speaker 1: So when Sam originally sent me an email to do this course, he said, Ben, can you teach a 50 minute course on management? And I immediately thought to myself, wow, I just wrote a 300 page book on management. So that book was entirely too long, and I didn't actually have time to lapse the 300 pages into 50 minutes of like Mark Twain. I didn't have time to write a good short letter, so I'm going to write a long letter. But in this case, I'm going to teach exactly one management concept. So one long thing. And this management concept, though, is the thing that I see CEO's mess up more consistently than anything else. And from when they're very, very early to when they're very, very big as a company, it's the easiest thing to say and the most difficult to master. And the concept in musical form, whoops, pardon me, very sensitive. So musical form, this is from sly and the Family Stone. Sometimes I'm right and I can be my beliin, my song. So no difference. But grew bottom, man. So that's the musical version of today's lesson. For those of you who musical, you can leave now in management concept form, basically, it's this. When you're making a critical decision, you have to understand how it's going to be interpreted from all points of view, not just your point of view and not just the person you're talking to, but the people who aren't in the room, everybody else. In other words, you really have to be able, when making critical decisions, to see the decision through the eyes of the company and the company as a whole, which means you've got to kind of add up every employee's view and then incorporate that into your own view. Otherwise, your management decisions are going to have very weird side effects and potentially very dangerous consequences. And it's a really hard thing to do because at the point when you're making a decision, you're often under a great deal of pressure. So let's get into the agenda. So I'm going to cover kind of four cases. First, I'm going to cover demotions, which is a very emotional thing. Then raises, which is also an emotional thing. Then we're going to evaluate one of Sam's blog posts, which is news to Sam. So I figured I teahim since he invited me to do a 50 minute management class after I wrote a 300 page book. And then I'm going to talk about history's greatest practitioner at this, and I'm wearing a shirt with him on it and kind of how he used it to do something that nobody had ever done before in human history and has never done since in human history, but basically complete mastery of the technique I'm going to talk about. So first business example. You've got an executive, and do you demote or do you fire him? And this comes from an actual conversation, an actual real life situation that I was working on with a CEO. And so the basic situation was this, he had a great executive, or like an executive, just a great effort. Like he hired him. He was working harder than anybody else in the company, doing you like everything it was supposed to. Everybody liked him because he worked so hard. And like he was a general smart person, but he was just in over his head knowledge wise. He did not have the knowledge and the skills to basically do what the company needed him to do or really compete against the competition. So he couldn't actually keep him in the job. But he's a great guy. And you so the question is, well, should I fire this person or can I just move him into a lower role and bring in a person above him and then like, you know, that would be real cool. So let's look at how you kind of make that decision. So you in this in this case, this was the CEO. So you as a CEO, so one, like look, it's really hard if somebody comes to work every day like you know at 6:00a.m.and is like working till 10:00p.m.and like doing it like harder than anybody in the company, it's really hard to just say, well, sorry, like nice effort, but you don't get nfor an effort. You get niff because I fired you. Nobody wants to have that conversation. And then a demotion is kind of neat because from a CEO's point of view, and this is he's like, look like we can keep him in the company. He works so hard. He's a great example of like somebody gives great effort and you know and then he's got a lot of friends in the company. And there you from a cultural standpoint, like it's a win win because he gets to stay and you know and then I can bring in somebody, I can solve my problem, but I don't have to create another problem. And then if you think about it from the executive's perspective and what they would think, it's like, well, I want to be demoted, but I really don't want to be fired because if I get fired, that's a way harder, more complicated thing to explain to my next employer than I got demoted. Like getting demoted is like, well, I didn't really get demoted. I got a new job, a smaller title. And then the last thing is it enables know, like theoretically, well, you, the company, we value all our employees. We brought you in. We made a commitment to you as an employee and like we value everybody and it kind of will enable you to keep growing with the company. And so know, and this was the kind of initial conversation I have with the CEO, and I said, well, wait a minute. I said, let me ask you this. Like what's the equity package that this exec has? He goes, well, what do you mean? I was like, well, like to see a like director level compensation. Is he got like a vice president level conversation? Is he have point a half? Does he have point 4% or what? And you know, that kind of gave the CEO pause. He's like, well, he does have a point and a half. And I was like, okay, so you're an engineer in your company. How do you feel about somebody who used to be the head of sales who got brought in with a point and a half? Now, mind you, you're an what do your engineers get? Like you get 0.1% point 2%. What are they getting at this point? So how are they going to feel about somebody who's not the head of sales with 1.5% of the company? And he was like, Oh, and I was like, Yeah, Oh, because how fair is that? So are you going to take the equity away? Are you up for doing that? Are you up for going back and taking back his compensation? And like how productive do you think, Hebe, if you take away his compensation? And then secondly, like will people give him the same respect now that you've demoted him? Because they knew him as this and now he's this. And so like I knew you when you were head of sales. Now you're the regional manager and you're telling me what to do. You're telling me I need to make that call. Like seems to me you got demoted. You know, who are you to talk to me? I'm up and come around, be the next vp of sales at the next company. So all these things come into play. And so when you look at it at the end, like you may think you're dealing with one person. You may think that this is a demotion or a firing of one person. What does it mean according to that one person? But what you're really doing is you're saying, look, what does it mean to fail on the job, particularly the highest paid, highest compensated job in the company from an equity standpoint? And then like what's required to maintain your equity? Like is it good enough to put in an effort or do you have to get a result? And in different situations at different levels, like these answers will come out differently. And if this had been a person, not that was an executive brought in from the outside, but was somebody who you may be promoted past where they should have been and didn't ever get that equity, like maybe you make a different decision, but you've got to understand what it's going to mean to everybody, not just the person you're talking to. Example two, an excellent employee asked for a raise. Good employee, this isn't like the last employee. This is like a really good employee. So excellent employee asked for a raise. So look, your first thing is like, they're really good. They ask me for a raise. They didn't ask me for no reason. They ask me because they think they deserve it. I want na retain them. Like I want na be fair. They've done a great job. I want na be fair. And like you know, I know that if I give this phrase, like is going to be all love coming my way. That's going to be if I gave you raise, we're good. You know, like we're boys and you you've got a raise. It's awesome. So like you know from your perspective, you know what you want to do when somebody asks you for a raise. And then if you look at it, okay, well, what about from their perspective? How would they like take it if you gave them the raise and now you have to remember the employee from for them to get to the point where they've asked you for a raise. This is not something they just like woke up one morning and like I'm going in and asking for a raise, right? Like this is something where they've thought about it a lot. They've compared their other options. They may have an offer from another company. You know it's something their spouse probably has been talking to them about. And so it's a serious thing. And so if you give it to them, they're very likely to feel very good about it. Like they may be like paranoid about like why you give me raise, but very unlikely much more theyfeel like. The. I'm sorry, I have to just let the whole thing try. And for those of you who don't know, that's Bobby Shmurda and Roddy grebble doing the shmani dance, but that's likely the reaction you'll get. So there's a lot of momentum to say, yes. You know, they read Cheryl's book, they leaned in, and I'm going to reward him for doing all that, which is no. And by the way, that book is very good advice. So I'm not knocking Cheryl on that. I don't want you to be misinterpreting me. However, you know there was going to be. However, what about you have to think about it through the point of view of the employee who did not ask for the raise. So the employee who didn't ask for the raise, they may be doing a better job than the employee who did ask for the raise. In their mind, they're going, okay. So I didn't ask for raise and I didn't get a raise and they asked for raise and they got a raise. And so what does that mean? That means, one, like you're not really evaluating people's performance. You're just going, well, whoever asgets. So that means like I either need to be that guy who asks for the raise, like and you know that's just not how I feel, you know, like I do my work and I don't necessarily want to ask for a raise or I just need to quit and go to a company that actually evaluates performance. And then so you could really make the person who doesn't get the raise feel like pretty pissy about it. And don't think that when somebody boy's walking down your company doing this shmudance, that other people aren't going to notice like they're going to be fired up about that race. They're saying, you can say, Oh, this is highly confidential, that I'm giving a disrace. It's not confidential. And then the cultural conclusion is going to be, everybody in your company is going to feel that they now have a fiduciary responsibility to their family to ask for a raise all the time, because if they don't, then they may be missing out on a raise that they would have otherwise gotten. And like you talk to any experienced CEO and they will tell you, this is like if you give out raises, when people just ask you for them like that, you will have a lot of people asking you for raises. That is called encouraging behavior. So what do you do? And really, the right answer on raises is you have to be formal, and you have to be formal to save your own culture. And I know this is always this is the thing that causes people running startups fits because it's like, well, I don't want like a lot of formalities. I don't want a lot of process. I want it to be organic. We want to do yoga. We want to only smoke organic weed. Sorry, that's like a Peter teal kind of works. Peter got very focused on who was smoking weeds a little while ago. But like the process actually protects the culture because what it does is it says, look, we're going to look at all the inputs. We're going to have a formal way of saying, anybody who wants a raise, come talk to me. Like I'm not going to give you a raise, but I'm happy to hear your story. I'm going to talk to all the people you work with. So I get like an understanding of it. I'm going to evaluate all the work that you've done. So I know like where I actually write you and what my actual opinion on. And I'm going to do that periodically. I'm not going to do it daily, but maybe if I were fast moving, I'll do it every six months or even maybe once a quarter. And at the end of that process, I will tell you what your raise is, and I will tell you if you're getting one or if you're not getting one. But I'm not going to do things off cycle. I'm not going to do things when asked. There is like one process and that's it. And you know when I used to be CEO and I had like executives, it's the bigger you get, the harder this gets because the more aggressive the people working for you are. Because to get to be an executive, it turns out you often have to be pretty aggressive in this world and in most companies, like that's how you get to that level. You know, I would go, look, you can lobby me all you want, you know, after the process is done and I give you your raise. But you know what? I'm not hearing it because I already went through my process. I got your input going in. I got everybody else's input. I've got so many people, I've got so much money and you got what like I believe is right. And having a process like that basically gets people to be actually more comfortable. They're more comfortable because they don't have to always be on edge about like, am I asking for what I deserve or am I getting like a ed out because of who I am, what I look like? I'm not buddy buddy. I'm not at the golf course with you or I'm not doing whatever you like to do or you know I don't have to worry about any of that because I know your process. I know your process is like you're gonna na evaluate everybody and then you're gonna to give them what's fair. And so that's a much better way to handle that and it means that you're actually understanding what everybody thinks, not just the people you're talking to at the moment. Okay, so now we're going to get into some fun stuff. We're going to evaluate Sam's blog post, which is actually there are some very good things in it. And then there's some things I'm going to discuss. So this is the t excerpt. Most employees have only 90 days after they leave a job to exercise their options. Unfortunately, this requires money to cover the strike price and the tax bill. And I'll explain this a little more later just but I want to read it first for the year of exercise, blah, blah, blah. This is often more cash than an employee has, and this is the key. And so the employee often has to choose between like leaving the job and walking away from the vested options I the money that she has because she can't afford to exercise or being like locked into staying at the company basically for all the wrong reasons. It's a particularly bad situation when an employee gets terminated. And I'll get into that. And that's a really key point. This doesn't seem fair. The best solution I have I've heard is from Adam diangelo of very, very smart guy, aqua. The idea is to grant options that are exercisable for ten years from the grant date, which should cover nearly all the cases. You know, whatever happens with the company, there are some tricky issues to this, blah, blah, blah, but it's still far better than just losing the assets. I think this is a policy that all startups should addebt. So our question is, well, likewise, Sam, right? Is this a policy that all startups should adapt? So let me first explain again what the policy is. So currently, the way almost every stock option package in Silicon Valley works and in all of startup world, is this that your stock, you get stock and vest over a period of time, but if you leave the company, when you leave, you have and it depends on the company, but I think it's 90 days to exercise. So yes, so 90 days. And if you do not buy your stock in that period, sclike, it's not yours anymore, which depending on when you entered the company, could be a big problem. So a lot of companies today that are valued a lot, like if you take like a really valuable startup, like say, an AirBNB or an Uber or something like that, when they bring you in, they go, wow. You know like if you look at your 409a price and to the preferred price, like the stock we're giving you right now, the options are already worth like $10 million. And you're like, Whoa, $10 million, I'm rich. But what they don't necessarily tell you is in order for you to get that money because the preferred is worth $10 million, your options probably are going to cost you like dollar and a half million dollars when you leave. And if you don't have that $25000000 in 90 days, scotlike, you just lost all your money. And so Sam is like, wow, that's bucked up. And so he wrote a blog post and he said, everybody should change it. So the first question that you have to ask yourself on something like this is, well, why is that even like this has kind of been around since like the 80 ties. So why is a rule like this around for 30 years? And it turned out Sam, and I don't know whether he figured this out or just intuitive it, but he was right. Like something actually had changed. So up until 2004, there used to be this law called apopinion number 25. That law was the old way to account for stock options and know it's also the law that all the guys went to jail on. So I got a lot of people who caught a case on apb 25. So I'm glad it's gone because it was a very confusing law and a lot of people did not understand it, and they literally went to jail when that was the law. If you gave somebody ten years to exercise their options, you would never have been able to go public and you would never have been able to be acquired because you basically were taking an expense that was tied to your stock price. So basically, the more your stock went up, the more compensation expense youhave to take. And the worst thing about it would be is you wouldn't know what it was going na be. So itbe totally unpredictable. So you could never forecast earnings ever, because your earnings would be a function of all of your stock price. And so the more your stock price went up, the more money you would lose. And in those days, people did not look through stock option expenses. So like it just wasn't doable and that's why everybody's agreement was written at 90 days. So that's why it's there. So absolutely, it's the right thing to question it being there. Are you guys following? You get this. This is like more complicated than the first two examples, but a very important one. Okay. Then so your perspective on this if you've got employees, is you want to be fair, like nobody wants to like, Hey, you get all this stock in four years psych, right? And especially like when you fire someone, Hey, you're fired. I feel real bad about it, but guess what? I'm almost going to take all your money too. Must not feel that bad. So like that's kind of like a problem. But you also, and this is the thing that you've got to keep in mind, you also have to think about the people who are staying and you want to reward the people who are staying. Now, the employee, the perspective of the employee who leaves. And this is really critical because this is your reputation, right? Like I worked like you know a year's work like where e's my yeis pay and then, okay, so now you're telling me about this 90 day exercise and I know it was in like the fine print of my stock option agreement, but my hiring manager never told me about that. They never told me I was gon na need like $2 million to get my stock, which I don't have. And like so if I was rich, like I'd get my stock. Like that's not fair. And so like you know now I'm fired and then I'm screwed. And guess what? You know I'm gonna to tell everybody like how you like screwed me over. And so that's a real reputational problem. So that's something that you've got to consider in setting this policy. But then you also have to consider the employee stays. And one thing that they're going to ask themselves is, look, they're leaving. And every time anybody leaves, it says, like, was that smart? Like that's something you, because these are people who write your employees know each other better than they know you in any company. I don't care what company you are, but like often the person they're really working with is going to be the person they know more. And so if that person leaves there gonna to go, well, like should have I left too? Like what did they get and how does that compare to my deal? And so like if we look at the situation and we try and analyze it, there's a lot of components to it. So first is companies, tria, lot of people around here. And I think really the average is somewhere around 10%. It's probably getting higher, particularly if you're in San Francisco. It's getting higher just because of the nature of the culture there. And then Silicon Valley companies dilute like six to eight or even 10% a year for employee options. And you have to keep in mind that is mean as it may be. If that employee leaves and can't exercise their options, then those options come back to the pool where you can potentially give them to people who are already there. So you're actually taking less dilution. So that's something that you have to think about. I'm not saying you have to act on it, but it's something that you have to think about it. Then secondly, look, losing all your stock is a very big incentive to stay. And that can be good news or bad news, right? Like it can be good news in that like you get to keep somebody you might have lost. It can be bad news and that you kept them for the exact wrong reason because they have handcuffs on them. And so you may get like the exact the an employee who's worse than not having an employee. But on the other hand, a ten year option on a highly volatile security. For those of you who have taken that class, anybody taken that class, that's valuable, right? Ten years options are volatility and length. That's the value of an option. Well, ten years on a startup stock, that's a big valuable thing. And then remember, the employee stays doesn't get that. The employee stays just gets a stock. They get that, but they don't get the new job in the new stock. So they get one thing, but they don't get both things. And so you've got to weigh that in. So this is a hard one. Like I think that it should be reevaluated by every company. I wouldn't go as far as to Sam that it should be adopted by every company. I think you have to think about what you want. And I would just offer kind of two alternative cultural statements. One is, look, we treat employees with the utmost straightforwardness. We're gonna, to be fair, and therefore, like you get ten years to exercise your stock and like what we said we're going na give you, you're going na get regardless of how rich or poor you are, like that's just a done deal. The second way to handle it, which is, and no companies do this, which is why I actually really like this post that he wrote. Look, you can say up front, look, you're guaranteed to get your salary, but for your stock to be meaningful, like these are the things that have to happen. One, you've got a vest. Two, you have to stay until like we get to an exit, like the company makes it and or like you've got to have the money. And finally, like the company's actually got to be worth something because 10% of nothing is nothing. And look, the reason that we set the policy this way is like we really value people who stay. So don't join this company like if you join another one in 18 months because like you're going to get screwed and like our policy like guarantees you're going to get screwed on that. And so like those are two ways to handle it. It really depends on like you and how you want to run your culture. But again, with all these things, it's just critical to think it through from everybody's perspective because when push comes to cheve, that's going to matter. It's going to change the outcome of your company. I'm actually revising my recommendations. Let's hear it. No, I just think there needs to be more incentive to stay, right? So you could get out and stay incentive if someone gets fired. I still think they get screwed a lot of times. Well, the other and the other thing that's really important that Sam pointed out is like the distinction now is how much money you have, right? If you've got the money, you don't get screwed. You walk away with all you can buy your stock. You do take some risk, but you can buy your stock if you don't have the money, you don't have the money. Okay, so now we're getting to the person on my shirt, tucent. He was the best at this and I want to take you through some examples because they're very powerful. Okay. So first of all about tucant, he was born. The thing to understand about him is he was born a slave. But he wasn't just born a slave. He was born a slave in the most brutal place to be a slave, which was in kind of then the colony of Santo Domingo, now referred to as Haiti. But this was actually a much more severe form of slavery as were kind of all the sugar growing areas than even us slavery, which is historically a very brutal form of slavery. And just to give you some numbers on it, basically over the course of slavery, the 400 years, a million slaves were brought to the us. And at the end of slavery, there were 4 million slaves in the us. In that same period to the sugar growing countries in the Caribbean, 2 million slaves were brought over. And at the end of slavery, there were 700, zero left. So from just a quantitative perspective, like nearly ten times more brutal, and I'm going to read this to you. I don't know if I quite have time, but I don't care. So but just to give you an idea, this isn't just like a quantitative thing. I'll read you sort of a description of slavery in tucanarea. Whipping was interrupted in order to PaaS a piece of howood on the buttocks of the victim. Salt, pepper, citron, cinders, aloes, and hot ashes were poured into bleeding wounds, not to heal them, this to make it worse. Mutilations were common limbs, ears, and sometimes private parts. To deprive them of the pleasures which they could indulge without expense. Their masters poured burning wax on their arms and hands and shoulders, emptied the boil and cane sugar over their heads, burning them alive, roasted them on slow fires, filled them with gunpowder and blew them up with a match burried them up to their neck and smear their heads with sugar that the flies might devour them fastened them to the nest of ants or wassps, and made them eat their extriment, drink their urine, lisaliva of other slaves. One colonist was known in moments of anger to throw himself on his sleves and stick his teeth into their flesh. So that's the slavery that he grew up in. And it's really important to understand this, because to get out of that perspective was not easy. But he had a vision. And his vision was kind of threefold. One, he wanted to end slavery. Two, he wanted to actually take control of the country and run the country. And thirdly, he wanted it to be a first class, world class country, not just like something where he had freed the slaves, but something that could compete on a worldwide basis. And so that was his mindset going in, but that was a background that he came from. So example management, example one, conquering the enemy. So the kind of sequence of battles that occurred in Haiti were, first, you know, he had to kind of defeat the locals, but then once he defeated the locals, which is there were several countries that were very, very interested in taking control of Haiti, principally Spain, England and France. So he had to defeat those armies as well. When he conquered them, he had to decide what to do with the kind of conquered soldiers and the leaders on the other side. And to do this, he really took into perspective kind of three different points of view. One, his soldiers point of view to the enemy's point of view, and finally, the point of view of the resulting culture. Like what kind of country was he building? Because the army was going to be the seed corn for the culture of the whole country. So from the soldier's perspective, and I got this, you know, do we get to pillage? Like soldiers like to pillage. They get stuff. It's something for their work. And like the second thing is they're trying to kill us, so we should kill them. Like that's the basic perspective of the people who are fighting for them. So the most important people to son, now, I put pillage up there. And so a couple of things to note when I didn't put rape up there. And very Interestingly, like, not only did he not allow rape among his army, but he didn't even allow his officers to cheat on their wives. And if they did heget rid of them because he was so concerned about the resulting culture, what was it going to be? Was it going to be productive? Was it going to be best in world, or was it going to be something less than that? And so that was his mindset going in. His army was actually famous for not pillaging. So they were actually already used to this, say, were famous for not pillaging. This was one of the most surprising things to the conquered people, to the point where in Haiti he had a reputation where even the White people were very impressed with him, just because he would go in and go into their city and not pillage, even though he would win. But again, this is because he took a long view of the culture. So, and this is a kind of important setttle point, which gets him to his conclusion. But he believed that the culture of Haiti, because it was a slave culture, sugar plantation culture, was just pretty low grade to what he had experienced in Europe when he dealt with the Europeans. And then he thought that slave culture was even more broken than Haitian culture. Because if you think about slave culture, it's like the kind of culture where, Oh, you don't do what I tell you, I'm going to beat you to death, I'm going to blow you up with gunpowder. If you think the kind of behavior that ensues from that, that was the culture he knew he needed to replace. He knew he needed to upgrade. So his solution was when he conquered the British, or he conquered the Spanish, or he conquered the French, he would take the very best people from there and he would make them generals in his army. So you probably didn't expect that. Like, so here are the guys trying to kill him. He's leading a slave revolution. And he when he conquers the enemy, he actually incorporates them into his army and makes him part of that because he wanted the expertise and he wanted he wanted the culture to be at a much higher level. So the second question he had, this is even more complicated. What do you do with the slave owners? So you're leading slave revolution, you take control of the country. What do you do with the slave owners? Three perspectives again. So for the slaves, like come on. Like if you're a slave and you win the war against the slave owners, like you want to kill them, there is no question. And not only do you want to kill them, but like that's your land now. Like we won. Like fyou, from tuoussant's perspective, it was more complicated because he wanted Haiti to be for world country. And sugar was really important. And the whole slave economy was the sugar economy then, right? Like on the other hand, he was a slave and he's got to be pretty upset, particularly given the type of slavery then. But he had to consider he didn't know how to run a sugar plantation and then like he didn't have any business relationships on who to trade the sugar with. But on the other hand, like war, like you win the war, you get the land. That's a pretty basic rule. So what to do? And then if you look at the slave owner perspective, it's pretty interesting because they're coming at it from and this is the point of view that he actually had the discipline to understand. They were coming from a cost structure that was predicated on slave labor. So like their business didn't work without slave labor. Like literally, if they had to pay people, like their cash flow wouldn't work. They paid a lot of money for the slaves up front and they paid a lot of money for the land. So in their mind, like to renit like that was like, that's how business worked. Like can't you can't just like change the economics and have it still work. And then they knew they had like some power because of the position they were in. So what was the answer for the slave owners? One. So his solution was like, one, I'm going to end slavery. Two, I'm going to let the slave owners keep their land. Three, I'm going to make them pay their workers. So there no more slave slavery. You have to have paid workers. But in order to fund that, I'm going to lower their taxes. You guys ought to be kind of impressed with that. Like lower the taxes of the slave owners after you defeat the slave owners and like end slavery. But he had a bigger goal. He wanted a stronger culture. The way he treated those slave owners, they need to keep the economy going was important. And then like let's look at the results. So first of all, it is tucance revolution is the only successful slave revolution in the history of mankind. There has never been another one. There may never. Hopefully we won't have slavery in a big way and there won't be another one. So like, he's it. Two, you know, the plantation owners kept their land. Three, he defeated Napoleon. He had a booming economy in a world class culture. Under Tucson, Haiti had more expexport revenue than the United States. So that's how successful he was in the revolution. And this is the power of looking at a situation not just from your point of view, but from the point of view of all the constituents, even the people you hate, which is hard to do when you're CEO and harder to do when you're leading a revolution. So just like in conclusion, the most important thing that you can learn as CEO, one of the hardest things to do, is you have to discipline yourself to see your company through the eyes of the people that you're working through. Through the eyes of the employees, through the eyes of the gpartners, through the eyes of the people who you're not talking to and who are not in the room. Thank you. Question. Company the best of of the and how do you communicate the message to the rest of their employees because they might be from, they could also suffthe same. Right? Right. So this is a great question. Yes. So the question is, so if you've got a fire to te an executive, one, how do you have the conversation? And then two, like how do you explain it to everyone else? Because like it's clearly some kind of failure. You failed on hiring you, you failed on integrating. They failed at their job, like something like it's a failure. And so I would say, look, the first thing is when firing the person, you have to really try to be honest and you're feeling like you failed. And I think a common reaction is like, then there's a couple of common reactions. One is like you just suck and like, so like I'm firing, you screw off. That's not good because it's not really. It may be like you you're feeling that way. And then another kind of common mistake is just to be like, you know too mushy. It's not you, it's me. And it feels like some kind of weird breakup with an next boyfriend that you really didn't like. But generally, look, when you hire people, you try to hire the very best. You hire people who are qualified to do the job. And generally, the reason that they fail in the job is you made some mistake in the hiring process and that you didn't match them to the needs of your company accurately enough. That's the number one reason why this fails. And so that's generally a good place to start to say, look, here's how we are and here's what I didn't recognize about us and about you when I made the decision. And now like it is what it is. So we're going to have to move on. And then when you talk to the employees about it, like this is, and this gets different, which is, look, you can take somebody's job. You have to take their job. And this is something Bill Campbell taught me, but you don't have to take their dignity. And so it's not necessary to get up in front of the company and said, I blew that motherfuck out. I kept his ass. In fact, it's not good because nobody feels good about that. Like you know you might feel like proud of yourself, but like nobody else feels good about that. You know the right thing to do is just like thank them for their work, like let people know that they're moving on and you don't really have to explain all their personal details. It's more important to leave them with their dignity and let them go on to live another day because look what you say at that meeting, that's their reputation, because everybody in your company is going na get a call on that person when they try and get their next job. So if you start saying like a bunch of b's about them, like that's not going to be good and it's not going to get interpreted as like we screwed up. It's going to get interpreted as, you know, he screwed up. And so there are kind of two different things. You have to be very honest with them, but you have to make sure you preserve their dignity when you talk to the company. Yes, sir. Yes. And I started getting hard about because of sorry about that. Yeah, we've cloud and not ts work. And so one question for me, I think everyone is how did you in particular doubt t with all with stress? Like was it a meditating hip hop. So the question was, how did I deal with all the stress of being CEO? And the answer is, I used to be six foot four and good looking, so clearly not very well. I get asked that a lot, and I really don't have a great answer for it. I think that the one I have a wonderful wife who's sitting right here. So I'll say that. So if you're married to somebody, if you're married to somebody who's supportive, that makes it like a thousand times easier. If I did not, if I wasn't, I would definitely probably be dead. But the one thing with trust is you've got to keep your focus on what you can do, not what happened to you. And it's a really hard thing to do because it's constantly, and people are always asking you about it, like, what the fuck are we going to do? We're going na die. We're going to out of cash. It's all going to be over soon. But you can't focus on that. You have to focus on, okay, like what are my options? What can I do and where can I go? And the better that you are at that, the kind of higher your chance for success. Yes. How did the song get the French journalist to work for him? Like what was his speech? Oh, so this is a great question. How did Tusan get the French generals to work for? And the reason was they were so shocked that he didn't kill them because he was like, their perspective is we're fighting the slave army, we're fighting the savage army, they're going to kill us. So when he said, look, we're not going to kill you, that was such a shock to their system that had completely reoriented their whole way of thinking. And they actually became much more loyal to him than they ever were to France. And he actually borrowed that technique, Interestingly, from Julius Caesar, who he had studied. He was a very unusual slave in the sense that his owner recognized how smart he was and put him in the library because he wanted Tucson to eventually run the plantation for him. And so the person that he studied most of all in his master's library, was Julius Caesar. And so he borrowed that technique from him, but applied in a much kind of more dramatic context. And so his army was kind of, he had British French ance, Spanish slaves and mulattos, who most of the mulattos and Haiti at that time were pro slavery. So that was another issue. But his leadership was so great, everybody wanted to join him. Yes. How do you incorporate that same ideology? People who were fevously against you on your side? Yeah. So you know, and it's different in different ways, but a lot of it you his whole strategy, and I'm sorry, the question was how you get people, how do you incorporate tucant's ideology and get people who are previously against you on your side? And I would just say, like what he did in general is the right thing, which is to best basically you have to show them a better way. You know, as a leader, if somebody's your enemy and you need to convert them over, and this happens in business too, where like somebody's like at a competitor or something and you want to bring them over, but you want to bring them over. You don't want to bring all the unethical people who will switch competitor to competitor over. And it really is like your culture has to be elevated. Your mission has to be elevated. Your way of doing things has to be just better. And that was the thing that was so compelling for the other rest of the army. Yes, actually, I'm curious as to sort of like injuries from the borwhich like dc that you found ded or found it how you built like a culture around of people and a lot of the entrepreneurs that you work with that has sort of differentiated you in the market from all other vcs? Probably not. The best question for me I could ask dthat I don't know. So the question is, you know have we built a culture at Andreson? Orthat has differentiated us from all of their vcs. I feel like that's certainly the goal. And you know we've been around for five years now, and you know the attempt that we made at it, and it's for the rest of the world to judge if we succeeded, was basically this, that you know in the old days of vc, when I was an entrepreneur, the basic idea was like, youhave an entrepreneur and an inventor and theyget a company to a point. And then at that point, theyeither be like ready to be CEO, or you would go find a CEO to replace them and build, quote unquote, the company. Our kind of cultural philosophy was, look, the founder inventor is special. So we're going to design the firm and the culture of the firm to help the founder develop into a CEO. And so we do a lot of systematic things different. The two biggest are, one, all of our partners are kind of founders, CEO's, so that you get somebody or original motto with some experience required. That's a joke. If you were going to advise the CEO, you have to have kind of been a CEO. Imagine that. That's why like Sam, he used to be a CEO. He doesn't talk about it that much, but he was a CEO. And I'm good at it. And then the second part is that a professional CEO would bring in in the old days, is a network of just tons of people that he would know from like all kinds of you know guys who bought technology at big corporations to like important partners in the field, like I like Google and Facebook, to people on the Press that he or she might know and so forth. And so we try to basically build that network on your behalf at the firm. And we I think we do a better job of that than anybody else. So those are the way that we try to be different. Yes. One more question. Yes, the front row, it seems like putting yourself in others people's shoes is very important in imaginment. So can you give us some tips to Yeah, sir. Yeah. So putting yourself in other people's shoes is difficult in management. Can you think about how to do it in daily life? It's hard. It's hard in daily life. It's even harder in management because it's the stress of the moment, right? Like a great employee is asking you for a race. It is very hard not to respond. It's a very because like you do not want to lose them and like they're not asking you for a race randomly. They're asking you a race for a reason. And so to say, okay, particularly if you don't have a process in place to go stop like back out. I would just say, and it's a key thing in being a leader, is you've got to pause yourself. Like if somebody comes to you with something that you know is important, but you want to feel like know when you're a leader, you want to feel like you have all the answers. Like right now you guys are asking me questions. If I don't know the answer, I'll make something up because I want you to think I'm real smart and it's important. I say the most important thing is to pause. Like, so if you know something is really important and you haven't thought it through, it's just to say, you know, look, I'm taking this really seriously, but I have to pause because I have to think it through from all perspectives and I'm gonna to come back and I end up doing that a lot just because there are a lot of things that you run into that you haven't seen before. I'll tell you, most CEO's, including myself, learning this the hard way. You walk in, you kind of step in it like three or four times, you go, okay, I'm going to sneak away with this. Nobody's gonna to see me give them the raise. I'm gonna to do it and that's gonna be all under the cover, his confidentiality, baby. And then like it comes up and it blows up in your face three weeks later, and you're like, Oh my God, like what have I done? Or three months later, even a year later. And then you know, once it's a year later, it's a huge problem. Like so you've taken what's a little emotional problem and you've turned it into a forest fire. You know, we call it like the kimchi problem. The deeper you bury it, the Hutter it gets. It's a Korean Joe. But you know it takes practice. I would say it takes practice and it's very difficult to do. And I say, you know, like some of the, but my friend Bill Campbell, this is his big skill. Like this is what he's so great at. People always try and describe him to me and I'm like, that's not him at all. That's not what he's good at. Like he's not good at that or that he's good at this. He's good at seeing the company through the eyes of the employees. And it's like I said, if you're good at that, you'll be in a very likely in a leader. So thank you. Thank you.