Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Reid Hoffman: LinkedIn Co-Founder on Building and Scaling Massively Valuable Companies Fast | Entrepreneurship | E332
Episode Date: January 27, 2025Despite having a strong product idea, Reid Hoffman’s first startup collapsed, forcing him to return investors’ capital. This tough experience reshaped his approach to entrepreneurship. By embracin...g failure, iterating quickly, and adapting relentlessly, he went on to become a leader at PayPal and later, the co-founder of LinkedIn. In this episode, Reid shares the concept of blitzscaling, which prioritizes speed over perfection, smart strategies for taking risks, and insights on achieving rapid market dominance. In this episode, Hala and Reid will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:32) Building Impact-Driven Businesses (02:56) Why We Need More Entrepreneurs (04:31) The Vision Behind LinkedIn’s Success (06:43) Lessons from a Failed Startup (09:26) Making Quick, Intense Decisions at PayPal (12:39) Blitzscaling: Prioritizing Speed Over Efficiency (18:10) Maintaining Company Culture While Scaling (21:20) The Power of Early Market Dominance (25:01) The Five Stages of Company Growth (28:54) Strategies for Taking Intelligent Risks (31:44) Why Product Perfection Delays Success (33:25) Pivoting Early to Seize New Opportunities (36:18) Entrepreneurship as a Team Sport Reid Hoffman is an entrepreneur, investor, partner at Greylock, and co-founder of LinkedIn and Inflection AI. He was an executive at PayPal and a founding investor in several companies, including OpenAI. Reid actively supports various non-profits and has received numerous accolades, including an honorary CBE from the Queen of England and the Salute to Greatness Award from the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for his philanthropic efforts. Resources Mentioned: Reid’s Book, Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies: amzn.to/4jnQkfQ Sponsored By: OpenPhone - Get 20% off 6 months at openphone.com/PROFITING Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify Airbnb - Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.com/host Rocket Money - Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster with Rocket Money. Go to rocketmoney.com/profiting Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at indeed.com/profiting RobinHood - Receive your 3% boost on annual IRA contributions, sign up at robinhood.com/gold Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap Youtube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new All Show Keywords: Entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship podcast, Business, Business podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal development, Starting a business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side hustle, Startup, mental health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth mindset. Career, Success, Entrepreneurship, Productivity, Careers, Startup, Entrepreneurs, Business Ideas, Growth Hacks, Career Development, Money Management, Opportunities, Professionals, Workplace, Career podcast, Entrepreneurship podcast
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You have to have speed.
And this is one of the things that Silicon Valley has learned more intensely than anywhere in the world other than maybe China.
You were a truly prolific entrepreneur, PayPal, LinkedIn, Airbnb, OpenAI.
What were some of the learnings that you learned at PayPal that helped you become a great entrepreneur?
People are familiar with pivots because it's not working.
But pivoting towards opportunity is one of the things that entrepreneurs really need to keep in mind.
But scaling companies is prioritizing speed over efficiency in an environment of uncertainty.
Speed over profitability.
Yes.
And by the way, through speed of learning it and deploying it and scaling it is the game.
Sometimes entrepreneurs are told, oh, ignore risk.
You're like, no, no, no, take smart risk.
When you're scaling really fast, hiring really fast, how can you maintain a healthy company culture?
You have to intentionally...
Yeah, bam, welcome back to the show.
Today we have a true legend on the podcast.
Reid Hoffman, who is the co-founder of LinkedIn and Infliction AI, is joining us.
He's also renowned venture capitalist.
He's been behind companies like Airbnb, PayPal, so many great, huge companies that have
moved the world forward.
He is also a partner at Greylock.
He hosts a podcast Masters of Scale, and he's a prolific author.
He's got a brand new book out on AI called Super Agency, which we're going to dig into in
this conversation.
Me and Reid talked for well over an hour and 20 minutes, which you guys know I love to
do when somebody is just absolutely amazing. I want to keep them on for as long as possible.
And Reid was one of those guests. In part one of this conversation, we really focus on
entrepreneurship. So I talked to him about his early entrepreneurship endeavors. We learn about his
failures and big learning lessons. And then we go into scaling, all of his strategy for scaling
businesses. And guys, he scaled huge companies. Like I mentioned, LinkedIn, Airbnb, PayPal.
He's behind some of the biggest companies in the world. So he's got a lot of great content when
it comes to scaling businesses, specifically his blitz scaling methodology. And then in part two,
we really focus on AI. He wrote a new book called Super Agency. It's all about how humans are going to have
agents moving forward, AI agents. And I really pick his brain on his optimism towards AI and how he
imagines the future to be with AI in the picture. And everything's going to be changing. So in part one,
like I mentioned, we're talking about entrepreneurship. So stay tuned for that. And enjoy.
my conversation with the amazingly talented Reid Hoffman.
Reid, welcome to Young Improfiting Podcast.
It's great to be here. I've been looking forward to this.
Me too. And first of all, I want to say I feel very honored to have you on the show.
You were a truly prolific entrepreneur. You've literally helped push the world forward for decades.
You've been a leader at companies like PayPal, LinkedIn, Airbnb. Now inflection AI. You also were a part of
Open AI. So you've just been behind so many huge companies that have pushed the world forward,
like I said. So I wanted to ask you, when you think of all your contributions to the world
and all the companies that you work with because you don't have to work right now, you choose
to work. And so you must be thinking about like, okay, what makes me want to work with a company?
What is your mission and what is the red thread with everything that you're doing in the world right now?
I guess probably it's like I'm, to put it to look, philosophically, a humanist, which is how do we make ourselves better individually and as a group?
So it's empowering a bunch of different individuals' lives, but also leaving the world much better than we found it.
And how do we do that?
And that's the red line through everything I do, including companies, because you want to do companies that, of course, have all the normal company things of writing great product services and jobs and all rest.
but you also want it to be the impact that you have in the world leaves the world in a much better place.
You transform industries.
You transform societies and like all the companies you mention that I've been involved with from the early stages,
whether it's personally LinkedIn and PayPal or as an investor and board member, Airbnb, OpenAI.
All of it has a theory of how does this improve human life, human work, quality of experience,
How do we elevate ourselves become more the people we aspire to be?
And in a similar way, in a similar token, I'd say, you've said in the past, society flourishes when people think entrepreneurally.
So talk to us about why you believe that the more entrepreneurs that we have in the world, the more that mankind is better off.
It's part of how you create the future. Everything that we have in our lives, I mean, this podcasting stuff, these computers, these phones.
all come about through entrepreneurial innovation.
And it's part of how the new future is created.
And it's part of how prosperity is created.
It's part of how life is improved.
And basically, we wouldn't get to, you know, even when you say, well, wait, there's also science, which events vaccines and other kinds of things,
although a lot of vaccines are commercial these days and have an entrepreneurial event like Moderna.
And so it's this invention of new things.
And it's envisioning the way the world could possibly be.
How could you create something that would be of service to, this is one of the things I think people always forget about the process of Adam Smith and capitalism is the theory of moral sentiments.
How are you being of service to other people?
And that entrepreneurial creation of business and products and services is a really key part of it.
And, you know, when you look around our lives and all the things in it, it was earlier entrepreneurs that we were building.
upon their work.
So speaking of building on entrepreneurs of the past, my career has totally skyrocketed from
LinkedIn.
I was able to become a full-time entrepreneur with my social agency and my podcast network.
And so my question to you is LinkedIn has blown up into this huge platform.
It's one of the biggest social media networks in the world, 135 million daily active users.
Was your vision for LinkedIn?
what it is today? What was your initial vision? And did you ever imagine it would scale to what it is today?
So when you start a business, you should think about this as the kind of probabilities of outcomes.
So I did think that LinkedIn could become what it is today. I actually even think things that were,
it could be bigger and could be on path. And you could be asking me this question in five years,
what had achieved a bunch of new things. And I would also say, hey, yes, this is possible. Now,
are we in a low probability, but a high result future from when I started LinkedIn?
Absolutely.
You have to be rational as an entrepreneur.
And part of what sometimes entrepreneurs are told, oh, ignore risk.
You're like, no, no, no, take smart risk, manage it smartly.
And so when I started it, it was like, well, we could be this big.
And, you know, there's all of these outcomes between here and there, which include not succeeding at all, that you manage your way towards, even as you have the moonshot,
the, if you shoot for the stars, maybe sometimes you only get to the hills, right? But you have to be
shooting for yours. You have that, but you're wise about it. And so yes, you know, there's learnings
and we can go to the depths of which things I made mistakes on or which things turned out to be
new surprises with LinkedIn, but I would say that we're within the probability set that I thought
was possible. I love that. And I'm definitely going to be asking you about scaling a business
and all of your guidance around that. But first, before we do that,
I do want to talk about your early entrepreneurship days because a lot of the listeners tuning in,
they're young entrepreneurs, they're failing every day, which is a big part of eventually
becoming a great entrepreneur is failure at first so you can learn and get better.
So you started a company called SocialNet, which actually was a failed startup when I read
about it.
You could tell me what you think, if it was a failure or not, but it was a social app for dating
way before we had the dating apps of today, like Bumble and things like that. So it was like a really
innovative concept. Tell us about what happened with that company, why you ended pivoting to
something else, and some of the failures and learnings that you had from that. So a lot of the
writings I've done are all the learnings from mistakes. There was almost never anything like I just
got it right the first time. It was you iterated at speed and you kept adapting and you kept learning.
And that's one of the rules of entrepreneurship has always been learning.
So social ed, you know, I started with kind of this theory of, oh, I've learned how to create software products.
I know what a really good thing would be.
I've got a great product idea.
Let me go raise some venture capital.
Let me release the product.
Well, a huge number of things, everything from, you know, if you're not embarrassed by your product release, you've released too late relative to software and consumer internet because I thought I would polish it and get it just so right and beautiful before getting out.
And when we released, we quickly discovered half of things we'd spent months on were completely
useless.
We'd thought that the game was entirely about, well, did we have a vision for product quality?
And we didn't spend that much time thinking about like our go-to-market strategy, which is
fundamental to entrepreneurship.
And so it was just failure after failure in recovery.
But the two ways that I kind of kind of learned to summarize this was one is I perhaps never
learned so much in my life, except for between the ages of two and three, because when you're
falling over and learning it and standing back up. And then the other one is, every Friday,
there were things I wish I had known on Monday. And those things I wish I known weren't person X is
going to return your phone call or this partnership pitch won't work out. It's literally how to
play the game, what to do. And so it was a tremendous learning experience, which of course
means lots of scars, tissue, and a lot of blood on the floor. And I'd say that it was, you know,
in Silicon Valley terms, the failure, we returned the investor's capital, but that was all we
were able to do fundamentally. And so I love that you started as an entrepreneur and you learned
a lot with SocialNet and then you went to PayPal, right? And you learned as an executive there
before you went and co-founded LinkedIn. So talk to us about that. What were some of the learnings
that you learned at PayPal that helped you become a great entrepreneur.
So part of what happened is two friends of mine, Peter Thiel, Max Lovechin, came to me and said,
hey, we're starting this business. You've been doing this for a year and a half with Social Net.
We'd really love you to join the board. We'll have you and Scott Bannister joined the board.
And could you do that? And I said, yes, because I've just gone through a year and a half of learning every week.
And so a bunch of this stuff, PayPal had an initial booster pack on, which is all the various lists,
which is hire people who are high talent and learners more than people who've had a ton of experience.
I mean, they must know how to do the job.
But it's supposed to, like, I've done this job for 10 years.
I've done this job for at least a year or two, and I'm an intense learner.
So PayPal started as a encryption technology on mobile phones, went to cash on mobile phones,
went to cash on Palm Pilots, then went to cash on Palm Pilots plus an online synchronizing payment service,
and then quickly converted to an online master merchant.
And that was after the last pit was after it launched.
And so all of that initial cryptology on mobile phones
was completely thrown out the door and useless.
Because again, it was kind of this,
don't just build something because it's an interesting product.
What's the market need?
How are you getting into it?
So there were just tons and tons of experiences.
I'd say one of the central things that I learned about entrepreneurship from PayPal
was the speed of execution, speed of making decisions.
And so one of the things, I mean, there was a whole stack.
Again, we could take this entire podcast, things I learned for SocialNet,
things I learned from PayPal, things I learned, you know, like just each one of them.
But part of the thing was basically I kind of adopted there, which I wish I'd had at SocialNet,
this decisioning mode where when I'm confronted with the decision, I say, can I make this decision right now?
And if I can make the decision right now, I go, great.
And by the way, usual answer is, what decision would I make?
Okay, I would decide X, not Y.
Okay.
Is there anything that I could learn by researching, talking to people, et cetera,
that would change from X to Y.
Okay, what's the cost and time to do that?
And if the cost and time is too great, you just make a decision, go with X.
And you'll live with it.
And maybe sometimes part of X and Y is, is it a one-way door or two-way door?
Because if you can recover from it, you're less likely to go do the research about should you decide,
Y versus X. Part of this practice, it gets you comfortable with making decisions at a really
intense speed where you're uncomfortable with it because you don't know everything when you're
making the decision. And that was one of our many ethoses at PayPal that allowed us to navigate
this just like lots of things almost blew us up. And it was definitely a ex-wing fighter going
into the Death Star. Oh my gosh, are we going to live or die on this? We succeeded.
Yeah, and I'm sure you've gotten really comfortable with uncertainty and taking these risks
without really knowing if it was the right or wrong decision. And like you said,
prioritizing speed over anything else, which is so important. And I know you say that in your
book, Blitzscaling, which you put out in 2018. And even though it was put out seven-ish years ago,
it's still super relevant. So I did want to cover it. So you talk about blitzscaling, and basically
it's a concept that is about achieving market dominance quickly. So can you go over some of the
key principles of blitzscaling? And I'll ask you some, I've got like lots of questions about it,
but I'll let you summarize it first. The pithy way of saying what blitzscaling about is its
prioritizing speed over efficiency in an environment of uncertainty. And to unpack that a little
bit, it's that when you're playing games where we call in the book, Glenn Gary, Glenn Ross games,
which is first prize is a Cadillac, second prize to stake knives, and third prize you're fired,
you have to have speed and speed to scale. And this is one of the things that Silicon Valley has
learned more intensely than anywhere in the world other than maybe China. China is one of the
few areas where I've also learned blitzscaling games. And it's one of the reasons why, when you look at Silicon Valley
for the tech industry.
The whole population of Silicon Valley barrier is like three and a half million.
That's like Ireland.
And yet, the number of global tech companies that come out of Silicon Valley versus
anywhere else in the world, and to some degree, including China, because you're talking global
here, although, you know, there's obviously bite dance and TikTok and so forth, is just enormous.
And why is that?
And the answer the answer is because this hyper-competitive game of blitzscaling is something that we have
learn to do. And you don't do blitzscaling as a goal into itself. You do it as a competitive tool
relative to being first prize versus second or third because your particular industry, your particular
company, your particular potential industry transformation is worth it. So you were just talking about
how you have to basically prioritize speed. So when we're blitzscaling and we're prioritizing speed,
lots of things can go wrong, right? Because you're prioritizing.
just hiring really fast, making fast decisions, things are not perfect.
So talk to us about some of the operational risk that is involved with blitz scaling and
some of the fast decisions that people have to make.
Typically, obviously, people in business schools teach reduce uncertainty and prioritize learning
for efficiency.
But if what you're doing is saying, well, we really need to get to scale very fast relative
to either our market because of scale mechanic or because of course of course,
competition, you'll say, which risk can we take to get to that scale product market fit
much faster than our competition?
And so, for example, classically what happens in a lot of these blitzscaling companies
is people who are traditionalist business people will say, what's your operating margin,
and you need to prove your operating margin?
We do this.
I myself sat in early Airbnb meetings where one of the VCs was saying that.
And I had to speak up and say, nope, bad question, not a question to answer.
right now because we're in a software business.
We don't have these capital hard assets,
even though they're being rented and transactant.
That's on our balance sheet.
What we just need to do is get this to scale
and be the growing marketplace of that,
and we'll figure out operating margins later.
But that's, of course, what the size of your operating margins are
is how valuable your business is.
And when you get to the operating margins,
will be when people start valuing your business more.
And you're like, so that's a very counterintuitive thing you say.
We'll take the risk on wherever our operating margins will end up, because getting the scale more quickly and fast and taking experiments with, like, for example, what you're doing in marketing, what you're doing in hiring, what you're doing in product development, we'll just try it.
And we'll iterate and move quickly and we'll abandon the things that aren't working.
And that's essentially, and that's part of the reason why, like, Airbnb is one of the, as you know, is one of the examples that we open blitz-scale.
the book up with to kind of show a modern example of,
these are a set of decisions that you make.
And then I forget which chapter,
but there's like eight counterintuitive rules in blitzgailing in the middle,
which is like embracing chaos and hiring Miz Wright now versus Miz Wright in three to five years,
because, again, with a learning curve,
those are all things you're doing to go, go fast now, go fast now, go fast now,
and iterate and change.
And that's part of why Silicon Valley produces,
just transformational technology companies for the world.
So it's really what you're saying.
It's about speed over profitability.
Yes, or any form of efficiency.
One of the things that I learned remotely from Uber,
because they were another Blitzkaling company,
we covered elements of in the book,
is one of the things when Uber's like,
oh, my God, we need to hire engineers really fast.
So what they would do is they'd interview an engineer,
a reference check on engineer,
and they'd offer engineer Sarah a job.
And then when they offer it engineers for a job, they say, okay, well, we really like to interview with you.
Who are the top three people you work with at your current company?
And then just send those three people job offers.
That's blitzscaling because it's like, well, maybe they're not going to really work out.
People think it's a little weird and creepy that they got a job offer out of the blue with a pitch.
But it's part of the going fast.
And so it's not just profitability.
It's efficiency and everything.
Yeah, we have a super unique company culture.
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When you're hiring that fast,
like you just gave that example of Uber,
I have to imagine that your company culture might suffer
and it might become a little bit chaotic.
What's your guidance for when you're scaling really fast,
hiring really fast,
how can you maintain a healthy company culture?
You have to intentionally try to do it.
And by the way, Uber is an example
of something that had a very chaotic and challenging company culture
and had to refacture it to be a good, stable, public companies you're getting.
But the usual heuristic rule of thumb is that refactoring culture is actually, in fact, really hard.
It is hard.
It's not necessarily impossibly hard.
Darre really demonstrated with Uber.
Actually, we had a master's scale episode on that because it was the question of,
okay, so you inherit something that's got a lot of really broken parts.
what do you do? The punchline was you don't show up and say, new sheriff in town, you say,
hey, we did these great things. We already have what's greatness in this. Let's focus on the parts
that are great and use those to refactor the other parts. So as opposed to saying, now for something
entirely new, it's we're returning to the central roots of our greatness and then refactoring
the other ones. And that's actually, I think, a good change. Now, that being said,
we have had a lot of culture episodes. And part of that's because you should be intentional about it.
and the intentionality can be not hiring a SaaS as Uber did.
So with like Workday and Anil Busry, it was he and his co-founder, Dave Duffield, did a cultural
interview at the end, even though he's being the CEO, did a cultural interview at the end
of every hiring process for the first 500 people.
That slows you down some, but that's one way to do it.
Another way is the culture deck for Reed Hastings, which actually just started as when they
were looking at the attrition of, like, why are people leaving?
I was like, well, they didn't understand our culture when they got here.
So let's first create a culture deck to onboard them.
And then, shit, we should publish it, right?
Because don't come here.
If you're looking for a family, go to other companies.
If you're looking for a team, like a professional sports team, come here.
Because our culture is, we ask ourselves the question every quarter, every year.
If you wouldn't hire this person right now, give them a severance package.
go hire somebody else.
And so you create these cultural moments.
And these are all the different tool sets
that you create for your particular business,
your particular founders, management team,
product market fit, competition landscape, etc.
Because it's not one culture, one size fits all.
But being intentional is very important.
Everything has a consequence, right?
There's pros and cons to everything.
You can implement all these systems.
Like I'm thinking about my own company right now.
I used to hire so quick.
I would just go on LinkedIn, find somebody, poach somebody,
DM them, do an interview, hire them. Now it's a month's long process. And I can feel that sometimes
it's really hurting us. And I'm like, I just want to go poach somebody off LinkedIn, you know?
It's just like really just pros and cons and you've got to figure out what is the right thing for your
business and make the right decision. So why is first mover advantage so important?
The whole point of blitzscaling is so that you can basically build a moat around you as a company.
but why is that so important?
Well, first mover to scale gives you all kinds of advantage.
It doesn't actually necessarily need to be first mover out of the gate,
but the first mover to scale, part of Blitzscaling, is really critical.
Now, sometimes, by the way, the way that you become first mover to scale
is you're the first mover out the gate because you just keep going.
But that kind of getting the scale can have all kinds of advantages.
One is capital markets reward you versus whoever's
in second place as part of the Cadillac and Steak Knives.
Employees more want to work there that when customers or members, if it's a consumer internet thing, think, well, what's the one that everyone's talking about?
It's the one that's the first to scale.
And so in all of these fields, you have advantages.
Now, you might also have a business with network effects.
with those network effects become a really important growing super linear kind of competitive
moat, whether it's like Airbnb or Uber or others, LinkedIn, or if it's just a, well,
I'm ahead. And so by default, all of the different forces that come together to make
a company successful are more aligned in believing you're number one. Because part of what
entrepreneurship does is I have this vision. It's currently non-operative. I'm
persuading multiple different constituencies to come invest in my vision. It could be investors with
money. It can be employees with their time and ownership. It could be press with their belief in what's
going to happen. It can be customers who go, okay, you're a startup, but I'm going to start using you
now anyway, because I believe you will be the right thing in the future. All of these things is
what you do as an entrepreneur is you persuade people to come and help build your vision when you're
the first mover to scale, you have a lot more of those people believing in you, and therefore,
investing in you, your cost of customer acquisitions lower, your cost of speed of recruiting
employees lower, your cost of capital is lower, et cetera, et cetera.
The weight of your brand is giving you all of this advantage, like the brand recognition.
Brand can definitely be a strong part of it, but it's also the question of who do each of
these groups think is going to win. So it's a little bit different. I mean, brand is also,
what is your brand promise? What are you going to become? And, you know, awareness is part of it,
but it's like, okay, we think you're going to win. Now, when you have dynamics like a network
effect, then your brand might be mediocre, but a network effect is incredibly good within a business
or within a, you know, any kind of entity that has it. It's a very strong amplifier.
So talk to us about that. I know Airbnb had a network effect. What's a good example of one?
networks are usually, but not always.
So LinkedIn has one.
Facebook has one.
WhatsApp and Instagram.
For example, when you look at Google,
the network effect isn't the search index.
That's a scale index.
What it is is the AdWords,
because the AdWords begin to get
when you're kind of that large and differentiated
and have the data and intelligent enough,
you end up with a better cost.
You can provide an ad
at what is a lower cost to you
in a higher price to your customer and have a higher margin revenue,
then your competitor that's trying to sell something.
And so its network effect is in the ad words.
So part of when you're looking for these mega-scale businesses,
usually there's some interesting network effects that really power them.
I know that there's different stages involved with bliss scaling.
So there's family stage, tribe stage, village stage, city stage, nation stage.
So I was thinking about my company,
and I think we're right in between tribe stage and village.
stage. I think there's probably a lot of growing pains in that stage, right? Like, we're doing
amazing, but I feel like it's just like scaling is really hard. And I feel like that is the first
instance of really scaling. So talk to us about each one of these stages. What do we need to think about?
And you can be high level or as deep as you'd like, but if you can just break down how companies
generally scale in the stages that they have. So the basic idea was to say when you're hyper-scaling,
to a market. Obviously, everyone wants to have as much revenue and as much customers in our else
per employee is one of the ways to benchmark businesses. But almost all businesses also get to
growing their employee base for various reasons. It's sales and new products and features, new product
lines, and customer service, and account management and finance and everything else. So you,
generally speaking, need to be scaling your employee base at some rate with your business. And so
the thought was, as you're getting to scale product market,
fit. One of the challenges you have is you're scaling the size of your operation in all of these
different vectors. And so that proxies to number of employees. And so we broke it up into the five
categories that you just outlined. Thank you. And we said, look, when you're getting to each of these
things, what got you here won't get you there? When you're at the earliest stage, it's like, you know
a couple people, maybe you met one of them, you hired them, you're all in a room. Communication isn't
really an issue. Company culture is usually like, well, we went out for beats in a beer and we talked
about it, and that's our company culture. Like, we figured out what we're doing. And as you get larger,
all of these things changed in the various earliest, everyone's working, and then you get to,
there's people who are working and being managers, then you get there's people just being
managers, then you get people who are managing managers. And each of these things change at levels
of scale as you go up, how you run communications, how you make decisions, how you pivot, or
readjust something, all of this changes, which risks are you willing to take?
Like, for example, Facebook went, and people thought this was different, but it was like,
move fast and break things to move fast with scalable infrastructure.
And it was, oh, you got wise and you changed your theory of moving fast.
Like, no, no, no, what we realized was, in our very earliest days, move fast and break things
was the way to optimize speed.
And then in our later days, the way to optimize speed was move fast with stable infrastructure
because we broke the infrastructure, it was too hard to fix,
and we suddenly were moving slower.
So it's still both speed principles.
But those changes, because, for example, move fast and break things,
we're totally fine when you're 40 people.
When you're 500 people, and the infrastructure breaking and everything breaks,
let's keep the infrastructure running,
however many other things we may be breaking as we're moving fast.
So all of those things go into the different levels.
And nation is kind of the placeholder for public company, you know, thousands of employees, etc.
And just saying, hey, the rules here change too.
And your mistake is trying to run the same way as you might be even in the village when you're in a nation,
even though you're, of course, trying to keep speed.
You definitely keep a vibrant culture and high performance and high quality talent.
The nature of the game changes as you change size.
It's so interesting. I highly recommend that everybody read Blitzscaling. I loved reading through it. I want to read
it in even more detail because I feel like it's just so relevant, especially as like a newer entrepreneur
scaling your business. If you've never done it before, build a company that's a nation-sized
company. It's definitely a good read. So when you're thinking about making intelligent risk,
this is something that we were talking about earlier. Do you have anything that you think through,
questions that you ask yourself to make sure that you're not just taking any risk and that you're
taking a risk intelligently? Well, there's a couple of quick hacks on every major decision,
maybe not surprising from the co-founder of LinkedIn, is I think who are the three to five people
I'd most want to talk to about this? Because it's kind of like, where would they give me knowledge,
expertise, different cognitive tool set, different analytic framework, et cetera.
And with that, would I predict that would be very helpful in this particular decision?
And frequently, those people, while you have a lot of great people in your company, there's a lot of them where in any particular decision are outside your company.
And that's part of the thing of like, okay, what would it take to go get that?
What kind of information I get?
What kind of information I get? What I'd be unknown and I would try?
Except.
So that's one.
Because analyzing the risks is knowing which only few things to focus on and which other things to really.
just ignore. Because one of the, as you know,
split-scaling rules are like embrace chaos and let fires burn
because you're like, we'll solve that later. We don't have to solve
everything right now. We can only focus on a few things.
Another one is to think about, all right,
even if it's painful to solve something later, like, for example,
we were talking with the Uber hiring thing,
can we solve that one later because which, the ordering of problems
that we need to solve? And some of the risk is,
We're not going to solve that problem right now.
We're not going to be able to measure it right now.
The only way to really measure this is to do it.
One of the things that modern consumer internet, mobile entrepreneurs have learned is this thing that's paradoxically called paper testing, which is you put up an ad.
And you say, here's our thing.
And you see what the click-through is, even though you don't have anything behind the ad because you're measuring it and trying to get data because you're trying to figure out what the thing is.
This is the toolbox of the cost.
de-risking? Which low-cost things can you do, talking to someone, taking a paper ad, doing
other things? Can I do to de-risk this? And then at the end of the day, you make the risk bet.
Now, some of the red-teaming thought is, well, if I'm wrong on this decision, what are my
plans be? How do I recover? If I go, ooh, this one, we're just dead, not, oh, it's painful.
We're dead if it doesn't work. Oh, okay, well, let's invest a little bit more on the risk
decision if we can. But by the way, part of what startups do is you're making the bet. If you're
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Okay.
young and profiteers. I know there's so many people tuning in right now that end their workday
wondering why certain tasks take forever, why they're procrastinating certain things, why they don't
feel confident in their work, why they feel drained and frustrated and unfulfilled. But here's the thing
you need to know. It's not a character flaw that you're feeling this way. It's actually your natural
wiring. And here's the thing. When it comes to burnout, it's really about the type of work that
you're doing. Some work gives you energy and some work simply drain.
So it's key to understand your six types of working genius.
The working genius assessment or the six types of working genius framework was created by
Patrick Lensione and he is a business influencer and author.
And the working genius framework helps you identify what you're actually built for and the
work that you're not.
Now, let me tell you a story.
Before I uncovered my working genius, which is galvanizing and invention, so I like to
rally people and I like to invent new things, I used to be really shameful and had a lot of
guilt around the fact that I didn't like enablement, which is one of my working frustrations.
So I actually don't like to support people one-on-one. I don't like it when people slow me down.
I don't like handholding. I like to move fast, invent, rally people, inspire. But what I do need to do
is ensure that somebody else can fill the enablement role, which I do have K on my team.
So working genius helps you uncover these genius gaps, helps you work better with your team,
helps you reduce friction, helps you collaborate better, understand why people are the way that
they are. It's helped me restructure my team, put people in the spots that they're going to really
excel. And it's also helped me in hiring. Working Genius is absolutely amazing. I'm obsessed with this model.
So if you guys want to take the Working Genius assessment and get 20% off, you can use code profiting.
Go to working genius.com. Again, that's working genius.com. Stop guessing. Start working in your genius.
I want to talk about AI, but before we do that, I've got a little quick fire section. I've pulled out
some of my favorite quotes that you've said about entrepreneurship,
and then I just want to get some more color on each one of these quotes.
Okay, if you aren't embarrassed by the first version of your product, you shipped too late.
Well, this is what I talked about a little bit already with Socialite,
which is, look, there's the number of people who are product geniuses that go,
oh, when I pull back the curtains, everyone's going to go,
ooh la, la, you are perfect.
That's less than 1% of entrepreneurs and product people.
and get everyone thinks they are.
And it obviously should be a good product person,
otherwise you shouldn't be doing the product side
on the entrepreneurship,
doing something else.
But the right thing is,
how do you learn from your customers?
How do you go which things?
And that's part of the reason why minimum viable product,
product market fit,
all of these things, you know,
kind of testing your hypotheses,
using other data as a way of do it,
because if it's speed to market
and speed to learning.
And part of the,
Reason why embarrassment is because our natural instinct as people, as entrepreneurs, is we want you to tell us, oh, my God, we love what you did.
And actually, in fact, you want them to grow to love what you did.
And obviously, the more they love it at the beginning, that's great.
But your speed of learning it and deploying it and scaling it is the game.
I'm like smiling because I'm just thinking about me being an entrepreneur and something that my business partner always says is my favorite thing is to just announce something.
even before it's ready, before I have any idea how to do it.
I love to just announce we're doing this, and I'm like, well, we got to figure it out.
Exactly.
Okay, so don't wait for something to fail before you learn or before you consider a change or pivot.
The best pivots are to take advantage of an upside rather than to avoid a downside.
So obviously people are familiar with pivots because it's not working, right?
And there's different ways to get to the conclusion before it.
totally is a train wreck. You want to make the decision it's not working before the train
rack happens, you know, change tracks. But one of the things that people underdescribe is a pivot
to a new opportunity. And in some sense, this is the PayPal story that we were talking about
a little earlier because they said, well, we have this really great unique technology and, well,
we're figuring out that it's not really going to work and we're pivoting away from it because
to order to get to market. And then what happened is,
You released this kind of Palm Pilot plus a synchronizing payment service.
And what happened is eBay people started using it.
And I remember the first week in the conversation of PayPal was,
who are these eBay people?
Should we stop them from using our product?
And it was like, no, no, no, those are our customers.
None of these people are our customers.
Those are our customers.
We're going to pivoting entirely towards them.
And so pivoting towards opportunities, seeing what happens.
And sometimes, by the way, it's like, oh, you've been working on the software product,
and now AI's here, and you're like, okay, I'm going to do AI.
Yeah, I know I did this last 18 months of work, maybe three months of it's recoverable,
because that's the opportunity.
And that pivoting towards big, new opportunities is one of the things that really creates
these successful businesses.
Because we want to tell this heroic story where she or he had this original vision
that came down from Monahai and they came down with the two stone tablets.
And they said, I've got this vision that goes on for,
forever, and that's the reason I'm a genius.
And it's like, well, actually, in fact, a lot of things happen based on, well, I was in the game,
I was learning, and I saw this new opportunity that emerged from a market, a technology, a set of
things with competitors, and I move towards that.
Like, for example, Google, its theory of when it launched its say was, we're going to sell
enterprise search.
That's our theory of the game.
Then they saw it and then, oh, it's not working.
Oh, our backup plan is to put double-click ads on top.
of it. Oh, shit, the whole ad market went. What do we do? Oh, now we invent AdWords.
And they pivoted from enterprise to consumer and then consumer to using elements that they'd
seen from the market, but inventing their own version of how to make a really powerful business.
And it's one of the most powerful business models that's been invented in human history
so far. And so that pivoting towards opportunity is one of the things that entrepreneurs really
need to keep in mind. It's not always that you're failing. Your company could
be doing good, but you just want to go towards even a bigger opportunity.
Yes, exactly.
No matter how brilliant your mind or strategy, if you're playing a solo game, you'll always
lose out to a team.
Again, we tend to tell these heroic myths of the individual entrepreneur where she or he
is like, I am the person, the creator, that innovator, et cetera.
And actually, in fact, all of these projects are the result of teamwork.
there's almost nothing as an individual.
And, you know, part of the thing is you want to be, to some degree, the best entrepreneurs,
the people who recruit and bring around them the most amazing teams who work with them for a long time.
And actually, obviously, part of the thing is the truism tends to be higher slow, fire fast.
The hire slow, you can see how, you know, whether that works.
If you're really going to hire slow, you better be hiring all the time so that your pace of hiring,
is it matched not like, oh, I need a person now.
I'm going to start looking.
It's like, I start recruiting for people I think I'm going to need six to 12 months from now today, as an instance.
And so that team sport is really important.
But it's not just the employees.
It's also the people around you.
So like the advice to give entrepreneurs is not to go up to people and say, Hala, what do you love about my idea?
What do you think about my idea?
Because, you know, I'm kind of asking, tell me good.
It's like, what's wrong with my idea?
What thing could make it break to kind of learn from it?
And so having those teams built around you outside your company.
Advisors, investors, experts, industry people, etc., is really, really important.
And that's why entrepreneuring is a team sport, is a network sport, not simply an individual sport.
Okay, last one.
Just as the Industrial Revolution created new opportunities for collaboration and new capacities for innovation,
creativity, creativity, the cognitive revolution will do it as well.
This is, I guess, bridging into our AI discussion.
The thing that happens that we've learned with entrepreneurship is new technologies completely change industries.
Sometimes every industry like AI with general purpose technologies and the parallel between chatGBT models and general purpose technology is always something I'm fine, a little entertaining.
But you look at these technology changes as changes in market landscapes.
It changes in how what the real shape of product and services are going to be.
It changes in how companies operate.
It changes in what business models are available and all of these things.
So you really look, even if you're not yourself, purely the technology company, you look for changes in the technological landscape.
Because fundamentally, if you don't have a technology strategy, it's not an IT strategy, it's not of my using PCs or Macs or iOS things.
It's a technology strategy, and that you're going to need to evolve with.
And so, AI, which is the cognitive industrial revolution, in my belief, is going to transform.
probably every industry, and if not every, almost every. It's between almost every and every.
So everybody needs to be looking at it to say, okay, what does this mean for my product service,
my competitive landscape, the way that we operate as a company, how we do sales and marketing,
how we do account management, how we do customer service, what other ways in which we
operate, whether it's supply chain, finance, risk mitigation, etc. What are all the ways that this
can come in and give me a competitive differentiation for how the next,
new world is going to look.
Well,
Yap, gang, that concludes part one of my interview with Reed Hoffman.
We're going to be talking about AI in part two, and believe me, you're going to want
to come back and check that out.
Now, Reed is as seasoned as you get as an entrepreneur and executive, and he's truly
seen and been through it all.
Yet, he remains such a compelling evangelist for the entrepreneurial spirit.
I love the way he talks about the power of entrepreneurs to not only transform industries,
but also entire societies.
From the printing press to automobiles to smartphones and now AI,
we entrepreneurs drive innovation, prosperity, and even the future.
And often, as Reid explained,
this process involves making big decisions at remarkable speed,
and sometimes you have to prioritize speed over efficiency
in an uncertain environment.
But for those who can succeed in this hyper-competitive game of blitzscaling,
they'll have all kinds of advantages in the market.
When you're the first to scale, you'll have a lot more people investing in you.
Your cost of customer acquisition will be lower, and so will your cost of capital.
Even the time it takes for you to recruit good employees will be reduced.
So it pays to shoot for the stars.
But like Reed said, you still got to be smart about it and take informed risks.
And it's the same optimistic but measured mindset that informs Reed's truly invigorating
approach to AI.
And guys, we're going to cover all of that in part two.
We go super deep on AI, and it was one of my favorite conversations about AI on this podcast so far.
I learned so much.
You guys are going to love it.
I can't wait for you to hear it.
So make sure you tune in to part two of my episode with Reid Hoffman coming out next week.
And until then, thanks for listening to this episode of Young and Profiting Podcast.
If you listen and learned to be profited from this conversation with the legendary Reid Hoffman,
please share this episode with somebody who would love it.
And if you guys enjoyed this show, if you learned something, if you feel like this is the best
entrepreneurship podcast you've ever listened to, write us a review. I read your reviews every single day
on Apple, Spotify, CastBox, wherever you listen to the show, let me know how you feel about it.
Let me know what you've learned. Let me know your favorite takeaways. I love to hear your feedback.
It motivates me to continue to do the show and give it my full effort. And if you want to watch this
podcast on video, check us out on YouTube. I just interviewed Mel Robbins in person. I interviewed
Gary Vaynerchuk in person.
If you guys want to see those in-person interviews, they were awesome.
Go check it out on YouTube.
Just look up Young and Profiting.
You can also find me on Instagram at Yap with Hala or LinkedIn by searching my name.
It's Hala Taha.
Of course, I've got to give a big shout out to my YAP team.
I've got the best team in the world.
I love you guys so much.
Thank you for all your hard work on the show.
This is your host, Hala Taha, aka the podcast Princess, signing off.
