The Tim Ferriss Show - #590: Tony Fadell of iPod, iPhone, and Nest Fame — Stories of Steve Jobs on “Vacation,” Product Design and Team Building, Good Assholes vs. Bad Assholes, Investing in Trends Before They Become Trends, The Hydrogen Economy, The Future of Batteries, and More
Episode Date: April 27, 2022Brought to you by LinkedIn Marketing Solutions marketing platform with ~770M users, LMNT electrolyte supplement, and Eight Sleep’s Pod Pro Cover slee...ping solution for dynamic cooling and heating. More on all three below.Tony Fadell (@tfadell) is an active investor and entrepreneur with a 30+ year history of founding companies and designing products that profoundly improve people’s lives. As the principal at Future Shape, a global investment and advisory firm coaching engineers and scientists working on foundational deep technology, he is continuing to help bring technology out of the lab and into our lives. Currently, Future Shape is coaching 200+ startups innovating game-changing technologies. Tony began his career in Silicon Valley at General Magic, the most influential startup nobody has ever heard of. He is the founder and former CEO of Nest, the company that pioneered the “Internet of Things” and created the Nest Learning Thermostat. Tony was the SVP of Apple’s iPod Division and led the team that created the first 18 generations of the iPod and the first three generations of the iPhone. Throughout his career, Tony has authored more than 300 patents. In May 2016, TIME named the Nest Learning Thermostat, the iPod, and the iPhone as three of the “50 Most Influential Gadgets of All Time.” His new book is Build: An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making. Please enjoy!This episode is brought to you by LinkedIn Marketing Solutions, the go-to tool for B2B marketers and advertisers who want to drive brand awareness, generate leads, or build long-term relationships that result in real business impact.With a community of more than 770 million professionals, LinkedIn is gigantic, but it can be hyper-specific. You have access to a diverse group of people all searching for things they need to grow professionally. LinkedIn has the marketing tools to help you target your customers with precision, right down to job title, company name, industry, etc. To redeem your free $100 LinkedIn ad credit and launch your first campaign, go to LinkedIn.com/TFS!*This episode is also brought to you by Eight Sleep! Eight Sleep’s Pod Pro Cover is the easiest and fastest way to sleep at the perfect temperature. It pairs dynamic cooling and heating with biometric tracking to offer the most advanced (and user-friendly) solution on the market. Simply add the Pod Pro Cover to your current mattress and start sleeping as cool as 55°F or as hot as 110°F. It also splits your bed in half, so your partner can choose a totally different temperature.And now, my dear listeners—that’s you—can get $250 off the Pod Pro Cover. Simply go to EightSleep.com/Tim or use code TIM at checkout. *This episode is also brought to you by LMNT! What is LMNT? It’s a delicious, sugar-free electrolyte drink mix. I’ve stocked up on boxes and boxes of this and usually use it 1–2 times per day. LMNT is formulated to help anyone with their electrolyte needs and perfectly suited to folks following a keto, low-carb, or Paleo diet. If you are on a low-carb diet or fasting, electrolytes play a key role in relieving hunger, cramps, headaches, tiredness, and dizziness.LMNT came up with a very special offer for you, my dear listeners. For a limited time, you can claim a free LMNT Sample Pack—you only cover the cost of shipping. For US customers, this means you can receive an 8-count sample pack for only $5. Simply go to DrinkLMNT.com/Tim to claim your free 8-count sample pack.*How did Tony overcome his lack of patience long enough to write Build: An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making? [07:38]What did Tony learn from Steve Jobs about taking vacations, and why did he lead the “Killing Yourself for Work” chapter in Build with this story? [12:30]As a CEO, what did Tony accomplish in his downtime? [21:03]Tony shares his thoughts on managing big jobs with small teams, and how to chalk up wins that best alleviate burnout. [24:07]The best practices Tony has found for efficiently dividing labor among the members of a small team. [28:40]What do the headcount and org chart look like within Future Shape? [36:20]How does Future Shape differ from a VC firm, and what is its mission? Why was the COVID pandemic minimally disruptive to the way the company handles meetings and does business? [39:17]What is programmable electrification, and how is Future Shape involved in its development? [44:50]“The story doesn’t exist to sell your product. It’s there to help you define it.” Tony shares how this concept played into the creation of Build, and what Build is intended to provide to its readership. [51:00]How did Steve Jobs use story to define projects and products at Apple? [59:47]Tony admits that plenty of people think he’s an asshole. But what differentiates an acceptable asshole from an unacceptable asshole? [1:01:43]In our last conversation, Tony drove home the necessity of finding creative ways to cope with the world’s overabundance of plastics. What progress has been made on this front since then, and what other materials can be reclaimed from the things we throw away regularly? [1:06:12]How does Tony’s small team leverage its time and resources to focus on solving the problems that will have the largest impact? [1:09:17]Underestimated targets related to climate change that Tony thinks deserve more attention. [1:13:16]Tony’s thoughts on the efficacy of carbon removal, and companies that are aiming to do it right. [1:17:45]How will geopolitics figure into the supply chain for an electron-based economy? [1:24:28]How can we cultivate optimism in our younger generations when the constant barrage of doom and gloom from the media is generating higher-than-ever levels of apathy and passivism in the populace? What can we do to consume a healthier media diet? [1:30:34]Audience asks and parting thoughts. [1:37:58]*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsors.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs, lemurs and squirrels.
This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show,
where it is my job, each and every episode, to deconstruct world-class performers
of all different types,
from all different disciplines, to tease out the habits, routines, influences, frameworks,
et cetera, that you can hopefully borrow and apply to your own lives.
And my guest today is a fan favorite. It is his second appearance, Tony Fadell. You can find him
on Twitter and Instagram at TFadell, F-A-D-E-L-L. Who is Tony Fadell? You can find him on Twitter and Instagram at T Fadell, F-A-D-E-L-L.
Who is Tony Fadell? Tony is an active investor and entrepreneur with a 30 plus year history of
founding companies and designing products that profoundly improve people's lives. You'll
recognize quite a few of them. So stick around, pay attention. Is a principal at FutureShape,
a global investment and advisory firm coaching engineers and scientists working on foundational deep technology, he is continuing to help bring technology
out of the lab and into our lives. Currently, FutureShape is coaching 200 plus startups
innovating game-changing technologies. He began his career in Silicon Valley at General Magic,
the most influential startup nobody has heard of. We talk about General Magic at length
in our first conversation, so check that out if you want that chapter. We talk about General Magic at length in our first conversation,
so check that out if you want that chapter. We cover it a little bit in this one just so you have context. He is the founder and former CEO of Nest, the company that pioneered the internet of
things and created the Nest Learning Thermostat. Tony was the SVP of Apple's iPod division and led
the team that created the first 18 generations of the iPod and the first three generations of the iPhone. Throughout his career, Tony has authored more than 300 patents. That is a whole lot of patents.
In May 2016, Time named the Nest Learning Thermostat, the iPod, and the iPhone as three
of the 50 most influential gadgets of all time. His new book, which we dig into at some length
because it is tactical and practical and very
rich in details, is Build, Subtitle, An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making.
You can find him online, futureshapellc.com.
You can find him on Twitter, Instagram, and all over the place, of course.
Easiest handle is at tfadel, T-F-A-D-E-L-L.
And without further ado, please enjoy this very wide ranging conversation, a very actionable
conversation.
Lots of nitty gritty details with Tony Fadell.
Tony, what a pleasure to see you.
Thanks for coming back on the show.
Tim, it's great to be with you and with you again.
I hear that's a rare occasion with you and with you again.
I hear that's a rare occasion to come on a second time. So thanks for having me.
It is a rare event. And I think there are many good reasons for it. The first is we only got through a small percentage of my total notes the first time around. And many things have happened
since we last spoke. And I have to ask you right up front,
so you have this new book, Build, subtitle, An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making,
which is incredibly well put together. I looked at it. I didn't read the whole thing,
but I did read quite a few chapters. I'm going to read more. Lots of diagrams,
lots of illustrations, stories, case studies, etc. I was looking back, however,
at the transcript of our first conversation, which I always do before having a follow-up.
And I had asked you what you struggle with, what doesn't come easy. And you had said analytics has
always been tough. Also, long-form writing. It's a lack of patience. You have a hard time waiting
on people to move when the time is now. He just wants to get things done. That's you. So long form writing,
but yet here we are with a book. So what the hell happened? How did this come to manifest?
Well, Build has been in the back of my mind, obviously not the title, but the concept has
been in the back of my mind for about 15 years
now. I've had a lot of people bugging me. When are you going to write a book? When are you going to
write a book? And I just didn't want it to be some kind of autobiography or some, look at this great
stuff. And here's all the wonderful things that the team and I created together. And, you know,
it's just these kind of hero stories. Well, I really wanted to give back.
And the real reason for doing this is I looked up and this was just before COVID.
I was looking around going, the only reason why I'm sitting here talking to someone such as yourself is because people helped me with my success.
I had mentors along the route, all the way from when I was a young kid through
school into the working world. And I thought about that. I was like, oh. And then I thought about
who were or are my mentors. And I found out most of them had died. And for me, I was like, oh,
wait a second. That means the baton has been passed. And to take what people gave me, I was like, oh, wait a second. That means the baton has been passed.
And to take what people gave me, their heart, their time, their energy, their passion to help me with no economic benefit to them directly, you know, they helped me.
So now it's time for me to give back.
And given our work at FutureShape, where we have over 200 companies we've directly invested in and lots
of other companies who just come to ask for advice, I was being a mentor every day. And so I
just started putting together all of the topics that kept coming up every single time, every day,
maybe multiple times a week, into a spreadsheet and start going, okay, this, this, this. These
are the core things necessary.
And so Build was born out of just those conversations that I have all the time.
And so to get into long form, obviously long form is difficult. And I didn't do it all myself. I had
a brilliant co-writer, Dina Levinsky, who helped me tremendously. And we've worked together for
over a decade. So she and I put the words on the
page. But the concepts and everything came directly from the conversations I have daily
with all of these startup founders or even high schoolers going into college, what should they do?
College people getting out, where should I go work? So it was all of those things coming back
and flowing back. And hopefully this book is a mentor in a box. So no matter whether you're a
high schooler all the way through retirement age, you were able to access something in the book. And the book is set up. Yes, it's long form, but really every chapter and it started out as micro chapters, short chapters about real key topics that I think affects most people in most industries who are trying to do something special and for either
themselves in their career or for the world in the in the businesses that they they create or
manage and so that was really what it was it's just trying to give back and it was really rewarding
it was very difficult it was very cathartic at times it's very personal. It's very raw. I didn't pull punches. And, you know, we'll see
what happens. I hope there's real practical advice, not just about success, but here's all kinds of
ways that I've failed and how I picked myself up from the failure and moved on. Because for as much
success you hear people talk about, and you know this, Tim, is there's a lot of failure along the
way that most people don't talk about. And I think we actually spend more time talking about the failures than we do the
successes in the book so people can learn. Okay. So I'm grinning ear to ear for people
who can't see me if you're listening just to the audio. And I'm grinning for a whole bunch
of reasons. The first is, if we just pause for a second, Everyone listening should imagine Tony in front of employees, say rallying
them for a launch or say identifying how they're going to move forth or after conquering a crisis.
There's a chapter on storytelling that I just finished reading, which talks about putting the
why before the what. So you are, I mean, a walking illustration of a lot of what's discussed in the book. And I
want to underscore the not pulling punches. And you'll have to trust me that I know at least some
subset of my audience when I give this example. There are a lot of memorable, very highly specific
stories. And they range from org chart design all the way to handling internal politics and
different breeds of assholes. And the particular story, we don't have to get into this right away,
but the story, you may know where this is going, that I broke out laughing over when I was reading
it was having someone pull you into an office with HR and saying,
there are two big swinging dicks in this room and mine is the biggest. And that's how they
started the meeting and how you deal with someone like that. Because this is the unpleasant reality
of navigating the entrepreneurial and in some cases, whether it's product or
company building journey. And so I wanted to now just go to this mention of mentors.
So you've had many mentors and you can learn from mentors in different ways. So mentors can sit you
down and teach you a lesson. They can lead by example. In some cases, they can show you perhaps
what you shouldn't do and you can learn from their mistakes. So I want to visit the killing yourself for work chapter, which I only
read the very beginning of because I didn't want to kind of spoil any surprises for myself. Could
you tell us what you learned from Steve Jobs about taking vacations? How did Steve Jobs take vacations?
I don't know of all of his vacations. I know of the vacations he took while we were together at Apple for 10 years. And what was really happening was, you know, Steve would go on vacation and in
my early days there, I would be like, yes, he's going on vacation. It's great. We're, you know,
we're not going to have to hear from him for seven or 14 days or whatever
the case may be. Well, that dream met reality and the reality was very different. It turned out that
Steve, he would go on vacation. He would usually vacation at one or two places and he'd go to the
same places all the time. That's what he liked and that's all good. And he would go silent for the first kind of 24, 48 hours. He would be gone. He
would be in transit. He would be, you know, with his family, what have you. For those first 48
hours, you wouldn't hear anything, maybe 72. But somewhere right after that, you started getting
calls. It wasn't emails. It was calls from Steve. And Steve would be on vacation and
he would be pondering where the next product, the next direction for Apple, new technologies,
things he's reading. He used that vacation as a time to kind of expand his thinking and get
outside of the Apple day-to-day and the projects that we all knew and loved. Or maybe there was
a couple of things to improve on the projects that we all knew and loved. Or maybe there was a couple
of things to improve on the projects we were working on. But he would start thinking about,
oh, let's go buy a music company. Or should we go and do this other kind of product? Or
what technology will it take to do this? Because he's also reading. He's reading or he's listening
to others saying different technologies. So he would be calling going, you would be like Google
for him. You're like, hey, what is the latest on this?
And you're like, okay, Steve, here's what we know.
I don't know that.
I can go get back to you.
He's like, oh, let me know when you know,
send me an email on that.
And then 15 minutes later,
he might call back with a different idea.
So it was literally while he was on vacation
during reasonable hours.
This was crazy hours.
But you might hear from him on vacation
five or six times, depending on what he was thinking about at that time per day. Could be
as much as maybe zero per day. But sooner or later along that vacation, he would call you and like
want to brainstorm something or want a piece of knowledge or want to know the latest about
something that was related to some idea he had
in his head. And so you loved it because you got to talk to him about all kinds of things that
weren't the day-to-day. But at the other times, you were like, okay, Steve, you need to be on
vacation. And then two is, how much work are we going to have when you come back? Besides the
incredible mountain of work we're already on top of, we're trying to get on top of.
Why did you lead with that? And why write this particular chapter? Because flashing back again
to our first conversation, which I encourage people to read, I'm going to try to not overlap
too much with that. But back at General Magic, you had a certain, let's say, approach to work, which was high volume, high intensity, kind of 10 out of
10. And that seems to have changed over time. And just for people who have no idea what general
magic is, I just want to say, and tell me if this is off base, but it's kind of like Jodaworski's
Dune in a sense where if people don't understand that, that was an attempt at making Dune, which failed. But the talent that was assembled ended up being this incredible diaspora of technical
innovation that then spread all over the place. You had Geiger creating Alien and so on.
So General Magic was somewhat like that, I would say, the genesis of a lot of amazing careers.
It's a great analogy. Yeah, great analogy.
So why did you lead with that story in that chapter? And why even write that chapter?
I went through that personal struggle. And I think a lot of people do of, I need to work
harder than everyone else and spend more time working. So I was working 80, 100, 110 hours a week kind
of thing because that's what I thought needed to happen. I thought I needed to prove myself
through the number of hours, through the amount of work that I could get done.
And I was also really passionate and kind of like, you're a kid in the candy store.
Like for me, I'm a geek, right? I'm
like, oh, I can do this. I can do that. And I get to work on this. And the more hours I got at there,
I could go and work and learn from all of these great people around me. So one thing I had to
learn how to do the work. And the other one is doing the work and learning how to do it at a
professional level like my heroes around me would do. So there was a lot of learning. And you know,
when you go to school, you go to school, but you're also doing your studying and
all the other stuff. So it was a little bit more than going to a university, but your first jobs
are really like that. You spend a lot of time, but you also start to learn how to be productive.
Okay. And what being productive means and doing a great job versus just being
there a lot of hours. And so that's where it all hit for me. I will say this. I was undiagnosed
ADD, ADHD at that timeframe. I was in general magic. And ultimately a couple of years later,
then I actually figured out what was going on. So I was trying to do my
work and perform at a professional level, learn the work. And I had ADHD across all of it. So
if you know anything about writing code, writing code and being in the details, and if your mind's
always going, oh my God, it made everything harder. So it was all of those things compounded.
And so that, that chapter is really about,
here's where I was,
maybe you're experiencing a lot of this yourself,
and here's where a more balanced approach.
Now it's not your typical work-like daily balance,
but here's a way to do it,
to be high performing, do amazing things,
but to also give yourself the right amount per day,
as well as per year of time off and time to
think and realize that when you get to go away from a certain activity you're doing every time,
you might be actually be able to think about it more clearly and come up with the answers
more clearly if you're away from it, as opposed to into it all the time. What did you find for yourself that annual cadence off looked like as a CEO? And I know
in between gigs, we talked in the first conversation about getting bored, spending
three weeks, like reorganizing your garage or doing something so that the ideas that are not
obvious might make an appearance, right? And you could have insights.
And we spent quite a bit of time chatting about that. Where have you landed for yourself
personally, or where did you land as a CEO? So as a CEO, and even to this day, you need,
for me, on a weekly basis, each week was make sure you're doing the right thing for your physical and
mental health,
either in the mornings or afternoons or wherever it is, five to six days a week.
That's the first one, right? There's eating healthy. So I got rid of all kinds of bad foods.
I got rid of alcohol, got rid of all kinds of stuff. Then there was, you know, making sure
you're physically fit, making sure you're mentally fit. Those are really important things to do. And you spend your
time, you know, spend a lot of time doing those. And during that time, I was able to come up with
great ideas and solve problems when I was quieting my brain and getting out of it. Like all of a
sudden things popped in my brain. It's not that I was thinking about it. It was like, all of a
sudden, I don't know what happened, but consolidation happened in my memory, in my brain.
I went, ding, oh, that's what we've been thinking about or thought about
a differently different perspective. So that was kind of on a weekly basis. I would also go for a
long bike ride or, you know, yoga or whatever. And this was three or four hours on the weekends,
really just taking my time, no devices, nothing around, just totally being absorbed in whatever activity it was doing.
And that was really, really great. Now, let's move out to more like a year kind of area from the
week. And that made sure going on vacation, getting out of the fray every day when you're
on vacation, really taking a vacation and turning over the reins to people I trusted.
So people who reported to me,
they always look up and they go,
oh, I'm sure they didn't say this to me.
But in the back yard, oh, I could always be better.
Why did Tony think of it this way?
And why did he manage us this way?
And I'm sure there's all kinds of backstories
that I didn't hear about, but I'm sure they're taught.
Everyone talks about their manager or leader or whatever.
So I was like, okay,
well,
I'm going to just hand over the keys to the candy store to one person on my team. And it would be a different person each time. And I was like, okay, now you get to sit in the chair. You get to see
and be from my perspective, see from my perspective and try to manage and lead in that special way.
And to me, it was kind of a humbling experience,
both for me, because they would take it on, and two, they would come back and ask all kinds of
questions, right? And so it was a great training ground so they could understand how it is to
sit in that seat and help the team in the way that a leader can by doing it themselves.
And then all of a sudden, the tables turned and there was more empathy both ways to each
other's responsibilities.
We're going to talk quite a bit about empathy in a number of different capacities.
For instance, a good story being an act of empathy.
And I do consider you a master storyteller.
So we're going to come back to that.
But I want to ask you a completely self-serving question first.
Okay.
So where I suppose the podcast in general is pretty self-serving question first. Okay. So where,
where I suppose the podcast in general is pretty self-serving because I enjoy doing it, but
talking about like killing yourself for work, you have another chapter on break points.
I'd love to ask you a super specific question and it's related to burnout for employees who have
many hats to wear. And I'll give you a very specific example.
So I have a very small team. And I'd just be curious to know how you might think through this
or how you have seen it handled or handled it in the past. And I currently have two full-time
employees. That's it. And that's for everything. And that will probably expand in the near future,
but I'm not quite clear how to properly expand it because I've got a lot of conflicting advice. So on one hand, I have someone who handles, say, the podcast and,
for lack of a better term, editorial. They're like the general manager of these very specific
roles that have very specific responsibilities. And there are a fair number of wins built into this
for them. So they get a good amount of positive reinforcement.
And then the other employee is sort of executive assistant chief of staff, probably in the future, more of chief of staff role.
And they're handling so many different miscellaneous responsibilities that the potential for burnout seems to be quite high. And they also get,
and I need to be better at doing this in person, of course, but they have fewer wins to chalk up
that are obvious that someone say on the editorial side would have, or in any, maybe product
management role where there are launches and so on. How have you handled this in the past
for yourself, for someone who's in like a admin support kind of broad role? Do you have any
thoughts that you can share? You've had so many more reps than I have. Well, you know, small teams
are challenging, right? As you say, there's, you have to wear a lot of different hats and we have
a small team at FutureShape as well.
And so we've been working that way for five, six years now.
So we deal with the same things, similar things, at least with a small team.
And I think it really boils down to, well, one is, as you say, the wins.
Let's talk about the wins.
Certain people have certain things that have big projects they produce or what have you,
and they can feel that.
For people who are kind of more the day-to-day, number one is typically when they're in those roles, they like those roles. That's what they want to be in. Okay. That's the first thing. So that's what they
naturally are accustomed to and that's what they feel good at. The biggest one for me is just
saying thank you a lot and acknowledging even the little stuff. Acknowledging that I know there's
so many things, so many
different hats you're wearing, what have you. Can I help with prioritization? Is there something we
can prioritize? Is there something we can remove from that list, at least temporarily, to help you
get through the day? Are there better tools we can get? Are there any other suggestions that you
might have for us to upgrade our capabilities to allow you to have other superpowers so you can get more things done or the things that just none unnecessary.
First, it's thanking for even the smallest stuff.
And the second thing is really talking about tools, processes, prioritization of managing.
And at some point you have to add people.
You don't want to add too many people, but you want to add in the right amount.
And as you start, you as the leader start to understand the prioritizations and what's falling off, either one, they don't really need to be done or they
really need to be done. And you have to start bundling that into a new role. The other one
is making sure that you're taking regular breaks because podcasting, as we know, is really time
consuming. There's a lot happening all the time and just shutting down for two weeks every so
often and everybody shuts down and two weeks every so often.
And everybody shuts down and they all go away.
I've always wanted to do this thing where email clients, the sending of email and even the receive of email would actually go offline.
So it would just be bundled and buffered in the server and it would only turn on for certain
hours.
I thought that was going to be a next generation kind of thing for companies to offer to their employees, which was really work time around the communications thing. And so if you can find a time to take everybody away from the day to day, that is another way to really reward the team and make sure that they actually have the time off as well. If you don't mind, I'd love to just spend a few more minutes on this because I get asked
all the time by friends of mine, people I'm sure we know in common also, I'm not going to call them
out, who ask me for help with this because I have done a lot of experiments. But when you have had
more than one person in a, let's just call support role where they wear many hats. What type of division of labor have you found
to work? This could be from 10 years ago, it could be today. But when people are really handling a
lot of different tasks, and if a miscellaneous new task pops up, they tend to be the first person in
line to handle that. What type of division of labor have you seen work or not work?
It really boils down to the people, especially in the small teams, what your team likes.
And so there is either time or task sharing, or there's time or task separation.
There could be two in a box for handling all of your exec and all of these little things.
And the two people really love working together,
whoever they are,
and they know how to self-manage between them.
They look like one person,
even though they're two people
and they can manage around the clock
or depending on when people have personal time
or what have you.
So there's that kind of task sharing slash time sharing
that can work really well,
but those people have to get along and they
say they want to do that. Then there's the other one, which is task separation, which is really,
there's your travel schedule, or there's your calendar, or there's doing briefs for, you know,
a podcast or finances or reports or whatever those are. And then just getting people into each of
those things. And then making sure that, to me,
I always try to make sure I have proactive people
on the team when it's a small team
so that they're working together.
And then I only insert
when there's either prioritization thing
or a little process of who does what,
because I want them to self-manage.
I've managed so many teams.
I'd rather not manage people, to tell you the truth.
I'd rather mentor and be there as an advice. But if you need me to manage, I'll happy so many teams. I'd rather not manage people, to tell you the truth. I'd rather mentor and be there as an advice.
But if you need me to manage, I'm happy to do it.
But typically, the best people to manage, if they're proactive and they're similar to
our kind of character, they like to manage themselves.
And they like to manage between each other.
And then I tell them, well, what do you want to do?
Just tell me what you want to do.
And if that works for you, and I think it'll work for me, then we go on and we try that.
And then we modulate. So there's no real rules. It really boils down to the people, absolutely
the people. And then when you get past, if you're one leader in a small team, you get past 12,
13 people, that's when the first breakpoint really starts to happen. Like you recognize in the book,
there's those breakpoints at different team sizes.
It becomes that where there's even more specialization
and more management.
If you want to just be a leader
that's delegating to everyone
and there's a chief of staff,
well, that's a different story,
but I like to keep it very flat,
get everyone to learn how to work together,
how to communicate together,
read each other's tea leaves,
if you know what I mean,
and be proactive because they know, we know how to work. So that's my preference.
Thank you for spending some time on that.
No problem. Hopefully it helps.
This is current. It is. Yeah, it is helpful. And this is very current for me.
And write down job descriptions, write down roles and tasks and be very, very specific
on the things that they should be specific on and other things that are like, these are the general pool of things that
we work on. And then it's a grab bag and you can give them out to people or they can just jump in
and take them. But even though you might be small, write it down because once you write it down and
you know this, it's visible and you go, wait a second, that seems too long. That's too many
things they're doing. And then you can have a discussion and, you know, we don't all ever want to add more people to the
team because we think, you know, lean, mean is better. But at some point you're killing each
other because you're trying to do too much. So either do less or you got to add capabilities
and hands to the situation. I think that's sort of the decision, the point in the decision tree where I am right
now. And I think if I could use the word intuitively, the time sharing appeals to me
because it implies that you have redundancy in so much as you have two people who can handle all
of the respective buckets kind of under their job description. I worry a little bit that if it
was task separated, that there would be vying for more interesting or less interesting, or if
there were some overflow, if someone were handling, say, finance and investments and
kind of more technical stuff that if they were asked to do personal, they might
balk, for instance, like in a very small team. We also move the tasks around. We also move the tasks around. So not everyone's
doing the same thing each half year. So you can move it around because you want everyone to learn
each of the different things. And you just, that's a great point. That keeps it interesting
for everyone, as opposed to you get locked in the rut, because I don't know how much you want to
grow your business, your platform. Right. And for us, I've the rut, because I don't know how much you want to grow your business, your platform, right?
And for us, I've been very clear is I don't want to add any more.
We already have too much to do.
And to add more people is just going to be more things on my head and everyone else's
head.
We're like, no, we're going to just stay small because we can be.
We don't have any business goals to grow beyond that.
So the other thing is not just your team, but understand what you need,
what you want, what are your goals as the leader for your, what you're trying to do.
You know, you can be everything if you want to be, but then that comes with all kinds of other
resources you need to add in and just be really cognizant. If you love your life and everything's
working just because somebody else has got, oh, well, they have more followers or they have
three houses and whatever. What is meaningful for you and what's meaningful for your team to
really be doing? And is everyone financially taken care of? Start there. Don't think about,
oh, I want to conquer the world. Maybe you do, but a lot of people don't. You're very successful
as you are. How much more? I don't know. That's for you to answer.
Yeah, I mostly just want to hike in the woods with my dog and barbecue with my girlfriend.
Well, then maybe you got to do just slightly less or add one person or a half person.
Yeah.
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show
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I think you and I have a number of converging interests we're going to talk about a little bit later. Let me ask you, with FutureShape, what does the headcount and org chart look like within FutureShape?
Since you've had the opportunity to kind of design many different teams, what does FutureShape look like?
FutureShape, depending on how you count, is around nine people.
When you factor in all of the accounting and all the other pieces, about nine to 10 people.
And they're both on the West Coast and also here in France.
So we have on both sides.
But truthfully, FutureShape is a set of individuals.
I might be a leader in a way, but everyone on the team is a leader for the expertise they bring.
And so it's all proactive. We're all friends. We all want to help each other. We're here for a
mission. And so we want to keep it flat, lean, and mean, because the reason why, at least I am,
and a couple other people are on the team, is we don't need to work in a corporation. We don't need to work in
something much more highly structured. We are professional adults. We know how to work together
and we just want to do really great stuff within reason while having great lives. Obviously,
there's peaks and valleys and all that stuff. But now with the book, it's very peaky right now.
I do know that stuff. But now with the book, it's very peaky right now. I do know that feeling.
Yeah. People are burning the midnight oil now. But typically, it's not like that.
And we try to make sure it isn't like that. Even though we have two different time zones,
we're very respectful on each other's time zones, even when we're traveling, these kinds of things.
So the nice thing is because we have two teams on both sides of the Atlantic, there's only windows of time when we can each be working together,
if you know what I mean. And so it's a great self-limiting function. So I find these kinds
of things really interesting. The other self-limiter is because we're an investor,
we're limited by only our family funds. We don't have LPs. So we're not always chasing the next
billion dollar fund or $2 billion fund. So we're not always chasing the next billion dollar fund or
two billion dollar fund. So we also have an internal pressure there, which is we're only
going to be doing our capital. We have to manage this portfolio. So we try to make sure we have
constraints on our time, on our resources, such that it doesn't allow us to grow too big. So it's
like the fish in aquarium. It grows to the size of the aquarium size or the
fishbowl size. So I try to make sure we put those constraints on it, team size, how much we're doing,
those kinds of stuff to make sure we don't spill over. And if we do spill over, then we just say,
okay, we're going to do less. It's hard. You always want to do more because you see lots
of interesting things. You see a lot of incredible teams, but you can't do it all, you know, and you have to say no. You know, I think we discussed that on our last podcast is
saying no a lot. And so really what's your mission, what are your goals,
personal and also the team goals and make sure it's all aligned.
Could you mention, just describe in brief the mission of futureShape. And then if you're open to it,
would you mind describing the set meetings that you have in terms of whether it's one-on-ones
or all team meetings, like what the cadence of set meetings looks like?
Our heartbeats.
If they exist.
That's a chapter in the book, Heartbeats. So for our team,
again, we are mentors. We call ourselves mentors with money. We're not a VC who takes third-party
money and invests it on behalf and have to worry about returns for LPs or limited partners.
We're not philanthropic, so we're not just giving away money either. Sometimes it feels like that
because we do have failures and stuff like that.
You know, we still have a portfolio that between 70 and 80 percent of the portfolio will be
a failure or a push, you know, in terms of like the financial outcome.
But the other 20 percent or 25 percent could be really, you know, dramatic.
So that's kind of the framing of where we're at.
But to talk about what we're really passionate about, our mission, our mission is to deploy our network, our expertise into these companies doing really hard, disruptive, typically deep technology companies who can be disruptive to a given industry. And that is either in the environment,
it's either societal issues, problems we want to solve,
or health issues.
So really the planet, society, or health, individual health. So that's what we're focused on.
And we get to work with some of the best entrepreneurs
in the planet trying to help in a big way.
We don't invest in sales
technology or media technology, gaming. We don't do that. Marketing or ad technology.
We care about doing the things most investors will shy away from, things that are not in vogue,
things that are not like we hear about metaverse or whatever, that kind of stuff.
No, we don't play those
trends. Typically, we're pre-trend. So before the trend happens, we're early. And like we've
been doing the climate investing for a while now. And it was crickets. People are like,
you guys are crazy. What are you investing in this stuff? We had 2008 with the green tech
implosion. It's never going to turn. Why are you spending all this time, Tony?
COVID hits, then all of a sudden people start changing their priorities, whether that's the
investment people themselves or their limited partners and family offices are starting going,
well, what do we have in climate change? What's out there? And now they're starting to call me.
They're going, wait a second, you've been in this in a while. What are you working on?
What are the cool companies? What should we be investing in? So typically we are ahead of the curve.
It can be lonely at times,
but now it's finally hitting
in many of our different aspects of what we invest in.
And it's like, okay, finally it was right place, right time.
But there are years when you're sitting there
navel gazing going, is this gonna go?
Is this just a pipe dream?
We know that there are problems.
When is the world gonna wake up to them?
Because we're solving pains. We're not just doing things frivolously and doing fun things.
We think we're doing very important things. And that's what drives our team. That's what drives
us. Now, as far as how we work our day to day, we were virtual well before COVID. Okay, we're a
virtual team. We have, you know, we're even more virtual now, but before COVID we were virtual. We have one physical office. Now we had two physical offices,
but even then we were virtual. So when COVID hit, we all said, what do we do? We were like,
well, what we've been doing for the last two years. So that went really well.
So we're always on, you know, we're always on the messaging apps going back and forth,
but we have regularly,
either every week or every other week, all team meeting, just an all team meeting. We go down, here's our work list. Here's what's going on. Funny stories, just kind of keeping, you know,
that team esprit de corps alive and going. It's very operational. You know, all the fun stuff
happens in our group chats
where we're sending each other posts about this
or funny stories or what have you.
We're probably talking to each other
almost every day one-on-one or one-on-two
or something like that.
Or we have conference calls with our portfolio companies
who are mentoring or CEOs or what have you.
So we get to pick and choose our schedules.
And so that's really unlike a lot of other companies and other businesses.
We're in a special space.
So we try to make sure our lives and our mission are paramount in the work that we do.
This is going to be maybe a mundane tactical question, but I know companies that use Slack.
I know companies that use many different tools.
Most recently, some have started using Telegram.
What do you use for group chat?
Interestingly enough, we go between WhatsApp and we go between, of all things, Skype.
No kidding.
Why?
Okay, tell me more.
Well, we started on Skype years ago before all of this other stuff.
And it works.
Maybe not the most modern, but it works.
We have had more or less less issues
with that group chat than anything else.
You know, I don't know why.
Maybe we also have less noise in it
because very few people use Skype.
So it's kind of like our own messaging client
without all of our friends and family in it.
Because if you're on WhatsApp, I got friends, family,
I got all kinds of crazy.
Very few people use Skype.
So we get, it's kind of our own messaging app
that's all our own thing.
It's kind of like a Slack channel without being a channel.
So we were pre-Slack.
Christine, uncluttered.
So let me ask you about something I know absolutely nothing about, but I would love to hear you
expand or just explain what it is if you're able to take a minute.
And that is programmable electrification. So I've read this
is something that you have been interested in, at least as recently as 2020. I don't know if that
has changed, but could you speak to what that is and some of the areas that you're focused on,
if you're open to mentioning them, that are pre-trend? Sure. I think programmable electrification or truly
the electrification of everything, which also includes the wireless of everything.
If you go all the way from the place where you first start, where energy is produced or created,
and it goes through the transmission lines or wherever it is, and then where it's consumed,
there's all kinds of things. The then where it's consumed, there's all
kinds of things. The same thing goes with wireless. There's all kinds of things in the middle or at
the ends that are consuming, generating inefficiencies and that stuff. So we look across
these entire value chains in these systems and we look at fundamental things that need to change
in those systems to be able to make them more efficient.
So today, you know, this is an electrical injury, but all energy in the world today
that is created, 60% of that, 60 is lost in inefficiencies. It doesn't even do work.
So just imagine what our climate crisis would be if we
just saved that energy. Okay. If we saved even half of that 60%, like 30%, we could still live
the life we're leading without all of the problems we have, because we're just throwing it away.
We're just being wasteful. You know, you know, when you've seen people with, to me, waste is horrid. I, I abhor waste. I loathe waste. When I go to the trash can each day, I'm like, okay,
this is organic. I know where that could go, but where's this thing going? Where's that thing going?
And it drives me nuts. And so when I see something like 60% of energy goes away in losses, I'm like,
where can we go target that? So one thing in this is better
motors, electric motors. And that's from not just cars, but all the way to electric appliances,
everything that uses motors, manufacturing, so many things use motors, and we're throwing away
tons and tons of fans on your ceiling, tons and tons of energy there. So one company that we
invest in is Turntide. And we've been there well before they
were named Turntide. We've been in, I don't know, six, seven, eight years now. They're making a
next generation motor. And that motor can be much more efficient, like 10%, 15% more efficient.
But it uses fundamentally new software and hardware technology and gets
rid of rare earth magnets, all the things that we keep talking about with supply chain.
So it's a very, very different motor, much higher efficiency, slightly higher cost in
certain regards, but that'll come down over time.
But it's such a dramatic reinvention of the motor that we had to be in it because energy
losses in motors is just very high and they're used everywhere.
So let's go after that. Another company that we're in is called Menlo Micro. Menlo Micro is all about
the distribution of electricity from place to place. Today, we have things that are called
relays. You've probably heard of them. You've probably heard of them. Click, click, click,
click and thermostats and various appliances or whatever. Those have not been innovated since the 1880s, I think it was, or 1850s.
Electromagnetic relays and silicon state relays, solid state relays, have really not been innovated.
They're the same thing, but they have all kinds of inefficiencies or reliability problems.
There's been no moment.
The same is like when the vacuum tube became a transistor and all of a
sudden all of these things changed in the world. So that vacuum tube to transistor moment is now
about to happen in relays and it's happening by Menlo Micro. And so it's these little MEM switches,
they're silicon switches, and they switch very fast, very reliably, billions of times and can
replace all of these old technologies. 20 billion or more are sold a year today.
And with this, we can get much better energy efficiency and getting it out of the transmission
lines, out of the problems in the cars, in all the traffic signals in the world, in how
you do your lighting in your houses or dimming or fans and all those kinds of things. So that's another example of
this kind of getting into the electricity system and trying to find those inefficiencies and get
rid of that waste. And so to me, this is incredibly beneficial. It's so much so that like Menlo has
an incredibly long set of customers because these engineers have been working for years with this
antiquated technology. Now all of a sudden they said, finally, the holy grail, and they're diving in. To give one
example, the country of India, 8% of all their electricity today is used by ceiling fans in
homes. 8% of energy consumption, ceiling fans. Yes. If you put our one switch in just in the wall switch
we can save 50 percent of that so we can go down from eight percent of the country's energy
consumption down to four percent just because they're waste it turns into heat this one little
switch that's not very expensive at all you're're like, oh my God, what other things can we do like that with all kinds of other
countries who have these kinds of, we all have the inefficiencies.
It's not just India.
It's the US.
It's Europe.
It's everywhere.
What else can we do when we have these fundamentally new things that are not cool and of the moment
like a metaverse or NFT or something?
This is the stuff that matters.
That's why we get up
every day and go to work and have a great time with this kind of mission, finding these people
doing these kinds of things that take six, seven, eight, 10 years to actually realize.
But once they're there, they're transformative everywhere in the world.
Let's return to storytelling. We've been listening to storytelling from start to finish, but I want
to read a truncated two sentences from the book. And there's more to, of course, this entire
chapter, but the story doesn't exist to sell your product. It's there to help you define it.
There's more on that second sentence, but could you elaborate on this place? Because I think this
is a really fascinating and deeply important point. So the story doesn't exist to sell your product,
right? Because a lot of people make something, then they're like, all right, what yarn do we
spin? What do we pitch? How do we angle this properly so we can sell it? But if we then
reframe it, it's there to help you define it. That is the product. What does that mean? And
could you give an example?
You hit it right on the nose here. So what I grew up learning, which you just mentioned,
is that you create something you really think is meaningful. And then you, at the end, you go,
we're going to market it now. And we're going to tell a story about it. And hopefully that story resonates. And hopefully it relates to the product. You're actually delivering what the product can deliver, right?
And you're like, okay.
If you actually move that story to the front,
while you're concepting whatever it is you're trying to build, trying to create,
when you actually create that story, as you know, you have to understand your audience.
You have to understand why they're tuning in, what their problems are, how you can solve them and how you make it easy for them to listen in
and learn, right? And hopefully some tools so they can apply it in their day-to-day life
after they get done so that it's kind of almost like a loyalty thing. They're like,
oh, he did all these great things for me. I want to listen more. So it's not just a one-time thing,
but it's a relationship that you're building, even though it might've started out as a transaction.
So how do we tell that story? What are the pains you're solving? Why does it matter? Why does it
matter to the individual? Why does it matter maybe to their family? Why does it matter to their
society or where they live? How is it going to help them both rationally and emotionally? In
other words, is it about money savings? Is it about some time savings? What's the rational
part of the story? What's the emotional part of the story to say, oh, that is so cool. I want to
get off my butt and actually make that transaction happen because I really believe in the rational
part. So you need to have this incredible balance
of understanding your audience, understanding all of these variables, and you need to write
them down before you embark. Now, it doesn't mean on the creative journey, but it does help to guide
you so you don't get off track and you just start building things that resonate with you,
but don't resonate with anyone else. General Magic was a perfect example of that.
General Magic, we were making all the things that we thought were cool because we knew
those problems would exist sometime in the future.
We're going to make all of this technology in service of what we think is the coolest
thing, but we really didn't have a great idea of who we are targeting, why we're targeting,
was society ready for it?
What were the both rational
and emotional reasons for buying it? All those things. And that's why General Magic failed,
because the technology wasn't even ready yet, but the market was so far from being ready,
even if the technology was close. So there seems to be a threading the needle here
that you have accomplished quite a few times, not just in building, but also in
investing where, and this is going to sound like a strange comparison, but I was reading a book
called Of Wolves and Men by Barry Lopez, one of my favorite nonfiction books, going to redefine
the genre of nature writing and what it could be just in terms of complexity and nuance and
beautiful prose. And he talks about, gave several examples
of wolf packs that would set off in a very particular direction at high speed or with
great intent and then intervene with a migrating caribou herd like four days later. So they weren't
following the action to where the puck would be in an obvious way, two seconds hence.
They were actually converging with the caribou in this case.
I'm using it as a clumsy metaphor for sort of customer and customer demand, right?
Because you're talking about the investments you're making in the electrification of everything
and the motors where it's sort of a seven to 10 year time horizon.
The problem is known. And I would love to know of another example,
if you could give another example
of using the story to help you define the product.
And I mean, one example that jumps to mind
and you could use another one
that I also had never been exposed to
was Steve Jobs' presentation for the launch of the iPhone and how people,
this is directly from your book, were saying, oh my God, it's so amazing. He has no notes.
And your point was, yeah, of course he has no notes because he has been honing that with every
person he met, kind of like Jamie Foxx working on standup material for the last several years.
Exactly.
Of course he has it dialed.
Exactly.
Could you speak to that or any other examples that come to mind? Well, first let's just talk about the example, which is this
book. So we went through those same tools. Who are the audience? What are we trying to solve?
What's the right form factor for them? How is doing micro chapters versus full chapters?
How much is story? How much is advice? How much is
just kind of giving more tools? It's trying to find all those balances. So if you look at the
tools that are in the book, we actually filled those out and we gave the press release for the
book for telling that brief story up front. Here's what the book's about. And we did the raw ones,
not today, but the raw ones when we started to help us form the mindset so we can help us make sure we stay on track.
You know, we could write the book, read the press release or some read some of the tools,
go back.
And we could then obviously change the tools if necessary, but we would go back and forth
and iterate to make sure we're staying on track.
So just for clarity with the people listening.
So you wrote the press release for the book before setting kind of proverbial pen to paper to write
the book. Correct. Just to be absolutely. Yeah, absolutely. Now we were, there might've been
ideas on a outline, right? Like we had an outline in terms of a spreadsheet of here's the different
things I want to talk about, but it was more like, okay, what is this? What are these ideas
going to form into? And that's when the press release happened. And that was the same thing
that we would share with the publishers, possible publishers who were bidding on the book going,
this is what it would look like. So we had to use that same thing to communicate to people
who wanted to buy the book because they're a customer too. Well, what is this thing you're
building? And we hadn't even put maybe a page, a page and a half of some prose down. It was
literally that blank sheet of paper, but with
a great idea that was encapsulated in a, I think it was one page or one and a half page press
release. And it's part of the book. It's actually in the book. Oh, I missed it. Okay. Can you give
us a teaser? Is there anything that jumps to mind that really stood out to you or just that comes
to mind now from that press release? Does anything come to mind that was particularly
important later kind of in the execution of the book? I think one of the things was mentor in a
box was really trying to make sure that we spent more time and advice. There are so many stories
we could tell, right? And there's so many things that people want to hear more and more stories,
but we want to make sure that there was takeaway usable advice. And the reason being's so many things that people want to hear more and more stories, but we want to make sure that there was takeaway usable advice.
And the reason being is so many people are so busy these days that any great leader, entrepreneur, even somebody in their career, if you want to read and get in depth, they're going to have to read 40 books on all these different topics, summarize them for themselves, and then kind of, you know, figure
it out. Well, we want to be the exact opposite. That's why we call it an encyclopedia. Go learn
about all these different topics. And here's some suggestions of other books so you can go in
further if you need them. So it was really trying to be a mentor, not a storytelling, biography,
what have you. We had to trim a lot of stuff out because that just, we wanted to be
takeaway, you know, quick takeaways, advice, real usable advice, and we wanted to be easily
digestible. So as you know, in the book, it's not really, you can read it linearly if you want,
but it's really dive into one chapter, dive into one microchapter, another microchapter
to pull out what you wanted. And the format is
even, you know, as you know, there's a summary at the beginning, and then we tell the stories.
If that summary hooks you, then you're going to probably want to hear the stories and the
practical details behind them. And so all of that stuff came specifically out of that press release
and the tools we used in the book to make sure we stayed on track, because we wanted to make
sure it was accessible to any age, high school and above. Let's talk about, you wanted to know more about,
I think you said about Steve? I just brought up Steve as a possible segue into an example,
which you gave of the book, of the story, so to speak, that people thought was developed for the
presentation having been
worked on forever, right? It had actually been refined over such a long period of time.
And that's where I got my whole learnings to tell you the truth about doing this stuff up front.
And Steve didn't have the same, we're writing the press release up front,
but what he would do is in his mind, he would start nailing the top parameters of the story.
What are the problems we're trying to solve?
Who are we talking to?
How are we going to solve them?
Why are we solving them?
And he would then use that message and talk to either us as the team or to his trusted
people around him, his friends or whatever, and give this pitch daily.
And he would be refining it and refining it and refining it. So when it came
time at the presentation, it was just natural. And guess what? The product met those things
because maybe we had to make some changes to the product over time because of, you know,
during the development, because we couldn't get the right technology or who knows what,
we can't get done in time, schedule issues.
So he would keep modifying that and making sure it's a crystalline little gem that made
sure it solved the problems that we were trying to solve.
Because a lot of times you get into schedule issues or whatever.
Should we delay the project?
Should we just throw this feature off board?
Should we not do this?
What have you.
And that press release or his story
were those guiding things to go, no, this is so important because I talk about all the time,
we cannot lose this. So that means we'll have to push it back maybe in the schedule to make sure
we get this as opposed to just throwing things out just to make a date and your story erodes.
It falls flat when it shows up. Yeah, you lose the lodestar. If you're getting that
sympathetic resonance with your audience per se, because you've refined this thing so well,
using that as the true north of sorts for all of these decisions.
Let's do a hard left here for a second and talk about assholes. You have a chapter on assholes.
I think the opening line under the summary is
plenty of people think I'm an asshole. So could you, and maybe a way to approach this is just to
ask you what the right breed of asshole is. And not all assholes are created equal. So we don't
have to go through all of the variations, the different species that you spec out. We could, but why have plenty of people thought that you're an asshole and how would you kind of delineate
acceptable versus unacceptable assholes? So this was a chapter that was very hard to write.
It took seven or eight full rewrites to get there. And it was very cathartic. The reason being is that in my heart
of hearts, I know who I am. And I've had, you know, significant people tell me, I really try
not to be an asshole. Okay. But there are certain things that are core to me, whether that's ethics,
morals, values, or certain product features
that need to happen. And they have to happen with a certain quality level,
certain customer experience, or certain technologies that need to exist. And you push,
and you push, and you push, because you're trying to deliver for the customer.
So there are these assholes, and even people have called Steve that too,
right? People have all said, oh, yeah. The question is, is motivation. What is motivating
that? And when I mean behavior, I mean like pushing people. I'm not saying offending people.
I'm not saying degrading people. I'm not saying you're worthless. That should never be allowed,
period. No bullying. None of that should be allowed.
But challenging people, pushing them to be better,
pushing themselves to be better,
the team to be better, making the product better,
that does not make an asshole.
That makes somebody who cares.
And I care so much that it may come off as an asshole,
but it's just that passion and that caring that matters
because it's all in service of the customer and the team slash company slash mission.
A lot of times when you see assholes, it's about them, their ego and their self-centeredness.
So really, you have to understand why assholes who might feel that way, you know, in the knee jerk reaction.
Oh, he's an asshole. He's just always on my back. He's da da da, da, da, da. Well, are they literally degrading you? Are they making you feel less? Are
they pushing you down so they feel better? That is definitely an asshole. If they're there to push
the details, to really make sure everybody's doing their best without insulting them, without just
horrible behavior, but making people go, why?
And asking why five times, why can't we do this?
Why can't we do this?
Why can't we do this?
To me, that is, as we say,
a passionate hurricane in the book.
Somebody who people don't always like to work with at the time, but usually years, weeks, months, years later,
they go, my God, that was an amazing experience.
And yes, it sucked.
And yes, it was hard.
But I did the best work I possibly could.
And it was in service of our mission.
That's what matters.
And so you have to really delineate the two, even though there are characteristics that
might be shared or ways that you react, the person who's on the other side react to it,
be like, oh, you oh, they're defensive or
they're worried about their ego or they're getting bruised. If it's about the work and it's about the
mission, not about the person, then that's really the delineation there. For those people wondering
where I pulled out the opening salvo in the office with HR at the beginning of our conversation,
that was from that chapter.
So you also give practical advice on how to deal with sort of political assholes with
Machiavellian techniques.
You know, sometimes they don't always work, you know, but you can try.
You have to try because sometimes people are just having a bad day or sometimes they're
just scared and you just got to build a relationship with them.
But sometimes it isn't the case. And sometimes you just have to build a relationship with them. But sometimes it isn't
the case. And sometimes you just have to get away if no one can help you. Yeah. Sometimes the answer
is quitting. Exactly. Last time we spoke, we spent quite a bit of time talking about plastics.
Is this something that you have continued to focus on? I'm wondering if you've had any
particular insights related to that discoveries,
or if you have maybe segued from that to other angles on the same or related problems.
Plastic is still forefront of my mind. I continue to work on it. It is not going away. Until the
plastic problem has been mainly solved, I'm not going to stop. All right. But in the meantime, in the last three
years or so, two and a half years since we last spoke, you know, there's been a lot happening,
which is a great way. So I'll give you some examples right here. I don't know if you can
see this, but if you know that logo, that's a Chanel logo and that's a cap. Yeah. It's hard
to see with the black background, but it looks like, yeah. So if people are on audio, it looks
almost like a, if you're old enough to know what the hell a film canister is. Yeah. It's hard to see with the black background. Got it. It looks like, yeah, so if people are on audio, it looks almost like if you're old enough to know what the hell a film canister is.
Yeah, it's just a cap for a perfume bottle.
But it has this Chanel logo on it.
Okay, got it.
And then this, that's a plastic cup.
You know, it's just a regular plastic cup.
I have a whole box of all kinds of things.
I won't bring them out.
But this is a company in the Nordics that makes, these are full home compostable plastics.
So they're taking bio materials and creating fully home compostable plastics to the level
of quality for someone like a Chanel or a luxury brand.
And you can go all the way to day-to-day kinds of things.
If we ever lose it in the environment or whatever, it will actually get eaten by the microbes in the soil and it will disappear. You can throw it in a compost pile.
This stuff is real. It's now in production. And this wasn't necessarily there just two or three
years ago. And it's gotten better and better and better. So those are the kind of companies we're
looking at. That said, we're also, I have, you know, a couple of companies that I've been
working on a trash to treasure. What other things can we take as trash and turn them into treasure?
So traditional plastics, how can we turn those into treasure? I can't talk about it right now,
but we're going to have a very exciting thing to talk about in nine months time, probably in a big,
big way. But that's been something that I've been working on. I've been looking at e-waste and how do we extract all the minerals and the elements out of the gold and palladium
and silver and all these things out of e-waste and other waste streams in general, because why
go dig up more of the earth? E-waste meaning devices.
Yeah, e-waste being all of our phones, our computers, our TVs, what have you. All those
elements have been already extracted
from the earth. Let's just reuse them. So a lot of this stuff is about reuse and trying to take
today's trash and trying to get into treasure. So plastic is a big one, but that's not the only
one that we're looking at because we think it's an underserved category, tip of the spear.
Some people are looking at it now, battery recyclers are getting into the act, like redwood materials, those kinds of things. There's going to be much more of this
over time because it's so much cheaper to extract from a waste stream than it is to extract from the
planet and better for the environment. You have a small team. I'm sure very capable,
hyper-capable people. You have a small team within the, say, scope of, let's just call it
climate solutions or technologies that are both attractive in and of their own right for various
reasons, but have some, let's just call it beneficial impact on the circumstances we find
ourselves in, how do you apply constraints to that? So you have positive constraints that you've applied
elsewhere in the company in terms of total headcount and various other ways that you've
applied constraints. How do you choose your targets and make sure that you have a focus?
How do you eliminate things? Well, first is it's a wide funnel. So it really is based on,
do they have a cool mission? Are we curious about the technology? Is this something that's important? Is this a really big market or a really big problem that
is solving something for, let's say, the climate crisis? And it could be anything. So it's not just
materials or just petrochemicals or carbon capture. We look across everything. Because,
frankly, at the end of the day, the reason why we do this is because we love to learn. And you got to really understand the systems thinking as opposed to just one thing,
if you're really going to solve the problems we have. So we like to look broad, very broad,
both from a technology perspective, value chain perspective, as well as regional perspective or
country based. So we look at all this, and that's just how many cycles we have to learn,
and how many people bring us interesting ideas.
So that's kind of the top of the funnel.
But as we narrow down, there's a few things.
One is, can this be deployed en masse in the next 10 years?
And is it going to be disruptive?
Is it going to be like we talked about the switch from the the vacuum tube to the transistor but this electrical distribution mem switch it is can be applied to so many things along the way and
it's so disruptive we're like that needs to exist when it's disruptive and not just evolutionary
but it's going to change the players on top it's going to change the products fundamentally it's
going to bring a win-win-win for the environment as well as the customers and end customers, as well as the manufacturers.
That's when we see big gains. Like we were talking about the motors as well.
So we want something with disruptive, wide impact, because that's what it's going to take to help fix
this planet. We can't just have little, there's no silver bullet for this. We've created so many
different systems over the last 150 years, almost all of them have even been thought about in a
circular fashion, you know, and how to get the trash or how to make it more efficient. It's just
like, oh, it works, but it works for that business, not for the planet, for us as a society. So those
are the kinds of things that we really look to. And that's how we narrow that funnel. So that's the first thing is, does the technology, is it disruptive?
Is it close to being marketable?
You know, is it close to being a product?
The third thing is, and this is one of the most important things that we've learned across
all of our portfolios, is there a way that we can quickly scale?
We have to reboot the planet.
This is not just, oh, we got to go do one industry in this one state or some in this
country.
We're talking about when we say plastic problem, it's around the world.
When we talk about energy and efficiency, it's around the world.
So if you have something, we want to see the disruptive technology.
It meets a lot of needs and can be out of the lab and into people's lives within 10
years in a mass scale.
And do you have the technology for scale?
In other words, we don't want to just hear
about your one factory.
What is your scale plan for making 100 of these factories
so we can quickly deploy them around the world?
How can we get this stuff move quickly
to every corner of the planet?
Because we all have these problems.
So I think those are the three
fundamental things that helped us to narrow that funnel down. And then there's obviously the
financial terms and if we can help and all the other stuff. But the big, the broad strokes are
really those three things. All right. So I'm going to dig a little deeper on this. And I just want to
mention briefly, and I can never pronounce his last name. Maybe you can get it right. But
rather than butcher it, Chamath, most people know who I'm talking about when I say Chamath,
has said the first trillionaire in the world is someone who's going to fix climate change or
greatly contribute to climate change. I do think having just watched the sea change in the last
few years, there's some really tremendous, tremendous opportunities for just,
let's just call it cold-blooded capitalists who want a great return on investment. There are many technologies and solutions being developed now that if we're talking about direct-to-consumer
or products that consumers use, that consumers will choose over alternatives. So I think it's
become really exciting on the playing field. Now, there are certain things that I would say
seem obvious and
get discussed a lot. So let's just say adoption of solar, maybe subsidies from the government such
that we have less dependence on fossil fuels and foreign, especially foreign energy. But I had never
realized, as you described, that so much energy was lost just due to inefficiencies from point A to sort of point Z. What are some of the uncrowded or underestimated targets, let's just say,
or areas related to climate change that you think people should pay more attention to?
There is what you can do personally, and there's what can be done professionally. And if we look at,
you know, obviously there's EVs and doing the right thing there and doing the recycling and
composting and all the right stuff at home and not, you know, reuse, don't buy all new. So there's all
those kinds of consumer facing things that need to happen. But it's really incumbent on the
innovators, the companies, the individuals in the world to bring new solutions to consumers
or change out the system without the customers even knowing to make things more efficient.
Because customers don't know that 60% of all the energy created in the world is lost.
What can they do about it?
It just shows up.
So we have to go and reboot our infrastructure in some ways.
And so in many ways, in almost every way. And so there's one
for me, you know, that we're now finally getting into, which is the hydrogen economy.
So if we think about all these different chemicals that we use today, come out of petroleum. Okay,
they come out from sucking something out of the ground and then refining it, what have you. Plastics is one of that. We can move to hydrogen-based economy to create all of those products. We can create them
more quickly with no or little CO2, get the similar products out, and they're actually more
profitable to be made for the companies themselves. So there's all of these things around hydrogen,
like let's give you fertilizer. Okay, doesn't sound sexy, but we need a lot of fertilizer in
this world. Now there's other ways of tackling that too. But fertilizer is a huge one. Concrete
is another one. Steel. Concrete's huge, yeah. Concrete, steel, another one. Thermal, just
creating thermals like high temperature steam and those kinds of things for different industrial processes.
Today, we burn coal, natural gas or whatever.
We could do it with hydrogen or we can do with electricity.
That whole area is unloved.
People are starting to work on it.
They're starting to make inroads there.
But we need a lot more work on those things.
It's not just electric cars.
It's not just the things. It's not just the
things that you hear about in the press every day. So I think that we need to be really thinking
about the hydrogen economy and to a certain extent, the biomass economy, because we can
actually turn a lot of the things we use today, like let's say jet fuel, those can come from
bio sources, trash sources, not edible sources,
but really trash or waste and turn those into things that can stay carbon neutral.
It's not a perfect solution because we're using things on the ground, on the planet, right?
Biomass, but it's just sitting there and it's going to turn into, you know, CO2 or methanes.
We could put it back in and use those things now. And we have lots of technologies to do
that. So I think hydrogen economy, biomass economy, not chopping down trees and just lighting up
smoke. That's not what I'm talking about here. I'm saying transforming it into chemicals and
raw materials so that they can be used, not just burning wood, which we see a lot of people
fudging that they say that's clean energy. It's not.
Let's return to a term that you used earlier that I would love to hear you speak about just a little bit, carbon removal. So I've become very interested in the last six to 12 months in
different means of carbon removal. So not credit, carbon credits, not offsets, but actual carbon
removal. I've looked very closely at what Stripe
has done, which I think is really innovative and inspiring. And I would love to know if you have
any general thoughts about carbon removal, if any particular approaches or companies you find
particularly interesting, any comments or thoughts at all on carbon removal?
There's carbon removal from the air. And we see Climeworks and we see other people trying to put up these big factories, so to speak, to suck in air and take out CO2. That may or may not scale.
I don't know enough about that. I always like to go to where the source of the problem is,
as opposed to fixing the problem to
allow other people. So that's what they're at. I don't know if that's going to be great. I hope it
is. We need lots of solutions. There's not one, again, not one silver bullet. So I hope they're
very successful and the competition around that successful. But there's another one, which is
taking the carbon that's already locked into plants and turning that into something that stays locked into biomass.
In other words, how do we take the oil
that we pumped up or coal
and how do we put it back in the ground
and leave it in the ground?
Just like we're just storing it again,
not as gas or whatever.
And I look at biochar.
And I don't know if you know about biochar,
but biochar is a way to take various biomass. You basically light
them on fire. Yes. But at a certain degree, certain temperature, certain airflow, and it locks all
that carbon in. And once you put it on the ground, it stays there for thousands of years and then
gets buried under the surface. And that's what turned into oil or coal over time, which was biochar. So if we think about today, biochar has been around
for thousands of years. Now we have to do it at scale. We can get energy out of it, but we can
also lock that carbon in. Because again, if you have dead tree trunks or whatever else, sooner
or later, that carbon will be emitted maybe 50 years, 100 years, whatever, from the decaying mass.
Well, today we can just take biochar, lock it in, you know, in a very simple process,
put it in the ground, get energy out. And it's like, it's a win-win for all of us.
So those are the kind of things when I see carbon sequestration, that's like really smart. Because
people are like, let's just plant more trees. Yes. But once the trees fall down, we need to
make sure that carbon stays out of the environment. How do we do that? Something like biochar,
locking it in and storing. There's a third one, which is carbon capture, which is just hooking on
carbon, basically filters from smokestacks or whatever's coming out and then trying to recapture
that and turning it into other products, which can be done as well. So I think those are the three different areas that I see as carbon
capture. And I think that all three are necessary and we should be seriously throwing those scrubbers
on sooner rather than later, especially on the CO2 generators, as we start to make the transition to
much cleaner hydrogen-based manufacturing process
or whatever that are not using the old CO2 emitting processes.
Are there any other or any companies, startups or larger, I mean, startups,
because there are startups these days are getting like series A funding at like billions and billions
and billions of dollars. So it's hard for me to even wrap my head around a lot of that. But are there any companies that stand out for you in those
categories? I want to say that one, you know, Charm Industrial would fall into the second
category, I believe. And I've been quite impressed by them with the caveat that I'm just an amateur
who's still learning on the job. But any companies that you'd like to mention
that you think are doing a good job?
I think, you know, these are all small companies.
Let's be very clear.
They're trying to do the right thing.
They want to do the right thing.
And now people are really starting to rally around them.
Investors are, you know, the early money.
And so there's another one called CarboCulture.
They're also doing the Piochar. So CarboCulture. They're also doing the
Piochar. So CarboCulture is there and they're doing it en masse and they have their first
factory. But again, I want to see a factory for a factory. How are they going to make lots of these
so they can deploy them everywhere? I'm seeing a lot of new technology. I don't have any specific
companies, unfortunately, right now that I can talk about in the, you know,
the kind of the smokestack scrubbing. There's a lot of new technology in terms of membrane technology,
other kinds of chemical treatment technology to extract that CO2 from those emissions and bring
them right down into some useful form. So I don't have anything right off hand. I should go do some
lookup and I'll give you some things you can put in your description.
The show notes.
Yeah, we'll put some links in.
You know, I heard of one recently and I can't speak to the company.
I haven't done any diligence on this at all, but great name.
It's called Remora Carbon, R-E-M-O-R-A, but it's a reference to this, I believe it would
be categorized as a fish that kind of hangs on the sides of sharks and eats the scraps as the sharks consume their own food. And it's carbon
capture for semi-trucks. So it's scrubbing technology that is piggybacking, just like a
remora in the ocean on semi-trailer trucks. Super exciting. I mean, a lot of innovation
happening right now. Like you said, though, very much so on a small scale. So how do you make a factory for a factory
is a great way to put it. Exactly. And so, you know, Remora, you know, they're doing it for
trucks. I think those are something that can actually move to hydrogen or ammonia kind of
propulsion. They don't necessarily have to use diesel because those are longer haul stuff.
Same thing with electric trains,
electric trains or hybrid trains. So yes, there are a lot of these things and some of them are
stopgaps for the next five to 10 years while we transition away from petro-based economy to
a more electron-based economy. All of these things are really interesting. We're trying to go for the
stuff that's the ultimate solution, not necessarily these kinds of windows of time. Because to me, it's like a hybrid car. Sure,
you can get an electric gas hybrid car, but really it's two systems that are much more complicated,
more things to break. Let's try to get to the end goal as opposed to this interim goal.
So I always try to look at something where it's the destination,
not the waypoint along the way. As we move to electrons, I don't know if you are open to
taking a stab at this, but how do you think geopolitics will figure into the supply chain
for an electron-based economy? If you just look at electric vehicles, EV, right? You look at
the raw materials, and I'm not technical enough to know what those raw materials are,
but if you look at the incredibly good job that certain countries are doing,
which you can certainly name, but in Africa, in South America, at establishing-
China, Russia.
Exactly. Really good relationships on the ground.
They're building infrastructure for cities and countries, and I don't want to say in
exchange, but often in tandem, developing incredibly good, incredibly dominant sourcing
and distribution for a lot of raw materials.
What are some plausible ways that that develops?
I think we're seeing the reality right now with the Ukraine war that's going on.
And we're starting to understand that we need to have more independence in terms of our energy
supplies, our raw material supplies, and we need to be working with people that have like
values, you know, ethics, like morals, if we're going to truly be, we'd like it to be a global
economy. I think we went down that road and we're seeing people exploiting that to their own gain
for too long and now wanting to rise up more in a powerful position, whether they can or can't, I'm not going to judge that.
But I think that we need, we being each country,
needs to have their, and Europe is, EU as I'm calling this,
you know, I know it's many countries,
but they each need to have their own strategic way
of doing energy sourcing.
Luckily, as we go to electrons, that's going to be easier because it
can be done inside the borders. But from a materials perspective, there's going to have
to be many more of them, suppliers. And the reason being is, you know, we kind of let monopolies
prevail in there. And we're like, oh, those are dirty. Those are hard businesses. Actually,
there's a lot of interesting businesses that can be built
with new technology that will actually help us to find and mine things or find these elements much
more easily inside our national borders or our true friends' national borders so we can get
these strategic things set up. What we were witnessing in many regards, whether that's in
materials, minerals, manufacturing,
it was outsourced to the lowest GDP country or the lowest GDP per capita country to get that
lowest cost labor. And then those things will come back to us. We're not going to see that anymore.
We're going to see technology derived extraction, these kinds of things, and it's going to have to
be nationally protected. And it's just going to happen more and more now.
So that's one thing, which is the supply.
But if we also look at the technology, there's things like non-lithium-based batteries that
are coming, sulfur-based, sodium-based, iron-based.
So we're actually able to then gear some of the technologies for certain things to the
resources that we have or the abundance of resources around the planet where it's not as strategic, right, as we hear about the rare earths.
Some are rare and some aren't, but rare earths.
And that's the reason why we invested in that motor company, Turntide, is because they're not using any rare earths.
What does that look like when you have a different way of creating those motors and different partnerships that you need to be able to do so? So I think we're going to be
spending more and more time on understanding we need to invest in strategic capabilities,
and we can't just farm it out to the lowest cost in the world and use the logistics chain,
and then we get trapped from the geopolitical side. And the war is horrible. It's devastating,
all those other things.
But with high energy prices, guess what? It makes climate change a lot easier in terms of the
rational argument for why we need to do it from a business perspective. Obviously, there's an
emotional and rational to preserve our species on the planet. But some people don't see it that way,
especially some shareholders. But I think we're starting to see
that it's not just doing the right thing. It's not just about us as a society. It's also the
right thing geopolitically to start to really figure out how to be more self-sufficient and
get away from these things. And luckily, we do have technologies today that are already available
to allow this kind of world to exist. Even though we'd rather be all one thing, unfortunately, not everyone sees it the same.
Yeah, it's certainly when people get hit in the wallet as intensely as a lot of people
have been with...
And will continue to be.
And will continue to be.
It sort of highlights the vulnerability, the vulnerabilities that we have if we don't take
a lot of these newer technologies seriously and newer options for sourcing. Right, exactly. And
frankly, if you look at our petrochemical world, it's been subsidized for decades. It has been
propped up. And if you look at when we look at inflation, I really look at it the opposite.
Deinflation is stopping. We've been deinflated. We've been
moving everything offshore. We've been going to lowest common work for your lowest common
monies for paying a workforce, getting rid of health care and all this other stuff.
We've been just pushing the externalities on everyone else, what we're doing to the climate.
Now it's all coming back to roost. And that deinflation thing that was happening
is no longer. And we're just paying. We're paying back what we weren't paying all those years.
Right.
So when people go, it's being done to us.
No, we did that to ourselves to try to keep prices low for so long.
And now all of a sudden we really press reset on the whole system, whether that's workforce,
materials, manufacturing, sourcing.
Now it's coming back and we're like, oh, inflation.
No, we're finally paying oh, inflation. No,
we're finally paying the prices we should have paid. Maybe not all spread evenly. We should have been paying with a steady increase over time. So you seem like an optimistic guy to me.
Would you consider yourself optimistic? Well, the alternative sucks.
Well, say more about that because I think it's, I've seen various, and I can't cite
the sources here, but polls and surveys of especially younger people, like 20 to 35,
maybe even younger who have record levels of apathy and pessimism. That's a problem.
That is a very, very significant problem, especially when you consider a lot of the
entrepreneurs who are going to be in the full contact kind of professional sports of business
do a lot of great work in that band. And whether that is, it doesn't have to be in the for-profit
sector, but just people getting big things done in the world, a lot of them fall in that band.
How do you cultivate optimism or how would you sell optimism to people who are feeling
apathetic when they're just getting barraged all day long by what they consider to be fatalistic
bad news?
Well, first, change your media diet.
First, change your media diet and start talking and listening to people who actually have
some possible solutions for the problems.
Now that you're tuned into the problems, some of the
problems we have, go learn about them. Go see how you can be part of the solution. So either you can
sit there and be apathetic and be part of the problem, or you can move and be part of the
solution, right? Apathy doesn't sit in the middle between problem and solution. If you are in
apathetic, you're part of the problem.
You need to be working on the solutions.
And more that you look at the solutions,
and I'm seeing things for five, seven, 10 years out,
15 years out, you can't help but be optimistic
because you see the stuff that's coming down
from these research labs
or from these brilliant entrepreneurs who have great ideas.
And some will fail, of course, but a lot of them will succeed. And you start going,
oh my God, there is a future. We can do this if we want to embrace it. We saw it with COVID.
We all got together in COVID just two years ago, like this week or last week. Oh my God,
we're putting up temporary hospitals. What can we do about testing? What are we doing about new ways of communicating the data and new, you know, getting the new
stories out there?
And of course, there was misinformation, all that other stuff.
But look at how the world rallied together and tried to figure this stuff out.
Governments did.
And you're like, you might even feel, at least I did here in Europe, a sense of leadership
from the politicians and the governments of trying, even if you might not agree, trying to do something about it.
When you see that we do have that capability as humans to help each other and help our own
as well as each other, when we know that there are climate crisis problems out there, and when
you start to see the solutions, it's hard to be pessimistic or apathetic about it.
Because again, if you are, then you're not helping to solve it. You're not helping to be on that
side, be on the other side, helping to solve it. And maybe you'll see something. I'm a cautious
optimist. I used to be an optimistic optimist. I'm a cautious optimist or a pessimistic optimist.
I make sure we pick things because there's lots of things to pick from
that can be real and help those become real.
But I obviously ask all the questions.
It's just not like, oh yeah, that's gonna be great.
No, we have to really dive in.
There's a lot of shady people out there
selling things that don't really exist.
But when you start to get on the other side of the equation
and start to look for solutions,
then you can start to get optimistic. So change of the equation and start to look for solutions, then you can
start to get optimistic. So change your media diet first and foremost, start learning, think about
things you're passionate about and dive in and learn because there's so many resources out there.
You wouldn't believe how many things are out there and people are needed for those. And they're
usually really well paying too. And you're going to do something that's meaningful to you, to your family, maybe your kids or
grandkids, and it's going to help your society and it's going to help the planet.
So that when you sit at a dinner table in 2050 with your grandkids or whoever it is,
and they go, oh my God, we just got past this climate crisis issue.
It's always going to be lingering with us,
but we got past it. And your kids or your generations, people around the table go,
what did you do about it? How did you solve it personally or professionally? How are you part
of the solution? You can actually have really good answers because this is an existential thing.
This is not about bullshit metaverse or the craziness around the NFT gambling.
This is about true problems that we have.
And to your earlier point,
the first trillionaire will be someone
who solves these massive problems
on this planet that we have.
Because why?
Because we're not going to exist without them.
And that's the biggest pain ever.
Think about this.
When you get sick, or I hope you never do, but when someone gets sick, what happens?
They all of a sudden go, I'm going to change my life. I, you know, they have a heart attack,
who knows what it is, God forbid anything happening, but I'm going to change my life.
I'm going to go in and they wake up to it. Well, guess what? We have a sick planet. Our planet is
incredibly sick and we caused it.
Nobody else. We cause maybe it's other generations, but you can't just sit around and go,
well, it's sick. I don't know what to do. It's a family member. It's so important. It's a family
member. What are you doing to be on the right side and trying to find solutions, both personally
and professionally? You're here.
It's a passion, man. I love this stuff. No, I know. This is why I wanted to bring it up.
So people, I think, will come away from this conversation with lots of notes related to everything we've discussed. Are there other, in terms of changing media diet, any particular
people, resources, could just be one or two,
anything or anyone else you could recommend people take a look at to diversify, get some
more nutritious fiber in their information diet?
Well, I think this is a great place to start, which gives a great overview.
Speed and Scale.
I don't know if you can see it, but that's John Doerr's latest compilation of all kinds of different people working on climate solutions.
I think that's a really great one.
The subtitle is An Action Plan for Solving Our Climate Crisis Now.
It's not fully complete, but it gives a good sense of just reading about it.
I'm sure there's podcasts about it. I'm sure there's podcasts about
it. I'm sure John's done a lot of different ones. I think that's a really good place to get started.
There's also things like My Climate Journey, talks about people who are in the industry and
trying to solve things. And it's just looking at different blogs. There's all kinds of different
blogs that you can read with daily articles about various
solutions that can get into it.
And there's also great podcasts to video or YouTube videos, dive into a lot of this stuff.
So it really depends on what, hopefully there's something that you really get you really upset.
Like, why is there so much pollution in the environment?
Or why is there, you know, why do we have trash on the streets?
Or why is there, you know, why do we have trash on the streets? Or why is there food waste? Finding something that you really care about and either going in
it personally or professionally and learning about it and seeing how you can use your time
and your passion and turn it into, or your disgust, and turn it into something positive and helpful.
And for people listening, I'll also include links to everything we've discussed
in the
show notes.
So you'll have a couple of places to start nibbling and exploring at Tim.blogs.com.
Tony, you're always inspiring to talk to.
I always recharge myself full of piss and vinegar to go out and tackle something difficult.
So I appreciate that about you. And I also appreciate that you're an uncommon
blend of someone who's deeply technical, but also deeply honed. I was going to say deeply talented,
but that might imply something innate, which you may also have, but you've developed the skill
of storytelling and communication. And I think it's a really formidable combination.
Thank you. I do think it's a really formidable combination. Thank you.
I do think it's incredibly compelling.
And it was all learned.
You know, your audience can learn it.
Yeah.
You can learn it.
It's just always thinking about the audience,
thinking about the message.
Why are you doing this?
Why, why, not what?
And it's about the mission, not about your ego.
And the why, why, why in the storytelling,
plus the technical side, and a lot of details are
conveyed, I think beautifully in the new book, build subtitle, an unorthodox guide to making
things worth making. And, uh, I am going to read a lot more of this book. I did a little taste
tester, uh, you know, over the last 24, 48 hours. And it's very well, I just want to give
you credit where credit is due. It's very well formatted. I'm amazed how many well-written books
are poorly formatted in the sense that they are simply visually difficult to absorb.
But the book is formatted in such a way that the pages are incredibly readable and the chapters are incredibly short. So the kind
of rat with a kind of cocaine pellet dispenser, dopamine reinforcement used in the positive sense,
I know it's a bit of maybe an awkward example, but it's very self-perpetuating as a reader
experience. So I really encourage people to check it out. I really appreciate it because
I spent a lot of time re-architecting the book and trying to get it into that thing. And that
was a big risk. We took a risk, threw it out there and see, because I think it's unlike other books.
Like I said, you can read it literally, but it's really not for that. And we just want to help.
At the end of the day, just want to help. And to be truthful, you know, if you buy the book, the book, there is all proceeds, you know,
that come to me or any profits that come to me, they're all going to a climate fund that I'm
going to run that I'm matching with five times the money. So whatever comes out, I'm matching
it five times. And we're going to personally manage and put that money to work in climate crisis solutions.
And we're going to continue to invest that. And then over time, we'll then be donating all the profits of that as well to climate focused charities.
So the whole thing here is just to give back, to inspire people who are working on tough societal health or planet scale problems, help them learn through
the failures we had and to also help the planet. So trying to take whatever comes out of it and
reinvest it because the whole world, as we know, it's circular. Everything in the world is circular.
And so I want to make sure this all goes back. And I hope your listeners, your watchers will
find a value in the book and
go out and purchase it so that you can be also helping find the solutions to climate change,
helping us find the solutions to climate change at least.
So people, check it out. Build an unorthodox guide to making things worth making. Tony Fadell,
you can find him on Twitter and Instagram at TFadell, F-A-D-E-L-L. You can find FutureShape on Twitter at FutureShape LLC.
And is there anything else you'd like to add, Tony, before we wrap up?
Any comments, other requests to the audience, complaints, anything?
So at the end of the day, with the Ukraine-Russian war that's going on, we have geopolitical
tensions between China and the rest of the world and everything.
I've been trying to really understand from a historical perspective what that means and how technology can be brought to bear on those things.
And so I've been reading books like The Hundred Year Marathon, something like this, just to learn to get from a different perspective.
That's by Michael Pillsbury. I've also been really fascinated by The Changing World Order
by Ray Dalio. And when you start to look at history repeating itself, it's really insightful
to help you try to understand the world better. And these books do a great job of illuminating those things. The other one that I hope is going to happen, and Ray does a second
edition of this book, is going to really talk about the new technologies for government,
for currency, for finance, all of these things that, you know, in his book, he's talking about
these arcs and that the world order, you know, which country was on top, whether it was, you know, the UK or whether it was the Dutch,
you know, and then ultimately the US, these kinds of things, how those changing worlds happen.
And they almost happen all the same way. I won't give it away in the book, but you should read the
book. But we now have technology for currencies, for financial systems, for governmental systems,
for community action and bonding that may change these arcs.
It's so disruptive.
They may change these arcs.
And it doesn't mean what is written in the book today will happen tomorrow in the future,
because now technology can change those fundamentals that have been more or less
locked in for the past hundreds of generations. So it'll be very interesting to see how these
lessons or these historical lessons change as we change the technology. So I think those are two
really great books that people should, you know, if they want to understand a little bit about
what's going on and make sense of it. Those are two really great books. Thank you, Tony. I think for a lot of folks, the starting point, whether it's
prior to building a company or educating themselves on some of these technological
innovations and possible solutions is, as you said, changing your information intake.
I think it's so critical. You've given a bunch of recommendations on the entrepreneurial side and also on the climate solution side.
I just think, you know, garbage in, garbage out.
So you got to fix the garbage in piece.
Without a doubt.
Yeah, you just can't give automatically
any company that wants it root access to your brain.
It's a very dangerous set of permissions
to just automatically give away.
So really thinking
about information intake, I think you've given some really good guidelines. So thank you for that.
Well, thank you. Thanks for the time. Hopefully our discussion on your
small team management stuff, maybe that can help a little bit.
Oh, great. Oh, I took a ton of notes. I took a ton of notes. And it's incredible how
some of the most powerful insights can be just hiding in plain sight, right? Like I was thinking
in my head of this kind of false, well, in a sense, like a false dichotomy of the time sharing
versus task sharing. And in my head, I'm thinking, well, once you task split, those are set. Although
I didn't even phrase it in my mind because it didn't occur to me that you would have a rotation,
right? I mean, it's just, it's so simple, but I needed someone to fucking tell me, God,
it's just like, how blind can you be sometimes? It's incredible. So I'm very excited for you.
I know everybody's burning the candle at both ends right now on your team for the book launch.
I think the book really stands on its own two feet. A lot of people do a big push for a book
launch. And at the end of the day, the book has to stand on its own. And. A lot of people do a big push for a book launch, and at the end of the day,
the book has to stand on its own. And I think the book has a lot of really, really good tactical
advice. So I appreciate you taking time once again to have a conversation with me. It's nice to see
you. Really appreciate it. Thanks, Tony. And to everybody listening, well, first of all,
thank you for listening. And until next time, be a little
kinder than necessary. Cultivate optimism. It is something you can cultivate. Start with picking
your information sources more carefully. And I encourage you to check out the book,
Built, An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making by Tony Fadell. And once again,
until next time, thank you for tuning in.
Hey guys, this is Tim again.
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