194 episodes

Grit explores what it takes to create, build, and scale world-class organizations. It features weekly episodes highlighting the leaders who are pushing their companies to make a difference. This series is hosted by Joubin Mirzadegan, go to market operating partner at Kleiner Perkins, a venture capital firm investing in history-making founders.

Grit Joubin Mirzadegan

    • Business
    • 5.0 • 177 Ratings

Grit explores what it takes to create, build, and scale world-class organizations. It features weekly episodes highlighting the leaders who are pushing their companies to make a difference. This series is hosted by Joubin Mirzadegan, go to market operating partner at Kleiner Perkins, a venture capital firm investing in history-making founders.

    #193 Former CEO Nextdoor, Sarah Friar: Four Circles

    #193 Former CEO Nextdoor, Sarah Friar: Four Circles

    Guest: Sarah Friar, former CEO of Nextdoor
    Sarah Friar has worked with some of the top leaders in Silicon Valley, including Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, Walmart CEO Doug McMillon, Block CEO Jack Dorsey, and most recently Nextdoor founder Nirav Tolia, who just replaced her as CEO in May. And one of the things that sets top performers apart from the rest, she argues, is their compassion and their responsiveness. When her former EA’s husband was diagnosed with cancer, Sarah texted Benioff — who she had just left behind to work at Square — for help. Within seconds, she recalls, he arranged an appointment at UCSF. “That is an amazing moment of compassion,” she says, “where he did not need to take that time.” 
    In this episode, Sarah and Joubin discuss public markets vs. VC, George Floyd, working with the board, singular focus, Goldman Sachs, being in “flow,” the freedom of not getting the thing you want, Walmart, Steph Curry, Graham Smith, Charlie Rose and Donald Trump, ugly babies, Elon Musk, Ladies Who Lunch, CNBC, commuting from home, white noise, “frequent Friars,” @TechEmails on Twitter, and the “zone of gratefulness.”
    Chapters:

    (02:04) - Why Sarah left Nextdoor

    (08:18) - The stock market and success

    (10:21) - Going through hell

    (14:48) - Life is not an A/B test

    (16:09) - Multiple tours of duty

    (19:21) - Ikigai

    (22:02) - Perfectionism and drive

    (25:54) - Sarah’s next operating role

    (28:35) - Big transitions

    (30:35) - Personal burn rate

    (35:34) - “Are people gonna take my call?”

    (38:40) - Leaving Salesforce for Square

    (41:27) - Loyalty

    (45:33) - Leaving the right way

    (47:44) - Square and Swiss cheese companies

    (50:03) - Growth companies

    (52:38) - Apolitical workplaces

    (53:42) - Leaving Square

    (55:38) - Loneliness

    (57:18) - Daily routines

    (01:05:03) - Working on weekends

    (01:08:30) - Hyper-responsiveness

    (01:11:47) - Resumé virtues and eulogy virtues

    (01:15:33) - What “grit” means to Sarah

    Links:
    Connect with SarahTwitterLinkedInConnect with JoubinTwitterLinkedInEmail: grit@kleinerperkins.com Learn more about Kleiner PerkinsThis episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

    • 1 hr 17 min
    #192 CTO and Co-Founder Discord, Stanislav Vishnevskiy: Ship It

    #192 CTO and Co-Founder Discord, Stanislav Vishnevskiy: Ship It

    Guest: Stanislav Vishnevskiy, CTO and co-founder of Discord
    For many years, the conventional wisdom was the gaming was not social because it was something you usually did at home. “But people who play games are often the most social,” says Discord CTO Stanislav Vishnevskiy. “They’re spending 10, 20 hours with other people online, hanging out.” As a teenager, Stanislav logged more than 1,000 days playing his favorite video game and socializing with friends around the world, but with 200 million monthly active users, the social platform is appealing to a lot more than hardcore gamers. “People online who need to get together and collaborate ... [want] tp have control and create a place,” he says. “That’s not just a gaming need, right? That’s pretty much any community.”
    In this episode, Stanislav and Joubin discuss “Discord moments,” hanging out online, IRC and AIM, Fates Forever, good and bad stress, leadership coaches, Claire Hughes Johnson, socializing online, heart surgery, Slack, Jason Citron, in-browser voice chat, Reddit, authentic CX, hiring slowly, Mitch Lasky, “playing moneyball,” React, content moderation, deprecation plans, and collaborative projects.
    Chapters:

    (02:09) - Discord’s scale and importance

    (07:35) - What is Discord?

    (09:43) - Hammer and Chisel

    (13:18) - How Stanislav’s role has changed

    (15:17) - Imposter syndrome

    (17:47) - Doing stuff for the first time

    (21:22) - Final Fantasy XI and Stanislav’s parents

    (25:12) - YOLO

    (27:02) - Games as social networks

    (30:49) - The evolution of Discord

    (35:58) - Inherent virality

    (39:04) - Building the company

    (41:39) - The COVID effect

    (43:08) - Hiring for slope

    (46:43) - Pivoting back to gaming

    (51:27) - The Discord Store and Nitro

    (54:30) - Emotional stakes

    (56:09) - Midjourney and AI art

    (59:58) - Virtual worlds

    (01:01:30) - Who Discord is hiring and what “grit” means to Stanislav

    Links:
    Connect with StanislavLinkedInConnect with JoubinTwitterLinkedInEmail: grit@kleinerperkins.com Learn more about Kleiner PerkinsThis episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

    • 1 hr 3 min
    #191 CEO and Co-Founder Intercom, Eoghan McCabe: Second Beginning

    #191 CEO and Co-Founder Intercom, Eoghan McCabe: Second Beginning

    Guest: Eoghan McCabe, CEO, Chairman, and Co-Founder of Intercom
    “We are not ready for the degree to which our world is going to change,” says Intercom CEO Eoghan McCabe, “in insane and incredible ways.” When he co-founded the company in 2011, the Irish-born entrepreneur was making it easier for companies to offer human customer service to their customers. But Eoghan believes “every single type of knowledge work” will soon be done by AI, and Intercom is well on its way to that destination: 45 percent of all tickets are being answered by bots now, and he expects that number to climb to 70 percent by 2026. “The agents no longer have to do the repetitive, painful, boring work,” Eoghan says. “They can focus on the more human, creative, interesting work that requires their empathy and creativity.”
    In this episode, Eoghan and Joubin discuss fitting in, Archana Agrawal, authentic comms, taking risks, returning to the company you founded, politics at work, celebrating innovation, therapy for founders, and Ram Dass.
    Chapters:

    (01:04) - Insecurity and success

    (06:16) - What Intercom does

    (08:20) - Reinvention and “big company values”

    (15:50) - Becoming an AI company

    (16:53) - 2011 vs. 2024 in San Francisco

    (21:03) - AI for customer service — and more

    (25:07) - “The s****y gift that being attacked brings”

    (30:25) - Expectations vs. reality, part one

    (33:16) - What success means now

    (36:08) - Running away

    (39:56) - Coming back

    (41:58) - Being busy is BS

    (44:10) - Expectations vs. reality, part two

    (45:44) - Self-mastery

    (50:38) - Sanding off the rough edges

    (55:08) - Who Intercom is hiring and what “grit” means to Eoghan

    Links:
    Connect with EoghanTwitterLinkedInConnect with JoubinTwitterLinkedInEmail: grit@kleinerperkins.com Learn more about Kleiner PerkinsThis episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

    • 59 min
    #190 Co-Founder Cost Plus Drugs, Mark Cuban: Mavs to Meds

    #190 Co-Founder Cost Plus Drugs, Mark Cuban: Mavs to Meds

    Guest: Mark Cuban, co-founder of Cost Plus Drugs and costar, Shark Tank
    “I just love to compete,” says Mark Cuban. “And the day I stop is the day I’m dead.” Previously the co-founder of MicroSolutions and Broadcast.com, Cuban is probably best known to the public today for competing with the likes of Daymond John and Barbara Corcoran on the reality TV show Shark Tank. But his real focus — and his real enemy — these days is the pharmaceutical industry. His latest company, Cost Plus Drugs, aims to be far more transparent than established PBMs, or Pharmacy Benefit Managers, and Mark clearly relishes eating their margin. “Everybody talks about disrupting healthcare,” he says. “This is the easiest motherf**king industry I've ever tried to disrupt because it is so opaque, and everybody is so captured by the scale of these big companies.”
    In this episode, Mark and Joubin discuss Luka Dončić, Synthesia, the Sony hack, the American Dream, TikTok propaganda, MicroSolutions, throwing away watches, keeping kids grounded, Black Mirror, keeping up, Ali Ghodsi, the NBA, MGM, gambling in Dallas, the Adelson family, CES, transparency, and Alex Oshmyansky.
    Chapters:

    (00:55) - Game day and superstitions

    (03:08) - Email responsiveness

    (05:48) - Shark Tank

    (09:21) - Retiring young

    (10:57) - American Airlines’ lifetime pass

    (12:55) - Sports and blue-collar work

    (16:02) - Compete or die

    (17:43) - Why Mark hates meetings

    (19:57) - Immortality through AI

    (23:05) - The new AI wave

    (25:07) - Startup founders and low-hanging fruit

    (29:24) - Selling Broadcast.com to Yahoo

    (31:35) - The Dallas Mavericks

    (34:52) - Selling his majority stake

    (37:08) - The missing link in pharma

    (41:27) - Disrupting a huge industry

    (43:57) - The problem with debt

    (44:59) - What “grit” means to Mark

    Links:
    Connect with MarkTwitterLinkedInConnect with JoubinTwitterLinkedInEmail: grit@kleinerperkins.com Learn more about Kleiner PerkinsThis episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

    • 46 min
    #189 Co-Founder Watershed, Taylor Francis: Worthy Missions

    #189 Co-Founder Watershed, Taylor Francis: Worthy Missions

    Guest: Taylor Francis, co-founder of Watershed
    One day when he was 13, Taylor Francis walked out of the movie theater, and he was pissed off. He had just seen Al Gore’s documentary An Inconvenient Truth and internalized a “generational call to arms, that my parents had screwed our generation” by causing the climate crisis, he says. 14 years later, he was working at Stripe and felt another call to arms: The 2020s would be a crucial decade for slashing carbon emissions and combating global warming. So, he and his co-founders Avi Itskovich and Christian Anderson all left Stripe to start Watershed, which helps companies measure and reduce their emissions.
    In this episode, Taylor and Joubin discuss Patrick Collison, Dan Miller-Smith, hiring challenges, Jonathan Neman, “golden age syndrome,” John Doerr and Mike Moritz, the Climate Reality Project, steady partnerships, DRI cultures, shared context, social distancing, information sprawl, and the founders’ “woe is me” narrative.
    Chapters:

    (01:02) - Magnetic missions

    (06:40) - How enterprise sustainability works

    (08:40) - Watershed’s first client, Sweetgreen

    (11:04) - Reflecting on the early days

    (16:36) - Al Gore and An Inconvenient Truth

    (18:53) - Mobilizing teenagers

    (22:16) - The origins of Watershed

    (27:04) - Leaving Stripe and raising money

    (31:41) - Interchangeable co-founders

    (33:06) - The ground truth

    (35:25) - The Dunbar Number

    (38:22) - Watershed’s operating principles

    (41:56) - Intensity, priorities, and sacrifice

    (47:37) - Moving faster

    (50:26) - Sustainability is a part of business

    (52:21) - The topology of emissions

    (58:08) - Who Watershed is hiring

    Links:
    Connect with TaylorTwitterLinkedInConnect with JoubinTwitterLinkedInEmail: grit@kleinerperkins.com Learn more about Kleiner PerkinsThis episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

    • 1 hr
    #188 CEO and Co-Founder Synthesia, Victor Riparbelli w/ Josh Coyne: Gorilla in the Room

    #188 CEO and Co-Founder Synthesia, Victor Riparbelli w/ Josh Coyne: Gorilla in the Room

    Guests: Victor Riparbelli, CEO and co-founder of Synthesia; and Josh Coyne, partner at Kleiner Perkins
    When Victor Riparbelli wants to learn something, he’ll start with a YouTube video or a podcast: “I maybe buy the book on Amazon as like the fifth step,” the Synthesia CEO says. His company is trying to change the text-first (or text-only) way information is conveyed at work, making AI avatar-narrated videos to replace documents like customer profiles and HR manuals. Victor says that as the technology improves over many years, it could replace text entirely. “I think for most people, if they had a choice, they would probably prefer to watch video and listen to audio.”
    In this episode, Victor, Josh, and Joubin discuss Seedcamp, Annie Case, Rubik’s Cubes, AI video dubbing, Instagram filters, emotive avatars, Ilya Fushman, Atlassian, Grammarly, the Gutenberg Parenthesis, European startups, email responsiveness, acqui-hires, and being “lonely at the top.”
    Chapters:
    (01:33) - Loose screws

    (02:45) - How Victor and Josh met

    (04:35) - AI hype cycles

    (06:57) - What Synthesia does

    (08:22) - Copycats and competition

    (14:34) - Winner take all

    (16:38) - Synthesia’s origin story

    (21:36) - Category creation

    (23:41) - The next era of AI video

    (28:51) - The uncanny valley

    (30:07) - Watching videos at work

    (33:17) - Scaling video and audio content

    (37:45) - Emailing with Mark Cuban

    (45:15) - Battle scars

    (48:47) - Customer obsession

    (50:54) - Pressure to succeed

    (54:41) - Deep passion

    (57:16) - Who Synthesia is hiring
    Links:
    Connect with VictorTwitterLinkedInConnect with JoshTwitterLinkedInConnect with JoubinTwitterLinkedInEmail: grit@kleinerperkins.com Learn more about Kleiner PerkinsThis episode was edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm

    • 59 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
177 Ratings

177 Ratings

SB,CA Working Bus/Econ Student ,

If you like biography of entrepreneurs you’ll like grit

One of the best podcasts in my library (top 3) he does a great job of interviewing business leaders. I like it because it’s mainly CRO and CEO. But mostly because I love biographies of entrepreneurs and hearing their stories and struggles of how the built companies. This is similar and a great insight into how top execs think and live

McGeezer3328 ,

Useful content

Interviewer has annoying habit of asking 3-4 questions in a row, which detracts from interviewees’ answers

Master A. Chu ,

Great discussions.

Only call out is that it’s very much white men skewed….

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