The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish - #23 Ray Dalio: Life Lessons from a Self-Made Billionaire
Episode Date: October 11, 2017Are you in love with your own ideas regardless of how good they are Would you like to make better decisions and fewer mistakes? Would you like to improve the most important relationships in your life?... These are just some of the topics I discuss with my guest, Ray Dalio. Ray Dalio is the founder of the world’s largest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, and is the author of the new book Principles: Life and Work. He is also a leading figure in the world of philanthropy, is an avid supporter of transcendental meditation, and has appeared on Time magazine’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world. Ray gave me over an hour and a half of his time, and I didn’t waste a minute of it. Go Premium: Members get early access, ad-free episodes, hand-edited transcripts, searchable transcripts, member-only episodes, and more. Sign up at: https://fs.blog/membership/ Every Sunday our newsletter shares timeless insights and ideas that you can use at work and home. Add it to your inbox: https://fs.blog/newsletter/ Follow Shane on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/ShaneAParrish Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome to the Knowledge Project.
I'm your host Shane Parrish, the curator behind the Farnham Street blog,
which is an online community focused on mastering the best of what other people have already figured out.
The Knowledge Project is a place where we look at interesting people, ideas, and uncover frameworks to make better decisions, live life, and understand reality.
On this episode, I have Ray Dalio.
Ray is the founder, chair, and co-chief investment officer of Bridgewater Associates.
Bridgewater started out of a two-bedroom apartment in New York in 1975 and has grown into the largest hedge fund in the world and one of the most important private companies in the United States.
As you'll hear from this conversation, this was no fluke.
We talk about why Ray punched his boss in the face, his principles for living and work, the nuances of Bridgewater's culture,
technology, why so few people deal with reality, mental models, how to build an idea,
meritocracy, and how to make better decisions, and there's so much more.
Intellectually, raise answers will cause you to question why things aren't more like this.
They might just change the way you live.
I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did.
I want to start with this story.
of you punching your boss in the face.
Can you tell me a little bit about that?
Well, I was, he and I were drunk on New Year's Eve.
And, you know, and we had this playful, fun, challenging relationships.
And I decked him.
And he then crashed the car when he went home and his wife chewed him out.
And I figured that I was going to lose my job.
And then he came in the next day or the day after and with a black eye.
And he had no problem with me.
And he said, hey, listen, that was what it was like.
You know, we just, you know, it was a moment and it was fun.
And I had a lousy New Year's Eve, but no hard feelings.
And we got past that.
Why are you interested?
Oh, I'm interested in that story because it's the story that everybody kind of talks about.
But nobody really knows a lot of the details behind.
I mean, it's something you've released before, but...
I was at a certain age, and I had a certain kind of, you know, spirit, I would say.
I don't know what you call it, but I was a little bit, you know, wild at the time.
And, you know, anyway, it was, it's interesting to evolve, you know.
Tell me what a day looks like for a typical day, if there is one for the world's largest hedge fund manager.
Well, I wake up and immediately check what the markets and the news are doing.
And then I was in a stage where I used to run the company and then deal with the markets simultaneously.
So I was juggling both things.
Now I'm in a stage where I'm just following the markets and the economics.
It's not a fast-paced type of existence.
It's more of a thoughtful type of existence.
So I've got a group of brilliant people I come in.
We usually hit a big meeting.
It'll usually be a research meeting.
We're examining something that is happening.
Everything happens over and over again.
Everything, we think of this as everything's another one of those.
So by being able to look at history and make the connections and examine how the mechanics,
of the cause-effect relationships are, that's what we spend a lot of time doing.
And then we convert those rules, those principles, into algorithms.
So through the day, I'm doing that mostly and reflecting on, mostly on the markets with interesting people.
And we debate a lot.
So, and that'll carry through the day.
I imagine everybody's throwing information at you.
How do you filter what's valuable and what's noise?
Well, I don't let them randomly throw the information on, you know, I'm very stepping back.
I'm much more like to go to kind of a, what I might describe as a higher level.
There's the blizzard that everybody's normally in.
And that's where they're caught with all these things coming at them.
And I prefer to go above the blizzard and just organize.
So I'm, it's organized that way.
I also should say that I meditate.
So I started my day when you gave me the question as I started my business day.
I should say I also find that meditation has been fantastic and I do that regularly.
So I want to always maintain an equanimity, not get caught in the blizzard to try to be more strategic.
And so I don't, I manage that.
Tell me the story about how you came to transcendental moment.
meditation? Well, it was 1969 and the Beatles had meditated and went to India and I read about it and
it became popular and I was curious about it. So I took my, I don't remember it was, it was very
$50 fee and my flowers and I went to this place and I learned how to meditate. And it, one of the
most important greatest things in my life because it allowed me to have an equanimity.
You want me to describe a little bit?
Yeah, please do you.
Yeah, please do you.
What it's like.
Okay, it's a simple exercise, really, in which one has a mantra, which is a sound or a made-up word.
And when you repeat it over and over again with your breath, it takes your mind away
from your thoughts, and it directs those attentions to your mantra, and then when you keep
doing that, the mantra disappears, and you go into your subconscious. And when you're in
your subconscious mind, that's extremely powerful because so much comes from our subconscious
mind. That's where our creativity comes from, you know? That's what intuitions and all of that
happens, and so it opens a passageway between one's subconscious and one's conscious. So
you're not in an unconscious state like sleeping, and you're not in a conscious state. And so
that exercise, it allows you to completely eliminate stress and it fosters creativity. Because
when you think of creativity, it's not that you go muscle it. It's more like, you know,
you take a hot shower and these great ideas come to you. Well, that's what happens. So meditation
creates that equanimity, it creates that vehicle for the connection between the subconscious
and the conscious, and it allows creativity.
And I really think that then the reconciliation of what is subconscious and what is logical
is very powerful, because your instincts, your intuitions and so things, those sort of
things may be invaluable insights and they may be wrong. And when one can reconcile their subconscious
thoughts, those instincts, those intuitions with their logic in the consciousness, it's very,
very powerful. So that gives me an equanimity that helps keep me out of the blizzard.
Was this something that took off right away for you or was it something that you had to work at
to establish this? You mean the ability to get to that spot? It's a practice. It's a simple
simple exercise and the more you do it the more you get better at it and you know the deeper
you go the easier it is it's like I suppose if you were doing yoga or you were doing almost
anything you get better with time I assume the Beatles were a pretty big influence on you
if you've kind of followed this well I like the Beatles but it wasn't as much that as you
know the practice the practice of meditation was way more than the Beatles
Beatles were interesting and a good rock group, and I love music.
My dad was a jazz musician, and I love music.
But it wasn't the Beatles.
It was this thing I tripped along on the meditation.
Who were your biggest influences over maybe the 70s and 80s, kind of?
Well, I think if you take the 60s and the 70s and then you get into the 80s,
What affected me was it was an era of aspirational ideological, ideological ideals.
So you have to understand, let's say, John Kennedy, if you start off, was a man who believed that we were going to conquer out of space, eliminate poverty, and produce equal rights.
And so he was a very charismatic figure.
And all through my life, there were people.
who were inspirational, I will call them shapers.
They will visualize the future.
It was an era when the United States was the most powerful country in the world, still
is, of course, but in a way different.
We counted for 40% of the world's economy, we were nominate in almost any respect.
And the reaching for the stars literally was all part of that aspirational, that greater thing.
And so when you take that, and then we went into an era of that creative rebelliousness,
and I would say that I admired Steve Jobs, Martin Luther King, those people who were rising
above and having that, people who I would consider to be highly principled people.
And also, so then, you know, there were just so many of those types of people at the time.
Were you a big reader?
I wouldn't say I was a big reader.
I was, and of course it depends on my age when I'm asking that question.
No, I wasn't a big reader.
I was a big experiencer more.
You know, I like experiences.
Tell me the story about how Bridgewater almost went bankrupt.
So I started Bridgewater in 1975, so pick up where we last left off.
Punch my boss, didn't get fired that time, not long after that, did another, had another
incident, and got fired.
And that was 1975.
But the clients at the time, Shearson was the firm that I was working with, we were, we
which were big hedgers at the time,
wanted to continue to work with me,
and so they paid me fees, and I started out.
So from 1975 until 1982, 82 is the period.
Can you imagine this?
It was seven years of building a business,
making a lot of good and bad decisions,
but many more good ones and bad ones,
and built up my little business.
And then in 1982,
I had calculated that a number of countries
would not be able to,
pay back their debts to American banks, and the American banks had 250% of their capital out
to them in loan, so they were going to go bankrupt. And this was a very controversial point of
view. I mean, people, I thought we're going to have an economic collapse, because the banks
wouldn't collapse. And then what happened is, lo and behold, on August 1982, Mexico defaults
its debts and people started to see this and that led me to getting a lot of attention so as
a put on Wall Street week I was asked to testify to Congress to help them understand this debt
crisis and so on and so forth and I thought we were going into a depression and this was the
worst economy ever and it turns out if you look at the exact bottom in the stock market
In August, 1982, when Mexico defaulted, that was the exact bottom in the stock market.
And that's because the Federal Reserve printed money and did any interest rates and so and so forth.
But that was totally wrong.
So I lost clients and it cost me money.
And I had to let everybody I who worked with me go.
And we were a very tight group of people.
So it was like losing extended family.
I was so broke that I had to borrow $4,000 from my dad, and I had to make a choice.
Am I going to go to work for somebody else, or am I going to work through this?
And this, so it was a terrible experience, but it turned out to be maybe the most valuable
experiences or one of the most valuable experiences in my life because it changed my approach
to decision-making.
I went from thinking, you know, I'm right to asking myself, how do I know I'm right?
In other words, how do I triangulate?
It gave me the humility I needed to balance with my audacity.
And so then it gave me an open-mindedness.
And from that point forward, everything was better.
We can get into, but what changed?
That raised my probabilities of being right and managed and allowed me to manage risk.
So for that point forward, you know, everything became better, really, until today.
And that's what I'm trying to convey in the book.
If I can convey that to people at this stage of my,
life. My goal is to pass along the most valuable things I've learned. And really, that
is the most valuable thing I learned. Would you say that was the seed of when the principles
started? Yeah. It was, what I learned was the value of thoughtful disagreement. I learned
a few things. I learned radical open-mindedness. I think the greatest tragedy of mankind and
the greatest tragedy of most people is to hold opinions in their head that are wrong,
that they're attached to, and that they don't stress test.
It's so easy to take those ideas and properly put them out there in an idea meritocratic way
and have them stress tests which raises the probabilities of being right.
So I learned radical open-mindedness.
And I'll explain what an idea meritocracy is like because I'd like to do that.
I learned how to balance risks better, right?
So I learned that if how I could reduce my risk was without reducing my returns by being
able to literally structure my bets in a more diversified way.
And I learned also to look at history of things that never happened in my lifetime.
Whenever I was surprised, and I think whenever most people it's surprised, it's because of
something that never happened in their lifetime before, but it happened before.
So it doesn't happen in their context, but it happened, so you don't see it, so you don't
think about it.
That's right.
Like the 2008 financial crisis.
In the 2000 financial crisis, almost everybody thought that was unplausible.
The only reason we were able to anticipate it and benefit from it is because we felt that
it was necessary to understand what had happened in the 30s and what happened before, because
the same things happen over and over again. And once you get the idea that they just may not
have happened in your lifetime, it could be a hurricane, it could be a plague, it could be whatever
it is. Some things happen once every 75 years, particularly debt crises and those kinds of
things. So that, so those were the three things. The three things were first to know how to have
an idea of meritocratic decision making, knowing that I might be wrong, having that fear. The
second was really knowing how to balance my bets. And the third was really how to gain a perspective
in which I see the same things happening over and over again beyond my lifetime and can write
down principles for them. So they answer your question in terms of the principles. Yeah,
I got into an exercise that I'd recommend for everybody out there. Whenever you're making a
decision that's an important decision, you're used to just making that decision. You're used to just making that
decision of moving on, I developed an exercise that I would write down my criteria for making
those decisions. So that would be my principles. So you had a decision journal almost. A decision
what? A journal about how you... Yes, a decision journal, right, which are those written principles,
which are really what is in the book mostly. So one by one, how do I make that decision? What are the
cause-effect relationships? So when another one of those comes along, I remember it and I
communicate it. And this has been invaluable to me also in dealing with people because we could
deal with each other better. I can have those stress tested. It's reasonable you look at that and you say
if this thing came along, would you do this the way I'm describing? Would you operate by that
principle? And you can have back and forth and refine the principles. Then that leads one to think
in a principled way rather than in the snowstorm that you're talking, this blizzard of everything
that comes at people. Instead, it's like you look at everything and you see everything is another
one of those. So like a duck or a species, right? You think, okay, what species is it? How do I deal
with that species in the most effective way? And then I found out that I could put those into
algorithms. In other words, that, you know, starting 30 years ago, I was able to say if I had
that criteria, you know, we called them formulas then. Now they're algorithms.
But I would write down, if this happened, then do this, and I would write that down.
And then I learned how the computer could be a partner.
And so it changed everything by writing those principles down and then also putting them to algorithm.
It changed my relationships with people.
It allowed us to have an idea of meritocracy.
How instant was that from the kernel of kind of almost going bankrupt to knowing,
that you had to start stress testing your ideas against other people and other ideas and
developing principles for making decisions? Was that like an overnight thing? Well, no, it's
one thing leads to another and it's an evolutionary thing over, I guess the biggest reaction
to that probably happened over the next, let's say, two years or something. First, there's the pay
And then there's the dilemma.
The dilemma is how do I not let this happen again?
Or avoid it, yeah.
But also not lose the upside.
In other words, there's this upside and I want to grab the outside.
I want to have the greatest life I could possibly have and be right.
But also the greatest upside produces downside.
So it started me to go into the calculation of how I could do that.
But it also just naturally gave me a humility, you know.
And then I was at that juncture.
Do I go to work for somebody else or do I do this?
So over that period of time, then you do something and then you find out how that turns out
and then you modify it and modify it.
But it told me, idea meritocratic decision making is the best.
decision making. In other words, that if you do this well, you will radically improve what your
decisions are. There are only two things you need to do to be successful. First, you have to know
what the best decisions are, and second, you have to have the courage to do them. But you
might think in your head that you have those right decisions. When you start to realize that
there's a world out there and that you know how to sort through those things to find out
the best decisions are. You radically raise your probability. So it was the evolutionary process
of seeing that and not giving up on that. You know, thoughtful disagreement is not an easy thing
for a lot of people. People are instinctually reluctant to disagree. That's a great barrier,
right, to learning. So it, you know, that was a journey of how we could, you know,
disagree well and have an idea of meritocracy. So what is an idea of meritocracy?
Well, an idea of meritocracy is when the best ideas win out.
And the way that you have to have it, there are three steps that you have to do.
First, you have to put your honest thoughts out there.
A lot of people have problems doing that, but you have to welcome others doing it and you have to do it,
so you have to put them on the table to look at them.
Second, you have to have thoughtful disagreement.
In other words, the ability to take in and have a back and forth in a quality way
so that you can make better decisions than you could make individually.
And we have protocols for doing that that are described in the book.
And then third, you have to have ways that if disagreements remain,
that you think are fair, appropriate, agreed upon ways of getting past that disagreement
because not everybody's going to get what they want.
And the problem that most people have at that point is that either there is an autocratic decision
maker or a democratic decision maker.
Neither those work well.
The autocratic decision maker is just the guy who's the boss who says, okay, well, now I'm
going to do this.
That's a problem because others don't own it and how do you know that you're right?
You can't be arrogant.
And then there's democratic decision making.
And that means everybody has the same votes, the same opinion.
that's not sensible because they have different merits to that.
So if you have an idea of meritocracy, you have to know also the merit of people's thinking.
And so we go through the process of being able to identify in fair ways, in ways that we all agree to,
of ways of knowing what's the merit of each things.
And we literally have scores of these tests and whatever they are that become the scores.
So we have believability weighted voting.
So, I mean, literally, if I'm running something and we're at a group and three people who have higher levels of believability than I do think that it should be one thing and I think it should be something, there's going to be a questioning back and forth.
I put myself in the mode of a learner so that I can take in and then make the best decision.
You have to know that the best decision that you can make isn't necessarily the one that you're attached to that's in your head.
Right.
That's idea of meritocratic decision making.
I like that a lot.
I want to talk about, like, how do people adjust to an environment like that where they
have a believability score?
What is believability?
Believability means that some people have a greater probability of having a better insight
or a better opinion than something else.
I'll use an example.
You have a medical problem.
Okay, your own believability on the subject is low.
Right.
You go to a doctor.
Okay.
That doctor has a certain level of ability.
Another doctor has another level of believability.
You want to handle it well?
Go to three highly believable people who are willing to disagree with each other
and hear that disagreement and interact and bring out that disagreement and see where there's
agreement so that you get to the other side so when you either have agreement,
or you understand the disagreements, you're then in a position to make a better decision.
That's an example of believability-weighted decision-making.
Then there's just the mechanics of how you get to assign each person the believability.
But if I use that example with your doctor, that's how you're making that decision.
That's what believability-weighted decision-making is.
So regarding your question of what it's like and so on.
I have this belief that everybody goes in going, of course, I want to be a part of
this environment and then they get in and there's this dose of reality that comes with it.
Exactly. That's what it is. Okay. So before anyone joins Bridgewater, we explain to them
all of this and what their challenges are going to be and so on because they're not used to
operating this way. Our educational system doesn't allow it. Our work environments doesn't allow
it. There's so much that stands in the way of doing that. So the first thing is do you
intellectually want it, because there are two U's in you, really, in your brain. There's the
thoughtful intellectual part of the brain, the prefrontal cortex that is thoughtful. And you said,
I would like to know, I would like to know what people think, I would like to be able to fully
convey what I think, I would like to work myself through this idea of meritocratic, I would like
to know my weaknesses. Do you want to know your weaknesses or do you not want to know your
weaknesses. I'd like to get to know my weaknesses. So those people intellectually come and they say
I'm going, I buy into that. Okay. Then there's an emotional part of the brain. That emotional part of
the brain comes, it's genetically programmed from literally millions of years ago in which there's a
part of our brain in the amygdala which has this fight or flight thing. And when there's
that kind of frankness and that kind of exploration of one's weakness,
people can think that they're being attacked instinctually.
So why wouldn't you want to know those things out of curiosity to have a quality back and forth?
So there's an emotional.
So when people come in, they understand very well that they have their two U's, we call it their two U's,
that are going to struggle with each other.
So they're prepared for the struggle.
And then they go through it.
And that's largely what happens.
As they go through it, they regularly encounter it.
And because they're mindful of it, they know it's there to use struggling with it.
And then also struggling with others who see things differently to pass through that.
And so that exercise is what they go through.
And most, we call it getting to the other side.
Because when you go through that, you know, you're recognized you're faced with the choice.
Do you want to go back to an environment in which people are hiding things and the office is a political environment and you don't really know what's going on?
and you can't speak up and nobody else can speak up.
So when they intellectualize, they work themselves through it.
And we say when they get to the other side, it's great.
Like they love it.
They don't want to operate any other way because they know even their weaknesses.
They can be more of themselves.
A big part of this is that we have meaningful work and meaningful relationships.
They're equal priorities.
And they reinforce each other.
So to know that people are helping them through that, that this is not an environment in which there's somebody trying to hurt you, but to explore what's true by going through that exploration of what is true and doing it in an idea meritocratic way where there's that meaningful relationships, it helps people get to the other side.
Then those who make it to the other side really don't ever want to work anywhere else in the sense that.
that they start to think, you know, first of all, the relationships are important and that, that's healthy.
So it's a transition.
It's probably like a transition of trying to eat healthy and exercise and do those types of things.
Typically takes about 18 months.
Who thrives in that?
Like, what are the markers for someone that's less likely to succeed and what are the indicators that somebody is more likely or more probable to succeed?
It is that what I guess I would describe as the capacity to rise above oneself, to look down on oneself.
In other words, that combination of need to understand as well as open-mindedness.
We describe it as the balance of assertiveness and open-mindedness.
to know that you're not blindly following, that you have an opinion, you have an independent
thing, and to know that that opinion simultaneously can be wrong and to then be curious.
So to find out how do I know whether I'm wrong and do that in an idea meritocratic way,
people who can juggle those two things can make it.
Would you say that's almost a continuum that you're constantly sliding on,
depending on the type of decision you're making and the people that are in the room,
maybe based on the believability of their opinions,
you should shift more towards an open mind versus, if not,
or am I thinking about that in the wrong way?
I think what you're saying is absolutely true.
I think the big question is,
do you have a whole lot of both open-mindedness and curiosity when you're entering that?
I could say whatever meeting I'm in with whoever I'm on, and whether they're the least
experienced, I know that's a valuable exchange.
And the reason I know that that's a valuable exchange, whether I'm at the highest level
of expertise with a person, in other words, they are up here at the highest or maybe knows
a lot more than I, it's still going to be a valuable exchange.
And knowing that is valuable.
And the reason I'm saying it's a valuable exchange is, first of all, in a
community, respecting the fact that that person has the right to understand is important.
At the same time, I think it's important for the parties to try to think, am I a teacher,
student, or peer?
Because if I'm speaking with somebody who really knows a lot more about them, something,
I want to be asking more questions than I want to be sharing opinions.
Right.
And vice versa.
It should be generally vice versa or if it's a peer.
So by knowing something, keeping in mind what that situation is, it helps in the navigation.
You know, like I'm very curious what a very smart, respected person disagrees with me.
Right.
Right.
Because then you want to know why, what is the essence of my missing something?
Right.
And if somebody who's much less experienced or less capable disagrees with me, I'm still curious.
But the first exercise we probably should go through maybe is they're asking questions.
But the more I know that they have the answers, you know, the quicker I want to switch to a open-minded, you know, more peer type of exchange.
So you're correct in that knowing that is helpful.
But it's never the case that the open, that the discussion shouldn't be along those lines, particularly in a community.
What advice would you have for somebody who works for an organization that doesn't support an idea meritocracy, but they want to learn and get better?
Well, I think the first thing you have to decide is what is the most important things for yourself, right?
if it's the case that everybody has the right to make sense of things, the right
and obligation to make sense of things.
Now, if you're an environment that doesn't allow that, it doesn't allow you to ask questions
and do those explorations, for me, you know, frankly speaking, I couldn't do that.
I just couldn't do that.
For somebody else, that may not be a problem.
So you have to decide for yourself first, you know,
is what is the right environment? What do you like? What's important? If it's a really high
important thing to you, then you will find it. It may not be at that job. It may be at the next
job. It may not be 100% exactly the way you want it. But you can find a by and large way
of finding it. And it's not just the organization you're with. It's the relationships you're in.
because this doesn't end up just with your organization.
It's like if you're having a partner, how do you deal with your partner?
It could be a spouse, it could be anybody.
How are, how do you, what's your relationship?
How are you going to get past disagreement?
So it's the same three questions.
Can you put your honest thoughts on the table to look at together?
Yeah.
Can you have thoughtful disagreement on how to get past it?
And when you disagree, do you have an ability to, what is your mechanism to get
past that disagreement? Do the principles that bind you together? Are they more important than the
ones that divide you? What are your principles? These same things apply in personal relationships as well as
work relationships. Are people more successful at Bridgewater coming in at, say, above 30 or
written out of school? It really doesn't make too much difference, although the reasons make
differences. The people who come directly from school are, tend to be a little bit more
arrogant, no little bit less, and go through a transformation that's pretty much easier.
They're more adaptable. So that's why they're prone to like it, but also depending on whether
they can get over the arrogance part, it will be important. The person who comes later in career
who likes Bridgewater is so sick of the organization that they work for.
And the bureaucracy and all of that.
So that it's like an oasis.
So they come with different perspectives, you know.
It's equally likely to succeed or fail any of those groups.
It depends on their perspective, though.
They have different perspectives.
Your principles are packed with kind of mental models of how you think we should
calibrate to the world, which of them are the least well understood or misunderstood?
The most is this issue of thoughtful disagreement. So thoughtful disagreement, also what the
purpose of these principles are like. So sometimes people think that the thoughtful disagreement
is a being mean with people. And sometimes people also think that another misunderstanding is
that these principles are like a dogma, okay?
Is this, is Bridgewater a cult?
Is it a dogma or something like that?
Where it's the exact opposite.
In other words, it's an idea meritocratic.
If we don't have ground rules about how we can challenge each other and do those things,
we would not be able to have an idea meritocratic environment.
So it's, you know, it's erratically trans.
So those would be the two things, you know, are we being mean?
No, we're not being mean.
We have tough love with each other.
Right.
Okay, that's what it is.
No, it's not meanness.
And secondly, it's an idea meritocracy that allows radically different points of view
to be thrashed through and gotten past rather than something that's asking everybody to behave the same way.
In the book, you talk about tough love as being one of the best gifts you can kind of give somebody.
Do you tell me about that, walk me through why you think that's the case?
Well, because the most important thing I can give anybody is strength, right?
That feedback, that critical feedback, that toughness to let you strive, to let you make mistakes.
I talk in the book about how it's important to make mistakes and how making a mistake.
is not a problem that not learning from mistakes is a problem so that's difficult skin your
knees strive develop that those strengths that's what tough love is if you spoil somebody so to speak
if you if you're if you don't do those things that allows them to get better that's not in my
opinion you know true love that's not that's not helpful so tough love if you could think about that
I gave the example of Vince Lombardi and the old, you know, in the football in terms of that.
The image of tough love is a, it's a healthy thing.
And it's a particularly difficult kind of love to give because it's often not appreciated, you know, at that point.
Because what are you doing or give me what I want?
It's human nature.
But if you really understand that it's good for somebody and it's good for the community, it's very important.
Has your implementation of the principles changed over the years?
Yeah.
How?
Well, you know, in so many different ways.
You know, first, you know, we just lived the principles.
Then we had to write them down and agree on them.
Then we put them in algorithms.
Then we develop tools.
So you saw the tool in the TED Talk.
I would say to your listeners, if you go 16-minute TED Talk,
you'll get the idea of what's going on.
Yeah, phenomenal TED Talk.
The dock collector.
Yeah, so you'll see a tool, right?
The dock collector.
It'll give that perspective.
So you could see technology evolved,
all sorts of things evolved over that period of time.
So it evolved over, you know, 40 years, I guess.
The new Mitsubishi Outlander brings out another side of you.
Your regular side listens to classical music.
Your adventurous side rocks out with the dynamic sound Yamaha.
Regular U owns a library card.
Adventurous U owns the road with super all-wheel control.
Regular side, alone time.
Adventureous side journeys together with third row seating.
The new outlander.
Bring out your adventurous side.
Mitsubishi Motors, drive your ambition.
What other technology tools do you have internally to aid in decision-making or give people feedback?
We have a number of, we have a dispute resolver.
Okay, so if there's a dispute, you sort of push this button and it's an app and it takes you through the paths of resolving that dispute and it breaks down disputes in terms of types of dispute.
If it's just you and somebody arguing, then it will say it'll make suggestions.
For example, you both mutually agree on who a moderator for that dispute would be, a moderator or a judge and so on.
So there's one level of dispute.
And there's another level of dispute, which is like a case.
But it is a, it's a created pathway to resolve a dispute, like a legal system.
So that if you have now a dispute with your neighbor, because something happened, you have a pathway to follow.
So we've created a tool called a dispute resolver that does that.
We have, oh, just, we have a thing called people pro.
profiles that show profiles of different people. We have a thing called a meeting tracker.
So it's the it's a computerized version of watching what's going on and then synthesizing the
whole picture of what everybody's thinking so that anybody can look into that meeting and
see everybody's participating it through other people's eyes.
There's a tool that we help people go from pain to progress.
You know, as I mentioned in the book,
an expression, pain plus reflection equals progress.
So we have a thing called a pain button.
And the pain button means that if you have psychological pain at the moment,
it makes it very easy to capture what type, the facts about it.
Is it with this person while you're in it?
Then you come back to it and then it prompts you through reflections.
Like, what are you going to do about that?
How will you handle it?
Should you have a conversation with the person?
Should you do this?
Should you do that?
And then what it does, it tracks your progress.
Are you having that same pain over and over again of the same type?
Did you follow what you set out to do in terms of that?
Or did you not follow that and so on?
So it almost works like a psychologist on a daily basis to be able to take a look at that.
It's like a double level of feedback on that.
Well, it gives you the bio.
You're giving yourself biofeedback, right?
And so, but you're looking at yourself.
It encourages the self-reflection because at the end of the day, all I want people to do
is get what they want out of life, right?
And so it's very much important for them to have that self-reflection.
And so by reconciling their emotional pain that's coming within their reflection is a very, very
powerful thing. We have a tool called a coach. So if you're in a situation and you're in
you're saying, you know, how do I think I should handle it? There's a device that says this
kind of situation. Okay, here are some principles that might help. Again, this isn't doctrine.
This is like it's the opposite of doctrine. Yeah. It is an intention that presents things easily
so that you can make the choice that when you're in that situation, okay, comment.
What should I do?
And here are the principles that might help me get through that.
A lot of these tools I'd like to get out there and make public at some point.
They're figuring out how to do that.
Because this idea of meritocratic way of operating and is knowing what you don't know
and how to get past that tragic mistake of having those ideas in your head is just so invaluable.
Are any of the tools connected to biometrics, like an Apple Watch for heart rate and stuff like that?
We haven't done that yet, though there are possibilities for doing that.
That kind of biofeedback is really valuable.
Because then you can almost hit the subconscious level of you're saying something that's
making me angry even if I don't feel it, or you're saying something making me feel something
because I can tell because my sweat pores are coming on and my heart rate is rising or...
Exactly.
Exactly.
We haven't made that connection yet, but it's something we probably should do.
you know, we'll do.
You have a culture of radical transparency.
Can you define what radical transparency is?
Well, except for a few things, a few types of things.
It's allowing people to see everything.
So what it means is all discussions, meetings are taped,
And pretty much unless it's an ultra-personal matter, we don't do that, unless it's something proprietary.
We don't do that.
But when we're encountering other things, most things, we let people see things.
And the reason is if you can't see things firsthand, you can't be part of the idea of meritocracy.
Yeah.
Right?
If somebody's talking about you behind there, why are they talking about you behind there?
Wouldn't you like to know?
Can we encourage that straightforwardness?
So it's one of those things where in order to maximize the idea of meritocracy, we want to maximize the transparency.
Now, let me be clear.
I know that that's not for everyone.
and I know it's not for every organization.
It's been fantastic for us.
And I would recommend the approach.
But I wouldn't say that in order to have an idea of meritocracy, you need to do that.
You need to go that far.
The real question is, do you want to have an idea of meritocracy?
Once you start there, then you will go down a journey that will start to take you,
into questions of like, okay, how much, how far, with whom.
The idea of meritocracy may be a narrower group of people.
So if you say it's going to be 25 people in a, I don't know, 300-person company or something,
they're still facing the question of how you are with each other.
So in one fashion or another, you're going to have to deal with,
do you not know, how do you work through the dealing, the three questions that I,
three things that I mentioned before, even in a two-person relationship, then these techniques
you will make choices about, but that radical transparency is important.
I'll say also that radical transparency is coming at you fast anyway, because we're now living
in a world where the data that you leave about yourself all over the place is meaning
that people will, you know, strangers, systems can now examine you and know you better than
people who are your close friends or your spouse, they can look at you because of the data
that you're leaving all over yourself. So it can be a bad thing or it can be a good thing.
But it's coming at you, that radical transparency. So I would encourage people, even if they're
not having radical transparency, to start to think about how they deal with this radical transparency.
radical transparency. I've found it fantastic because it gives me the, none of the meaningful
work, it gives me the meaningful relationships. You know, if you're with each other on a regular
basis and everybody understands what you're like and there's not much to hide, I mean,
there's certainly privacy, but you're generally having that kind of openness, it also makes
a better relationships. Those have been my experiences for 42 years. When it goes wrong,
how does it go wrong?
The things that can go wrong are if you have people who want to do your harm and will take information and distort the information to do your harm, I mean, that's a risk.
I would say that that would be, you know, the only risk that I've experienced and that has to be a, you know, function of how you deal with it.
Aside from technology tools, how does Bridgewater shape people's subconscious through their environment?
Well, the environment, of course, shapes people's subconscious a lot.
And it is that by having, aside from the tools, by having an environment that is like this,
that is what I would call intellectually, I view it healthy, it's like living in an environment like
a healthy environment, an environment if you were living in a community where people ate
health in a healthy way and did those habits and self-reinforced those kinds of behaviors.
So it's, and, you know, encourages that kind of reflection.
It's one of those things where the people you're around will influence you and how you are with
each other influences each other.
I love the idea of tools and kind of the baseball cards that you have because one of the
big problems in life that everybody faces, whether they know it or not, I think, is determining
whether the person they're sitting across from knows what they're talking about or they're
kind of an imposter and they sound like they know what they're talking about.
How would you go about doing that without tech tools?
Well, in one fashion, another, you first have to bring it up.
I mean, so let's just imagine you didn't have tech tools, but you have five people in a company, a startup.
The most basic thing, you don't need the tech tools, is the question of how you're going to be with each other, right?
so if you can I ask you any questions can I probe you can we see how it is after a while you're going to know what you're like and you're going to discuss it you you typically don't have that understanding because you don't talk about a lot you've got these scenarios going in your head and that other person's got those scenarios but because there's not actually truthful conversation and exploration of evidence you have problems so even when
there's disagreement we have about you know what somebody's like the fact that we can establish and
anybody can establish sort of tests okay let's try this and see how that goes and see how well you
do what can we agree our objective criteria and then we don't know what's true until we pretty
much reach an agreement ourselves so somebody's yeah there's no disagreement about strengths we
have very little disagreement about people saying you have a strain. Where you typically have
disagreement is about people having a weakness. And if the person then says, oh, I recognize that I now
have that weakness, that's the point we have to reach that we agree on it. Because if we still
don't agree on it, then we say, how do we solve that together? So that there are lots of ways that
individuals can operate in idea meritocratic ways without tools. How do you think that people can
foster this sort of open-mindedness. I mean, in your book, you kind of lay out what an open-minded
person looks like versus a close-minded person. How do we go about getting ourselves to the place
where we want to be open-minded if we're close-minded or if we don't even acknowledge it? I think
that's probably the first step. But if we do, is it like you dive in the deep end of this pool
and people are starting to give you feedback all the time now or is there a baby step?
Well, I think the first thing, the reason I wrote the book, I'm at a stage of my life
and I want to pass it along, is to have the first stage is to have people actually be able to
visualize what is it like?
What is that alternative like?
Yeah.
Okay.
And if you can visualize it and you say, I intellectually want it and that the only thing that's standing
in my way of having it.
is these emotional reactions, and now I have to develop the muscles, you know, and that
discipline to just get myself over those moments so that I can have it.
That's the most important thing.
Our whole environment does not lend itself to knowing what that alternative way of operating
is.
So I hope to paint it in that book so that people can see that what that alternative is like.
If you see the alternative, intellectually, you'll probably want it.
And if you want it, you'll do it.
Yeah.
Are people the same outside of Bridgewater as they are in the company?
Like if you have a social gathering, is it a similar?
It's almost identical.
It's almost identical.
I mean, like you're going to want it.
Now, of course, the ground rules are different, you know, and the way you navigate it is different
because people around you are different.
They may misunderstand what you're doing in terms of being straightforward.
But even there, you know, it depends on like how you're doing it.
Like if you're phrasing, let's say a complaint.
If I go to a restaurant and I don't know, the food isn't good.
and I actually, or I'd have a problem with that.
I think to myself almost in an ethical way
and if the owner comes by and he asks me,
it almost is like an ethical question that one wrestles with.
And if I was going to make a comment,
I would have to preface that comment by saying something like,
I'm trying to be helpful, you know, here is what a thing,
here's what my thought is, take it or leave it.
you know, that kind of thing.
But even more in their personal relationships,
it affects friendships,
you know, how you are with each other.
You know, the two things that I think,
the only two things I require in a relationship
are people to be reasonable,
in other words, able to reason,
and to be considerate.
And I will give people an enormous amount of that,
and I expect an enormous amount.
amount of that and that's that's in all relationships and I would say that a lot of Bridgewater
people carry that with them you know when we have a disagreement are we able to reason it through
or we're going to have temper tantrums you know I can't so people become more reasonable and more
considerate so these are carried through in a lot of ways well what are some of the other
organizations who have cultures that you admire or that are similar that you see to your
principles? I, you know, I'd be the wrong person to ask. Three wonderful psychologists,
organizational psychologists, came in and examined us. I'd particularly recommend the works of
Adam Grant. He did a book called Originals. And he examined a book. And he examined a book.
bunch of companies and he found those elements and then of another person by the name
at Harvard professor and organizational psychology by the name of Bob Keegan and he wrote a book
the deeply developmental organization and he looked at all those organizations and and contrasted
them so I would say you know they'd be better experts on it um um um
Although I think that what came through all of that was the notion of the meaningful work,
meaningful relationships, bringing mistakes to the surface, making it okay to make mistakes,
but not okay to learn from mistakes.
All of those things were in mind.
I can't really comment on a lot of organizations because I don't know them well.
To what extent do you think is leadership innate versus it can be learned?
I think it's probably almost entirely can be learned.
Of course, in terms of the development of the brain and how synapses develop and so on,
the early years has a very big influence on a lot of our personal development.
That's physiologically, psychologically, you know, known.
But I think that there's always a leader.
leadership style that can be learned. In other words, there's your way of doing it. I've given
personality tests to, well, I mentioned that in the book, Bill Gates, Elon Musk, many, many incredible, successful
people. And they all have some elements in common, and then they also have differences. And so there's a path to
leadership. There are some people who are the charismatic, extroverted leader and they find one
path. There's the person who's introverted and thoughtful, and they can find another path.
I think the key is, still in both cases, this combination of do you know where you're leading
to and how do you get that? And then how do you interact with the people so that you can bring
them along. You can make them believe or grow so that they can also help leading. Leading is a lot
the development of leaders so that they, in order to lead effectively, what you have to make
is a group of people who can be effective themselves because that's what's going to produce
the leverage and the cohesiveness. So there are different styles of being able to do that.
It's a lot learnable.
Again, I offer some thoughts that are in common in the book about that, but I think it's a lot
learnable.
Do you at Bridgewater have a formal kind of leadership development program that you put people through,
or is it?
Yes.
What does that include?
Like, what does that look like?
Well, when everybody comes in, there's a, we would call a boot camp, and that'll go for two
to three weeks that gives them an immersion into.
what the culture is like.
It might go three weeks if they're in the management boot camp,
and then they start to get skills.
And then they go into their job,
which is an apprenticeship kind of a relationship.
And then they get typically about three hours of training pertaining to the development of those skills.
And they go through experiences and we collect data on them.
They look at the data and we then recalibrate how they learn.
And then it's an evolutionary process as they grow.
We learn more about them.
They learn more about themselves.
We find out where they're better suited.
We go through a series of experiences that continues that to happen
until they continue to evolve wherever they evolve to.
Who's the mastermind kind of behind the development program?
Because I imagine it's always evolving too.
Largely, me, I had two things to do, and then I have this great team of people.
And it depends what it's like.
We have on the data collection, processing type of thing, we have a fellow by the name of Dave Faroochie,
who was the person who started and created Watson at IBM.
He's fantastic in terms of machine thinking.
And he's a key person, but we have the CEOs of the company involved.
We got people involved in, you know, how they write algorithms.
And, you know, so there's a, we have a team, a whole team that deals with training, you know,
what that is like on a daily basis.
So there's a lot, you know, there's a lot of different people do different things up
to where we are in this, it's been a very particularly important thing for me personally
to make sure that the people part of this was developing.
Basically, the business grew up under me, right?
So two things.
Investments, you know, we're talking now about the people part, the work part.
So I had run a business.
It was an entrepreneurial endeavor, and it grew,
and do quite a business.
And then at the same time, I'm thinking about economics, investments, and markets.
And so I do both of those two things.
And now I'm passing the baton.
That's why 2017, by the way, that's why I'm putting the book out.
Now?
Yeah.
2017 is my going from the second stage in my life to the third stage in my life.
It's a transition.
I've stepped out as the CEO and I'm, let's say the transition itself, when I mean second to third stage,
what I mean is in the second stage of your life, you're working and other people's are dependent on you.
First stage of your life is when you're learning and you're dependent on others.
When you get into, let's say, your 20s or when that is and you enter your second stage,
stage of your life, you're working and increasingly people are dependent on you.
And when you get to your 60s, let's say, your greatest beauty that you can have, the greatest
success is in helping other people be successful.
It's instinctual.
I want others to be successful, not me be any more successful.
Because then what happens is I can then go on to my Thursday.
stage and they can be in their second stage and it's quite normal in families like if you think
about your parents okay and you think about your kids in terms of your life when you went on to
your second stage and you became self-sufficient and you could do it all yourself they could
watch beauty happen and they became free of those obligations and their goal is to have that so that's
the transition that I'm in 2017 is my transition year that's why I wrote the book and
and it's why I'm in that process.
So that's what's going on.
Buffett said one of the things that he kind of worries about
is keeping the culture at Brookshire Hathaway when he passes.
Is that something that worries you at Bridgewater?
No, I would say it's like a family in the next generation, right?
It's now up to others to make that choice, to not be attached.
So if I have my kids who then become grown adults, I want them to make the choices that they want to make.
Now, I hope that they will make the healthy choices.
And did we, you know, do we raise them well?
Did they, you know, in other words, to make those choices.
But they need to have their own experiences and have that kind of independence.
So at that age, you let go and you enjoy them doing it their own way.
Even in the, even you can't start at that age.
You have to start at an early age that they can make their decisions.
So I don't have an attachment to that.
What I did have, most importantly, was my sense of, do I pass it along clearly and well?
That's what, in other words, my writing that book relieved me of what my responsibility is.
What others do with it is up to them.
Right.
So I did my job.
If you want to read the book and it's helpful and you're rejected or take it.
And that's true of Fitzville of Bridgewater.
Great.
Okay.
I did my job.
Now it's you to live your life.
How did the principles transfer over to the world of philanthropy?
You know, it's the same thing.
It's part of this, you know, evolution.
I started.
I didn't have any money.
And then you acquire money.
And, you know, for money, for me,
money was not very much a priority to begin with.
It just happened to be the thing that I do
produce a lot of money if you do it well.
But anyway, you evolve and you make your choices.
And I think as you go higher and higher level of evolution
and maybe as you get older,
or you also this meditation has helped me
feel connected to other people,
feel connected beyond me.
I realize I'm part of an ecosystem.
I'm an infinitesimally small part of an ecosystem.
And I really do feel that the ecosystem is much more important than me
and I can see it from that higher level kind of thing.
So I feel connected to others.
And then I think about what my incremental, what are the increments?
So, and what it can mean?
So on the margin, what is it going to mean to another person,
that amount of money. And I also view it as a life cycle thing. In other words, you know,
I don't know, you start with nothing and then you end with nothing. So it's part of that
evolutionary process. So it's like the issue of what I call spirituality. Spirituality, I don't
mean religion. I mean the notion of feeling connected to others and the whole and that if that
whole is good, then you're good kind of thing.
And so I think that one, in terms of philanthropy, it becomes a natural extension of that.
It doesn't become, for me, it has not become something that I think of even as a peripheral
activity or philanthropy or giving away.
The question is, what do you want to do?
like it's you know like I'm excited about doing some things where I feel needs to do something so
it's that kind of experience and by the way it's interesting because I thought I have a lot of money
and I have a lot of money relative to most people and then you realize through this that you
have a tiny bit of money relative to all that needs to be done
And so then that becomes, you know, this other dimension.
So I think probably philanthropy is one of those things that has come to me,
or maybe starting 10 years ago, something like that at that stage,
because of these various evolutionary considerations.
You've said that the future is going to look very different in the book.
I'm wondering what do you think will be the same?
I think that, you know, human nature changes very slowly.
So I think the, you know, the conflict between thoughtfulness and emotion individually
and between people will probably always be with us, you know, that human nature will be with us.
I think what will change there is the role of algorithmic decision-making.
I mean, I think we're largely entering an environment in which, not too exaggerate it,
but there are going to be people who are riding the algorithms that will replace the people
who are doing jobs.
And so there's going to be a bifurcation.
And I think that learning how to code is like learning how to read and write for the next generation.
And you want to be on that side of it.
And I think what will be the same is conflict between people.
That's what worries me.
It worries me because, you know, let's go back to basics.
you know as a country do the principles that bind us together are they greater than the ones
that divide us right can you know this is a time to be very clear for everybody to be very
clear what their individual principles are the president of the united states each person
the country and work ourselves through can we do this well collectively
Or are we in a fight with each other that's going to actually divide us apart?
And it's going to be more challenging because the circumstances of the people who are in,
let's call it the bottom 60% of the population are very different than they're hurting.
And it's a major problem.
Death rates are rising, just wholly different economy than those are in the, let's say,
the top 40%, let alone the top 1%.
So conflict will be the same.
Okay. How we approach it will be the same, you know. That's why I'm hoping that there can be this
idea meritocratic decision making that pulls us together and allows us to resolve those things
so that we can do those things. We could have thoughtful disagreement and then we can
have mechanisms to get past our disagreements. That conflict issue will be the same and it's
going to be a bigger issue in the future.
Do you think that that relates to kind of first order thinking versus second order
thinking?
I mean, one of the sections of your book that I love was kind of talking about people that
optimize for the first tranche versus people that optimize for the second or third or kind
of fourth layer effects to that.
Do you think that'll always be the same and it's key, right?
It's the, quite often it's the great trick of life.
you know in so many things the first order consequences the thing that you get first is like a trick
that will the opposite consequence like you know why is it that it seems like all food that
tastes good is probably bad for you I mean I'm not saying that is generally but I mean you know
why is it that why is it the things that are fun or it somehow seem to be harmful and it's the opposite
way why is it that exercise is painful and it's good for you and you know and it's the opposite it's
almost like life is tricking you in terms of putting out first order consequences and then the
second order consequences is the opposite okay now can you see that can you deal with that
because in order to get what you really want in life you're going to have to pay attention to
that second order consequence i don't care which you would you pay attention to it
at the end of the day, when I ask you, do you want to be, I don't know, fat, do you want to be
whatever, do you want to do those? So that notion of can you consider your second order
consequences and then even your third order consequences is so important. And you can, even though
you can't do it yourself maybe sometimes, by having the help of others.
I want to circle back to this algorithmic decision-making for a second.
You mentioned that it's coming, it's coming quickly.
Who do you think is at risk in a corporate job that might not think that they're at risk right now?
Well, I guess generally, generally speaking, I'd say almost anybody who isn't riding the algorithms is
is at risk.
I guess there are some things.
You know, it'll be a while before the robots
give good massages and it'll be, you know,
it'll be, you know, there are
the imagination.
It'll be a long time before those intuitions
and those imaginations
are created by computers.
Okay?
but it won't be a long time before computers produce better quality thinking.
Would you feel different if you listen to a computer-generated song or music
and you were told that it was computer-generated versus a human who had a story of craftsmanship around it?
What a great question. What a great question.
I have an attachment for the humanity, right?
So I said, but I would probably also have an admiration for the marveling of how that can be created.
So I guess I would, I would say, ah, there's that transition from the one to the other, you know.
But I would, yeah, it caused reflection that would have a little bit of excitement and a little bit of almost nostalgia, right?
You're a fierce observer of human nature.
What's the most common mistake that you see successful people make?
Well, again, the most successful, the most common mistake, I suppose, which is made less by successful people, but still is too often made by successful people, is thinking that they know the answers without having the best perspective and adequately stress testing it.
that they're taking in so they can make the absolute best decision.
Why do you think, or maybe it's a misconception on my part, but why do you think so many successful
people are unhappy?
Is it that the strategies they've chosen to become successful or making them?
Well, I think the question is a deep psychological question of what are they going after, right?
And is success going to provide that?
So, for example, if they're going after status, if they're going after the admiration of others
and so things, I don't think that that's going to bring them happiness.
Probably a lot of people who are successful or compulsive and trying to get those types of things.
So I think a lot of people versus, you know, so the question is, is,
Is it a personality disorder that is making people continue to strive to get something that
they can, that is within them and that they can have that?
So I, yeah, I don't think, why are you doing it?
You know, is it the thrill?
Right.
You know, for me, like early on, it was first the adventure.
Yeah.
You know, the thrill of the experimentation and the doing that.
And then the thrill of getting better, okay?
And then I have my own evolution.
And I describe in the book how my perspective had changed.
Wow.
How my perspective had changed from the early days to the later days.
But anyway, I won't reflect on me.
I would say that community, by the way, we're talking about happiness.
there is virtually no correlation between the amount of money one has and one's happiness
that's pretty well known past a certain basic the factor that's the highest correlation
is whether it is relationships sense of community across societies that's genetically
programmed into us it's estimated that
somewhere between a million and two million years ago,
before it was even man,
before we were the ancestors a man,
that that got programmed into us.
But anyway, it's one of the things
that's the most important source of happiness.
And when I look back on myself,
and I think what was the thing that I most was made happy by,
it was relationships, the meaningful relationships.
Intellectually, I feel I contributed something,
but the greatest source was that relationships in the community.
So a lot of people who are going after status, success, admiration,
I think the question is, are they making the most of the relationships, I think?
That's important.
So I have a question on that, because if we move to,
I mean, one of the economic ideas that countries are tossing around or even experimenting with, in some cases, are universal basic income for people that are displaced, perhaps, by technology.
How do you think that interacts with this high correlation to sense of purpose and connectedness with our peers?
How do you think that?
The universal basic income is a complex issue, but I'd say the following.
There is income and then there's usefulness.
And I think the most important, past this basic income,
taking care of some of the basics,
the most important thing is usefulness.
By the way, I don't believe that the basic things are being well taken care of.
I could digress into that a little bit.
But we have to get purpose and usefulness.
So when we talk about giving money, the real question is, what is that money best used for?
And so that concept is that the individual could decide best for himself what it's best used for.
That may be right and it may be wrong.
I can't tell you whether it's right or wrong.
My wife works in the most distressed school districts around at a very early age.
There are major problems.
We come from Connecticut.
I'm from Connecticut.
She works largely in Connecticut.
She supported the doing of the study of what percentage of the students, what are disconnected or disengaged.
A disengaged student is a student who attends school but actually doesn't participate.
They don't study.
Presenteism.
I mean, they're sitting there, but they're not doing anything kind of.
Exactly.
And then disconnected is they don't know where they are.
And 22% of the students in high school students in Connecticut are one of those two things.
That's one in five.
So the real question, I think, is at a very early age, nutrition, basic education, creating, making sure that the bottom is not, and it's not just an education thing.
It's the family that they go home to or what the circumstances are.
It's the traumas that they're having in their environment.
So these things, the question is, are those best provided in some manner by somebody else?
Or would you, if you gave that person the money, would they do the right things for the money?
And these are difficult questions, right?
I mean, my, I know that on, if we take educational opportunity, like, I didn't have anything
and I, when I grew up, the idea of equal opportunity was like a basic right and an American
dream and reality.
Not equal outcome, but equal opportunity.
Equal opportunity, right?
And that's also the beauty of immigrants who would come here and work hard and all of that,
that equal opportunity, okay?
So when I'm looking at it, I would want to try to find out what are the mechanisms of creating that equal opportunity,
you know, not equal income, but equal opportunity.
So because that usefulness, that disengaged that we're talking about, that will be replaced more by technology.
And that split that's happening is the most fundamentally important issue that we have to deal with.
I want to talk a little bit about decision making at Bridgewater.
I mean, what is the, by and large, what is the overarching process you use for decision making?
Is it we have a decision to make, we're going to get in a room and we're going to talk about it,
or is there something that we're not seeing to this?
Well, it's pretty much, we have a decision making, we get into the room to do it,
but what starts to be different from that is that rather than things,
about what our decision is we spent more time thinking about what our criteria
for making the decision is so walk me through that a little give me like can
you give me an example of how you would how you would go about doing that yeah you
have a currency crisis you have balance of payments problem rather than
decide should we sell the currency or
sell the currency. We say, what are our criteria? And then we go back into all the times in history
that that thing happened. Remember I said like everything happens over and over again?
Yeah. And if you could decide what species it is and have principles for dealing with that
species, then you know how to deal with it best. So that's the exercise of saying, okay,
what are our criteria for making decisions? Because if we can agree on those criteria,
And then when there's disagreement, rather than making disagreement about the action, you say, what is the disagreement about the criteria?
You can test the criteria?
Because if you disagree on the criteria, the decision, or if you agree on the criteria, the decision basically makes it so.
Right.
How do you go back and correct if you're wrong?
Well, same thing.
You know, you experience, okay, I'm wrong.
So this is pain plus reflection equals progress.
So you look at experiencing the pain, okay, now calm yourself down and say, okay, what would I have done differently?
And again, what I do like to do is look at all the cases in which that thing happened before, what happened differently to gain the perspective of the cause-effect relationships, and you do that.
You love your mistakes.
I mean, love the, you don't love the outcomes of any mistakes, of course, but you realize that the connection is a feedback loop.
you know, so that you get that mistake, meaning that you have to then learn.
As I say, you know, there are five steps to success.
Okay, first, your goals.
You want to have audacious goals.
You have to know what the goals are.
Second, on your way to your goals, you're going to have your problems, your mistakes.
Okay.
Okay.
So you have to identify and not tolerate your problems.
Then, third, you have to diagnose your problem.
to get at their root cause.
Okay, root cause may be your weaknesses
or somebody else's weaknesses
or maybe the mistakes.
You've got to diagnose them deeply.
So, once you have the diagnosis,
then you have a fourth step,
which is design what you're going to do differently in the future.
And then once you have that design,
then the fifth step is you've got to do it.
You have to follow through with those results.
And you keep doing that,
and it produces this looping, as I'm calling,
this evolutionary process.
So it's that process that we call it this five-step process that we're always living by.
So mistakes instinctually, which causes us to change.
My whole attitude, our whole attitude about mistakes has changed dramatically.
It's like mistakes trigger puzzles and the puzzle, if I solve the puzzle, I get a gem.
So the puzzle is, what would I have done differently, what should I do differently that would
have produced a different result?
That's a principle.
You write down the principle.
Okay, the gem is the principle that lets you do better in the future.
So it's that kind of accumulation of learning and making the connection between the mistakes
and the learning.
That's the process.
The reflection process for you is, is that maybe the most important part of that?
or if you had to or they're all interconnected obviously you need all of them you need all of them
yeah i think the reflection is probably the most important but if you're not designing your
alternative to change you're not getting anywhere if you're not following through with that
design you're not getting anywhere if you don't have your audacious goals so that you know where
you're going you're not going to get to the right place because you're not really on a trajectory
Right. So you need your audacious goals to know where you're going. You need to recognize your
problems. You need to diagnose them to the root cause. You need to do the design of what you do
differently and you need to follow through with it. What advice would you give to a high school
class of students if you had to pass along a couple sentences of wisdom?
Yeah. You know, love your mistakes.
learn from them
realize that personal evolution
and mistakes and imperfection
is a part of our lives
and know how to deal with it well
value what you don't know
even more than what you value what you do know
be radically open-minded
go for the adventure
have the adventure don't mind
falling and you know banging yourself up or scraping your knee it'll pass and make the most out
of your life by learning and evolving those would be the general themes I suppose this has been an
amazing conversation Ray I want to thank you so much for your time today thank you
Hey guys, this is Shane again.
Just a few more things before we wrap up.
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