The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish - Frank Slootman: Doing Less, Doing Better
Episode Date: August 8, 2023Frank Slootman doesn’t start companies. But no CEO has a better track record for turning the ideas of others into jackpots. On this episode of the Knowledge Project, Slootman dives deep into the no-...nonsense, results-based strategies that have made him a leading executive, including how to approach the first 90 days after taking over a company, doing less and doing better, the difference between a good sales organization and a great one, how to get the best out of people, positioning yourself for future success, and so much more. Slootman is the Chairman and CEO at Snowflake, a cloud computing–based data company which currently boasts a market capitalization of $81 billion. Prior to taking over at Snowflake im April 2019, Slootman served as the Chairman and CEO of cloud computing company ServiceNow, and he also spent six years as the President and CEO of Data Domain Inc., a venture-backed storage company. -- Want even more? Members get early access, hand-edited transcripts, member-only episodes, and so much more. Learn more here: https://fs.blog/membership/ Every Sunday our Brain Food 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 Our Sponsors: MetaLab: Helping the world’s top companies design, build, and ship amazing products and services. https://www.metalab.com Aeropress: Press your perfect cup, every time. https://aeropress.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I rarely use the word proud or pride because that signals, you know, a profound happiness with the status quo.
And I don't have that, you know, because I'm always at odds with the status quo.
That's sort of the natural malcontent posture that we have.
Yeah, we're here, but we could be there.
So what gives?
How do we get there, right?
So we're always envisioning a future that is different than the one that we're currently experiencing.
Welcome to the Knowledge Project to podcast about mastering the best of what other people have already figured out so you can apply their insights to your life.
I'm your host, Shane Parrish.
If you're listening to this, you're missing it.
If you'd like access to the podcast before public release, special episodes.
that don't appear anywhere else, hand-edited transcripts,
or you just want to support the show you love,
you can join at fs.blog slash membership.
Check out the show notes for link.
Today, my guest is Frank Slutman,
one of the most incredible operators
that Silicon Valley has ever seen.
Frank is the chairman and CEO of Snowflake.
Before that, he was the CEO of Service Now,
taking the organization from $100 million in revenue
to $1.4 billion.
Prior to that, he was the CEO of Data Domain, leading to an acquisition by EMC for over $2 billion.
I've been trying to get Frank on the show for nearly a year, but luckily, I don't give up very easily.
I wanted to talk to Frank because his no-nonsense, results-based approach really resonates with me.
In this episode, we talked about the first 90 days taking over a company.
And while there's no blueprint and each situation is different, there are common methods of thinking and principles that work
and you can apply. We also discuss one of my favorite ideas, doing less and doing better.
The difference between a good sales organization and a great one, how to get the best out
of people, positioning yourself for future success, artificial intelligence, and so much more.
It's time to listen and learn.
I think when I was thinking about where to start, I want to start with going.
going into a new company and the playbook that you use for the first 90 days.
Can you walk me through what's done before, what's done on day one, and give me some detail
over how you look at the next 90 days, because that's really the time when you can transform
a company.
Yeah, I tend to take a little bit of exception to the term playbook, like it's a cookie cutter thing,
and it's not.
It's also not a football game.
whether you know there's very precise rules on on how to play the game it's very situational
very much first principles i mean you come into a new situation and you just start processing
on what you're what you're seeing but that said yes there are things that you know you zero in
on each and every time and that is you know are there right people on the bus are there people
that need to get off the bus you know we're inspecting the functions are they working are they not
working? Do people think they work? You know, what can we see very, very quickly? And then you start
prioritizing, okay, you know, some things, you know, are obvious. They need to be dealt with ASAP.
Then everything starts to sort itself. So, you know, there's usually a number of things that
happen incredibly fast, like week one. And then there are things that happen slower, you know,
maybe, you know, 30, 60, 90 days. But in 90 days, you know, I tend to be through sort of the initial
tree eyes of, okay, you know, let's get ourselves on a solid footing here where we can
function and operate and understand and then we can, you know, much more incrementally,
iteratively, you know, progress from there. So that's sort of a, you know, if you're asking
for a framework, that that would be it. But I will tell you that, you know, every place I've
been, they're all different. You've got to be very careful that you don't get into a rinse and repeat
mode where you know, you just think you have a formula or an algorithm and you can just
apply it over and over again. That's just really simplistic thinking. It will lead you astray
because you kind of try to observe things in a way, you know, like a five-year-old would. I've never
seen it before and how are you reacting to it, you know? So I understand there's no repeatable
framework that you can just apply, but I would imagine there's there's sort of repeatable
principles and methods of thinking that you use. What are the ones that you find the most
helpful. Well, I look very hard at what's working, what's not working. And in other words,
you know, some things are not working at all. Some things seem to be working reasonably well.
And then there are sort of the stuff that you're sort of humming and hawing on. So obviously,
you prioritize the, I mean, I've sort of separated with people very, very quickly because I think
the functions that they were responsible for were barely breathing. And at that point, you know,
I don't hesitate. You know, I move on.
quickly, immediately. You know, I go after cultural issues, you know, people that are just,
you know, egregious violators of just things that we all generally find normal and acceptable,
you know, we very quickly separate on behavior. You know, performance is something that we
will give more time. Behavior, we won't. And that's because behavior is a choice, not a skill set.
You know, when you come in as a new leader, everybody's watching, not just what you're doing,
the way you're not doing. So if you're not moving on things that people, that everybody is
seeing, your leadership brand is already in question because, you know, apparently you're blind
and apparently you're hesitating or you're tolerant of behavior that you shouldn't be tolerant
of. So, yeah, there's pressure because, you know, it's not just what you want to do,
it's the whole world's watching. You said behavior's a choice, not a skill set. I've never heard
it quite framed that way. I think that's a very, that's a really interesting way to look at it.
but you also said that you sort of you'll give time for performance but not for behavior how much time
how do you learn like when do you pull the plug when do you reinvest and how do you think about that
well look you know behavior is it's it'll it'll smack you in the face usually but i've also seen
things happen underground where you know i wasn't aware of it and i wasn't seeing it but it was happening
because of what happened on calls that I wasn't on.
You know, one time I got tipped off by an employee of my former company that said, look,
you know, that office over there is a complete, you know, disaster.
And because they knew people there.
And, you know, as well, you know, everybody talks, doesn't matter what company you're in.
And then, you know, we started, you know, basically peeling away the layers
and all of a sudden, you know, you come across, you know, really bad situations,
abusive situations, you know, harassment, all these kinds of things, because sometimes it's just
not visible. It's happening. People don't like to talk about it. They're worried that they're ratting
on people and they don't want to go to their manager because they don't trust their manager.
You know, they don't trust HR, you know, which is usually, you know, your second choice or maybe
your first choice to go when you have, you know, real behavioral, cultural problems. And then it just,
it just keeps going on. So I've been surprised before about how much, you know,
wasn't visible to us, not just to me, but also the people that were, that I had brought in,
they were close to me. They were not seeing it either. Eventually, you know, believe me,
we will, we will find it and we will get to it. And then we will move at lightning speed
because you want to get bad behavior, you know, out of an organization fast.
Because that is your leadership brand. You start tolerating that. There's no end in sight to
you're going to have. Trust is key to moving quickly, I would imagine with velocity in organizations.
How do you go to establishing trust in a performance-based culture? Well, you know, people need to
believe that you're fair, that it's not just personal preference, right? That you're not doing
things because, oh, I don't like your haircut or whatever. It has nothing to do with that.
It has to do with, you know, how do we come together? How do we behave as a group? And, you know,
if you have people behaving in huge conflict with that, then it's like, yeah, we are going to move on it.
Sometimes, you know, I've had situations, especially with young people where, hey, we need to do a reboot, reset, come back tomorrow.
I'm sure your parents didn't teach you, you know, to behave this way, and you can do better.
And I've seen people come back literally over the weekend and be a different person, because for whatever reason, they were led astray by managers that just, you know, were inspiring that kind of behavior.
happens, right? People learn behaviors from what they see around them with a behavior that gets
encouraged. And they don't realize that they are just getting a drift, you know, from their
own upbringing and their own, you know, personal principles because that's sort of the environment
starts to, you know, really, it's a slippery slope that they get on and all of a sudden
they're in a place where they don't even recognize themselves anymore. And that's where a reset can
really work, you know, because basically you're re-grounding them to, you know, normal behaviors
and then things can work out really nicely from there on.
But most of the time, unfortunately, it's like, look, you know, you're not a fit here.
You know, this is not who we are, who we want to be.
You know, it's choosing, you know, it's just, look, we want you to be this way, not that way.
And, you know, for some people, it's like, hey, they learn behaviors in other companies.
It's part of who they are.
It's their culture.
This is not for you, man.
Alan Malali put it to me this way.
He said, when you're choosing a behavior that's not the organizational behavior,
that's desired, you're choosing not to be a part of the organization.
I thought that was a powerful way to think about it.
Yeah.
You're separating and you're in violation of the driving culture is really important
because if you don't, other people will fill that void, right?
And you get subcultures in a city or a division because strong personalities can do that.
So unless you are filling that void, right, it will get filled by something or somebody
else and before you know it you're just a grab bag of stuff and it's just a bunch of fiefdoms running
a company well you don't want that the company needs to stand for something this is who we are
seems like there's a lot of organizations that are more family based i mean they take a very
similar approach to a family and they they don't necessarily think in terms of performance what are
your thoughts on that well you know we we've talked about this quite a bit in uh in recent years you know
i don't think a business is a family unfortunately in a family
you can't fire your family even though you sometimes want to you have to tolerate them and deal
with them and often in the most egregious way that is just the nature of families i mean all the
dysfunction that comes with it but in business it's more like being a professional sports franchise right
you're you're assembling the best players and uh you know we may be friends but we don't have to be
friends because we're not coming together on the basis of friendship we're coming together on the
basis of mission, you know, in other words, share purpose. You know, we're very demanding of each
other and it's really about, you know, our respective contributions to the mission. That's the basis
of our relationship. So it is much more akin to professional sports. I think that's the correct
analogy. Now, some companies don't want to be that way. Companies like Salesforce and even Google come
to mind, but, you know, in the end, they're laying people off too by the thousands. Okay. So I guess it's not
family after all. Do you think most organizations try to do too much? There seems to be a natural
entropy that sort of builds up, right? You start with one thing, it becomes successful, and then
you sort of expand your footprint. And before you know it, you have, you know, before Steve Jobs
came back to Apple, they have, I don't know, what was it, like 20 or 30 different products.
The first thing he did was narrow the focus down to four key products. How do you think about
that? Yeah, well, the interesting thing about Steve was that he had a, he had a stand.
called Insanely Great, which, you know, I remember at the time that it was kind of a thing in Silicon Valley.
So if it didn't meet that standard, you know, it would get scratched really, really quickly.
If it wasn't, you know, incredibly exciting and world changing and all that,
we just couldn't be bothered to, you know, even have that on the palette and work on that.
So I think that's a great way to be, by the way, to just demand to be inspired and be in awe, you know,
of the nature of the mission and what we're trying to do because that's that gives energy that
gives life that creates excitement it creates focus uh it creates urgency and people come to work
you know with a sense of mission rather than well i have to be here you know for my paycheck
so it's it's really applying that filter rather than i got too many things going on
there just aren't too many insanely great things so it will it will naturally start itself to a small
set, you know. When you come in, you also believe in sort of doing less but doing better and
narrowing the focus. How does that manifest itself in an organization? Like, how do you go through
and decide where to focus and what to cut on? We constantly have conversations, you know, around
prioritization, you know, what is, we can't do everything. So we have to choose. Not choosing is the
worst thing you can do because now you're compromising everything. So the question is, you know,
I use all kinds of different ways of trying to figure out what is most critical.
And then, by the way, and we revisit that conversation constantly.
It has to be sort of reaffirming.
But it's like, hey, if you can only do one thing, which one would you pick and why?
And what would be the consequences of not doing, you know, the other things.
So we start sort of strapping it on for size and like, can I live with that or what would
happen if that was the scenario here?
The problem is, you know, over time, people create, you know, they're a mile wide and an inch deep, right?
We create more, more, more, and pretty soon we're swimming in glue.
You know, we're lethargic, you know, we're moving like molasses and that saps the energy, you know, out of the people and the organization.
So what I go through is, okay, let's just take things out.
Let's just, you know, do things in sequence rather than in parallel because, you know,
you know, we just want to be lightning fast on the things that really matter and really,
you know, make sure that we're appropriately provisioned, right?
Because oftentimes, you know, everybody gets, you know, one hundredth of the resources
as opposed to getting, you know, 50% of the resources.
Things all of a sudden go a lot faster when you have to focus and the resources and the
provisioning.
Things really move, right?
Whereas if you have to share with 50 other things and nothing moves now.
Being very aware of it, now you can create focus in different groups, right?
when you get bigger as a company, right, it's really about you will be multi-focused and you
will be multi-purpose, but you have now way more resources.
You can, and we often have done that by creating, you know, product teams with general
managers on them that were measured, you know, on the progress, you know, against their targets,
right?
So they could really go after their targets for their vertical industry or their product type or
their channel.
They could own it.
They could declare victory at the end of the month.
So you can create focus in a multi-mission organization.
You absolutely can't.
I mean, certainly Google was actually quite legendary for doing a lot of that stuff
because they had a lot of successful things that they did.
And I think there's many other companies that have done that as well.
But you don't do it through a large monolithic functional organization
because now everybody is a small cock and a giant wheel
and that doesn't create the momentum that you want.
In your experience, is there a number of priorities
that people can focus on and deliver really exceptional results?
Is it like one or two or three?
Obviously, it's probably not 10.
Is there a number that seems to be key?
Obviously, greatly depends on what it is.
You know, I don't start off saying it has to be this number or that number.
I just want to see what it is because these things are not created equal.
It might just be one thing because it's just so big that it's going to consume us,
which is then fine.
You know, sometimes it's not.
and then we can we can address more obviously more than one thing most product organizations obviously
have a you know have lists of projects and you know maintaining moving all these things along
you know with with the focus and velocity and momentum yeah that's the art of management you know
you will know when things are grinding down to a halt and things are too slow momentum is not
happening revisiting prioritization over and over again is really important you sort of want
convince yourself again and again this is correct this is correct or no it's not it's not working
you know based on the on what we're seeing that's okay you know you don't know everything ahead of time
right so you you learn day by day and you calibrate and and adjust you know from there it seems
like bureaucracy naturally creeps into organizations if it's not fought how do you go about
fighting bureaucracy yeah what's your role in that yeah that's that's a really important
observation because, you know, larger companies, they tend to become their own worst enemies.
It's not what the world does to them. It's what they do to themselves. And introducing bureaucracy,
in other words, undue process, you know, a lot of friction in terms of getting things done.
So I often talk about this in my communications, you know, to the company is like, hey, you know,
we have to hang on to our youth, our innovative muscle, our audacity, our daring. And, you know,
I always say, look, hierarchy, orchurch means nothing to us.
You know, we operate through influence.
If you can convince people, great.
And if you can't, then you just can't.
It doesn't matter where your title is or what organization you come from or who your boss is.
So it's really, it's an extreme meritocracy.
It's really your ideas are judged on their merit, you know, not on, you know, where they're coming from.
You fight it.
I always say, let's be like Peter Pan, you know, we never grow up, you know, at least not entirely.
So we maintain that chip on our shoulder, that attitude, and, you know, back to the insanely
great thing, right?
If we're not inspired what we're working on, that's a problem in and of itself.
We've got to go get that back fast.
I think I remember from one of the interviews I was listening to you to prepare for this
that you look for maladjusted people.
I'm probably one of those people myself, but, you know, yes.
I mean, look, you know, where does drive come from?
Where does ambition come from?
You know, it is a lack of adjustment because if you were a perfectly balanced person,
you wouldn't have any ambition.
You're so happy with where things are.
You barely have a reason to get up in the morning, you know?
But, you know, maladjusted people, they just have this disparity between where they are
and what they want to do and what they want to prove.
I mean, all of us want to prove things either to our parents if they're still around
or our siblings or our friends or people that didn't believe in us.
Totally.
All this stuff.
and that's very powerful, you know.
I remember, you know, we had a great exit with Data Domain back in 2009,
and we were very proud of the work we did because it was a startup.
It was just, you know, we didn't have product market fit for the longest time,
and it became, you know, we were a bigger exit,
and then the next 10 competitors combined, all this kind of stuff.
But then people started saying, oh, you're just lucky, you know, how that goes, right?
Well, you know, that just puts on the after.
after burners, you know, for me. It's like, I'll show you luck, you know. And that's attitude.
And attitude is something I like in people. I like people that have attitude that have a chip
on their shoulder that have a burning, you know, need and desire to prove something. Now, over the
years, that will wear off a little bit, that that is just a nature of things. I mean, when you're 18,
you have a very different life experience than when you're 40 years older, you know, depending
and what happened in between. But I generally, you know, like people who sort of constantly are
very, very strongly aware of where they are versus where they could be. You know, I rarely use the
word proud or pride because that signals, you know, a profound happiness with the status quo.
And I don't have that, you know, because I'm always at odds with the status quo. That's sort of
the natural malcontent posture that we have. Yeah, we're here.
but we could be there. So what gives? How do we get there? Right? So we're always envisioning a
future that is different than the one that we're currently experiencing. If we could do it all
over again, what would we do? Those kinds of conversations. So it's very refreshing. You're constantly
sort of reinventing, you know, what's going on. And also keeps you safe because there's people out
there who don't have legacy. They don't have nothing existing. They start from scratch. Well,
they're going to get the better of you unless you know you develop that attitude you know in your
own company your own business as well it seems like the natural state for most people is to get
reasonably good at something like driving a car and then there's a bit of a complacency that sort
of sets in it's like I get to average or slightly above average in my job and then I sort of like
let off the pedal how do you prevent that obviously you know their relationship you know with
the people around you your team and your manager is like you know are people driving you to
higher standards or are they not? You know, are they accepting, you know, of the way things are.
But, you know, one way we do this, you know, this is throughout your organization, all our
employees that are not in sales because salespeople are on commission plans. But, you know, every quarter,
you know, the company has to, you know, earn the bonus pool. In other words, the money that we're
going to use for bonus, we have to earn it. And then we tell people how we earn it, exactly what the
metrics are. And, you know, we share all of that. So they know, hey, we,
none of us are going to get bonuses unless the company gets paid but once we
once the company earns it now we're starting to allocate the uh the bonus money to managers
and departments and we just say look you use this money you know to send messages
to all your people there needs to be belkirt we want to know who is you know deserving of
two x three x versus who is deserving of zero um so that we we see the full spectrum
the bell curve, if you will, of people that are, you know, performing, you know, incredibly well
and the ones who are not in good standing. This is not so much about, oh, I don't want to give
money to people who aren't doing well. It's more, are we giving enough to the ones who are doing
great, right? I don't want the great ones feel like to treat it the same way as people that are
obviously not in good standing. That just, you know, that creates a, that's not a performance
culture. So we do this every quarter. In the beginning, when people have not lived this life
before, it's very challenging for them. It's like, oh, my God, I got to have a conversation like
this about money and performance every single quarter or every single person. How do I do that?
Well, people get used to it because during the quarter, they now start to have a different,
you know, a much sharper lens on the work and how the work's getting done. And they keep notes
and they make notes, and they can really give a credible message back.
And employees will also ask, hey, if I want to have a 150% bonus or whatever number,
what do I have to do?
And by the way, this is exactly the conversation you want to have.
What do I have to do?
Damn good question.
Let's go have that conversation.
What do you have to do, right?
Everybody wants to aspire to something.
They want to be better.
But you've got to force that conversation to happen in such a way.
it has consequences, right, in terms of compensation and recognition and celebration and all
of that. So I'm big on recognizing, you know, great work. I think great people need to be
celebrated and rewarded and singled out in every way possible. Again, that's a merit performance
culture, you know, these days that is being frowned upon in popular culture. But in enterprises,
this is really important. People need to become the best version of themselves. And this is
This is part of how we go about doing that.
Aside from money, what other sort of mechanisms do you use internally to reward people?
It's recognition and celebration.
You know, we, for example, we have equity awards in sales for people that are landing designated
customers that we desperately want.
And, you know, they're often surprised because they may have forgotten about it because it's
not a, you know, it's just something that only happens when you, you know, you, you land
certain customers. And, you know, we all get on it, you know, to send notes, you know,
have conversations, references in other conversations. All of a sudden, everybody knows
in the whole company like, wow, this guy, this team did this. And they're like, wow, you know,
they're bathing in glory. You know what I mean? And, you know, so many people live for that.
I mean, yes, they live for money. I know, you know, they're corn operated, but they also
live for recognition because that is just a, you know, it's very, very rewarding. It's in a very
deep, you know, psychological way. It's very rewarding. So you want to bring that. Don't take
it for granted, you know. It's not like, oh, that's just doing your job. Yes, it is. But at the same
time, man, this is, this is amazing, okay? Especially when it comes from me as a CEO and they're like,
my God, you're taking time out of your day to tell me this? I'm like, yes, we are. Well, most
organizations are sales organizations. And I guess I'm wondering, we all sort of recognize a bad
sales organization because that business will go out of business. But what's the difference
between a good sales organization and a great sales organization? You get much better sales
organization when you have full alignment in the entire company so that everybody works for sales
effectively. We always say that we're all working for sales here because they're at the tip of
the spear. And the rest of us are really the wood behind the arrow hat.
You know, sort of the way I characterize the relationships between sales and the rest of the company.
And sales needs to feel that wood behind the arrowhead.
Like, everybody is, you know, is killing themselves to help me succeed.
And it's not so much that it's all about selling stuff and transactions and deals and all of that.
It's just that sales experiences the reality of the marketplace, the first and the most profound in the most profound way.
The rest of the organization sits much farther away from the cold winds of competition
and somebody ugliness that happens and the uncertainties and the anxieties and all these kinds of things.
So, yeah, sales is harder, which is why the rest of our organization needs to be in alignment
and in support, you know, off them.
So the alignment is really important, right, that we really provision the whole company behind that
because they are experiencing a reality in the marketplace and we, the rest of us, have to adjust to that.
got to help them, we got to change things. So it's a constant process of basically living
their experience and what does it mean and how often are we seeing this and what are we going
to do about it. But in terms of your question, I mean, one thing that's really important to me,
I'm a stickler for consistent execution in sales organization, meaning that every quarter,
everybody shows up. You know, what we can't have is like, well, you're not a bad quarter,
but I'm going to do better next quarter. I don't want that. Okay. We, we,
We need to run ourselves and our organization in such a way that we show up all of us,
every single period, you know, every single line of business, channel, geography, and so on, right?
And if that becomes the culture, the expectation, and the reality, you're going to do way better
than the rest of them because, you know, sales tends to be, you know, a very unevenly distributed
thing and you want to work on that.
And so the expectation is, you know, I don't care how far ahead of plan you are.
you have a shitty quarter. That's now a problem with me. I can't build on you. I can't trust you.
I can't expect that you're going to deliver. And you work on that all the time, right? People that are,
that are not consistent. You better, you better find a way to get there. Not overnight, but you're
going to make moves. What moves are you going to make? What are the reasons that this is inconsistent?
What are you doing differently, right? Because we always say a good quarter is one where you exceed your
numbers, but also one where you set yourself up for the next one. You got to do both.
It's not just about making the quarter.
You also have to lay the foundation for the next one and the rest of the year.
So you've got to think much more long term, much more strategic, you know, about your business rather than I'm just trying to hit a number for the quarter, you know.
I think of that sort of like running a billiards table, right?
Like where you leave the ball matters for the next shot.
It's a good analogy.
Just anybody can make one shot, but you want to run the table.
Exactly.
There's a natural tension between sales and product.
And at the start of an organization's life cycle, you can sort of get away with cuts.
Customizing the product per sale, but when you start getting into enterprise, you can't do those things.
How do you think about the relationship between sales and product and who's driving the bus and who's not and how that looks?
Yeah, you know, there's there's tension there, sometimes healthy, sometimes, you know, not as healthy.
And, you know, it's a relationship that has to be managed very aggressively.
You certainly want a product organization that really views the reality of sales is their problem, okay, as opposed to, well,
You guys are just not smart enough or whatever, and they're interested in all kinds of things that have nothing to do, you know, with the sales organization succeeding.
The alignment, again, is number one, but you have situations where, you know, sales goes, this is not working, okay?
And we have enough data points to say that it's not working, okay, what are we going to do?
So that dialogue goes on all the time.
You know, we make mistakes, you know, we prioritize incorrectly.
were too slow on certain things.
I mean, all these things happen, right?
But that's a continuous force field that we're working on.
You know, the thing about sales is that, you know,
great salespeople can't sell a bad product, right?
But a lot of these salespeople can sell a great product, okay?
And that's very important because, you know,
oftentimes in Silicon Valley, they think that sales is the problem.
And I'm like, no, because if you had a great product, you know, even an average or a below average salesperson will be able to sell it, right?
And typically sales problems are product problems, but typically that's not the initial assessment because, you know, you don't want your baby to be called ugly and, you know, investors around the table have invested in your technology.
So you don't want to openly face your demons and really confront things the way they really are.
And that then leads to a focus and solutions that don't work.
Like, well, let's hire another VP of sales.
Well, I won't work because your product is the problem, you know.
So I do hold the product people to a very high standard because we have to make very average
salespeople productive in a very predictable manner.
That's hard.
And that's exactly what that is where the focus should be.
Because if I have to hire brilliant salespeople, even though even brilliant salespeople can't
sell a lousy product, there aren't that many of them.
So that's not a scalable model.
Would you go as far as saying a great product sells itself?
Almost.
I've certainly seen that, you know, with my own eyes in various companies.
You know, I used to say about Snowflake, it's like a two-year-old golden retriever.
All I got to do is to separate them around and everybody's going to want one.
And it sometimes wasn't that far off because it was the benefits were amazing.
I mean, you benchmarked these products and sometimes they were an order of magnitude faster,
know, because of all the architectural breakthroughs and the provisioning of the workloads.
So people were like, wow, I mean, that wow experience is just, it's just priceless, right?
So all you have to do is get people to try it.
And they go like, yeah, this is a no-brainer.
And so in that sense, it almost sells itself.
I mean, we used to see that with companies like VMware as well.
I mean, you know, once people were sold on virtualization, I mean, all they were doing is picking up orders, right?
This is actually, you know, a bit of a problem because, you know, you hire people from a very successful company.
They've never really sold because they were just riding the momentum, you know what I mean?
And then they get into a company where they do have to really sell and they do have to campaign and they do have to fight.
And they have no idea because we didn't, we never had to do that before, right?
So I like to hire salespeople who have really been in shit fights because that breeds, you know, the type of skills and focus that you really want to have.
are than people that are good at, you know, quoting and picking up orders.
That's an incredibly valuable point. I don't think I've ever heard anybody mentioned that
before. What are the methods of thinking that you would use sort of in the first 90 days
to assess the degree to which the problem is not sales or product? Like, how would you go about
determining where that problem lies? Do we have the wrong sales organization, the wrong culture,
do we have the wrong product? And obviously, it's probably a little bit of both. But how do you
go about thinking about that. Yeah. And by the way, it is often a little bit of both, which is what
creates the confusion, you know, around these topics. But look, you know, I'm, I can't tell you
how many customers slash prospect calls I've already been in this week. It's Friday, you know,
and there were numerous when I was to talk to seven or eight banks this week, you know,
the CIOs, CEOs, CEOs. I experienced reality the way the salespeople are, obviously a little bit
differently because I talked to higher level people in organizations. But, you know,
I experience things firsthand.
What you don't want to do is sort of, you know, rely on information, you know,
because you just get it secondhand, third hand, fourth hand,
and you don't know whether you're dealing with a feeble person that has no fortitude
or whether you're dealing with a real issue.
So there's no substitute, you know, for inspecting things at the front lines
and really be part of it.
I always tell people, if I can't sell it, I'm not expecting you to sell it, okay?
So if you're going to get your nose blood, I'm going to get my nose bloodied,
And so you need to get to reality.
In other words, you need to see things as they really are.
So you've got to be very, very careful with second and third hand, you know, information.
And sometimes, you know, I got to whip people up the hill.
It's like, look, you know, you guys are basically, you're intimidated by the marketplace.
You know, your own worst enemy because you just lack fortitude and confidence and you can't, you know, articulate things.
And that's, you know, that's all under the header of sales enablement, right?
And, you know, I personally get after this.
I'm very aggressive in terms of, you know, really pressing our case in front of, you know, the customers in the marketplace.
Because I need my organization to do the same thing.
If I'm not doing it, you know, then, you know, they're not either or they're not going to go at it with the same confidence and fortitude.
So leadership is important there.
You want to set an example that people go like,
oh, I guess that's the way it is then.
And, you know, I should be too.
So you bring forward.
But, you know, people see me talk in front of a customer.
They go, and they see the customer react.
And they see the customer ask questions.
They're like, hey, I can do that too.
Okay.
There's no better learning than right in front of where the action happens.
So you want to bring that.
If you just want to post some data sheets and some videos and what have you
and sit back and wait for things to happen,
you're going to get killed. So you want to press all the way into the end zone.
And then people go like, okay, I think I can do it. You know, I've seen it. The results are
there. It works. We talked about positioning yourself for future success, and we sort of
use the analogy of running the billiards table. What are the ways that an organization positions
themselves for success tomorrow that is hard to do today, that's hard to compete with, but makes
tomorrow easier? I've always told other CEOs, especially people that are the sort of first-time
CEOs and knew that you can count on the fact that you will be confronted with a need for
transformation because it happens to all of us. And the question is, will you recognize it?
Will you recognize it in time? And will you be able to execute on it? These are all super big
questions because you walk into a situation it works and then one day you wake up it's not working
as well anymore the world has changed and the world does change it the technology changes I mean
you see a lot of that right now with AI obviously that people's perspectives and the narratives
they're all up for grabs and it's one of the most disruptive things I've ever seen happening
in the world of software in all my years you know of doing things but you also you know the early
adopters, you know, and in Jeffrey Moore style of thinking, are very, very different than,
you know, when you get across the chasm and you're dealing with a more mainstream
customer because they buy differently. You know, people ask me, you know, why do you think
this is sort of a late adopter? I'm like, well, because he hasn't bought yet. That's why.
He would have bought already, but he was an earlier adopter. Okay. So by definition,
he didn't. Why didn't he? Okay. So he has different ways of assessing and thinking.
you know about the value about the risk all these kinds of things and these things
are difficult to observe sometimes you know you just wake up and you're like you know
what things are different now they have changed just in the aggregate you just
sense the change that is that is that is happening and then it becomes a question
okay we have to adjust we have to change we got to do all these you know all these things
but the need for transformation people don't expect it because we have a we have a
very, you know, humans have a very linear attitude about the world. In other words, it's just
going to continue as it is. We rinse and repeat and it will never change. No, it will just a
matter of, you know, can you recognize it and can you do it in time? And then, will you know,
how to successfully deal with that? And a lot of people can't. They'll fail on recognizing it,
or they fail on the timing of it, or they fail on the execution of it. And we've had a lot of
great enterprises, obviously, that we all know.
I mean, you look at the, you know, the Fortune 500, I mean, how many companies are still
there that were there 20 years ago and 30 years ago and 50 years ago, right?
So you got to as a leader, as a CEO, you've got to be extremely open-minded about what is
happening, right, and not assume the linearity of the business.
It takes many forms.
Some things are incredibly disruptive, you know, some things are.
you know are marginal so that's by the way the rest of your organization will not have this
posture because they got their heads down they're very much in a pattern in the mode so that means
that you really you don't want to have that that mode about you as the CEO as a leader you want to
be basically you make everybody else work you got your head up when they have their head down
you mentioned AI is the most transformative thing you've seen talk to me a little bit about
about AI. I've not always been to world data, but I started out very early in my career in the
world of data, and I've gotten back to it again and again and again. So I've seen the challenges
from the early days, you know, just being able to take transactional records and being able to put
them into a format where it was sort of human readable and sensible, you know, for humans to
consume. And I mean, this is going all the way back to the late 80s. You know, when we
we had what we back then called decision support systems.
We didn't, I mean, we didn't even have the term of business intelligence or none of those terms
even existed back then, but, you know, especially in there, by the way, and there was only
certain verticals that did this, like retail was really big on it, you know, they would be
able to sort of break the skews down by, you know, by location and channel and store and
all these things.
Very, very granular detailed data.
These are a massive mainframe processes that would run, usually on a monthly basis, you know,
let alone on the 24-hour cycle.
every month you would get data. That was already a big deal back then. So things have progressed.
Our relationship with data has progressed, you know, very, very slowly, painfully difficult.
And obviously, the biggest change we had until now was really the introduction of search, right?
I mean, it's not 25 years ago. I mean, I became a search junkie. I still am to this day because I find
it so empowering in terms of your relationship with data. But search now feels old because, you know,
it matches on strings. It's stateless. I mean, it doesn't remember a damn thing from one search
to the next. And it has no context. You know, if you search on Snowflick, you might get the weather.
You might get, you know, you might get the social phenomenon. Or you might get the company because
it doesn't know. It just knows the word. So we now have opportunities to to massively enrich
and contextualize, you know, searches for data. So I really see what data is going to just get
catapult into the future here, just unbelievable. We'll be able to ask harder and harder and
harder and harder questions of our own proprietary data and get better and better and more
valuable answers. I mean, it's fairly easy, you know, to use natural language interfaces now.
The whole text to SQL has become, you know, table stakes. I mean, you can you can interrogate,
you know, you know, a Salesforce data on Snowflake, you know, what just, just text to SQL.
And it's really nice, by the way.
I mean, hell, it's a hell, it's a lot better than using dashboards for the most part.
Not all of it, but for the most part.
So fine, you know, let's just step forward.
But, you know, I want to ask very business-specific questions.
You know, the insurance company may say, hey, you know, I have disproportionate, you know, bodily injury claims in this state compared to the surrounding states.
You know, A, what's going on?
B, am I going to have it again next quarter?
C, what might I do about it, right?
should we just stop, you know, underwriting in this geography altogether, which is what's
happening in California right now.
And or, you know, we, obviously, it's a pricing issue because how do we price risk, you know,
is it a policy issue?
Those are questions that, you know, God, analysts would be launched on, right?
Because people would do their reasoning, not the system, that the system becomes like
an advisor to you in literally in damn near real time.
So this is, our relationship with data is going to get amped up here to use a term in ways that we just can't even imagine.
Obviously, content generation is what everybody's looking at and they find it very cool.
And it is, you know, but how is it going to work in medicine?
How is it going to work in education?
I mean, it's just, it's going to be a renaissance, you know, in intelligence and computing and how we mobilize data for purposes.
Yeah, it's a great time to be alive.
And I think the innovation will drive a lot of new employment.
We will also, you know, have a lot of, you know, obsolescence, you know, in jobs and even functions and industries and processes.
But that's the nature of, you know, of a capitalist, you know, free economy.
Creative destruction is just the nature of stuff.
And we do pretty well with that, even though it can be disruptive.
I mean, we used to learn one profession and that would last us for our lifetime.
Now you need to shift years more than once a year a lifetime because it's moving so much faster, right, than anything we've ever seen.
So the acceleration is going to be dizzying.
There's no two ways about it.
Is there anything that gives you hesitation about AI?
Yes, of course.
And people talk about this all the time.
I mean, social media created the fake news phenomenon because, you know, so many people use social media to inform their reality.
which I don't, I don't recommend that, by the way.
I always tell people, turn that shit off, man,
because, you know, you're distorting how you really should be interpreting things.
And I don't like that.
But social media had a lot of good things, you know, obviously.
But it also had, you know, the flip site, you know, is that, you know, people,
it became very, very powerful influencing people in terms of how they experience the world.
Obviously, this can take that to the nth degree, you know.
I mean, it can change the realities.
How is that going to go?
Right?
You can see the opportunities for abuse becoming extraordinary.
Yeah, we're going to have to deal with that, you know,
but we have to still count on the goodwill of men and women
because, you know, that's all we have at the end of the day, right?
One of the things we talked about earlier I want to come back to you
just before we end the interview is you talked about we all make mistakes.
How do you handle a mistake?
At the moment you, how do you recognize that you've been a mistake?
and then what do you do when you've made a mistake?
You personally.
I use mistakes as, it's a cultural moment and a teaching moment
because it's actually good for me to go,
oh, I really screwed this up because it's sort of,
you can do really well in the world by being a fast course corrector.
What is devastating in organizations is when people defend bad decisions, okay?
But if you can fail fast,
that was Scott McNeely used to say that fail fast,
If you can fail fast and correct, you can do really well.
So mistakes can become a real cultural moment like, hey, you know, I really screwed this up.
Let's unpack this and understand what were we thinking, you know, what were the assumptions that were wrong, right?
And then, you know, that's a good culture because now everybody goes like, look, I can revisit my dumb decisions now, right?
In other words, fail fast, you know, have urgency around your bonehead, you know, decisions that you've made and the things that are not working.
That's really what you want.
And when I do it, you know, it's basically now it gives permission to everybody else to do it.
I'm basically politically neutralizing, you know, the idea of making mistakes because making
mistakes, everybody who makes decisions will make mistakes.
You know, people always ask me what are your biggest mistakes?
Well, my biggest mistakes are always around hiring, you know.
It's like, you know, I've hired a lot of great people over the years, but I've also made my share
of mistakes because that's just a nature of things, right?
but if you're willing to confront it, I sometimes, I talked about this in the book as well,
I may make mistakes again and again on the same topic, you know, but the one thing I will tell
you is I won't stop until I get it right, okay?
And I will, in other words, I'm willing to say again and again that I screwed it up,
but I won't stop, you know, until we're in the place that we need to be.
So that's very powerful message to people to say, look, this is the behavior we want,
confront your demons, basically, you know, go after the things that didn't work that were wrong.
God, if you can get people to, because most people, you know, they're afraid, they're going to
defend their decisions.
And especially when it's a gray zone, right?
In other words, it's, you know, some people are, you know, not good enough to keep, not bad enough to fire.
You know, those are the worst cases because, like, well, you know, person looks nice, speaks,
speaks well, articulate, you know, but they're the ultimate passenger.
They never move a dial, right?
And, you know, those are the ones that always survive, you know, way too long, you know,
until we have mass layoffs and all this kind of crap going on.
But you can get people to say, no, you know, when there's doubt, there's no doubt, you know,
have a higher bar, you know, have high conviction.
That's hard, you know, trying to get your organization to get to that level, you know,
of, you know, basically very unyielding, uncompromising.
That's hard because most people want to lay the bar lower and, you know, not rock the boat,
not be confrontational because all that stuff is hard, hard, hard,
you know.
Those passengers are probably the easiest ones to hire too because they get to the interview,
they say the right things, they check all the right boxes, and then they come in.
Interviews are notoriously, like, difficult to, to hire with, I would imagine,
because you just really want to see on-the-job performance.
How do you assess that?
Well, you're exactly right.
Interviews are far less valuable, not for all roles.
I mean, there's roles where interviews, like, for example,
engineering. I mean, they're like, they put them in front of a whiteboard and say, here's,
you know, right code that does this. So you can, you can very much, you know, test people's
skills, you know, that way. But, you know, in the other roles where, you know, people become good
at selling themselves, right, because they've learned that over the years. And they, they talk well,
they look well, and they're very pleasant, and they're getting along and all these things.
But the way to find out anything about people is to fully surround where that person has been, okay?
And, you know, if they've been at Company A, you know, you go find out who in my company was at Company A while this person was there.
And let's go.
I'm going to go ask inside the company first, who knows this person?
Because you were a contemporary and, you know, what was that person's reputation and so on?
You learn a whole bunch of things very quickly.
You don't even have to go outside of your own company to, you know, to find.
find out. And then you see if consistency, you know, our information is manifesting or it's still
confusing and contradicting and all this kind of stuff. And then we go outside. You know,
we go call people that we know or have known and say, hey, you really, and you really want to
hear from people that have directly worked with them and say, what was the experience like? It
doesn't have to be an indictment type of conversation. It's like, look, I just want to know more
about this person. How does this go? You know, tell me some stories, you know, because now,
you start to really get color and texture around a person as opposed to the sniff test,
which is what an interview really is. And the thing is, you're going to learn, you're going
to get great conviction now because you're like, you know what? I think we're really on to a great
person. Or you're like, wow, you know, I'm glad I made these calls because, you know, we were,
this was not trending, you know, correctly at all. And I find that people rush, especially in
fast-growing companies, you know, we have hiring targets, and they're just slamming bodies.
And it's the worst thing ever.
I'd rather hire, you know, more slowly, but better than faster.
And I have to do a lot of, you know, of course, corrections along the way.
And people are lazy.
They're like, oh, yeah, it's probably okay.
No, probably okay is not the standard.
You need to know and have conviction.
And you need to take the time and do the work to develop that conviction, especially in places
like Europe where it's so difficult to separate and so expensive and so time consuming the
opportunity cost is enormous. You really, you know, need to do the work, right? So you've got to
bring that into your recruiting culture. It's like it's not like a check a box, see you on Monday,
no. It sounds like you just hit on something that I think is one reason that your cultures
are always so successful, which is you just elevate the standard. I mean, having eye
standards goes back to the insanely great Steve Jobs. I mean, he, he, he, he, he's, he, he, he,
He had a really hard time dealing with mediocrity in any, you know, in any realm.
And it's very hard to live with, by the way, because Steve was super hard to live with.
I mean, everybody was a shithead and didn't know people's names and all that.
Yes, I know it's hard to live with.
And I'm personally, I'm not that way, by the way.
I know I don't treat people that way at all.
But at the same time, you know, the leadership needs to really reinforce.
We have very high standards.
and then other people will want to follow that.
Okay, they will do it because they feel like that that is the way.
That is the right way.
Leadership sets tone, sets expectations.
And if you don't do that, yeah, you become the California DMV,
the worst goddamn place in the world to try and get something done, you know.
The lack of leadership, you know, people go slow, they go substandard.
I mean, it's just a hellish world, you know, it's like I feel sorry for the people who have to be there.
those leaders, let's create an environment where great people feel like, yeah, this is a good
place.
This is a great place.
They have urgency.
They have high standards.
They move fast.
That's what you want.
That creates energy.
It gives energy.
It just lets people, the right people will love it.
And some of the wrong people will go like, you know what, this place is too intense for me.
I can't handle it.
You know, I need to get the kids from school at 4 p.m.
I get that, right?
But it's like culture.
It doesn't mean that people are bad, you know, when they don't like the culture.
It just means that they are not a fit.
They're just different, you know.
Totally.
We always end on the same question, Frank, which is, what is success for you?
You know, it's just not a word that, you know, I'm constantly thinking about or you're thinking about that, you know, at all.
You know, I'm, by the way, your thinking gets sometimes poisoned by the type of words that you use and the concepts that you're preoccupied with.
I mean, people sometimes ask me, what's your legacy?
Legacy is not a word that I use, okay? I find that very sort of a lot of self-absorption around
that stuff. Like, you know, I need to live beyond the grave. I really don't need to, and I don't want
to be, you know, feel so important that that's even a question, you know. My enterprises that I'm in
charge of must succeed, you know, they must succeed because that is the contract that I have with all
my stakeholders, you know, they're not just investors. Obviously, I want them to succeed
because the investors succeed with us, my employees are going to succeed as well.
I'm trying to give my employees, you know, an incredible shot at changing their station
in life, advancing their careers where, you know, 10 years from now, they still feel like,
well, that's the best thing I ever did.
And I get a lot of that from people that have worked with us in our prior companies,
and it's very personally rewarding to hear that, that they still, you know, have, you know,
sort of this warm feelings about the experience that they, that they had.
the money they made, but just the people they were with, the things they did, and they became
better than they ever thought they were, right? That's success to me is achieving that.
In my partner ecosystem, I want them to be wildly excited about being our partner. They're
succeeding with us, right? So we try to make all parties, you know, succeed in their own worlds,
you know, with us. Employees have their own agenda. They're families. They have circumstances. They have
issues. So, you know, we help them and everybody else that's part of our universe. I guess that's
the best way I can answer that question.
Thanks for listening and learning with us.
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Until next time.
Thank you.