Sam Altman : How to Build the Future

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
I'm Jack Sam's brother and we are here in our backyard where we also live with our other brother and Sam wanted to give some advice about how to have an impact on the world and since you couldn't interview himself Here I am so Sam thank you thank you for taking the time yeah my pleasure so to get started I think one of the things that people talk a lot about is how to get things done once you're working on but I know you spend a lot of time thinking about sort of what to work on so could you talk a little bit about how to pick what's important to work on yeah um I think you want to look for the intersection of what you're good at what you enjoy and and what where you can create value for the world and in my experience if you don't find some of the intersection of those three it's hard to really have an impact I think most people kind of just fall into what they work on they don't give it much thought and there is benefit to that sometimes you actually have to just try stuff to figure out what you like but I really do think it is worth upfront thought about what you're going to spend most of your waking time doing so I think is really good when people think about what they're good at what they like and and kind of how they can create value for the world in sort of in addition to what people are working on I know at Y Combinator you talked a lot about who people are working on things with yeah how do you advise people to select sort of who they're working on things with um this is this is really hard finding your tribe finding the sort of people that you end up working with on and off for the rest of your career is is really hard I think I'll tell you some things I've learned and I will admit that I don't have a perfect answer to this yet but I think one thing is you should be willing to move for whatever you're doing there tend to be pockets of it around the world where there are similar people that are doing great work in whatever field you care about and it's really worth trying to go be being near them and so you know we get criticized sometimes at YC for having people move to the Bay Area but bringing people together that are interested in this similar thing of startups I think has been really valuable for a lot of people I think another thing that I have learned is that whenever I've helped people for no immediate benefit and with no intention of ever getting to benefit at all time and again in my career it is really later benefited me a lot so I think you at some point often get to a point your career where you're limited by how many good people you know and and how many of those you can work with or get to do things that together and so fine just helping a lot of people and spending a lot of time with a lot of people has benefited me you know years after I really helped someone for no reason I get to invest in their startup and it goes on to be a huge success or were able to like work on opening I together any number of things I think just trying to help a lot of people and out of that scene who is really impressive and who gets things done is helpful and in terms of how to actually get things done so you've selected what to work on who to work on it with you think maybe you found your tribe and then kind of now what what are what are sort of the best ways to actually accomplish big things well there's a Charlie Rose quote on this that I've always loved and I've since added one more element to it but the quote is that the way things get done in the world are through a combination of focus and personal connection and the additional point I would make after having thought about it for a while is that the third factor is self belief it's you really have to have a deep-seated personal conviction that this thing you're going to do that a lot of people say is really stupid is going to work and going to be important but I think those three things focus personal connections and self belief in my experience are how things get done in the world so since you were you know as long as you know you've you've grown up and certainly three or 20s and now you've worked incredibly hard and I know that a lot of the people around you have worked very hard what's sort of the advice or the way that you think about your work-life balance in your 20s and what do you recommend to people who want to do these things and also want to you know experience their 20s well I don't think I work as hard to a lot of people I think I do work pretty hard um but I'd say it's really I think it's compound interest is a good metaphor here if you work really hard at the beginning of your career and you get a little bit better what you do every day every week every year and you learn more and you meet more people and you just get more done um there's a compound effect and it's far better to put that time in at the beginning career then at the end because if you do at the beginning you get to benefit from it you know for the rest of the time you work so you know one thing I always try to do is like meet every person I had time for go to every you know go to everything I could and just like spend a little bit more time trying to learn and get better what I did what I do and I think that is really valuable um the you know the beginning of your career I think in terms of studying the trajectory that the rest of your career follows is the most valuable time and so obviously you don't want to work all the time because your twenties your twenties but I do think you want to work harder than most people think you should and I think that if you do that you tend to benefit from it later life is super unfair sometimes you also just get unlucky and and so all you can do is kind of maximize chances there but I do think that working hard early in your career to get the leverage and the compounding effects is underrated and one of the most valuable piece of advice that I never got and so going into that idea of these early years being particularly valuable and working very hard on things how do you decide when you've worked on something long enough and it's time to call it quits or when you've worked on it for four years and you're just about to have that breakthrough how do you make that distinction yeah this this is really hard um knowing when to quit and knowing when to give up on something is there's no perfect answer to that but it's really challenging to even get that approximately correct I think most people give up on things way too early so the mistake that most people make is they try something it does not immediately work you see this particularly in young entrepreneurs it does not immediately work after seven weeks they say you know what I tried this thing it's just not meant to be and I have too many other projects and so they immediately give up and you kind of you know the satirical version of this is people that are 23 and have started 14 startups because they give up on everyone before I could ever possibly successful these things are really hard they take a very long time there are a lot of critics there are a lot of people who say this thing sucks it's going to fail it's really stupid and then also there's like what at YC we call the trough of sorrow where no one even bothers to say it sucks because no one cares at all um and that is at least is demotivating most of the founders that I have spent a lot of time with that have gone on to be super successful spent a very long time on their idea when a lot of other people would have given up and either people said it sucks or people said nothing at all and a framework that I have for when to go up and when to keep working is it should be an internal not an external decision if people aren't using it or people are saying it's bad that alone is not a reason to give up you want to pay some attention to that they might be right but I think the best entrepreneurs I know they make an internal decision about when to give up or when to keep working on something it's basically when you have run out of ideas and something is not working then it's a good time to stop and so into this idea that you need a long time to do anything important what's the source of motivation for people like what should people be looking to find to be inspired or to keep going on these ideas for a long period of time um yeah I think if you don't actually believe what you're doing is really important if you don't derive satisfaction from what you're doing then you will not be able to sustain all of the bad things that happen an incredibly long period of time that the bad things happen over and so the only motivation that I have seen work for people over a long period of time is enjoyment and what they're doing and an intense belief that it matters and ideally liking the people that they go to work with every day um but the I think the reasons that a lot of people and by the way it's totally cool when people start off saying well I want to make money or I want to be famous I think a lot of people start that way and they don't like to admit it but pretty quickly or at least in the first few years I think a lot of people find a deeper mission for why they do what they do and that drives them than for the rest of the time they work have you noticed a change in what motivates you over the last say 10 or 12 years um yeah I mean I think I at this point I am sort of only interested in things that I find sort of interesting and important and early on like a lot of other people I think I was well I make money I want you know like be in the press or whatever else and I wouldn't say that doesn't motivate me at all but it's honestly not a big factor at this point yeah I just sort of like there's a set of things that I think are important and I want to work on this I think another point about motivation that is that people don't talk about enough is related to burnout so I was told and I thought for a long time that you get burned out from working too hard and at least in my own experience what I found is that burnout actually comes from failing and things not working momentum is really energizing the lack of momentum is super draining and I find that I have infinite energy to work on things that I find interesting and that are working and almost none to work on things that I either don't find interesting or aren't working and so I think you see a lot of founders try something and fail and assume that they just can't work hard enough or not amount of energy or passion or whatever and that's actually not true it's just that that thing didn't work and what you should do is shut that company down go on vacation and try again and many people then find that oh actually when I'm doing this thing that I like and that is working I have a huge amount of energy and I can get a lot of stuff done and so when you look at really successful people and say how do they get all those things done it's they have the benefit of momentum and momentum is energizing in the lack of momentum is really not energizing working on a lot of these problems that you know kind of inspire this type of motivation are sort of inherently riskier and I know you know this is something that we've talked about a lot about sort of the concept of taking risk in a career being a repeated game but how do you how do you think about the idea of taking risks in your career and how should people think about it maybe differently than they currently do well yeah I think people have terrible risk calculus in general even people who try to be really good about this are bad at it um the answer I think is almost always a you're wrong about what is risking what it's not risky and B most people don't take enough risk especially early in your career being on young and unknown and poor that is actually a great gift in terms of the amount of risk you can take and I think people don't capitalize on that enough I think what risk actually looks like is not doing something that you will then spend the rest of your life regretting and there's a quote you know people regret way more the things they didn't do them things that they did do so if you really believe in something there's an idea that you're super passionate about um you know and you take a calculated risk to start a company realizing you may forego a couple of years of studying come in another job and whatever else and you know maybe people call you a failure or whatever that's a great risk to take and if you don't take that risk I think you have a very high chance that you end up regretting that um I think the wrong kind of risk to take is where people don't actually do things or don't commit to something because they don't want to fail and they over rate the risk of failure and the reputation damage or embarrassment or whatever I think one really important thing to strive for in your career is to be a doer not a talker and the reason that people don't do stuff one is it's hard and two is it's risky and so you have these people that you know want to dabble on a bunch of different projects but never be all in on one and I think it's this combination of work and risk and it's you know I think that's really bad I think history belongs to the doers and I think you should take a risk actually do something don't just sit around and talk and organize and bring together groups and go to thought leadership conferences and whatever it is these people spend their time on other than actually building something and just take the risk of committing to what you you have conviction on yeah and I think people also seem to have sort of the fear of being told no a lot and not asking for what they want I'm sure that's something that you've encountered with people yeah um this was one of the other things I learned that I wish I had gotten advice on early in my career is ask for what you want you will get told no a lot but sometimes it will work and and I think you see a lot of entrepreneurs shoot themselves in the foot because they don't ask that person to quit the job and come join them they don't ask this big company to do a deal with them and they're just not aggressive enough and I think you being willing to ask what you want and be somewhat aggressive are really important characteristics of being an entrepreneur people don't want to fail they don't want to be told no they don't want to end up in some crisis another thing that I learned and I want to say I wish someone told me this one because I don't think it's a lesson anyone can teach you you have to just live through it is that each crisis gets less scary than the one before it you're running a company now I'm sure you've I hope you've noticed this by now you there are a lot of things that really go wrong and they feel like company killing events and they feel like there's no way you're going to survive because the crises are really bad and the thing you learn is that you generally do survive these and and that the world doesn't usually end and even if in the moment something happens you have no idea how you're going to get around it you eventually figure out a way and because of that you know on the 19th major crisis you're like well I survived the first 18 I'll probably get through this one bit and you kind of just do yeah definitely that rings true so switching into a bit topic of sort of money and sort of the long-term view of it and how people can think about it most clearly I'm actually to start with a quick story that I think illustrates a bit of some of your views this is from when we were very young and our grandma gave us each some stock oh this is a good story in a company or you can tell this one okay so she gave us each some stock in a company that she thought we would like and so as you like to point out I was heavier as a child and one of the things I liked was Appleby's and you were hacking away on computers and other things I was Apple and so we each got an equal amount of Apple and Apple B's this is like 20 years ago 20 years you know and I think neither of us has sold it in fact you nicely brought me my Appleby's stock back from st. Louis recently your stock certificates it's so long ago still paper certificates and I think inflation-adjusted I've probably lost half my value there whereas I think your Apple has gone up something like I don't even want to think about it hundreds hundreds yeah it's been a lot how do you think about sort of the long-term willingness to hold on to things what are the advantages somebody has early in their career how should people think about money when they're young yeah you know I still have those uh Apple shares marked in my brokerage account as grandma's birthday Apple shares I don't know I'm good I'm gonna keep them I should benchmark them against Applebee's um so I I think that one of the few arbitrage opportunities left in the market is time I think we have gotten really good at high frequency trading we've gotten really good at the price of things we've gotten worse at the long term value and I I don't think you can go beat the market in a lot of ways but the one way I do is is by making a long-term commitment to something I think that I my new belief on how long I should hold stock and the best companies I invest in is forever and I think you know in a world where people are increasingly focused on the tick and the quarterly earnings cycle you should try and go in the other direction and this is a great way to generate value and wealth and and so I think that when you're thinking about a startup it's really worthwhile to think about something you're willing to make a very long-term commitment to because that is where the current void in the market is um I think you know you get paid as a founder for the wealth you crave for other people so there's this view of the world that business is all about like trying to steal money and sometimes that's true but but they're the best companies just create massive amounts of value for the world and then they capture some of that for themselves but they capture far less than they create and they do it over a very long period of time so if you're going to be one of those companies um I think you want to make a super long term commitment to yourself and others that are going to work on it with you that this is going to take a long time um but it is worth waiting because you will make far more money over the long horizon by doing this company really well then a bunch of short-term things along the way so how much do you think people should have strong opinions about things versus putting something into the world iterating and sort of finding out whatever works and going with that I think you want a combination of those two things you won't want to have a strong opinion and then be flexible about the details so the thing I don't think works that often are the startups on their love of the pivot that are totally unrelated but I put a big difference between refinement and pivoting so when you start with a strong belief you know we should have a social graph in an online directory that is Facebook has stayed pretty similar to that although the product itself has changed a lot along the way and I think that's really good that is a strong idea with flexibility in the implementation and I think that's much better than the we're just going to keep trying random ideas because we want to have a startup I think strong with strong opinions about the future are really important and I think one of the things that I have noticed among the most interesting the most successful people that I spend time with is that they have strong opinions strongly held about the future they are willing to be convinced with new data they are wrong but the bar for that is fairly high and this idea that the future is fundamentally unknowable I've never liked actually I remember pretty clearly this time war I was sort of like spouting advice someone else had given me in high school or college about how you in you know you need to diversify and investing because the world is unknown unknowable and so all you can do is have the most balanced possible portfolio and I remember that I was saying that out loud someone else's said it to me probably grandma and and I realized that I really didn't agree with at all um because I had strong opinions and then I knew that there were some companies who stock I'd rather own than others and I knew that I would rather like own stock than own bombs because I thought technology was gonna be worth a lot more I have different ideas today about the next 10 or 20 years um but I think it's good it's not only okay it's good to have strong ideas about the future and it is okay to not be super diversified in your investment portfolio or your career or your life and then the final question is if you could leave young people who want to have a big impact with one or two pieces of advice what would you tell them well I don't want to give people a specific field to go work on because I think the whole idea is that people need to figure out themselves what they believe in and what they think and what they believe is high-impact to work on for the future so what I will say instead is it is really important to actually think hard about where you think you can make the biggest contribution that you're good at and the world needs and that you enjoy and then go meet people to work with go learn as much about that field as you can and then have the the courage of your convictions to actually take a risk and focus on it and go do something there and that it's okay if you fail and if you do fail you'll not be in much different place than you are today and you can go try the next thing but it's I think really important to be willing to go take a risk and make someone of sacrifice to be able to try to impact the world in some way that you really care about and I think the sooner you get to work on that the better you'll you'll be awesome all right well Stan thanks very much thank you jack
Info
Channel: Y Combinator
Views: 428,784
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: YC, Y Combinator, sam altman
Id: sYMqVwsewSg
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 21min 9sec (1269 seconds)
Published: Tue Sep 27 2016
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.