$46B of hard truths from Ben Horowitz: Why founders fail and why you need to run toward fear (a16z co-founder)
$46B of hard truths from Ben Horowitz: Why founders fail and why you need to run toward fear (a16z co-founder)
$46B of hard truths from Ben Horowitz: Why founders fail and why you need to run toward fear (a16z co-founder)
Shownote
Shownote
Ben Horowitz is the co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, Silicon Valley’s largest and most influential venture capital firm, with over $46B in committed capital across multiple funds. He took Loudcloud public with just $2 million in revenue (dubbed “the IPO ...
Highlights
Highlights
In this insightful conversation, Ben Horowitz, co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz, shares hard-earned lessons from his journey as a founder, investor, and leader. Drawing from personal experiences and mentorship of hundreds of CEOs, he offers a candid look at what it takes to build and scale successful companies in today’s fast-evolving tech landscape.
Chapters
Chapters
Introduction to Ben Horowitz
00:00Important leadership lessons from Shaka Senghor
04:09Running toward fear and why hesitation kills companies
10:15Who shouldn’t start a company
19:35The Databricks story: thinking bigger
22:36Managerial leverage and CEO psychology
24:54When founders should be replaced as CEOs
28:06Normalizing failure for CEOs
31:20Counterintuitive lessons about building companies
37:57“Good Product Manager/Bad Product Manager”
42:31Product managers as leaders
48:21Why a16z invested in Adam Neumann after WeWork
51:16Is AI in a bubble?
56:23The biggest opportunities in AI
1:02:43Why U.S. leadership in AI matters
1:12:51The Paid in Full Foundation for hip-hop pioneers
1:18:53Lightning round: book recommendations, products, and life mottos
1:23:18Transcript
Transcript
Ben Horowitz: The worst thing that you do as a leader is you hesitate on the next decision. The thing that causes you to hesitate is both decisions are horrible. Probably one of my bigger ones on that was we went public with $2 million in 12 months of fail...
