# Anthropic's Hypergrowth: AI Automation, Exponential Bets, and Evolving Product Roles

**Podcast:** Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career
**Published:** 2026-04-05

## Transcript

A lot of companies claim to be the fastest growing companies of all time.
Anthropic actually is.
You guys were at a billion ARR at the start of 2025.
The last number I've seen is 19 billion ARR.
That's one to 19 billion dollars in 14 months.
Historically, we were very much the smallest, least well-funded player in this space.
We didn't have the free cash flow or the distribution of a meta or Google.
We didn't have the first mover advantage of an open AI.
It's a complete miracle that we've gotten to the stage that we have.
Give us just a glimpse of what it's like to be leading growth inside of Anthropics.
The hardest job I've had in my life to come into Anthropic, you need to understand that 50, 60, 70% of how you operate in the past, just throw it out the door.
One of the cleverest growth moves you all made was this idea of importing memory from ChatGPT.
Activation is a really big challenge in AI.
We are starting to look at how do we automate growth.
Our growth platform team is driving this effort called Cash, which is Claude Accelerate Sustainable Hypergrowth.
How can we use Claude to automate growth experimentation?
And it's delivering results.
You're basically living in the future.
We always talk about the exponential.
The product value that we will deliver in two years' time is probably like a thousand X, what it is today.
The funniest thing is I've noticed internally linear charts are just not cool.
Everything is log linear.
It's just showing me at log linear scale.
Today, my guest is Amol Evasari.
Amol is head of growth at Anthropic, which is on the most unprecedented growth run in history.
In the past 14 months, they grew from 1 billion to over 19 billion in annual recurring revenue.
Just in the past few months, their revenue doubled.
They've been growing 10x year over year.
This is unheard of at this scale.
By the time this episode comes out, their revenue will be even higher.
To put this scale in perspective, companies like Atlassian and Palantir and Snowflake, which have been around for 15 to 20 years, each do something like four and a half to six billion in ARR.
Anthropic is adding this much ARR every few months.
And if that isn't interesting enough to you, Amol, who leads growth at Anthropic, is an incredible human.
He previously led growth at Mercury in Masterclass.
Before that, he was a founder and an investment banker.
And most interestingly, something that most people don't know about him is that Amol suffered a severe brain injury.
He had to spend nine months relearning how to walk and work and just not be nauseous all the time.
He shared this story in a guest post in my newsletter a number of years ago.
We actually chatted about this during the conversation.
These are my favorite kind of conversations because Amol and his team are living in the future, and he's come to tell us where things are heading and what's gonna change.
And in this episode, Amol shares an unprecedented look at how a company like Anthropic operates and grows, including how they think about growth, what parts of the job they've automated, the future of the product and growth roles, how Amole got the job in the first place by cold emailing Mike Krieger, and so much more.
Amol is wonderful, and just try to count the number of times that he blew my mind during this conversation.
Before we get into it, don't forget to check out Lenny's ProductPass.com for an incredible set of deals available exclusively to Lenny's newsletter subscribers.
With that, I bring you Amol Avasari.
Amol, thank you so much for being here and welcome to the podcast.
Pleasure to be here.
Head of growth at Anthropic.
No big deal.
I've had a lot of people come on this podcast from companies that claim to be the fastest growing companies of all time.
And Anthropic actually is, if you look at the trajectory, I just have some of the numbers here, just so people understand how absurd this is.
So you guys were at a billion ARR at the start of 2025, then hit something like 4 billion mid-2025, then 9 billion ARR at the end of 2025.
And the last number I've seen is you guys are at 19 billion ARR, which uh just to put a couple pieces of context here.
One is that's from one to nineteen billion dollars in 14 months.
Um I have so many questions.
First of all, the story of how you actually landed this role is really interesting.
Talk about how you how you got this role.
Yeah, it's a little unorthodox.
So it was funny.
When I when I did my onboarding, they they walked through what percentage of the cohort came through referrals, what percentage came through applying on the website, what percentage came through uh sourcing.
And I was on none of those.
And I was like, okay, this is interesting.
Um basically the the way that I I got to anthropic was that I was actually a user of Claude, and I was using it a lot.
I was like, man, these guys, like great product, great company, but they they really like obviously don't have a growth team.
And uh what I did was I just sent Mike Krieger a cold email.
He was a chief product officer.
I sent him a cold email saying, like, hey, love what you guys do, love the product.
I think you guys badly need a growth team, want to chat.
And uh I didn't expect he would respond.
And uh, you know, he responds and says, Hey, yeah, I'm interested.
Let's let's talk.
And it's funny, I didn't know.
I mean, I wouldn't have known they were not hiring for a growth team, there were no growth PM roles listed, but they were just at that time starting to think about hiring a growth team.
So it was very good timing.
But yeah, one one spoke to spoke to Mike and one thing led to another.
He said, I'm the only PM that he's hired from from cold email.
And I I feel very lucky that he decided to respond to my email.
I did not know the story.
That is that is another uh absurd fact.
Uh clearly you're good at cold email.
What did you do in this cold email to get his attention?
I would say like I've basically perfected cold email over the years.
So I was a when I was a founder, I I had to get really, really good at this.
So I sent a lot of cold emails out and just honed the the subject line, the message and and the tone.
And and so basically, I have in the subject line, the first thing is like from a conversion standpoint, someone sees the emails, they need to click on it.
And so I have a copy that I've tested that is like very, very high uh open rate.
And so wait, what is this copy?
Or is this a secret?
It's a secret.
I think we'll keep it, we'll gotta keep some secret secrets.
Um so that's one getting them to open.
I think the second is then the tactics of you need to understand like where are people getting outreach.
And if you if everyone's getting outreach in one area and then uh you reach out to them there, then you're not gonna get as high of a response rate.
So you can think about like LinkedIn, you can think about like work email, these are things that everyone is emailing.
So there's there's ways to get people's personal emails out there, and so like that's one thing that I did, and so I can't personal email.
I know the copy that works, and then it's just keeping it very short on here's who I am, here's why I'd be a good fit, and and we should chat.
And and you know, these things typically don't work, and then yeah, you should always follow up a few times.
I think my rule of thumb is like if I really care about it, I should just keep keep reaching out to them and until they tell me like please stop.
And so I would have I would have kept doing that, but he responded the first time.
It makes sense that a talented growth person would be very good at cold email and getting people's attention.
So that's almost like an interview step is just did I want to read this email?
This episode is brought to you by our seasons presenting sponsor, work OS.
What do OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor, Vercell, Replit, Sierra, Clay, and hundreds of other winning companies all have in common?
They are all powered by work OS.
If you're building a product for the enterprise, you felt the pain of integrating single sign-on, skim, rback, audit logs, and other features required by large companies.
Work OS turns those deal blockers into drop-in APIs with a modern developer platform built specifically for B2B SaaS.
Literally every startup that I'm an investor in that starts to expand upmarket ends up working with Work OS.
And that's because they are the best.
Whether you are a seed stage startup trying to land your first enterprise customer or unicorn expanding globally.
Work OS is the fastest path to becoming enterprise ready and unblocking growth.
It's essentially Stripe for Enterprise Features.
Visit WorkOS.com to get started, or just hit up their Slack where they have actual engineers waiting to answer your questions.
Work OS allows you to build faster with delightful APIs, comprehensive docs, and a smooth developer experience.
Go to workOS.com to make your app enterprise ready today.
Okay.
So give us just like a glimpse of what it's like to be leading growth inside of Anthropic right now, the most by far fastest growing company in history.
Just what is it like?
Yeah, I'd say it's very much a company-wide effort, right?
So like, yes, we we are the growth team, we have done great.
I think we've driven a lot of impact, but honestly, man, we can't claim too much credit for the success of the company.
We we uh as Anthropic are really a model company and an intelligence company first and foremost.
And so the the lion's share of of like what has driven our success is our research team.
We have, I think, the best research team in the world, we have great teams on inference and compute, and then there's many other teams like Clod Code, GoToMarket, etc., who I think deserve much more credit than us.
I think just zooming out, going to some of what you said earlier, that the growth trajectory has just been insane.
That that 10x year on year revenue growth trend has been there since the beginning.
I think 2023 was zero to 100 mil, 2024 was 100 to 1.
Uh last year was one to roughly 10.
And then like I look back to when I joined in 2024.
Revenue was in the the hundreds of millions.
And just that trajectory through the end of 2024 and 2025, like week two of when I joined, we're going into 2025 revenue planning.
And we have these like base case and aggressive case scenarios.
And Daria's pushing the aggressive case scenario, and people are freaking out, being like, how the hell are we going to get that?
And Daria's like, I think we can actually go much higher than that.
And I'm I'm coming in like this, this this place is crazy.
Like there's there's absolutely no way.
Um, and and and that happened, right?
And and then you you get to the end of 2025, and it's like, okay, law of large numbers, there's going to be a pretty big slowdown here based on you know your baseline rate of of 10 billion, how you're going to keep growing at this rate.
And like it just like has not slowed down.
And you know, those numbers are public.
The the 19 billion number you you quoted is from the end of Feb.
So that is also out of date.
Um, and it's at look, it's absolutely insane.
Like the the funniest thing is something that I've noticed internally, is like linear charts are just like not cool.
Like no one cares about linear charts.
Everything is log linear.
I've just showed me a log linear scale, and that's that's kind of a scale we we think.
And I think overall, we're just, you know, really hanging on by the seat of our pants, and we're trying to manage the growth and um do do do the best that we can for our users.
I was talking to somebody at Anthropic about you, and they said that basically anytime they want something to grow, they ask you to help, and it works.
So you talked about just like things are magical and amazing, and like like Claude and all the tools you all build are amazing innately, and that's a big part of the reason they grow.
I think many people listening to this will be like, what do you act even do a mole with like a magical microguard that just can do anything for you?
Why do we need a growth person?
What do you even do?
Talk about just the stuff that you focus on and maybe like a couple of the wins that your team has shipped that has helped accelerate growth.
I would say like they're not fully wrong, right?
Like we're very, very lucky to have the best models in the world.
We're very lucky to have products like Claude Code and Cowork.
It it certainly makes life a lot easier.
Um having said that, I would say this is like the hardest job I've had in my life, and that's uh, you know, having been a founder, having been an investment banker, and and other things like that.
Uh it's it's it's tough.
And in fact, if I look at what do we do as a growth team here, I think it's the it's it's ultimately it's the same categories of things that you would think about at a normal company.
So we care about acquisition, how we're getting more people in the door, the the intent of the people coming through the door.
We care about activation, the sign-up flow, funneling people to the right products, making them them successful.
You know, we care about things like monetization, free-of-paid conversion, pricing and packaging, all of that stuff.
But we the the categories of work is the same.
I think then the the probably the big differences is I would say that like roughly 70% of what I I spend my time on is is what we internally refer to as success disasters.
And that is where like things have gone so well that other things are breaking now.
And and I think anyone who's worked at companies that have gone through rapid growth, uh, you think like Facebook or Uber or DoorDash early on, like they understand this viscerally, where scaling this much just brings a lot of challenges.
So if you think about each of those categories on acquisition, on activation, on monetization, there's just a ton of firefighting, jumping from like one urgent thing to another.
And it's often like extremely painful.
And and like it's it's funny because you you look at all the charts, all the charts are like green, like fully up into the right, and everyone's just like it's it can be quite tough emotionally still.
And so you need to sort of step back and just realize like we're very lucky to have these problems.
But that's 70% of my time, I'd say is just these like firefighting and success disasters.
And I think the 30% remaining is just much more standard bread and butter growth work where it's like more proactive.
So you think about okay, if we have limited resources, which which are the products, we have many different products, which of the products do we want to put some juice behind?
What is our long-term pricing and packaging look like, especially given that the technology is changing a lot and behavior and engagement trends are shifting?
And then, you know, things like we have a lot of new products coming up, like okay, you ship co-work.
Now what?
Like when is the right time that we should lean in as a growth team to start optimizing the core adoption funnel for for co-work?
So it's probably 70% just crazy firefighting, 30% more, more bread and butter stuff.
Okay, I'm gonna dig into a lot of that stuff.
One of the cleverest growth uh moves you all made recently was this idea of importing memory from chat GPT, where you just made it really easy and kind of jumped on this trend of people getting really excited about.
Is there anything you could share about this the behind the scenes story of that feature?
Whoa is thinking about what can we do to improve the cold start problem and improve the new user experience?
I think that activation is a really big challenge in in AI.
And so, you know, that's like one example of something that that we ship that was very um you know specific to a moment in time.
But ultimately that you zoom out, it's like, okay, how do you really how do you really make it easier for people who are signing up to have Claude understand who they are and understand how Claude can help them and get them to the right place?
I want to follow that thread, activation.
There's something that comes up a ton when I talk to people leading driving growth on AI products.
It's just like there are so much stuff trying to get your attention these days for people to get to a place where they, okay, wow, this is really gonna be something I want to keep using it.
It proves to be really hard.
And it's also just unreliable.
Sometimes it's not going to be magical.
It's AI, it's a non-deterministic.
I guess one is just like uh how important is that focusing on activation, getting people to that aha moment with AI products, and two, what are some things you've learned about how to do that well with with Cloud or AI in general?
Yeah, it's a good question.
I I think that activation, it's it's critical, right?
And and and defining that as like early activation, call it day zero, day one product experience.
I think that historically anyone who's who's been in growth or been in product understands that that's that's usually one of the highest levers that you have to actually even increase like longer term retention.
And I think that that the importance of that has just gotten exponentially higher now.
Zooming out, I feel like one of the biggest problems in the industry is capability overhang, where the the models are just getting better so quickly.
And and it the the real challenge is on the product side of how do we start to um diffuse those benefits to to people where even internally, like it there's there's new models coming internally, and you're sitting there, you're so busy, and and when it when you when a new model is available, you you need to like really carve out time to be like, well, what can this do?
How do I need to update my priors?
And and if you think about more broadly for most people, you may have a model that is like, yeah, you may have AGI or some you know model that can do all sorts of crazy things, but if if people's instinct is to come there and be like, hey, what's the weather in SF, then you know they're not gonna get the the most out of of the product.
And then so I think that it's it's it's tough because the model capabilities are rising so much.
So like if I if I think about okay, back when we had, I don't know, say like Opus 4, at that there's there's a series of things the model can do at that point, and and Opus 4.5 unlocked a whole bunch of new things.
You think about, okay, we sit there, we've got this new model, Opus 4.
The the time to then go and run a bunch of tests, figure out, okay, there's the capabilities from this new model, what are the right on ramps to guide people to those features?
You know, you run you run tests, you get the learnings, you then ship a new flow.
By then you may already have the next model, which unlocks newer capabilities that makes all these learnings irrelevant, right?
So, like it's actually just like a really difficult problem to stay on top of.
I think that many of the same things, same old trends in in in growth and activation remain, I think, accurate.
Where to me it's like ultimately you you the some of the highest leverages from finding the right product or the right feature for the right user.
And uh I think that one learning uh you know seeing this time and time again across companies, actually like the right friction helps and and adding more friction usually works if you do it the right way.
I think that's something I've consistently seen that we've we've seen here as well.
Uh so to me, I think it's really under being able to identify which what are the characteristics of a user that allows you to then recommend them to the right feature of product and not being shy about adding friction to to do that?
I think is probably like the single biggest thing that that's important here.
When I asked uh Ben Mann, one of the co-founders for more podcast guests, what to ask you about, and this is what he highlighted is your experience, especially at Mercury, redoing onboarding and making it magical.
And basically, he's in the same uh place as you of just how important it is for people to understand what the AI tool is capable of to help people decide to use it and stick with it.
Is there an example of something you changed in onboarding that helped significantly improve activation?
Yeah, it's a great, great question.
And I like that he brings up Mercury.
I talk about the product a lot.
So worked on the growth team at Mercury.
I think it's a fantastic product.
It's something many people use, and the reason they use it is because the better banking experience than this.
Yeah, I'm a I'm a very happy customer just to put that out there.
I love it.
Great product, highly recommend it.
They have personal banking, everyone's go and use it.
Right, they just launched that.
I I and so I think that the interesting thing about Mercury is like the core value is that it's a better experience, right?
That that's the reason you use it.
You're not getting like better other things, just it's a better product experience.
And so the that ethos is very, very deeply held within the company.
It comes from uh a number of the founders.
And um, I think that we we had a big push one quarter when I was there on the onboarding flow.
So onboarding flows for banking institutions and regulated entities are extremely complex.
Like the the amount of time I've spent on the difference between like a registered agent address and a legal address and a physical address.
Like these things are very, very complex.
And we we basically looked at the onboarding flow, and we're like, okay, we we've invested so much in quality in the rest of the product, but we haven't really done it here.
And this is the first experience that people have.
And and so we said forget metrics, forget growth, forget everything else.
As the growth team on conversion, we're gonna spend a whole quarter fixing quality in in this flow.
And so that's all we do.
Like, forget the metrics.
We're just going to make this as good of an experience as we can and fix all these, like you go back from one field to the other field and adding in your beneficial ownership details.
And it actually ended out being like and probably until I joined here, like the single most impactful quarter that I've ever had as a growth TM in terms of the impact that it had.
And so we saw a significant uplift from uh on basically our like onboarding started to to completion from from just focusing on quality.
And so that to me is like a broader learning around quality drives growth that I think I I've tried to bring to Anthropic.
I think for us at Anthropic, um, you know, some of the things that we've done in the onboarding flow uh is is basically like we we ask users questions around who who they are, what their interest areas are, and we we then use that to recommend different products and features, and like a number of people look at the flow and they're like, you have so much friction, it's such a long flow.
And I'm like, we have the data, we're kind of happy with how that's performing.
What is your kind of a philosophy on friction, good friction versus bad friction?
I've just seen time and time again at every job I've been in in growth that adding friction and adding the right steps uh leads to higher conversion and and higher funnel completion.
So you want to get rid of an uh I think especially if you have high volume, you should test the majority of this and just learn and see like, does this apply to your business as well?
But you you want to you want to get rid of annoying friction that doesn't add value.
But the the like I think the most simple understanding people have is like just get just just solve time to value, cut all the steps and just get them into the product.
And and like that doesn't work most times.
Like I think if you if you're if you've really thoroughly tested your flows, I look at the companies I've been at, master class.
If you go through baster classes purchase flow right now, you'll go through all these steps in this this quiz when you land on when you're trying to buy, and it's you're like, you're like, I came here to buy, and it's taking me through all these questions, what are you here for, etc.?
I think it's easy to look at that and be like, why why do they have this?
This is like a terrible thing, just cut it all.
And it's like, no, like that's been thoroughly tested, and and actually that's like a significant revenue driver uh because it helps users feel that the product is for them by understanding what their interests are and then recommending the content and and classes there.
One of the the growth PMs on our team left to to join Calm, Calm.com, the meditation app.
If you go to Calm's uh, you know, their landing page and you go through their purchase flow, their login flow, you'll see a quiz.
It's like not not a not a coincidence.
At at Mercury, we also tested, I think, um, I think Imad posted on Twitter, like we broke out some steps in onboarding and just having one screen.
If you have like five or six different form inputs and you you often break that into two screens and reduce the cognitive load to people, like that that is something that that performs well.
We added steps into the flow there that actually performed well.
Same at Anthropics.
So I think that the takeaway to me is like cut friction when it doesn't add to the experience of helping a user understand why the product is for them.
But if you can help users understand a product, why product is for them and like how to use it and what's what's most relevant to them, and it's gonna add friction, uh, don't shy away from it.
Test it, confirm that it works for you.
But I think this is like a something that like most growth practitioners deeply understand.
And the for them is really important there.
What you described is adding friction to better understand who they are so that you know how to recommend the right thing for them.
Correct.
Yes.
And like that, that like done right, that just it just flows through, right?
So it helps you with activation, but then it helps you with life cycle, you know more about those users and why they're here.
And and like you know, most sophisticated businesses, you can then even if someone drops off, you can do like look alike targeting and you can get you can get them at the ad layer as well.
So that that initial piece of how you understand the you who the user is is just like it's a juice that just keeps on giving if you if you then use it right uh further down frontal.
Everyone's about to go do a bunch of teardowns of clouds onboarding, master class onboarding, Mercury onboarding.
Uh kind of as a tangent, I was at this PM dinner recently, and I was asking all the PMs, how is your role as a PM changed most with AI?
Like, where is AI most impacted?
What you do?
And one of the PMs answered that is actually doing competitive analysis, doing a bunch of like teardowns of what other people are doing for pricing pages and onboarding.
So it's easy to do now.
Just hey, hey, hey, co-work.
I don't know, would you co-work for this or cloud?
What would you use for that?
Okay, this is good.
Help people pick which tool to use.
If you want to go do a bunch of teardowns of other competitors onboarding flows, what would you use?
You can use you can use cowork for this, right?
Um, so you have co-work with the Chrome extension.
So if you task co-work with the Chrome extension, go and look for these these flows and uh show me, give me a view of what's working, what's not.
That's definitely something that that co-work can do.
Cool.
I think that imagine that's one of the challenges is like you have all these tools now, just which ones for me.
Um by the way, the Chrome extension, I use it all the time.
That's amazing.
I want to drill a little bit further into the growth org.
There's this whole meme on Twitter the other day of just like you have one growth market or driving all growth at Anthropic, and it's like, okay, that's crazy.
What's like how many growth people are there?
What's kind of the rough org structure of the growth team?
We're roughly maybe 40 people now.
And so we are I think it's structured very much like a traditional growth team in that we have sort of horizontals of of growth platform and monetization who think about the the sphere of growth across the the entirety of our products.
And then we we have more sort of audience focused growth pods.
You can think about like B2P gross, you can think about cloud code gross, knowledge worker growth, API growth.
So so really like these audiences to to keep a narrow focus, which is the thing you have to do when you have so many different products.
And then these these horizontals that that sort of think about things um across across the board.
And is it a cross uh a team of engineers, designers, PMs?
What's kind of like the functions within this growth org?
Yeah, it's it's engineers, designers, PMs data.
Um I think that overall the shape of the org is quite similar to I'd say a traditional um growth team.
Probably the things that are uh maybe different is that we I think that we index a lot more towards larger swings as opposed to smaller optimizations.
Like if I think about a traditional growth team, I would have probably done maybe 60, 70% of my time on small to medium bets, 20 to 30 um percent on larger swings.
And I think that for us, we we we've we've we flip it a lot.
Like we we do much more the other way where it's sort of 70-30 or more like 50-50 um rather than than indexing towards smaller bets.
That's probably like one of the biggest changes.
I I think just to highlight that, what's interesting there is at the scale you guys are at, uh like a 1% win is massive in the scheme of things.
So it's interesting that even at the scale you're at, you're not focusing on these micro optimizations.
It is easy, like you could easily focus on these small optimizations and then you tally them up at the end of the quarter, and you're like, look, how much in that be made?
And like you could do that.
Another billion, no big deal.
Yeah, but but the the thing is like we're we're we're we've been tracking it 10x year on year, and we we we, you know, that's like the the thing that we we sort of keep in mind.
And I think it like ultimately comes down to our fixed fixation of this company about the exponential.
I think if you look at anyone who's talking about talking from anthropic about basically anything, we always talk about the exponential, like it's is uh effectively as model capabilities continue to grow on an exponential um and and the the tools around them enable a better job of diffusing that into uh useful use cases, you you basically just keep unlocking new markets that where the value of those markets significantly dwarfs what the value of the previous markets were.
And like agentic coding is a great example.
Like it didn't exist, you know, a year, a year and a half ago, and then now just the value of agentic coding is is bigger than the like previous market of AI coding use.
And and so I think that is like the core thing here, where just the the future product value is an order of magnitude higher than it is today.
And I think about I don't know, like in a normal business, like a number of companies that have maybe mentioned, or like if you think about like a trading app or like a grocery delivery product, like they're all many of these like the leading companies, they're great businesses, but if I think about what is the product value that the a company, like a standard, like call it a grocery delivery app, like what is the product value you get as an end user today versus two years from now?
I I look at it as like again, two years from now, even if you're you're shipping all these new products, as an end user, you the value you get from that product maybe goes up like 30 to 50% if the company's done a really good job of of shipping new features.
It's not exponential though.
And and so if I think about okay, you're here today, in two years, you're gonna have 30 to 50% more product value.
Then as a growth team, the like relative differential of the product value two years from now relative to today, I can actually capture like a decent percentage of that with the small to medium optimizations that typically have higher conviction as opposed to like larger bets.
But for anthropic, it it's not really that way where where the because of the exponential and and our products being like very, very, very coming from AI, the um the product value that we will deliver in two years' time is probably like a thousand X, 100 to 1,000 X, what it is today.
And so if I think about that, and it's like there's so much value on offer, you need to shift more towards okay, we need to take larger bets, and we need to not not sort of miss the the forest for the trees.
And and so that's why we we do we still do all the smaller optimizations.
It really matters, and like no one else is gonna do some of these things.
And so we we need to do it.
The compounding value is not immaterial, but we we do take on much larger core product y type of swings as well.
So you mentioned it, the Chrome extension, like that is now the thing that underpins a number of use cases on co-work and and uh and cord code as well.
And that's something that the growth team built.
That's like a very like AI pilled product that is like a very research heavy product, but we we were just bullish on it.
We had an engineer who was very bullish on it, and we were just like, hey, no one else is doing it, we're we're gonna do it.
And and so that's the sort of thing that I wouldn't have done at another company.
Oh wow, that's I did not know that.
So the takeaway, one takeaway here is like, you know, there's like stuff to extract from your advice that is like only true and anthropic, and then there's what can other companies learn from this experience that you've had.
So one is is your sense that if you're working in AI, shift more of the pie chart towards bigger bets, because in the future the opportunity is so large, you want to get find those as soon as possible versus microoptimize.
To be more specific there, it's I would say that it's if the primary value that your product delivers is underpinned by AI as a central element of it, then I think you should operate this way.
So I don't know, companies like Lovable, Cursor, you know, all these like great businesses that are like it's as the exponential rises, their their value props are also gonna continue to rise significantly.
Like if you're building a product where it's like it's an AI first product, then I would definitely operate in this way.
I think if you're building a product where you're it's not necessarily an AI first product, and you have some AI features that are on the side, but it's not the core of your value.
I don't know that I would operate this way.
It would need to do it look, it would depend on how is the rest of the product all staffed and how is the growth all staffed in relation to that.
Okay, awesome.
And then in terms of the way you're structured, I thought that was really interesting.
It's like a combination of different sorts of things.
So there's like uh the API growth, there's cloud code growth, but then there's also like personas, like a vertical of like knowledge workers and B2B.
Is that intentional?
Like some specific bets and one just kind of like broad market opportunity.
When you have like one product, it's easier to have a growth team that's more like purely on the funnel, right?
It's like you have the conversion, you have activation, you have monetization.
But as you start to get into having multiple products, I think that's harder because if you do that, then you know, if you just have a like one activation team, for example, but then you have cord code, you have cowork, you have all the other things, they're very different audiences and and and they're very different sets of cross-functional stakeholders internally.
So we're kind of looking at what what is the thing, and all org structures are like not perfect and they're like right for a point in time, but we're looking for what is the structure that allows us to have as much focus.
Like focus is a really big thing, and um on audience and and uh and and problems and and uh and also the tie-ins to cross-functional partners is really, really important.
Like uh the the folks on our Claude Code growth team, like they work extremely closely with Kat and Boris and the others uh on on that team.
And so that that tie-in is is is really important as well.
So you've done growth at a lot of different companies, a lot of basically let's call it traditional growth before anthropic.
How else is growth as a function and as a skill set changing with the rise of AI, AI products, AI startups?
I think if your your your core product value is very backed by AI, then it is it is shifting where you're you're skewing more towards larger bets as opposed to smaller, medium experiments.
I think in um other things, it maybe maybe a big big thing related to this that I think will accelerate this, which I am really interested to see how it will play out, is we are starting to look at how do we automate growth, which I think is like a really interesting area.
So our growth platform team, um, we have a we're very lucky.
We have like Alexei Komissaruku teaches growth engineering at Reforge, and he's just like the guy on the team.
And and so he is driving this effort.
Um that it's it's the name is a it's a little cringy.
I didn't come up with it.
And it's like it's called cash, which is Claude Accelerates Sustainable Hypergrowth.
I I did not come up with that.
Um but but but really it's an it's an effort to to to look at how can we use Claude to automate growth experimentation?
And it is still very, very small, it's still very, very early.
Uh we we we kicked it off only, I think a couple of months ago.
I think before Opus 4.5, it wasn't really possible.
We were just like not seeing the results.
And more recently with Opus 4.6, we're we're like, okay, this is like headed in the right direction.
And so this, I think, is it will happen more and more across the the industry where basically, if you think about okay, I think this can happen all across product, but grow growth teams in particular, because there's this whole body of work that is very small optimizations, I think are just more inherently uh suited to to like tackle this earlier.
Uh if I think if you think about like the life cycle of shipping, there's this sort of four parts to it.
One is there's um identifying opportunities, like how good is Claude at actually identifying opportunities based on different trends, based on um previous trends that Claude has seen in the past.
Second is then building the actual feature and and getting it ready to ship.
Um, third is is testing and ensuring that it meets your your your quality bar and your brand bar, and then fourth is then once you've actually shipped the thing, analyzing the data, get gathering the learnings.
If you think about that as like a the the loop of okay, the these are four things that you can eval and hill climb on each of these areas and understand how good is a model doing for you there.
And we we we we basically think about it in that like the four four four ways, and um, and and we are scoring how good is Claude doing in each of those areas, and so we've been testing this with pretty small scale right now.
It's there'll been a lot of copy changes and some like very minor UI tweaks.
It's it's it's it's delivering results, right?
Like, and it's like you can push it, press play with it, and it's like it ultimately prints money.
Where I'd say that the win rate is like I would expect a senior PM to do better.
Like I would say, like if this is like a junior PM, like two, three years in, I would say this is like the win rate that I would expect from from like a junior PM, um, but it's not quite at the senior PM level.
Although I think like you look at the exponential, this wasn't available at all a couple of months ago.
So it's it's it's getting better rapidly.
And um I I think that the the it's gonna change where you'll you'll be able to do this for larger and larger types of experiments.
Um, but but then you know, when you think about the largest types of experiments, I think the the the I I mentioned that the the four pieces around sort of identifying opportunities, building, testing, and shipping.
The one I didn't mention there, Lenny, is cross-functional stakeholder management.
There's still a need for human brains.
Yes.
There it is.
And and like I think that that that one is is going to mean that like in my eyes, the work of PMs is like not going away, actually, in any time soon.
And um that that piece, especially for larger projects, usually you don't need to do as much of it for smaller stuff, right?
You can you can you can skip it, but for larger stuff, uh that that piece is is not not going away.
Until the the other stakeholders are their own little agents running around.
I think that's right.
I think that would be the wait remember changes.
It's funny, we had a uh we had like a difficult meeting a couple of weeks ago, and me and my uh our head of design, Joel, we were debriefing afterwards, and he things need just like a we will have AGI and it will still be impossible to get six people in a room to get to a line.
And uh I'm like, yeah, I think that's I can see that.
That's uh like what's the harder alignment problem.
Oh okay.
This is so interesting, and this is exactly where I feel like things are going.
So just to be clear, what you shared here, there's basically this tool that comes up with experiments to run to help grow Claude and all the tools.
So it comes up with idea, somebody looks at him, proves cool.
Let's do these things, builds it, ships it, tests the results, see how it's doing, and then comes back like here's things that are working.
Is that roughly right?
It's roughly right.
And like we right now we have human in the loop approving, but like the amount of time I kind of think about scale in this way of just like week on week, are things getting better in each of the areas?
Are people spending less time on each of the areas?
Are you are the results getting better in each of the areas?
And as long as like week on week that's getting better, then you're like, okay, this whole initiative is like scaling.
Um, and and so that that's roughly right.
But you can think about it as I I think a lot of this can be automated where human review is not needed.
So we care a lot about brand, right?
So that is something that we we do look at right now.
Like we don't want to be shipping something that goes against the brand.
Um, but then you know, you can have a skill that a skill that that is contains your your your brand guidelines and and very clear yet do's and don'ts on on brand.
And and and so all of these types of like accompaniments, I think are going to get better.
The model's gonna get better at understanding how to use them.
And so over time, I I think that the need to like human review this really really decreases significantly.
Yeah, and you could always unship it if it's like, okay, that was actually not a great idea.
And that's such a good point that we like we think we need people to do these things forever.
And it turns out, okay, a skill could do this really well.
Here's our brand guidelines, here's our vision, here's our mission, here's our goals, here's what matters to us.
Okay, let's not ship that thing.
So the reason I think this is so interesting, this is like I've just been watching the expansion of AI doing more of the product development process, and in this case the growth process of just okay, it went from helping you write code to like writing all your code to reviewing your code.
Now it it feels like what are the other ends of this, the two ends around this?
It's kind of going from the middle out.
The top of that is coming up with what to do.
And then there's like the alignment stuff, still very hard.
And then on the other end, it's uh reviewing the code and then shipping it, uh, and then get distribution is that's like a whole other thing I want to talk to you about.
So, what I'm hearing here, and this is exactly what I thought was gonna start happening, is AI is now getting really good at telling us what to do, not just taking our orders and building it.
And it feels like the growth version of this is where it starts because it's so much simpler, just like not that growth is easy, but just like it's data-driven.
There's this loop that you talk about.
So I think this is such an interesting sign of things to come across just generally product.
Yeah, just putting that out there.
Okay.
So something that I'm constantly thinking about along these lines is just the future of product PM engineering, how those roles shift over time based on the stuff we're talking about.
How are you working together as a as a triad?
And where do you see these roles going?
What's most gonna change?
Do you think across these three roles?
This is like something that we talk about and think about frequently, and the the picture changes rapidly.
So sometimes when when things break, you know, execution like the bottlenecks break.
Historically in the past, it's like okay, now you need to hire more engineers, you need to hire more designers, etc.
And it's more just like a a life cycle thing of like where is the life cycle of your team and that specific pod to identify where the bottleneck is.
But now when when when things break, you need to still look at it of like, okay, is it like that to a ratio, or is there also underlying technological shifts that are that are also causing this to break?
And so that's like a an interesting thing.
I think that smaller companies, like if I'm at like a 15 or 20 person company, I'm like the only PM there working with some designers and engineers.
I I I think um I think in the smaller companies, you'll see probably like the biggest blend where like the PM will be doing all sorts of there'll be you know designing, shipping, etc.
And I think you just have extreme bifurcation, you know, at larger organizations, more scaled organizations.
I think the jury is still very much out like you you speak to people even internally here and different people in different teams will have different views of like okay how much are these roles coming together versus how much are these roles going going to be separate I I think that um it's not to say like I think even the PMs like a number of PMs are shipping and and and like themselves shipping and and and pushing PRs etc but I I if I if I look at okay across what I'm seeing I think that it's it's clear that while PMs and designers are getting more leverage from AI engineering is getting the most leverage right now.
And I look at tools like Claude Code and like they the the amount of leverage engineers are getting from them is higher than I think the amount of engineer the leverage that designers and PMs are getting from them today.
Now that this like rapidly also changing but that that to me is like my view today.
And so um if you think about okay a default team which is say five engineers one designer one PM with cord code that that that five engineers is like two to three X, right?
And and the PMs and designers have also increased, but that that now they're managing what is effectively a much larger group of of and and engineers.
And so even though like the head count and the org structure hasn't changed, you're now you're now just dealing with a situation of maybe 15 to 20 engineers in the old world, one and a half to two PMs and like maybe one and a half to two designers.
And so we're seeing that that's putting like a lot of strain on on PM and and design and it's it's not everywhere.
Like I look at teams like Claude Code and I think that org because that product is so technical like it's probably like just the the right thing where you the the PMs are like all basically engineers themselves anyway.
But but you know we had a product like a PM lead on site the other week and we were all just like talking about this where across the board we're feeling this where PM and design is just squeezed.
It's just absolutely squeezed and we're like is it is the right thing here we just need to actually hire like a ton more more PMs and and that that could it could actually be where we we we we land you know on growth how I think about it is like one we are hiring a number of growth PMs uh we we desperately need people who are very very good and uh we are we are hiring so if you if you are excited by what we're doing and and you uh know growth please please feel free to apply uh would love to love to chat and um let's craft uh maybe craft an amazing cold email to you yeah, yeah, yeah feel feel free to clap crap craft that email um so so that's one is I think we are going to be hiring in a number of PMs.
But then the second thing that we do is we we we very much hire product-minded engineers.
I think this has always been the best thing to do in growth.
Like you always want to have the the engineers coming up with ideas, et cetera.
And so we uh especially especially people who who can really like step in as mini PMs if if people are if the PM is is absent.
And so we're like basically more formally leveraging that right now because we are so stretched.
So the the frame that we have is that if a project is less than is two weeks of engineering time or less, then the the uh engineer is on the hook to effectively be the PM for that.
And so that means things like talking to security, talking to legal, talking to cross-functional stakeholders, and the engineer is very much driving that.
The PM will get looped in and and they'll advise if needed.
And if something is like like wildly going off track, then they'll step in, but they're much more in an advisory capacity versus execution.
If a project is more than two engineering weeks, then the default is that the PM should continue to be on the hook for for making that go well.
Um they'll still delegate more to Eng, but they're like squarely accountable.
It's not like fully clean cut, it's like use your head.
Like if this is a uh one week thing but it's extremely controversial, like the PM should probably still drive it.
But that that I think is like the the approach that I expect more companies will start to do, which is just deputize the engineers to be mini PMs.
Now, not everyone can do it, right?
So the the PMs, the the engineers who are more product minded, suddenly their value goes up significantly, like an order of magnitude.
And and then I think we will probably still be hiring a lot a lot of PMs.
There is so much interesting stuff I want to follow up on here.
Okay, so one is this idea of two weeks, just briefly.
I always joke as a PM.
Uh you can go on vacation and be away for like a couple weeks from your team, and things are gonna be all right.
Like they'll, you know, there's like a momentum, there's a plan, people keep operating.
And it feels like that's kind of the this rule of thumb you use of just okay, if it's a two-week project, you'll be all right without a PM, you can handle it.
Uh I love that those two connect.
Okay, the other here is so interesting.
So you're saying here that because engineers are so accelerated, and this all makes sense, PMs and design are kind of just like holy shit, there's like hard to keep up with the space of engineering.
And what you're saying is you need more and more PMs to keep up.
That's one route, or it's engineers that can PM essentially, which is so funny.
It's just like, okay, great news for product managers, uh, until more of the PME stuff can be done by AI.
But that's a really interesting trend.
I don't know, is there anything else there?
Just like, oh wow, we actually may need more PMs.
The ratio of more PMs to your engineers might be the future.
Yeah, I think this is like it it just like really depends on the industry, the the size of company, like any company where you're building something that's like much more developer focused, like you're gonna rely on the engineers a lot more.
Earlier companies, you don't have as much of this like cross-functional coordination stakeholder alignment nonsense that you need all these PMs for.
So you you you can like get by with less.
But then as a company scales, and like you if I think about okay, now you have this ratio where maybe the the one PM became two PMs from like productivity, the the like five engineers became like 20 engineers, that one designer maybe became like three designers.
If you think about like what is the best use of time for that PM, I think this is like a really interesting thing of like how much should PMs be actually shipping things themselves versus everything else.
I think like in the in the world where you're like limited on engineering, you the PM should definitely be shipping things.
I think in in today's world, um it's a good way to like get an understanding of the tools, which is really important.
So the PM should be shipping for that reason.
But if I'm if I'm one 1 PM or 2 PMs and there's 20 engineers, I think about what is the incremental value I can add with with my time.
And is it actually shipping like the 21st PM feature?
Or is it saying, how am I getting a little bit better at guiding the team on what the right opportunities are?
And and so that's where I think like in this world, you may have all these engineers who are like mini PMs, and the better that happens, like that's like where I would love to be doing more of, but still, like the if if you then get a really good PM who can come in and can like improve that, the the like why and the what and and uh the with why and the what particularly by like five percent, that is like such a high leverage hire.
This is such an interesting insight you're making.
It's like so counter to how a lot of people are thinking PM is evolving.
Like what I'm hearing here is because PMs are so behind, because engineers are just getting so much done.
There's like many people here, okay.
You need to be prototyping, you need to be shipping PRs as a PM.
What you're saying, which I completely agree with, is your time is much better spent helping PM, basically, and helping the engineers uh become better PMs themselves.
And and the leverage there is a lot higher than you spending time coding shipping PRs in most cases.
I think that's true in certain circumstances.
I think that as a smaller company, I don't know that that's the case.
In a smaller company where it's all hands on deck, I I think you you you probably need to be shipping.
I think if you're in a company where like budgets are very tight and engineers are very tight, and you you know you you're not able to just hire because money's unlimited, then like you need to do what the what is needed to to accelerate the the like the the impact your team's gonna have, right?
So there's gonna be a number of cases where like as a PM, the right thing to do is to be like, screw it, I am shipping and like I am I am going it the whole way.
But if I'm talking here more about the like larger companies, more scaled businesses.
Uh yeah, if you have 20 P 20 engineers, is is it the highest use leverage of your time to ship an extra feature or figure out how do I uplevel everything that we're doing, get the user insights better, etc.
Yeah.
And I think there's also an element of shipping to learn, building a prototype so that you can have a better opinion.
Like a lot of people talk about just I'm just gonna try three things, see how it goes, and that'll help inform the roadmap.
This is now the PRD, is look at it instead of talking about it.
So there's a lot of value there still.
That's that's that's very true.
I think that's a great that's a great point.
So like even for me now where we've got a number of PMs we've got many engineers there are certain times and I'm like I want to articulate the idea I have in my head I it's just better for me to prototype it and show it.
Right.
So I think that that is really important.
And then you know we we are very scrappy so like we're like a big big company by by name valuation but we're like extremely scrappy and just the the focus internally just like minimize bureaucracy and just like just go.
And so probably 70 70% maybe 60 70 80% of what we what we ship does not have a PRD I'm like averse to PIDs I think I just like I just like hate documentation.
I'm just like go go go just like cut cut cut the blockers um 20 30% of stuff where it's like it's important it's really important to get right like the documentation should be really good and like that people spit should spend a lot of time on it but by and large I think PIDs are just out outdated at this point and and um you can just kick things off with a good team without without needing to do that sort of thing.
Say more about that.
What do you do to help make sure?
Because people can build so fast or spend a lot of time going in the wrong direction, ship things that are not what you're asking.
How do you kick off a project and clarify?
Here's what we're doing.
Is it just a conversation or is there anything beyond that?
It really depends on the size of it.
And this kind of goes back to like the two-week thing.
So the why we have that two week thing, it's more like a uh uh how do I have some filter to say if we're investing heavily into something, we should apply more thinking behind it.
Versus if it's a smaller set of investments, just go for it.
And as a growth team, again, you do have a decent amount of these smaller things that you do.
So for for very small changes, you know, like oh, there's a thing coming, we need to have an upsell for it.
What is it, the thing we're doing?
Like, this is just on Slack, right?
This is just purely on Slack.
It's just a messages back and forth, and we'll I think it also depends on having a good caliber of engineer in there, but engineers can can understand, like, hey, I know you said this, but like, what about that for the audience?
And so, like, we're we're lucky we have good good product-minded engineers in that sense.
But all these smaller things are very much just on on Slack, back and forth, and and and that's what you you do for the larger things.
I think I I very firmly believe in like a proper kickoff.
So we we still do just there's so much going on at this place.
No one's got time, no one knows what's going on.
And so doing a cross-functional kickoff, get legal, get safeguards, get everyone in the room and just be like, this is all plan to do.
What it what do you care about?
What do you care about?
What do you care about?
Like that that 30-minute meeting um for larger things is just I think still so important to to just streamline all the mess that may happen later if you don't do that work early on.
What's your approach to crafting that PRD in those cases?
Is it like ramble into Claude?
Is it do you have a template?
Even in those cases, there are times I don't craft a PID.
Like because we were just everything's moving so quickly, right?
So there's still some of those cases where I just set up the meeting, and then like five minutes before I'll put it into code work, like here, you know, some of my thoughts, what credit, like here are the things that I need to think about, spin up like a basic doc and and we use it to talk.
Other times I won't even have a doc.
But if if I am creating a PRD, um, I have basically skill, like a skill that that I've you they've created.
Um, and then there's projects with all the previous PRDs in there.
Uh, and then I will it's is pretty simple.
Like, I'll it has the format down.
So I'll just say, here are the things I care about, here's the why, here's the problem, and flesh out the key considerations, fresh it flesh out the cross-functional stakeholders, those types of things.
But again, my my my default is like if I can avoid the doc and if we can just just jump to action, then that's what we should do.
And increasingly just jump to prototyping the thing.
Yeah, and that's that's where I think it'll get so interesting once we can automate more of that, just like your uh assistant talking to the legal assistant, just like ironing out all these little, you know, what's important to you, what's important to the yes, and it's coming, and I think the legal team has done like good enablement around this.
Like, we work you know, there's versions of like how do you you can think about like how can you um mimic what someone might say and like set up, you know, like a co-op, right?
So there's there's things like that that I think that we have now, and then as Claude gets more and more context and gets better at passing long context, I think these are things that Claude will just get better at knowing one of the one of the things Lenny's like a slight tangent but one of the I think most effective ways I use Quad or most interesting ways I use Claude is which I see a number of people doing internally is to like help you identify misalignment um this is like a I think something that's I found really really helpful.
So with with cowork you have this the Slack MCP and you and you can you can tell clo work uh you can tell co-work to say basically look across Slack you know the projects that I'm working on these are the things that are top of mind go and find me areas of potential misalignment right now and it does a really really good job.
So this is something that I've scheduled runs every week Claude's like looking at things and coming back to me with and saying like hey I think these things you should be aware of and so you can think about in that in that shipping context it's a similar thing where Cord can basically be looking at what's what's happening across the company and say you're thinking about shipping this thing here's who you need to talk to here's what what you need to keep in mind.
That is so cool.
I am so excited to tell you about this season's supporting sponsor, Vanta.
Vanta helps over 15,000 companies like Cursor, Ramp, Duolingo, Snowflake, and Atlassian earn and prove trust with their customers.
Teams are building and shipping products faster than ever thanks to AI.
But as a result, the amount of risk being introduced into your product and your business is higher than it's ever been.
Every security leader that I talk to is feeling the increasing weight of protecting their organization, their business, and not to mention their customer data.
Because things are moving so fast, they are constantly reacting, having to guess at priorities, and having to make do with outdated solutions.
Vanta automates compliance and risk management with over 35 security and privacy frameworks, including SOC 2, ISO 27001, and HIPAA.
This helps companies get compliant fast and stay compliant.
More than ever before, Trust has the power to make or break your business.
Learn more at Vanta.com slash Lenny.
And as a listener of this podcast, you get $1000 off Vanta.
That's vanta.com slash Lenny.
I feel like there's this like, what are the jobs of a product manager and then how are they slowly gonna be uh supported slash done by AI?
So there's this misalignment, just like fine misalignment, and then maybe one day it'll be like align people initially.
You talked about this uh cash automation for growing, like how do I grow this product?
That's starting to happen.
Another that I I might use myself when I'm building stuff is just asking how do I make this product better?
How do I make this a better user experience?
And asking the AI to just give me a bunch of ideas, and they're actually really good.
Uh so it's interesting how these little pieces are starting to be put into place to do more and more of this role.
I'm curious what other automations you have and your team have that are effective.
What I love about these conversations is you're basically living in the future.
You're working in like the most bleeding-edge company with the most talented people with the most cutting edge tools.
And you can like see where things are going and start to actually live in the future, build things uh that nobody else has even thought about or can do.
I'm curious just what else is working, what else your team has done to help save you time, be more productive.
We use it pretty extensively across the board, right?
So there's a standard PM stuff like writing docs, brainstorming, looking at data.
Um for data, I personally have like a co-worker runs on a schedule and looks at sort of 20, 25 different charts every morning.
And then so when I when I come in the morning, there's just so many charts, so many products to track.
Cowork will tell me, okay, here are the things that you should pay attention to.
Here's like what is concerning, and here are just some like interesting insights.
And it sends you the update in Slack, or how does what's kind of the workflow?
I it for me, it just shows it comes up in co-web, right?
So cowork has a schedule.
In the desktop app.
You yeah, in the desktop app, you can have a scheduled task that you create.
And so I have a bunch of hex links that it will go and and look at.
Um uses the Chrome extension if for some things and it uses MCP for for other things.
And and then it'll just give me a summary, and then I I know like I still there's some few charts that I just like to look at because I just like I'm another guy, I just like charts.
They're all up and to the right too.
So that was.
Yeah, I'm just like I like to see the chat.
Uh uh, but then there's a there's like a long tail of things, and even the medium tail where it's like you don't have time to look at it every day.
That if Claude is is proactively looking at it and you start to feel good over time of okay, it's like the the false positive rate is going down, the like false negative rate is going down of the things that Claude brings to you.
Um then you you just get a little bit more of uh confidence and peace of mind there.
This touches on an idea I've always had that teams will have is uh a strategy bot, which just imagine an agent that's just constantly watching metrics, the market, the roadmap, what's working and snatch, and just like hey, I'm all here's what I think we should do now.
Here's the pivot we should take, here's where we're gonna win.
Like it feels like we're very close to that.
I think we're close.
I think we'll get there later this year, um, to like the point where that's very, very effective.
That's my my my gut.
I think that that level of like proactivity and getting looking across a bunch of context and and distilling insights, I think is it's it's it's like you know, the the the thing I mentioned earlier, Lenny about the alignment piece, like that's like a version of it, right?
Now you're just looking at across more data sources.
Um, this is something that I use.
So I talked about like this some of the standard PM stuff, you know, brainstorming data, UXR.
There's a lot of like admin stuff.
I just hate like life admin and like paperwork.
I just hate it.
And so I get Claude to book my meeting rooms.
Like I don't book meeting rooms, Claude archives sort of my my email first pass at clearing out my inbox.
I I don't do any of my reimbursements and and expenses.
Claude will go to Bennapass and like file the reimbursements, he'll go to Brex and file the expenses.
So all of that side of things, I'm just like just hand it, hand it to cowork, just get get rid of it.
And then the the stuff that's quite interesting, I think is like the the man the manager lens where where I talked about alignment is one thing.
So I look also across my direct reports, like Claude can look into what have they done this week.
You look at sort of our team goals and OKRs, look at the transcripts from our discussions and understand.
I can basically ask Claude, like what are what are the key takeaways and observations I should keep in mind, and like what feedback do you think I should give them?
Um and that's something that is like again, you can just set that up weekly.
The the quality is like hit or miss right now.
It's like it's decent on some things.
Sometimes you're like, holy shit, like I am so glad that I caught this.
And and um that's very, very helpful.
And then I do that for myself as well.
So I basically um yeah, one of my manager, Ami Vora was I think a podcast guest of yours, right?
So I say, hey, based on what you know of Ami, both publicly, she's written extensively about product and then internally, and then our discussions.
What uh what is everything based on everything that I've done or not done this week?
What feedback do you have for me as Army?
And like I get that every week, right?
So like a lot of these things can already be done today.
I think that the as um the models improve, I think it's just like the accuracy and the signal of these things is going to continue to improve rapidly.
I don't think you realize just how much awesomeness you're sharing here.
This is just like every one of these is like, what?
Okay, so okay, so this army example.
So you have one-on-ones with her.
You're you ask you is this so do you ask Claude co-work to go through all of her writing?
Basically, build like a model of her, and you ask, What should I be doing differently based on what you know about Amy?
Is that is that the problem?
Yeah, effectively, there's a number of ways you can do this.
I think with if someone has um a public profile where they've written extensively, it's it's helpful because you can Claude can just get all that information.
Otherwise, you can have a project or you can have a skill, but increasingly Claude is better at just understanding because you can tell Claude, like, look on on co-work, you can say, using the Slack MCP, look at everything that this person has said in the last you know, week, etc.
And based on that, like what are their top priorities?
What are priorities my manager has based on how they're spending their time that I don't know?
Um, and and so all of this this layer of stuff, which is like the I think about it as like soft coaching.
Um, I think that that is like unlocked in my opinion already.
I think it's just that you you're like working with a coach who's like kind of like drunk at times, not drunk, but like you know, like sometimes like says something you're like, why like why would you bring that up?
Like that's clearly wrong.
But you're the other times you're like, wow, like that has there, there's like one of um one of the the guys, Scott who leads our enterprise team.
I think he there was a few cases where it's like he found like major areas of misalignment that would have caused teams to sort of spin their wheels significantly or or um do overlapping work.
And you think about that, the impact of that, like you, your your shipping uh in this world is at bigger companies is going to be constrained at often by all the cross-functional coordination, right?
And I think we're now starting to see at this cross-functional coordination layer, some of that work, uh AI is really being able to be used to reduce that toil.
And I think that six months ago that wasn't possible.
And I'm like, shit, like six months from now, what what what is is going to be possible there?
Oh man.
And I think the fact that all this data is there, Slack, there's granola, whatever people use, like all these notes from conversations and and discussions are really key to this working.
Yes.
So for someone that wants to do something like this, what how do you set this up?
What's kind of the steps?
Yeah, you go on to co-work, download the the desktop app on co-work, uh, connect the Slack MCP.
That's where you you need to, um, depending on how big the organization is, you you you may need to get sort of team or enterprise admin permissions to to um, you know, someone with those permissions to to enable that.
But once you have the Slack MCP connected and on covert, you just ask Claude.
That's it.
Amazing.
Okay.
I'm gonna go in a kind of a different direction.
I'm gonna talk about the focus that Anthropic has had over the years.
So if you look at the numbers um that that you're all putting up, what's really uh incredible about it is the focus that you all have had, and I think this is the reason that has worked out so well.
There's a certain competitor in the market that is realizing they should have done this and are starting to shift to a similar approach.
As an external observer, it feels like Anthropic has been very good at doing very few things, but going super deep.
So B2B, for example, just going deep on B2B, and then going really deep on coding use cases, cloud code being an example.
And it's worked out really well.
Where who's been driving that focus?
Who has helped keep that focus from the beginning?
Yeah, I mean, I think it's I think it's a foundational part of the the company.
I think it's been there from the very, very early days, and it really comes from leadership, and and I think they've they've just done a phenomenal job of of distilling that.
Uh I I think that you know, uh I I saw this doc come up recently.
It's I don't know where it was shared.
It was something that Den Mann is one of our founders that you had on on the vodka, had written.
It's dated in 2021, I think a few months after they started the company, and it was like, here's why we should just focus on AI coding.
And this is like, you know, this is like five years ago.
This is long before anyone knew what the actual market opportunities were around this.
And um, I think this is just like a deep focus that we have had internally from the start on the importance of of coding and and and B2B.
Um, you know, it's a it's a I think there's like two lenses to it.
It's like the maybe a view of okay, that this is gonna be commercially beneficial to tackle, and then also the the side of it around accelerating research.
So I'd say it's a pretty mainstream view now.
I've now heard people from various labs talking about the this, the you know, the importance of of coding to accelerate research, but that has just been like a very firm view that we have been laser focused on internally of okay, if you have the best models, that's gonna accelerate your researchers and that's gonna accelerate the research loop.
And I think that's something that like Dario has has seen very clearly for a number of years.
So I would say that that that's probably one of a lot.
I think a lot comes from Dario.
I think a lot comes from from leadership and and just our DNA.
I think the second though is is probably just like necessity, where if you're if you're um, you know, it's now changed.
Like we're like a more well-known company, raise lots of money, blah, blah, blah.
But you know, historically, we were we were very much like the smallest, least well-funded player in this space.
Like in many ways, it's a complete miracle that I think we've like gotten to the stage that we have.
Like we we didn't have the free cash flow or the distribution of a meta or Google.
We didn't have the first mover advantage of an open AI.
And so, like, what do you do, right?
I think there's um I think there's like this broader principle I have just around life of of like the the freedom through constraints that when you when you have a bunch of constraints applied on you, whether that's in personal life or or or or at work, I think that that that can just help it can bring a lot of freedom because it just frees up all this excess choice.
So you're like, okay, like this is this is clearly the path.
And I think for us, it's like okay, you you're not you don't have a ton of funding, you're you're a small player, you don't have distribution, like you just have to to really pick a very narrow focus and even for a very generalizable technology to to maximize your chances of getting to escape velocity.
And um, I think that that's also just related to like how history played out, right?
So, you know, it was it was well before my time, but anthropic had a version of Claude.
We had a chat bot before ChatGPT was was launched, and we we had ultimately chosen not to launch it for safety reasons.
I think the team didn't want to kick off the effectively an AI uh a global arms race and um you know ChatGPT launched and like they got like insane traction, right?
And and that just naturally sort of pulled them towards consumer.
You know, there's another world where if anthropic had launched Claude first, like maybe you'd be the other way around, even with all that focused stuff.
So it's uh who knows?
It's it's hard, it's always hard to say looking back with some of these things.
Wow.
I didn't know that.
I think also people just don't realize how far behind Anthropic was.
Like right now, it's like, of course, they're amazing.
But like I just remember when people were talking about anthropic, we were raising money.
I was like, there's no way they're gonna compete with open AI at this point.
It's like so over just like they're so far ahead.
And it shows the power of focus and just uh I guess I don't know all the things y'all did.
Like it it is absurd how far y'all have come and how successful and how things have changed so quickly.
Yeah.
And I I would say I I very much agree I think a lot of that like we I think a lot of that comes down to our leadership team.
We have a number of people who've worked at like call it like the best companies you know in the world very senior people and almost uniformly everyone's like this is the strongest leadership team uh out of any of those companies and so I think a lot comes from them and then we're just very lucky to have incredible people I think that that helps a lot as well.
On the coding piece just to make sure that part is is is clear I I never thought about this that the reason that the bet was so deep on coding is not just that's a huge cam, but it's that this will excel this is a feedback loop that will accelerate us further and further.
So if we get the best at coding coding will help us do research it'll help us build better models and it'll accelerate faster and faster.
Yeah, that's correct.
And and this is something I checked Dario has talked about this publicly.
So I'm fine to find that like okay it makes sense.
The safety piece is really interesting.
So I want to spend a little time here.
So famously Anthropic, I think the official name of Anthropic is anthropic and AI safety research company.
As a growth person, there's this balance I imagine you strike between growing and just and not and the mission being don't grow at all costs.
Our goal is AI safety and alignment.
How do you balance those two things?
How does that impact your job?
Look, I think it's something we take very, very seriously and um it is it's the whole reason the company exists.
And and and if you think about it's all the way from it's why this they they left to start the company it's deep in our corporate structure itself.
So you know historically um everyone raising money is like go go create a Delaware C corp and and that's like your the structure you do and with a with a corporation um you have a fiduciary duty to maximize returns for shareholders maximize shareholder value.
And uh from the beginning they they went a different way where we we went to we and created a public benefit corporation PVC which allows you to legally say that maximizing shareholder value is not the the like overarching umbrella goal of this of this company and you you can optimize for for public benefit.
So really I think it it starts from there and it it ladders down from there.
For us, you know our our our purpose, our mission ultimately is to is to make sure that the transition to powerful AI goes well and is is net beneficial for for humanity.
Um you know, we I think in internally, like we we are like very excited, and I think we're honestly is a lot of we're like very, very optimistic about where this can go, but we also understand what what the risks are.
And so for us, that top line objective of this just like this needs to go well for humanity.
This just needs to go well for humanity.
That is something that we are happy to take a significant commercial kit for.
And we've done that time and time again, right?
So like we have a, you know, like it back then, okay, you had Claude, but you don't want to release it because you're like, there's the safety risk.
And so there's time and time again that I've I've seen we've been happy to take that hit, and it's it's actually worked out well for us in in other ways.
From like a growth lens, you know, I I look at it as like growth teams can often push the boundaries of what is like good user X, the UX, etc.
Because they're trying to very, very uh much like eke out metrics at times.
When I think about if a controversial test is brought to me, I I sort of look at it as like this there's two types of tests that are controversial.
One is when that test is so controversial that you you just should not run the thing because the results don't matter because you would not ship it for a combination of uh you know brand and and sort of customer friendliness and and values.
And then the second is where it's like it's controversial.
Like I don't like it.
I certainly don't love it, but it it's it's like it's not like a red line.
And so you're like, you know, if someone comes to you with conviction and is like, I have a really good hypothesis around this, and you're like, I don't love it, but like you can run the test and see what impact it has.
And if it's like if it's like a high level of like cringe or ick, then I I want to see a high level of return for for the result for that I kind of think about everything in like what is it is it in is it in one or is it in two and for every company that one and and two is is is different.
I think for us the AI safety is like very much in in in one I think that it's like yeah that's why we exist like yeah it's fine we're just not gonna not gonna do this thing.
I think then there's other things that fall into two where you're like heightened sensitivity but we can we can we can try it and see what happens.
I think zooming out though Lenny one of the biggest mistakes I feel like I see growth teams make and particularly just like hardcore growth practitioners is is just trying to squeeze every last dollar.
This is like I think this is like a general principle also in life like if you're a founder raising money and just trying to squeeze that like last dollar like you don't you don't want to do that because you want people to come back next time as well is is my view.
And I think in in growth like it's it's I think it's really important that you you usually need to be okay leaving money on the table.
And that's a core principle for us as a growth team where we are very comfortable foregoing metric impact in order to prioritize safety, in order to protect our brand, in order to hold a high quality bar and to maintain a great user experience.
And if you like look beyond the short term and like, okay, what are the numbers for this quarter?
And you zoom out and you think about what are the very best products out there, you realize this is how they all operate.
And that's actually the thing that's going to drive more growth long term as well.
And so I think that that actually ties back to safety, where as the risks get higher and the stakes get higher, I think the fact that we are taking a stance and safety is like critical to what we do is actually going to become a significant uh it's gonna be a significant um competitive advantage for us that I think is going to help us in the long run.
Yeah, what's as you as you share all this, like clearly it's working, anthropic is killing it.
Uh so I love when those examples, when someone doing something, someone approaching the problem that way, uh, if you it actually works out.
That's the same way I think about with my newsletter.
There's so much more I can do to grow it.
I just my philosophy is just like just focus on creating good content, nothing else, like all these micro optimizations are not going to matter in the end.
It'll grow through people sharing it if it's useful to them.
So uh, and a very small scale, I have a similar philosophy.
One of the things that people are probably thinking about as we talk, so you know, we joke about like AI replacing parts of jobs here and there.
Like, you know, it is it is pretty scary to a lot of people, just like, what is the future of my job?
Will I have a job?
How do I stay relevant in this future?
So for there's a couple of questions here.
One is just like for folks that want to be to thrive in this approaching AI future as a PM as a growth person.
Do you have any advice, things that they should be doing right now?
To me, a couple of things come up.
Like one thing that everyone says is like use the tools, you need to be on top of the tools.
I think you need to be using clawed code, you need to be using cowork and understanding just each model release.
What is the new things you can do with this?
How can you apply this to your job?
It'll work well in some things, it'll work terribly in other things.
And then one model launch later, it's like, oh shit, that other thing worked.
But if you didn't go back to try it, you would not have known.
And now many months have passed and you didn't know that that was possible.
And so I think that being on top of the tools is really important, both for improving your own productivity, but also for getting product sense around AI products, um, which I think is just going to become increasingly important.
I think then zooming out beyond that, I kind of look at it as like just leaning into where you have a competitive advantage and an unfair, unfair advantage.
And so to me, it's like if you know there are some people, some PMs who are really good at like craft, for example, and there's others who you throw them into a situation with all these stakeholders who have all these strong opinions, and you're like, there's no way they're gonna mediate this, and they and they come out and it's like everyone's kind of swimming in the right direction.
And and so the if you think about like what is the major skill set that you have where you spike in the that that can be tied to delivering uh driving impact for a company in a product role, I would just double down on that and like almost like forget the weaknesses, just what can you do to be become like the best person at that thing?
Um, because that's that's like very, very valuable, and I think that ties to the notion of just leaning into being interdisciplinary.
So going back to some of what we mentioned earlier on, where it's like, okay, in this world of engineers are mini PMs, that the the engineer who is like highly product-minded is a unicorn, is an absolute unicorn.
I think the same thing is true for for PMs, where it's like, okay, now you know that this in this ratio, if the designer's really stressed and you're a PM who can design, you are also a unicorn now.
Like the chances of a company letting you go has gone down dramatically because you are now just so much more useful.
And so I think that is just like really really important.
I think if I look at what's benefited me, it's probably a version of this.
Like, I think that for me it came from a founder background.
So, like the mix of the the founder background, the the like finance, I was in a Ness and banker.
So, like the finance background and numbers and then sales, like I was I almost became an account exec instead of going into product.
I was right on the edge of should I go into sales or product?
And I think like a combination of those along with with growth is probably what's led to like there are certain areas and situations where I can just have outsized impact to other people, and and so understanding what that is for you is is really important.
I look at our financial services product.
Um, you know, we've launched like Cord for Sheets, Claude for XL.
They got to like tank the market, by the way, everyone knowing course.
I know.
Um, but like the guy running that Nick Lynn, like he came from investment banking, he came from private equity, and it just has such a competitive advantage where he's building that product, and he's like, I know this, I know this.
Like he's like built for this.
And so I think just understanding what what are those interdisciplinary areas you can lean into to to make yourself more um just like higher higher higher impact is is really important.
And then the last one is just being adaptable.
Anyone who you you who who is trying to just keep applying old playbooks, I think you're you're gonna make life a lot harder for yourself.
So one of the biggest things you come into anthropic is you need to understand that probably yeah, 50, 60, 70% of how you operate in the past, just throw it out the door.
It's it's not gonna be relevant.
And if you try to stick to that, you're gonna have a lot of friction and it's not gonna be helpful.
So just being adaptable and understanding, okay, the job's changed this way, I'm gonna go that way, is I think like it's it's so important.
That is awesome advice.
It matches a lot of what Jenny shared when she came on the podcast, the design design leader on Claude and Claire work and all these things of just like like the idea of going deep, becoming the best or one of the best at a very specific thing, and that not every company will need, and you don't need all 10, but just going deep and on something, I forget what how she described it.
Or again, Dreesen said the same thing, just like I think we called it or uh a sideways E instead of just like T-shaped of one thing.
If you could have a couple things you're really really good at, uh, there's a lot of power to that.
Oh man.
Okay.
Before I get into something that I think will blow a lot of people's minds about how we actually met and kind of a big part of your journey.
Um, let me just ask you this.
Is there anything else about anthropic that might be worth sharing, might be worth talking about?
The thing that maybe comes to mind is just like our culture and and the people that that we have here.
I really think it's our secret source.
I think it's the thing that is the most defensible, the thing that no one else is going to be able to replicate.
And um, I don't think it's an accident.
Like leadership has has really invested in this a lot, and Daniel and Dario, they they really believe in this in this a lot, and I think they've just created a very special culture.
So I would say that you know this is like truly a mission-driven company.
And I was not 100% sure of that when I joined.
Like I was like, I think that this is an exciting company.
It's I I I like very much agree with their principles, but I didn't know anyone at the company.
I didn't have any references on what it was like inside.
So I was a little skeptical when I joined.
I'm like, at least they're talking about it, but like I don't know.
Are they are they are they serious about this?
And then I came in very early and I was like, oh, oh shit, okay.
Like they they are maybe they're even more serious about this internally.
They talk externally.
And so it's just like the it's it's a mission-driven company where people viscerally viscerally understand both the upsides and the downsides of the technology, and therefore understand the the the divergent ranges of how this may go for humanity and and how different of a future that could be and I think like when you understand that of how different this could be as a future for all of us and like our children and our grandchildren etc.
I think it it it leads to a lot of passion for what we do and um it just leads to a a lot of belief in in what we're what we're doing.
And so I kind of look at every other job I've had in the past and there's some degree of people at the company who are just checked out where it's like you know I'm I'm here I I'm sick of this but I I don't have a better option or I'm getting paid too much to leave etc.
That is just like not the case here.
I have not met a single person I'm I'm saying like a single person who's checked out everyone is putting everything they have on the table everyone is is pouring it out and like leaving nothing behind and and is just fully fully in it.
And so I think that leads to like this releases energy that is just like very very hard to to describe I think you have that energy, you have that mission-driven nature, and then it's it's such an open culture.
So leadership is very, very transparent with us on things.
We uh Slack is like a it's a it's a whole maze everything's so many things that play out on Slack.
We're very open.
Everyone has these notebook channels where you kind of have like your own like Twitter feed in a way where you're you're just talking about your thoughts about things.
And so you can go and like join the Slack channel, the notebook channels of people on research and all these other areas, and like you'll you can learn whatever you want, and and you can spend so much time like getting lost in that as well.
But that that openness where we even encourage like people can just argue with Dario.
There was an all hands, you know, he said something where someone didn't agree, and then and the person goes onto Dario's notebook channel and just says, like, hey, I didn't appreciate how you said this and this and that, and then it sparked a whole big debate.
Um, but like that sort of thing where like it's encouraged, like go to leadership and disagree with them, challenge them publicly, and like that I think that just leads to a level of trust, and all of that together.
I think it just means that we have this very, very deep sense of togetherness that um man, I have just like never I've never experienced anything like it.
And and then you get to the talent, right?
That I think that that is the thing where the talent density is like I feel like I'm playing for like Real Madrid at times.
I look around and I'm like, man, I'm playing for Madrid, where it's like you just like have the best people in the world.
I think it's most I think it's most the case on research.
We have like the very, very best researchers in the world, but even you look on on like product, we have Ami Vora, like she is phenomenal.
We have Mike Krieger, you're like, okay, casually started Instagram, he's here.
Um, you know, on growth, we have John Egan, who is my engineering counterpart, he's like the OG in growth engineering.
He's he's he's he's great.
We have Alexei, so like guy who teaches growth engineering at Reforge, he's just like another dude on the team.
Um, and all of that I think is just very special.
I think my my favorite here is like in the Lenny a couple of months ago, we had our on-site, company-wide on-site, and in October, and I'm walking around, I see this guy, he's just walking around eating popcorn by himself.
I go up to him and I'm like, You're Jeff, right?
And he's like, I am.
And I'm like, you are literally the US ambassador to my country, Australia.
And you're just an employee here.
I'm like, this is insane.
I'm like talking to our prime ministers of our country and all these things.
And it's just the the talent combined with that culture, I think is just this secret source that uh is is the reason that I think we are as successful as we are.
This notebook channel is so interesting, just like as a tactical thing.
So the idea there is Dario just shares, it's like a little Twitter, like internal Twitter feed where folks just share what they're thinking about and what their what their priorities are and things like that.
Yeah, that's basically it where it's a it's an internal feed where every it's not just Dario, everyone has one.
And you basically you share your internal thoughts.
It's a way to like keep people updated on things on what's working, it's a way where people share provocative things.
I think from like a leadership level, and we also think about that as it's a way to scale your beliefs and views across an org as it grows quickly, right?
So, like if you're now adding a lot of people in the organization, you need to think about okay, what are the like behaviors that we want to model?
What are the principles that are top of mind to us?
And if you think about like, yeah, you can have a bunch of these meetings where you talk about it, you can you can model that behavior, but if you have a channel which is like, here's my top of mind, and you you say these things, right?
Like if I have a post, which I did the other week of like, this is the importance of being comfortable leaving money on the table.
Now all the new engineers on growth who've joined have seen that and they're like, oh, okay, well, this is like different to to what we had, we've we we've known before, right?
So I think it's like good for the openness, but it's also good as a leader of how you can scale your views as an organization to like get people more up to speed on the way that things are done.
Um, which is I think really important to like avoid that drift, which we have so many new people signing up, that drift can lead to a lot of drift in strategy and and sort of perception.
So it just helps run it, run a title ship in that way.
And more importantly, it's data for the agents everyone's got running to help them work with all these humans.
Yes, that is that is very, very correct.
Like it is, it is something that goes to Claude.
You know, that there are certain documents in onboarding where it's like the HR team has written before editing anything on this document, please check with this person because this is a document that Claude references as like a key thing, right?
And so more and more these types of things of okay, how does the growth team think about this?
How does safeguards think about this?
You're armying Claude with that context to get better and better at at um at and helping in the future.
That's interesting.
It feels like that's something that every company's gonna have to start doing is just sharing their thoughts in a structured way so that all these agents that we've all got running uh have what they need to know.
Uh another interesting side note here is just Slack.
Okay, so like there's all this talk of SaaS tools being replaced by AI, and you guys use Slack.
I think there's this famous tweet of you guys still use workday and all these tools, all these SaaS tools, everyone's like, why like they're all gonna be vibe coded out of existence.
The fact that you all at the cutting edge of what could be built with code, uh, still use Slack and all these other tools.
Uh to me, that's a good sign that maybe SaaS companies will be all right in the future.
I don't know if you have anything there to share.
Yeah, it's a really I think it's a really complicated picture, right?
Like there's a number of things that we just build internally ourselves.
Um, as time goes on, then you know, you're your the ability for Claude to do that better increases.
And at the same time, like we use Figma a ton, we use Slack a ton, we use Workday.
Uh we use a lot of these products, and I don't see that changing in the immediate future.
And um, and so yeah, I I think like this there's probably some truth to some of this.
I think the other parts are like it's overblown, and uh many of these products are like the customers of ours.
We we value that them a lot as customers, and we use their products very, very heavily.
And uh I don't see that changing in the and you have better things to do.
Like, I don't who's gonna spend time building a Slack at that throughout, like that is not where value is gonna accrue.
And I think it also helps you see how much how sophisticated these things are.
They're not just like, you know, like there's been teams thinking about these problems for a long time.
Anyway, that's a whole other tangent.
Just coming back to the values thing, I just want to highlight something here that's really important.
A lot of people criticize anthropic for talking about the dangers to humanity, throwing in all these numbers about jobs going away, just like creating all this uh fear.
But like, and people think it's oh, we're trying to raise money, or we gotta get people's attention, or we just yeah, we're just trying to like create headlines.
But everything I've ever seen internally is always just this is what we believe in.
We want people to know what it might be coming, even if it isn't bad, we want people to understand here's what might happen, and we are trying to avoid it.
And you might say, why doesn't why is anthropic even building AI that's if it's so dangerous?
And you know, the understanding Ben shared is just like we think it's better that we go at this and try to build it the right way versus just stay out of the and just hope that nothing bad happens.
Yeah, I think I think three three things that come to mind there.
First is I go back to something I said earlier, which is that we we very much think about things from an exponential lens.
And if you are thinking about things from a linear lens, you'll see the world very, very differently, right?
Because you look at where we are today and you're like, okay, but like how much better can it be in two, three years?
I think if you're looking at it from an exponential lens and you understand how exponentials work, then you just realize that like a lot of this stuff is actually gonna be happening sooner that then people think if you're looking at it from a linear lens.
And um, and then if you understand that the like the that there could be upsides and downsides and the range of outcomes here, you you need to like I think we we're very much like need to be talking about the downsides so we can avoid them and push towards the upsides.
I think most people at the company are optimists.
We're we're we're very optimistic about the future.
I think it's just we understand the risk is like it is not a guaranteed that we we we end up in a good place, and not enough people are talking about the risks, I think, in productive ways, um, and and who have the no the know-how of the risks.
So I think there's people who may talk about the risks but are not in the game, and so they don't actually know fully, like they're they're not like surgical on what the specific risks are, but we're in the game, we understand what's happening, and so that's one piece.
I think the second is like I think we actually believe in this stuff more strongly than we say externally.
So, like it is just such a key part of how we think internally that sometimes like we we just like re- you know like reword your statements because it's like people might just think we're being like too over the top, but internally that's how we think.
And and what we're we're putting out is a is a softer version of that at times.
Um, and then I I think the the third piece is that is is going to what Ben said, where we we think a lot about driving the race to the top.
And so it's like if you're not in the game and you're shouting from the sidelines, no one cares.
It's just the reality of of how the world works.
Like no one, no one really cares.
If you're in the game and you're a leading player and what you're doing is working, you can influence people in who are also in the game to to take the right actions.
And so that is like the core of it.
Like, if we just pack up into a home, you have no influence on this thing.
And if you stay in the game and you're like commercially, you're you're doing great.
And then you have ways to influence the that, okay, these are the principles and put that into the conversation and make more people sort of believe in those things.
I could talk to you forever, Amal, but um, two more questions just to round out the conversation and touch on some stuff that I've hinted at a number of times.
One is I want to take us actually to failure corner, because someone listening to this may be like, all right, look at this guy.
Just worked at all these amazing companies, cold email, the CPO at Anthropic, got a job, joined this rocket ship.
It's all been up and to the right, just killing it constantly.
What's the story from your career where things didn't work out when you failed and what did you learn from that experience?
I have a couple, I think it's very much not that way.
I feel like it was a lot of squiggly lines uh to to get here.
The biggest I'd say is is just you know, founding a company, raising a bunch of money, having employees, and then having to shut it down and tell your investors that you've that you've lost the money and that you're you know you had a vision of what you're gonna do and that it's not it's not gonna happen.
And so that I think is is probably the the biggest one.
You know, we spent three years on it.
It was not like a oh, we tried something part-time.
It was like, no, we we went, we went for it.
We had spent three years, raised a couple of mil.
We had, you know, maybe seven, ten employees at our biggest, and it was something that we really believed in.
It was around mental health and how you can quantify mental health to help understand or get early predictors of things like generalized uh generalized uh anxiety, major depression.
So like it's stuff that we really really believed in, but ultimately um, you know, we were like in our early 20s, we had like no idea what we're doing at the time uh and many things are differently.
But that was just a very, very, very painful process.
Um I think the good thing was like we kept our investors in the loop the whole time.
So to any founders who are struggling out there, uh like send those monthly investor updates.
It's really easy to send those when you're when things are great.
It's really hard to send those, like when when things are bad, you just battered down.
You need to sit down and send an update to your investors about why everything you talked about last month like did not go go to plan.
But it's just the right thing to do, and it it keeps people in the loop and it avoids surprises, but it's still so tough when you're then calling up the investors to be like, hey, like we are we're shutting down or making that decision.
Everyone believed in you, and it becomes such a big part of the identity.
It's very, very tough.
So man, that was just brutal.
Like it's brutal.
And it took me, I think, like a number of years to truly get over.
Um, I think that it's it's it's a tough thing, but you get so much from that experience that it's hard to see in the moment.
And I think without doing that, I would not have gone into this.
I was not a PM before.
I didn't have any of these skills, I'd never worked on products, I didn't know how to call email really.
And so it was through that job that I learned a ton of the skills that made this career path viable for me.
And it's just really hard to see that in the moment when you're looking at a point in time.
It's much easier to like draw the line looking back.
But I think that'd be my like takeaway is just keep in mind that it's a long game.
And some of those things, like I'm so grateful for that experience now.
I'm so grateful that it failed and went that way, actually.
It's very painful because it wouldn't have led to what I'm doing now.
And so it's just a it's a it's a tough thing, but the you know, positives can come from it.
What I love about this is a lot of people have these times in their career where they're like, it's all over.
Like I'm such a I failed in such a big way and my reputation screwed, and people were counting on me, and now they see um I'm an imposter.
I never knew what I was doing after all.
Now they finally see.
And just seeing that, and this was three years.
You had I'm looking at your LinkedIn, you had seven employees, some like that.
And and then it's like master class, Mercury, Anthropic.
Um, I think it's inspiring to hear a story like that to know that you can have a big failure like that, and things can work out.
That's not the end.
Okay, so in 2023, I was uh I was gonna go on Pat leave because uh my wife's pregnant and I was just like, wait, what do I do with the newsletter?
I have I need to take some time off.
That would be really nice to take a month or two off.
And so my plan was, okay, I'm gonna do a bunch of guest posts where people line up.
I put out a call for guest posts, people apply.
Uh, I pick a few, and then I kind of slot them in ahead of time so I could take time off.
So I put out this call.
Hey, who wants to write a guest post for my newsletter?
I got 500 plus applications.
One of those applications was from you.
And the pitch was essentially how a traumatic brain injury made me a better product manager.
And I still remember reading the first draft you sent me, and I was just like, holy shit.
This story is incredible.
It's just like like you feel such feelings.
And it was just so tactically interesting and useful.
Like, oh wow, this is actually gonna make me a better product manager.
Share the story of this of the brain injury that you went through and just the journey that you went on there, because this is gonna blow people's minds.
It was the toughest time in my life.
It made shutting down a company be like, oh, that was nothing, actually.
Just funny how perspective works that way.
Uh back in uh early 2022, I had a traumatic brain injury.
So I'd done MMA for many years.
I'd done Muay Thai, which is a type of martial arts for many years, never had a problem.
And just it's just like the one of the things that happens, like the wrong session, the wrong, it's just a normal day of sparring, nothing crazy.
You get the wrong hit to the head in the wrong way.
And uh my whole life changed.
And and basically I spent nine months, I was off work for nine months.
The first couple of months were brutal.
It took me roughly half half a year until I was comfortable walking again.
It was very, very difficult.
The first two, three months beyond just showering and going to the bathroom, my wife did everything for me, like, including like texting my friends.
I would listen to music for uh maybe like 20 seconds and feel like I needed to vomit.
I couldn't look at screens at all.
And it was a very, very long recovery.
It was not clear to me that I would ever work again for a while, actually.
And it was like we we'd even discuss my wife, like what would we do in that case, et cetera.
And we had we had to think even on on those those levels.
And through a lot of pushing and and really working through myself, and and you have to just slowly increase your tolerance to things.
It's a brutal process.
Uh, but you need to slowly expose yourself to different things and just get better and better at each little thing, actively work on that, don't push it too far, otherwise you have a big setback.
But it basically got to the point then where where over over nine months and then after that returned to work and and then it slowly got better.
And the the the part, Lenny, you don't know is you know, we we in mid-2023 we posted that newsletter, and a month later I I got re-injured actually.
How are you?
And because and and w when you have a brain injury, until you're 100% healed, your your risk of another concussion or brain injury is elevated.
When you're 100% healed, your your risk falls down to that of a non-concussed population.
But until that time, and like even if you're like 95% healed, you're not 100% healed.
And it was just an innocuous sort of in in in everyday life, getting off a plane, a bag sort of hit me on the head type thing.
And um, and I was off work for two months when I like one month into joining Mercury, like one month in, I'm like, sorry guys, I need to peace out for three months.
And and that then it was a very, very long recovery from that.
And I'm actually still not 100% healed.
So I'm like, I'm like mostly good, but I have uh times when I have like dizziness and headaches and other things that I need to work around.
Overall, I feel like it's one of the best things that could have happened to me.
I and I think that keeping that mindset helps.
So there's a point when you can like take that too far when you're that view is devoid is detached from reality.
But I think it's just made me so much better and effective, more effective as a person.
A lot of the same habits, like I I don't drink alcohol, I don't drink caffeine, I have to do a bunch of these things for my physical health.
I just have to do them.
So I keep doing them.
I take breaks.
This is like a really big one.
You might think even in a place like anthropic, like how do you survive in this way?
It's like even on the craziest days, Lenny, between the start of the day and lunch, and between lunch and the end of the day, I take a short break.
Um, even on the craziest days with like model launches, etc.
I'm lucky we have like a meditation area in the office that I'll go to and uh and then the whole the whole side of things around meditation that I I talked about in in in um that that post.
I think both you and I have done a retreat at Spirit Rock and doing a you know meditation retreat changed my life, and it's something that I do uh at least once a year now.
I have one coming up uh relatively soon as well.
And and just I think all of that has helped with better managing the physical side of it, because this job is very taxing, and then emotionally having a little bit of space to what happens.
Like you you have you have sort of awareness on one side, you have the reality on the other side, and reality's crazy here, man.
Like, reality is insane.
Like, there's so much happening every day.
Uh, there's so much noise, it's it's it's mind-blowing.
And so that relationship between awareness and reality, that's where you have choice that you you sort of learn from from deep meditation on on how to shift that and apply your choice there.
I think that that is the thing that has helped me significantly with just keeping a more level head.
Um, doing a lot of staying in this game at this at the in this level of intensity is just yeah, you just keep your head, just don't lose your head in like the crazy times.
And I think all of that that I've gone through has like helped me do this um without resorting to like unhealthy coping mechanisms.
Wow.
Uh Amal, you're such an inspiration in so many ways.
Just like there's so many reasons that you would not have been successful and things have would not have worked out.
And there's so many lessons to learn from just the stories you've shared in the journey been on to help people overcome challenges they're having.
Like if you can like come back from an insane, was it like a kick to the head?
Is that what would happen?
Is that it was uh it was a kick to the head, that's correct.
Yes.
Just like feeling like you may not be able to like not want being able to listen to music uh to just like leading growth at the fastest growing company in history.
There's also just like a lesson here of constraints again.
You mentioned this idea of just like the power of constraints, like you're forced to take breaks, you're forced to go meditate, like in a way that's really helpful, and it's like a lesson for us all.
This is actually really good for us all.
Yeah, I think that freedom through constraints is is like one of the big takeaways I've had during that time.
And it because if you have these constraints, you're forced to adapt.
And it it creates you, it gives you in a business setting, you have to focus more in a personal setting.
And like if the constraint is I can't do anything and I'm injured, I don't know what's going to happen.
I don't know, I'm gonna get better.
You have two choices.
You're like, one, are you going to let that are you just going to resist and like fight with reality and and let and really suffer from that?
Or are you going to accept the situation and and like not let that affect you emotionally?
It's not to say like I did everything, man.
I was like, every single thing I could do, diet, except I was like, I'm on it.
Every action I can take, I'm on it.
But then you have a choice of are you gonna let the impact of that define your happiness or not?
And and I think that that's the thing when you when you when the impacts maybe are not coming, you have to then adapt to okay, what do I want my happiness to be?
And one of the meditation teachers said, like the true freedom in in life is learning how to be content when you don't get what you want.
And it's not to say you shouldn't do something when you don't get what you want, but I think that that that takeaway of just can you be content and like not have your happiness rely on on getting something, I think is it's a challenge.
I'm not perfect at it, but I think it's it's probably like one of the biggest takeaways from that whole thing.
Incredible.
And we'll link to the post if folks want to read this.
Before we get to our very exciting lightning round, is there anything else you wanted to share?
Or should we just jump right in?
I think we can jump into it.
Oh, we we covered a lot of ground.
Okay, here we go.
Uh I've got five questions for you.
First question what are two or three books you recommend most to other people?
It probably ties to a lot of what I just talked about.
Like I think a lot about meditation and my emotional state.
That's what I spend most of my time thinking and like reading and researching and working on outside of work.
So my recommendation is very related to that.
The first is a book called Joy of Living by a Buddhist monk.
His name is Yongi Minge Rinpoche.
Um it's just really about how you can start to think about your life experience in a different way and uh and and you and have tactics of what to do to kind of change just how you think about things.
This is one where like I've recommended it to people.
Um it's not like, yeah, it recommends a lot of people and they they've really, really enjoyed it.
I think another one is Awareness by Anthony DeMello, which is a kind of similar thing but from a different angle.
Those two I consistently recommend to people.
And then the third one is more relevant to product in many ways, is thinking in bets by Annie Duke.
I think just being able to break down a situation when someone's like, I don't know, it'll get done in time.
Okay, like can you put a number to that?
Like what percentage likelihood is it?
Those types of things I think are just so tactically helpful in in product.
Favorite recent movie or TV show?
I think movie is probably Marty Supreme.
It's one of the only ones I watched recently.
I thought it was great.
I thought it was just insane.
Absolutely insane movie.
It was ridiculous, but but I loved it.
Uh TV show.
I have not watched TV in a while.
I think it's probably the Olympics would be the one if that if that counts.
Is there a product that you love just like I don't know, one you discovered recently, or just one you have in your life that's like, oh, this is very cool.
People might want to know about it.
Yeah, so I this is a funny one.
I was in Japan last week, and uh I was on this sitting in this hotel, and I should really love the pillow that I had in this hotel.
It's very random.
I've had just had at times had like neck and upper trap pain, and and sometimes I've been frustrated with my pillow because I sometimes sleek facing up, sometimes sideways, and like the height's not quite right.
And I was just like, this pillow is just great.
And basically, this pillow is like it kind of is full of beads, and so you can like naturally shift the height of the pillow while you you're sleeping, like even like unconsciously without thinking.
And and so I like looked at the tag.
I was like, what is this?
I've ordered it to Inf by Amazon Japan, and I brought it back with me on the plane.
And so I have the name here.
It's it's called the Maru Hachi Shinsui Maruhachi Pro Pillow.
And you can only get it in Japan, but they ship to the US.
Uh no affiliation.
And I think that has changed my life in like the last week.
That is an awesome pick.
Uh, do you have a favorite life motto that you often come back to in worker in life?
Main one I'd say is just she'll be right.
This is a this is a very common Aussie saying.
It's like she will be right, she'll be right.
It's a common Aussie saying when we're faced with like a tough or difficult situation.
Um, you're kind of like dismissing the severity of it in a way by saying, like, eh, it'll be fine.
And I think that that's just like such a good metaphor.
It's such a good like tactic in in many, many cases.
And then I think the other one is just like sometimes in life you just have to go for it.
And that is something that um the guy Eros Rasmini, who is the the CMO of Discord, who is a very close advisor to me as a founder, he would push me on this, and that was something that he would often say is just like just go for it.
And I think that that's it's it's a very helpful thing.
Of you can sit there thinking, should I do this, should I not?
And sometimes in life you just have to go for it.
I love the combo of those two.
Uh just sometimes just go for it and she'll be right.
So good.
Okay, final question.
Okay, so I'm curious.
Uh used to be into martial arts.
That didn't go great.
Uh, do you have a new hobby that you uh find yourself loving?
Do you make time for hobbies?
I think I'm just like quite tight on time for hobbies.
I would say I I think it's largely just like work and have my body function and then like you know, take care of the most important relationships around me.
I think maybe the the the one hobby I'd say is just I'm really into sports and I've gotten more into sports at football in particular.
I mean watching.
Watching, certainly not playing.
I my wife's from Michigan, and and she took me to a game at the big house, and it just changed my life.
From then on, I was like, I'm a Wolverines fan and uh big Wolverines fan, big 49ers fan.
I just love football, so that's that's probably the the the one that comes to mind.
This was incredible on so many levels.
Uh I am so thankful that you made time for this, considering how much you got going on.
Where can folks find you a line, say they want to apply for a job maybe on your team?
Where can they find that?
And how can listeners be useful to you?
You can find me in my LinkedIn, it's just Amal Oversari.
Um I'm boring.
That's that's it.
Uh you can look online to apply on our jobs page as it roles across growth engineering, growth product, growth design.
We are looking for great people on the growth team.
So please come and join us.
And I think being being helpful to me is just two things trying our products, giving us feedback, giving us harsh feedback in particular on Welcome You Better, and then please send uh great people our way.
We are looking for the best of the best to join the team, and uh, we would we would love to hear from anyone you know uh of as well who could be for one of our roles.
Dream job for so many people.
Amol, thank you so much for being here.
Thanks, Lemmy.
Bye everyone.
Thank you so much for listening.
If you found this valuable, you can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review, as that really helps other listeners find the podcast.
You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at Lenny's Podcast.com.
See you in the next episode.
