can do with drones in getting there, it's pretty amazing. They still can't do really large orders. So like the, sure. Yeah, yeah, yeah. What it fits in is huge. You're ordering for a whole office. But I do think over time, they will figure it out. and more of restaurants will be built around that.
Starting point is 01:22:15 Yeah. I mean, what's amazing to think is how much your radius can increase. And what that means for your footprint over time, if that's true? Yeah, I mean, L.A., since, you know, we're here, when you look at this market, the craziest thing is putting, when you put, you know, you go into maps and you put an address in, and you're like, it's seven miles, and it's going to be 50 minutes. It's like a normal thing. It sounds crazy to anyone else in the country, but it's like a drone going seven miles.
Starting point is 01:22:42 is like, you know, feasible. Yeah, and you've seen the videos. They're able to just drop the, you know, just literally have it parachute, like right on your doorstep. So it's a pretty amazing. It's coming, but I think it's a little early for us. Yeah, yeah. Very fun.
Starting point is 01:22:57 Well, thank you so. Thank you for the food. Great, see you guys. Let's hang, let's hang soon. Thank you guys. Let's put this in here. Throw these back on and we can click over to, um,
Starting point is 01:23:08 to some of just Jason Freed's favorite watches. He was a fan. of Nike's early 2000s era watch lineup. Have you ever seen this before, Jordy? I have, I have. I have never seen one in person. I've never seen one in person. Where's my other, here.
Starting point is 01:23:25 Headphone, there we go. Yeah, this, has this design aesthetic come back yet? I feel like there's enough posts about it at some point. I feel like a tech startup is gonna really run with it. Someone will do it. I like the kind of soft lines. Yeah. from friend was sort of doing that with the material that went into the friend pendant,
Starting point is 01:23:47 but he was talking to Paul Graham about like how do you differentiate from Apple? Like if you launch a product like this, it does stand out from an Apple Watch, certainly, aesthetically. And so you at least create some like distance that's maybe defensible. Even if they come out with a competitive product, it's not, if you become iconic with this design or similarly bizarre design, you don't stand as much chance of getting commoditized. Well, Ryan Cohen's in the Financial Times.
Starting point is 01:24:16 People have been processing his bid for GameStop to take over eBay. Very fun story. Not too many updates on what's actually happening. I think there's sort of a wait and see approach here. But the Financial Times has a little bit of a deep dive here. Ryan Cohen spent much of his career being dismissed. It's a pattern that has turned the chief executive of video games. game retailer game stop into a leather jacket wearing outlier with a loyal base of meme stock investors.
Starting point is 01:24:48 I saw someone commenting the legal, the leather jacket, very Jensen-esque. Although, has he been dismissed? I feel like through the rise of Chui, there was a ton of respect for him all along that journey since e-commerce is such a challenging business. There's so few companies that have exited north of a billion dollars. There's been a ton of attempts to make e-commerce. companies, but they often run into Amazon headfirst. The Canadian entrepreneur turned activist investor
Starting point is 01:25:19 has built his cult-like reputation by repeatedly betting on ideas that many institutional investors labeled as absurd. First, it was online pet supplies. Okay, I guess that fits. Then a dying strip. Why has Chooey? Why is Chooey? So, Chooey is a $9.6 billion company.
Starting point is 01:25:39 Yeah, that's great. Why has... Is Amazon and Walmart not eating them alive? I don't know. I mean, I think a lot of people have pet food on subscription, and they just don't change it, and so you acquire that customer, and then even if it's on Amazon.
Starting point is 01:25:56 So the Kack equation just works. I think the retention is remarkable, because the dog doesn't tell you, hey, I'm bored of this particular food. It's just like awesome. I feel like my dogs would grow up, and they'd be like, not today. They had this look, and I know I'd had to go take an egg, go get an egg from the chickens and crack it on their, on their cable.
Starting point is 01:26:16 But that's not, you're not getting that egg on Amazon. They don't make egg, egg-laced dog food on Amazon. Like switching e-commerce platforms isn't going to solve your, your belligerent dog problem. Yeah, one response from eBay could be focus on yourself, King, because Chewy's down 40% of the last year. Well, is Ryan... No, he's no longer... He's no longer... He's no longer the CEO, obviously.
Starting point is 01:26:45 But still, you know, I guess it's down since IPO. It had a quick rise in 2021. The stock was up at $101 now at 23. So some sell-off there. But let's read through more of this. Now he is focused on this $56 billion attempt to acquire eBay and our e-commerce giant, roughly four times the size of GameStop. Wall Street, right?
Starting point is 01:27:08 Wall Street's immediate response to the hostile bid has ranged from skepticism to outright mockery. Analysts have questioned how GameStop valued at roughly $11 billion could realistically finance the takeover of a company worth around $47 billion. None of that has dissuaded Cohen. The more eBay fights me, the more I'm going to not take no for an answer. I'm not going away, he told the Financial Times. The 40-year-old billionaire first set out his stall for the takeover bid in an awkward interview with CNBC. on Monday that instantly ricocheted across social media. He responded to questions about the financing details with a blank expression and clipped
Starting point is 01:27:45 monosyllables explaining that it was half cash, half stock. Of course, that became a massive meme. The interview generated waves of memes online as X and Reddit users speculated that Cohen looked drunk high or exhausted. Do you think the half cash, half stock meme is good or bad for the prospects of successfully acquiring the company? I think once it clicks, it sort of makes sense. But it is a big.
Starting point is 01:28:08 jump to eBay shareholders to, you know, to roll into that at that price. Yeah, the decision or the sort of like situation would be wildly different if eBay hadn't been performing since Jamie became CEO. Yeah, it's outperformed the S&P 500, right? Yeah. Which is pretty remarkable. So, yeah, it's not, it's not beaten down. And the shareholders seem pretty happy.
Starting point is 01:28:31 The Financial Times says the script has played out before. Born in Montreal in 1986 to a teacher, mother, and father who implore. glassware, Cohen did not attend university. As a teenager, he built websites for family, friends, and small businesses teaching himself coding. Now, in 2011, now in his mid-20s, he founded Chui from South Florida with the ambition of creating
Starting point is 01:28:52 an online pet supply business that could compete with Amazon. Investors thought the idea was ridiculous. I knew that significant capital would be required to finance the growth, that's for sure. A lot of inventory, very capital-intensive business. He approached dozens of VC firms, even flew out to Silicon Valley, went door to door on Sand Hill Road. Can you do that?
Starting point is 01:29:17 I don't think you can just knock on Sequoia Capital's door. I think some of these Neo Labs are hot enough that they actually can just drive down no meetings and just go door to door. I'm here. Unannounced. Be like, cool, I'll come back in like 20 minutes. I got to grab a coffee. Yeah, yeah, probably. So we went door to door on Sand Hill Road.
Starting point is 01:29:38 a turn of fray as he was probably scheduling meetings, but he was explaining how Chewy would succeed by delighting customers and running an ultra-efficient operation, but everyone turned us down. He couldn't raise money. The skepticism was understandable given the failure of pet supply website, pets.com, and the dot-com bubble era. Pet food was bulky, low margin, and expensive to ship. Venture capitalist doubted consumers would buy 40-pound bags of dog food online. Cohen ignored them all. Instead, he focused obsessively on customer service. Chewy employees wrote customers handwritten cards and sent flowers to grieving owners who animals had died. That's really sweet. That is a good touch. He doesn't come across as that. He comes across as, you know, this like ruthless operator. But that is really, I mean, obviously that is really great. Well, he comes across as an absolute dog, John. I guess he was, he was raised by dogs essentially. It grew his career through the dog economy.
Starting point is 01:30:31 me. The approach helped to create unusually intense customer loyalty by 2017. Private Equity Back PetSmart bought Chewy for $3.35 billion. Then the largest e-commerce deal on record. It cemented Cohen's reputation as a rare entrepreneur who had successfully challenged Amazon on its own turf. Flush with cash and credibility, he launched Ryan Cohen Ventures, R.C. Ventures, his investment vehicle. That led to his most controversial bet in 2020, while much of Wall Street viewed GameStop as a doomed relic of the physical retail era. Cohen quietly amassed a large stake in the company and began pushing for a radical digital transformation.
Starting point is 01:31:10 I really wonder if there's going to be, what is this, just horses? Why are we just playing horses? The team had this on this morning. I thought it was incredible. No, the horses are good. I wonder if there will be a Ryan Cohen. Some people do subway servers.
Starting point is 01:31:24 We do horses. I like it. Horse B-roll. Do you think there'll be a Ryan Cohen game stop type deal of the SaaS? Apocalypse era? Like the most seat-based sass, you know, like laggard, who's getting absolutely beaten up, shorted, huge short interest, and some wildcard operator comes in and turns it around or at least turns it into a meme stock. I don't know. Yeah, it feels, I mean, it's just felt
Starting point is 01:31:48 like so many people were too, too afraid of, of, you know, catching a falling knife, basically. But I'm sure we'll see some of the- We can dig into it more. We can ask us all about it, because we have my good friend Zol from Refactor in the TBP and Ultridum. Let's bring him on down to the seat. And I don't know. Are those plates left over? Anyway, great to see you. Very good to meet you.
Starting point is 01:32:14 Thanks for having me, guys. Let's introduce yourself and then I want to hit the gong. I want you to hit the gong. Oh, man. Tell us the news today. Introduce yourself and then tell you. Yeah, no, I'm Zol from Refactor Capital. As you know, I led Lucy's seed round a decade ago.
Starting point is 01:32:28 That's right. And it's been a pleasure. Yeah. And I run a deep tech, hard tech fund. Hey! There you go. There we go. I like it.
Starting point is 01:32:39 Yeah, yeah. And by the way, I do have swag for you guys. So that is for you. And I got some of this team. How did John pitch Lucy to you back then? Because this is a little... This is what? Four years before Zins were like a common, you know, word?
Starting point is 01:32:54 Well, no, no. It was a smoking alternative, Jorkey. That's what he was pitching. It was before Zinn-Lch. It was before Zin-Lunch. No, I know. Yeah, I know. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:04 Yeah. I mean, the pitch was basically just. The main thing is, like, if I was getting that pitch, I mean, you're very compelling. I probably would have invested if we knew each other back then. But, you know, a pouch. Yeah, it's popular in Europe. We weren't doing pouches yet. No, it was just the gums.
Starting point is 01:33:21 And I think we maybe had mapped out lozenges, but the idea was basically that Nicorette was a horrible product. Horrible product. Horrible product, but had grown into like a billion dollars a year in revenue and had been around since the 70s, had been really well studied by the scientific community, had been loosely effective at getting people to quit smoking, but delivered in the most medicinal way and had not had a consumer brand wrapped around it. So very much in like the Hymns and Roman telehealth, like let's take the, you know, the scientific backed product that we know works, but then. package it in a new way and go direct to consumer. Chewy style. Yeah. It was fun.
Starting point is 01:34:03 It was a blast. It was a blast. But you were doing a lot of other investing at the time. Yeah. What else stands out from your investing career? Yeah. Well, can I first say? I have had a fantastic week.
Starting point is 01:34:13 Can I tell you about the week that I've been having? I think it's my best week in venture. Okay. And I've been doing this for 12 years. So let me paint the picture, right? So Wednesday, yeah. Astronis raises a 450 million Series E.
Starting point is 01:34:27 Yeah. This was the first check I wrote after I left Endreson Horowitz. That's right. Very first check I wrote. A great company. I led the seed round. Introduced on the A16Z, which did the Series A and they also done subsequent rounds. So that was on Wednesday morning.
Starting point is 01:34:41 Yeah, that was amazing, right? You know, $2.8 billion valuation. And then on Thursday, of course, I launched my new fund. Fund five, right? And so I've got $300 million under management. Amazing. Yes, 10 years and change. at this point. So another $50 million. I just raised $50 million funds. We can talk about that in a sec.
Starting point is 01:35:02 And then, you know, I'm like waking up yesterday morning and I'm like, you know, getting all my tweets and my LinkedIn post together for the launch at like 6 a.m. And something pops up in my feed and my emails. It's like, one of my companies just got acquired. I'm like, okay, well, I got to take a look at this. Like, what happened? Well, Path AI got acquired by Roche for a billion dollars. There we go. That's incredible. And I, and I, I have two founders that have had kids this week, babies this week. So it is just best week ever, guys. I mean, I know.
Starting point is 01:35:37 So it's time to rest on your laurels. One point you were thinking about getting a bed of laurels that people here could physically go and rest on. Yeah, exactly. One day. What were you doing before Andresa? Yeah, yeah. So, you know, originally from the Midwest, born and raised in Indiana. Cool.
Starting point is 01:35:54 My dad had a computer business growing up, so I built computers in our basement. and we sold them to people's homes, doctors' offices, 80s and 90s, pre-DEL. Was this basically like we'll build you a custom PC for your use case? Do you remember 3-86s and 4-86s and Pentiums and all that? I was born in 95. So maybe not, maybe not. But this was like the era of the 80s and 90s before Dell, like, really kind of took over.
Starting point is 01:36:16 And so, you know, we built that business. So I got into hardware software coding at a young age. And then I went to Penn, and I did the Word and Undergrad program. What I didn't understand when I got there was that 90% of my classmates would go into banking and consulting. And I did internships in both and I hated it. So I didn't know, a senior year comes around
Starting point is 01:36:35 and I'm like, what am I going to do with my life? And I was so lucky, I was so lucky guys. Microsoft came to campus and recruited me to be a product manager. Okay, there you go. Right, and so that started a 10-year career. Yeah. The goat, yeah. Is Sadia running in that time?
Starting point is 01:36:47 No, no, it was Steve Balmer at the time. But wasn't he like a rising PM? He was a VP of product at that point. Yeah, yeah, that's what I'm saying. You're working under the house. In the aura. People knew him. Of course people knew him.
Starting point is 01:36:59 Insane aura. Yeah. That's awesome. But it was like a time when like Microsoft's stock price was just between $25 and $30. Yeah, the Balmer era was rough. It was rough.
Starting point is 01:37:07 And they didn't understand the internet. This was 2004 to 2006. This was like while they're missing mobile basically. Correct. They missed the whole. And I was like, this is not happening. I'm wasting my career up here in Seattle. So I moved to the Bay Area 20 years ago.
Starting point is 01:37:20 Okay. And I got a job at Google. Yeah. I was a PM in 2006 on the AdWords team. Sure. Let me tell you a story on that real quick. So this was Susan Wojicki's team. So Google was founded in her garage back in the day.
Starting point is 01:37:34 She passed away a couple years ago of non-small cell lung cancer, but she was an amazing leader, amazing human. And the talent that she had put together on that floor in Building 42 and the second floor was amazing. So I'm in this cube. Elad Gill is sitting next to me. Satcha Patel from Homebrew over there. Josh McFarlane, who was at Greylock and now at Boom. Ben Silberman from Pinterest
Starting point is 01:37:56 No way Kevin Sistram from Instagram Oh Dan and see from Optimizli Wow Tom Tung is now from Theory Ventures and Gokoradram who's on the board of Coinbase
Starting point is 01:38:06 and Pinterest Godfather of AdSense We were all within three cubes That's incredible It was insane I don't know what was in the water there But like That's remarkable
Starting point is 01:38:15 We've all done pretty decently Yeah for sure What is a PM on AdWords do? Yeah Because there's like the ad matching product, that's a product, but then there's like the dashboard with which brands go to advertise and sites, and there's like, you know, a two-sided marketplace effectively. Like, what is a day in the life like? Yeah, so there's, you know, back in the,
Starting point is 01:38:38 core product offering at Google back then was AdWords and AdSense. Yeah. So AdWords was like, okay, I go to Google.com, I tip in a search query, you know, the ads show up. AdSense is putting ads, whether it was text or display or image ads, video ads. on other publisher sites so that publishers can start making money from the Google search algorithm based on the content of scraping that page, surfacing the best possible ads. Sure. So my job was to kind of think about new concepts or new product launches to make more money on the AdSense side.
Starting point is 01:39:08 Sure. But they were AdWords products on AdSense. Got it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But then we acquired YouTube. Yeah. And so I was asked to move over to YouTube. Okay.
Starting point is 01:39:16 And another OG Hunter Walk, oh yeah. Satjia's partner at Home Brew brought me over. That's awesome. And so I was working at YouTube for three years. Cool. And this is when we were bleeding cash. Everybody was suing us. The Sony, the music labels, like the movie studios.
Starting point is 01:39:31 We were burning cash like crazy. And Eric Larry and Sergey come to us and they're like, hey guys, this is like 2007, 2008. Hey guys, like we need to turn on the revenue spigot like yesterday. Like go figure out how to get the Fortune 500 to feel comfortable putting their brands on YouTube. Because remember with UGC, user's generating content, people were really. really worried about it again 20 years ago, right? So we had to build all new products to get them more comfortable with making that, making that, their brands and their products available on YouTube. And so, you know, we built that business to a few hundred million in revenue. I think they
Starting point is 01:40:08 did like 20 billion last year. Linear, linear TV execs at the time were they saying like, no one's ever going to put dollars against YouTube because of that UGC risk? Were they, were people saying that? Yeah, I mean, they didn't, they didn't want to, but they didn't want to risk, because honestly, YouTube's filters for content were not as good back then. So like, like weird stuff was like popping up. Totally. This was like the tagging age where like you could upload a video and tag it like skateboarding, Los Angeles, and then you hope that that's what's in the video, but there wasn't an AI model that could look inside every frame, listen to the audio and actually understand what it was, at least not yet.
Starting point is 01:40:51 Yeah. What were the, I'm super interested in, you know, every, every platform, every platform that has traffic and usage is like different. So like, you know, just screen space is on, on a website is different than screen space on Instagram is different than screen space on, you know, a Google search result, right? What were the unique challenges with building an ad product for YouTube, given the consumption habits and the state that people come to YouTube in. Yeah, so, you know, they actually had to create a new role for me because they called me
Starting point is 01:41:28 the big ads PM. So my job, to your point on linear TV, you know, execs, they wanted a, they wanted their 30-second TV spot on YouTube, but we weren't going to do that. That's just like so orthogonal for the YouTube thesis. Yeah, yeah. So what we did instead is we let them buy the homepage. Oh, yeah. Do you remember this?
Starting point is 01:41:44 So we had homepage takeovers. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you could put like these big banners up. and our sales team would have this calendar of 365 days. And they go sell them. And they go sell them for a million a pop. Wow. Two million a pop.
Starting point is 01:41:54 Whatever it was on Christmas or whatever, it was like $3 million or whatever. Yeah, I'm sure. Right. And it got tons, I mean, hundreds of millions of views. Yeah, so much traffic. Because everyone lands on the homepage then. It was pre-app. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:05 Apple, EA, all the big brands. Yeah, they would all do one day. They wanted to put their brands up there. And, you know, that was getting them comfortable with, like, a known display ad product that they were using on AdSense or somewhere else. Yeah. And bringing them on. But with that million-dollar ad buy, John, we were forcing them to actually spend money as part of that million on YouTube.com through the search engine.
Starting point is 01:42:29 Sure. So when people search, they'd have to have their display ads and their other search products up there and running. So it got them comfortable with using YouTube. Because otherwise it's like, okay, it's just a 24-hour pop. Don't you want to continue the campaign for the next month and leverage all the gains that you made from brand awareness by people coming to YouTube.com? Yeah. And they're not tied to a specific video at random, which is where the real brand risk comes. Because it's like your ad was shown on this particular ad.
Starting point is 01:42:53 It's like, no, we were on the homepage. There's a lot of things. If you're mad at that one video, take it up with Google or YouTube. Yeah, exactly. Interesting. And then after YouTube, I went to Netflix and I was their first head of mobile. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:05 This was like six months after the iPad launch from Steve Jobs. And we had to rebuild all the phone and tablet from the ground up. They were growing like a weed. And they looked like. This is like Forest Gump, love. Silicon Valley lore. It's like, then I was in Andreessen, then I was at Netflix, then I was at Google.
Starting point is 01:43:22 You know, there's definitely gray hairs here. You've been to every big tech company. There's like three on the mag seven that you still got to go do tours at some point. Well, I did LinkedIn after that. Okay. So I got Microsoft. There we go.
Starting point is 01:43:33 But I was basically at LinkedIn. Please tell me you were pitching them on short form vertical video on LinkedIn back when you were there. Because they finally added it. They finally did. They finally got comfortable with it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:46 We were talking about it back then, but they were not, they were not going for it. Interesting. So, yeah. What was the experience? It's too addictive. I spend, I spend four, five, sometimes six hours on LinkedIn, just scrolling on the vertical video. Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:58 No, Netflix was great, man. I mean, a very small team back then. This was 2011, 2012, 2012. Only 8 p.m.'s in the whole company. Yeah. I was responsible for all the phone and tablet apps. Yeah. You know, across Android, like the tablet nook.
Starting point is 01:44:11 Remember those? And the Kindred Fire. Kindle Fire, rather. And so we had to build that. And, you know, No one really gives Bezos enough credit for using the Gen Z slang. Like, he made, like, a fire phone. And, like, that's what, like, kids would say, like,
Starting point is 01:44:26 oh, we should make a fire phone. Like, this phone is fire. And he roll it into an entire brand. But today, people would, like, call that out as, like, being too, like, patronizing to the younger generation. Yeah. But the fire phone just sort of slid under the radar. Oh, well, it was a complete flop, too.
Starting point is 01:44:41 I know. Horrible. Yeah. Well, he also has, like, you know, he, He clearly picked up people say, you know, the derogatory, like, oh, you're basic. Yeah. He flipped that around and tried to turn it into a positive with Amazon basics. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:44:54 Like, it's okay. It's okay to be. I'm not a jenzy slang over there at Amazon. That's right. That's right. Anyway. Yeah. So that was a great time.
Starting point is 01:45:01 And then, you know, Andreessen Horowitz, about 12 years ago, we're looking for kind of junior folks of like their general partners who were product people like me to come join the investment team. Sure. and help them source, evaluate, and work on investments together. Yeah. Right. And so this was 2013.
Starting point is 01:45:19 I ended up joining. The firm was only four years old at that point. Investing funds three and four, which were each $1.5 billion in size. Yeah. At that point, they had not launched any sector-specific funds like the crypto fund or the gaming fund or anything. Or American Dynamism. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:45:32 None of that was a lot. It was just one fund. They didn't even have growth yet. It was just one pool. It was just one fund. Yeah. It was just one vehicle. But they were doing weird deals.
Starting point is 01:45:40 Like the Skype thing is always so funny to me. Were you around for that? We were doing SBVs in a Pinterest, Skype, Facebook. Yeah, yeah. It was very creative dealmaking. It was not, which I think was like to their massive benefit. Yes. To so many experiences, obviously of financial wins, but also just like the breadth of activity
Starting point is 01:45:58 at the firm allowed for those expansions to go successfully. That's right. That's right. And so, you know, obviously you can imagine it was just an amazing whirlwind of an experience. And then I got to meet you and Rob, the Soylent Journey to as well. We're going with Chris Dixon. Yeah, with Chris Dixon. And that's when I started actually getting into hard tech.
Starting point is 01:46:17 Yeah. So I was kind of bored trying to find the next Netflix and the next Google. It wasn't as interesting to me as like the world of atoms. And so I ended up starting getting into digital health, computational biology, synthetic biology. I don't have a bio background, but like very smart people. Like you guys got me excited about where some of these directions were going, especially in food and chemicals and materials. And then a few of us convinced our LPAC to actually launch the bio fund.
Starting point is 01:46:42 which was the A16Z's first sector-specific fund that they launched in 2015, which was a $200 million fund to go after the intersection of life sciences and computer science. And that's when I spun out and started refactor about 10 years ago. And so, yeah, if you recall, I started it with David V. Angel, and then he ended up retiring, but I've been solo since. And yeah, I haven't hired anybody. It's literally just me running the firm. So you have SaaS for the tooling on the back end fund administration?
Starting point is 01:47:16 You just have lawyers on contracts. There are certainly things that in a day you can't do. Do you not even have an executive assistant? I had an executive assistant for nine years part-time who would just do all my scheduling, all that stuff. But there was a new company that Sequoia partner actually ended up leading called Blockit. Okay. And it's an AI calendaring tool. Okay.
Starting point is 01:47:38 and use that? And I just made that change three months ago. It has been amazing. Amazing. So I have, like, I don't know what SaaS is, John, but I know what AI is. Yeah, yeah. I'm kidding. But I've got, like, a whole bunch of, you know, stuff and set up so that I can actually, like, amplify my time.
Starting point is 01:47:53 Yeah, yeah, yeah. I have my fund admin. They do all my compliance. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I have a tax and audit team. Fractional back office. Yeah, but as far as employees go. Yeah, not just you.
Starting point is 01:48:02 You're looking at them. That's amazing. Yeah. That's wild. Then why, why keep the fund size the same? why not at least inflation adjust it. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:11 I mean, so I get this question all the time. I'm sure. Because I had more than 50 million of interest in this fifth. Yeah. Right. And so if I increase the fund size, then one of a few things might happen. A, I have to write more checks, right? And so that's, you know, as a single person, like, it might be a little stressful and
Starting point is 01:48:29 like I won't be able to give as much time to my founders. And marginally, you might be adding, like, the company that wouldn't make it on the margin in the previous fund. so you're just adding in like worse performance. Adverse selection. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. And so if I only do 20 or 25 companies every fund, it's a concentrated portfolio.
Starting point is 01:48:45 I'm writing one to two million dollar checks and all things hard tech, bio energy, airspace, critical materials, robotics, physical AI. So all of these things like need my time. And so if I, and I want them to actually be a fun driver, right? If I'm starting out with 10% ownership in a business, maybe after dilution, I have 5% of that company. Well, what's 5% of a billion dollar unicorn? $50 million.
Starting point is 01:49:07 Yeah. What's my fund size? 50 million. So it makes it work, right? Yeah. And I hope they're much bigger outcomes, but like PathAI, it was a great, great outcome, right? And so I wish I had more in it, but. So that's why.
Starting point is 01:49:20 On dilution, is the level of dilution increasing? I mean, you look at the CAPX numbers from AI labs. You look at the CAPX and spending and dilution that's going on at large-scale, hard tech companies that are growth stage. Is that dynamic shifting? are you worried about that or are you changing your strategy based on what's happening with some example companies? Oh, yeah. I mean, we're seeing it in the last six months in the areas of hard tech, deep tech, whatever you want to call it, right?
Starting point is 01:49:46 Like we're seeing it, the valuations increase both that precede and seed. And so I have to be able to make certain adjustments to make sure that I can get into the highest quality companies. Yeah. Right? Because like 10% of a bad company is still a bad company, right? And so to your point on average selection, you know, I want to avoid that. And so, you know, I've made very conscious decisions and exceptions on being below my target ownership to get into some of the very best companies. Sure.
Starting point is 01:50:14 Right. And so, especially in this world of AI where I feel like the outcomes may not be a billion. They might be 10. It might be 100. Yeah. Right. And so. And we've seen that constantly, even with like there's so many markets.
Starting point is 01:50:26 I mean, the coding agent market across cursor, windsurf, cognition, like you have three companies that are all north of. there are three decacorns in the same category effectively. Like that is a wild situation. I can't remember the last time that happened in a competitive industry. Certainly you had Uber and Lyft, but there was a divergence there at some point. And the third company was, I forget what it was called, but I think it topped out at like a hundred million in valuation, maybe a billion, but it was very power law driven. And we're seeing many more categories be more oligopolistic early on, which is fascinating.
Starting point is 01:51:03 I mean, the venture math is pretty simple for a seed fund of like mine, like refactors. You know, if I want to be a top-decile investor, you go back and look at 40 years of venture capital history, what is a top-decile investor? A net 3-X fund. So I take my 50 million and I turn it into 150. Yeah. Right? But in order to do that, there's a lot of ways to make money in venture. But the vast majority of those funds that hit that top-decile net 3-X mark had at least one fund returner, meaning they had one company returned the entire.
Starting point is 01:51:33 fund, more likely many multiples, like a two, three, or four X, right? And so you only can do that if you have sufficient ownership at entry, right? Which is why I've done more of a concentrated strategy versus, you know, I love, you know, SV Angel, box group, I co-invest with them, there's a bunch of other seed funds that I love working with. They write smaller checks and they probably do like 100 investments of fund. Right. And they get into some amazing companies. So I love working with them because they're a great source of deal flow. Yeah. But, you know, they've got a whole team that can go and, like, just meet companies all day long. That's all they do. They just meet companies. Yeah. And I want to really spend more time building, like, foundational relationships with my founders. I just get a lot out of that. Yeah. How are you sourcing and vetting hard tech founders? It feels like there's the SpaceX alumni mafia, and then there's the wildcatters, the college dropouts who are doing a bunch of interesting stuff. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, you know, I have one here in L.A. General Collective.
Starting point is 01:52:33 X-SpaceX-FARDA team building the fastest engines in space using electrolyzers. Sure. So water on board. You guys remember the TV show The Expanse for all mankind? The whole idea is like can we use water as a fuel? Sure. Right? And we think that there's water at the South Pole of the moon.
Starting point is 01:52:50 Okay. Imagine being able to actually have a satellite powered by water that can go all the way out to the moon and refuel and come back. Yeah, yeah. And if we're going to have a civilization on the moon, you know, that is going to be required. Water as propellant. So what is your diligence process for that? Because that sounds like amazing, but I don't feel equipped to answer, will that work or not?
Starting point is 01:53:13 How are you deciding to make the investment? Yeah, I mean, when I invested in their pre-seed, like, you know, what was it, three or four years ago? Three years ago, yeah, three or four years ago. It was just Halen and Luke with a deck and an idea. Yeah. And I just love them as founders. And they were extremely well referenced. Okay.
Starting point is 01:53:30 And I feel like they had a sense of urgency about them. That's what I look for it. I mean, I don't really have a market map saying I need to invest in this idea. Sure, sure, sure, sure. That's where I make mistakes. Yeah. Right? Where if I fall in love with an idea, more so than a founder, I have to really watch myself.
Starting point is 01:53:45 Sure, sure, sure. It's more of the other way around. I need to fall in love with the team. I may not know what the business model is going to be or the product. Yeah. Like, this team has pivoted once before it, right? And so, like, but they figured out this new idea and it's like, it's going to work. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:53:57 And the Space Force loves them, and, like, you know, we're getting some great momentum there. And so that's an example of one. But like, you know, when you're doing hard tech investments across all these categories, I leverage my network of professors, advisors, and founders. And I don't have to pay them because they just want to meet these companies for free. Yep. Because sometimes they may want to invest. Sure, sure.
Starting point is 01:54:16 Sometimes they want to be an advisor. Yep. And so it's great to be able to do that. And so they can sort of fact checks on the scientific claims. Jordi, any other questions? Is the business getting more, you know, running the firm getting more fun now that you have over a decade of investments that are, kind of, you know, some of the most exciting companies in hard tech are the ones that were started 10,
Starting point is 01:54:38 you know, 20, in the case of SpaceX, 20 years ago, things like that. I think of companies like, you know, Zipline Keller's company that are, that were incredibly exciting probably in a deck back then, but then now are like actually coming to real like fruition. Yeah. At least here in the U.S. And you mentioned like weeks like this with a lot of activity. I've certainly felt that way as an angel investor. It's like the more time that passes,
Starting point is 01:55:06 the more fun it is to be an angel investor because you're not just making new investments, but you're getting to see the sort of stories of all your previous investments play out and you start to like really notch wins, and it's a great feeling. It's a really great feeling. I've got six unicorns in the portfolio today.
Starting point is 01:55:21 I've got many more hopefully coming, you know, nuclear energy company and all of these things. So it's, yeah, oh, yes. It's great. And so, you know, there are just so many amazing companies to be built, and I'm ready to work with them. And I don't know if you guys saw my new website, but I've got my call sign. Okay, what's your call sign?
Starting point is 01:55:45 Better calls all. Better calls all. There you go. There's my name, and it's the call sign I was built for. Well, thank you so much for taking the time. Thank you, John. I appreciate it. Great to meet you.
Starting point is 01:55:54 I'll give these to the guys. Fantastic. Perfect. We have Brian Chesky from Airbnb joining just a minute. We can pull up what else is in the timeline in the meantime. Someone. Oh, there are some birthday announcement. David Attenborough turned 100 years old.
Starting point is 01:56:13 Wow. He's called the most consequential broadcaster of our time. And if you haven't gone down the David Attenborough rabbit hole, I highly recommended. Major inspiration for travel. And I'm glad we have Brian Chesky from Airbnb here. to talk about all things, travel and his business. He's in the waiting room. We'll bring him in to the TV again for the new end of the ultra-um right now.
Starting point is 01:56:36 Brian, how are you doing? Good. How are you guys doing? We're doing fantastic. Welcome back to the town. Yeah. Yeah, I know. Why don't we kick it off with just, you know, an update on how 2026 is going, how the business is going, what's new in your world? Yeah, I mean, things are really good.
Starting point is 01:56:52 We've accelerated growth for the first time since the pandemic. We grew 10% last year in revenue. And this quarter, we announced that revenue was 18%. So from 10 to 18%, which is a pretty big acceleration. Yeah. And marketplaces are really, really hard, right? It's kind of like gravity. Once a marketplace at our size doing around $100 billion in gross booking a year,
Starting point is 01:57:14 it's starting to come down, it's really hard to tip that curve. So this has been a pretty big feat for the team to be able to do it. So how'd you do it? You know, it's kind of funny. A number of years ago, we, so I noticed that, you know, as we got bigger, we started losing a little bit of that startup intensity, that startup energy. And I asked myself, like, how can we get that energy back? And we basically took a very small team. We named the team Project Hawaii. The name doesn't really matter. But basically,
Starting point is 01:57:42 I took a very small team of people, and we said, we're going to focus on a very, very small service area. And we decided to focus on conversion rate, the guest journey. And I basically tried to work with a team, like, as if we're at Rouse Street. Routh Street was the apartment that Joe Nade and I started. And I said, we're going to act like a startup. And the team just grinded really, really hard. We weren't working like a big company. We were a very small team, grinding really hard, focusing on obsessing over the customer experience, really looking at the data. And we really got a lot of points in the board. Then we really started taking these pods. And we really started working with the teams, trying to coach them, how we worked
Starting point is 01:58:15 in the early days. And I just think the pace increase, the intensity increase. We really tried to bring in, like, world-class people onto the team. They got very, very focused. We tried to get all the management and bureaucracy out of their way. And it's been a couple years. And in fact, we were doing this last year, but one of the things is, as you know, financial results are lagging indicators, especially when you're a big company.
Starting point is 01:58:36 So it takes sometimes a while to get the financial numbers to reflect what's happening inside the company. But I feel like we're a startup again, more than ever. We're like, where we feel much younger and smaller than earlier. And I think with AI, that would be the other thing,
Starting point is 01:58:50 is 60% of our code is now written by AI, which is, twice our benchmark of our competitors and peers. And it's really, really helping us. AI, I think, is a huge boon to us. I don't know if it's helped the OTAs, but it's helped us with customer service. The customer service ticket's down 10%,
Starting point is 01:59:08 40% people who contact every me, the AI solves the problem for them. And we brought it through the entire journey. So everything is really accelerating. On the special team that went into optimized conversion rate, I imagine you have folks internally, whose job, it was basically the customer journey already, then you bring in your special team.
Starting point is 01:59:30 And is there some sort of culture clash there? Like, how do you set people up for success to, you know, not get too political in that environment, actually see it as an opportunity for a win, some fresh eyes, some fresh ideas? Like, what is required to actually have success? Because I think a lot of big companies that bring in McKinsey and they put together a big deck and everyone freaks out
Starting point is 01:59:52 and thinks they're getting fired and maybe some of the good ideas are surfaced, but it never really goes through. So what, like, what, what, what, what do you have to communicate to the team that is receiving information from this new, uh, this new Kauai team? Yeah. So it's a great thing. I mean, really what I'm talking about has played out over like really five years. Yeah. And the term founder mode, what it really meant that Paul Graham wrote was about me like skipping Layless and management and going into the details with teams. And instead of trying to, I mean, here's my advice. If you're a CEO or a leader of a company that's big, don't try to change the whole company, try to change a corner of the company. It's kind of like don't renovate
Starting point is 02:00:28 the whole house, pick like one room and make it perfect and then go room to room. So I really told teams like, hey, like I actually didn't replace the team. I took the team that was already working. I like handpick some people on the team, but I really just taught them the pace and I would review work very regularly. So I'd sometimes review the work weekly or even daily to just teach them a level of intensity, a level of perfection. And it was unfamiliar and uncomfortable. And I will tell you that not everyone liked it. And some people didn't stick around the company
Starting point is 02:01:00 because they didn't like that way of working. But those who stuck around and the vast majority did, they realized, wow, actually when the CEO is involved, it's actually easier. There's less bureaucracy. I try to make the work better. And I try to clear all obstacles. And so I basically did that group by group.
Starting point is 02:01:15 And the great thing is, like, I was in massive number of details, reviewing everything for years. but eventually it's like muscle memory. It's like an instructor or a coach. You have to teach them, but once they learn and they have the muscle memory, like a golf swing,
Starting point is 02:01:30 you can step back and now it's muscle memory. So now I don't have to be in all these details, all these teams. But I would just say a couple things, people listening, like, great leadership is presence, not absence. I think a generation of management consulting or management school, management teaching, taught us that CEOs should trust their people and get out of the way. And I don't think trust and getting out of the way of the same thing.
Starting point is 02:01:52 Again, I think leadership is presence. And you should actually be partnering with your people. You should be on the field with them. If you're a cavalry general, you should be on a horse. You should be on the battlefield. You're not like, you're not overseas somewhere else just writing out blueprints. You've got to be on the field with them. You've got to be leading for an example.
Starting point is 02:02:10 I think leadership is from the front, not from the back. And so these are just some of the things we do. And I think AI is going to create like the equivalent of an AI founder mode, which is now you've got to be even more hands-on. And I don't think in the era of AI there should be any peer people managers because you're so close to the details, to the data, that everyone has the opportunity to be hands-on,
Starting point is 02:02:32 and it's hard to imagine only managing people and not agents. So I think this hands-on approach is for everyone inside of a company. Jordi, please. Do you think a lot about what you would do if you were you from 10 or 15 years ago and you were trying to disrupt Airbnb?
Starting point is 02:02:50 Like, is that a helpful exercise? Yeah, and it's slightly scary because I think that I've told, I had a meeting with their team recently. I said that 26-year-old me and Joe and Nate could F us up if we wanted to. And so I told them this is what I would do. But that's because you understand this market
Starting point is 02:03:11 better than anyone else, you know, you know the key drivers. Like, I don't think any 26-year-old off the street. Hey, I'm paranoid. I think that if everybody sits still, I think a different group of 20 or 30 year olds could also disrupt us. And I think that's true of every one of us. And maybe, by the way, maybe that's not true. And maybe that's not reassuring because we do have a brand that's a noun and a verb. We've got a global network effects.
Starting point is 02:03:34 I think it's actually hard to build a network. That may not be possible. But the software and the app, I told our team, like, we can't sit still. Like our app is beautiful. It's really nice. But we got to be in a world of AI native. And here's a key point I would make. I do not think a chatbot is the right interface for travel or e-commerce.
Starting point is 02:03:52 That might be a radical statement. ChatGBTGPT launched third-party apps last year. In March, they shut them down. I don't think a chat bot's the right interface. It's got four or five problems. The first problem is it's text-based, you know, photos are an afterthought. The second is there's no direct manipulation. You have to type every single prompt, which is fine for a conversation, but you can't, like,
Starting point is 02:04:11 add filters, you can't click around. The third problem is it's hard to compare. A lot of e-commerce and travel as comparison shopping. If you have thousands of options, the AI has to know exactly what you want to be able to show you one or two things, but you usually want to see more choices and you get lost. And most AI is single player. It's not collaborative, let alone the fact that Airbnb requires people to have an account. The 85% of people send a message.
Starting point is 02:04:40 So what I'm trying to do is imagine. Sorry to push back there, but I'm my wife's planning a vacation. and there's like three-ish hotels that we're looking at, and we're looking for specific dates. And she theoretically, I'm not saying the products are there yet, but theoretically you could ask a chatbot, I'm interested in staying in this location, I'm interested in these hotels.
Starting point is 02:05:07 I have X, Y, Z number of people, and it could go, and the agent could go and pull together, like relevant sort of like listings or, room types, et cetera, pricing, show me pictures, and then actually do an analysis of the tradeoffs based on all the information available as well as information in other parts of the internet and pull it together. And then she could share that chat with me and we could both review it together. Yes, I agree. That's the future. And that's not a chat bot we described. That's not a chat bot. It's going to be a completely different interface. It's going to be, well, I guess you'll
Starting point is 02:05:42 have to wait and see, but I think the future are not apps. The future are agents, but I don't think they're going to be text forward. I think they're going to be really rich user interface. And so I think the current chatbot paradigm, what you're describing, it can do it. I just don't think it's the best way to do what you just described. I think there's a much more immersive way to do that. Yeah. As you think back, I mean, it feels like at various points, clearly there's been like,
Starting point is 02:06:09 oh, is all of this going to move to chatbots? is all of is, are there going to be a million competitors that are all vibe coding exactly what you have? And so is software remote. Uh, the stock has not been beaten down during the SaaS apocalypse. But have you had to process those with investors? Have you had to walk people through Airbnb strengths again? I'm sure. I'm sure you did after the like the 2028 intelligence crisis.
Starting point is 02:06:34 Thankfully, they picked door. Yeah. Instead of you guys, but they're very, I really appreciate them picking on someone else for once. But, um, yeah, no. Absolutely. I think there were entire, like actually when Chachapit launched a third-party apps, their stock probably went down like 7%. And by the way, I thought it was a really good idea for them to do third-party apps. I think it could have been successful.
Starting point is 02:06:54 Sure. But they would have needed a richer SDK for it to work. And it would have like the App Store, Apple's App Store was good for Airbnb and was good for every company because they had a really rich user interface. Maybe this is the point I'm making. Yeah. That imagine using I message on your iPhone to do everything when in fact, like every other app has a unique interface. I think is e-commerce, you want a very rich user interface. It would be agentic.
Starting point is 02:07:18 You can be able to have a conversation with it. You can talk to it. I could talk back to it. But I think the point is it has to be more visual. I think a text-based interface is for some solutions. And a chat bot that's visual, yeah, that would work. I'm just saying today's chatbots aren't the right solution. But the answer to your question, I had a couple new employees.
Starting point is 02:07:36 Like one of our new team members is a guy named Ahmed, who is the CTO of Airbnb Now. he led the Lama models at META and one of the comments he made to me was he said wow yeah Airbnb is so much more than the app and in fact the app that you see is like 20 percent of Airbnb I mean we have typically four or five million people staying in Airbnb every night and more than a hundred countries around the world so there's a lot more to do around payments around customer service adjudicating everything we have to you know we have a three million dollar guarantee against after property damage for a million homes a night that's three trillion dollars you
Starting point is 02:08:11 There's just so many types of things around managing five and a million hosts. We have a host app. So there's a lot of things that are beyond the guest app. I actually think the guest app would be pretty easy to copy. And I think in an age of AI, you can make a better app than ours. And we want to make that app before anyone else does. And we want to be agentic. But I think the key is most of Airbnb is not the app that you use.
Starting point is 02:08:31 It's mostly the off-on experience. It's the operation. Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah, the IMS example is good as maybe even going deeper into like old SMS. Because I message has hydrated so many things with the reactions and you paste a link and it hydrates it and it's becoming more of a visual tool. But it is a long road. Question for you. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:08:52 Well, before you said, one of the things is the last time I was on, I did make a comment and I'll make it again almost every AI company is an enterprise company. And the last stat I think I said on TBPN was like three months ago. And stats haven't changed. I think it was 175 companies in a YC batch and I think 16 were consumer. That trend hasn't changed. Almost everyone is going into coding, almost everyone's going to enterprise.
Starting point is 02:09:14 I think that's great. My whole point though is that the consumer experience hasn't fundamentally changed that much being a chat bot. And I think the consumer is a massive opportunity for AI. And I think it's going to need to be a richer user interface. I think people that want to do more things, they want it to be, I mean, the modern AI today is text, photos, and buttons. Yep.
Starting point is 02:09:36 Mostly in some videos. And I think there's a more breakthrough visual parity that could be much more immersive. And with a new image and video generation models, you could do something so much more immersive. So the exact example you gave of trying to book Hotel, yeah, you can do it on chat bot, but there's probably some more breakthrough way
Starting point is 02:09:52 to imagine that, to visualize it, to see the neighborhood, to see the map, to be able to talk to it, to understand where it is, to be able to compare photos, different hotels. There's something, I think, richer on the horizon. Yeah, that was, I was surprised at the push into browsers last year from some different different AI companies, specifically because I already felt like an LLM, like the chatbots,
Starting point is 02:10:17 were helping me browse around the internet. It was like just double down on that and helping me find information all over the internet. I like that it's brought together in a standardized way, right? If I like the example, you know, of comparing like different hotels, right, it's nice to have it just like formatted the same way. So I'm looking at it. I'm not being like, I want to be influenced by the images and like the, the process. property, but not necessarily the design of the website, right? Because they can be disconnected.
Starting point is 02:10:46 I wanted to ask if you think LMs will impact travel in the world in the way that social media did and travel trends, specifically because Instagram nowadays, like a place like Marfa in like Texas, right? It's like it's random town, you know, artistic type town in Texas. And then it just becomes a cool place because of Instagram and then the entire kind of town evolves because of that. I can imagine people researching places to go with LLMs could ultimately drive some of that and then ultimately reinforce each other. But what do you think? Yeah, maybe the simple framework is think about a travel journey.
Starting point is 02:11:29 Step one is destination discovery. Where should I travel? Step two is flights. How do I get there? Step three is where do I stay, Urban Beer Hotel. Step four is like, what do I do when I get there? Restaurants, activities. And step five is typically like logistics, car rental, services.
Starting point is 02:11:46 And then step six is you're in the city. And then you might want to do things that time spontaneously. I think LMs, or let's call it the LM technology applied to, I'm arguing, a slightly richer user interface than typical chatbot, will be revolutionary for step one, step two, for destination discovery and flights. Also, because flights are not very hard to build, there's just three global distribution systems. Anyone can pipe in an API and have a flight booking app pretty quickly. And so I think the LMs are really, really good at Destination Discovery. If you want to say, like, hey, I want to go somewhere that's like Paris, but it's a little more affordable.
Starting point is 02:12:21 It's good to go in August. I like opera. It's going to give you a very rich suggestion of places to go. Now, I think the current chatbot doesn't have really rich maps. I think it could do a lot more visually. I think eventually chatbots or this new interface could be very video-based. So imagine a chat bot that was actually video-based or very, very photo-based rather than a little less text-based.
Starting point is 02:12:44 I think that would probably be what you'd want for travel. I think what I'm describing would disrupt travel more than the current chatbots, which are more acting like Google sending referral traffic. And they actually, the referral traffic from these chatbots are converting higher than Google. And so actually the chatbots are actually actually asking. to travel companies. To disremediate travel company, you would really want to disemediate the travel journey
Starting point is 02:13:08 and it would have to be much richer. Yeah, I feel like, do you remember that company, Hipmunk? I think it was founded by some YC founders, right? Yeah, and actually the CEO of Reddit. That's right, Steve Huffman, right? Wait, are you talking about HipCamp? No. Hipmunk.
Starting point is 02:13:24 Hipmunk was a really cool flight booking. It was really cool flight booking dashboard, and it would rank the flights by pain, like a pain index. So it would say, well, you're not going to face financial pain because it's a really cheap flight, but you do have a stopover. Or you do have to get to the airport super early. And so it would blend all these things together. And it's something that it feels like could be vibe coded over a weekend now.
Starting point is 02:13:49 Totally. And yet, it is weird that when I open up the app store charts, I see chat, GPT, Gemini, Claude, and then it's just AI chat apps. And we haven't had that breakout moment. Demis was on stage at YC actually talking about that. the fact that it feels weird that we have this super intelligence in the enterprise and vibe coding and your 60% of Airbnb's code is written by AI now. And yet we don't have like a new AAA game or a new video game that everyone's playing. And I'm wondering like, is that a lack of creativity?
Starting point is 02:14:18 Is it a lack of risk taking that there's just too much money? It's too, it's too obvious to be able, if you're, if you're good in AI, just go into enterprise because you'll just raise a bunch of money, get a bunch of customers. it's really easy to make money, and it's more risk on in the consumer? Like, what do you think needs to happen? Or is it just the intelligence isn't quite there, and maybe the next model is the one that unlocks it? Well, this is such a good question.
Starting point is 02:14:41 I think there's like three or four factors going on. The first factor is I saw a tweet recently that I think there's like 60 new neolabs being formed. Yeah. And I've met a number of these researchers, and a lot of them are interested in doing the same things. And I think what I'm noticing is most of these teams are purely AI people.
Starting point is 02:15:01 They don't have product people or designers on their team. They're picking things like science. They're picking things like coding. They're picking things like we want to create a different type of model. This is great, but I don't know if all 60 companies should be doing the same problem. And so what you're seeing is you don't see a big focus on people wanting to do consumer. I think some people think that the AGI can just figure out consumer. I think that's maybe overly simplistic thinking.
Starting point is 02:15:26 I do think you have to have a point of view about consumer. So I think that's the first point. I think the second point is, you know, Silicon Valley has become more vibe and trend-based than when I came to Silicon Valley 2007, although it was back then. And one of the things I think when people see enterprise companies doing well, they go into it. And I think there's this like natural flywheel. The other thing is I know in Wycombinator, for example, we teach the Y Combinator companies used to other companies as their customers. Now, back in the day, we would get them to use our product as consumers. But I think everyone's figured out actually it's way more.
Starting point is 02:15:59 efficient to get them as to become customers like five code five code gen startups all being like you code with me yes exactly yeah and so i think enterprise makes a lot of sense until everyone does enterprise yeah and then suddenly like everyone's saying consumers hard but you know it's also hard like competing with 10 other companies and enterprise doing your idea too that's also hard yeah i think additionally the image in um in video generation models are having a i think image too is only almost like a Claude Code breakthrough is so good now in the CDANs video models that I think we're about to enter this new era where suddenly going beyond text as possible. I think you're going to even be able to see real-time AI-generated interface the next year or two.
Starting point is 02:16:45 So my prediction is this has been the era of enterprise. Even Chad GPT's breakout success, I would predict that most revenue is going to be going to Codex. That's my pretty, I might be wrong, but just given how much money is going to Claude. and I think in the next two years, you're going to see a massive revolution in consumer, and I think you're going to need a couple companies to lead the way. I think we need reference points.
Starting point is 02:17:08 I mean, even me saying the chatbots, not the interface, people are probably asking, well, what is? And someone needs to be the one to do that. I mean, we're going to try to do our part. I'm not sure Airbnb will be the company to blaze the trail, but I think someone has to.
Starting point is 02:17:21 I think in another era, it would have been Apple, like the Steve Jobs era, Apple would have done that. Maybe Apple will do that, but they would have been typically the company that would have done that. Are you worried that everyone is working on the exact same thing? And when I say exact same thing, I mean agents that can do things on your computer and or look at the iPhone app store chart or look at the early stage startup market, right? A lot of companies, you know, the full spectrum of companies from hyperscalers to labs to
Starting point is 02:17:56 Neo Labs to I'm not too worried I might be a little worried for the entrepreneurs if they're like the 10th company doing something I mean like Peter Teal was one of our earliest investors and he used to hear with this book zero to one
Starting point is 02:18:11 that a lot of people listening probably read he has a saying competitions for losers and you want to kind of try to do something that no one else is doing back in the day that was enterprise because everyone was making an app and now I just I'd be careful about being the 10th company doing something unless you're going to be a lot better decisively.
Starting point is 02:18:28 It's just really, really hard in a crowded market. So you want to kind of zig when everyone else is zagging. So I'm not too worried, but maybe a little bit, and I would just encourage entrepreneurs to try to claim a space for their own. And by the way, Airbnb was that. It was kind of accidental, but in 2007, everyone wanted to do like a social networking something.
Starting point is 02:18:48 And we were like, it was tempting for us to try to be a social networking something, something as well. it was accidental that we inflated through airbeds one weekend and created airbed and breakfasts, and people thought it was the worst idea ever. I guess it became like the worst idea that ever worked, but we carved our own space, as did Uber, and we weren't trying to be anything else. And so I kind of, and by the way, Open AI wasn't trying to be anyone else either. Maybe they were a little bit like DeepMind, but AI was not the thing when OpenAI Anthropic got started.
Starting point is 02:19:19 So I do think there is something about not chasing trends. I think once it's a trend, it can be a little crowded and to try to claim out your own space. And I would say there's so much of the U.S. economy that AI hasn't yet touched. Yeah. On that note, how are you talking to or how would you talk to designers or RISD students about applying non-technical skill sets or non-AI disciplines, non-computer science background, to consumer. The reason I ask you to do,
Starting point is 02:19:58 I feel like there's a lot of, there's a lot of pushback against AI in design communities, in colleges right now broadly. AI is not particularly popular, and there's a lot of fear of job loss. But at the same time, you know,
Starting point is 02:20:13 I'm sure, like, the tools have changed throughout the history, and there's, and I feel like you believe that there's an incredible opportunity, but I'm worried that, Some people are not jumping on that opportunity because they have hesitations about various,
Starting point is 02:20:31 oh, well, does this displace this tool? Or how was this made? Or is this the right tool for the job? Should I even be using this? Yeah, I'm really worried that an entire generation of designers, artists, and creative people are gonna decide to kind of sit out AI. And I think it's the biggest opportunity
Starting point is 02:20:50 for creative people in my lifetime. By the way, this is not, the first time designers were late. We creative and designers were really late to the internet and web. So going back 30, 35 years, most of the prestigious designers did not get into so-called web design. Web design was considered a lower tier, lower status design, and they stayed with print, all they established people. And so they did not really chase design. What ended up happening was because you had a lot of these really excellent designers that did not go into web design, I think what happened was a lot of, there were a lot of good things. There were a lot of
Starting point is 02:21:23 people that became web designers, but I think there became a gap between web design and engineering. You had people that maybe didn't have the full design skill set. And what happened was this function emerged called product management. Product management, I'm not arguing against. We have product managers. It's very important. But in industrial design, there's no product managers, for the most part. They're industrial designers.
Starting point is 02:21:44 In architecture, the architect is the product manager. And so I think what ended up happening in web design designers are very, very narrow. There was a void. product managers fill that void. I'm not arguing against that model, but I think if designers sit out, we're going to see as engineers and product managers are designing for them.
Starting point is 02:22:01 And I think the counterpoint is designers can be engineers and product people for intents and purposes, said differently, if I were starting Airbnb today, I'd be vibe coding and Claude Code. And I'm trying to do it now. I'm doing it for fun.
Starting point is 02:22:13 I'm not really going to be doing anything productive Airbnb B. But if I was 26, I would have thought of myself as a technical person. I think all designers should think of themselves as product people and as front-end engineers, if anything. And so I think this is a boon.
Starting point is 02:22:29 I don't think that the future of the Internet has to be all text-based. I think it can be very visual. I think the photo and video generation models allow you to design incredibly rich interfaces. And this is, I think, the best time in the world for designers and creative people to get involved. I think they're just a little bit afraid. And whatever we can do to enlist them to just get their hands dirty, many designers are, I just think more should get involved and not be, you begin, getting out of typical wireframes, just start coding.
Starting point is 02:22:58 Do you think, so assuming we solve this problem of not enough, you know, creative people working in consumer, we build, you know, we as a society build cool new consumer products and experiences and apps, there's something that deserves to be at the top of the app store, has distribution and the acquisition of customers and users changed structurally. You know, you were very good at SEO and Google, and there was a referral program. Do those patterns still work?
Starting point is 02:23:33 Are they broken? Is there a new playbook that needs to be rolled out for anyone who has something that's great, but they need to get it in the hands of consumers broadly? I think we need new patterns. This is a funny saying, I think the highest turnover job of any executive of Stoken Value might be the CMO. I don't know for sure, but like, you know, you don't see a lot of turnover of CFOs. You don't see a lot of turnovers of CTOs.
Starting point is 02:23:56 But like Amazon was famously, and I don't know if part of my theory is that like what works in marketing changes every few years. You have to be adaptable. And your old playbook gets outdated. So marketing is unfortunately one of the hardest functions. I have a huge amount of respect for people of marketing because once something works, it almost becomes stale. Because then everyone does it. And so like influencer marketing was really successful until everyone did. it and then people kind of tune it out.
Starting point is 02:24:23 It's this thing called banner blindness. Banner blindness is after you see something over and over, you tend to be blind to it, and so you need a new tactics. So I think that a couple of thoughts. Number one, I think that just like we need new interface design, new creative, experiential approaches, we also need new types of marketing. I don't know off the top of my head what that is. It's probably something we haven't done before.
Starting point is 02:24:45 I mean, Joe and I, we did like bizarre things like we sold collectible cereal boxes and we like, when social media was new, we were all over social media. And when there were newspapers, we would hunt down reporters and try to get them to write about us. But people ask me, how do we get users? I'm like, all the tactics from 2008
Starting point is 02:25:04 aren't relevant anymore. So you've got to be irrelevant and you've got to find new tactics. The second thing I'd say, though, is, you're right, the distribution is mature. When we started Airbnb, the app store was young. In fact, the internet was still young. I mean, we could just, you could launch a website,
Starting point is 02:25:19 and just ride the growth of the internet. And it's hard. The internet is not growing like it did before. In other words, people were coming on to the internet and hundreds of millions a year, new users. So I do think distribution for consumers mature. At the same time, the top apps in the app store or new apps.
Starting point is 02:25:36 They're mostly chatbots. So what that tells you, if you do something truly breakthrough and revolutionary, consumers will still probably find it. And so that's, I think the two principles are do something so revolutionary, consumers will find you. And number two, you're going to have to find your own new tactics. And, you know, anything that is standard is probably stale.
Starting point is 02:25:58 Well said. I have one more. Yeah, looking out into the future, you've ridden the growth of the short-term rental market. You dominate it now is the biggest opportunity to just continue to make the best product in the category, ride the continued growth of it. or do you think there's another STR-sized market for Airbnb? I think the biggest opportunity for Airbnb needs to go
Starting point is 02:26:24 beyond our core business. I do think a core business does close to $100 billion in gross sales if you net out all the other businesses gross booking value. The total amount of reservations going through the site. I think that could probably double one day. I don't know how long that one day is,
Starting point is 02:26:40 but for every person who stays in Airbnb eight or nine stay in a hotel, I think we can get one extra person in an Airbnb. eventually. And I think that can get you to 200 billion. I think there's a market much larger than Airbnb, which is hotels. Again, hotels is about eight or nine times the size of Airbnb. I don't think we'll ever be a hotel dominant site, but we are going more aggressive into hotels. A fun thing is that about half the hotels in the world are independence and boutiques.
Starting point is 02:27:05 They're not chain hotels, and they're not really happy listing on the OTAs because they pay a higher commission to chains. A lot of these independent hotels are being forced or they feel like their hand is being forced to franchise, to Marriott, to Hilton, other brands, because they have loyalty programs. They can, you know, they can negotiate lower commissions. So we think we can be a distribution channel for these boutiques independence. That is a multi-billion dollar market. I think another one would be services. There's no Amazon for services. And, you know, think about, like, you can hit a button in a car can pick you up. You can hit a button and food can be delivered to you. But what about hitting a button having 80 other things possible? You know, I don't know if any one
Starting point is 02:27:43 market is large, but if you add up the 80 different service verticals, that to me is another pretty big market. And then maybe the last one is like living, stays longer than 30 days. More and more people have a job via a laptop. More people are nomadic. More people are moving around. That's another really big market. So I think for Airbnb, we're looking at really expanding to a lot of different categories,
Starting point is 02:28:05 and I think that's where most of the growth is going to be in the future. Do billboards in San Francisco work on you? going back to marketing. It's one of these old things where, like, yes, I completely agree with you. Like the, the CMO who did the first billboard campaign back in the 50s, probably printed, legend, you know, books written about them. Well, the billboard campaign that fell off. Now it's, it came up. It was just buy so many billboards that people are like, wait, how did this company buy so many billboards?
Starting point is 02:28:34 Yeah. And so I'm wondering, is your thesis on marketing that these things go in cycles? And yes, yes, we might be out of the influence. marketing meta right now, but it's going to come back in five, ten years, who knows? That's possible. Or is it rise and fall and then never again? I think these channels, though, they don't go away. They just stop being like, if you do this thing, you're going to grow like crazy.
Starting point is 02:28:56 You still need to do that thing, but it's no longer an art. Okay, yeah. What do you think? You guys are, okay, so one thing I have to acknowledge is I think all of us, advertising works better on us than we admit. Yep. I honestly, we spent a lot on, like, all these ads, and I kind of think to myself, do these really influence people.
Starting point is 02:29:13 And if they do, and if they didn't, we wouldn't be spending like a billion dollars here in advertising. So I want to admit that advertising does influence us more than we realize. There's, I think, a lot of studies that show, like, oh, that doesn't change my mind. But you see something seven times, and it probably, even if you don't want to believe it, you might start believing it. Yep. So clearly it works.
Starting point is 02:29:30 I do think, though, the ROI of new ideas works a lot better. Just for example, we spent a lot in advertising, but the most popular marketing we've ever done is like when the Barbie movie came out, we took a house of Malbo, we turned to Barbie Malibu Dream House, and it was like new, and the whole internet talked about it, and the ROI of that was better
Starting point is 02:29:49 than any ad we've ever done, right? We've done things like that. So I do think doing kind of crazy, slightly unhinged things that people notice, like, I mean, you guys are successful because you're different, right? I think being different is the key to marketing. And so if you have a billboard,
Starting point is 02:30:06 people are probably influenced, but if it looks different than another billboard, it's going to work. So I think the key to marketing is to be different because you've got to stand out. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:30:16 The Red Bull Baumgartner, the skydive from space is I think like a thousand X ROI. I think they spent less than a million dollars on that. And I think it has a billion views
Starting point is 02:30:28 or something like that. Space Airbnb. But if like 10 people did that and the 10 one wouldn't work as well. And that's probably why they didn't do a sequel and then another one. They went and found something else.
Starting point is 02:30:38 Let's put a plane through a tunnel or fly a hot air balloon upside down or something. Get a blimp on Airbnb that I can go on a sky cruise. Sleeping in a blimp, yeah. So that would be a very good idea. Maybe we can talk about it. I'd love that. Ship it.
Starting point is 02:30:53 We'll podcast. Yeah, I don't know how long it takes to get to. Yeah, LA to San Francisco. If it takes me two days, three days, but I have a beautiful view. Would you guys do that? I would 100% do that. It would be good advertising for us and you. So we say things like this all the time.
Starting point is 02:31:09 where we're like, oh yeah, like we'll definitely like do something. And oftentimes it's hard to schedule. But we have been talking about blimps for like over a year. We know we can broadcast. We've been having to happen with a blimp. We've been having guests calling from their jets with Starlink and the connection is perfect. It is so much so that people in our chat sometimes don't know that the person's on a plane.
Starting point is 02:31:31 That's really incredible. Airbnb and TBPN are going to work together on a blimp partnership. You guys are going to broadcast across. country on a blimp. I love it. He's going to be a part of that. Yeah, I want to make this work. Let's figure out. We'll talk. Fantastic. Well, thank you so much for coming on the show. Have a great weekend and we'll talk to you soon. You're the man. Bye, bye, guys. We're going on a blimp, baby. We're Blimp, time. We're going to blink, time. We've been waiting for this for so long.
Starting point is 02:31:59 We've been thinking about blimps, what we could do with them, and we finally have the perfect fit. I couldn't be more excited. Thank you for tuning in to TVPN today. It's a fantastic Thank you to our guests and our audience. And leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Sign up for a newsletter at TbPN.com. And that was supposed to cut to John. There we go. You got it.
Starting point is 02:32:25 All right. Anyway. We love you guys. Sign up for a newsletter. Leave us five stars. Thank you. And we'll see you on Monday. Have a great weekend.
Starting point is 02:32:31 Goodbye. I love you.

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