33:18 Link copied!
Let's talk about what to actually do,
and this is going to be a kind of a high level overview. Obviously buy the book if you really want to get serious about this stuff, coming out May 26, that all you have- May 26, yes, thank you. Anywhere you buy books, talk about what we should do. I just wanna plant the seed of OpenAI is probably on people's minds as they hear this idea of building a nonprofit. Yeah. Yeah. We'll get there. And obviously in the book, I tell the Anthropic story where I I played a bit part. So we'll we'll get to all that. We'll get to all that. But let but let's start with the easy stuff first because like,
when you like, AI is kind of like the humanity's final exam. You know, you've heard that that joke.
Like,
these issues are so amplified in AI. Of course, we have to get it right. I think it's incredibly important and I've done my, I've done what I can to to set us on that proper path. But but it's easier to see it, I think, in simpler businesses.
OpenAI's business is insanely complicated. So let's look at it in some some simpler examples first.
Let's start with the principle I call harder is easier.
This is the this is the the leadership principle that anybody can adopt. There is truly like, there's nobody who's not who you you tell me you have no power whatsoever. Like, everyone's got some influence. And if you have any influence at all, you can adopt this principle.
Like, when I talk to people about business, I don't care if I'm talking to two guys in a garage, founders, you know, or or I'm talking to super boards or CEO, c suite, whatever. Everyone always says to me, just what you were saying a minute ago. It's like, man, Eric, business is already so hard.
And now you want me to do extra?
Now I gotta worry about the Vectura thing and this other stuff? Like, I man, I'm already just trying to get through the day. Like, it's so hard.
But I think this is a basically backwards
way of looking at it because
I ask people,
could it be just consider the possibility that one of the reasons you're finding business so hard
is that nobody trusts you.
If they trusted you, maybe it would be a little bit easier. Now, actually, this is not a supposition. We have really good evidence. Companies where their employees trust them spend way less time on employee communications.
They have much better alignment. Everyone's kind of rowing in the same directions. When customers trust you, they are of course, you have way higher loyalty. Your cost of customer acquisition is lower, but also customers are more likely to stick with you after you make a mistake. They're more likely to try your new product. Like, so many people are like, god. Customers are so fickle. They have no loyalty.
You know? They just like they only care about the slick marketing from our competitors. But maybe
because you view these things as extra is part of the problem.
So harder is easier is a principle that says if you're willing to do the work upfront to commit to quality, to design, to ethics, to integrity, to safety, whatever the thing I don't wanna tell you what your values are. You tell me what they are. If you're willing to be principled in your decision making,
you will get these unexpected
rewards.
Now you can't do it for the reward or it doesn't work. You have to do it for the thing itself.
Trustworthiness is the most underrated asset in all of business.
And the things that create trustworthiness,
by definition,
stack rank to the bottom if we do it by ROI.
Because doing the right thing has intangible rewards but tangible costs.
So let me give you another story. Because now we we've been talking about, like, lofty stuff, and I wanna talk about something super practical. And that's I mentioned Cloudflare before. So let me actually tell the Cloudflare story. I like Cloudflare because Matthew Prince
and his co founders, they like
they were really anti consulting
BS talk.
Like, they didn't want if you in the early days, you know, they came out of Harvard Business School, and so they were, traumatized. There was, no. I don't wanna hear about mission statement. I don't wanna hear about values. I don't know. It's just we are making a firewall and putting it in the cloud. It's not that complicated. Like, we don't wanna hear it. So for years,
they had no mission statement. And this is a critical point.
As leaders, we get so focused on value statement, mission statements. We forget the mission statement is not the mission. The map is not the territory.
Mission is an emergent property of the living superorganism
of the thing we're birthing. Okay? It's not something you can slap on with a label. You have to build it in. You wanna have a company that stands for quality? You gotta build quality in from the inside. Deming taught this in the forties. Like, this is not some new idea. This is a critical idea. This is what craftsmanship really means. Okay. So we know that Cloudflare had a mission because quite often they would do this harder is easier stuff
and without even really knowing why. Like there's a very famous example in their history where pro democracy protesters,
I'm gonna say oh, I forget what nation state they were pissing off. I better not say it because I get it wrong. Pissing off some nation state,
were having their having, like, state sponsored hackers
try to take their websites down so they couldn't coordinate their pro democracy protests.
They were going around Silicon Valley begging big tech companies to help them defend their websites. No one would do it. All these big mega companies, even like Google, were just like, I'm too scared.
And so Cloudflare, the tiny startup, was like, we'll do it. These were like free tier customers. They weren't even paying any money. And they're like, yes. We will incur the wrath of nation state level hackers to protect you because it's the right thing to do for no reward whatsoever. That was just the kind of company they were. So anyway, a couple years in, they're having lunch, and one of the engineers says, you know why I like working at this company? I just feel like it's the first place I've worked where we're just we're trying to make a better Internet.
And everyone on the table is like, yeah, make a better Internet.
Someone asked Matthew, oh, is that our mission statement?
Smack. No. We don't have a mission statement. What are talking about? No. But it actually was.
Over time, the engineers, people who worked there kept saying make a better Internet. That was that was how we talk about it. And eventually, the founders had to be convinced. Okay. Let's adopt this as our mission statement, which they did. That is their mission statement to this day. They had to eventually adopt formal values. Like as you get bigger, these things really matter. It matters that you document those emergent properties. Otherwise, how are people supposed to know what they are?
Their number one value, by the way, is be principled,
which is the ultimate harder is easier move. So this all sounds great. It's fun to have values. It's fun to have a mission statement when it doesn't cost you anything. But sometimes it can be very expensive. It can make your life a lot harder. That's why we call the principle harder is easier. One day, an engineer, a junior engineer, not like some senior executive or anything, walks into Matthew Prince's office and he says, boss,
is it our
mission statement to make a better Internet?
Uh-huh.
When you're a CEO, any conversation that starts this way is definitely going to be extra work for you. So you're like, what is it now? It's like, well, you were saying at the board meeting that our number one driver of revenue, the thing that causes people to upgrade from our free to premium plans, this is a few years ago now, is a web encryption, SSL encryption.
Right? You said that makes sense because SSL encryption is expensive to offer. We can offer it for free. We have to get the certificates and pay for them. We have to do all this extra cryptographic stuff as compute, you know, we have scarce compute, da da da da da. Sure.
But boss,
wouldn't a better internet be an encrypted internet?
And he's like, yes, so what's your point? So like, why are like, if it would be better, why are we giving it away for free? And so many people have heard this story.
If you've ever been a middle manager in a company, okay.
You know this, you're just like, Oh my God, every day someone walks into your office, it's like, Hey boss, let's give our product away for free for no reason. Okay. Like your job as a middle manager is to be like, No, We have a strategy. Get back on the strategy. Right? Redirect. Hey. Thank you for your buy in and your input, but we have a job to do. So everyone's expecting Matthew to react that way, and we'd be the most normal thing in the world. This is our most profitable product, and you're saying we should give it away for free. Get lost. No.
Matthew told me once I saw it, I couldn't unsee it.
And he he uttered the three key words. He said, let's figure it out. Figure it out. This is the the leadership principle I think is so powerful, the figure it out principle.
When you have if you're committed to something, you stand for quality or whatever, it is going to make life harder.
The best leaders, the ones I really admire,
they revel in it. They love the difficulty
because every time you have one of these impossible dilemmas, it's a chance to teach what you really stand for. So Matthew insisted the whole team rally
to figure out how to give encryption away for free. Now they couldn't just give it away for free. He's like, go bankrupting the company won't achieve the mission.
We had to find a way to make it sustainable. And I won't go through all the technical details of like how they managed to get the cost. They had to hand roll their own software and assembly language. They had to do these complicated biz dev deals with certificate authorities. Like, they figured out how to do it,
and they drove their own cost down. Now keep in mind that at any time, first of I could have used the difficulty as an excuse. Oh, it's too hard. We can't do it. Give up. Once they did it, they could have said, wait a minute. This is just free margin.
We can make our costs lower and then we just get free money.
When they shipped it, they had to report to their board on what happened.
The conversion rates for their, for a premium product went down. So they could easily have bailed out at that point, but they didn't. They stuck with it because this is what we stand for.
Now, of course, it's a happy ending story.
The top of funnel increased by an order of magnitude. In fact, to this day, people still talk about how Cloudflare is like the reason you take for granted we have an encrypted internet. The trust that they gained is the reason why they're a $70,000,000,000 company today.
But most leaders,
when asked to defend their principles, can't do it because they've been taught ROI based thinking. They've been taught shareholder primacy.
They've been taught that that's the path of maximum profitability. To give you like an easy contrast,
Andrew Mason, the founder of Groupon, once told me this story. Everyone remember Groupon? Maybe not now. It's kind of fallen out of public consciousness, but there was this time when Groupon was one of the fastest growing private companies in America. It was powered by a daily email
with a cool deal.
And the whole thing was you got one email a day from Groupon. They went public on the one email a day. That's how successful it was.
And I remember he told me this story. One day, you know, his executives and employees started coming into his office and they'd be like, you know, boss, we need to make the quarter. We need to make more money. We're a public company now.
We know what would be better than one email.
Have you considered two emails?
And he was like, no, one email a day. He's like, that's our whole thing. But he said over time, they ground him down and they kept saying they were using language. It sounds kind of Lean Startup. Shouldn't we do an experiment? Shouldn't we look at the data? What about the I. R. I. I. Like, what about the ROI?
And so he's like, all right, fine. We'll run the experiment. They ran the experiment.
Emails a day makes more money.
So he couldn't say no. And everything was fine for several months until someone came into his office and said, you know, you know, would be better than two email.
You should send three emails.
And next thing you know, they're sending eight emails. And this is not just Groupon. I have had so many CEOs tell me this exact story about email frequency. Email frequency is like, for some reason, the tip of the spear
where it's like, we don't really have any way to defend doing the right thing here
until we do the wrong thing. That destroyed
the whole company.
But in the short term, we made a bunch of money. So if you can stick to the harder is easier principle, that is the first line of defense against losing whatever is that makes a company special.