The a16z Show - Building for Tomorrow
Episode Date: January 12, 2023New year, new you! Right?Well, as much as we’d all like to believe that we embrace the new… the reality is that we often resist change.That’s why we’ve brought in someone who has studied how h...umans respond to and adapt to change – or sometimes how we fail to. That person is Jason Feifer – long-time editor in chief at Entrepreneur Magazine, host of two popular podcasts, and recent author of his book Build for Tomorrow. Today, Jason shares 6 specific frameworks around the very natural human responses to change, which he’s developed through interviewing and studying some of the most influential people in the world – past and present. We also play a fun game at the end, where Jason comments on current technologies encountering pushback, and assesses where they might fit into his framework. Jason’s website: https://www.jasonfeifer.com/Jason on Twitter: https://twitter.com/heyfeiferJason’s book Build for Tomorrow: https://www.jasonfeifer.com/book/ Stay Updated: Find us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
People talked about the waltz in society, Europe.
The way that people talked about Miley Cyrus twerking at the VMAs a few years ago, right?
Like, it was this incredibly scandalous, awful, destroying the youth kind of thing.
Welcome back to the A16C podcast.
And welcome to 2023.
It's hard to believe we're here.
But if the last few years have been any indication, we are in for a lot of change.
And that's why we brought in someone who literally studies change.
And that is Jason Pfeiffer.
You might recognize Jason as the longtime editor-in-chief at Entrepreneur Magazine,
the host of several popular podcasts,
and the author of his recent book, Build For Tomorrow.
But in today's episode, Jason is sharing his six frameworks
about how people understand and adapt to change,
or how sometimes they fail to adapt to change.
And he does this through studying and interviewing
some of the world's most influential people,
both past and present.
So I'm going to give Jason the floor,
but I did want to flag that at the very end,
I think we play a very fun game
where I go through a bunch of current technologies
that are facing some degree of pushback,
and Jason shares how they might fit into his framework.
So that includes things like remote work,
AR and VR, VR, biohacking, and lots more.
So if that sounds fun,
make sure you stick around to the end.
I hope you enjoy this episode
and have a great 2023.
The content here is for informational
purposes only should not be taken as legal business tax or investment advice or be used to
evaluate any investment or security and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any
A16Z fund. For more details, please see A16Z.com slash disclosures. We have Jason Pfeiffer on the line. Jason,
thank you for being here. Thank you for having me. People listening. We had to go through a lot of
roadblocks to get this recording on the books and then now actually recorded. So Jason, thank you for your
patients, why don't you just give everyone a super quick background on who Jason Fyfer is and what you've
done over the many years you've been involved in technology? Sure. I have to say, by the way,
I kind of love when things break. Like, this was not a bad experience for me because the thing is
that when something breaks, it gives you an opportunity to fix it or to do something nice. And then
people are kind of more grateful. Totally, which is what you did. I didn't fix it. You fixed it,
but fixing it involved inviting me into your Riverside account
and then me setting up this room and hitting record.
So, you know, I have a weird amount of power in the A16Z world right now
that will be drawn from me the second this is done.
So anyway, who is Jason Piverr?
I am the editor-in-chief of Entrepreneur Magazine,
and that means that I have the unbelievable pleasure
of spending all my time talking with and learning from
just the most innovative and smartest people in the world.
I am also the author of a book called Build for Tomorrow,
which came out of a lot of work that I've done,
both with entrepreneur and then also in this podcast
that shares the same name, though originally started as Pessmiss Archive.
I know you guys at A16C here, Pessmiss Archive fans,
and I used to be a part of that project
and launched a podcast under there that I then evolved into my own thing.
So anyway, what am I?
I'm a guy who gets to learn from incredibly innovative people
and then turn around and teach innovative people
how to be more adaptable,
because I think that that's the most important thing in success.
That's amazing.
And I want to get to your book that you recently wrote and published, Build for Tomorrow.
So we will talk about that and talk about the many themes and lessons from it.
But I want to hear from you, why do you think that skill is important?
That skill of adaptability?
It seems to be something that you've kind of geared your career around, now your recent book.
Why is that important today?
And why, of all the things that you could possibly focus on or write about, why have you chosen that?
Well, so I chose it because when I became editor-in-chief of Entrepreneur Magazine,
and to be clear, I didn't have a business background per se.
I really have a media background.
But when I started an entrepreneur, I would go out and I'd be interviewed on podcasts,
or I'd be speaking at events.
And I got this question over and over again.
The question was, what are the qualities of the most successful people
or most successful entrepreneurs?
And I kept thinking it's like a weird coordinated attack
that all these people are asking me the same question.
And then I realized, you know, if you're not,
listen to the questions that people ask you, you discover that what they're really doing
is telling you what they think your value is to them. And so I started to think, well,
why are people asking me this specific question? I realize the answer is because people see me
as a pattern matcher. I get to talk to a lot of people, and therefore, my value is that I can
see patterns across lots of different experiences. So I thought, well, if I am to seize the
opportunity here and be really useful to people and match their expectations of me, I should
have a good answer to this question. I spent years thinking about it and talking to very smart
people. And what I came to was that the one thing that seems to define success is that people
hang on through enough failures to get there. Because the journey of anybody in business,
I mean, we're talking specifically to a tech audience, but it is certainly not
just specific to tech, you are absolutely not going to have the right idea at the start.
But by just putting something out into the world, you can start the iterative process of
developing something that is something people really want and that solves real problems,
hopefully in incredibly innovative ways. And that requires a level of personal adaptability
because it's not just enough to keep revising the product. You,
yourself have to be able to rethink who you are and what your company needs from you and how to
relate to the people you're trying to serve and then to just overcome the emotional, like,
battering that is things not working out. And I've spent years and years running various theories
like this by just global game-changing folks. And they all say, you know what, that sounds about right.
And that made me feel confident to put it out in the world that adaptability is the most important thing.
I love that you said that it happens on both the micro and macro scale. And we're talking, as you said, to a tech audience.
But this applies everywhere in life, right? You wake up one day and you have certain plans and then it rains.
You're like, oh, I guess I have to adapt. And it's funny because even in those micro examples, there is a huge spectrum in the way that people respond.
Right. Some people get very upset. Some people say, oh, well, this is an opportunity for me to stay in and work.
And then if we extend that to the macro lens, which I'm very excited to talk to you about today,
this has happened throughout history, right?
You see this new technology arise.
And you're like, oh, man, that thing that I've worked on, that skill that I've developed for 10 years,
no longer matters or soon will not matter.
It's an opportunity to understand that you do have a choice in the way that you respond,
and that adaptability is something that impacts us at the daily level, the weekly, yearly,
decade-long level. So I'm excited to talk through that. And you were one of the most prepared
guests I've ever had. You sent me these six different, would you say, their frameworks or theories
around how people maybe miss the opportunity to adapt or don't really recognize some of these
larger themes that have happened throughout history. And why don't we just start there? What are these
six different frameworks or theories that you've developed? And how would you kind of package them?
So I appreciate that. Yeah, I sent you a very, very long document that I like pecked out at midnight in a hotel room. That comes out of me seeing how people kind of convince other people to work with them. And the answer is often that they just, they come with a solution. You know, like if you go to somebody with a solution, how do they turn down good solutions? But don't ask for an opportunity, be the opportunity. So anyway, when we were first in touch, I was like, I'm just going to show you a whole lot of stuff and hope that you will read through it. So look, I'm
I'm fascinated by both how entrepreneurs solve problems today,
but also about how change happened throughout history.
The reason I really love the history stuff is because you know how the story ended,
whereas we don't know how the story ends now,
or anybody who's working on anything right now,
you have truly no idea what's going to happen,
despite your best efforts to control it.
And yet when you look backwards,
you can see how decisions that were made played out.
And I think that those are really instructive.
If we can find the patterns across all of this,
what we can see is where change and adoption of change
goes right and goes wrong.
And so I have throughout my work on all this many years
been just trying to make sense of all the data, right?
I mean, how can I draw lines between why people
through rocks at early automobiles,
and why people are uncomfortable with lime scooters on the streets.
And I think that we can learn a lot by trying to compare all these things.
And so I came up with these six frameworks,
which are really ways to understand why people are uncomfortable with
or outright resist some kind of new innovation.
And we could be talking about big, global changing things like social media,
but we could also be talking about individual innovations
that you are just trying to introduce to a client-based.
So why are people uncomfortable with these things?
And then what does it take to get them to embrace or understand this newness?
Right. How do we get them to adapt?
And something I liked from Pessmiss Archive, which you've been a part of,
is that it really is anything from the automobile to the mirror.
Right?
There are some of these things that people think are very, very commonplace today.
but we're faced with resistance when they were first introduced.
And we'll go through the different reasons for those,
but I think it's important to note that this isn't just like, yeah, social media
or this big airplane.
It could be the mirror.
It could be the teddy bear.
It could be jazz music.
There are many things that people have faced with resistance that you would not expect today.
And I think the lesson that we'll get to is that, you know, we see many parallels.
So why don't we dive in?
Why don't you introduce the first framework?
from the six. Number one is we fundamentally do not believe in our own adaptability.
If you look back through time and this even won't be unfamiliar to listeners of the A16Z
podcast because I know that Mark was talking about it not that long ago, which is that you
find throughout time incredible concern that is repetitive about new things. So the number of
that have been claimed to be addictive or it goes on forever, right?
The things that people say about social media, you heard about the radio.
But it also, you know, it gets kind of funny and time-specific, the spinning wheel of the bicycle
in the early days of the bicycle people thought would make people go insane.
Novels were believed to make women infertile among many other things.
But what I think you're seeing, and I'll tell you this one story that really captures it,
that we generally believe that we exist in a kind of balance.
and that that balance is very easily upset by new things.
And so when something new comes along,
we tend to process it as a loss.
We see some new way of doing something,
and then we instantly identify the thing
that we will no longer have access to
or that the thing that we're very comfortable with
that maybe we won't be able to do in the same way.
And then, because we cannot imagine what the gain will be,
and maybe don't even believe that there will be,
be game, we start to extrapolate the loss. So we say, because I lost this thing, I will then
lose this thing. 1877, Thomas Edison infense the phonograph, or he might not have called it
the phonograph, but anyway, it was the very first record player. It was really a cylinder,
and then it became a flat record like we know today. And people's minds were blowing. Just consider
how until that moment, the only way that you could listen to music is if a human being was playing
an instrument in front of you. There was just, there was no other way to do it. And then suddenly
there was a machine, a machine that had captured sound and could play it back to you. People didn't
believe it at first. They had to be shown that there weren't like a live, there wasn't a live
band hiding behind a wall somewhere. And then once they did come to believe it, they were
amazed and fascinated by it and they wanted it in their homes. You know who really hated that?
the answer is musicians.
Musicians really hated that
because they saw themselves being replaced.
And the leader of the resistance
was a guy named John Philip Sousa.
So John Phillips Sousa, you may not know his name today,
but you certainly do know his music
because he wrote all the military marches
that we're still very familiar with.
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-ssa.
John Philipsu.
He wrote this article.
He was the champion, the champion against recorded music.
He was leading the resistance for his fellow musicians.
and he wrote this piece called
the menace of mechanical music in 1906, I think.
If you can go look it up,
and it is this string of arguments against recorded music,
and my favorite of which goes like this.
So he says that if you introduce recorded music to the home,
the photograph or record player enters the home,
it will replace all forms of live music.
All live music now gone.
Because, you know, why would anybody perform live
when there's a machine that could do it for them?
And then mothers will no longer sing to their children
why would a mother sing to her children when a machine could do that?
And then because children grow up to imitate their mothers, as John Phillipsuzza says.
The children will now grow up to imitate the machines, and thus we will raise a generation
of machine babies.
Now, that of course didn't happen.
But you can see the logic.
You can see where he's going.
That there's some kind of very specific balance here that we are performing live in the home,
which inspires mothers to sing to their children, which inspires children to grow up to
imitate the mothers and therefore kind of find
humanity, and that one little change to that very important shame breaks everything.
But of course, that's not what happens.
What instead happens is that we find game in totally unexpected ways.
You think about what happened with John Phillips-Souza and recorded music, and as it turns out,
recorded music enabled musicians to reach people that they couldn't physically reach.
John Phillips-Souza lived in a completely geographically based world.
where the only way that he could
he could have people hear his music
and make money off of that
is if he traveled to them.
But now he had the ability to scale.
I like the analogy of something breaking
because that really does seem to be the emotion
that arises when people visualize
certain new technologies where it's really like
there is a current world order
and something about this is going to break.
Maybe all of it.
Sometimes it gets that far.
And it reminds me actually of the Douglas Adams quote
that Mark, you mentioned Mark's interview,
brought up there, which is really this idea that when you're brought into the world, do you think that
everything is normal and ordinary and just a part of the way the world works? And you basically
live that way until you're, I think the quote says, around your, around 15. And then between 15 and
35, everything's new and exciting and revolutionary, and actually probably something that you can
build a career around and that you can be a part of. And then anything after 35 is just fundamentally
against the natural order. And then that's where you see, you know, a parallel from the music
example you gave. You see AI coming into play right now, a lot of dispute between artists and the people
creating the AIs and the other people building technology on top. And so, yeah, I think one of the reasons
it's so interesting to learn these stories from history is because you can apply them or you can see
the parallels today. But I think that's a great example of just that idea of breaking society.
Meanwhile, the society that we live in today broke the society from 100 years ago, which broke the
society 100 years before that. There's no, like, true way that humans are supposed to live.
That's right. We really are the products of change, and we forget that. We're actually the
argument for change, because the things that we grew up with were the things that people had
previously opposed. The belief in a kind of easily breakable humanity, I think, is also a belief
in fixed opportunity. Economists have this theory that I love, which is called the lump of labor
fallacy. Are you familiar with it?
I am not.
So the fallacy is that there's a lump of labor.
So the idea is that there are a fixed number of jobs and a roughly fixed number of people to do those jobs.
And anything that creates an imbalance in one way or the other will create kind of unfixable disharmony.
So this is what would drive, for example, a lot of fear that new immigrants to a country will take the jobs from the people who already live in that country.
and therefore there will be a lot of unemployment
from the people who used to have the jobs.
But that's not what happens, of course,
because when immigrants come in,
they are also consumers themselves,
and so they create more jobs.
There isn't a lump of labor.
It's totally flexible.
Similarly, there's always been the belief,
as John Phillips-Suzza had,
that new technology will reduce
the work available to the same labor pool.
So, you know, he's believing
that recorded music will replace
live music in many instances, and therefore there will just be musicians out of work.
And to be fair to him, that was true for a while, because musicians used to, for example,
they would perform live the scores for all movies. You went to see a movie, and the movie was
silent, and there was a live band playing the score from the movie, and that wasn't necessary
anymore. And it was a difficult transition. Every time that there is a shift, we adapt to it,
and it creates new opportunities. It isn't to say that it's easy. It's not. It will be,
disruptive and there will be losers in that disruption. But I think what we need to do as a whole,
as a society, is be alert to how and where those new opportunities come from and then how we can
start to help people realize those new opportunities and then kind of create new value out of them
ourselves. Yeah, I think something that people fight against sometimes is the amount of abstraction
that exists in our lives. And that is really a macro theme. If you think about
many hundreds of years ago, humans, as you said, they were focused on, like, how do I have
enough food to live? How do I make sure that I'm not getting diseases and dying at age 20?
They're really focused on, like, the nitty gritty of how do I survive? And over time, we've
abstracted that from people's lives. And that, for the most part, is a good thing. So we can focus
on things that are enjoyable, that are discretionary. Just this idea of this different skills that
humans, quote unquote, should have. I think one great example is people saying, well, Google is
removing our memory spans, right? Like, we can't even remember things anymore. We just Google it.
But again, coming back to this idea that the way we've operated for a period of time does not mean
that's inherently correct. It doesn't mean that you being able to recall all of these historical
dates or all of these names from the past or all of these random facts and, you know, ace at trivia
test, that's not necessarily good or bad. It just is changing. And so I think that's another important
perspective. Yeah, that's right. I'll credit that to Lee Rainey of the Pew Research Center who
had originally put that to me. And I was really struck by it. You know, he was saying,
look, a sign of intelligence decades ago would be the ability to be able to easily retain
information. So the ability to read something and retain it, the quick recall of that information,
that was a sign of intelligence. Now a sign of intelligence would be the ability to quickly
find and process information. And is that to say that one is better than the other? No. It's just to say
that it's different and that intelligence takes different forms based on the needs and the resources
of the time in which somebody needs to be intelligent. And we shouldn't be weighing these things
against each other as if one thing is better or worse because progress just simply doesn't work that way.
Progress doesn't wait either. Let's bookend
that and move on to number two, what is the second framework that you've developed?
Yeah, so the second one is that we don't often know what things are for. And if we don't know
what something is for, then we will either be alarmed by it because it seems like it's,
you know, to go back to what we were just talking about, kind of breaking something that we were
familiar with, or we just think that it's frivolous. So oftentimes I'll go and I'll speak to
crowds and I'll talk about change and adaptation and technology and then somebody will raise
handle and say, but you make a print magazine, why are you still doing that? And the answer is,
well, look, I think that it's important to ask if I'm in the content business and I am,
what is content for? What's it for? Decades ago, content was for monetization. So you could sell
ads against your content, you can sell subscriptions to your content. Now, you can do that,
but it doesn't make you nearly as much money. And I'm not just talking about entrepreneur,
I'm talking about the entire media ecosystem. So I look at content, I think, well, what is this for?
content is for relationships. That's what it's for. Why does Red Bull pour a ton of money into content?
If you like extreme sports, then Red Bull is your place. They got a magazine for you. They got videos,
they got events. They make money off of that? I have no idea. Probably not. They probably lose money off
of it. You know where they make money? Energy drinks. And the reason that people buy the energy drinks
is because they feel really good about Red Bull because they developed a relationship with Red Bull because
because of the content. Content builds relationships and then you can monetize the relationship with
products or services that people trust you to provide because of the content. That is why we do it,
because a print magazine is an unbelievable way for people to feel really good about entrepreneur or
media. We do still make money on the print magazine, to be clear, it doesn't lose money,
just doesn't make the kind of money that it probably did 30 years ago. But that's how I think
we need to think about the entire media ecosystem. What products or services can we build that
people who trust us because of the content? Stop thinking about the content is monetization. What is it for?
It's four relationships. So anyway,
I think that people fundamentally misunderstand oftentimes what the new thing that they're looking at
is for, and as a result, they think that it is either bad or frivolous, and therefore they make
incorrect conclusions. I think they also maybe struggle to see what it can be for eventually, right?
When you're met with a new technology, it's not the perfected version of that technology. And there's
so many examples of this where there was an 1865 newspaper editor that I found that said, well,
inform people know that it is impossible to transmit the voice over wires and that were it possible
to do so, the thing would be of no practical value. And I could see how when that technology is either
inexistent or nascent, you're like, what on earth would I use this for? But with millions, if not
billions of people who are using a technology, there are so much creativity that goes into
building out the use cases. And sometimes it does take some time. That is also very similar to
something that Henry David Thoreau wrote in Walden, which is we are in great haste to construct
a magnetic telegraph from Maine to Texas. But Maine and Texas, it may be, have nothing important
to communicate. And, you know, the funny thing is that Maine and Texas, possibly back then
didn't have anything to communicate. But as soon as you give them an ability to communicate,
they will find something to talk about. They will find commerce. They will find information to
exchange. That's the thing. Things aren't fixed. Once you introduce something new,
people find ways to use it. That's right. Ken Olson,
was also famously quoted as saying there was no reason for an individual to have a computer in his home.
And to your point, at that time, there may have not been because there weren't connections
between computers. There weren't certain jobs, certain information that this person had access to
that would make that valuable. But with time, with more people who are integrated into that
technology, with the evolution of that technology, the increased speed, the increased access,
things change. And I think it is important to focus on what something is used for and
remember that your first encounter with the technology likely won't be the version that you
encounter as it grows and progresses. And just a final note there, I think it's very common for us
as humans to, we basically encounter things and skeuomorphically apply something that already exists.
So, I mean, email is the perfect example of this where literally it was like, there's mail.
And then we're just going to call it email. But now it's a fundamentally different thing.
And I think you see the same thing where people jump on Zoom calls and they're like,
let's have a happy hour, and they just apply what we do in the quote-unquote physical world.
But these things will evolve on their own into completely new things.
And I think that's also important to keep in mind.
Very hard to predict, but just it's worth having that lens of this will change.
So if you're on the innovator side of that, what we need to be doing is asking, what is this for,
maybe of a nascent technology or something that we're developing, and then running experiments,
seeing hypotheses through
because ultimately
the reason why we were able to get to
what you're describing their stuff
with a nascent technology
that maybe is really frankly
for nothing right now
but becomes something that's transformative
is because someone or a series of people
had an idea of where this thing should go.
And of course, you know,
when you look back at time,
it's not like these things are preordained.
Oftentimes people had lots of different ideas
and directions for technologies.
There were all sorts of funny design
for the bicycle that turned out to not be the final one that we have now. But what people were doing
was carrying a hypotheses out into the world and seeing how people react to it and then reacting to that.
That's ultimately how innovation happens. And so the winners, the people with the competitive
advantages are the ones who are constantly asking what is this for and then are willing to see
if they're right and if not be adaptable enough to take the data that they're learning and build it
back into something better. Completely. I think that's a perfect.
segue into framework number three, which is that innovators don't always build a bridge. Can you speak
more to that? Yeah, right. So here's the challenge that innovators often have. It is that they are so
familiar with the value of the thing that they have created that they do not realize that other people do not see that value.
or do not understand it or don't understand how it fits into their lives.
I think that Silicon Valley is guilty of this all the time
of introducing very revolutionary ideas
without doing the groundwork of connecting this new idea
to something that people are already comfortable and familiar with.
To play that out, I'll take you back on another historical story.
So in the 1800s, the car was introduced.
People didn't call it the car.
at the horseless carriage. And that, of course, is if they were being generous, if they were not
being generous, they would call it the devil wagon, because they totally thought these things were the
devil wagon, and they would throw rocks at them. And if you drove down the street in one of these
early cars, somebody would literally yell, get a horse at, get a horse. They would go, get a horse
at you. And when people tell the story now of how cars became the dominant mode of transportation,
what they tell is the story of Henry Ford, the Henry Ford revolutionized.
manufacturing and therefore made cars cheaper and more accessible to the masses. And though that is
true, it skips over an important point, an important part of the story that I heard from a car
historian, and it was something that Henry Ford was the beneficiary of. It goes like this. So in the
earlier days of the car, people are calling the devil wagon, they're throwing rocks at it. And the
auto industry is trying to understand what on earth is wrong. And they start to look at the
way in which they're advertising the car.
and they
they realize that they are advertising the car
as a replacement to the horse.
They're saying, get rid of Dobbin,
Dobbin being the generic name of, like, spot for a dog.
Get rid of Dobbin and get this car.
This car is so much better than your stupid horse.
But here's the thing.
People hated that.
They found that offensive.
And they should have because they loved their horse.
Their horse was a member of the family
and as far back as they knew every generation of their family
had a horse.
And now here come these people saying,
I have a totally better way for you to be.
And your old way is stupid.
People hate that because people hate new things.
What they like is better versions of old things.
So what we need to do as innovators is we need to build
what I like to call the bridge of familiarity.
And that bridge goes not from us,
the people with a great new thing,
to the people who we want to have that great new thing,
that is not the direction to build the bridge.
You build the bridge the other way around.
You start with where they are,
and you build towards you.
So back then, the shift that the auto industry made
was that they stopped talking about the car
as a replete spent to the horse,
and they started talking about the car as a better horse.
So they started popularizing terms like horsepower
and naming cars after horses,
which we still do today with the Bronco and Mustang.
Oh, it's kind of like my horse
and I can sort of respect it like and use it like my horse.
Well, that makes a lot more sense to me
than someone just coming along and telling me to get rid of my horse.
This is what we always need to keep in mind.
I was just talking about a guy who he had a product
that they were calling it chicken chips.
Chicken chips.
Chicken chips.
Chips, like out of a bag, like potato chips, but chicken chips.
Now, does that sound appealing to you?
No, I was going to say, I'm not sure where you're going with this, but I would definitely
not grab that off a shelf.
Yeah, and that's the thing.
It did really well in taste tests.
People really liked the product.
Nobody was buying it.
Because chicken chips sounds disgusting.
So after a bunch of consumer insights research, they changed from calling it chicken chips to
protein chips. Why? Because people are already familiar with protein bars and protein packs and
protein shakes. So the idea of it being protein first now signals to an existing audience.
And where's the protein coming from? Well, you can find out that it's coming from chicken.
And that little shift completely unlocked sales for this company.
I love that you brought up a current application of this because that was going to be my question.
There are so many cases where there is pushback and in many cases rightfully so, whether it's Web 3,
whether it's autonomous vehicles, whether it's different versions of space.
There's a lot of pushback in some of these new, emerging, perhaps exciting industries.
And I think you're right that there is that familiarity gap where people are just like,
why do I care if people are going to Mars?
Like, I have problems on Earth or like, why do I care if something is.
is decentralized, tell me why that matters. And so I think it's important to use those frames of just
like, why does this matter? That simple question, why does this matter to someone today? And even,
like you said, using like simplistic terminology can completely shift. And I think another area
that this reminds me of is, as I mentioned, AI is, you know, we went through AI summer.
Things are still trucking ahead very quickly. But it's like, how can you reframe something to not
sounds so scary, right? Like someone who's a designer is like, oh, this artificial intelligence
bot is creating art based on my artwork. That sounds really bad. And in some cases, I can see how
there is a negative consequence. But yeah, just thinking through how this can be framed as something
new. And I will just add one more thing there, which is your examples of cars and applying
horses to them reminded me of a conversation I had recently, which is,
someone basically saying, I want to get an electric vehicle, but man, I just love hearing the sound of my car.
They just love that familiarity. And I was like, huh, I wonder, I mean, I could see an electric vehicle company one day, maybe, just like adding in that sound for familiarity.
It's not creating the same emissions, but again, giving someone that bridge that you talked about, that familiarity bridge of what they like and what they love and what they're familiar with.
And then just giving them almost like a little step towards the next thing.
Totally.
Elevators used to be obviously hand-operated.
And then by the time we got to the 1950s,
automatic elevator technology existed,
but people didn't want to get in them
because they were used to having a human being operating it.
And consider it.
There's literally no other example in the world,
or at least that the average person will use,
in which you walk into a completely enclosed space
with no windows and no human operator,
and it moves you.
There's nothing else like it.
And so people weren't getting into these things.
Now, there were also all these kind of interesting fear-mongering campaigns happening from
elevator operator unions that were also contributing to it.
But anyway, one of the ways that the elevator industry found could get people inside the doors
was by recognizing that what people needed wasn't necessarily a actual human.
What they needed was the feeling that there was a human involved and that there was a human touch.
There was a human that would be there to their aid if something went.
wrong. And simply adding in a soothing female voice that said things like going up, going down,
floor one, floor two, that that by itself helped a lot of people feel comfortable getting into the
elevator. So that reminds me a lot of your example with the electric car making that noise.
I mean, we do things like that all the time. Potato chips are engineered not just for flavor,
but for crunch. And there's a reason for that. It's because people are looking for those
kinds of things as signals of quality. So you have to understand where people are.
and then start to build from there.
I love that example because it is one of those things
that I have just taken for granted in elevators.
I have never thought about the fact
that there would be an elevator without some of those things.
And now there are, but I never noticed how that might influence people today
because we're so used to elevators and just accepting the fact
that they're part of our everyday lives.
But there was a time where I guess that really mattered.
That's so fascinating.
Let's move on to number four.
What framework number four?
Right.
So framework number four is we mistake a 1% problem for a 100% problem.
So I'll tell you another story from history,
which is that the waltz, when it was first introduced centuries ago,
people talked about the waltz in society, Europe.
The way that people talked about Miley Cyrus twerking at the VMAs a few years ago, right?
Like it was this incredibly scandalous, awful, destroying the youth kind of thing.
Society had all sorts of reasons why they hated the waltz.
It was sexual.
It involved too much physical contact among young people.
But doctors were saying that the waltz was physically harmful.
That dancing the waltz would take years off of people's lives.
Now, this is something that comes up all the time.
I mentioned a little earlier.
There were doctors who said that the bicycle made people insane
and that novels made women infertile.
But I talked to a historian of the waltz,
and he made this really interesting point,
which was that in that case,
the doctors were actually right.
The waltz was actually very bad for people's health.
But the thing was that they thought it was the dance that was harmful,
the spinning, the contact.
It wasn't the dance.
It was literally everything around the dance.
So how did people dance the waltz in like the early 1800s?
Well, here's what they did.
First of all, they were in buildings that were,
enclosed, didn't have modern ventilation. They were being lit generally by oil candles. So you have
the lighting is pouring noxious fumes into a unventilid space. Then they were all dancing on top of
these particular kind of rugs. And the rugs would kick up all this dust and other particles that
people would then be breathing in. And of course, they're wearing these incredibly tight like corset like
clothing. So you better believe that that was a pretty unhealthy environment to dance in.
The waltz wasn't the problem. All these other things were the problem. Now, the reason I tell you
this story is because we often mistake a 1% problem for a 100% problem. People thought that
the waltz was the problem. The waltz wasn't the problem. The circumstances of the waltz were the
problem. This really goes to in a way that 1% again, which is to say people see the 99%. They see
the hardware, they see the processing of credit cards, but they miss that 1%.
And sometimes they miss that 1% and they think that the 1% problem represents a 100% problem
in the case of like Lyme scooters, these are all terrible and dangerous and let's get them
off the street.
Or sometimes that 1% is actually the thing that makes it work that you only understand and
that your competitors don't.
The more that we can focus in on that 1%, and make sure that we're maximizing it, the more in
which we are able to create things of value and also protect things of value. I think that reminds me
of something I love about digital products in particular. And it's that you get data on all of this.
So if you were to compare the Lyme example to bicycles, well, you could go and have a bunch of bicycles
sold and then people distributed throughout the country are crashing and getting hurt or using them
for purposes they shouldn't be. But really, it's extremely hard to get that information and to really act on
what that 1% problem is. Because those distributions are not foreign in many aspects of life, right?
People have heard of the Preeto principle, 2080. There often is something smaller that is accounting for a
larger issue. And that's what's so beautiful about these digital products is you can get that
information to really tease out, yeah, how do we improve this product? How do we fix something that
might be a 1% problem that people are viewing as a 100% problem? And I think you're also right that
It's just so hard, and we've kind of spoken to this throughout the conversation, just so hard to
understand how technologies manifest. And often I find that people's reservations or fears early on
about those problems just don't end up being the very real problems that exist later. So just a
quick example that many people would be familiar with is just the phone. A lot of people worried
about the radiation from phones early on. And that was like the big thing. Like, can we have phones near us?
it's going to impact our health in these ways.
And no one back then could ever have imagined
the very real consequences of phones today.
And I'm not saying that phones are net negative,
but who could have imagined
that these phones that we were worried about
in terms of radiation would be the talk of the day
in terms of like upending democracy
or kids spending too much time on this?
I'm not taking aside on either of those topics,
but more so just saying like no one could have ever predicted
that those would be
the quote-unquote issues of the day with that piece of technology.
Yeah, totally right.
Just a really useful, quick framework to try to think through those exact kind of things
is, you know, people often ask the question, is this perfect?
Or sort of that's at the heart of the 99% their problem is people are seeing an
imperfection.
And then therefore they say, well, this whole thing is damaging or dangerous and has to be removed.
But, you know, the problem with asking, is this perfect
is that the answer is the same every single time.
The answer is no.
It's not perfect.
It's never perfect.
Nothing's perfect.
So the better question to ask is,
is this new problem better than my old problem?
Because once we start tracking progress through problems,
one, we just create the space for problems,
which are inevitable, and therefore,
when a problem arises, it doesn't shock us.
but also that it keeps us focused on the task at hand,
which is not to create some kind of perfect balance.
Like we were talking earlier about people believing
that we're all in some kind of perfect harmony
that gets easily disrupted,
but rather that we are a non-stop rolling series of problems
and everything that we ever create just creates other problems.
And so the question that we must evaluate is,
do we have better problems?
I would say that for all the problems,
and certainly there are many of them of a, let's say, just interconnected world,
that the amount of prosperity and access to information,
just for two things to start, the things that come out of that,
which is all sorts of problems.
I mean, we were like, you know, large and small,
but I think that we have better problems now than we did back then
when we didn't have those same levels of prosperity and access to information.
Well, you'll have a plus one there for me.
I know not everyone agrees with that.
But let's move on to number five,
which I think relates to what you're speaking.
to, which is that people not only resurrect or dig up problems with these new technologies,
but they also tend to map them to other problems within society, which may be removed or
overlapping to the new technology. Yeah, we imbue our innovations with our own cultural or
personal anxieties. You know, we've been talking about kind of technology in a more
traditional sense, but here's something that was innovative all the same, which is the teddy bear.
So the teddy bear was invented in Germany right around the turn of the century,
and then it made its way over to America, about 1906.
1907, it became popular enough to trigger its own moral panic.
There was a national moral crisis over the teddy bear in 1907.
It started in Michigan with a priest named Michael G. Esper,
who had given this sermon about how damaging teddy bears are
and how dangerous they are.
It sounds so ridiculous for there to be a moral panic around teddy bears.
And it always just reminds me of the fact that people probably will look back 100 years from now.
And there will be something like the teddy bear.
I don't know what it'll be.
But it always just reminds me that this is just so ridiculous today.
And something parallel will happen tomorrow.
Right.
It started with a Reverend named Michael G. Esper in a little church in St. Joseph, Michigan.
And one day, he gave this fiery sermon about teddy bears.
He said, this is an actual quote from the sermon,
when your little girl asked for a doll and you gave her a teddy bear,
your action was fraught with a consequence that is only excusable on the grounds of your ignorance.
He called the bear's bundles of horribleness.
He said that they are the most harmful and repulsive nature fakes ever perpetrated.
Now, what is going on?
How could somebody be this worked up about a teddy bear?
Well, first of all, I should say that it wasn't just kind of one crank,
in Michigan, what happened was that he gave that sermon. That sermon was then reprinted in
newspapers around the country, the kind of 1907 version of going viral. And then it triggered
other churches, kind of giving their own sermons. It triggered schools banning teddy bears.
A national crisis slash conversation took place as a result. Here is what he was concerned about.
He was concerned. If girls play with a teddy bear in the
instead of a doll, you heard that for the quote,
then they are going to do lasting damage,
not just to themselves, but to the family.
Why? Because girls, of course, have one purpose in life in 1907,
and that is to grow up and become mothers.
And when they play with a doll,
they develop a maternal instinct,
and that enables them to then grow up and be mothers.
But if they set aside the doll
and play with a teddy bear instead,
they will not develop a maternal instinct.
They do not develop a maternal instinct.
They will not grow up to be mothers,
and thus we will have, you know, the end of the human race.
That was his real concern.
Now, you listen to that and you think,
well, that's a real logical leap.
What could possibly be going on here?
And the answer is that if you look at what was happening,
the culture of the time,
women were becoming educated in a way that they had never been before,
and they were also entering the workforce
in a way that they had never been before.
And that was very alarming to the traditionalists of 1907.
and they were distilling all of that anxiety down into the teddy bear.
Oftentimes, and then what we see here is we see our own concerns about either shifts in culture
or sometimes our own fading relevance.
And we therefore treat something new as if it can only be bad
because it is upsetting the delicate control that we like to.
to have on things.
I mean, I will tell you, as a longstanding member of the traditional media,
you know, you don't get a membership card to traditional media,
but I started my career in community newspapers,
and then I've worked in national magazines ever since.
You know, I'm often deeply frustrated by the way in which I see traditional media
cover technology and, you know, the kind of alarmist look for the worst possible outcome
and then report it as if it is, you know, fact or at least certain outcome.
I mean, just one example was that a completely absurd New York Times story
from earlier this year in which they found out that LinkedIn was doing some like basic
A-B testing.
And then they ran this story about how LinkedIn was actually conducting a gigantic hidden
secret experiment on whether or not people get jobs.
I mean, it's just like, guys, do you not know that A-B testing is like a really basic thing
that actually improves do it as well?
Yes, that the New York Times does it as well. I mean, this was just really nuts. But anyway, what's driving this? I'll tell you, I think that it, and I don't think that people are doing it consciously, but I think that generally speaking, people in traditional media are very, very afraid that the systems that kind of drove the relevance of the organizations that they work in, and therefore the structures that people work in are going to get upended. I completely agree. And I think in some cases it's not just anxiety. It's really protecting an investment.
of some sort. And that could be an investment in a skill, like a journalism degree. That could be an
investment in a taxi medallion that no longer is relevant or is less relevant or worth less,
literally, than it was prior. And so, yeah, I think it's important for people to keep that
of mind on both sides. I like that you pointed out. It's not just important for the person who
might be anxious or scared or protecting what they've invested in. It's also important for the people
who are developing these technologies to understand that technologies, especially if they're game
changing will upend power. They will upend structures that already exist. And there's beauty to that,
but it's also very scary for someone on the other side. And so figuring out how to bring that
technology into the masses in a way that's understandable, in a way that's clear, in a way that's
perhaps, if possible, less scary is important. So why don't we dovetail that into the final
framework, which I think is related?
We oversimplify problems.
And when we oversimplify problems, we inhibit our ability to come up with meaningful solutions.
Because you cannot create a meaningful solution to something if you do not really understand the underlying problem.
So my story for this is, again, more of a recent one.
after the 2016 presidential election, you know, there was all this concern about how Russia had interfered,
and pundits and politicians all had this word for it, which was unprecedented.
I mean, you know, you would just, it doesn't matter what cable network you turn on,
you would hear them talk about, and this was an unprecedented attack on democracy, etc., etc.
And they all blamed in one way or another social media, and particularly at the time Facebook,
and to a lesser degree Twitter on the problem.
And I had started to wonder as I was hearing people talk about this being unprecedented, if it was unprecedented, because it just seemed maybe too simplistic to say that Russia interfering with American elections was unprecedented.
And so I found this guy named David Shimer, a historian and foreign policy analyst who had just written this book called Rigged about the 100 years of Russian interference in American elections and called him up to ask him about it.
He said, I'm just going to read you what he said to me because I just thought it was really powerful.
He said, if you treat something as unprecedented, what you're saying is there's no history behind it,
what you're saying is it's never happened before.
And that makes it much easier to create rumors, myths, and even lies about this subject.
Now, then he went on to basically explain to me how for 100 years, Russia had run the same exact playbook on American elections.
And that was to utilize the dominant mode of communication at the time, which could either be
newspapers or radio or television or social media to exacerbate existing tensions in American
culture. And that was the playbook. Now, of course, in 2016, social media played a larger role
in American life than it ever did before. And it hasn't been around that long. But what Russia did
with social media was not really any different than anything else it had ever done. And I asked David,
okay, that's a really interesting academic point,
but what are we supposed to do with that?
And he said, well, look, as a starting point, it's this.
Right now the conversation is entirely about social media.
And that's not to say the social media is blameless.
Facebook, for one, could have certainly had a smarter approach to this problem
and more proactive approach to this problem.
But if we simplify the problem of Russian interference in American elections
down to it's a social media problem.
Well, then look, you could throw Mark Zuckerberg in jail
and you could shut Facebook down today
and you wouldn't solve that problem
because that problem is bigger than social media.
So if everybody is focused on only one part of a problem,
then you are not solving the problem.
We need to have smarter conversations
about exactly what is underpinning
the problems and the challenges that we face,
either culturally or at an individual company
and then start to really develop meaningful, comprehensive solutions.
Yeah, I think you're right about that.
I also wonder sometimes whether, as I mentioned before,
we're becoming so abstracted from the things in our lives,
how that plays into all of this.
And what I mean by that is, you know,
social media is one example that you give,
but you could also give like self-driving cars as another example
or some of the other things that we engage.
engage in that we just don't understand. Even you and I on this call, I cannot explain to you
the technology behind this call, like the really nitty gritty, like what bits are moving where and why
and how this is so much faster than 20 years ago. I can kind of speak a little bit to it. And we're
involved in technology. We interview people who create these technologies. And then I just think back
to people who, you know, I mean, the New York Times example that you gave earlier where someone
doesn't know that A-B testing is happening. Well, there are people who are even further from the
technology than that, right, who just don't understand the world that they are now placed in.
And so I do wonder, I think you're correct, that people simplify these problems because that's
the only tool they have. They don't know the nitty-gritty about how these algorithms are working.
They maybe don't have the historical perspective to understand, like the scholar you spoke to,
about all of the different, you know, pieces or ways that Russia was involved in the past.
And so I don't know if I have a solution. Do you have any thoughts there?
Like, we are becoming more abstracted.
And then simultaneously, these technologies are becoming more complex.
And so it's hard for people not to simplify, if that makes sense.
Yeah. Well, I think that's absolutely right.
People will and must simplify.
and I think on an individual basis
there's just kind of little that you can do about that.
It'll be a kind of chaos of noise
and out of which will come use cases
that make sense to people.
I think about AI right now
and the way in which people are using these new tools
to do every random thing.
I was like laughing today at these AI images
somebody had created of Avengers characters
if they were in a Wes Anderson movie.
Look, it's so funny.
And then we're going to start to imagine
all the ways in which this could be used
for bad or for good,
and people will try all sorts of things,
and it'll be noisy and chaotic.
And I think when you put something out into the world,
in a way there's kind of nothing
that you can do about that.
Outside of, if you are an innovator,
an entrepreneur,
then find the use case
that is going to solve people's problems.
and really focus on it
and then tell a story that is so compelling
that it breaks through that noise
or it helps clarify to people
why this is useful to them.
You know, of all that we've talked about today
that were incredibly disruptive
and that were feared and resisted,
you would think that electricity would be this thing
that's going to invade my home
and animate my objects.
What a terrible, terrible thing.
But the thing was that at the very beginning,
electricity for the average resident of a home
had only one use case, only one.
And that was safer lighting.
People were lighting their homes by gas,
and they understood that that was incredibly dangerous
because if the flame goes out and the gas keeps coming in,
you could get poisoned to death.
Electricity was an ability to remove that danger in your lives
by bringing in safer lighting.
For that reason, people welcomed it in their homes, largely.
There wasn't the kind of mass panic over electricity.
And once we had that, we could start to build and create new uses for it.
There was a new familiarity of this thing in our home.
And now, of course, we wanted to see what else it could do.
And what is that?
That's problem solving.
That's storytelling.
That's also being aware of and building into the very foundation of the thing that you're
building, if you're a company, if you're creating something new of what people need and where
the shifts are in their needs. I was talking to this disruption expert, his name is Hamza Madasia,
and he was telling me about this really interesting theory of what killed Kodak. The story, of course,
is that the digital camera killed Kodak. And there's a good reason for that. You know, Kodak very
famously, they were part of developing the digital camera. They basically put it on the shelf.
They saw it as irrelevant or competitive or whatever they thought.
And then, of course, somebody else, many other people came along and created a digital camera.
And the business was gone.
But he says, no, no, no, that's not what killed Kodak.
What killed Kodak wasn't the digital camera.
It was Facebook.
Why?
Because when the digital camera first came out, people saw it as a novelty.
But they didn't see it as a replacement to the camera film.
Yeah, you know, the photos were grainy.
and even if they were good,
what were you going to do with them?
People were used to printing photos out
and putting them on their refrigerator
or putting them in albums.
And you had really nothing to do
with the digital camera.
But then Facebook comes along.
And Facebook is really the first major use case
for sharing and storing digital photos.
Now people know what to do with these things.
And as a result, they know what to do with their digital cameras.
And as a result, they like their digital cameras.
camera more than they like their film camera. And that's what killed Kodak. Now, what's the moral of that
story? The moral of that story is that Kodak was so busy thinking of itself as a camera film company
that it thought all of its competitors were companies that made camera film. And therefore,
the way to compete against those companies was to make camera film better, faster, and cheaper.
But as a result of that, they didn't see disruption coming from a completely different space.
but they could have if they didn't think of themselves
as a camera film company
and they thought of themselves as a memories company.
And if they did that,
then what they would be obsessed with was their consumer
and how their consumer shares memories
and captures memories and what they want to do next.
And they would have seen Friendster,
and they would have seen MySpace,
and they would have anticipated that eventually
somebody is going to come along,
and make a much better version of those two platforms
that were pretty buggy.
And eventually, people are going to want to share memories
in different ways.
I guess the reason I tell you that story
is that we need to build into the way in which we operate
the assumption that there will be problems
and that there will be change.
Change, not just that we are introducing into the world,
but change that we are navigating ourselves.
The change will constantly come for the thing that we make,
even if what we made changed things for others.
And if we are aware of and alert to,
that change is always going to come to us.
We will start to build structures
and approach the world in a way in which we are anticipating that change
or at least operating the belief
that the thing that we do today is not the thing
that's going to happen tomorrow.
That's really the only way to solve these problems.
That's how to make things seem complex
is by never allowing us to simplify,
to oversimplify.
But to realize that everything that we do is just part of a complex structure and that whatever balance we find, if we find it at all, is going to be very temporary.
You're so right to say that balance is temporary. We always find these like temporary states of the world, but that is just subject to change.
And I think the six different frameworks that you've provided today are really helpful, as we've talked about for someone who is the innovator or someone who is part of this wider world that is being innovated.
on. So why don't we just quickly wrap up by you sharing the six different frameworks?
Number one, we fundamentally do not believe in our own adaptability. Number two, we often don't know
what new things are for. Number three, innovators aren't building a bridge to the people that they're
trying to reach. Number four, we mistake a 1% problem for a 100% problem. Number five, we imbue
our innovations with our own cultural and personal anxieties. And number six, we oversimplify problems.
Now, you know, it's funny, stuff, we've been calling these frameworks the whole time.
As I read them back, I realize that really what we're talking about here is major problems.
But of course, if we think about what's driving those problems, then we drive solutions, and that's really where the frameworks come from.
So if we are grappling with why is something not working or why are people not understanding or valuing this new thing that we have spent so long creating with such care, then I think thinking through,
those problems will help us identify maybe where we have gone wrong and where the beginnings
of solutions are for people and ourselves. I couldn't agree more. And I know we only have a few more
minutes, but I want to play a quick game just to make this, as you're saying, this relevant,
this tangible for people today. So we're not going to be able to get through all of these.
But I have, there's going to be two parts to this very quick game. The first part is looking at
a couple pieces of technology and we're using that broad sense of technology.
where I'm going to read you a headline from the past for a particular piece of technology,
and you're going to tell me which different problem or framework as we were using before applied.
So let's just let's go with the mirror, which I mentioned before.
Yeah.
So we have the mirror here.
Okay.
The quick headline is Little AIDS for Vane Women.
And then there is a much longer paragraph, which basically talks about how a woman no longer has to go into a store or go back home in order to.
to fix up her makeup or see her face.
She now has it on her.
She can now see herself at any point in the day.
Little AIDS for Vane Women,
where do you think this fits in?
Okay.
So that's definitely number two,
which is that we don't often know
what new things are for
because they're describing something very similar
to how we talk about selfies today, right?
Which is that these mirrors are exacerbating
and playing into people's vanity.
And I mean, those old articles about the mirror
would talk about women
who will literally not pull their faces up from the mirror.
There were concerns that women would be wandering out into streets
and get hit by cars because they're looking at the mirror the whole time.
And of course, now we talk about that with our cell phones and with selfies.
But what people didn't understand was that, you know,
the mirror wasn't going to override our basic humanity.
The mirror was going to be a wonderful new tool that people used
in certain circumstances and that, frankly, everybody would be happy to have one.
Exactly. I also think it plays into,
I think is it number four or five where basically
I think people were just a little worried
that women would have a new tool
to use in ways that they didn't like.
But with that said, let's move on to
something else we've talked about.
The camera. All right.
This actually relates to the prior point.
So maybe actually we'll move on to the next one.
But basically, this headline says,
people who photograph their vanity.
And it goes on to talk about how.
But now a stroll down Broadway reveals
hundreds of unknown faces
taken in the imperial style of photo
so much in vogue.
So basically now not only could rich, wealthy, famous people be photographed or painted, but now everyone could.
Yes. So this is, I'm slotting this into number five, which is we imbue our innovations with our own cultural and personal anxieties.
Possibly what those writers at the time were reacting to was when America was a far more dominantly religious country, there was a belief that vanity is a sin.
is one of the sins.
And people were really taught that any focus on themselves,
you know, this is, we're kind of rewinding back to like a 1700s,
1800s timeframe, that any focus on themselves was vain.
And therefore, an insult to others and an insult to God.
When the camera came out, people were actually often very concerned about photographing
themselves and sending the photo to others because it was such a sign of vanity.
And so there were these really interesting, like Emily Post-style etiquette guides.
Explaining that you taking a photo of yourself and sending it to someone else is not vanity.
It is a gift.
Because, you know, cameras coming out at a time in which people are moving,
but in which – moving around the country, but in which transportation options are not that great.
And it's possible that a family member of yours would move away, and then you would never see them again.
and the best that you ever had was these little photographs.
That was the way in which you could look into your brothers or sisters or aunts or whoever's eyes.
And that was a gift.
That wasn't vanity.
And that was a real tension around the camera.
And I think it's a tension that we're seeing play out now in the way in which we share things from our own lives today.
I agree.
There's a level of judgment in both.
All right.
Yes.
Final one in part one of this game is the airplane.
All right.
So I like this one because it's a little different.
And the headline says, no chance for the airplane.
And interestingly enough, this one also relates to women.
It says it can never have the support of the feminine sex.
And that alone is all that is needed to relegate it to an inescapable and dingy obscurity.
And this is one of many headlines that took many different forums.
I think I read another headline that said it would take over a million years for the airplane.
to be successful, only to which I believe the Wright brothers took flight two months later.
So what do you think? What do you think about the pushback against the airplane?
Oh, that's a really interesting one. Okay, I'm going to slot this one into, this is a complicated
one, but I'm going to slot it into we don't often know what new things are for. And the reason I'm
going there is because this is really about the dawn of the technology. And it took some time,
not just obviously to perfect the technology,
but then to develop it out into a way
in which it was really commercially viable.
So at the time, I could imagine
that people would look at the airplane
and they would wonder,
well, even if you get this right,
what am I going to do with you?
It's sort of in the way that like right now,
Richard Branson can send people into space,
but there isn't really a point to it at this point, right?
It's just a kind of joyride for wealthy people.
But it's very possible that at some point in the future,
there will be a true purpose for going into space.
I kind of can't anticipate it what it would be,
but for the average person, that is.
But in the same way that when the car was introduced,
people often didn't know what to do with it
because the very idea of a commute didn't really exist.
People didn't, they weren't commuting long distances.
So they were mostly joyriding with these things.
And a lot of people were saying, well, this is obnoxious.
I don't need this thing to joyride.
So I think that people just didn't know what it was for
because they couldn't imagine
and how it could develop into something that served a purpose
and in a world that was so connected
that there would be reasons to be flying around all over the place.
I think you're right.
I think that was one of those exponential technologies
where if you're early on in that curve,
it's just so hard to see how this could progress.
Okay.
Second part of this game is to share things today
that people are pushing back on
or maybe as we've been talking about,
maybe our earlier on in their adoption curves.
So one of them that I'm going to skip by,
but I'm just going to call out
because it relates to what you just said is space.
So I think part of that is it's just really hard to imagine a future
where people, the everyday person, is engaging with space.
Let's go to one that's a little different
that I think you might find interesting,
which is remote work.
Yeah.
So again, this is not like a specific piece of technology,
like a phone or a laptop or a camera,
but I think it's kind of like some of the other things,
we talked about, maybe like more cultural phenomena. So remote work is something that many of us are
doing now. We certainly are leveraging the technology there. But there's a lot of pushback.
A lot of people want to send people back to the office. What do you think this fits into the current
pushback around remote work? So I am slotting this one firmly into we mistake a 1% problem for
100% problem. I think to the companies that I have called who have shifted to four-day work weeks,
who are generally always remote.
And they tell me this really interesting thing,
which is that if you get it right,
if you can implement the four-day work week,
then productivity remains the same.
People are working one day less.
They're much happier.
It's a great retention and a recruitment tool.
But here's the problem.
After about a year, people start to say,
I'm starting to feel disconnected from my colleagues
because the problem here, of course,
is that how do you get to a four-day work week?
Well, what you do is that you eliminate
meetings and colleague chit-chat and basically anything that feels inefficient so that everyone's just
focused on efficiency. But it turns out all those inefficiency has had a purpose and that purpose
was building the fabric of a company culture. So you could ask to go to this point that I said a second
ago, is this perfect? And the answer is no. And then you must ask, well, is this new problem better
than the old problem? And here, I think if you asked, is this perfect and said no and then got rid of the
four-day work week or any other form of remote work, right, that, oh, well, you know, my managers
don't feel like they're able to properly oversee their, you know, direct reports. And so that's
a problem and we need to get rid of this whole thing. Possibly what you have is a 1% problem.
Possibly you have a management training problem. Possibly in this case, what you have is,
in the case of employees not feeling connected to each other in four-day work weeks, what you have
is that you haven't figured out how to replace those longer meetings and ways of people communicating
with other ways that are more efficient,
but that are still building those kind of bonds, right?
That is a 1% problem that can be solved
rather than 100% problem that you had to get rid of.
I think that the remote work is fantastic.
I work from home.
That's not to say that it is not without its problems,
and we need to be solving those problems,
but I think that we have better new problems than we did before.
I completely agree.
Let's see if we can fit in two more,
although I have a bunch more,
so maybe we'll do a full separate episode.
answers. Okay, AR and VR. Right now, there's a lot of hype. People talk about this term,
the metaverse. What do you think? Where does this fit in to your different set of frameworks?
This to me is very clearly a we don't know what things are for. I don't think that the killer use case
for AR, VR, or the metaverse has been introduced yet. And so what people are hearing is a lot of hype.
And then if they get the Oculus, I got an Oculus, you know where it is? It's in my closet.
And the reason is because I didn't really know what to do with it.
I couldn't find enough ways to integrate this into my life.
I think the technology is incredibly impressive,
and I just don't think that the use case for mass adoption is there yet.
So we don't know what this is for,
and I think it's incumbent upon the very, very smart people
who are building these things to make that argument to the consumers
who are waiting for the answer.
Great.
This one's a little different.
Biohacking, or you could say longevity science,
you could say genomics.
I know those are all slightly different,
but they all overlap.
There's some concern around people doing certain things to their bodies.
There's also cultural issues with, you know, changing what babies you might have and what
genes they have.
What do you think about this whole space of maybe biohacking?
Yeah.
I mean, incredibly complicated.
Intersex with a million, you know, moral questions.
But I'll slot it into we imbue our innovations with our own cultural and personal
anxieties. I think that the big disruptive potential of biohacking leads to just unbelievably
large questions, fundamental questions. But are we going to get there? Is that where this is
really headed? I don't know. I have a hard time parsing what is realistic and what is somebody's
kind of hyperbolic fever dream. But I do think that as we introduce these and anything else,
it's worth having really intelligent, serious conversations about, you know, the world that we want to build and how the innovations that we have can help us get there.
I couldn't agree more. I know we're out of time. I'm just going to quickly share for listeners or watchers at home.
I think a good exercise would actually be to go through the six different frameworks that Jason has shared here and just think about where this might fit.
So we've got NFTs, which we didn't get time for. We've got autonomous vehicles or cars, right?
And then this is similar, so it's cars, but ride sharing.
So we're kind of over the hump for this one to a degree, but maybe think through what some of the pushback there was.
And there's the train, something that also had pushed back when it was being introduced into society.
But Jason, I want to say thank you for taking the time here and for sharing all of these thoughts through your many years of research and talking to different people within this field.
If anyone does want to find you or your book, where should they look?
Yeah, so, Steph, thanks. This is so fun. I really enjoy it.
really, I'm just honored you had me on. I've been a long time listener to the show. So my book,
where a lot of this comes from and much more, is called Build for Tomorrow. You can find it,
audiobook, e-book, the hardcover, wherever you get books. And it's really, it's designed to be a
guide to adaptability to help people think through great changes in their careers and their lives.
And otherwise, get in touch with me. My website is jason, fifer.com. J-A-S-O-N-F-E-I-F-E-R.com.
There you can get links to my social media accounts, my newsletter that I
write on this subject. And I'd love for people to reach out. And I promise I will respond to anyone who
does. Wow. That's a big, big commitment. I find it hard to keep up. But Jason, thank you so much.
We'll include all of those links in the show notes. And we'll have to do this again some time.
I would love it. Thanks for listening to the A16Z podcast. If you like this episode, don't forget to
subscribe, leave a review, or tell a friend. We also recently launched on YouTube at YouTube.com
slash A16Z underscore video, where you'll find exclusive video content.
We'll see you next time.
