The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Strava Founder: How I Motivated 100 Million People To Stay Active: Michael Horvath
Episode Date: June 2, 2022Michael Horvath is the co-founder of Strava, the app to track and improve peoples fitness that’s used by millions of people worldwide. It’s his second business success, after he built a thriving o...nline business in the 1990s. But it hasn’t all been plain sailing for Michael. Initially quitting his first business, he spent several years as a family man before boredom launched him into starting his second. What he didn’t appreciate is that his calling as a family man would come back for him in a way he could never have imagined. Michael took 5 years off from Strava to care for his wife until her tragic death, and then care for his children in the aftermath of that. When he returned to a struggling Strava as CEO in 2020, he had to build it again from the ground up. It was something he was ready equipped for, because it’s something he’s had to do many times before. Follow Michael: LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/mtkhorvath/ Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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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 time square um
for the show so thank you so much amazon music um thank you to our team and thank you to all of you
that listen to this show let's continue we have reprogrammed our lives to be remote and so we are
stuck in patterns that are really difficult to get out of.
I actually, I don't know if I'm gonna get canceled for this,
but I think that...
Michael Hobart, the CEO and co-founder of Strava.
With over 76 million athletes.
You track your activities,
turn those activities into a post.
That's when the Strava magic happens.
If you want to be as good as you possibly can be,
you have to strive to be the best.
But can you be okay also with not actually achieving the goal of being the top of everybody?
Win or lose, that's the feeling you're looking for.
How are you doing in your personal life?
My wife was diagnosed with a terminal illness in September of 2013.
I think I prepared a lot for how to live my life caring for her.
I wasn't prepared for how to live my life when she was gone.
I had to not rediscover who I am.
I had to define who I am.
That doesn't happen overnight.
If what you do every day is put a little effort into being kind to the people who are important to you in your life
and the complete strangers, then that's where you're going to find the meaning.
So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett, and this is the Diary of a CEO USA edition.
I hope nobody's listening, but I tend to
believe that people have some kind of hypothesis as to what factors or experiences from their
earliest years shaped the most significantly into the person they are today. Do you have a hypothesis like that?
I think I have several, starting with how my family felt to me,
being the youngest of the five kids in my family,
felt like it was pulled apart by geography between Sweden and the United States at an early age.
My sisters stayed behind when
my family moved back to the States when I was five years old. And I had this dream to reunite
us in some way. How could we be one family again? Now that my sisters were older, they were choosing
to, it was the normal, maybe a few years early from what you'd say
normally would have happened anyway, then deciding just where do they want to live? Who are they as
people? And, but me, I was, I was this five-year-old and I was, I was sad to lose my, my sisters, my,
I had my brother with me. And when you think about what are the most important things in your life,
it's the relationships you have with people.
Now, I'm not necessarily an outgoing person myself, so that's not where this hypothesis led me.
But it has led me to the idea of connection, deep connection with people you care about is super important for how you live your life and the choices you make and what you prioritize.
So that's one theory. And then there's one other one, which is, I think, growing up, going through high school,
coming to the United, first of all, coming to the United States, not speaking English at the age of
five and learning it all, you know, from television and getting thrust into school. And you have this,
this feeling like you don't belong, you don't fit in. That just, that kept, you know, for many
people, I think it keeps going and you don't fit in. That just, that kept, you know, for many people, I think it keeps going.
And you don't have that great sense of belonging until later,
maybe until your teenage years, your later,
even into your twenties.
But throughout all that time of searching
and looking for something,
like what I kept believing is that
there's something inside me,
a potential that needs to get realized.
And I don't just think that about me now i think that
about every single human being on this planet and um the aspect of what it means to realize
someone's potential your own potential and then create the opportunity for the people around you
to realize their potential that drives me that is something that i've i feel like has been a
constant in everything I've
done since I've been about 25 years old. That moment when you're, you're growing up and you've,
you're parted ways with your siblings seems to be one of the first seeds that led to the success of
your later businesses, because it was, I mean, in hindsight, I guess we all do this, but you,
I guess it highlighted the importance of connection and community, as you said, when was the next seed planted? Cause I kind of think about that
with like great business ideas. And I saw that in your story that there's these moments,
these key moments, which introduce you to like the idea of community and then to the idea of
sport and competition. When was the next chronological seed? Yeah. So coming out of that um like high school feeling like i know i've i've got some amount of
intellect i don't really understand like what i'm going to use it um i don't feel like i was that
you know call it like high school wasn't where i peaked i don't think anyone should peak by the
way in high school like that's a lousy time to be at your like the pinnacle of your life you want to
peak later than that so getting into harvard going to a good school that, that seemed like that
would be it, but it wasn't, that wasn't it for me. It was actually walking into the boathouse,
never having rode before and finding this group of people who also were trying to figure out where,
what's this, where is there a place at this institution that in some ways it's like, well,
you got into there. So aren't you kind of done?
And it's like, actually, no, now you're scared
because you don't know if you measure up.
You don't have any understanding of where you stand.
Will you make it there?
But finding that going into the boathouse,
you're like, hard work and-
What is this boathouse?
This is the boathouse at Harvard.
Yeah, for the rowing team.
It wasn't that I went in there thinking,
I'm gonna conquer this. I'm going to conquer this.
I'm going to be one of the best rowers
that this school has seen when I went in there.
But within a few weeks, I was like, that was my goal.
I was going to be the best.
Like that was somehow, it wasn't,
there wasn't anything else
except it just turned on inside me.
And I was hooked by that experience
because I'd found my place. I think that was the key because I'd found my place.
I think that was the key is I'd found a group of people.
I'd found this vibe, this energy.
It was the part of the day I look forward to.
It was the part I felt so good about the rest of my life because I was there in that experience.
I was motivated by the desire to be as good as I can possibly be at this thing.
And I don't think I'd experienced
that feeling before in my life. I was really compelled by the use of the word best. It made
me start thinking about the idea of competition. And I think I sat here a couple of days ago with
Simon Sinek talking about this, like the role that competition and wanting to be number one plays.
Is it toxic? Is it a healthy motivator because i'm filled with that anyone we went
bowling last night with the team i was very quiet until i knew that i was going to win
you know what i mean i'm a deeply competitive person it motivates me it drives me and i've
wondered if that's a deficiency of my character or if it's a healthy thing what have you learned
about that yeah i think it can lead to challenges,
both at the personal level and then in a group.
What I found in the crew team was that
we couldn't be the best team
if each of us individually wasn't trying to be the best.
But we always knew that you don't win a boat race by yourself.
You win it with seven other rowers and a coxswain.
You have to think like a team,
but you have to think like an individual
who wants to be the best at what you can be.
Another way to think about it is like,
if you want to be as good as you possibly can be,
you have to strive to be the best.
But can you be okay also
with not actually achieving the goal
of being the top of everybody,
but being as good as you know,
you got reached that point of you,
you could not have given more. That's what you're, that's where I get the satisfaction is. I know
at the end of that race, you know, I'm thinking of the race of my freshman year where we won the
championship and we came from, you know, a boat length back, we had lost to that team in a previous
race. And that feeling that went through my body. and I believe everyone's body in that boat
halfway through the race,
we said, we're not giving up.
And we just rode them down.
And at the end of that, it wasn't like I'm the best.
It was like, we did something
that we didn't think was possible.
We created a new capacity.
And so then all of a sudden,
maybe some spaces opened up
with what you thought you were capable of
and what you could be. And you try back at it again. You train again for reaching that point where you said you did everything you possibly could. And win or lose, that's the feeling you're looking for, I think, when it's positive in your life. And I've been in those places where it can be really destructive too. It changes your
relationships with other people. You start to actually hate the thing you're doing because
you're striving for the wrong, you're striving for some outcome that maybe is not the right outcome.
What experience are you talking about?
Training for races where you're, by the time you're on the starting line, you just don't even
want to do it anymore. That was often the feeling I had by the time, you know, a, a big race came around where I was just like, I'm so done with
this. I just want to just not, not be, not be here right now. These things should be additive
to your life. It should be something that you, that makes you better in other ways besides just
stronger physically, probably a sign that you've just you have lost the reason why
you're doing it the why behind the work when i was reading about strava's work values i read about
this abc's thing and the b and that was about balance which is what you're talking about there
is that in part why you put the b there in terms of the the culture
and the the office and the professional culture you're trying to create with strava is that why
the b is so important there balance balance is elusive and the counterpoint we have another one
of the c's is commitment so i talk about that a lot that um these things seem like they're at odds
with each other if you have balance how can you also be 100% committed to the goal of building the best
company we can build, doing the most we can do for our athlete community?
And I say, yes, that is the struggle in life is to both have balance and be committed to
something.
It's incredibly challenging.
And to hold both, calm your heart and in your head
is the work.
That is actually why they're there.
They're there to remind us.
If we only have one balance, we won't do as much.
We won't strive for as much as we can be.
If we only have commitment, we will burn out.
We will get to that place
where we don't love the work we do anymore.
And we will question why we're here. So it's by putting them together that, that my
co-founder and I felt we had the best chance at achieving that long term commitment with balance.
And it's a struggle. It is, you're not, there's no recipe here. There's no, no playbook that
tells you how to do it. And each person has person does have to work at it on their own on their own is it their responsibility to to work work at it
i i sometimes struggle with this as an employer which is what role do i play in because i know
the role i play in driving commitment right it's very obvious you set ambitious goals you set
tight timelines you create a good prize and a worthwhile, you know,
carrot at the end of accomplishing the goal.
That drives commitment if you have the right people
and you have camaraderie and all those things that you said.
But then in terms of telling people to,
encouraging them to have balance in their life,
what role can I play as an employer?
What role do you think you should play?
If you hire people who respond really well
to those motivators that lead to their commitment,
I think you also have to look at it
from how long do you want them to be there
to do the work, to be working at that level.
And I think you can structure teams in different ways.
You can roll through people in the sense of that they may only contribute for a couple of years or a year.
And if that's the structure, and many companies in Silicon Valley operate this way, which is two years on the team is a pretty standard length.
And then you move on and you recommit somewhere else.
We are trying to build something different at Strava. We're trying to build the hundred year brand, the company that
will last longer than I will be there. It will still be here after many of the people who have
been investors in the company have exited the company. It is something that we hope will
withstand the test of time.
And in that setting,
I think it's much more important to think about
you need some people who are going to be there
for much longer than that one or two years.
That's where balance comes in.
Yes, it's easy to say you don't want people to burn out,
but if it's only that you don't want them to get that tired,
that sick of their job,
that they're quote-unquote burned out.
You've probably lost some level of productivity for quite a while before that.
So we strive for a different kind of relationship with our team.
It is a challenge also as a leader to make sure we're still performance-oriented.
We still want that sense that we have to bring our A game. We cannot be satisfied with
past success or be complacent. There's plenty of competition out there, all sorts of new
technologies that are coming into the fore today, new ways of building communities,
new ways of motivating people. We have to stay competitive. And so that is my job
as a leader. I have a leadership team that helps me with this. It's not just my job, but it is
ensuring that we are taking care of our people, but also expecting that they're going to climb
the mountain with us. The way that you're building that company and what you're aiming to do to
create a long-term, long-withstanding business goes against the narrative especially
in silicon valley where the objective is to like raise money before you're profitable
sell the thing or go public and move on to the next thing um clearly there's experience behind
your desire to pursue a longer- term strategy where you're not just
you know investing all your money in user growth getting a gazillion users and then exiting
i expect it's because of your other business the one that came before strava
am i right and if so why did that teach you that this longer term approach to company building is a better path forward for you as the founder and for other things?
When we started Strava, we were looking back at the previous company we had started.
And we started talking about creating what is now Strava. Back in 2006, we got together,
starting on the phone weekly,
talking about ideas that we,
if we're going to start a company, what would it be?
Eventually we got Mark and I, my co-founder Mark Gainey,
and I decided we had to get together for a few days the summer of 2006.
And we defined at its core
that what we had experienced in that other company,
Kana Software, back in the late 90s, it was the Silicon Valley Olympics.
That's the way I term that you have an idea, you raise some capital, you're off to the races.
And either you have taken it public or sold it in four years, and that's the gold medal, or go home because that's it.
We didn't want to do that again.
And a few reasons why.
It wasn't terribly satisfying at the end of the day.
Kana was a wild ride during a wild time
in the first internet boom.
A lot of people made a lot of money.
A lot of people lost a lot of money.
And so what in it would we look back on and say,
besides the experience itself and what we learned,
what would it be that we would say to our kids
or grandkids like,
here, this is something we're really proud that we created.
We can't even lay claim to having created it
if we're only there for four years
and then other people take it forward.
Is it really ours?
So we were out on the doorstep, literally almost four years
to the day after starting Kana. How and why? Well, personal choice in my case, I wanted to go back to
teaching. I came from academia. I was teaching economics when we started Kana. I wanted to go
back to academia. Mark, the company got to a point where he brought in another CEO to run it. And he found that it wasn't his company anymore.
He didn't have the role that he thought he would have on the other side of that decision.
So I don't want to speak for him, but it was like this sense of like, it was a personal
choice for both of us.
But at the same time, we look back on it and say, where it goes next is not part of us.
We have to forge a different path.
There's got to be an idea that's
worth that much of our investment. And perhaps it's that sense of at that point in our lives
where we were then, late 30s, early 40s, when we were starting Strava, we were thinking about this
could be it. It's not like we're going to have that many good ideas in our life. We're not
going to have another opportunity to build this kind of a company,
at least. And so let's make it worth it. And let's find something that we're extremely passionate
about. And we used to say things like, it doesn't have to be big. It has to be great. It has to
give meaning to the people who are our customers. And we define that as like, we want to help people live a more life
more full of meaning, adventure, and fun.
We didn't say activity.
We weren't yet sure what it was going to do,
but it had to have some impact.
It can't just be transactional.
It has to have an effect on you
at the core level of what you value,
what decisions you make on a daily basis.
And that's where I think we got to Strava. And I love to go to like the idea behind Strava was a 20th century idea.
We had that idea coming out of the boathouse. When we graduated from college, we had the idea
that what we experienced there is something that is applicable in so many places in our lives.
Being connected to other people through sport
is what motivates you to lead a more active life
and makes you a better human being.
It helps you live a healthier life
and makes all the rest of your life better.
It did that for us when we were in our 20s.
And that's the universal part that we wanted to tap into
when we were starting to create what became Strava was that it's the context of the people around you that keeps you motivated.
It's the way in which you're connected through sport to other people that unites you.
And so we started to explore that space.
And when you explore and are willing to talk to people about your ideas, they respond. They tell you ideas that they've had
that sound pretty close to what you're doing,
even if they're not sure that it's really relevant.
And so those conversations in the early days, 2008,
led to us actually putting a team behind this
to build a prototype.
And that eventually became the earliest version
of Strava in 2009.
So it was really just a set of conversations that led to what we actually decided on, but it came from
something we had experienced in college back in the late 80s and 90s, a 20th century idea.
When I think about how you formulated Strava and that early process, it's like exactly what I'd tell an entrepreneur not to do. In the respect of, a lot of time entrepreneurs, you see that
they actually just want to be an entrepreneur. So they think, fuck it, oh gosh, what shall I do?
And they look around for a problem to solve, one that isn't in line with any of their intrinsic
like passions and innate motivations so the minute they encounter
some difficulty the first hurdle in business which is inevitable they then fold and they give up
because why would you pursue Karen doing something that you weren't genuinely um in love with and I
guess you know I guess the process is the thing that I wouldn't I've never would advise someone
to kind of like sit down with your mate and think of a business but i guess the process also led you
just closer towards what did innately matter to you which was adventure activity community
even though you did it the other way around does that make sense yeah well so uh i guess i'm drawn
to tell this like how we've originally conceived of what became what what is now Strava was in 1994, 95, when I'm a professor
at Stanford teaching economics, Mark is working in venture capital in Palo Alto. And there's this
thing called the internet that has just become like a household word. Before I got to Stanford, I think I had sent one email in my life.
I had never, I didn't know what the internet was.
I had no idea.
When I got to the Department of Economics,
the person who managed all the IT equipment said,
I'm going to install a browser on your computer.
I had no idea what he was talking about.
What's a browser?
So had lived up to that point
without the internet and the internet is introduced. It's a different thing than today
with, you know, kids growing up with all of this around them. But when it was introduced, what Mark
and I did was exactly that entrepreneur, that instinct is like, what is this new thing going
to do? What problem can it solve? What's the, what's the, you know, and Mark wanted to start
a company. I was a professor. I was going to be his sounding board. He came to my office because I had an internet connection and he
didn't, you know, so what we, we cooked up was like, well, what are the problems in our own life
that we would want to solve with this new technology as a starting point? Cause we didn't
know what else, where else to start. Right. So we, we went through a bunch of, you know, different
ideas of the thing that we hung onto was like, we missed the crew team. We missed that, the bunch of different ideas. The thing that we hung on to was like, we missed the crew team. We missed the bunch of people
who were from all different walks of life
and they found the same thing
that we were passionate about
and we spent a ton of time with them.
We were with them hours every day
and we missed that feeling of being connected to them.
We missed the boathouse.
We missed the feeling of competition.
Could we recreate that
with this new technology called the internet? Could we create the virtual locker room?
And so what we were describing to ourselves was what you see in Strava today is like a place where
you could see other people's workouts. You could see, you could talk about, you track your
performance over time, a training log, all that was, we sketched that out. We wrote a business plan. This is 1995, right?
So we're not anywhere close to the founding of Strava
in any means.
We actually went out and talked about this idea
with companies that were building websites.
And that was the earliest internet companies
were the ones that were building the websites
that other companies would then use
to become internet companies, right?
So, and they told us, this is a lousy idea.
You know, like, come on, guys.
Can't you do better than this?
This is never going to work.
People are not going to share personal information about themselves with strangers on the internet.
That's never going to happen.
Let's see, there's no technology that's going to make it easy to get the data in.
People are going to be having to fill out forms and submit them online.
That's going to be really full of friction.
You should just put this away.
Don't tell anyone about this idea.
It's such a bad idea, right?
And they turned us on to the idea that became Kana Software, which was something so mundane, boring, built a great company, but it was build systems to help these internet companies respond to
inbound consumer email, customer support email. So we did that. We got turned on to that idea.
Why did we pursue that? We weren't passionate about it. We became passionate about it,
especially Mark. We just wanted to be entrepreneurs. We wanted to seize the moment
of this new technology, this new world of the internet. We wanted to be entrepreneurs. We wanted to seize the moment of this new technology,
this new world of the internet.
We wanted to create something.
We were motivated by the idea that anyone can do this.
That's the way it felt.
And we tabled the thing we were really passionate about
because some people told us it was a bad idea.
And I thank them for it
because it probably was a bad idea at the time.
It would have failed, right?
But where we were in 2007, 2008, that idea
was still in our back of our minds. That idea came to the front. That's what we went and said,
now what has changed? Well, a lot has changed, right? So you have Facebook showing us that
people are actually willing to share with people that they trust on the internet. And before that,
I'm sure Facebook wasn't the first to prove that out, but Facebook was the first to prove out that you can build
community with the internet, at least in our world. Then you have GPS as in the thing that's
in our pocket all of a sudden. This mobile phone has got a GPS chip in it around that time frame.
And it's okay. It's not great. And so we're like, all those reasons why we shouldn't have started that company
are now reasons why we should start that company.
And it matches the things we talked about
in that time in Vail.
Could we build something that people would use every day?
Would they tell their friends about it?
Would it help them get out
and live a life of more adventure?
Would it be trusted?
Would it be a trusted brand?
And we're like, hey, wait a minute.
The universe is putting this right in front of us.
This is all coming together.
And why not?
Why not this?
And in some ways, we denied that it could be that easy,
that this idea we had had more than a decade earlier
could be the thing that we're now going to go and start a company.
We had denied that for a while and tried these other things first.
We explored other places in very much the way that you would say,
the way entrepreneurs should do it.
And we said, no, we got to do this.
This is the thing.
And then it says, you meet some people,
you talk about your idea with some people,
and you see this has got some legs.
Other people have had similar thoughts, and you see this has got some legs. Other people have had
similar thoughts and you can get them on board. The person we met, Davis Kitchell,
instrumental in how we got this company started. He happened to be living in the same small town
I was living in. He was trying to work out technology to use GPS to compare the time it
took him to climb on his bicycle up a road by his house. He was just
exploring this because he was curious. And we thought, oh, that's interesting. I wonder if
that could be somehow the basis of what you could do in this virtual locker room that we were
building. And that became Strava Segments. That was the earliest first conversation about something
that became a fundamental part of what Strava is today. That would the earliest first conversation about something that became a
fundamental part of what Strava is today. That would never have happened if we hadn't just opened
up and said, we're trying to build something that will help people live a more active life.
And then Davey says, well, I'm working on something that might help motivate me to be
more active. I wonder if it could be relevant to you. And he's still part of the team today. And
Strava Segments is a big part of what people know about Strava. What have you learned then from all these people
who are changing their lives and exercising on Strava about what motivates us to go from a place
of being sat on the sofa as I was in 2020 in March, as that first lockdown rolled in to downloading Strava and then going on a
fitness journey there's something weird that happened to me which I've never really understood
if I look at the person I was before that date I was a repeat failure at fitness like every year
this is going to be the year everyone knows the story like no this year is going to be the year
then crashed out but no this year is going to be the year, then crashed out, then no, this year is going to be the year. And then I think I know what's changed, but is there data to prove
or to suggest what it is that makes people finally get the bug, the fitness health bug?
Yeah, great question. What we see is that people who, you do have to catch on and find something that keeps you in Strava.
But the thing that happens to you when you use, when you're part of the community, when you stay with it, is you become more regular.
You become more, it's more frequent that you are active.
You may not get faster.
You might, but that's not actually what we see. You're just
more regularly active. Consistent. More consistent. And so what is also true is that if you're more
connected to other people, and it doesn't have to be a lot of people, I think most,
the majority of it is you have to be connected to people you actually care about on Strava
that motivate you to be more consistent.
And so we say people keep people active,
people motivate people to be active.
And you may not realize it,
but your journey motivated somebody else too.
Your activities were the source of motivation
for someone else and they were more active
and they added their activities
and that was the motivation for someone else.
So this has a way of exponentially increasing people's motivation. And I believe we can
change over time, over the next many years, we can help people follow the same journey you took
more and more regularly. So we may have started in a place which was more about the performance
aspects of being active. How can you get faster? But we quickly realized it's about consistency.
It's about the experience. And that's, I think, where we keep people. You may come for the
competition. You stay for the community. You may come for wanting to track your workout,
but you stay because of the people you meet and how they motivate you and how it feels.
Am I missing anything then from my, because I'm just personally very interested in this,
the competition, the community, I guess, striving towards a goal or a metric. Sometimes for people,
it's improving my running time or something. I guess there's a sense that might be linked to
the sense of like accomplishment of winning a badge or a reward or a little thing you know
when i'm on my peloton or when i'm on strut you little something is there anything else that you've
seen as a significant motivator for people to be engaged with their fitness journey well it's got
to make them feel better i mean mean, yeah, I definitely think
there's, and we don't, I would say we don't necessarily track that very well today. How do
you actually feel about yourself now versus a month ago or two months ago? We track a lot about
your physiological performance. We can show you you're better, lower heart rate, lower resting
heart rate. Your fitness score has gone up, all sorts of ways in which we can show progress
physiologically. But I'm more interested in joy. I mean, we're not good yet at measuring
the meaning and joy we bring to people's lives. We'll get there. But that's a very important part
of the equation is that you feel better and you want to keep feeling that good. So if I also look back at where we thought we were starting was we were building something
that had to be good enough for the best athletes in the world to use, because we believe they could
motivate people who are not as committed to an active life to come on board. I actually don't
think that that is motivating, but I think the other stories are even more motivating.
Stories like yours,
like you've dramatically changed how you live your life.
You put activity at the center
and that's incredibly motivating for people
that they can see that that's possible.
So I believe it's increased storytelling
is really the key.
Yeah, you're right.
I think that's so big.
The idea of the gamification.
Yeah, we did that.
But where we're leaning much more heavily now
is allowing the people in our community
to tell their story.
And not just of today, I went out for this run.
Yeah, that's part of a story.
But what does this amount to over time?
How do I accomplish my goals?
What are the things I'm striving for?
How do I feel when I get there? And maybe that's where we can start measuring the joy a bit more
precisely. I was thinking, you know, one of my hypotheses, which I've shared many times,
but I feel compelled to ask you, is that my goals were bad. My goals were like, they were goals.
And it's funny because it kind of goes back to your first company. They were goals that could
be completed. They were short-term goals. This is when i crashed out and failed all the time they were like surface level superficial
get a six-pack for summer goals and it wasn't until i i mean simon cynic sat where you are
a couple of days ago one of the things he talks a lot about is infinite games right
until i started setting goals that were more infinite like you've done with strava and trying
to create a long-standing company and those goals ended up just being about consistency. It was like, go to the gym today,
something I could never accomplish. That was one of the turning points. The other was the pandemic,
which is, I think it was, which was a, I mean, I mean, I know you saw a boost in
customer acquisition. I mean, that's when I joined and I, I know the numbers, but I think in part,
it was realizing that health was fragile. Seeing that for the first time in my young life,
that health was the foundation of everything I was doing.
I actually want to ask you a question about the pandemic.
Because you were talking earlier on about how at the boathouse,
you learned that community and connection
and these things are so unbelievably important.
One of the things the pandemic has robbed us of
is community and connection.
It's put us behind screens.
So I was compelled to ask you,
what's Strava's take on this remote working thing?
Where at your core, you're about community and connection,
and you know that more than anyone.
Yeah, it's been hard for us to find our way back
to how it felt to work together.
We were, camaraderie is one of our other Cs,
commitment, craftsmanship, and camaraderie.
So camaraderie was important
and it showed up in a lot of ways.
We had a Wednesday workout.
Lunchtime, we'd go out for runs
or there was a group that walked.
There was a group that met some mornings
to go for a ride.
So the camaraderie in sport, yes.
There was camaraderie in,
we spent a lot of time working together
and building those
relationships. It felt like a team inside the company. And that was really difficult to replicate
virtually. But something else has happened as a result of pandemic that I think is a real beautiful
outcome that will lead us back to camaraderie of a very different kind.
We stopped putting location as a requirement on any job openings.
So we've hired, we've more than doubled the team
over the course of the last year and a half
and have added people across the United States
in many different countries as well.
Because if you have the talent and we're looking for it,
you don't have to be in San Francisco or Denver,
which were the two main offices we had,
or Bristol, UK.
We've now opened an office in Dublin.
So we will have physical locations,
but we have over 150 people today
who don't have any one of our office locations
as their home city.
And the beautiful thing in that is
these people all
have incredible talent. Yes, they were the best people that we could have possibly attracted for
the position, but they have such different lived experiences. They bring that to the work they do.
So we're learning a ton about what camaraderie, where it really comes from. Maybe the thing we were creating was in the old, in the pre-pandemic
times was a camaraderie that was built around a very limited set of rituals, like going for that
Wednesday workout. It turns out that a lot of people felt excluded by that because they weren't,
they didn't feel fast enough to go with the crew that was going out for a run. We have to find our ways to replicate or create something that is like that today.
But what we have is a much broader set of stories that people can bring and tell about
what they did before they joined Strava, what they're experiencing here.
They're coming from all sorts of different locations.
So that's an aspect of what camaraderie can...
We feel when we got together in San Diego in person
for a week at the beginning of March,
what came out was how much we already appreciate each other,
even if we've never been together.
Most of us had never met in person,
but we already felt like we knew each other.
And we didn't start with the awkward,
hello, I'm so-and-so. It was hugs right
away. It was the sense of this is the team that now is in the same place. And I want to carry
that forward. I want that to be like, we put coins in the bank that'll get us for the next six months
or a year to the next time we get together. But we can create that sense of camaraderie,
even if we're not sitting in the same office building or
the same room. So that was eye-opening for me that that was possible because of the pandemic,
that we could create this very distributed, interesting, diverse workforce team that felt,
everyone felt, for the most part, felt a sense of belonging.
What role does that play, the in-person stuff?
Because we all here think it's great.
That's why we're all here together.
Yeah.
I mean, a lot of my personal team are here in this studio.
What role does that play though?
And what value does that add?
Because I don't know.
I think I have a real bias towards being with people.
And maybe it's, I don't know what it is.
Maybe, I don't know.
I don't know what it is, but I like being with people.
And I really struggle on Zoom. I don't feel like it's. Maybe, I don't know. I don't know what it is, but I like being with people. And I really struggle on Zoom.
I don't feel like it's real.
Yeah, me too.
No, so I think what is possible is you can be with people,
but you don't have to be with them all the time.
That you can find the combination of my colleague, Brian,
who's here with me today.
He lives in Dallas, in the Dallas area.
And we looked at the calendar.
It turns out we've actually gotten together in person now,
I think four out of the last five weeks
because of business need brought us together.
Yet we've also spent time
working in a virtual setting. So I call that putting the coins in the bank. We have enough
opportunity to see each other in person to get that feeling that we can be more effective when
we have to work virtually together. And I think we replicate that. That's the model I think that we
can get to. If we only worked with people
who are geographically proximate,
we're losing that opportunity to work with people
with a completely different set of experiences
that they can bring to what we're trying to build.
We're trying to serve athletes everywhere.
There are, I think, easily over a billion people
who wake up every day wanting to be active,
and we want to meet them all.
They're in every part of the world world and so that incredible diversity of the customer that we want
to serve it just moves us that we need to build a team that tries to match that diversity and the
people on the team and so if we're not there anywhere you know we most of our team is still
in the u.s like as in terms of the geographic bias we have today. But I think that it's not possible
to build that kind of a company,
that kind of a team,
if you require everyone to be in the same location
all the time.
So we give some little on the location
and we get a lot back in terms of what people can bring,
the different experiences they can bring to us.
So I guess the conclusive question here is like,
what role does the corporations,
or do you feel you play in adding, you give community to your customers, but what role do you feel you play in adding you give community to your customers
but what role do you feel you play in giving that in like that in-person community outside of your
home out in the wild to your employees yeah we we pay a lot of attention to it i think it's important
for people to do their best work that they feel a sense of belonging and i don't think this is
just at strava i think it's true in a lot of places. And sometimes that is so much easier
to do when you're in person and you're providing the breakfast and the desk. And that's that place
that I can feel productive in this space. And yes, the colleagues around me are people with
incredible talents and I'm energized by the group, by the setting that
I'm in. And I think for many of our team, they really missed that during the pandemic. They
would love it to come back, but it's really difficult to bring it back right now. It's
going to take us time to work our way back. Why? There are two reasons I see, and I've thought a lot about this
in the sense of Justin, our Strava's example. One is we have programmed our lives to be remote,
reprogrammed our lives to be remote. And so we are stuck in patterns that are really difficult
to get out of. Just like in the beginning of pandemic, it was really difficult to get into
that pattern. We were forced to, we're not forced to get out of it now. Strava's not forcing people back into the office. So it's difficult with
everything from how you organize your day. Maybe you have children or other dependents at home you
have to take care of. You have pets. You have worked out a routine that works really well for
working from home.
And so getting people back into the offices, getting over those hurdles and frictions.
And so what do we do?
We make it more enticing.
Wednesdays, we offer lunch.
We are trying to organize Wednesday as the day.
If you're going to pick one day a week, maybe one day a month, make it a Wednesday.
Get people, oh, this wasn't so bad.
I got over the friction that one day.
Maybe I'll do it again. That's just the, that's like the mundane reason why it's, why it's hard. The second reason
I think is more fundamental is like, it is really difficult to be halfway, halfway back to work.
Coordination of either being all remote or all in the office is a lot easier. And we're not ready
to go all in the office.
We'll lose people on our team we don't want to lose.
That's like maybe too much of a calculating way to think about it.
It's more like that I don't think we'll get the best work out of the people who we force to come back in and they stay on the team.
And that is what will take more time and more of a sense of security that this is going to be a good experience i'm not
going to number one just my my health is not going to suffer the health of the people i love around
me won't suffer so we're not there yet maybe in terms of from a medical or scientific basis yet
but i think it's more important it doesn't really matter what the science says if what you feel is
i don't feel secure and safe when i go to the office that's what I think is going to be much harder to overcome and that's the part where coordination
just makes it really difficult to replicate if you don't have everyone just say yeah I work from the
office or during working from home you lose you lose all those things are true and we we lot we
had that great sense of disconnection uh the days of endless video meetings and um trying to do whatever you
could to get that sense of energy you get by being around another human being um it was a struggle
did you find in that in that period you lost employees so from my perspective with my company
we had about so many people around the world one of our big usps we thought was community you know that's what we that's one of our the reasons why you'd come and
work at our company social chain was community the culture in the office and all of those things we
offered flexibility so people generally decided what days they worked etc but the minute the
pandemic rolled in and everyone had to stay at home in their boxer shorts in their one bed studio
apartment it felt like people then
started to make the decision about where they wanted to work based on well if i'm going to be
in my boxer shorts looking at the screen anyway i might as well get paid more to do it and we
we saw a little it was the first time in our history where we saw people just leaving for
and we asked them why they're leaving they got more money before then it didn't matter and i
was wondering and this is part of the reason why
I think I have a real bias towards the office
can kind of be like open about what I do in my companies
is at the moment,
we actually had a group session the other day
where people said, we talked about the days,
but the moment there's two days a week
where we all want to come, we come in, right?
And in between that, like whatever whatever and if you can't make
like the the days then because you've got something going fine but that's when we all
try and really be the present because we want that synchronous collaborative all that wonderful stuff
and taking a hard line on it i'll be honest i think has helped i speak to so many founders
and companies who are trapped in this limbo
of can't force them back trying to insert trying to make the office a nicer place but people aren't
coming back and i i actually i don't know if i'm gonna get cancelled for this but i think that um
there's risk in not setting a hard line and having clarity and saying listen if you don't want to
work here there's other places to work but here's how we do it. And we're choosing to do it this way, not because the CEO is an ego test and wants to control
people, but when we reverse engineer our objective as a company back from whatever it is, we believe
that the best way to achieve our goal as a team, and that's what we are, is by having moments where
we're together as well. So that's my stance on it. Not popular the time no i but i agree with you that it provides
clarity for people they don't have to make a choice they're it they may be unhappy with the
decision but they say at least it removes my requirement that i have to think about it and
decide each time on my own is this the day i go in are other people doing it too you have
coordinated people for you've done the work of coordinating them. And I think
that's the way we used to operate. We used to have, no, we don't work from home. We work at
the office. That's our policy. Only under rare situations would we say that that's okay to work
from home. So at least what the path we've taken right now is to try the carrot approach before we
move to something else.
And I don't want to say what you're doing is a stick,
but it's that right now it's by degrees.
And maybe this is the difference between the UK
versus the US.
There is differences.
And maybe San Francisco is even particularly this way.
We did not lose people during the start of the pandemic.
Instead, what we saw was A lot of different reasons.
Instead, what we saw was a lot of people moved away from San Francisco because we said you can.
Oh, yeah, of course.
And so I think we may have saved ourselves from a lot of departures
by giving people that escape in another way.
It sounds like you already had a distributed workforce.
You couldn't tell them they could go to other other places they already were other places right yeah they were
yeah yeah so that wouldn't wasn't really the thing um and we haven't said now come on back to san
francisco yet i also need to point out another difference which i just realized from what you
said about the difference of the cultural differences in san francisco there's a
precedence is that the word across, all the tech companies are doing it
following a very similar line. Whereas in the UK, it's not like that. So when I think about the
companies working in San Francisco, especially in tech, whether it's the big ones like Twitter or
whatever, they've all kind of adopted the same approach. So if you're the only one not adopting
that approach, I guess that's a bit of an existential, a bit of a risk to losing people.
I think there's going to be a sorting.
I agree with you that in the start, you kind of like you followed the lead of the bigger, we did at least.
We saw what they were doing and we followed the lead of the bigger players thinking that's teaching us what we need to do as well.
I think there'll be a sorting here.
It's going to take another year or two, but there will be companies that say we're all about hybrid work.
And there'll be companies that say we're all about hybrid work. And there'll be companies that say, we're all about office work. And employees then will say,
I get to sort based on which one is the way I want to. So actually that'll be a really healthy outcome. I think a lot of companies that would never have tried the hybrid approach or enabled
remote work are now happy they did. Like we are, we're happy we have this much more, you know,
geographically
distributed workforce. That's bringing us incredible talent with a lot of different experience
behind that. And then on the other side, I not sure, you know, where this is going to go for
some of the companies that are in like right now we're saying you all have to come back into the
office. They, the, just the loose number of conversations i've had
with with other ceos says you lose about 20 of the people if you do that and you're not really
sure which of the 20 because it's really difficult to know until you you make people decide um but
they're going to be okay i mean they'll find other people who then say yeah i really want to work at
a place where everyone comes to the office
and that's what I want to.
And so that's the sorting
that will happen here
over the next few years.
But,
you know,
these things take time.
That's the thing.
And time,
you know,
we don't have a lot of,
I mean,
I mean,
we're trying to build
a long lasting company,
but we want to have,
we don't want this
to be the thing
that gets in the way
of us progressing
as a company.
So we are balancing that too.
Is there not a middle ground where you say like these two days a week,
the team comes to the, is that a middle ground?
And you're just very clear on that.
Yeah, I think that is a really good next step.
If we're not achieving that sense of coordination with giving people the choice, but encouraging
them to say with incentives like lunch or, or events or the presence of the senior leadership
will be there on these certain days. There needs to be a point. There needs to be a point where
you say, okay, it's not working. We're going to try to try another way. What was the hardest
moment at the start of the Strava growth that you faced at the start in those opening years?
Yeah, we opened, like we created the company, got the founding team 2000, beginning of 2009.
We were only web-based. So you had to, you couldn't track your workout with your mobile
phone on Strava. You used a third-party GPS device.
An example of one was a Garmin 305 cycle computer. It was largely cycling only to start with.
You really, we didn't encourage any other sport type, but you had to pay for that piece of
equipment. You had to plug it into your laptop or desktop computer, transfer the file,
and upload it. It was incredible friction, right? So we did not grow fast at all in the beginning.
It was like so many, you had to really want to try to experience this thing. And it's not because
mobile wasn't a thing you could do. We just didn't do it. There were companies that started
largely with, they did maybe had a website, but they pretty quickly built a mobile app. Companies like RunKeeper. They were one of the first hundred apps in the app store. Imagine that. Now there are, I don't know, millions of apps in the app store.
How are RunKeeper doing? to a pretty crowded space back in 2009. There were at least 10, maybe more companies that were doing something you would call
activity tracking with GPS.
Most of them had a mobile app, so we did not.
RunKeeper was acquired in, I want to say 2015, 2014
by one of the big sports brands.
MapMyFitness was acquired by Under Armour.
Runtastic was acquired by under armor run tastic was acquired by adidas by the way none of these acquirers ever came to talk to strava can't tell you why i would have to
you'd have to go have to go talk to them maybe we were perceived as we were too niche because we
were perceived as only focusing on more hardcore athletes and not the masses.
It wasn't true.
But in any case, what was true back in 2009,
we had built the wrong experience
for what ultimately would drive community growth,
which is it needs to be on your mobile phone.
It needs to be kind of all on your mobile phone.
The mobile phone is not just the tracking device
that then you then go to the website
to look at and have the experience.
You need to build the experience on mobile.
And we were really late to that.
We were so late.
And so by 2012, we finally have a mobile team
that's building an experience.
So three years after founding,
two and a half years after founding the company,
we are finally in the game, if you will.
How did you know you were wrong?
We were wrong in the sense that we weren't seeing the community growth.
We were building an experience that really people, once they got through all those frictions to get started, they stuck around.
They were committed.
They were engaged.
They converted to the subscription, which is the core of our business is
you can use Strava for free as long as you like,
but the best that we have to offer,
kind of if you're going to put something,
you say you're going to invest in yourself
and try to live a more active life.
The subscription really helps you.
It gives you more ways to stay motivated,
more fun, more ways to discover what's great around you.
So the subscription has all these great things. And it was there from the early days. We didn't wait to launch it. We launched
it in the end of 2009. So we had a lot of people who were found, we had a high conversion rate.
If you want, we had a low community size, but a high conversion rate. So we knew we were onto
something. And so what taught us we were wrong was we actually said, okay, we better build a mobile app.
And we built one that basically just tracked your workout.
You could record a workout to get it into Strava.
We saw off the charts community growth in the first week.
We were adding, prior to the mobile app,
we were adding maybe 100 new users,
100 new athletes a week.
We added 10,000 a day on the launch of our mobile app.
We got featured in the app store. That was a hundred thousand in a day. Why? Because it's
such an easy entry point. You don't have to pay for anything. You already have the phone in your
pocket. You're just downloading our app from the app store. The app store is pushing us out to
a community we would never have had the money to meet
from a marketing perspective.
There was only one problem.
We built the wrong, there again, we learned,
we built the wrong experience.
We thought you track the workout on your mobile phone
and then you go to the website to see your results.
And that's not, people are like, people aren't going to do that.
So we had to rebuild that app app and that rebuild the experience to
be all all completely on mobile but the idea that what can unlock the community growth is
the form factor of reducing the frictions getting meeting people where giving them a chance to
onboard into something without having to go through a lot of hoops jump jump through all
the things basic stuff but those those were like the earliest things that we that we did did prove that we could build something that was highly engaging
we just couldn't get people into the into the experience in the early days until we built the
mobile apps as you're going through that iterative experience to figure out how to scale the business
and where the product market fit is how are you doing in your personal life at that stage on the B, the balance?
Yeah, I mean, this is where going back
to when Mark and I were thinking
of starting another company,
we were saying it's going to be different this time, right?
We're not going to let it consume us.
We're going to find a way to keep the B.
In my personal case,
that did not last more than the first year i uh we we thought we were going
to build a company i was living in hanover new hampshire which is this very small community in
um about two hours north of boston in in the state of new hampshire it's in the woods um
dartmouth college is there and they had a they hired me to teach entrepreneurship in 2000. And so that's what
brought us there, my family, my wife, and four kids. So we arrived when my youngest daughter,
she's now turning 24 this year. She was turning two that year. So we had this very little,
we have four kids in five years. And we're very young kids. We're going to raise them in Hanover.
And I was like, I got to live in Hanover and Mark is in the Bay Area
he's living in California
well he's got to live in Portola Valley
so we were going to build this company on two coasts
and it was going to be a team in New Hampshire
and a team in California
and by 2010
it was like that's clearly not going to be the case
to hire the
talent we need
it's probably going to be the team in San Francisco that's going to be the headquarters. To hire the talent we need, it's probably going to be the team in San Francisco
that's going to be the headquarters. And so I start flying to San Francisco more and more regularly
all throughout 2010. Instead of going like once every two months, I'm going
once a month, staying for five days. Now it's once every two weeks, staying for five days. And then
it gets more and more frequent. So I'm definitely not on the beat.
The balance has gone out the window.
And this was 2010 through the end,
almost to the end of 2013,
where I'm CEO of the company.
We're growing this community
is now surpassing a million members in the community.
And we get to the point
where I think we're just shy of 10 million
by the time that I'm stepping down.
And you know what?
It's a very sad story,
but my wife was diagnosed with a terminal illness in September of 2013.
She had had been diagnosed.
She had had breast cancer, gone through treatment in 2004,
long before we started Strava and it had come back.
And it was, you know, those first months,
we weren't sure exactly how long she would have to live.
The doctors were, we got to do a lot of tests
and I'm still living this dual life
between New Hampshire and California
because she didn't move to California with me. We didn't move the family. That was a choice we made to remain in New Hampshire and California because she didn't move to California with me.
We didn't move the family.
That was a choice we made to remain in New Hampshire
as the home base for the family.
And so what ends up happening at the end of 2013
is I stepped down from running the company.
Mark steps in as the CEO.
I'm in a supportive function,
but I have a lot of flexibility
and I moved back to New Hampshire.
And for the next three and a half years until Ana passed away, I, that was my, my, my priority became taking care of my family, taking, doing what I could to, to take what time we had left to make it as meaningful as possible.
And all sorts of things we can talk about of finding meaning to the last day.
There's a lot of lessons learned there,
but what I was,
that's not, that's a different kind of balance.
I want to be honest.
It's like not necessarily what I expect,
you know, when we say balance for as a value,
it feels like what we do
is we pass through that balance point over and over again in our lives. We never quite seize it and hold onto it and feel like we live in it, but it's something we experience, we go through I'm motivated by, by putting balance into the core
values of Strava, by having it be something I focus on in my life. I want to return to it as
often as I can, even if I won't be able to stay in it all the time. So leaving Strava, that was
definitely not balance. Moving into caring for my family, there were periods where it came in, definitely found a flow and a harmony and a balance,
but then times where, you know,
just it completely is out the window
and everything is all hands on deck
on what's the next treatment
we're gonna try to find for Ana.
Where are we gonna, in one case,
we had to move and we chose to move back to,
move to San Francisco
so she could be in a
clinical trial of a novel therapy that showed some promise and that these are the kinds of examples
where balance just didn't wasn't there either you you had to you had to work at it and then
in the balances where i think you find the most meaningful moments
you said about the passing of your wife anna in that period you were trying to find meaning
till the last day and you've learned a lot about what that is what is that
you have to you have to think of it as not as the goal is to get to something some state of
health or physical ability or mental ability to do something like a dream or a trip you wanna take.
It's the day that is the day you're living in.
It's take it as it comes today.
And having a living a life where we're all terminal,
by the way, it turns out we're all on our way
to some point where we say we're on our last day.
But what you experience when you're going
through regular measurement of the progress
of a disease like that,
because that's the way the medical treatment is,
we're monitoring the disease to know
when to change therapy,
when to add other drugs that will help handle the
side effects of all the therapy, when to say it's time to stop the therapy. The meaning can't be
extend my life. At some point, if that's your goal, you will not find meaning in that goal.
It will be out the window. So instead,
you have to find meaning in what can this day bring? It starts by how do I feel today?
If you string together a bunch of days where you feel you've gotten something out of the day,
that's a meaningful life. And you can find that to the very end. And just, I learned so much from watching Anna progress through that and give she would never finish, but she was motivated by
what she could experience of working on those pieces of art. She did leave behind like, if,
if this were going to continue, here's what I would do with it. My youngest is an artist. I,
I know what's motivating her is like, she wants to get to some of those pieces and see if she can bring them to some version
of what her mom had left behind,
what she had indicated,
this could be something like this.
I think Mira will bring it to something else.
She'll add her own thing to it.
But that was what Anna,
I think she got there.
Struggling against the end
is not the way to find the meaning
how has that shifted your because experiences like that i imagine um teach you other profound
things about the point of all of this i know i spent much of my early years thinking the point
of all of this was to buy a lamborghini right and then even the pandemic was one of the catalysts
that made me realize there was
as i said earlier this tectonic plate that mattered a little bit more and then it was
really interesting to watch um how i had a rolex at the time i don't have one anymore
but my rolex was exchanged for my apple watch and there's something quite symbolic in that
it went from being about signaling status to others to caring about my health
and when i think about the loss of someone um especially someone young someone close to you as
well what are the what is the priority shift that happens you know i'm presuming there is one but is
there a priority shift that happens, a different perspective on what matters
that maybe an entrepreneur like me needs to hear?
I don't know that I knew this
when she was going through those last few years
or even the few years after she passed away.
I don't think I was,
I think I prepared a lot for how to live my life caring
for her. I wasn't prepared for how to live my life when she was gone. But what I've come to,
I think is, it's, this is again, maybe somewhat obvious, is that the relationship you can build
with some, an individual, and in this case, my wife, the person we met.
Where did we meet?
We met in my backyard.
When I started grad school at Northwestern University,
I rented this coach house,
which is like a little carriage house behind a bigger home.
And I was walking to the front of the house one morning
to get my mail and walking through the backyard.
And there's this young woman in her pajamas talking to my landlord.
And this is Anna.
It turns out she's a friend of my landlord, had babysat for her children when she was going to college at the same school I was getting my PhD.
This is Northwestern University in Chicago and Evanston, Illinois.
So I meet Ana in my backyard and she's not living in Evanston. She's living in Cincinnati, Ohio,
but she comes back to visit a few months later. And a few months after that, we're married.
And so we're babies, right? I got married the day after I turned 25.
I mean, she was 23.
We were not yet fully formed human beings, right?
But we're now building a life together.
And we went through all sorts of highs and lows in our marriage.
And we have four children and we live.
Otherwise, like this life where you'd say
we built something together.
I look back on that and say,
like the best thing I've built is two things.
My friendship with Mark and my marriage with Anna.
Those, I hope those are the things I look back on
apart from everything else and say,
at the end, when my day comes,
like those were the things where meaning comes from.
That's where, if I go back to what's most important,
it's the relationships with the people
who are closest to you in your life.
And then that extends to the people
who are also important,
but you may not have that same bond.
So what did I learn?
Well, losing that person is extremely difficult you're left with i was i don't want to speak for everyone who goes through this but it's
there is an aspect of you don't know which way is up anymore you're off script you are whatever
you thought your life was going to be about it It is, you're questioning everything. And in my case, I had four children
who are 17 to 22 in age at that time. And we pulled together, this is, I wear this bracelet.
This is, I gave one to each of my children i they wear it every day that we get
this is on the day of anna's funeral and we pulled together and we helped each other through that
darkest darkest moment and again it's the relationships and it's we're we've we're a
normal family we got our highs and lows um we got we got dysfunction we got function you know it's
we've got it all but there's something in there that's
like we know that we can count on each other. We know that that is at the core. I want to look at
that as like the model for what is possible, even inside something like a company, even in something
like the Strava community, that that's happening, that people are building relationships.
So if Strava is like, what is it all about?
It's about motivating people to be active
through the relationships they've had with other people.
And you returned to the company
several years after Anna passed.
That section between Anna passing
and your return to the company,
you almost referenced being somewhat disorientated
in terms of not knowing.
Were you double guessing whether to go back to the company?
I wasn't thinking of going back.
Really?
No, I wasn't.
We had recruited in someone to replace Mark as CEO. So Mark stepped down in May of 2017.
So just a few months after Ana passed away, I wasn't thinking about returning at all. I was,
you know, I was, that was a, I knew I had to discover what was next, but I wasn't considering that it was going to be returning to Strava.
So what got me closer was that Strava started to need some help.
By 2018, I step in as interim CFO and head of people.
By the middle of 2019, we're looking at a pretty challenging environment for the company. We were
about 100, 200 people in terms of team size. We were not profitable.
And we had to figure out a way to get to sustainability very quickly. We were not able to
raise capital at that time, given the state of the business. And so we made a decision to make a leadership change. And I,
what I recall from the conversations with the board, I want to characterize it as like,
I feel like I was the least bad of all the bad options because there weren't very many good
options at that time. We weren't going to be able to recruit someone in given the state of the company. I don't know if I was ready
to dive back in. I'm still really doubting what my place is right now. But there was one thing that
Mark and I were convinced about, which was inside what was there, there was a great company. We had, at that time, 50 million people in the community.
So 50 million registered athletes.
We were not yet profitable, but we,
November 2nd, 2019, my second day back,
leading the company, we get up on stage and we say,
here's the path back.
This is how we're going to do this.
We're going to focus nearly 100% of this company on our customer. And that's the person who wants
to lead an active life. That's the athlete. We're going to build this for them. And we're going to
build something so good that they're going to pay for it. And that's the subscription.
So we focus the company on that goal to build the best subscription service for
the athlete and the team responded they dug in we climbed that mountain
and we did have help with pandemic bringing us a lot more people we doubled during the pandemic
from 50 million to i think we're, we're at 99 million registered athletes.
So we have, the team knows I love analogies. We had the right sales up when the wind started to
blow. We got that tailwind from the pandemic and it accelerated our business. And so now we can
imagine a very different outcome as a result for this company.
We were 2019. It was, how do we get this back on track?
Now it's how do we make the most of this opportunity?
And for me personally,
I've had to really rethink everything from what's my purpose,
what motivates me to be the person who can lead this company.
And what I'm reconnecting with is this is what we intended all along is that Mark and I create something that we want to stick with and stay with for decades. So finding that path back
personally out of the abyss that I was in is tied integrally to what Strava means for that future for me. I don't at all ascribe to the idea that
I saved Strava, but Strava saved me, brought me back from something. And where we have now,
what we have to look forward to, what we can imagine for the future of the company and the
community we're building for is a much, much richer experience,
doing more for athletes all the time,
investing in what they'll be able to experience years from now,
how it will be a part of their active life
for as long as they live.
Because we've built sustainability
into the core of the business.
Yeah.
So one of the really difficult things in 2019 when you're changing
the the fundamental model of a business under the pressure of a cash crunch as they call it
where cash is running out because you're not comfortable and you can't raise is you gotta
let some people go and it sometimes feels like a bit of a contradiction of values
that when you're a family, you know, you have that kind of family community connection,
you really care about the people, but then there's got to be a decision at some point to
say goodbye to some of them, involuntarily, and for the greater interest of the company.
You had to do that, right, in 2019? Yeah, that was November 1st. So November 2nd was how we're going to get this company back to winning
again.
November 1st was we have to let in that time.
It was a little over,
I think 32 people go out of,
out of the 200 or so that were there.
So,
uh,
really tough way for your first day back on the job.
But what was even harder was that the deep wound
it created in that family,
that sense of we didn't think this would happen here.
How come we didn't know?
That feeling of, can I trust leadership?
And they didn't know me.
I wasn't like I was a host.
I was not around nearly for most of the people in the company at that time. They weren't hired during the time
that I was the CEO. The first time they knew that I was a founder, they knew I'd been helping out
as an interim CFO, but I wasn't really a presence for in, in leadership for them.
So there was just the basic level of needing to rebuild trust, needing to say,
not only do we have a plan, but you're a really important part of the plan.
And here's how I show that you can trust me, or here's how I want to build a relationship so that
over time you will trust me. That period of time in November and December and January, I remember, I think just the level of
how much we thought about every word we said was aimed at the objective of getting people to
believe again. Compared to today, where I think people believe and maybe what we're changing,
what we focus on now is getting
them to understand what our potential is. They believe that we are going to be successful, but
I think we, today, I focus so much of my effort is making sure people connect with what our
potential really is and how we're going to get there. Whereas in 2019, it was all about believing
we even had one, a future. Today, the company looks very different from, in some respects,
to the company that you and Mark set out to build. There's now hundreds of people. When you started
out, you wanted 20 or 30 in this company. You weren't going to do what you did last time.
Yeah. And we do talk about that. It's like, this is very different than what we had imagined,
you know, something that was additive to it's additive in a very different way, but something
that where we could by and large, not give up so much of our personal life for the sake of
the company that what we're creating and it is consuming. And that And so what part of that is, well, this is what we should have
expected if we were going to be successful. It's just a given. You have to do it this way.
And what part is it you need to create the structure so you can maintain that measure of
I'm still Michael Horvath apart from Strava. Strava is not my 100% of my identity.
That's something I struggle with.
And it's really important because I don't think I'll be as good a leader
if my identity is completely wrapped up in this company.
I need to have that level of commitment that says,
I'm here, this is super important to me,
but I have to be myself.
I cannot define myself as this is the thing
that makes me who I am.
What's the risk?
Well, for someone who's a rather emotional person,
you'll bring your emotion to the decision in an unhealthy way
if your identity is wrapped up in the company.
So what I strive for is thinking,
what is in the best interest of Strava?
And when I wake up in the morning, I ask myself the question, what am I doing today
to help connect people to the full potential of what we can create?
And that sometimes it's the obvious things, making sure that we have the right set of priorities,
executing against a longer-term strategy, not churning people around with different ideas, limiting how many
things I throw into the room. Some days it's about, do we have the right team? Do we have to add
someone or take someone away from the team? Those are hard choices for someone who's pretty,
I call it, I say emotional, but I have a lot of feeling. And so that's the part that I feel like I suppress
a lot is like, I can't feel as much. I can't let myself feel everything I want to feel
because I feel it will come out in ways that are not healthy, not in the best interest of the
company. So what gets me through that is like, well, that's not, this is me as the CEO of this company. It's not me, Michael Horvath.
That's another person who will live on.
I'm not going to be the CEO forever.
So I will have a life that's my life.
And what is that life?
What is in that life that is mine, that isn't the company's?
One thing is, for example, everyone in the company knows this.
I love to cook.
It's, I feel like it's an incredibly valuable creative outlet. I love to cook for other people.
There's nothing better than to imagine a meal, design it, think of it, think it through,
get all the ingredients, make the dinner and have your friends or your family sitting around a table and enjoying what you've
created that for me that is that is part of my identity and so finding like that's that's that's
a core belief in if you you got to give some time for that you got to you got to invest in that you
you you create the space for it as a way to say it's still there's still a part of me that's not the company has that specific issue of identity evolved or changed in you since anna passed
yeah um that's a really really
interesting and like that the way i think about it is i had to not rediscover who I am.
I had to define who I am after my life with her.
I was dramatically changed by my life with her.
I don't go back to being the person I was without her.
I am somebody who is now discovering who am I as the survivor of that life with her.
That doesn't happen overnight.
I think my first inclination was to try to make it happen
as quickly as possible, get on with it,
find out who you are.
And I think, well, at least what I learned was
you can make some pretty,
what you think are good choices or good moves and you realize that's not you. That's not the what you, you're still thinking of the life you had and wanting to recreate, find, fill the hole that's missing.
You know, the deep wound, you're trying to sort of fill that with something when there's something yet to be
discovered about what you really, who you really are on the other side of this.
So as I said, I wasn't thinking at all of going back to Strava, joining, you know,
coming back to the company. I wasn't thinking of starting another company.
I didn't know what it was going to be. I imagined it was going to be something like
deep sense of rescuing people somewhere. Like this idea that what I couldn't save my wife, but I'm going to go find other people to save.
But that isn't it. That was just that, that again was like this idea
that I'm trying to solve the hole in my heart
by finding people I can help.
And what I've,
though it wasn't that what I chose
or how I thought I would get
that sense of purpose again,
that sense of who I am, it is through Strava. It is through running this company and connecting back to what we tried to create. The idea we had
in 1995, the thing we came back to in 2006, the way in which we've built this team around our
ABCs with the future we can have, the company that we will be in 20 and 30 years i can contribute
something to that now and that's what is that is where where i have found that sense of
completeness again so we have a closing tradition on this podcast which is the previous guest writes a question for the next guest. So, so clever. Okay.
What should the average person optimize their life for if their goal is fulfillment?
Said another way, how is fulfillment achieved?
I believe we are what we do every day. And what I mean by that is that it's not the big moments. It's not the
thing we strive for for several years and achieve at one moment in time or the big trip we take or
call it the peaks that actually give us the most meaning.
They are important.
But what really defines who we are is what we do every day.
And so if what you do every day is put a little effort into being active,
being kind to the people who are important to you in your life
and the complete strangers,
if that's how you in your life and the complete strangers
if that's how you walk through life then that's where you're going to find the meaning
so fulfillment i believe comes from being intentional about what we do every day
amen and you said to you you said it correctly you said that you don't realize that you then you then have that impact on others well i've have a podcast and tens of millions of people download it and i bang on about the fact that i changed and what that does for people who are
struggling like i used to struggle with all these false starts in their fitness journey
is it lets them know that it is also possible for today to be the day where you where you begin that
journey in your life and again if you think about the catalyst there that that strava moment at the
start of my journey and how many tens of millions of people have now heard me talk about this um
it's incredible the the ripple effect across the ocean by one small catalyst so thank you thank you Thank you.