Main content
Talks and interviews
Course: Talks and interviews > Unit 1
Lesson 3: Khan Academy chats- Reid Hoffman - Founder of LinkedIn
- Thomas Friedman - Author
- Walter Isaacson - President and CEO of the Aspen Institute
- Elon Musk - CEO of Tesla Motors and SpaceX
- Davis Guggenheim - Filmmaker
- Scott Cook - Founder and Chairman of the Executive Committee, Intuit
- Angela Ahrendts - Former CEO of Burberry
- Sean O'Sullivan - Founder of SOSventures
- Drew Houston - CEO and Founder of Dropbox
- A conversation with Eric Schmidt and Jonathan Rosenberg
- Sal and Francis Ford Coppola fireside chat
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Reid Hoffman - Founder of LinkedIn
Want to join the conversation?
- It's interesting Reid explains that he would find jobs and get positions at companies to learn skills he didn't yet possess. But nowadays, how does one get the job if you don't already have the required skill-set?
Saying you are a fast learner might probably not be good enough...(25 votes)- I found that the best way to get a job you don't have the skill for is networking. Meeting the people who are already in that position and asking questions. Also going out to sites like this to learn the basics of that job and using the "buzz words" that office is looking for when hiring.
What I have done in the past is finding out who was in charge of that office or position and go to them directly and ask them questions like " What are you looking for?" "How can I get into this kind of job, what do I need to do?" This does two things:
1. It lets that person know that you have a genuine interest.
2. It puts a face to your resume when you apply. Hiring managers are always going to go with the familiar resume when they are faced with a lot of options.(19 votes)
- What is Dungeons and Dragons? He mentions it around themark. 1:45(5 votes)
- Its a table top fantasy role playing game also known as d&d made by wizards of the coast for more information visit
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungeons_%26_Dragons(8 votes)
- So... what exactly is LinkedIn. Sorry if this sounds stupid but I really have no idea.(9 votes)
- LinkedIn is essentially the ultimate networking platform, essentially the Facebook for serious people (it was actually bought out by Facebook ironically), and it's used for discussing with other business personnel. Being one of the largest social media forms for multiple years, it's grown a very large library of entrepreneurs and respected business employees alike, and is purposed of connecting.(14 votes)
- How much is Reid Hoffman worth?(5 votes)
- The internet says about 4.6 billion. But his goal when he started was not to get rich but to get solutions that can help how people to connect using the internet(7 votes)
- I'm a 7th grader and I love math and science. However, I've always had an entrepreneurial spirit, and I think If I didn't own my own business and be my own boss, I would greatly regret it. Does anyone have advice for me?(4 votes)
- Young Entrepreneur, you can develop your business experience even while you study, play, socialize and develop other skills. The time to be an entrepreneur is now. You can choose age appropriate ventures to learn and pursue with the help of your parents, a teacher, or another mentor from your community. Adventure Awaits! Start your journey now.(4 votes)
- As a man consciously improving and selecting life skills for use in an undefined entrepreneurial field I find myself sometimes overwhelmed by the abundance of possiblities I see in innovation and need for skills that I have or could quickly possess. So my question is when do I stop drawing at the board and skill margin and start acting on my ideas when every new idea I have has a better application that comes before production even begins or someone has started the project idea I had and I am unsure if y skill set will be of any use to the project?(4 votes)
- Peter, I had this same issue and the answer is to pick one idea and see it through to the end. You will never reach your goals if you keep adding different games and more goals into the equation. That 's like starting out playing football and at the 20 yard line you come up with a way to perfect your golf swing.
Stick with one idea and finish it. When other ideas come to you, write them down and save them for later. Yes someone will come along who is working on the same idea, but that is not your path. If anything you can help them by giving them your piece of the puzzle. You never know, they might have the puzzle piece that you have been looking for as well!(8 votes)
- Isn't Sal an entrepreneur... can we have his story?(5 votes)
- I think there is a story under the section: Talks and interviews on the main taskbar, (top left next to khanacademy's logo). Then, there is a section called talks and interviews with sal...(4 votes)
- You should make a business simulation i would like to test out how good i would do n business without risking any money(6 votes)
- why did he want to take the risk?(4 votes)
- curios and try your adrenaline. the last one "High risk high return"(3 votes)
- This is just a general education question. Technology is at a place right now, that one can control toys with only your mind. Therefore, if we can literally move things with our minds, couldn’t someone be able to reverse that method and allow someone to learn something by means of “downloading”? Don’t we possess this type of technology? Just a question, since Reid was talking about in the field of Symbolic Systems seethrough 13:08. Also at the end of the conversation, Reid was explaining of updates with technology as a means of learning fresh ideas, relevant ideas. Anybody else ever thought about this method of learning? REAL WORLD, please not SYFY. :) 13:17(4 votes)
- Yes, this learning would be ideal. If you were to think from a technological standpoint, your brain already "downloads" information i.e information in a textbook. This downloading, however, doesn't take a matter of seconds; you have to work to download this information. If this could be downloaded in seconds, then people might get overloaded with information. Also, the information in a textbook doesn't just teach information; you're supposed to learn the information, of course, but you should also learn how to take notes, make professional-grade essays, solve problems, and best of all, learn the ideal principals of diligence, hard work, commitment, time management, etc. If you were to just "download" all that, you would become lazy, which is quite the opposite of what it is trying to teach you.
The bottom line is that if you could "download" all the information you need, then you'll probably be harming yourself rather than helping yourself.
Hope that helps!(2 votes)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] So I'm
here with Reid Hoffman. We actually met a long time ago, back when Khan Academy was operating out of a walk-in closet. The whole point of doing these things, and I think it's interesting
for our team here, and for the audience at home and the people who are
just users of Khan Academy, is just understand how someone
becomes a Reid Hoffman. And so, if we rewind back to your childhood, what were you like at eleven,
twelve, thirteen years old? Did you think you were going
to do what you have done? - Actually, I'm not even
sure that I really knew what being and entrepreneur
or venture capitalist was. I'm not sure either of
those items of language, I think I probably could
have passed a word test on entrepreneur perhaps. When I was around those ages I was actually pretty unconvinced about, I hadn't really thought about
what life after school was. I wasn't really sure what
the value of school was. Around the age of 9, this will date me because I doubt most of the
folks here will actually know what this is, but did you ever play Dungeons and Dragons? - I did. - So I was obsessed with
Dungeons and Dragons. I would basically spend every waking hour. And part of what I did is
there is a particular variant of this called RuneQuest which, the company that did it was a
company called the Chaosium, it was in Berkeley, and I
found that a friend of mine could introduce me to them. So I used to like-- - And you grew up in Berkeley. - I grew up in Berkeley, yes. And so, I actually spent
most of my afternoons going down to this gaming company. And my dad ended up thinking
it wasn't such a terrible idea when they started
employing me to do editing of the scenario packs and
other kinds of things. He was like, "Well maybe that isn't "just a crazy thing to be doing." And then, around the age of 12, maybe it was 13, 12 to 13, I started realizing
that after high school, I would be responsible for myself. And I needed to start
thinking about what life after high school was going to be. And that's when I started
focusing on what school was, what learning was, what you
could do in terms of life. It wasn't until I got
all the way to college where I started having concrete thoughts about what I would be doing. And even then I pivoted a lot. - So when you had that realization, I guess early adolescence at age 12 or so, did you become a serious
student at that point, or you just took school
a little more seriously? - My thinking then was, I was a terrible student basically until the end of 7th grade. I got an F in French because basically the teacher was so boring and the thing was so irrelevant that I would read science fiction books through class the entire time. - In English? - In English, yes. (laughter) In French that would probably
have been a little bit better. - Impressive. - Yes. I answered every question
for a year in that class, "Je ne sais pas." (laughter) And just kept reading. And the teacher thought
it was really funny that I had to be asked,
to be stopped reading. "You're the first student "I ever had to ask to stop reading." And I'm like, "Okay." But then, what happened is,
my father hired a tutor for me because he was worried about me. And the principle function, Fritz Bloom was a really
good guy, good tutor, but his principle function
was actually getting me to wake up to, "Wait a minute, "I should be choiceful
about what I'm doing. "What is my plan? "When I get out of high school, "what am I planning on doing?" And at the time, the only
thing that could occur to me was, well most people who
lead interesting lives from back then, and this is
obviously not 100% true at all, but it was kind of a kid
thing, go to college. So I should go to college. Well, what kind of college should I do? Well, I should have
options, I should at least be able to go to a good one. That would mean I need to
do well in high school, which means I need to start
doing well at academics now. And in 8th grade I
basically shifted entirely to now doing, I only
did Dungeons and Dragons after I finished my studies. And it was like study, study,
study, Dungeons and Dragons, and that was it. Went to a school called the
College Preparatory School, which was, for first year in high school, which was a private school on the border between Oakland and Berkeley. And my whole family was a very strong social and political
proponents of public school. So it was a big battle. And the way that I got
my father to send me to the College Preparatory School, was I would, every week, when there was a bad story about Berkeley High, gang violence, drugs,
anything else, anything, I'd clip it out and leave it for my father on the dining room table
as part of a campaign to say, "No, you should send me "to College Preparatory School." - And why did you want to go there so bad? - Well, because I had made
a decision that I actually had to do well at academics. I knew that I was better
off in smaller environments. I'm not one of those folks
who thrives in a survey class of 500 people and so forth. That close interaction and discussion is the kind of thing, I learn
faster, I pay more attention, it stimulates me more. I think I'm a little
bit more of an auditory than visual learner in kind of a similar, but I do read, but I read slowly. Because I kind of want to understand each page very carefully, and
some people read very fast. I tend to be more of
a very careful reader. And so, I knew I wanted to go to a school that was focused on academics,
that was small classrooms, and the College Preparatory School was the closest thing
that I could find to that. Now then later, what happened is that I
realized that I wanted to get independence, I got
the independence bug early, so I applied for and got into
a boarding school in Vermont called the Putney School, without either of my parents knowing. Because I was like, "Well I'd like to do the small course classroom,
but I'd like to do it "somewhere thousands of miles
away from the Bay Area." And Vermont struck me as
the safest place to do it. Plus the Putney School had
like, I did blacksmithing, and I did woodworking, and I've driven oxen through the woods, and I
did all of these other things. So I had a very broad range
of experience that I was also very interested in. And I was all kind of a build up to "I'm going to figure out "who I'm going to be
once I get to college." - And did that happen? You go to college, you go to Stanford, so you must have been a good student, or and excellent student, so
you did get your act together. A little bit less Dungeons and Dragons. (Reid laughs) - Well, actually on the
Dungeons and Dragons thing, I stopped cold turkey (laughter) my first year in high
school, Freshman year. But then at the Putney School a close friend of mine, a guy named Reid Sorrel, was smoking. And so, what I did, this
is the very last set of Dungeons and Dragons like
game game that I played, I said, "Look, if you can
stop smoking for 6 months, "I will actually be a Game Master and, "with the friends you
select, I will run you "through a adventure scenario." - So you told him, "If
you give up your addiction "I will re-immerse myself in mine." (laughter) - Yeah, that is usually a good trade. - Yes. - And so I did this
game called Aftermath!, which was a fantasy
roleplaying variant that was after there was a nuclear holocaust, because that's what he
chose, and so we did that. The primary thing that I
knew is that I wanted to I liked ideas, and I
wanted to be involved in thinking about what it
was to be a human being. And what it was that we are
all in a society together. And when I was going to college, I knew that was interesting to me and so I came back here, actually, to Stanford for two reasons. The first one was, they
had a program called Structured Liberal Education. Which was then called Western Culture, I think it's now called World
Civilization or something. Which was kind of this
intensive program about you did Philosophy, and History, and Art, and Psychology, and Sociology,
and kind of the history from the pre-Greek, Ancient
Greek, through modern life. And what is the broad swatch
of human civilization. And I loved that program, I was like, "Okay, that's really interesting." And the second thing is I also felt it was time to come back to the Bay Area because I had been gone for three years and now to rebuild
connections in the local area. - And even in college,
you weren't dreaming of tech entrepreneurship and you have a bit of an academic inside you. - Yeah. So I got to college,
basically by the way you should never be too determined about what you're going to be. Your life plans change as you go, and they're even changing now. So to think that you know everything that you're going to
want to be in 10 years means you're not going to be learning between now and 10 years from now. You've always got to anticipate that not only will the world change, and the environment around you change, but that you will change as well. And so I got to college and was like, "Okay, what do I want
to do when I grow up?" And of course, one part of
that answer is "Never grow up." But I was like, "What do I
want to do when I grow up?" And I was like, "Well." What I decided, and I'm
still largely on this plan, although in a very different
way than I ever imagined, was essentially be a public intellectual. And what a public intellectual is is not someone who quotes
fancy authors and so forth, it's someone who participates
in the public discussion about who are we and who should we be as individuals and as a society. What are our identities? And what should we be
evolving our identities to? And I thought that I would
do that by being an academic. People at college, they spend a lot of time talking about this, I
could participate with that, and I could write for the Atlantic and the New York Review of Books and this would be a good life. And so, that's essentially the plan that I started at Stanford. And then one piece of wisdom that I had, that when I look bad was
like, "Oh, that was smart" but I didn't realize it was
smart when I was doing it. I was doing it and not
realizing it was smart, was that I was like, "How
certain am I about this plan?" And I was like, "Well, I don't know. "I think it's right, but I'm not sure. "So how do I test it?" And so I was like, "If I
got a Marshall Scholarship "and I went to Oxford, I could
try being a graduate student. "I could try being an academic, "and see if it was the
thing that I wanted to be." Within three months of
being at Oxford I was like, "I do not want to be an academic." No question. And the reason for me was
that the modern practice of humanities academics
tends to be so narrow that it's what I think of, it's very scholarly, but
it's also very scholastic. And almost by definition,
if you write a book that more than 50 people want to read, you're actually not being professional. - You're a sell out. Those two people read it. - Exactly. And so I was like, I actually want to talk at the public discourse at a larger. I appreciate scholarship, I appreciate a lot of what the folks do,
but it's not what I want to do. And so I spent a year
scratching my head going, "I don't know what I want
to do when I grow up." And what I realized was,
by having come to Stanford, I realized there was a thing called software entrepreneurship
or creation of software, and what I said was, "If you
look at public intellectuals, and you say, 'What do they do?' "'They write the essays and books.' "What if it's creation of
a different kind of media? "Cause essays and books are media. "But so is software. "And what if I could create software "that would have a similar kind "of public intellectual impact, "maybe I should go create software." - And were you already kind of immersed in the software world a little bit? Were you programming
from when you were young? - No, well I had gotten
a computer pretty early and I'd played with it
because I was intrigued by it. And my major at Stanford was a major called Symbolic Systems, which is kind of cognitive science and artificial intelligence. And so I'd done some programming, but I'd never done any
commercial programming, never written a program to sell, or it'd always been academic. Write a simulation or
complete a problem set. But it was like, "Maybe that will work." So I came back here and it was
the very first time, in '93, the very first time that I
hadn't planned out the next step. I had an idea of a direction
and an idea of a place, but I literally was like, "Okay I think I'm going to
do that, but I don't know." And so I moved back here,
moved into my dad's apartment, I was very grateful that he would say, "Okay fine, I'll put you up." And then after about
three weeks he was like, "Okay, when are you
going to go get a job?" And I'm like, "Well, I'm researching." And he's like, "No, no, no, go get a job." (laughter) And I was like, "Alright." And again, this was, it
turns out very lucky, but I thought, "How can I find "the most interesting
work that I could do?" It was like, "Well, let me call "all of my friends and
ask them what they know." - I see some foreshadowing of what you will do in the future. - Yes, exactly, yes. That is a definite foreshadow. But basically that's what I did and I explained, "Look, I
want to work in software. "I want to construct things "that I think millions
of people might use. "I want it to be helpful "to how they navigate their
lives in the right way. "What would be an interesting
company to go work at? "What would be an interesting
project to work on?" And I see this whole online
revolution happening. - This is 1994, '93? - This is '93, so going into '94. - So the internet is not really there yet. - I played with the internet at college, but the internet hadn't
hit the business scene. Netscape had just recently started, it was only the entrepreneurial edge, the main companies. This was, many people in the room won't
know what these names mean, Prodigy, Compuserv, I mean AOL still rings. And so I ended up getting
a job at Apple Computer because they were doing
this thing called eWorld. And it was like, "You should
do these online services "and Apple Computer is a good company "and you should go work there "and learn interesting product
development skills there." And so I was like, "Great." And I went and did that,
and a friend of mine, Jesse Ellenbogen was working there, and he's like, "Look, if you're willing "to do the contract to hire thing, we have some work that we
can see if it would work out "and you can come work out in that." And that was an intense
learning experience because among other
things, because I had been more directed by the ultimate outcomes, like one of the things I remember from my very first day on the job there they said, "You need
to create some mock-ups "of some user experience, some images "of how the user experience
will work on these projects." And I was like, "Okay.
How do you do that?" And they're like, "Well,
you use Photoshop." I'm like, "Okay, how do you do that?" And they're like, "Oh." (laughter) "Okay, here's the
program. Here's the book. "Here are three people you can ask. "You'd better be functional
in this in a couple of days." I'm like, "Oh, okay." (laughter) And then you taught yourself
Photoshop very fast. - This was back in '93, '94. And this was the first
social network idea. And then you're next couple of roles were exploring that space. - Yes, well I've always been, and I think this is true
of many entrepreneurs, and I actually still by
this point would never dream that the word entrepreneur applied to me, was that they have some
vision for how technology or product or the way the
world can be a problem solved. And for me it was this
question of "How are we better as individuals and as a society? "How do we have that conversation? "How do we move forward?" And so, all of the social dynamics of what is called "online"
or "online systems" like for example, "What is your identity? "How do you post pictures? "How do you find other people? "How do you communicate with them? "How do you work with them?" All of these things were kind of key. And so I knew that's
what I wanted to be doing and I wanted to be pulling up experience. Now one of the things that I did that I actually think was pretty helpful was pretty soon into my time at Apple I realized that I was unlikely to be happy working on a product that
it would be random luck if I found a product that
someone else had constructed that I wanted to work on. It was possible, but it was really kind of rolling the dice and seeing. But if I started the product myself, I had a much higher
likelihood of being there. And it wasn't so much I had to own it as much as it was a
product that I thought, "This would have the right
kind of characteristics." And so I wrote out a
very long list of skills. I said, "What are all the skills "that I would need to start a product?" And then I started
volunteering for projects that would allow me to apply those skills. So I would literally, there was all kinds of different work at
Apple and later Fujitsu where they would say, "Well
we need someone to do X." And I'm like, "I'll do that." Because I would look at that and go, "Oh, the skills of doing that work "are something I figured
I wanted to pick up." - That's really interesting
because I don't know a lot of people who do
what you just described, but it sounds extremely powerful. I'm guessing a lot of
the things on the list are things you might have cringed at, that weren't in your comfort zone. - Oh yeah, for sure. Because it was exhaustive. The way I did it, is I went and talked to a bunch of smart people. Like, for example some,
of my mentors at Apple were Jonathan Rosenberg and James Isaacs. And I said, "Okay, to do this,
what are the skills I need?" And they'd say, "Well, you need to have "product management skills." I'm like, "Okay, I'll write
down product management, "but how do you break
down product management? "What are those skills?" "Well, you need to have spec products, "and you need to understand "what the support requirements would be, "and you need to understand "the engineering feasibility of it. "You need to understand ..." (jotting down list) - So you were just kind
of a vacuum of knowledge. So you were at Apple and
then you went into Fujitsu? - Uh huh, yes. - It was another kind of
social, and this one is-- - WorldsAway, it was a virtual world. - And your future
collaborator, Peter Thiel, I think called this seven years or eight years ahead of its time. - Well it may even be
much longer than that. - Ten, fifteen years. - We still don't have really
interesting virtual worlds. It's still TBD, right? Well, I did that because it
fit that "How do we create a community and a society?? Community products, network
products were interesting me. The other thing I
realized when I was doing all the skills indexing is I thought that in order to create
the product that I want I would have to start a business. And so, starting a business meant I would have to raise
money from investors. Venture capitalists. So I then went and studied what happens, what kinds of people do
venture capitalists fund? And it was like, "Well,
generally speaking, the ideal target for
venture capital financing is one business person, one tech person. Two founders with a product
that has a unique position in the market that can grow into that, that has a competitive edge, that the founders' capable of doing that. I said, "Well, okay, I either have to be the tech person or the business person." and I was like, "Well
I'd rather actually be "the business person than the tech person. "How do I do that?" I need to have experience with a P&L. I need to have experience
with running a whole project. I need to have product experience. And so Fujitsu said, "You
can do all that here." So I took the job at Fujitsu
in order to be able to do that. Now it also happened
to be a virtual world, so I was interested in that project, although I did actually tell them, which turned out to be true, is that virtual worlds were too early. The likelihood you could pull
off the project was very low. But because picking up
all of the experience was part of getting to
building the product I think I should be building, I was like, "Look, I am willing to
essentially work 80 hours a week "really hard on this to
pick up all these skills "and try as best I can to make this work. "But I'm not sure that the
actual project will work." - What's fascinating here
is you were very deliberate at an early stage in
your career of saying, "I'm going to construct myself into--" You didn't say I'm just a business person. You decomposed what are the skills that makes someone good at this and I'm going to get them. Even if they're not where I naturally, in some of those dimensions. And I think the other interesting aspect, I think that there's no coincidence
for what you'd do later, is when you thought about businesses it seems like you didn't say, "Where can I eek out an extra dollar "or the market hasn't fully adjusted yet?" You said, "What are
interesting social dynamics, "problems, ways of
connecting human beings? "And maybe a business falls out of that." - Yes, that's exactly right. And so part of the thing was, if you say, "Well, public intellectual. "One thing you could be
doing is writing essays "and trying to influence
people and think about "how to be different as
individuals or a society. "What do you aspire to be?" But I was like, "Well, so
what if you're creating "software as a medium
that people live in?" It's kind of the medium is the message, in the classic McLuhan. But literally it's like the medium changes our identities, how we
connect with people, who are our friends, who we play with. Who we go to school
with, who we work with, How we work, how we learn. Things that you guys do. And so given that, I wanted
to play in the construction of that medium in a way that
lead both the individuals and the group, the society, the community, to both be a lot better. And that was the thing
I was interested in. And it didn't have to be, this is one of the reasons after Socialnet I was kind of willing to join PayPal full time. When the company was
founded I was on the board, but when I was thinking
about starting that company Peter said, "No, no, no. Come join us." And I was like, "Great." It doesn't have to be my idea, it just has to be the landscape
that I wanted to play in. - PayPal has that same, it's
something that could change how people interact and transact. - There were two ideas on PayPal. One of them was, and
is, but one of them was "Enable anyone to be a merchant." And I know to many of the
students anyone being a merchant sounds, "Well, what is that?" Everyone can essentially you decide that, "I'm going to be an artist,
I'm going to sell my art. "Well I can sell my art with PayPal." Using eBay and PayPal
together for example. Or "I'm going to open up a lemonade stand. "Well I can now accept
electronic payments, "I can accept credit cards doing that." Enabling anyone to be
entrepreneurial and set up a business was kind of the key thing that was part of the baseline vision in PayPal. And the second one was
to create a new currency, which PayPal obviously didn't do. We transacted in national currencies. Although that's now one
of the reasons I'm now an investor in two
different Bitcoin projects. - PayPal, obviously huge
success and continues to be so, but there's something
interesting about PayPal. Cause there's you, there's
Elon Musk, there's Peter Thiel. You guys are are hanging out. (laughter) - We didn't think of it
as hanging out, but yes. - You all were working hard
and trying to establish a new global currency,
whatever it might have been. - That was the t-shirt by the
way, "New Global Currency." - I'd like to get one of those. Was there something about the three, there's kind of famously the PayPal mafia, it wasn't just the three of you there was a whole group of folks
who graduated from PayPal and then went on to do other epic things. Was there something special about the conversations you all had, the way that you all pushed each other. - The other person to add
into that is Max Levchin when you do that whole list. Because Max and Peter were the
first two founders of PayPal. And then we merged with X.com
which Elon was the founder of. The three were the
founders of the new PayPal. The thing that was unique
about the PayPal crew is typically when people start companies they go, "Oh, I need to get
people with a lot of experience "at doing just this job." Like you have a lot of experience coding, or you have a lot of experience
running the data center, you have a lot of experience marketing or a lot of experience selling. PayPal opted for very
high talent young people with the expectation that the high talent young people would learn the jobs. So as opposed to hiring
someone who's like, "Well, you've had a ton of
experience doing this exact job, "we're going to hire someone
we think is a very fast learner "and we're going to trust that they're "going to learn the job really fast. "And we're going to hire
some experienced people, too. "But a huge predilection to that." And so part of the reason why
the PayPal folks all went off and were A) entrepreneurial and B) went off and did stuff is you had a whole bunch
of high talent young people that had experience with entrepreneurship, experience young. The PayPal story was
like basically kind of let's call it four years
from beginning to sales, so everyone was like, "Well
I gotta go do something." So everyone started running off and doing all the different things that
they were interested in doing. I went off to found LinkedIn. Peter started a hedge fund. We'd done a hedge fund
before, but a much bigger one. Elon went off to do SpaceX and Tesla. Max founded an incubator, then did Slide, and is now doing an incubator with another company, a firm now. That's cause we were all like, "This is a game that we got
experienced in that we like," and then, quote unquote, I don't really like the term PayPal Mafia, although it's entertaining. Cause you know, mafia the
organization is disparative. Network. I like PayPal Network. The thing that was also very helpful then, in 2002 was when PayPal was sold to eBay, and a lot of great projects and great entrepreneurial companies get started during, actually, downturns. And we were all very fortunate in that we all got free to go to our next projects during a downturn. Because it meant the capital we had gotten from
PayPal, we could use that. Because when lots and lots
of companies are starting it's hard to break through the noise. In a downturn there's fewer companies, so you have a longer runway. If you can get the financing for it you can be one of the
interesting projects. You can aggregate talent for it. And we were all very interested
in the consumer internet. And so, that's part of the
reason the PayPal Mafia all interested, although Elon went and did hard science projects. Great, he's an awesome example for that. That's part of the reason why it was an unusually large number of people who went and founded
interesting companies from that. - And when you were, as you say, free as 2002 was the downturn,
you feel empowered. Were you just like, "I'm
going to start a new thing, "what do I start?" How
did LinkedIn come to you? What for did it come to you? - In August of 2000, PayPal burned $12 million dollars in one month, had an exponentiating cost curve, and had no revenue. So we could chart the hour
in which this company, which I think at the time
raised $168 million in capital, would be a smoking hole in the ground. So Peter, Max, and another of the kind of junior co-founders of
PayPal, Luke Nosek and I went to an offsite, in
my grandparents' place in Gualala, which is
in Northern California. And we did three days. The first day was, "What
should we do with PayPal?" We decided that being a master merchant, which PayPal is today, which takes fees for
accepting electronic payments, credit card payments in particular. That was the path we were going to do and we had a lot of discussion by the way of Star Wars and the Death Star, cause we had one swoop into the trench, we had one shot at this. - So you had to use the force. - There was a lot of discussion of "Use the Force, Peter." The second day we presented
the ideas that we had had to each other in terms
of the kinds of things that we would also, if PayPal didn't work
what else we might do. And I had said a little
bit about what I thought about, "Well everyone's going to have "a public professional
identity that will be useful "to their career and their jobs. "It will help them invest in themselves." I had some of the components, not all of the components. But I had that as an idea. And then the third day we went hiking, because we knew that was going to be our last day off for a while. And so then the first idea
worked, PayPal still-- - Master merchant. - Master merchant and awesome company. And then what happened is I helped sell PayPal to eBay, and then in October I was
planning on taking a year off. Because start-ups are really intense. They tend to be the, "What are you doing "on Saturday at 7:00pm? "You're working on your start-up." "What are you doing on Sunday at 10:00am? "You're working on your start-up." Because the metaphor I use for start-ups, in a start-up you're throwing
yourself off a cliff, and you're assembling and
airplane on the way down. - It is not easy to do for
anyone who hasn't tried. - Not recommended, other than in the
metaphorical, business context. And the reason for that is the start-up, by definition when you start it, is dead. It doesn't have a business
model, it doesn't have customers. So the inertial state is dead. So you thermal draft by financing, you put a little bit of money you get a little bit further from the ground. You get a little bit more, you get a little further
away from the ground. But until you create a plane, you actually do not have a going concern and by definition you're going to crash. So that's really intense, and
so after having done that, first at Socialnet, then at PayPal I was like, "I'm going to take time off." And so I actually started
it by going and spending two weeks with a friend of
mine, Ned Hoyt, in Australia. And then what I realized is that the Silicon Valley had gone crazy, that they all thought the
consumer net was over. That Amazon, Google, eBay, PayPal, you know, Yahoo, this was it, that's the
whole consumer internet. The consumer net game is played. These are the big companies. Now we're looking at other things. So they went to enterprise
software and clean tech. And I was like, "No, no. "The consumer internet is
actually, in fact, just starting." Cause one of the problems that people have is that they, generally speaking, over-imagine change in the short term, and under-imagine it in the long term. And they hadn't realized that all these different
ideas that people had, they're still building towards them. There was a great future possibility for what the consumer net could do. And so I said, "Alright,
I'll have to like, you know "just take the two weeks
as a break and not a year. "And I have to get back "and I have to start playing
the consumer internet." And actually I should found a company and I should be investing. So I spent about eight weeks thinking about different
ideas about what I could do, and ultimately LinkedIn
was still the best idea of the ideas that I had. And I'd been talking to a bunch of friends about these ideas. So Jean-Luc Vaillant and Allen Blue and Konstantin Guericke and Eric Ly, we all kind of came together and did it. And then I also decided to invest, because one of the problems with being a start-up entrepreneur is you're putting all of
your eggs in this one basket. The challenge is, you roll the dice and that may work, that may not work. And so how do you have a
little bit more diversity. I was like, "Well, I have
a little bit of money," I was sure the consumer
internet would do well, and so I started investing
in the interesting companies in the consumer internet. Both the investments and LinkedIn
obviously worked out okay. - In the forming process, in hindsight it looks like LinkedIn is
obviously going to be huge, were there moments where you were like, "What am I doing? This
is not going to work." - There are always those moments
in this kind of hard work. One of the pieces of advice
that I give entrepreneurs is 98%, like almost a hundred,
almost all start-ups go through what I call a
valley of the shadow moment. PayPal did that. You burn $12 million in one month. What I told Peter Thiel is
if we had stood on the roof throwing wads, like the roof here, throwing wads of hundred
dollar bills over the side, we would not have spent money faster than we were spending it. $12 million is a lot of money. That's a valley of the shadow moment. You're actually in fact
going, "Was this a good idea?" "Did we make the right choices?" "Is this going to work?" Was absolutely unclear. And so all start-ups have that. You have that at multiple
points along with LinkedIn. You had that with, when
we launched LinkedIn we hoped it would just work. And we launched LinkedIn and
in the first eight weeks, the number of people that were signing up for the service were about
2,000 people per week. Now, roughly speaking, if you
think 2,000 people per week, we probably could have
gotten that many sign ups if what we had done is taken a phone book and had everyone in the
company calling people saying, "Please sign up. Please
sign up. Please sign up." That was about the rate,
that's not going to work. That's death. And so we knew we had to
solve our growth problem, we had to get enough people inviting and getting people on LinkedIn. So that's what we worked
on for basically a year in order to make that work,
and if that didn't work, the value of LinkedIn? Zero. The whole thing goes to
zero, there's nothing else. Then you got another problem, you say, "We got people signing up in a relevant set of numbers "that was beginning to compound and grow, "but okay, if we don't
have a revenue stream "then we also value
zero," because eventually you run out of money, you
can't raise anymore capital. You're gone. So we first launched job listings, and we knew that job
listings was likely to be the thing that would be the
big revenue model for LinkedIn. Because we thought it was too difficult to grow a marketplace. Marketplaces are really
interesting places, eBay, Airbnb, but they're
very difficult to grow. And we thought that would be difficult. But most of the questions people had about LinkedIn then was,
"What do you do with it?" "Okay, I signed up, I
don't know what to do." And we knew that getting
people to understand that it could be used for finding a job or recruiting was one of the
things that we wanted to do. So we started with job listings. And it had exactly the impact
that we, to some degree, both hoped and feared it would have, which is, "Oh, we know
how to use LinkedIn now, " but not a lot of people
are buying job listings. So then we went to subscriptions and ads and those got us to profitability. And that was when we went,
"Okay, now I know that I have "a company that can build
to something very large." And that was, I think, 2005. So this all started in late 2002, we incorporated in early 2003. So more of less that was
two years where you'd say, in any particular week, right now if you were to look at the
data of what's happening, if you were to just say, take a look at the company as it is right now. What happens? And the answer
is the company doesn't exist. You're building towards
the future that you see. And that's all through
a valley of the shadow. - And I think that's an important point In hindsight, everyone's all, LinkedIn, and Google and all this. They all went through this
phase of "What are we doing?" "Is this going to survive?" - Two thirds of my friends,
when I talked to them about the LinkedIn idea
thought I was crazy. Which, by the way, is
frequently a good sign. - Right. - To do a really interesting start-up you have to be contrarian and right. So if everyone says, "Oh,
that's a great idea." Like, for example, when
you were going around early in the Khan
Academy, people were like, "Naw, that's not going to work." "You shouldn't do that." - Yes, I remember. - That's what happens. - I had one moment, where
I was at a dinner party, and they said, "What do
you do for a living?" And I was like, "Oh, I
make YouTube videos." And I heard them say,
as they were walking, "Good thing his wife's a doctor." (laughter) Boy that was very, made me feel small. - But you have to work through that. - If we fast-forward to today, LinkedIn is obviously, what's the number? - Oh I don't remember
what our public number is, it's over 300 million people. - 300 million, a chunk of
humanity is using this. If Reid of 2002 saw this organization what would he be thinking? Is it what he dreamt of? Is it beyond what he dreamt of? And where do you think
this is going to go? - One thing that's unusual, most consumer internet start-ups don't actually have a vision
from the very beginning that they stick to, they pivot a lot. They change a lot. LinkedIn was actually, more or less, there are things that have surprised us, some things we've
learned, but more or less, we thought everyone's
going to have a public, professional identity, that
it is like a resume or CV, they're going to have a network
of people that they trust. And then there's going to
be a set of applications built on that identity and network that will help them with their work. Key initials things? Will help find a job. Or help find an expert. Or help find a connection to a company or help recruit somebody. But, as you get larger
you also get to the, "Well, how do I solve this problem? "Who else is expert? "Within my company, outside my company? "How do I find a person
to found a company with? "How do I find a source in a company "for a story I'm writing as a journalist? "How do I find an expert to
advise me on an investment? "How do I figure out which
skills are the interesting skills "for me to pick up if I want "to get a first job out of college?" All of these things we knew,
from 2003, would be the kinds of things that would be coming out of it. Because it's been a very
consistent vision about let's build to the place
where, for every individual we are the best thing to
help them with their career. Which includes their daily work. And that's more or less been on target. Now we didn't know, would
we get to revenue in time? We didn't know this would
be the exact revenue source. We had a whole raft of ideas. We didn't know, for example, we thought people would be using
the Groups product more. Web developers or graphic designers getting together and helping each other. They are using it, we thought
they would be using it more. They're probably using
it less than we thought. There are unexpected uses. Like, for example, we didn't
realize we would end up building essentially a skills index. Cause we could do big data
analytics on all things and say, "Here's a list
of all the human skills." Those sorts of things. So there's discovery, but the direction and the true North has
been unusually constant for what happens for most
consumer internet companies. - So what's next? I mean LinkedIn, you're still
very active in LinkedIn. But you're also a partner at Greylock. So you're a very active
venture capitalist. And, we were just talking, you're doing a million other things. You're getting involved in
philanthropy, in the community. In the spirit of all of
what we've talked about, you're still a young guy. Where do you see all of
this going for yourself. - I feel older. My mission is how do I help, it's the public intellectual's mission, how do I help society be better? If it's starting, and I
won't start another company, but it's like LinkedIn, helping people discover what they should
be when they grow up, what skills would be helpful
for them getting a job. How they control their
own economic destiny. And there's a bunch of
stuff we do specifically also to help veterans and students and everything else within LinkedIn. As part of the modern
mission for good companies is to have things that you
do as part of your mission that aren't just pure profit incentive. It's not to say you're not always paying attention to revenue,
but there are things that align with your mission that are part of the right way to help
create a better society. Greylock, I'm an investor,
a venture capitalist, I generally invest in
marketplaces and networks, so I'm an investor in
Airbnb, Bitcoin companies, Zappo is one of the ones. I serve on a bunch of nonprofit boards. Akiva, which is a
marketplace for microfinance and Do Something, which is the largest teen philanthropic community. And then I do writing, so I wrote a book called The Start-Up of
You with Ben Casnocha. And also with Ben and Chris Yeh, this book called The Alliance, and it's how the right life strategy is to think of yourself
as the entrepreneur of your own life, and what
are the skills for that. So The Start-Up of You is
take all of the concepts that I've learned about entrepreneurship and I help other
entrepreneurs and distill it into what an individual's life should be. And then I respond to phone calls for people and projects
that I'm trying to help. It's a very diverse life. - And no one can be better to talk about The
Start-Up of You than you, just based on our conversation, you are amazingly deliberate in your path. Just a final question, we always ask this at Khan Academy, but also
just for some of the users of Khan Academy, what
advice do you have for us as an organization and
for anyone else out there. - Well, you're already doing
a lot of amazing things. How do you use technology to
scale so you can possibly help tens and hundreds of millions of people take control of their own learning. You help cross the digital
divide in social justice because you're available to anybody who has an internet connection. You're focused on mobile,
so you have a mobile app. Because I've used it. (laughter) - [Sal] It's about to get much better. - Excellent. - [Sal] We're working on it right now. - It's one of the things I travel with because learning new things is always fun. I'd say sustainability
in terms of creation of a business model is one
of the things to think about. Not to make tons and tons of money, but to be able to keep reinvesting. Because technology organizations, one of the things people don't understand about them is, it takes a bunch of investment every year. And so a business model
is helpful with that. And obviously a business
model that works and aligns with the organization would be something I would think would be
on the drawing board. You probably have stuff
you're already thinking about. Actually, I don't think you guys do a lot of social media stunts. You might do that to get more attention. Do a little bit more
of classes and lectures on, for example, things that are current. Like the current zeitgeist that
people're paying attention. So, like, "What is Ebola?" - Yes. We have one actually. We should do more. - Do more of that and do that along lines with what's currently happening. Cause you'll get attention on that. It's that sort of thing. It could even be little
micro lessons or classes. That would be something I
would think about doing. And you may be doing some of it already. - No, the more ideas the better. - And I'll give it a
little bit more thought. - Awesome. Well, on behalf of everyone here, I just really want to
thank you for being here. - My pleasure. (applause) And thank you for coming, I hope that was (words drowned out by applause)