Transcribe your podcast
[00:00:00]

Hello, Acquired listeners, and happy summer, David.

[00:00:04]

Happy summer indeed. I feel like a kid let out of school.

[00:00:08]

I know. You just got back from Hawaii. Are you feeling refreshed?

[00:00:11]

I am feeling as refreshed and relaxed as the father of a three-month-old and three-year-old can possibly be.

[00:00:20]

Yeah, I bet. We'll get to that in Carveouts, I'm sure. Yeah. Listeners, we, after 10 years straight of never taking any time off of Acquired, we were doing six weeks off over the summer. It turns out that doesn't actually mean six weeks off of work for you and I, David. It means six weeks of not making an episode because we are putting all of our energy and focus into September 10th at the Chase Center. David, what are we doing?

[00:00:47]

Hell, yeah. Chase Center, live show in partnership with our good friends at J. P. Morgan Payments. This is going to be, as many of you have already heard, the biggest thing that we have ever done. This is where the Warriors play. It's the brand new arena in the middle of downtown San Francisco. And Mark Zuckerberg is going to be there with us on stage. He's only one of the acts that we are planning. We've been very, very busy. We're pulling out all the stops. It's going to be an amazing event.

[00:01:20]

Yeah, we'll have some fun surprises for everyone that we're not planning to share in advance. So if you're free, September 10th, or if you can make yourselves free, be in San Francisco. It's funny, we We announced many months ago on the show, Save the Date, but then we actually haven't had an episode since tickets have been on sale. And so despite the fact that we e-mailed a lot of you and we tweeted and we put it in the slack, David and I were on the phone yesterday and we were like, We should probably let people who just listen to the podcast and don't follow Acquired anywhere else, know about it, too. So, acquired. Fm/sf. We really hope to see you there. Our goal is really just to feel like the biggest celebration and community of like-minded listeners possible, almost like the Omaha for tech or Omaha on the West Coast.

[00:02:04]

It's going to be great. Listeners are organizing a bunch of events around the show itself in the days before and after. It's going to be really like the Omaha weekend. If you want to stay up to date on all of that, look for announcements in the slack in the coming weeks. Yeah.

[00:02:22]

And feel free to plan your own, too. At the end of the day, even before announcing this on the podcast here, there are several thousand of you who have tickets and are coming. No one venue except for the Chase Center is going to hold us all anyway. If you're coming and you want to plan dinners or happy hours or company meetups or anything, please just feel free to take the initiative, do that, post in Slack. We'd love for it to happen.

[00:02:44]

The other thing we should say here, there's two ticket prices all in price. It's $100 for floor seats, which are almost gone at this point in time, and $50 for everywhere else in the arena. That's it. That's all in. That includes ticket master fees. We're pretty sure this is the cheapest event that has ever been put on, ticket price-wise at the Chase Center. Definitely not the cheapest event, production budget-wise, but we're really proud of that. We want this to be open and available and accessible to everybody. We want as many of you there as can make it. This is a party that we want to throw for everyone.

[00:03:21]

Well, David, now that we have a few minutes here and we're not mid-episode, should we reflect on the last few months in acquired land We thought listeners would be interested in a little bit of a peak behind the scenes.

[00:03:34]

It's been a hell of a ride the last couple of months, Ben. I don't think I've even really till leaving for Hawaii, whatever it was 10 days ago, had a chance to stop and reflect on this. My second daughter was born at the end of April, and then the Wall Street Journal article about us came out, I think, like two weeks later. So it's just been a whirlwind.

[00:03:55]

Yeah, it's funny. It's been one of these things people have asked, what is the impact on the Wall Street Journal profile. It's hard to disambiguate the two things that happen concurrently. That piece, which is the best encapsulation of what acquired is that has ever been published. There's been two canonical pieces. David Lidsky's wonderful piece in Fast Company last year, following the production of the Nike episode, really dives into the making of an episode and what that is all about. This one is like, what is Acquired today and how did this thing come to be? What happened is when that article came out, Acquired became the number one podcast on both Spotify and Apple charts in the world.

[00:04:43]

That is even mind-blowing sentence. That is not something that we ever thought would even be remotely within the realm of possibility.

[00:04:52]

No. And what that led to is number one has staying power, because if anybody opens up Apple podcast right now and hit the Browse tab, you can very clearly see the number one podcast is the one centered on your screen that you're curious about checking out. So all of the goodness that came from the WSJ piece was then massively amplified over the course of weeks and months because we just stayed the number one podcast in this self-fulfilling prophecy way across both giant podcasting platforms. To just add some numbers to that, because we've gotten the question so many times we were thinking, We should just talk about it on air. 317,000 new subscribers or followers, depending on whether you're using Apple or Spotify's parlance, have followed the show since the Wall Street Journal piece went live. For context, in January, coming into the year, we estimated our listener base was about 500,000 people.

[00:05:52]

It was a major event.

[00:05:53]

Yes. David, I had always been of this belief, especially when I'm working with startups, ups, don't count on a single press article being trajectory-changing for you. That's generally true, except when it isn't.

[00:06:07]

Yeah. Like all the companies we cover on the show, it's the exceptions that prove the rule here. It was a wonderful piece. Ben Cohen, who wrote it at the Journal, is an excellent journalist. I have the utmost respect for him. He writes the Science of Success column at the Journal that this was part of. It was just one of those lightning in a bottle moments. I don't know how to describe it otherwise.

[00:06:29]

Yeah. Part of this is a welcome to all of you who are new listeners to the show. David and I have been doing this for close to 10 years now. The audience has grown slowly and it doubled organically every year for the first nine years. One way to think about that, because we don't really do paid marketing, what that means is the whole audience base, on average, told one friend who stuck around and listened to the show every year. In some sense, that's almost There's nothing to write home about. But on the other hand, it actually just kept happening. The cool thing is it meant that it built the audience base that we really wanted because everyone personally recommended it to a friend rather than having an explosive growth moment. That's why the Slack is such a wonderful and civil place. It's not like this community that showed up out of nowhere. It's this community that's been slowly building organically by inviting other people who they know in from the real world over time. Then if I could say, what would be the single best growth event if we were going to have a outsized external force that brought a bunch of audience?

[00:07:37]

The Wall Street Journal is the exact right audience to join the rest of you.

[00:07:41]

I was going to say the same thing.

[00:07:43]

Wsj subscribers are among the most well-educated, thoughtful business people in the world who love nerding out on this stuff. We're delighted to have anybody here who just found out because you read the WSJ.

[00:07:55]

Totally. The other thing that was just so surprising about this, I used to work at the Wall Street Journal a long, long time ago, briefly, early in my career. I identify with it deeply and loved the publication and was so glad they were going to cover us. But I, at least, have always believed that people aren't going to discover podcasts by reading about a podcast or in another medium. If you read about something, you're probably not going to go open up your phone and your podcast player and hit subscribe or you're in some other modality. But this proved us wrong.

[00:08:29]

The dirty secret behind Acquired is every episode is about the exception. Every company we talk about is the most extreme outlier. I often find myself wondering, even though we have this playbook and this lessons learned, is the real playbook that you can't learn any lessons because they're such extreme outliers? These big tech companies, they're all monopolies or near monopolies in the largest and most profitable markets in the world. Well, no one else's business is that. The lesson you can draw from a cash gusher that is extremely difficult to disrupt. Some of the things you can apply to building your business, but it's much more interesting, which is, of course, why we do the history and facts, to go look at them in their first few years of life to understand how they catapulted to the position rather than trying to learn something about the companies as you perceive them today.

[00:09:19]

It feels like a visceral manifestation to you and me of this takeaway from all of our episodes, every great success story is idiosyncratic. Yes. You We can't plan this, and they all are their own journeys. It's why we can make a four or five hour episode about all these different companies. It's not just, well, they did the same thing that the other companies did.

[00:09:42]

Yeah, part of this takeaway for me is it's unclear if and what would ever be a large outsize growth event. When you look at our chart, it's perfectly smooth for almost a decade until there's this one point where you can see, whoa, something clearly happened and numbers jumped up from May to now. I I don't know that you can ever really plan for those. A PR person emailed me, How did you pitch that piece to the journal? I was just laughing like- We didn't. There's no way you could possibly anticipate something like this happening and then execute a PR strategy to try to make it happen. Maybe other people know differently, but I've never once seen that be the way that things like this happen. Well, let's see. Things we wanted to do today, chat about The Arena show. Oh, one other note on that. A few people have emailed us and said, My whole company is coming. We even had a parent email us and say, My 13-year-old wants to have his birthday party by bringing all of his friends to the live show, which is the coolest thing ever. Coolest thing ever. Crazy, that's real.

[00:10:45]

If you're interested in something like that, to email us hello@acquired. Fm for big group ticket buys, and there's a special office that we can hook you up with that helps deal with that.

[00:10:54]

We've had a few companies get in touch with us and say either they're remote first companies or they're somewhere else. Like, oh, we're going to do our fall off site as a company in San Francisco for the live show, which is super cool. So yes, if you want to do anything like that, hello@acquired. Fm, we'll make it happen. We'd love to have you here. Yeah.

[00:11:13]

The other thing that we wanted to do, we've got one more announcement on show structure and then carveouts. So the show structure thing is, as you may have guessed or observed, the thing that makes Acquired episodes unique is the format of David and I sitting down, doing the hundreds of hours of research, coming together with separate prepared minds, with separate understandings of the history and with separate beliefs about what made this business work, and then doing our four-hour format to tell the story and unpack why the business worked. That's very different than an interview show where you have a great guest on where everybody knows their name and you interview them, and then you say, So long, folks, and you sign off. There are many of those shows, and there are many excellent, excellent of those shows. Occasionally, we do have the opportunity to interview someone like Jensen, like Charlie, like Dara from Uber, where we have covered the business in the past, or perhaps someone like Howard Schultz is willing to spend the five, six hours with us that it takes to do our standard format with them present. But what we've basically done is we've decided that the main show, with few exceptions, is for doing our core four-hour format of David and I together.

[00:12:36]

Occasionally, we will follow that up with an interview with the protagonist after we've had a chance to really do our thing. But that leaves us with a whole bunch of opportunity to do great interviews, but just that are not quite acquired. And so ACQ 2 has really become the place where we're doing all of that now. And so if you like interviews like the one we did with the synopsis founder and the synopsis CEO to do a deep dive on the state of semis today, or the next one we have coming out is an interview with Joe Montana, who managed to shift from being one of the best football players of all time, many times Super Bowl MVP.

[00:13:10]

To a really excellent venture capitalist.

[00:13:12]

To an exceptional investor, yes. We've got several other public company CEOs lined up that we're going to be doing on ACQ2 soon. While Dave and I are taking some time to breathe, prep for the arena show, if you're feeling like you want to experience some more acquired and you've already gone through the back catalog, ACQ2 is the place to tune in for those as they come out.

[00:13:34]

Indeed. All right, to bring us home here for our little summer session, Carveouts. Carveouts. Ben, we were about to hit record, and you stopped and you said, Wait a minute, I got to walk around my house. I am so excited to hear what you came back to us with.

[00:13:48]

All right, so we may have to start doing this on the show, or we may hear a revolt if we start doing this. I don't know. Now that you and I both have small children, there's a whole second category of goods that are parent-related.

[00:14:02]

Baby carveouts. Yeah. Parent carveouts.

[00:14:04]

I'll do my parent carveout first. On the holiday special, I gave two stroller recommendations. In keeping with tradition, I'm doing a third stroller recommendation. My Father's Day gift.

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This is the most Ben Gilbert thing ever. I love it. Wait, was your Father's Day gift a stroller?

[00:14:20]

It was. It was a running stroller. Yes. Because it perfectly aligned with my son turning six months old, which is when it's reasonably safe for them to be in a running stroller. I will tell you, he loves it. Running through the park near our house, the trees whizzing by, whether it's wake time or nap time, it's great. I get the miles in. I've been ramping up by running again, which is now that I have a nine-month-old, a thing you can start doing again. But the Thule or Thule? I don't exactly know how to pronounce it.

[00:14:53]

I never know how to pronounce it.

[00:14:55]

Thule? I'm going to mess it up with my American, but I think it's colloquially to in America as Thule.

[00:15:01]

T-h-u-l-e is the brand, right?

[00:15:03]

Yes. The Urban Glide 3 is excellent, and I highly recommend it to anyone who is thinking about running with a small child.

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It's funny. I never got into the running stroller, running with children thing. I think I would really enjoy it, but it's so hilly here in San Francisco.

[00:15:21]

Yeah, I can't imagine pushing that thing up.

[00:15:24]

Yeah, I've been more in carrier mode and then doing hikes with the baby in the carrier, which I'm now back in that world with baby number two here. Well, okay, great. We'll trade off. You did your parent carve out. I'm going to do my parent carve out, then I'll kick it back to you. So mine actually is what you started the show off with. It was my time in Hawaii. Our second daughter just turned three months old. We wanted to do a family vacation while we're having this little acquired hiatus before Jenny goes back to work. We were thinking, What could we possibly do with a three-year-old and a three-month old in tow that is going to be the least bit enjoyable or relaxing as a family vacation? We scoured the Earth, and the best idea that we came up with was the Disney Resort in Hawaii. It was awesome. Let me tell you, this place, it's called Alani. It was perfect. It is not the nicest resort. It is not a Disney park. There's no rides or stuff. As far as Disney goes, it's actually fairly touch. It's not the best Disney experience. It's not the prettiest beach.

[00:16:34]

But you are really selling it.

[00:16:35]

It is not spiky in any category. But the Venn diagram of needs of you have a young family, you are a harried parent, you want something like a Hawaii vacation where you can have some hope of getting a little bit of relaxation in and everyone will have a good enough time. Man, it nails the center of that Venn diagram. It was truly the very best trip we could have done at this stage in our lives.

[00:17:06]

That is great to know.

[00:17:07]

Highly recommend for anybody in the same life phase. Although there were people of families of all phases there. There weren't I mean, non-families there, I will say. But there were big family reunions happening. There were parents with preteens. There were parents with teens. I was a little surprised by that. But I mean, hey, who doesn't love Disney and who doesn't love Hawaii? Yeah, I highly, I really, highly recommend it, especially with young children.

[00:17:33]

All right. Great to know. All right, my adult carve-out. I don't know. My carve-out that anyone can appreciate is a sunglasses brand called Meller, M-E-L-L-E-R. When I was at my buddy's wedding in Crete earlier this summer, I was out walking around the shops and I forgot my sunglasses because I left super early in the morning. I just grabbed these because they were at the store and I was like, Oh, those look pretty cool. They are the highest quality lenses that I have ever had in a pair of sunglasses. Maybe it's because I just always buy cheap throwaway sunglasses because I lose them all the time. But 59 bucks, polarized. It's the type of lens where you put them on and you can see things that are further away, clearer. Normally, when you put some form of glass in front of your eye, it- Distorts a little bit, yeah. Right. It's not going to get any better than your own clear eyesight. But I noticed that I put these on and I can suddenly better than I can with my own plain eyes. Wow. I'm like now a loyalist. Meller, M-E-L-L-E-R, sunglasses.

[00:18:36]

Is it a Esalr Lixatica brand or is it an indie?

[00:18:40]

That's a great question. I mean, my general answer when anyone asks, is that Esalor Luxotica? Would be yes, of course it is, just because it's the default answer for all the brands you know.

[00:18:49]

It's a safe bet.

[00:18:50]

Yeah. Ray Bands and Oakleys and everything. But I don't think so.

[00:18:54]

Well, speaking of, I am intentionally wearing my Ray Bands metas here to prepare.

[00:18:59]

I see you are.

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I especially enjoyed these in Hawaii. They were great.

[00:19:03]

Yeah, they look great. But no, I don't think, unless my quick Google was wrong, that I think Mellar is not SLA Luxotica.

[00:19:11]

Independent. Wow, the question is for how long? Well, to bring home on our summer carve-out theme, my carve-outs for everyone are, it's summertime, which means, sadly, no NFL. But with the little baby, I got around to watching the Netflix quarterback series from last year, and then the new receiver series. They're so good. I love them both. The quarterback series, especially, there's no other position in sports, or at least sports that I am familiar with that are like large team sports where so much of the game hinges on that one person. Just following the amount of mental work that goes into being an elite NFL quarterback, and then just the pressure that these guys are under is so immense. Receiver was funny, too. I enjoyed receiver almost equally as much, but it's so funny to watch the difference between the preparation and the pressure that the quarterbacks are under versus what the receivers are doing. Very, very different stakes, although they are obviously the receiving end of what the quarterbacks are throwing.

[00:20:26]

All right, on my list. Well, with that, listeners, thank you tuning in to our Ben and David randomly hop on a call and you get to listen. Summer mini episode here. We really hope to see you September 10th in San Francisco. We're going to have a blast. Mark Zuckerberg and other special guests will be there. Yeah, feel free to organize any meetups, lunches, dinners, anything you'd like in the Acquired Slack, acquired. Fm/slack. Tickets are available now at acquired. Fm/sf. A huge thank you to our friends at JPMorgan Payments for just pulling out all the stops. Their team is so awesome. It's like the acquired team has tripled or quadrupled in size for a few months here while we all do this together. It really does feel like we are one.

[00:21:13]

Yeah, it's not just that their name is on the building, which it is, but they are performing a heroic amount of work and effort to make this, hopefully, the best live event that you've ever been to, and we cannot wait. Yeah.

[00:21:28]

All right. With that, listeners, thank you, and we'll see you next time.

[00:21:31]

We'll see you in September. Who got the truth? Is it you? Is it you? Is it you? Who got the truth now?