The a16z Show - Why We Invested In Cluely
Episode Date: June 21, 2025In this episode, a16z general partner Bryan Kim joins TBPN hosts John Coogan and Jordi Hays to discuss the recent launch of Cluely , a consumer AI product. The conversation covers early traction, eval...uating distribution and momentum, and how investors assess go-to-market strategies in emerging AI applications. Resources: Find Bryan on X: https://x.com/kirbyman01Watch TBPN: https://www.tbpn.com/ Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://x.com/eriktorenbergPlease 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. 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)
I have a saying where momentum is a mode today in this sort of an era of AI applications.
And when I say momentum is a mode, I don't mean just distribution.
I also mean product iteration.
And so the calculated risk here is that Roy can convert this awareness into people clamoring to work at the company that are highly high and exceptional, great people to build products.
And then use that to continue to iterate on innovation on the product format that is already amazing.
Yesterday, A16Z partner Brian Kim joined TBPN with host John and Jordy.
The discussion centers on Cluelly, an AI product that has generated significant attention online.
Brian shares his perspective on the decision to invest, how he evaluates early traction and distribution,
and what he looks for when backing founders with unconventional go-to-market strategies.
Let's get into it.
As a reminder, 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.
Please note that A16Z and its affiliates may also maintain investments in the companies discussed in this podcast.
For more details, including a link to our investments, please see A16Z.com forward slash disclosures.
Brian, welcome to the studio.
How you doing?
Good to meet you.
Great to be here.
Thanks, John.
Thanks, Trudy.
Your notifications must be crazy right now.
Cluelly, you guys decided, hey, Friday, let's throw it out.
That's right.
Nobody's crazy to launch.
Everyone's going to going on a weekend.
Yeah, there's no other Andreessen deals that are really taking up in mindshare right now.
This is the one.
Yeah, you guys, the thinking machines was leaking to the FTA.
And of course, Cluelly is just going to suck all the attention out of the room.
For sure.
This is the hot one.
Anyways, we got your launch post here that we read briefly earlier on the show.
But why don't you break down, background on you, and then let's break down the deal, why you invested.
And then, of course, we're going to have Roy on in just 10 minutes.
Fantastic.
Background on me, been at 816D for four or five years.
Look at a lot of AI applications.
You met a bunch of my colleagues here and had them on already.
That's an 11 labs functional health of the world.
And prior to this, was a with a SNAP as early employee and with a CFO.
Are you done in L.A.?
Yeah.
Are you in L.A.
No, I'm in New York.
right now.
My heart is in L.A.
Okay, yeah.
We got to get you back.
L.A.'s coming up.
It was too nice to live, you know.
All right.
So, deal, rational,
anatomy of deal, or as you said.
The anatomy.
I think it really,
really breaks down to a couple things,
but really three points.
One is, you know,
distribution.
It's really, really hard to get distribution these days.
And to get it repeatedly
is a little bit of a dark art.
Yep.
And so I think Roy had that in abundance.
So one,
got the distribution.
We invest for strengths, the strengths, as you know, not lack of weakness.
And so that's really exciting for us.
Second, I love the product.
You know, I grew up on Dragon Ball Z.
And I always wanted one of those scoutsers that tells you, how strong is Jority,
how strong is John?
Sure.
The thing goes up, right?
And that's essentially what it is on your rep brother, right?
Talking to people, you just took a quick command enter,
and it just gives you all the things you need to know while reading it and looking into
your eyes.
I think that's special.
I think that sort of is right for a lot of the use cases, whether it's consumer or enterprise.
So I love the product.
So that's one thing I'll call out today.
We've had our intern over on the intern cam testing the product all day long.
And I've been impressed.
Yeah.
I'm impressed.
He's there.
Tyler, there we go.
How are you liking so far?
Yeah.
It's been really good.
I mean, it's very fast.
The answers are really good.
I think it's like a great product.
Well, that's amazing.
What are you rated?
Why are, why did you put in a car?
I would say nine.
It's our version of kind of like the, the office in a box.
What do they call it?
Yeah, a lot of people have like these toll booth.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Phone booth style.
I think the World Economic Forum is like live in the pod.
Yeah.
Our version of a pod is a Maybach.
Yeah, it's very perfectly, it's perfectly soundproof.
So when we don't want to hear him, he just rolls up the window.
He just rolls up the window.
He's good, but he's got a table, a desk in there.
Yeah, it's a comfortable setup.
Phenomenal.
Massage chair.
Good ergonomics.
Yes.
Yeah.
It made it a lot of bit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that was so we've we've had Roy on the show a couple times.
We've covered some of the various stunts and we got some pushback.
One of the times we had them on because we hadn't used the product and somebody was calling us out.
And now as a company, we're paid.
We're paid subscribers of Cluelly.
We are.
We're customers.
You can throw the TVPN logo on the site.
Yeah.
Excellent.
I've been impressed.
We were kind of firing back questions using it more in that interview functionality,
and the answers were very good guesstimates of, you know,
if somebody that had generalized knowledge on a topic being able to answer quickly.
I think it answered a better question on,
it answered the 747 question better than my chat GPT of 40 direct answer.
There we go.
Cluelly mugged.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Whatever the, whatever the, whatever, I wasn't O3.
Lilley monged O three.
Love that.
But it did well.
I guess the last point I'll just add on.
It's, you know, it's a, you know, revenue conversion.
A lot of people think, oh, is it just hype and what's happening?
Is it all distribution, all the stunts?
The truth is that he is actually converting that to revenue, right?
Whether it's consumer or enterprise.
So that to me is sort of the, I guess, the seriousness that underlies the crazy stunts that people see outside.
And that combination works for me.
I'm excited for it.
And, you know, let's go.
Let's go.
Let's go back to the first one.
Roy's clearly great at distribution, breaking through, getting attention.
It feels like earned media does have a cap versus paid media or brand marketing or some of the other flywheels,
the referral programs or, you know, some viral mechanic internally.
It doesn't have a cap, John.
He's going to be in front of Congress, you know, using Cluelly and some spectacles.
Well, that's a good question.
Cheating when he's dragging.
in front of Congress, you know, for antitrust.
Do you think it has a cap or or and and because you could, one, one scenario is, is, this is his, this is not,
this is not his, this is not his permanent go-to-market motion. It's, it's merely the beachhead.
It's, it's, it's the way to break through, get attention, hire the first 50 interns, but the next
thousand interns will come through recruiters and kind of standard practice and he'll be on a more
traditional podcast circuit when he has news, but we won't be hearing from him every single day.
The other is that maybe we're in a new era
and he actually can
and the company can go viral every single day
and you're seeing kind of the Mr. Beast playbook
in reverse instead of Mr. Beast going viral every day
and then launching a snack brand
the other way around.
So he builds a company
and then becomes famous on the back of that company.
Which one of those feels right to you?
Yeah, I think maybe I'll just comment.
One, Mr. Beast follows Roy.
So that's fun.
Fun fact one.
That makes sense.
Fun fact too.
I think from a media and audience perspective, John and Jordy, I think I think of it as like a bunch of oceans.
There's no one ocean.
There is Indian Pacific Atlantic and that's Twitter, you know, Facebook properties as well as like, you know, more organic and all of these pools of water are very, very deep.
Yeah.
And in terms of general population, who I lovingly call our, you know, consumers, I still think it's so early.
The only consumer AI product people are using a really chat GPT.
And for them to actually learn about products like this and use it,
I think the sort of oceans way deeper than we imagine.
And we're just scratching the surface today.
Talk about calculated risk.
This feels, you know, this is a calculated bet.
You guys invested 15 million in the company.
He's clearly talented on the product side, clearly talented on the attention side.
You know, he's charismatic.
He's fun to talk to.
He's well-spoken, all these things.
So there's a lot of reasons to love it.
And then the pushback and other VCs that maybe didn't do the deal would say,
Roy's like a wild card.
Like, do you think that more investors need to be comfortable
with like a very potential real risk?
And maybe the average VC has just gotten a little soft?
Good things.
I think, look, like if you think of the history of large general population,
products, you see a lot of them actually being pretty risky early on.
Sod or not for Facebook?
Where does Snap begin?
What was Reddit initially?
And sort of thinking about that, I think there's the beginning of a lot of the consumer
products and products that are used by many people, have a funny beginning sometimes.
And I think, so one, Calcutter Risk Site, we're comfortable with that.
And I think second thing is when I have a saying where momentum is a moat today in this sort of
era of AI applications.
And when I say momentum is remote, I don't mean just distribution.
I also mean product iteration.
And so the calculated risk here is that Roy can convert this awareness into people clamoring
to work at the company that are highly high and exceptional great people to build products
and then use that to continue to iterate on innovation on the product format that is already
amazing.
So that's sort of the bet, if you will.
And when those two come together, I think we'll be surprised.
How do you think about restrictions or dynamics from the major, like, big tech companies?
Because you mentioned that, you know, there's a consumer angle here.
But when I see the product, I see it as a desktop app.
And many consumer interactions happen on the phone.
And so, you know, Roy was fantastic at creating a viral moment around the idea of, like,
using Cluley on a first date.
And yet, you're not.
going to have a first date over a Zoom meeting on your MacBook Pro. Maybe. Maybe Roy's planning another
pandemic. Yeah, maybe, but, but, but, but, but people do talk to each other on the phone and on
FaceTime, but it's much harder to plug in and do screen recording and do, uh, picture and picture and
all of that. So it feels like there needs to be some sort of transition point if you're going to go
broader to killer use cases for consumer.
But at the same time, you're going to bump up against a ton of pushback from the platforms
who just say, we don't want to give you access to that API.
We don't want you to screen record for privacy reasons, good or bad.
So I don't disagree.
We are techno-optimist, and I would believe that there will be another innovation that
actually allows the likes of clearly to live and be omnipresent and everyday interaction.
That said, you know, AI is like a digital god we created.
and we trapped it behind a little trapbox.
Yeah.
So it is natural to me that it should live on a thing that you actually work and interact with the most.
And we're starting with computers today because that's where the power is.
Like that's actually, the digital God is not godly enough on the little, little, you know, little devices today.
So we put it in a little larger box.
Yep.
And the little boxes will get better.
And we're excited for that future.
Awesome.
Well, I'm excited for you guys.
Congratulations on the deal.
And we got to get Roy in here.
We should pull up the launch video as well.
But thank you for joining.
Thanks for having me.
Brian, thank you for being bold and making a real bet.
Probably had to fight it out with the American Dynamism team.
Because as we know, they're working on hardware.
They're working on reindustrialization.
They're doing everything over there.
Thank you so much for stopping by.
We'll talk to you soon.
Cheers.
Bye.
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