The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Bumble Founder: World’s Youngest Female Self-Made Billionaire: Whitney Wolfe Herd
Episode Date: November 14, 2022Whitney Wolfe Herd is the founder of Bumble and the first self-made female billionaire on the planet. In this episode, she reveals after leaving Tinder in explosive circumstances, the injustices she f...aced drove her on to build a better kind of dating app. A firm believer that the way to connect with people is by being authentic and being vulnerable, Whitney reveals she routinely shares with her staff her struggles with anxiety and when she’s not feeling on top of things. The only path to human connection lies through honesty, and Whitney breaks the mould to be as transparent with her employees as she can. In one of our rawest and most emotional conversations with CEOs yet, Whitney reveals that she wanted to be the boss not because she wanted to, but because she thought the nature of her character meant she couldn’t work for anybody else. Whitney: Instagram: http://bit.ly/3UUZR0P Twitter: http://bit.ly/3UWNstj Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. I'm legally really not
meant to comment on the Tinder times. I don't even know if I've told this story.
But.
Whitney Wolf heard the CEO and founder of Bumble.
Whitney became one of the few women who can add billionaire to her title.
The dating app that puts women in charge of making the first move.
Making the first move can change your life.
But you have to do it. No one can do it for you.
Which would then
become bumble's entire mantra i've seen all the things that bumble have done over the years and
it always seems to be original in its nature there's a lot of these tiny hacking concepts
that made no sense no one had ever done these things before but if you understand what moves
and motivates people then you have this opportunity to connect with them.
And so that's been the superpower of ours over the years.
At 31 years old, you're the youngest woman
to take a company public.
What's the personal toll on you in those moments?
It's been pretty dark.
It's been pretty heavy.
Your departure from Tinder read to me
like it was horrific and sexist.
It was soul-crushingushing i was being described in all
sorts of ways i had reporters trying to go through my window and it was really violating there's a
whole persona that's been created about me out there in the world how am i ever going to escape
this i was 24 years old if i asked your teams what's with really like as a leader what would they say to me i don't know
we did ask them oh so
whitney what is the early context that i would have to understand about you in your life to understand
you i think probably broken gender dynamics
growing up i so i grew up in salt lake city utah i don't know if you know much about Salt Lake City, Utah. I know. It's a Mormonism. Yep. So it's a very LDS is kind of the formal religious term or better known as Mormon place.
And my dad is Jewish and my mother is Catholic.
So I'm already a total anomaly in this place. And it's a very tough community to fit into when you
don't look, act, behave like everybody else or have the exact same belief systems. And the Mormon
faith and the LDS faith, not to generalize, but it's very much a community, or at least it was. I was born in
1989. So growing up back in the 90s, it was very much a man's world where the man is the breadwinner,
the man is out, mom is at home in an apron, and everyone follows rules, lots of rules, very strict rules, in fact.
And I think I always grew up with a conflicting set of values to my community, to this ecosystem
I was placed in or was raised in rather. And then that started to come out in relationships. So my first, you know, real boyfriend that I ever had,
it was quite toxic.
And these were kind of these undertones of my entire life
that would then set the stage for my entire career.
Using that first relationship,
that first sort of toxic relationship
as an example of how your belief
system at that point was causing problems um could you give me some color to what you mean there
yeah it was a it was you know it was a new experience for me i was a young young girl
at the time and i think there was this set of behaviors i was expected to adhere to, to be on his rules, what he believed was right.
And it was quite demoralizing, frankly. And I don't think at the time I fully recognized what
was taking place until later in life, but it set the stage for me about unhealthy relationships. And I recognized just how
unequal women were when it came to their romantic relationships. So if you were to fast forward,
here I am running this business where women make the first move, which when I put that into the
product in 2014 was squawked at and eyes were rolled and people couldn't
understand why we would do such a thing because women aren't supposed to talk first. So if you
look at that moment of a business being born, there's so much more than just a eureka thought. It's really pent up years and years of confusion, passion, purpose brewing to essentially
be born into this moment of bumble. Were you rebelling at all against that environment
or that belief system? I think there was two sides of that coin. There was the side that wanted to fit in, desperate to be a part of
my community, desperate to be a part of what was around me and to fit in and to fit the mold,
because that's humans. Humans want to fit into their environments. They want to be accepted.
No one wants to be the child sitting alone at the lunch table. This is what devastates
humans to be left out, right? So there was a part of me that so desperately wanted validation and
to fit. And then there was a part of me that said, this is wrong. This doesn't feel right.
This feels against my soul. This doesn't feel like how things should be. And I feel like that's been
a theme of my life. There's been duality on, on this topic in every, every situation I've been in.
And that's, that's part of navigating it. How do we navigate that duality? Because we all,
we all expect, experience those sort of conflicting needs
at the same time often one of them is like an external one can fly can colliding with an
internal need that's going unmet and it feels sometimes like we have to choose as you said like
the external comfort of fitting in or validation versus like this doesn't feel good to me yeah me inside? I think for me at least, I have to live in a place of authenticity. And I've lived
in chapters of my life that were not authentic, that I knew what I was participating in or what
I was doing didn't feel authentic to what I really believed in or what I knew to be right.
And genuinely, authenticity wins.
That's my fundamental belief.
And I think that when you follow and chase that authentic space, the world opens up for you.
The world unlocks.
Sometimes in the short term, when we, especially if we've had a prolonged
period of being inauthentic, what we've done accidentally and inadvertently is created an
environment and a community and a job and an environment where that's built on that
inauthenticity. So to make the change to one day be like, do you know what, today I'm going to be
authentic requires, it seems like quite a lot of short-term loss especially disproval people going
stay stay stay stay in line stay who we thought you were you know be the person that we resonated
with even if that was your inauthentic self so that like i think i see so many people kind of
contend with that they want they kind of might know who they are that voice inside but the apparent
cost of pursuing it seems so because mom and dad and my boyfriend
and I'd have to leave the city and my job and my friendship you know of course you have to leave
the tribe yeah it's terrifying terrifying it's almost unimaginable for people and I've been there. I felt that feeling before. And I think this is why so many people
stay in whatever situation they're in. Stay in a marriage, stay in a business, stay in a church,
stay in a team, stay in a you name it. This is what perpetuates the cycle of of the quest to fit in versus just truly being who you really
are and so that age-old saying be yourself it's harder than it looks it's really hard and it comes
with a lot of risk and it's scary and it's dangerous and And what if I fail? And what if no one likes me? And what if
everyone judges me? These are real things. But at the end of the day, nothing can be worse than
having a broken relationship with yourself, right? I personally think a broken relationship
with yourself is more toxic than a pseudo phony good relationship with a hundred other people.
But it's hard to give ourselves that love and compassion. We're hard on ourselves. The things
we say to ourself is something we would never say to another ever. I mean, think about that rhetoric,
the internal self-talk. We would never say those things to other people, right? And the compliments
we pay others, it's very hard to pay ourselves. So when you think about that narrative, how can
we expect people to have the confidence and courage to be authentic to themselves if they're
not even willing to accept themselves? So I think that's a big piece of it, right? And I've watched
over the years, women I grew up with in Salt Lake City,
just now in their 30s, they're coming out of their cage. They're quite literally coming alive.
And they're taking to TikTok and to social media and they're taking to all these platforms
like a roaring lion saying, I'm alive and I've been hiding and I've been living by standards
and I've been living by rules and I've been living by X, Y, and Z, and it's not authentic.
So at some point it will burst open, you know, like that the truth is the truth does prevail.
When you were, when you were 18, what was acceptance or success to you? If I asked you at 18 years old,
what you want to be post-uni when you grow up, what would the answer have been at that point?
Well, the answer of what I really wanted to be was not what I would have said because I would
have said something to fit in, right? That's standard. So I think the young women, when I
was in college, all wanted to go work for a fashion brand or get a job at a bank or be successful, and they wanted to get married.
And they wanted to find someone that they could marry, settle down with, have kids with
eventually.
Maybe not next year, but that was part of the program, right?
This dating game exists as college students. And this is where the undertones of Bumble started to really form
because I remember being in college and being completely judged and made fun of by girlfriends
of mine if I texted a guy first. I remember I went on a date, which was so out of my character. I
believe it or not being so ingrained in the dating world. I think I've on a date, which was so out of my character. I really, believe it or not, being so ingrained in the dating world.
I think I've been on maybe three dates in my life.
That sounds weird.
But I went on a date and then I texted the guy afterwards.
And they were like, oh, no, you have committed a sin.
A sin.
Like you should be ashamed of yourself.
It made me cry.
I felt so embarrassed.
I felt so ashamed.
And I remember thinking, this is wrong.
What is wrong with you?
Why can we not text?
Who wrote these rules?
What are these rules?
These rules are ridiculous.
So this desire to break the rules, change the rules, rewrite the rules was something
I inherently felt deep down.
But everybody's felt
that you felt that everybody has felt that it's just who chooses to go and actually act on it is
the difference. Do you, I was, I was thinking then when you, when you talked about, um, being 18 and
having this kind of sort of social expectation of what success would look like. And then having a
family was the orientation of a lot of young women at that point. Do you think there are any gender differences that are innate to us
that have a bearing on the path or the way that we show up that are innate? I not social constructs,
but do you think there's anything in us as, as men and women that makes us want different things from birth innately?
You know, it's a good question. And I have two little boys right now.
And I think a lot of this is imposed on us as a society. I really do. I think the toys we buy our children and the clothes we put on our children and the shows we show our children, you have to really
ask yourself, is this not truly forming what they're interested in and what they care about
and what their ambitions are? I do believe that there may be something, and I see this in men too, to folks that genuinely want to have a family and have children and
be part of that type of a life. And then folks that just genuinely don't, but I don't really
see it with, I don't think it's a gender thing. I really think that these are just a personal
soul level thing, but I think society comes in and puts bows on it or puts trucks on it and says,
here's your path. So it's interesting now raising kids, seeing if I really believe this
nature versus nurture thing. And I think there's components to it, but I think it's definitely more
imposed upon us by others around. This morning, I was watching my son read a book at breakfast.
I don't know where he found the book. I think it was something he found at the restaurant, but
I opened it and it was a picture of a pig family in a little house. And you could see everything
in all the different rooms. And daddy was upstairs in the bathroom, combing his hair in a suit.
And the pig mom was in the, it's like the pig family. The piggy mom was in the kitchen in a pink dress with an apron cooking eggs.
And I was just thinking to myself, here is a almost three-year-old.
These are the books they're reading.
And it says, where's daddy and where's mommy?
So we have to imagine that we do some of this to the kids around us.
Did you burn the book?
I took a picture of it and raged about it I raged about it at work for about
three hours and we will not be reading the book again what was your what was your formal education
per se what was your in terms of university or anything like that what did you study yeah so
I went to a college in Texas and I really wanted to go into marketing and I wanted to go into advertising and marketing,
which is funny because now somehow I have ended up there a little bit. And I sat down for the
test and completely failed it. I could not answer any of the questions. It was so confusing to me.
It was all about return on investment and television views. And it was super,
not to be disrespectful, but super boring. I was like, this is probably not for me. But anyway, I did not get it accepted. So I studied
international studies. And that was just this huge mix of big people problems, globalization, anthropology, women's studies, gender studies,
international relations. I mean, it was really fascinating. And that was the best marketing
degree I could have ever gotten because it's the study of people. Why do people do what they do?
And if you look at the business I'm in, I'm quite literally immersed all day long into
why do people date who they date?
Why do they want what they want? How do they behave? Why do they get aggressive? What causes
aggression? What causes online abuse? Where is this stemming from? And this stuff is really
interesting. So I'd say my education really did help me connect those dots.
And as you leave that degree, that gap between like the working world and leaving university college, what was that gap?
And how, how, what were you thinking in that moment? Where were you heading? What were you
applying for? Where were you seeking the next chapter of your life? So I really wanted to be
a travel photographer, like a photo journalist. And I had no training in that, obviously, but I
was just obsessed with the idea. And it's actually funny at the Bumble office right now, we have this
photo of this incredible woman that I met in Burma and she is holding a Bumble lighter and it's my
never made it to Nat Geo moment. But that was my dream. I wanted to be to Nat Geo moment.
But that was my dream.
I wanted to be a Nat Geo photographer.
And so I went traveling through Southeast Asia and took a lot of photos.
And I remember on my travels thinking, gosh, there's such a disconnect for someone trying to explore a new country place.
It's only TripAdvisor.
And if you follow TripAdvisor,
you end up eating a hamburger in Laos at some version of a hard rock, right?
And this is not really the experience.
I thought, why can't I get to know a local?
I want to ride around on the back of a moped in Laos
and I want to go understand what do they do here?
Like, where do the 18 year olds go?
What was their life like?
Like, what does their day look like? And I thought, why is there not an app that does this? Why is there
not something on my phone that can put me in touch with these people? But then of course,
that idea fell by the wayside, went into the back of my brain somewhere. And by chance, one day,
would end up in this wild world of connecting people on the internet. So
some of these things were already brewing and already starting to bubble up in ways that
wouldn't totally expose themselves yet. By chance, you ended up in this weird world of connecting people. What was that chance? So the chance was that I went to a dinner in Los Angeles one night
with one of my very dear friends. And she had been friendly with a couple of these guys in LA,
and we all ended up at dinner because I didn't end up driving back to my mom's house
that night. It got too dark and it was quite a long drive. So we all had dinner and I was staying
at her house. And one of the guys at dinner was the general manager of this incubator and was
telling me all about this incubator. And here I was a 22 year old, just barely 22, if that even
two year old woman that needed a job. I needed to make money. I
needed to find my way in the world. And I had just been kind of adventuring and seeing the
world and exploring and taking this very risky path of not going straight into a career and
going to travel and going to see the world and find my passion. And he said, well, maybe you
could take a marketing job. And I said, okay, I'll try. I mean, I'll call you tomorrow. And he's like,
okay, probably thought I'd never call. And I did. Long story short, that incubator would be the
incubator where we ended up launching Tinder. So it was by happenstance that that connection
happened. But I think it was about taking advantage of an
opportunity, right? Seeing an opportunity and it didn't feel perfect. And I think this is a good
lesson for people is the way it was described to me at that dinner, people think, oh, well,
she got so lucky. She, you know, she met the so-and-so of so-and-so. That's not what it was
like. This, that concept of Tinder was never mentioned. It was
never called Tinder at the time. And it was a totally different opportunity, but it was putting
my foot in the door of something that would then turn into something else and something else.
And I think so many people wait around for the most perfect headline when it comes to an
opportunity that they can't really see or read between the lines.
And everybody has that potential. Everybody can do that. They just have to be willing to say,
well, this is a stepping stone or this is a door that I could bust open. Right. And I think
that's kind of how I've tried to approach most things in my career.
It's so true. It's, you know, that moment there, there's so many other outcomes that could have happened from a dinner. Namely, one of them is you just don't call the
person back. I mean, the amount of times in my life, someone's given me their number and said,
call me and I just haven't called back most. 99%. It's like all of us do that. Yeah. But there's a
philosophy of like leaning into stuff, especially when you're young, just like leaning in regardless
of certainties you've described. and people have i see this in
people i'm sure you have as well where people have a tendency to be like lean in people or kind of
just lean out people even when the world is changing crypto bitcoin blockchain all these
things matter only typically people lean in or lean out and um i think people that lean in are
the ones that end up creating opportunity, which looks like luck in hindsight.
Yeah, I agree with you.
And being brave enough to just say, even if it doesn't work out, at least I explored it.
Right. I think people, what I've seen, and it's something that I'm guilty of as well in my life is it's a risk.
And we have to be willing to get excited about risk instead of being afraid of it.
It's the uncertainty though, isn't it? How good are you at dealing with uncertainty?
How guaranteed do you need the outcome to be before you take a step?
Right. And for me, not very guaranteed personally, because it's like, what do you have to lose?
Right. Are you creating risk for yourself? Not really. But I do think that it's like, what do you have to lose, right? Are you creating risk for yourself? Not
really. But I do think that it's scary to pick up the phone and make that first move, right? Which
would then become Bumble's entire mantra and tagline and product and everything. But making
the first move and taking that first step can change your life. but you have to do it. No one can do it for you.
And I learned that the hard way. I had very little support along the way in terms of
advocates or community. I had a handful of people I could call upon, but candidly,
even when I was starting Bumble, all of my confidants, with the exception of a couple,
were like, no, don't do this. Why? Why would you expose yourself
to this? What's the point? That won't work. There's already dating apps. They're going to
eat you alive. And you can get bogged down in that. You know, it's really, it's easy to drown
in that noise. In those, in those early years of Tinder, I remember being told the story maybe 10
years ago in san
francisco when i was working there with um a guy called michael birch who was the old bibo founder
you'll know bibo bibo the old social net oh no it didn't go to the us it was just
i'm not sure i remember that it was like facebook here before before facebook okay cool um and he
in his little sort of incubator that i was in when I was 20, they were telling me the bump, the Tinder story of how you went to a fraternity.
For people that don't know what a fraternity is, what's a fraternity?
So I guess in the UK it would be like college clubs, maybe.
Do they have like members clubs or something like that?
So basically sororities and fraternities and sororities are a house of women and fraternities are a house of men and there's different names. So they all have these Greek names, right? So for example, the one I joined was Kappa Kappa Gamma. You could have Tri Delta. There's all sorts of them. lot of college students, they do something called rush where they rush and they go house to house
and they meet all the women or all the men. And then they basically prep, they put in the name
of the one they would really love to be a part of. And then they see who accepted them back.
It's been criticized up and down. And there's a lot of things that are not, you know,
spectacular about it, but this is a way a lot of people find friendship and community. It's a community
gathering for their college campus. So with Tinder, I essentially went back to my alma mater at SMU.
I'd just graduated. So a lot of my best friends were still in school. So I got access to the
campus and I would start at the sororities and then go to the fraternity. So I'd essentially
have all the young women download it and then run to the fraternity and then they would download it and then everyone would start
connecting. So, you know, is that good? Is that bad? How do you want to chop that up 10 years
later? Who knows? But that's the reality and you can't escape the truth. But so, so you heard about
this way back when? I heard about this 10 years ago because we were building community-centric
apps. We're building something called Blab, which resembles what clubhouse is now um and when we
were talking about the marketing strategy tinder kept coming up and sean peary who's now who we
the company got acquired by amazon in the end twitch um who owned amazon hey other way around
amazon and twitch um but yeah that was the that was the It was like, should we go to fraternities and go get, you know,
and to try and build that sort of isolated tight community
to try and get product market fit.
Yeah.
Because network effects really, really matter,
especially in the dating game.
The most important.
That's why there's only a handful of dating apps
that have ever survived.
I mean, at least during my time doing this,
which is almost a decade now.
But what's interesting is there's such a, not to say only I could do this or only somebody else could do this, but there was a superpower in the timing of it all because I had just graduated.
And I knew all of these people.
So if some random startup founder knocks on a sorority door, the police are coming. You
know, like you can't do that. So I felt like I had this insider hook, right? Because I was
technically an extension of that by proxy because I had just been on the college campus and all my
girlfriends were still there. So they were part of these sororities and all my guy friends were there. They were part of these fraternities. So I'll never forget. I took the photo of one of my guy friends back then who was, you know, all the young women hadliked on campus.
And I went into Dani's journalism class
because she was still a student.
And I basically snuck into her journalism class
and used Photoshop.
And I took the Tinder screens
and I put the guy's face on one
and her face on the other.
And I said, find out who likes you on campus.
And then I saved it to a file
because this is the olden days at this point.
And I went to FedEx, which is is the olden days at this point. And I went
to FedEx, which is like the office supply store across the street. And I printed a thousand copies.
And I quite literally handed different students on campus $20 to go distribute them under dorm
doors and to put them on windshields and to put them in their different social clubs and to
essentially distribute these flyers everywhere. So this entire campus, and now in hindsight, it's probably
not great. It's littering. There's all sorts of bad things involved with it, but like,
I'm just telling you a story. So yeah, basically that was, that was just one of the tactics I,
I used to go and put it all over campus. And then I had a few t-shirts
printed up that said, don't ask for my number, find me on Tinder. And I had my girlfriends wear
the t-shirts and we went to the bar. And so I gave them a couple hundred bucks and they would go
around and buy drinks. And then when people would ask for their number, they'd essentially say you
have to download Tinder. So it was a lot of these tiny hacking concepts that made no sense. No one had ever done these things before. I had no playbook.
It wasn't like, you know, I was reading some manual to marketing. It was just what felt
around me. It was, it was just bringing the real life dating experience to life through an app,
marketing. There's like so many important messages of marketing there. I
mean, the first one that you said was, was that you were the customer. You were so close to the
customer that you understood them. I mean, even you said about how if another startup had come
and knocked on the sorority, well, they wouldn't have even known which door to knock on for a
start. They would have knocked on the wrong door, got the wrong people. And they wouldn't have
understood those people, their motivation. So like really you being the customer, I think is such a
key thing. And then the second thing you said about like,
if I'd read a marketing book and you were kind of just doing it based on
intuition, I've,
I've seen over and over again from speaking to really successful CEOs and
founders, how important naivety was like not knowing.
So important. Just following your gut.
Yeah. Cause then you, that's like first print,
that's creating something from first principles as opposed to convention that's real innovation right like and it creates solutions
that are more suited for today and for the challenge that you're solving which no one has
ever had the challenge of solving right on that date right right um but naivety you know this is
this is sometimes why i think some of the best founders don't come from like business school or
from marketing school the best marketeers aren't marketing graduates because naivety is such a superpower it's a superpower and following
your instinct and if you understand what moves people and what motivates people then you have
this opportunity to connect with them on a real level. I mean,
we've done things that are ridiculous. So I remember we would make these signs that said
they had the big X's, like no, you're not allowed to. And they said no Facebook,
no Instagram, no Snapchat, no Bumble. This was like week three of Bumble or something,
some ridiculous early, maybe first year.
I can't remember at this point.
And we would post those all over the universities.
So there was this association where it was like, wait,
I can't do the things I really want to do.
I want to sit in class and Snapchat.
I want to sit in class and Instagram.
What the hell is Bumble?
And so we were essentially seeding this psychological curiosity.
And then we were actually sending young women wearing Bumble shirts into classes 10 or 15 minutes late, interrupting a class of 300 people and saying, oh, sorry, wrong room.
But everyone's looking at this young woman or young man, whoever it was, wearing a Bumble t-shirt.
So we were seeding curiosity in this like, why is Bumble everywhere type of thing.
And so, you know, a lot of people think, oh, well, I can just go start an app and I'll just buy some, you know, I did and our team did to bring this to life, we were the first people, certainly the first tech brand, to do humor accounts, to pay for the humor memes.
Do you remember the humor memes?
Well, we ran a bit of 100 million followers on meme accounts. Yeah. So, you know, all about this, but like we were way back years and years
ago, I remember reaching out to, I can't remember what it was, one of these meme accounts. And
they're like, wait, you want to pay us to, I'm confused. How does that work? And we're like,
okay, here's the deal. We'll give you a hundred bucks or whatever it was. We turn around a year
later, that same account is charging
$100,000 a post. So there's also something about luck and timing being just right before something.
You know, and if you look at Bumble, we were also beating the woman drum, this drum of we need to advocate for women, beating this drum of let's put women first. Let's
elevate women. Women are not equal in their relationships. Women are not being treated
respectfully. Women are being abused on the internet. Women are not being treated right.
We were saying this in 2014, and then Me Too would come a couple of years later. So I think we've been lucky as a business
to basically be right before the wave. And then we've been able to be a part of that wave
versus chasing a wave. And so many people chase a wave. So many people chase a wave. They look
around them like, well, what's cool? How do do i chase that and i feel like we've always had the good fortune or whatever you want to call it conviction
sure inspiration to go first and so that's been um maybe a superpower of ours over the years
because you're making those decisions it's so clear to me you're making those decisions from
original thought and from like what I think Elon calls
like first principles as in what do we know is true and create a solution from that versus
how's it done how's it been done before and that like and even you being early to the meme account
things just for context um we were probably like probably probably maybe one of the first
companies in the world I'd say to
to do the meme thing that's really like how my business began we had like 100 million followers
on these meme accounts that became this big social media business this big media company
and it comes with ecom and then it went public but it started with meme accounts it's amazing
this is how I met I think your original investors how I met Bidu so I remember speaking to having
these long conversations with them in London about we'll make you trend number one on twitter we'll do a thunderclap all they
can't say at the same like but for you to have been one of the brands that was leaning into that
you know what their brands had no and to your point yes the meme accounts were there you were
pioneering all of that but i don't know if you experienced this brands did not see their place
there and the brands that did that i had seen had been like Buy My Bracelet or Buy My Fashion Company.
It was something very consumer-centric, which made sense.
But it wasn't the Download My App.
And that was such a different way of promoting something, even for the app world. It was so out of bounds for the app space
because the app space used traditional app space
acquisition strategies.
You're right.
It wasn't safe.
And the reason why we managed to get so many followers
was because people didn't value those accounts.
So I remember buying BFit Motivation,
which had about 10 million, I'll say, followers.
Lovefood, which had about 7 million followers. And BFit Motivation on Twitter, which had about 10 million, I'll say followers. Lovefood, which had about 7 million followers.
And BeFitMotivation on Twitter, which had 2 million followers on Twitter.
Just those, just that 20 million followers cost me about 10 grand.
Oh my God.
Can you imagine?
It's like really good real estate.
It's like buying a house in some crazy part of London a thousand years ago.
And then all the other accounts were free.
Because I offered the people
jobs that ran them and said you'll have a proper job you get paid loads i know your mom doesn't
think it's a job i think it's a job i see you i validate you people are you exploiting well
nobody valued it back then and then they eventually did value those social media accounts and what
you're talking about the whole you know it was attention it was it was attention it was eyeballs
and from
a first principles perspective you go well we want attention eyeballs they are here i don't care if
it's safe call or the done thing that's where we're going to go i saw bumble doing that and
and i've seen all the things that bumble have done over the years and it's always seems to be
original in its nature it feels that way it feels like someone has had an original thought
today about how to solve a problem. And
not just, they're not just focused on showing what Bumble is, that they're communicating how you
should feel about Bumble. That was always the goal. Yeah. And I think there was a lot of people
that thought it was ridiculous early on. They're like, why are you doing a campaign that has
nothing to do with dating?
We did this huge campaign where our team put together this huge push on be the CEO your parents always wanted you to marry.
And then in parentheses, it said, and then find someone you actually like or want to
date.
And I remember a lot of people being like, we're not going to do this.
There's no ROI here. What's
the ROI? There's no call to action. There's no download in the app store. And what was fascinating
was it built this wild following of our brand. So people that would never have downloaded a dating
app are now wearing our hat. Now their mother is carrying around a Bumble tote because they're proud of
the brand. And it created this intangible feeling, this magic. And there was a sentiment that was
more powerful than any ROI campaign you could do on any other channel. And so I feel like for me, I always wanted Bumble
to be more than just an app in your pocket. I wanted it to be something that gave you
a feeling and a good feeling, not a bad one, because so many of these products give us bad
feelings and they make us feel uninspired and they make us feel lonely. They make us feel broken. They
make us feel exhausted. And I wanted us to do something different. And our team wanted us to
do something different. We had such a passionate team. We still have an incredibly passionate team,
but that early community of our team is really what made this company so magical, right? It was that
genuine purpose and buy-in and candidly naivete. Our team was young. Our team was separated from
a lot of our infrastructure, meaning like a lot of the more technical stuff was isolated from the
marketing stuff. And I've been criticized over the years by the, you know, the tech publications and the tech this and the tech that and whatever. I don't really care. The point is,
it's been like, well, this isn't how Silicon Valley does it. Where are the engineers and
why are this? And why aren't you sitting with the engineers and why are you da-da-da-da?
And there was a method to the madness. It was, let's let this team go out and paint the town yellow and do it with no interruption,
no distraction. And then let's let our fantastic infrastructure team really solve big problems
through tech while these two heart and brain can operate together. Right. And I had never
really been done before in this like
traditional Silicon Valley world. My first startup experience is not like my second startup
experience. You learn all the lessons you learn. Well, hopefully you learn the lessons. I think
I've learned, hopefully learned some of them. Um, but your first startup experience at Tinder,
this is when, you know, cause especially when it's moving at the speed of light,
light, you know, I mean, my startup it's moving at the speed of light. Light.
You know, I mean, my startup didn't move at the speed of light quite like Tinder did,
but still absolutely the speed of light Tinder moved at.
And there's that culture out in San Francisco about, you know, move fast and break things, which is, I think, Facebook popularized.
I think that was their slogan.
But everyone kind of has adopted that mindset of just go fucking lightning fast and figure it out later fix it while it's fix it while we're falling
kind of thing um talk to me about that talk to me about the the cost of that what it taught you and
really give me a picture of what it was like in those early rocket ship days well you know, I think it was so new to everyone involved. No one really understood what the next day held. different time also. Instagram had just had its big sale now in retrospect, not such a big sale,
but at the time, remarkable, right? Still remarkable regardless. And it was just such
a new environment. Tech was still relatively niche. Mobile was very niche, right? It was not
super mainstream. Apps were kind of hitting the scene, but not like where
we are today. There's an app for this or that. And we were this tight tribe of people that
really probably had not much to do with each other outside of this, but it became this 24-7
unit. And we were just fighting every day to keep it going. I mean, our blood, sweat,
and tears went into this business, right? So when I left, it was completely devastating
because I wasn't just leaving this rocket ship of a business. That's one thing. But I've just been essentially one day in a 24-7 environment
with the same people for more than two years to the next day, never seeing any of them ever again.
And in the middle of that, ending up on the front page of all sorts of magazines and newspapers because of the
narrative of the ending, right? And it was extremely traumatic, extremely. I think I was
stuck in fight or flight mode for years because that was all I knew for years. And it had been such a zero to 100 experience.
As you know, when you're in these startups, they're almost their own.
I'm definitely not accusing the company of being this.
But they become their own little cults.
And it's really hard to go from that one day to not that the next day and then to go end up launching a woman version
to some degree within six months of leaving. So if you can just try to imagine what every day
looked like to both mourn and grieve my exit from Tinder and deal with all the logistical pieces of it
and the media pieces of it, which were coming at me. I had reporters trying to go through my window
at my little apartment in Beverly Hills from some rag magazine. I mean, this is just crazy for me.
I was a nobody. I mean, I'm still technically a nobody, but it's not like I was on some reality show and I became popular overnight. Like this was traumatizing to me.
And you know, it's funny, like the land of everyone trying to be famous. I was probably
maybe one of the only people not at that point. Right. So it was very crazy to just all of a sudden, in a very scandalous way,
by the way I was described in the media, I was literally painted as this scandalous
gone girl of the tech world. And it was soul crushing because it's not who I was. It's not
who I am. So I was watching this narrative unfold about me. And I was in these Twitter discussions
with all the most important people in the tech world. And it was just crazy. I was just watching this narrative unfold about this person that wasn't me. And then I'm, you know, even before that, trying to start Merci, this compliments-oriented kinder social network, which then I meet up with Andre and one thing leads to another.
And now Bumble is my new path.
And now we're starting Bumble.
And this is all going on.
It was a whirlwind.
A whirlwind what is what is the the context you're able to share about why they were writing
those headlines about you and why you are ostracized from your as you've described it's
something that felt a little bit like a cult which is actually a good description of how
all my companies are pretty much started it feels like a 24-7 doesn't feel that way come on we're
going to take over the world it's that kind of it's i mean it's crazy yeah i mean like the way
people speak about what you're going to do i mean they're such big ideas and they're
such like passionate ideas and then you go from real world which is so mundane right it's like
quite boring out there in the real world to this like super like high energy you know there's you
know gonna be a disaster if we don't do this in the next five minutes.
This is crashing. That's crashing. This metric's up. This metric's off. One day you're booming.
The next day you're crashing. I mean, the adrenaline, you know what I'm talking about,
the ups and the downs and the hard work that goes into it and the skipping meals and the no sleep.
And everything feels potentially fatal as well at that point, isn't it?
Fatal. And the other thing that is interesting is you can't connect with everybody else the way you used to because they're, they can't quote unquote get it.
They don't get it.
You know, so it's like trying to like have a Sunday afternoon meal with your family or your friends during that.
You're like, I can't.
Like we don't even speak the same language anymore.
I'll just avoid them.
That's a waste of time. You have no idea what's going on. So, which in hindsight, I think I lived in that mindset for years between Tinder and Bumble. I mean, kind of coming up for air now and having
time to breathe and think like, that's a, I'm sure a lot of people that have built companies
feel this way though. I'm sure you feel this way where you're like, whoa, I isolated myself from a lot of important
relationships that there's regret to that at some point.
Do you ever feel that way?
100%.
I was incredibly lonely.
I didn't speak to my family.
Didn't really see them for many, many years.
And I thought that, I thought that something mattered much more and you eventually
even if i used to think i was immune but eventually your body will remind you that you are a human too
and you have needs and your needs are being unmet and the signal will come in many ways i hear the
signal sometimes come for people that have panic attacks they'll feel growing sense of loneliness
their health will give out i've had certain examples where the body has just shut down yeah and I've gone through that yeah I read that your departure from tinder was
ominous to say the least in fact that's actually the word that's written in my notes in 2014
and in the early days of the foundation the founding of tinder you'd had a relationship
with somebody that relationship had ended you were then treated in a pretty horrendous way from everything that I read online threatened multiple times
people saying that they would they would fire you for things they didn't have a justification to
fire you for sort of patronizing condescending behavior to the fact that you were a young female
co-founder and and how they would take that co-founder title from you um it's actually
really hard for me to read actually just from it kind of makes me a bit feel a sense of injustice
in my core um you were called annoying and dramatic at certain times when you raised
certain concerns and as a result um you you know you were you ended up leaving the company. You're fired, I read. You're fired from the company,
which is even worse, when you raise certain concerns. You then filed a lawsuit,
which went on, and there was certain actions taken, and there was a reported settlement
reached at one point. But overall, your treatment while you were at Tinder, specifically from men,
read to me like it was allegedly horrific and unfair and sexist. And then upon leaving Tinder,
there's this huge wave of press who are mischaracterizing you, what happened, and you
fall into this situation where you've been in this cult, we'll call it a cult because that's how it
often feels to both of us, for so long. You come out of that and you're greeted with this wall of
like mischaracterization, attacks from all sides, and you're kind of out on your own then. That's
the moment where you're ostracized from the tribe um and you're dealing with this wave of negativity yeah so you know i'm legally
really not meant to comment on the tinder times but what i will say is i was literally broken during that chapter where I was waking up to headlines about myself. Like
you said, I was being described in all sorts of ways and people were calling my, you know,
my uncle and my ex-boyfriend. I mean, it was this digging weird investigation into my life. And all I wanted
was to just do my job, right? And so it was a very dark, toxic moment. And I felt so alone.
And I felt so unsupported because this was before Me Too. This is before Time's Up.
Any woman that said anything out of line was called names.
And this was still during a chapter even in modern land that was not really pro-women.
And so no matter what I said or did, I wasn't going to be able to
get through. There was judgment. I had friends from college didn't want to talk to me anymore.
They're like, oh, this feels icky. I don't, this isn't that cool. I was ostracized. I was just,
I had a scarlet letter. And that was such a devastating feeling
because let's just remember, I was just a young professional. I was 24 years old and I'd been
working my tail off for two plus years. I had obviously teamwork makes the dream work. I still
fundamentally believe that, but I had played my role and an important one, right? To get the company to where it was. So to be called all of these names and to be basically just written off by Twitter and the
random media and the random everyone. And I had big respect for media and I'm not criticizing them.
I'm just saying this was the narrative at the time. So it was really hard. I was super depressed. I was paranoid. I was,
I actually don't think I left the house for like three weeks at one point. I'll never forget,
actually. I don't even know if I've told this story. Maybe I have. But when I was launching
Bumble again, because you have to remember Bumble launched within six months of my departure. So not the departure itself, but six months from kind of when the legal pieces were put to bed,
that was August. I want to say August 3rd. December 1st, Bumble was live in the app store.
You know how much work goes into launching something. It's a 24-hour job. I had another
24-hour job of grieving and being in fight or flight defense mode of whatever Twitter was
coming after me with. And it was really hard. So I think there was a chapter where I didn't
leave the house for several weeks. And when I was launching Bumble, I think it was Business
Insider. I can't remember who. They were doing a piece on Bumble and they needed a picture of me. And I was like, well, I'm not taking any pictures.
There's no way. I'm in sweatpants and Uggs. I'm not leaving this house. So I went outside in my
front yard in sweatpants and Uggs with a sweater on and did like a half fake smile and had someone
take a picture on some camera I had at home that I had used way back when I wanted to be a travel journalist
and use that. And I just had to peel myself back up. I just had to peel myself off the ground.
And I was lucky to have a couple really strong people in my life that had my back,
like my now husband, like Andre. There were a couple people that were like, I don't care what people say
about you. I don't care. We believe in you. We know that you're capable. We know you're smart.
We know that you can do this again. So you need to go chase your dreams. You're not done.
And very soon after leaving Tinder, in this moment of despair and drinking too much, not like socially, like at home,
like very depressed, trying to numb myself in any way I could. I had this moment where I was like,
I have to solve this. Part of my psyche is find a problem and solve it. It could be anything,
micro, anything. It's just part of the way my brain works. And the being attacked on the internet
felt like such a big problem to me. And I felt like this was something so many people were going
through. So many young girls in particular were going through being bullied. And I thought to
myself, I'm an adult. I can get in a car and I can drive to a grocery store and I can do all
these things. These young women are trapped at home after school, often in bad circumstances at home, and they're being abused by people they actually know. How horrible would
that be? I'm getting attacked by strangers. They're getting attacked by friends at school
and strangers not really in the sense of stranger to us, like proxy strangers, right? Friends of
friends. And I was like, I have to fix this. I have to fix this. It's my duty on earth to fix this. So I started quite literally with a pencil and a pen. I still
have the early drawings, sketching out a new social network. It was called Maracy. And the
only currency and the only way to communicate was compliments. So instead of saying, you know,
you're stupid or you don't look good or you're this or body shaming or that, or even, hey, you're so skinny, something that is negative,
even though it feels positive, I wanted it just to be compliments. And so it was essentially
supposed to be the girl's dressing room, the girl's bathroom. When young women go out to
nightclubs, there's this saying that young women are so nice to each other in the bathroom at a
nightclub. And I wanted to bring that to life. So I started sketching that out to basically rebuild myself. And long story
short, eventually Bumble would become what it was. I met Andre and then, I mean, I had known him,
but I reconnected with Andre. One thing led to the next and Bumble was born. So I think what
people don't realize they've,
I've had a lot of people that maybe I went to college with, they're like, Oh my God,
you've had such a good career. You're so lucky. You're so successful. I'm like,
it's been pretty dark. It's been pretty heavy. Dark.
Is there a, cause I reflect on my darkest times and I can typically remember a worst day,
a day when, you know, I just couldn't see the light
at the end of the tunnel what was your darkest day throughout that period I've said several that are
pretty visceral and memorable but one that I think maybe is something people can actually
tangibly like put themselves into this moment.
I mean, you can imagine there's lots of tough moments along the way. But one was we had worked so hard to build Bumble in stealth mode, starting from about August through call it November. So
head down four or five months of just like 24 hours a day back into
the, you know, the grind. And it was really important to me not to attach my name to it.
I was so scared of putting my name on it. I didn't want to muddy it. I was like, you know,
I'm in the media as this like scandalous person right now. And I don't, I don't want to be known for, I don't want,
I don't want this to be about me. I want this to be about what the product is and what the mission
is. I want women to go first in their relationships. I want women to be empowered. And I remember we'd
worked so hard to keep my name out of it. I had like a, a pseudo email that I was using to reach
out to certain people that I thought could, you know, maybe leak that this was happening. And we were going to launch in mid-December. They'd gone on
this investigative adventure of sorts of following all my early employees and ambassadors. And they
were going through all the images and piecing together this story about this new product that
was launching. And the headline said
something along the lines, maybe not verbatim, but it was really hurtful. It was like,
basically, I'm summarizing how I internalized it. Surprise, surprise, like the scorned woman
from Tinder launches her own dating app, but women go first. And oh, I hear she really likes bees. She's called a bumble. It was so
hurtful. And I just sobbed and I sobbed because there had been so much work that went into coming
back, rising from the ashes and pulling myself back up and to keep it in this kind of self
position away from me and not make it about that, not make it about that.
Women have, and everyone, every gender, we all have an opportunity and I believe a human right to start over. We all have the right to start over. None of us should be held hostage to
a certain chapter in our lives or a certain thing in our lives. Like we should all be able
to get back up, right? If we're still breathing, you have that right. And that felt like my right
to starting over on my own terms was taken from me and it was really violating. So in my typical
fashion, I cried about it for a while and then I pivoted. So I called my early team. I said, we have a problem. Whoever it was has basically leaked this information, which is their job.
I don't hold them against it.
It's not their fault.
But they basically have told everybody that we're doing this app and that it's coming out and that I'm behind it.
But they're kind of missing the point of what the product really is.
I think they're misunderstanding why we're starting this. I think for them, it read more
of like in a revenge novel, right? Which was not the case. It was about Merci then evolving into
a positive dating space. So I said, okay, you're all jumping out of an airplane tomorrow. And
they're like, what do you mean you're jumping out of an airplane tomorrow? And I said, you have to explain that it's just not that scary to talk first on a nap as a woman. Like if women can jump out of an airplane. And the whole tagline
was, it was something along the lines of like, if we can jump out of an airplane, you can send the
first text. And that was kind of how we reframed the discussion and took, you know, took control
of the narrative. That point about your right to kind of reinvent yourself and not be defined by
a previous chapter, i think is so
important it's also why you know i've got to be honest like i don't like i don't love talking
about it like the tinder stuff because it it's it's a it's a step in your journey it's an important
contextual step yeah of course you know it's it's inspired you in in many ways in terms of your
mission and your vision and your and all of those things but um i'm glad we could fill that context i when
i asked the um the question about your your hardest your hardest moment the darkest times
i was reflecting on some of the quotes i'd read about when you were in that moment feeling like
maybe life wasn't worth living anymore yeah and that kind of thing and it's hard it's hard to um
i think for a lot of people i hope it's hard for them to understand that mindset like getting to that place i hope it's hard for them to understand that mindset, like getting to that place.
I hope it's hard for them to understand.
I hope they've never had to experience it.
But for someone that has, what is that like?
Are those words real?
That prospect of like, maybe life would be better without me in it.
I most certainly felt that way at times, for sure. Leaving, when I was going through that chapter, I most certainly had moments where I thought,
well, this is it.
I mean, what?
What now?
There's a whole persona that's been created about me out there in the world.
How am I ever going to escape this? I'm going to be suffocated by a definition a group
of strangers have assigned to me. And my tribe is gone. I'm gone. Everything I can identify with,
this startup world can feel like a cult at times, right? And so
that all felt gone. And I told you earlier, you disassociate from a lot of the life you once had,
friends, family, you lose connection with them when you're trying to build something, right?
And so when you leave that thing you're building, it's not like, okay, well, let me just go home to grandma's house. That doesn't feel like an option. You don't feel like you can relate to anyone anymore. And I just did not understand what the point was anymore feeling such a deep pain in such a deep problem, which the problem to me was toxic internet and how toxic it could be and how detrimental it could be for your mental health, that a solution came. And so I really channeled that dark, dark, dark loathing and pain. And instead of
drowning in it, I kind of started's ultimately the way I was able to
reframe that. And I think the internet can make you feel very alone and very isolated and very
lonely. And we start believing it as our reality, right? What the internet says is not really what's
in the park across the street and i think that's
important for people to hear is that whatever you're feeling based on what people are saying
on the internet or whatever you've read turn off the phone for a little bit and go outside right
because i didn't do that in that moment and i think we have to realize that it's not always our reality.
Very powerful.
This leads to Bumble,
which was a game changer in its industry.
It was the first of its kind.
It was the first of its kind in many respects,
including just the look and feel and messaging.
That's really, you know, as a marketeer,
that's the thing I always respected.
I mean, I really respected the point of women getting to go first because I'd never seen
that before I'd never seen that done in the way that it's done on Bumble but from a marketing
marketeer's mindset I really respected how bold how clear how much Bumble were willing to position
themselves as the antithesis the the the opposite of everything else that existed it was really
willing to take to bring a new concept and a new idea to the market um when you look back at the earliest days of bumble like the first year
two years of bumble now with the hindsight of knowing how things will how the dots connected
why did you win i'm not sure did we win so you did i mean listen how many customers did you have
over the years like We have a lot.
A lot.
And that's an interesting point that it doesn't feel like you've won.
Oh no.
Okay.
So this is crazy.
I, in my head, still feel like we're tiny.
Genuinely.
I'm not even just saying that to you.
Like the concept of going public and all of these
things in my mind, I go to the office every day and I'm like, okay, how are we going to get off
the ground? Like literally, I don't think you understand. I'm genuinely locked in a place of,
we have so much more to do and we have so much more growth to be had that I feel like it's a
reset every day. So I will say. How is it possible to be happy when you're never there?
But it's not that I'm never there in a personal sense.
It's not like I'm like, oh, I don't feel like validated.
It's not that anymore.
It's that there are still billions of people around the world that have never heard about Bumble.
And there are still millions and millions and millions of women around the world right now in bad relationships, toxic relationships, where they don't understand that they should, can, and eventually will go first in their life.
They can leave a bad relationship.
They can go into a good relationship.
There are women, as we speak, you know very well, we're all watching this unfold. It's absolutely heartbreaking.
Just advocating to be able to have simple freedoms.
Just wanting to have the freedom to exist in their society as an equal.
So when I go to the office every day and saying, okay, how are we going to launch? We're 132 years away from gender parity. Maybe 136. Either way, it's not great. And so that's where I feel like I don't have enough time stuff. I am personally on a personal level now, thank God. It's required a lot of self-care, therapy, wonderful husband, beautiful to healthy
children, thank you God. I am happy now, but I'm not happy about where women are globally.
And that I feel unfulfilled because until we really look around us and say women are not in these toxic terrible
relationships and living in an unequal playing field I have got to go to work I gotta like get
back to the office and that's how I feel pursuing that goal comes somewhat at the expense of yourself
in some in some degree right whether that's your
you know because life could be easier if you just decided not to pursue that goal it could be easier
yeah i could probably be drinking pina coladas on a beach somewhere
so i always i always think about this you know the the pursuit of this of a goal versus like
you know self-preservation and and taking care of yourself and you seem like someone that is somewhat willing
to sacrifice themselves to a degree sacrifice something to fulfill a goal that might even
hurt yourself in your own life in a sense of like psychological harm or balance or you know
definitely sleep yeah no this is this is probably the biggest uh this is the this is the balancing
act we all talk about right but you can't do it all every single day why not go to the beach you
know why not go and have a pina colada you want to go have a pina colada on the beach
there's got to be like a group therapy for like,
why won't you go have a pina colada on the beach?
I don't know.
I just, I feel very passionate about what I'm doing.
And when I stop feeling passionate,
I'll go have a pina colada
and then I'll go do something different.
But this is,
it feels like my life's work. And I try to be a good mom and I try to be a good wife and I try
to be a good to myself and take those times. And I think anyone that sits around and tells you like,
oh, it's all about balance. And I mean, maybe they're right. Maybe they've got some secret
that I don't know about, but my God, I don't think any day is
fully balanced, right? I don't think any of us go to sleep every night feeling like,
wow, I just got a 10 out of 10 on every single category today. I think you just do your best.
And for me, I get joy out of pushing this brand forward. I get joy out of the women that come up to me and tell me
that they were in an abusive marriage for 20 years and read a story about Bumble and left their
spouse and got on Bumble and are happy and healthy relationships. Like that's what this is all about
for me. It looked like that question made you a bit emotional.
Yeah, I am emotional about it
because I'm kind of doing this
for my 17-year-old self also, right?
I don't want another generation of me at 17.
I don't want another generation of that.
I don't want another generation of young women
that felt unworthy and felt lesser than and felt like they needed a man to tell them what to do.
And I just don't – I don't want to see that as this next wave of 17-year-olds.
So I also don't want to see all these women suffering from domestic and emotional abuse across the world. So, you know, there's lots of
ways and a lot of people around the world that are doing a lot to fix this, but I don't have
those skill sets. I don't have, you know, maybe I don't know how to do what they know how to do,
and I know how to do this. So I feel like I better just lean in while I can. And plus,
I'm definitely old for the Gen Z people out there, but I'm 33.
So I feel like, you know, I might have a little bit more in me somewhere.
If you're old, I'm old.
So I thought we're very young. How old are you?
I just turned 30.
Wait, you're three years younger than me.
That's like five decades younger than me.
No, it's not.
We're in the same school.
Well, happy birthday, whenever it was.
Yeah, it was a couple of weeks ago. Well, happy birthday. Do you want a tissue? No, I'm okay. We're in the same school. Well, happy birthday, whenever it was. Yeah, it was about a couple of weeks ago.
Well, happy birthday.
Do you want a tissue?
No, I'm okay.
You sure?
Yeah.
That for me, that answer really answers a lot of questions
because it shows where the drive is coming from.
And that's the reason why the pina coladas seem like a lower priority than the mission.
Going back to the question, which I kind of took us off on a tangent away from um
about why you think Bumble won um or was successful was able to break through into that
very small category of dating apps or your dating sites where there's really only like a handful of
real players why why because I know you know I have to say something i know that the other dating apps
because i was sometimes in the room tried to launch dating apps of themselves so they took
their existing network they tried to launch a new dating app into it and it didn't work yeah i've
seen it happen over and over again i know michelle yeah from peanuts she's one of the people i used
to work with when we were doing the marketing at pur. Oh, really? Yeah. I think what she's done is awesome.
Yeah, I love Peanut.
It's great.
But I know it's not easy.
And I know it's not chance.
And I know it's not luck.
Because I've seen, I can't tell you at Social Chain,
how many times we had dating apps come to us and say,
can you do our marketing?
Maybe 200 times?
There's 5,000 dating apps in the app store?
It's impossible. It's impossible it's impossible
it's impossible to start a new one because of the network effects and all of those things
it's impossible impossible so why you how you how
every other dating product until bumble had been solving for the wrong side of the coin
they've been thinking about men that's all they woke up in the morning and thought about other dating product until Bumble had been solving for the wrong side of the coin.
They've been thinking about men. That's all. They woke up in the morning and thought about how to make a dating app good for guys. And they had it backwards. Why are you solving
for men when this is all about what women need and what women want? No one was asking women.
You think women want to get abused on the internet?
Think again. Like, find me a woman that enjoys being harassed on a dating app. Not one.
But for some reason, that problem didn't strike anyone as a problem. So it's not that hard to say,
wait a second, this is a double-sided marketplace.
This product can't survive without women.
Yet we're exploiting and degrading women on a lot of these products, not naming any names.
What?
And so for me, it was all about taking that original concept of Merci, a kind space for women, a safe space for women. And to Andre's push, got to give him some credit for being so interested in dating, right? I was so turned off of dating. I wanted
nothing to do with dating. When Andre was like, oh, let's do a dating, come be my CMO. I was like,
first of all, I'm not for hire. I'm starting my own company. I must be founder and CEO of whatever I do next. I cannot work for
someone. I just, I have to be my own boss. And, um, you know, I got to give him a lot of credit
because he trusted that. And he said, okay, do whatever you want to do. But it just, my one
stipulation is it has to be in dating because I know dating and I want to get behind a dating
product. So when I was sitting there, you know, we were, we had kind of agreed to, okay, we're going to do
this dating app. What's it going to be? What about Merci? I want it to be Merci. I want it to be
about women and I want to be women only. I want safety and kindness and accountability. There's
no internet spaces for women. Nothing's been built for women. We have to do this for women. And then it kind of just all clicked.
And I sat there and within literally minutes, it all just wrote itself. I said, wait a second.
I know the problem. Women don't go first. Men do. Men message as many women as they can. Women are getting inundated.
They never respond.
The lack of response is causing a rejection, and the rejection is triggering an aggression.
And that aggression is now translating into harassment.
And this is why women are being abused on the dating apps, because if only they would
go first, the man wouldn't feel rejected.
They'd feel empowered.
It would totally calibrate this whole experience.
And I said, okay, great.
I know what we're going to do.
Women have to talk first on this product.
And they only have 24 hours to do it.
I knew nobody else could conceptualize the way I would explain it.
So I was like, thanks, Cinderella, the pumpkin, and the carriage.
And men can send one extend on time of day to capture their attention if they want to.
Now, we have to also call out something.
This was back in 2014 in a very heterosexual-oriented dating app experience.
The landscape has evolved.
We have to be inclusive to all.
And so, of course, we are.
And, of course, we are currently, as we speak, spending countless time and putting all
of our heart and soul into how to make the experience better for non-binary, for the trans
community, for anybody that identifies as a woman as well. And so that's a big portion of the future,
but that was really how I would say we became successful because of two things.
Women, making sure that we were solving for women's real problems on the internet.
Marketing to women.
So when I went back to those sororities and fraternities, instead of going in with whatever we had gone in at Tinder, I went in with things for women.
I went in with items women wanted, cute yellow cookies.
Like I understood that we are going to build a cute brand, not a sexy brand. And that's what set us apart. I wanted it to feel warm and cozy and inviting and soft and feminine and safe.
And that's the beginning and still the current through line of bumble what do you like as a
leader because leadership has evolved you know over the last 10 20 years from like the steve
jobs days where you've got this kind of tyrant that from what i've heard so so hard to deal with
that they put him in his own building and only people could could work in that building if they
were really resilient i had all these stories i spoke to was wasn't to tell me
that was um was the closest i've ever got to steve to steve jobs but leadership and the concept of
what a leader looks like and how they behave and how they treat people in a post-internet world
where we have the ability to speak up because we can tweet and glass door and all of these things.
Leadership, leadership has changed.
Our perceptions of it, how they behave in a post pandemic world,
leaders are much more vulnerable because I think a lot of them had to be really vulnerable during the pandemic to,
to guide their teams through.
If I asked your teams, if I said, you know, what's Whitney like as a leader what would they say to me um
I feel like I try I try and so you know I'm sure I could be told otherwise I try to
be empathetic and I try to think about everyone around me, probably to my detriment, honestly.
I think it's probably done me more harm than good over the years because I'm trying to solve for
every single person in the room that maybe it doesn't solve anything sometimes. But I really,
I try to just be the brand we are externally, internally. It's hard. You know, there's so many conflicting needs as a business.
You have a marketing and brand team
that want to do one thing.
You have a technical team that needs to do another.
You have IPO teams that have to do another.
And so you end up being this conductor
of a very loud orchestra.
And I try to create harmony with people. But I don't know. I guess I wouldn't say I follow any – I don't read leadership books. I don't take leadership courses.
Maybe that's something I should do. I don't know. But I just lead with my gut. I just do what feels
right. I try to do the right thing. I try to listen and hear what people are
saying. And I try to listen to other people too. So if one person calls me and says X, Y, or Z,
I try to call the other person and say, what's your version of this? Before I jump to a conclusion,
I really try to have compassion for where everybody's coming from, but it's tough. And then I also have
to put my head down and say, okay, no, sometimes this is just how it's going to go. Right. Because
I feel like I can see certain things that maybe aren't present to everyone in the dating space,
because I've been in this thing for a decade now. And I feel like I understand the nuances of it very well so I don't know I don't know what they would say you talked about creating
harmony amongst the orchestra which I feel like is the perfect example of the role of a CEO
but a role of the CEO of a public company becomes even more difficult because then you have even
more conflicting expectations when you're that person that's trying to create a harmony
in all of this orchestra keep everybody happy meet all the needs how do you create harmony
within yourself so i personally have beliefs that you know there's something bigger than
what we're dealing with every day,
right? Like I try to zoom out, zoom out into something that we can't even see, right? There's
obviously influences of the universe that none of us know about. You and I cannot sit here and
say that we know every corner of why we exist and what's going to happen tomorrow. And so
I try to just trust the process. I try to laugh. Andre was
always really good at that. He would just laugh in really stressful situations. And I learned that
from him. It's just like, have a laugh. You'll be okay. And also to realize that we are just a blip
on the radar. Like this is going to be, if we're lucky, like Bumble will be like a half page in a
book one day, the hundreds of years from now. Like It's just not that big of a deal, the daily dramas and the nuances of everything. And so I try to just zoom out. Is this really going to still matter, this one moment in interpersonal dynamics or this one moment in a failed launch or whatever it might be. Is this really going to matter in
five years? Is this going to matter in five months? And I really try to do that exercise of like,
how big of a deal is this before I allow it to disrupt my harmony? Does that make sense?
I don't know if that made any sense. It does make sense. It does make sense.
I was reading things about your sort of sleep work
routine and you sounded a lot like me. I'm the type of person that has a fairly unhealthy
relationship with my phone throughout the early hours of the morning, especially when I was running
the company, especially when I was at social change still. I'd wake up in the middle of the
night. I was worried too often when we couldn't make payroll
and I knew it was payday in a week.
I'd be riddled with little sort of slithers of anxiety.
When we spoke to, I think it's Robbie.
Oh yeah, he's great.
Robbie in your team.
Robbie said she makes no pretense of being always strong
and is openly vulnerable with the team.
Well, you might walk into the office one day
and let them know that you've been struggling with something might you might be anxious or
struggling with anxiety that day and encourage your other team members if they're feeling the
same way to take the time that they need well that's really nice of him but yeah i mean vulnerability is
it has to be authentic i've watched so many people the last few years ride this vulnerability
trend. And I'm like, that's not real vulnerable. Like vulnerability can't be a scapegoat or an
exit or a crutch. For me, I don't know. I just, I just thought the truth. If I'm having postpartum
depression back when, after my first baby, I would just say that to my all hands because that was the truth.
And why would I be anything other than truthful?
If I want to lead a company that tells the truth and I want to run a business that instills behaviors that are truthful and healthy and better, like why would I want to operate in any way that's disingenuous to that?
So I just get up and just try to tell the truth. and better like why would I want to operate in any way that's disingenuous to that so
I just get up and just try to tell the truth um convention would say well that's not leaders are
strong and then that they don't they don't have any problems and they they're always tough and
they you know they you know so what if and this is honestly what I used to worry about I used to
think well if I if I'm truly honest that things affect me too, my team are going to think I'm weak and then I can't lead them. And that's the kind of narrative
that ran out in my head. Yeah. But, and I get that, but the reality is everyone's, everyone's
feeling something and I'm in a connection business. How can I run a connection company
if I can't connect? And the only way you can connect
is through vulnerability. It's the only way to connect with anyone. I'm being very vulnerable
with you right now because we're sitting here connecting. So I might as well, you know, I could
sit here and be like, well, it's a business book I read, you know, there's this theory of like,
you know, this many hours a day do this. And like, that's just not my vibe.
We sit here in 10 years time and we say that that was a really successful 10 years for Bumble.
What would have happened in those 10 years?
We would have built world-class features that were industry changing for safety and trust on the internet. We would have become the safest platform for women not only to date,
but to find any trusted contact that they need, a mentor, a mentee, a babysitter, a friend,
somebody that has the same illness as them, as rare as it might be, somebody who is struggling
with any type of mental health crisis, the platform to find anyone on a trusted,
safe wavelength. And we would have also gone and created a suite of laws to actually build
real legislature around the gaps that exist for physical and digital accountability as it pertains
to women's well-being. And we would have scaled globally to every corner of the earth where
women need us the most. And we would be a trusted product for them to find their innate strength to
quite literally make the first move out of something bad and into something good.
And we would have built a brand that showed everybody that you can have mission and profit live under the same roof and you can
be a kinder connected company um irrespective of how everybody else has done it before
so that's what i would hope for thank you understanding your understanding you and
understanding what's driving you i would certainly bet on that becoming a reality. And I think that's the most, that's really, you know, of all the,
the business success, the marketing brilliance and all of the things that you've done and the
resilience and the getting back up and all of those things that in and of themselves,
you kind of, we described them in a couple of minutes, but I, but any human that struggled
and been rejected and had been mischaracterized knows that those aren't small things. So for many people, even one of those things is entirely fatal, but there's clearly this
unbelievable resilience in you because you said, well, where does that, you know, I think, I think
you said it where, I think you said it on a podcast one time where you said, it doesn't matter if you
lose your confidence, you still have your drive. And I really pondered that when you said that,
is that true? Cause I was thinking, lose your confidence, you start, well started well you do you still have the drive whether you have the the the belief that
comes from confidence that you can have it but you still have that drive and that's exactly what I've
I've learned from you today which is that unshakable bigger than myself a mission bigger
than me drive which is driving you and your company and that's why I think you're an unbelievable
inspiration but Bumble is an unbelievable bet on the future a future which I think is inevitable in the future
that is necessary so thank you for your time today it's a huge honestly when I say it's a huge honor
I mean it's a huge honor I feel the same way about you so thank you for having me um today we have a
closing tradition on the podcast where the last guest asks a question for the next guest they
don't know who they're leaving it for so they just leave it in the diary i open it and i get to read it now um the question they left for you
not knowing it was you was what is the last belief you would relinquish
it's an interesting question like what would i let go of what belief do i have like what is
there a belief i have that i would let go of yeah so I he me shouldn't give away who
it is he means like what's the it's basically what's the most important belief to you what's
the last belief that you would give up oh um the last belief that I would give up is that people
are inherently good somewhere deep down that rejection and insecurity and lack of communication
drive cruelty and that I'm not going to give up on a world where we can actually connect good
people together because I think there's a lot of, a lot of good people out there that just
need a kinder way to connect. Amen. Thank you, Whitney.
Thank you. Bye.