The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Speaking Up at Work, Scott’s Guide to Fundraising, and The Case for Atheism
Episode Date: March 2, 2026Scott Galloway discusses tech employee activism and when to stand up to your boss, offers tactical advice on fundraising, and explains why he identifies as an atheist. Want to be featured in a future... episode? Send a voice recording to officehours@profgmedia.com, or drop your question in the r/ScottGalloway subreddit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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When things get hard, how do you talk to yourself?
I'm Robinette RON, VP of Fitness Programming and Head Instructor at Peloton,
and this week on my new podcast, Project Swagger,
I'm sharing my strategies for how to build better self-talk.
It's time to work on befriending yourself.
Follow Project Swagger wherever you get your podcast.
Welcome to Office Hours with Prop G.
This is the part of the show where we answer your questions about business,
big tech entrepreneurship, and whatever else is on your mind.
If you'd like to submit a question for next time,
You can send a voice recording to Office Hours of ProptoMedia.com.
Again, that's Office Hours of ProptoMedia.com.
Or post your question on Scott Galloway subreddit
and we just might feature it in our next episode.
First question.
Hey, Profi, Profi Media team.
I live in New York City.
I currently work at Salesforce.
Ryan today to seek your advice on a moral conundrum
that has come upon many tech workers, including myself.
I think you are uniquely positioned to comment
given your outspoken nature,
your dedication to holding those in power accountable
through economic power, given your resist and unsubscribed movement.
I write this to you in confidence, and I'm not revealing anything that has not publicly been reported on already.
Their company at all hands yesterday, Mark Benioff, made a crude and inappropriate joke about ICE.
Now, in a vacuum, this may just seem like an insensitive comment, but compounded with comments
by Benioff on bringing National Guard into SF, and then the New York Times report
on saleshorse pitching services to ICE to expedite hiring shows a pattern and not a one-on-one.
off incidents.
My question to you is outside of resisting and unsubscribing.
What can we do as employees to speak out while protecting ourselves from retribution?
I wanted to speak up, but I want to do in a way that is respectful and calls the kettle black.
I do have a blog and I've been toying with posting something, but very recently a coworker was
fired from Salesforce back in September while posting on her social media about the
Charlie Kirk assassination.
I fear the same for myself if I post something.
Thanks for finding the good fight, and I'm right there with you.
Yeah, it's a tough one.
But thank you for the thoughtful question.
So just some background on what happened at Salesforce.
At an internal company kickoff event in Las Vegas,
Salesforce CEO Mark Benioff made a remark joking that ICE agents were present to monitor international employees.
A comment many staff felt was deeply inappropriate.
The joke triggered significant internal backlash with more than 1,400 Salesforce workers
signing a letter urging leadership to publicly denounce ICE and end any business ties with the agency.
That's from CNBC. So tech has been the epicenter of employee activism around defense contracts, immigration enforcement tech, surveillance tools, climate exposure, and fossil fuel relationships. So some employee tactics, open letters, often with hundreds to thousands of signatures, walkouts and coordinated protests. I personally hate those. I talk about entitled douchebags, oh, I'm going to walk out over lunch. Okay. Well, that'll show them. Internal petitions and ethics complaints.
media leaks to force transparency, organized employee coalitions and side companies.
So we've seen a renewed wave of tech worker activism this year, particularly around immigration enforcement and government partnerships.
Most recently, 900 Google employees signed an open letter condemning recent actions by ICE and CBP officers, urging the company to disclose its dealings with the agencies and divest from them.
In January, workers and executives representing Amazon Spotify meta, among others, wrote a similar letter demanding ICE out of their cities.
Oh, God. Okay. So I think it's easy for a guy, you know, sitting in his cabin or hotel room during ski week to be generous with your livelihood.
I think your first priority is the economic security of you and your family. And I think you should be focused on that. And I think you want to gain the traction, credibility, the expertise such that.
you can, if you decide to at some point or not, go to a company that's more or less aligned with your values.
But at the end of the day, I just think you have an obligation yourself.
And he don't want to be what I call an artist or a philanthropist.
Carlo Chippola has this thing called Stupid, and it's a book, and he has a Matrix.
There are smart people who do good things for themselves and good things for other people.
those are the smart people.
There's bandits who do good things for themselves
and bad things for other people,
big tech executives.
There's people, there's the stupid
who do bad things for themselves
and bad things for other people,
and then there's artists slash philanthropists
that do good things for others,
but bad things for themselves.
I don't think this is the story you want to jump on.
If you're doing well at Salesforce,
I would say stick it out,
continue to do well,
and then decide over time
as you have the currency to go somewhere else
that offers the same upside psychic returns and economic security,
then you can make that decision.
But I wouldn't storm out in a blaze of virtue signaling glory.
I think your first obligation is to, again,
your and your family's economic security.
Now, let's talk a bit about Salesforce.
I have a bias here because I've known Mark Benioff for about a decade.
And I think that the narrative around Mark is unfair.
And one of the things I hate about progressives,
and I don't know Mark's politics, but based on what I've seen,
I would argue that Mark is a quote unquote center-left progressive.
And good to his employees, built an amazing company,
and has also been a huge benefactor or donor for San Francisco causes.
So I think you have to take a full, I think you have to look at all 35 frames of the movie,
if you will, about 35-millimeter film, if that's, or is it a 35-millimeter camera?
I don't know.
You get what I'm saying.
And one of the things I don't like about progressives,
is that we are playing into J.D. Vance's and Peter Thiel's hands. What do I mean by that?
There are bots. If I'm asked a comment on the Epstein files, and I say that we need criminal
indictments against the people here who engaged in sex with underage women, the majority of the comments
I will get on social media will be, they're not underage women, they're girls. And that's right.
but we seem to, on the left, be more concerned with redistributing virtue as opposed to redistributing
income or opportunity or fighting fascism. We're in a trench, literally, as a fascist army,
is about to run us over, and we're sitting here accusing each other of holding the rifle
incorrectly. And there is more, because progressives care, if someone says, oh, you're using the
wrong language, then, oh, you're an apostate. You're not really one of us. And there's definitely a
vein of any rich billionaire white guy in his 50s or 60s is just wrong with whatever he says.
I think the Democrats are absolutely guilty of massive identity politics here. I think there's a
certain vein or an undercurrent of young men are the problem. Billionaires are evil and all white
people are racist. And as long as that vein or the ideology continues to get traction and likes
online, then those three cohorts are going to say, fuck you to the Democratic Party, and we're
going to have J.D. Vance as president. So a long-winded way of saying, I think Mark Benioff is one of
the good guys. And if he fucks up and says something inappropriate, which I do a lot, I don't think
that's reason to leave the company. Now, I think you in a thoughtful, measured way, making it clear to
your boss that I am uncomfortable with sales forces support or working with the government
specifically around issues related to ICE and immigration enforcement, which I think has gone way
too far. I think making your thoughts hurt in a thoughtful, respectful way to your boss or to
whoever you report to, I think that's fine. I think you have to be careful, though, because
being the person who's decided to be the ringleader internally and speak up, everyone will nod and
call you a hero. And then someone you don't even know will put your name on a list when they have
the next layoff. You're on that list. And that's just the cruel truth of capitalism.
Companies don't need to be paying people who are shitposting the CEO or hurting the company.
That's the reality of a capitalist society. A place like Salesforce, I think management does
listen to its employees. And I think in a respectful, measured way, saying why you're uncomfortable
with it, I'd be very careful with social. A lot of people reach out to me and say,
love your social. How can I be more outspoken or provocative? And my advice is don't. Unless you're in
the media, it's your job, or unless you already have economic security, be very careful what you
post on social media, because it's one thing, you know, I'm not saying censor yourself. I'm saying
be measured and recognize that that shit is forever. And when you start cashing other people's
checks at a company, if you embarrass the company publicly, that is grounds for dismissal. In some,
be smart, be thoughtful, be respectful, and the key is to be a fucking gangster yourself.
Be just so good at what you do that you have the option to go to a place that pays you as well
and perhaps has values that better align with yours.
I appreciate the question.
Question number two comes from Mustache Gracias on Instagram.
They say, how would you approach fundraising if you're not connected to family offices, funds, etc.
Oh, fuck.
I assume you're in the hedge fund business. The hedge fund business has essentially been consolidated.
boss, it's like how to eat an elephant, one bite at a time.
I think you have to be in the mix.
I think you have to be in New York or San Francisco or London.
I think you have to be doing lunches and coffees every goddamn day with family offices.
What I have found, I've raised a lot of money.
What I have found is you don't raise money on the first, second or third meeting.
You raise it on the fifth or six, and they start with a little bit of money.
I think if you're a good person and you acquit yourself well, even when you lose money,
just communicating a lot.
slowly but surely you can start to build a book and then again a lot of it comes down to
a performance right but even so i'm seeing a lot of mid-level 100 million 500 million billion
three billion dollar funds just can't raise money right now so what is it it's a ton of hard work
and getting out of spoon and eating shit and doing a ton of meetings i think that if there's a hack here
it's content marketing.
And that is figuring out a viewpoint
or figuring out the most articulate,
compelling person in your organization
and having them put out content,
either newsletters or videos or thought pieces,
getting appearances on podcast,
where you get to explain the markets
and give people the sense
that this guy or gal understands
or can see the matrix,
and then maybe they should do a meeting with them.
I'm actually working with right now
or advising 150 billion AUM fund, and nobody knows about them.
And I'm like, that's great.
But if you want to get to $500 billion, you're going to have to have some awareness and retail
presence, which means you're going to need to start putting out thought leadership.
I think his name is Thorsten Slack?
Thorsten, oh, I forget his name.
Anyways, he puts out this great email newsletter on the markets from Apollo.
And Apollo's just in my head all the time.
Yeah.
So no easy, no easy route here.
market dynamics trump individual performance a lot of great managers out there just can't can't raise money right now
so two if you have the opportunity to go be a portfolio manager for a bigger fund i would seriously consider
that too if you're committed to raising your own fund just a shit ton of meetings day after day hand-to-hand
combat and then think about what kind of content marketing you can post on platforms youtube
podcast, social,
newsletters that raises your awareness
across a potential funding base.
Appreciate the question.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
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Welcome back. Our final question comes from Paredo Optimal 5,000.
on LinkedIn.
Hey, Big Dog, love the show.
I never missed an episode of Office Hours.
Would love to hear your opinion and thoughts on religion.
How did you talk about it with your sons?
Do you think the world is better with or without religion?
That's an awfully.
We're going to need a bigger boat.
By the way, have you seen that meme of Roy Scheider,
scooping trafe or that shit, whatever, chum?
I'm sorry, not true, chum, into the water,
and then the shark comes out,
and in this instance,
Bam Bondi coming out saying,
The Dow was over $50,000.
By the way, it's not dollars, you fucking idiot.
It's an index of the Dow's biggest hundred companies
meant to represent a balanced index or scorecard
on their market caps.
Anyways, I love that.
I love that.
Where were we?
Oh, religion.
How did I get here?
So what have I done with my sons around religion?
Almost nothing.
I am an atheist, and I think I grew up somewhat judgmental religion
and think of myself as a scientist and a cynic.
And it's good to call yourself a cynic? Oh, God, that's awful. I probably am. But, you know, you need optimists. You need pessimists. Optimus get the plane to fly. Pessimus invents seatbelts. You need both. Anyways, but I've always thought religion, to me, just made no fucking sense. I don't have an invisible friend. There's 5,000 gods out there. I believe in one less than most people. And as Ricky Jervais said, if we burned all of the religious books and then burnt all of the science books, the science books in 100,
500 or 1,000 years would probably look the same, whereas the, I don't know, the religious
books, who knows? Now, having said that, as I've gotten older, I've become much less judgmental.
And that is, I recognize, I think some of the beliefs of religion or some of the theories
just make no fucking sense to me. But my belief, as a quote-unquote scientist, is that there was
nothing and then it exploded into all this. That kind of makes no fucking sense either. So if people want
to believe some sort of divine intervention that built all of this and can help them understand
or appreciate, you know, how beautiful nature is and how good they feel when they, you know,
hug their kids. Like, I get it. And the fact that religion is used as the connective tissue to get
people together on a regular basis to appreciate each other and maybe invest in their community
and maybe, you know, wash the feet of others, I think the majority of the majority of the people, I think
the majority of religion, at least I've come to believe, is probably a net positive. And a lot of
people would argue have good points that, no, it's been the catalyst for most death and wars. I get
the counter argument here. But I find that the majority of people I know who have religious, I know,
some sort of religious upbringing or religious values or beliefs are generally, it's a great guidepost for
them, or it's a net positive in their lives. And not only provides them with comfort, but it helps them
develop a code around being more graceful and generous with others. I remember my dad's been married
and divorced four times. I've been to every religious establishment. I remember going to Sunday school
with his third wife or his third wife dropping me off at Sunday school. And the Sunday school teacher
would constantly ask, what would Jesus do? So he had to learn about Jesus. And, you know, Jesus probably
wouldn't hit Johnny and ask for his lunch money. I think at a very basic level, it has probably been a net
positive. It's the extremist in any religion that go bad shit crazy and start believing if you're not on my
team you deserve to die or you're less human. That's obviously where things kind of come off the tracks.
And I'm a huge believer in a separation of church and state. So what have I done with my kids?
Nothing. And I sort of regret it. I did give them a book called the history of religion just such that
they could be knowledgeable on it. I think it's hard to be a well-read, thoughtful person without at least
understanding the basics of religion. But I don't claim to have an answer here. I think this is a very
personal question. I think it's a conversation if you're thinking about entering into a long-term
relationship with someone that you have alignment around what you plan to do around religion with
your children. But my atheism is also a real source of strength for me. And that is I'm 99.9% convinced,
I think it's dangerous to be 100% certain of anything that at some point I will look into my
son's eyes and know our relationship is coming to an end. And then I'm never going to see them
again and they're never going to see me again. And that's okay because it has provided me with a lot of
courage and giving me the ability to forgive myself. And that is when I say or do something stupid,
which I do every fucking day, I try to forgive myself recognizing that the shame or the embarrassment
I feel doesn't matter because the people I'm worried about what they think of me are going to be
dead soon and so am I. And so try to be a good person, try to enjoy yourself, try to love others,
but recognize take risks, tell people you love them, be willing to make mistakes,
public failure, live life, dance on tables, dances if no one is watching you, because guess what,
you're going to be dead soon and so are they. I believe that, and I don't believe I'm going to
meet up with people and skirt along clouds and judge other people. I just don't buy that personally,
and I find that as liberating for me. Knowing that the end is coming makes me feel more bold
with my emotions and my actions, and that's been a real unlock for me. I'd like to somehow communicate
that to my kids, but I don't want to tell them it's all.
going to be over soon, you're going to be dead. And I don't know, that doesn't sound like a very
inspiring talk before we head to the Arsenal Liverpool game. But I have failed, I think,
as a father, to at least give them enough knowledge around religion such that they're versed or
well-versed in something that has played such a huge role in society. And also maybe to give them
the chance to make up their own minds about what, how much, if and how much religion they want in
their lives. In some, I have not figured this out. Other than
than to say, I believe that atheism is a form of religious belief. And one of the key tenets
of atheism that I've come to embrace is that you respect and accept other people's rights
or right to believe in a super being. That's a key component. People think of atheists as people who
discriminate against people have faith. No, a key component of atheism is that you, just as you
believe you have the right to be a non-believer, you also respect the rights of people to be believers.
Appreciate the question.
That's all for this episode.
If you'd like to submit a question,
please email a voice recording
to office hours of Proptoe Media.com.
That's Office Hours at Propggymedia.com.
Or if you prefer to ask on Reddit,
post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit,
and we just might feature it in an upcoming episode.
This episode was produced by Jennifer Sanchez and Laura Janair.
Kami Rika is our social producer.
Brad Williams is our editor.
And Drew Burroughs is our technical director.
Thank you for listening to the Propge Pod from Propheum Media.
