How Tinder Captures More Value With Tiered Pricing and Consumables — Ravi Mehta - podcast episode cover

How Tinder Captures More Value With Tiered Pricing and Consumables — Ravi Mehta

Nov 26, 20251 hr 6 minEp. 145
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Summary

Ravi Mehta, former Chief Product Officer at Tinder, delves into tiered pricing and consumables, explaining how Tinder successfully mapped user willingness to pay. He discusses the crucial role of free users in monetization and shares insights on optimizing onboarding for different product types, from Tinder's rapid flow to Sesame Care's extensive process. The episode also explores the NCTs goal-setting framework and the importance of a clear company mission for sustained product growth and market fit.

Episode description

On the podcast we talk with Ravi about subscriptions as a force multiplier for consumables, why narratives matter more than metrics in goal-setting, and why you might want to try a longer onboarding, or a shorter one.

📊 Stack the demand curve
Tinder didn’t just offer one price—it built a staircase of value. Low-tier subs, premium upgrades, and microtransactions filled in the gaps of user willingness to pay. The result? More people paid something, and some paid a lot. Don’t pick one price point. Map the whole curve.

 🎯 Create value before monetization
The fastest way to expand your TAM? Get users to the “aha” moment faster. Tinder made onboarding nearly instant to tap into a new, younger audience. In contrast, Sesame Care increased conversions with a 25-step flow by increasing user confidence. Friction isn’t the enemy—poor timing is.


💰 Free is a monetization strategy
At Tinder, 85–90% of users never paid. But their presence was the product—fueling demand and justifying spend for the other 10–15%. Don’t underestimate free users. Sometimes, they’re the reason someone else is willing to pay.

🧪 Price is product
Tinder didn’t guess what users would pay. It ran hundreds of localized price tests across SKUs to learn what users valued. Pricing isn’t a spreadsheet exercise—it’s part of the product experience and should be tested like one.


📐 Narrative beats metrics
OKRs fail when they skip the why. Ravi’s NCTs framework, which stands for Narratives, Commitments, Tasks, anchors goals in story and context. If your team is hitting the numbers but drifting on focus, it’s probably time to start with the story—not the spreadsheet.


🪞 Monetization reveals product market fit
Most apps undercharge. A scanner app might seem basic, but if it powers daily workflows, it’s worth real money. Set your price high enough to test willingness, not just conversion. If no one bites, you don’t have a monetization problem—you have a product one.

About Ravi Mehta:
🔥 Former Chief Product Officer at Tinder and product leader at Meta, TripAdvisor, and Microsoft.


📈 Ravi helps companies turn behavioral insights into scalable monetization systems — from multi-tier subscriptions to habit-forming onboarding flows.


🗣 “If you have a product that’s solving an important need for someone, there’s a system around that that fits into the problem you’re solving, and you should think about the value of that system rather than just the price.”


👋 LinkedIn


Follow us on X: 


Episode Highlights:
[0:00] Subscriptions as a force multiplier for consumables

[3:03] Filling the demand curve with tiers and microtransactions

[6:47] Why free-to-play was Tinder’s breakthrough innovation

[10:26] Matching monetization to different user behaviors

[13:09] Creating value for whales without breaking the game

[17:22] Experimenting your way into the perfect pricing model

[20:03] When free, trial, or paid onboarding makes the most sense

[23:47] Why apps are undermonetized and how to fix it

[28:43] Why a longer onboarding boosted conversion 40%

[35:20] How shorter onboarding expanded Tinder’s total market

[43:03] Narratives, commitments, and tasks: a better goal framework

[01:02:49] Growth is easier when you own your audience

Transcript

Subscriptions as a force multiplier for consumables

Welcome to the Sub Club Podcast, a show dedicated to the best practices for building and growing app businesses. We sit down with the entrepreneurs, investors, and builders. behind the most successful apps in the world to learn from their successes and failures. SubClub is brought to you by RevenueCat. Thousands of the world's best apps trust RevenueCat to power in-app purchases

manage customers, and grow revenue across iOS, Android, and the web. You can learn more at revenuecat.com. Let's get into the show. Hello, I'm your host, David Bernard, and with me today, RevenueCat CEO, Jacob Eiding. Our guest today is Robbie Mehta. former chief product officer at Tinder, now working with high-growth consumer and AI startups as a hands-on product advisor. On the podcast, we talk with Ravi about subscriptions as a force multiplier for consumables.

why narratives matter more than metrics in goal setting, and why you might want to try a longer onboarding or a shorter one. Hey, Ravi, thanks so much for joining us on the podcast today. Yeah, thanks so much for having me. I'm excited to be here. And Jacob, always nice to have you as well. I'm back. I'm here. It snowed three inches today, David, on November 8th or whatever day it is. It's crazy. It's upsetting. Nice.

I'm in Texas and it almost froze last night. You're out in San Francisco, Robbie, so you don't have any... I'm actually in LA. It was like 80 degrees a few days ago. Wow. Sorry. What a country. It was 80 degrees yesterday and then it dropped. Anyhow, on to subscription apps. So I wanted to kick things off with this chart you created from your experience at Tinder.

And I've talked about this chart so much. I've called it your famous chart because I've just obsessed over this chart ever since I first saw it. And it's always hard to talk about charts on a podcast. So for the video podcast, we'll see if the production... team can actually overlay this chart. But for those listening along, you might want to just pause and go to the show notes and link to this chart.

Because I think having the visual in your head is actually going to be super helpful to kind of understand what we're talking about here. So on the x-axis. is number of paying users on the y-axis is willingness to pay. And the idea is you want to fit this demand curve. So what Tinder did so beautifully is that with the Tinder Plus product, it was a lower...

So you had a lower willingness to pay, but you had way more users who were willing to pay that amount. Then for Tinder Gold, you have a higher willingness to pay, higher price product, but then it's fewer users. who are willing to pay. And then Tinder Platinum has the highest willingness to pay, the highest price point, but the fewest number of users.

Filling the demand curve with tiers and microtransactions

Beautiful thing is this creates a nice stair step where you meet people where they are on the demand curve, you know, how much they're willing to spend. And then the thing about Tinder and what Tinder did so well is that you also layer consumables. on top of that. So the super likes and other consumables fit that demand curve even better because on top of each of these subscription tiers, you can actually spend more money.

So I've described the chart, but tell me about why you created the chart and how you thought about this at Tinder to even create the chart and the conversations that led to this even becoming Tinder's monetization philosophy that then became the chart. Yeah, definitely. So the idea behind the chart is it's very similar to a lot of the charts in like economics 101 where you have a demand curve and then you're just trying to figure out how to price things. And as price goes up, demand goes.

down so that's the theoretical model the thing that happens very concretely in practice is if you have one subscription tier at one price We know there's two buckets of users that don't get their needs met. There are users who just can't afford the price if it's $30 a month or they don't want to pay the price. There's a whole bunch of users who might have some willingness to pay that you're actually not going to capture. because they're not willing.

to go to $30, you know, maybe they'd be willing to spend $10 or $20, but you're just not going to get them as customers. And then the other thing that people don't think about enough is that yeah, you have a bunch of people who are willing to pay $30. Within those people, there's a whole bunch of people that are willing to pay $50 or

$60 to leaving money on the table on both sides of that subscription. And so what you can do is you can add additional subscription tiers, maybe a lower price subscription, or a higher price subscription. And then you can partially address

the problem, but you still have this open space. You still have, you know, in between the subscriptions, there's these cracks of people that have a higher willingness to pay or a lower willingness to pay whose needs aren't met. And that's where a la carte purchases.

come in and so in addition to having you know you can have maybe two or three subscription tiers going beyond that is going to be too complicated you can also have microtransactions so people depending on what they need can purchase as much or as little as they want and that allows you to get to a much more perfect price discriminate

And so this combination of a subscription set of tiers as well as microtransaction products turns out to be one of the most optimal ways, especially within consumer, to price your product. It works really well in dating. Tinder's really proven that.

also works incredibly well in gaming and we've seen now a lot of game companies have moved to this idea of having a subscription as well as having all of these things that you can purchase within the game do you think the the benefit of having the subscription is just like it sort of recurringly fills like half of that demand curb area, right? Because in theory, if you didn't have those sort of recurring commitments, you could fill that all.

with consumables right if that's truly where the demand curve is do you think it just like generally raises you know like the spending under the curve or what's the interplay there yeah I think it's just a good like a single subscription It's just a really good threshold monetization point where there are a whole bunch of users who are willing to pay that amount. And so by setting, you know, by framing the price there, by getting people to think about the value.

In that way, you can move a significant set of free users over to the paid side in a way that is very predictable. That's another thing from a company standpoint, subscriptions are really nice in terms of the predictability of the revenue.

the challenge with having a microtransaction only approach, which theoretically should actually be perfect price discrimination because, you know, people buy as much as they want. But in reality, like the psychology of it is, you know, if people have a need one month,

Why free-to-play was Tinder's breakthrough innovation

spend more they have less of a need they spend less and then that leads to this kind of up and down for you as a business that you need to manage through and so subscription is a nice way to kind of ratchet that up and say okay there's this kind of flat rate that we want to get people into

It's good for them because they're getting a ton of value each month. It's good for us because it makes our business more predictable. And then you can use additional tiers or additional microtransaction purchases to kind of fill in the business model from there. Does Tinder have a free tier? I haven't used it enough personally as a happily married man. And how do you think about the free tier in relation to this? Yeah, actually, that was one of Tinder's innovations.

Dating in the very early days with Match and eHarmony was paid only. In order to be a member of the site, in order to match with people, you had to be a paid member. And there were a couple of companies that innovated around free-to-play dating. The first is OkCupid, and the second is Plenty of Fish. Both of them saw really fast.

user growth, because essentially, they pull down any friction, they get a much larger number of people into the product. And that's always great when you have a product that has network effects, you want as many people using it as possible tinder came in and said okay we're going to do the same thing we have a free-to-play product about you know kind of 85 to 90 percent of users are entirely

free. So there's very little friction to get started. There's lots of people that are on Tinder that are swiping on each other that are messaging with each other. So it's a really vibrant ecosystem from that standpoint. And for a subset of those users kind of 10 to 15%.

who want to get more out of this experience, who want to be able to match with more people, who want to be able to match with less effort, they're willing to pay. And that's where the subscription tiers and the microtransactions come into place. And that's, I think, one of the most interesting questions for...

consumer app builders right now is do you want to have a free tier? Do you want to have a limited pay trial? Or do you want to not have any trial at all? Do you just want to have people come straight in and pay right away? And depending on

what your product is doing for people and the psychology associated with that and the network effects associated with that, the right answer for one company may be totally different than the right answer for another company. It doesn't work without a lot of people, right? So you don't want to like gate. It's actually interesting to me that the...

And I'm sure there's probably reasons this works, but like so many dating apps were fully paid on both sides of the network. It seems like it would really limit your network effects, right? Be able to get like... Maybe it works in big cities, but anywhere outside of that would be really tough. You'd have just tough meeting supply and demand, I would think. Totally. And there's an interesting thing there where Tinder...

needs as many people as possible. And then there's, you know, broadly, there's two categories of people. There's people that are getting a lot of swipe rights, and there's people that are not getting a lot of swipe rights. That tends to break down on gender lines. So women get a lot more people swiping on them than men. do and because you have these two different characteristics of people within the system it's important to be free so that the people who are you know

In demand, the people that others want to swipe right on are incentivized to come into the product and don't have to pay to be there. For payers, it's predominantly men on Tinder. It is predominantly men. It's a little bit more balanced on Hinge and a little bit more balanced on Bumble. But the needs of someone who's getting a lot of people swiping right on them and the needs of someone who's not getting as many people swiping right on them are very different. And the Tinder paid products.

tend to focus on people that are not getting a lot of swipes so there are things like boosts and super likes which help you get more matches whereas bumble for example has products for people that are getting a lot of inbound attention to help them kind of filter and sort. I was going to ask if Tinder ever considered like bifurcating their products or like for the which side of the supply demand curve you're on, right?

Matching monetization to different user behaviors

Yeah, I think there's an interesting and really significant opportunity there. Tinder hasn't really been able to land it yet. Bumble, I think has landed it much better. because they've been focused on the female user ever since inception as part of their brand. And I think Hinge has done a really nice job of saying, hey, we're focused on people that are here for serious relationships.

across genders and they have a more i think broad set of products it's like hiring market tools right there's like all these tools out there to help you apply to jobs and then there's on the other side there's all these sasses to help you filter out the like yep you know always money to be made on every side of the market. To Jacob's point earlier about not having the subscription, and I should have known Tinder had a free tier, but...

do those free users then spend on consumables? And is that a significant part of monetization is having those free users spend on consumables and then do you monetize them any other ways like ads? I don't know if this is on purpose or not, but interestingly, there's a little chunk. on the value demand curve here where right of the cheapest subscription there is actually no IAP or no consumables.

So I didn't do that deliberately, but it is the case that very few free users actually buy microtransactions. It tends to be that these subscriptions are kind of force multipliers for the microtransactions. Because obviously there's probably 10 times as many or nine times as many free users as there are subscription. But it'd be interesting to see if they still don't generate a meaningful amount of volume. I think part of it is a product.

value problems. So the two main micro transactions that you can buy are super likes and boosts, both of which help you get more matches. And then the main thing you get from Tinder Gold is you can see who swiped right on you. So the two products work together. You can get more people to swipe right on you and then you can see who's swiping right on you and those work together to get you more matches. And so if you don't have Tinder Gold, the value...

of those microtransaction products is a lot less. I would also imagine, too, if your entry-level subscription product price point is pretty low. There's probably not a whole lot of people to the right of that. You know what I mean? That are like, oh, it's, you know, $4.99 a month is too much. I got to pay a dollar a month or whatever. Like, there's probably not a ton of volume there. 100%. And then that...

cheaper tier is meant to be an on-ramp like find people that are willing to jump the penny gap get them into a paid product that shows them that they can get a lot more from the experience and then from there you can upgrade them to tinder gold or to the microtransaction products And do you show ads to the free users or are they otherwise monetized? They are. There are ads. It's a small part of Tinder's revenue.

the numbers in terms of like you know the value of an ad impression versus the value of someone subscribing to tinder is such a huge difference in terms of order of magnitude it's a nice way to fill in the gap but it's not like i mean

Creating value for whales without breaking the game

Business driver. It's incremental. Everybody I've talked to, ads is like less than a quarter. You know, I'm sure there are exceptions to that, but it's not a huge part of the revenue mix from everybody I've talked to. But it's meaningful. I mean, 10, 20, 15%, you know, part of your revenue mix is you should do it. but like it's not going to be the workhorse for your business in most cases. For sure. And it helps you subsidize the free users.

This happened after your time, but what are your thoughts on the super premium tier that Tinder was experimenting with? And have you heard anything about how it's performed? So I actually started work on Tinder Platinum and this came out of... sort of came out of insights from this graphic knowing that there were people on tinder gold who were purchasing a lot of microtransactions people spending 100 to 250 a month

on tinder and what we wanted to understand is why are they spending this amount what's their motivation what are the things that we could do from a product standpoint to create something that better meets their needs

And that was the genesis of Tinder Platinum. And it really came down to the core value of Tinder, which is one of the questions was, is this people signaling? Like, are they trying to signal wealth or something like that by spending a lot on Tinder? Or is it more utilitarian? Do people just want to match with more folks? And it turns out it was more utilitarian. Like people are just looking for more.

matches and so tinder platinum it gives people access to additional super likes and additional boosts so it bundles that together you know one of the interesting things about the monetization products within tinder and i think this applies elsewhere is

Tinder is a game that operates by a certain set of rules. Like if I swipe right on you, you can't necessarily see that I did that unless you have Tinder gold and then you can break the rule because you paid and you can now have access to that feature. The other rule that was sort of.

golden in Tinder is you can't message someone until you've matched. One of the products that's in Tinder Platinum is the ability to message someone before you've matched, which is incredibly valuable for folks to be able to get more matches. LinkedIn has that feature too. It's remarkably similar in certain ways. But no, I was talking about the $500 a month, one that they had been experimenting with, the Uber Platinum. I don't even know what they call it.

Yeah, I'm not even familiar with that, yeah. So definitely after my time. The number of people, but you still should keep finding area under the curve potentially. Because I was like, what would be the hyper premium version of like, it'd be a personal matchmaker or something like this, right? Like, would you go all the way that far? I think like at some point you go beyond what is.

the uh in the practical scope of like a software company right to do what you do but this is often the rails but like airbnb has done this like more as a marketing thing you know there's like crazy experiences like there's no way that makes money for them i guess

but they have, they have, I've heard Brian talk about this several times, which is like the a hundred star experience. Right. And they've, you've seen them kind of put it into their product. Um, you know, but I think like what we're talking about here is like how you go from like selling something for the one star, two star, three star. four star right like that's probably 80 percent of the value you're going to capture is is within you know it's matching to that that that sort of spectrum

I think so. And then there's always the whales who are willing to spend more, and so it's good to cater to them. Games do a really good job with that. And I think there's also the brand signaling, if you can have really premium products within your brand or within your product ecosystem. that suggests that it's a premium place to be. We're actually talking about this at App Growth Annual. And to your point, Jacob, it is kind of beyond the typical playbook of a high gross margin software play.

But for a lot of apps, there are potential to do small things that don't scale for the people who are just willing to spend more or want those kind of different experiences. At App Growth Annual, I was talking to a guy who has a meditation app and was struggling to grow and started offering classes and intensives and week-long things. And I think he followed up recently with me and said he's now almost...

doubled revenue. So the digital product is providing half the revenue now and these in-person experiences, Zoom calls and other things are providing the other half. And so when you have this base of users, and again, you know, for...

Experimenting your way into the perfect pricing model

tinder at the scale of tinder maybe it doesn't make sense but this is one-on-one matching for you want to give up 10k matchmaker maybe high gross margins right tinder scale but when you're at a smaller scale it's potentially worth considering right yeah How did y'all go about staging into this three tier model and layering those on top? And was there worry about confusion? And, you know, I know you're.

the app is really careful to not show a paywall with like all three options at the same time. But what was the thinking as you started to work toward fitting this demand curve? It was pretty organic. So like I wish I could say, you know, we had this graphic and like, you know, the company sort of laddered into this strategy very intentionally. I think it was more of an organic process of launching one subscription.

seeing how it does, figuring out what are the things that people really value in that bundle, what are the things that are less important, what's the next level that you can provide someone. And so for a very long time, it was basically just Tinder Plus.

tinder gold and then tinder platinum came after looking and saying actually there are people that are spending a lot how can we better meet their needs and actually there is one of the interesting things behind platinum was people would spend more if they could get more utility we weren't hitting the limit of what they were they wanted to spend they were hitting the limit of what tinder could do for them um and so you know coming up with a product that met their needs was important

And then for the microtransactions, it was largely about like, how can we create things that enable people to match more? effectively um boost is similar to you know the boost on linkedin where your profile gets seen more by people in the ecosystem super like is the ability to send someone a like that's differentiated and so when you send someone a super like versus a regular like they're three times more likely to match with you.

And then there were a bunch of other microtransaction products that Tinder has tried along the way, some of which have stuck, some of which haven't. So it's a really organic, very experimental process. I think one of the interesting things about Tinder, I don't know if this is still the case, but it used to be that Tinder had... more SKUs in the Apple App Store than any other app because

Tinder would test out $7.99, $8.99, $9.99 for Tinder Plus, and then other price points for Tinder Gold, and then other price points for boosts, and then bundles of boosts and super likes. And so there were literally hundreds and hundreds.

of different SKUs available because of all the testing. And then all that testing would get multiplied by different locations. And so if you're in, you know, the pricing is going to be different in the UK versus in South America versus in the US. So it's all pretty experimental.

When free, trial, or paid onboarding makes the most sense

and organic i think a really key thing that the company did well though is understanding the underlying user behavior of what are people looking for from the product and then creating products that really map to that user behavior and help people get value get more matches for less time spent.

This being kind of the plutonic ideal of monetization, I know a lot of people would love to get to this, but having advised a lot of startups since your time there, I'd imagine you've started to build some kind of... of ideas around the game theory of like what kind of products this works for and what kind of products it doesn't. Any thoughts there? One of them is like that core question of are you free to play?

Do you have a limited free trial or are you paid only? I think that's the first question to ask. Free to play works if you have really significant network effects. You know, a limited paid trial works if you can get the person into a habit loop really fast. You've got seven days to get them into that loop of using your product and you want to limit the friction.

actually for them to get in and then get that habit loop built, that works. If on the other hand, you need someone to be financially committed in order to really adopt your product, I think an interesting example here are gyms, right? never want to do a seven day free trial at a gym. Instead, you want to charge people up front. And now they have both a financial commitment and as well as a personal commitment to go and to use the gym. And so I think that's the first question.

to answer and then once you've answered that then you can figure out okay where do we start in terms of a subscription what's the right price point for the first tier and then for microtransaction products i think it's important to understand How does the value that someone get scale with their usage when they get a lot of value from their product? What are they doing more of in order to get that value? And then you can create microtransaction products.

that really meet that that need. And so, you know, the best a la carte and record transaction products do have that scaling effect of, you know, 10 is going to be 10 times better than One, 100 is going to be 10 times better than 10, as long as they're scaling linearly or about that. Then people will want to buy more of it as they're getting more value. But then you also got to figure out what those users would actually be willing to pay those.

10 times more for, and that doesn't kind of break the game. You know, if you're a scanner app and you limit it to 10 scans a month and then you pay a dollar per additional scan, I mean, that's just not going to. probably fly you know so for certain kind of utility apps and other things there's maybe not that kind of similar game theory approach where people would be willing to pay additional consumables for those kind of products and experiences, right? Yeah, I think it depends.

So one of the things I think people undervalue is just the fact that someone is using your product, the fact that they've installed the app or they've gone to your website, they're using it, they're there. means that people have a lot of stuff to do other than use your product. The fact that they're doing it means they're pretty highly motivated. And so that means that they have an interesting level of willingness to pay. And so...

I think it's better to start out with something that's a little bit higher, especially going back to that threshold thing that we were talking about before. Get people into a subscription that's $20 a month or $30 a month, whatever the framing.

is for your particular space and then you can kind of optimize from there i think a lot of companies and founders make the mistake of under monetizing their users and then they build a system where like okay you can get your first thing for a dollar and then you can get five more of them for three dollars and now you're in a system where A user has to be incredibly engaged in your app in order for you to be making it reasonable.

Why apps are undermonetized and how to fix it

ARPU on a monthly basis. So set that high waterline of 20 bucks or 30 bucks. You've got a really good place to start. If nobody's willing to do that, then you've got a product market fit problem, especially if there's already framing for that price in the market. And then that. suggest that you should be working on product market fit not monetization and if they are willing to do that then you can optimize from there

And you mentioned a lot of founders are under-monetized. Any specific examples come to mind where you think if you could go in and apply this playbook to their business, you would 2 or 3x their revenue because they're just... currently quite under monetized. Yeah, I think Granola is a good example. So I use Whisperflow and Granola every day, incessantly. Whisperflow had a limited paid trial. They got me into that habit loop. I started using it. And then once the...

Once it came time to pay, it wasn't even a thought. I was like, I'm using this every day. I need to keep using this. Versus Granola, they have some sort of free tier, which I don't fully understand what the limits are. But I've never paid for the product, even though I use it every day. You know, and as we were talking, it came to mind. Riverside is a great example of this. I think we're only paying like...

$100 or $200 a month for Riverside, but it's so incredibly valuable to what we do with the podcast. It is such a drop in the bucket compared to my time, the production team. We send mics to guests. I mean, that's $100 a pop. We're paying... them less than we spend in microphones to send to guests. So that's an example of probably being way under monetized, but it's hard to differentiate and find those features that I would be willing to pay for.

that the hobbyist podcaster wouldn't pay for and then delineating all the different ways to charge for that. I mean, that's an interesting thing with going back to the Tinder examples, just like the, because, you know, at some point.

Riverside is a counterpoint. If somebody's doing like a for fun side podcast, whatever, $100 a month is probably a big ask. What we're doing, obviously, it's not a... not even meaningful um but for tinder tinder is an app that actually you know the the success case of tinder is worth a lot of money

right like you know not directly necessary but it is it's like to find a soulmate or even just like companionship or whatever a good time like that's actually quite valuable so you can charge quite a bit to lever onto that right uh go back to david scanner app it's like well I mean, I either scan the document or I don't. There's not a huge... Your product market fit problem there is just that that's just not a compelling... There's not a value there. But founders...

I think often, especially early stage, like so undervalue their products and that's maybe their second time founder or they're doing some very specific like price arbitrage thing. Like maybe that's what Granola is doing. I don't know anything about Granola, but maybe they're just like, hey.

We've got a bunch of venture money. We're just going to like dig a giant hole and it's fine because then we're going to be on every app and we'll figure it out later. But I've seen less of that and more of the like, you know, oh, I don't think it's worth that much. Oh, I don't feel like the product is ready.

But to your point, if you don't price it in the market at a competitive rate, you're not going to know your best way to measure product market fit. You can measure it with surveys and all that other stuff, but there's nothing more revealing than if somebody's going to open their wallet.

you know, and pay you, I feel like is the best way to measure product market fit. A hundred percent. I think that that framing thing is really important. You know, the fact that you guys are sending out microphones, that's a hundred bucks a guest, right? And you're willing to do that. analog in tinder is we thought you know 100 to 200 a month that's a massive amount to be spending on tinder a month why are people spending that much and we talked to people and they said

Look, if I'm going out on a couple of dates a month, that's like 400 bucks. And so actually, you know, spending $100 on Tinder is actually a really good investment for me relative to the amount that I'm spending on this need, which is I want to date people. I want to meet people.

and so you know if you have a product that is solving an important need for someone there's a system around that that kind of fits into the problem that you're solving And so you should think about what the value is of that system rather than just like, you know, oh, 20 bucks a month is a really good place to start because that's what everyone else is charging.

Yeah. And I brought up scanner apps as this canonical example of it's free. You can do it in the notes app. And this actually goes to your point exactly that the scanner, there's scanner apps making really great money. Why are they making really good money? Because they layer on the products that are valued. to people. If you're scanning on a daily basis and that scan needs to go into a certain workflow, like a lot of the scanner apps that are succeeding.

It's because they have inbuilt storage. They have OCR when OCR, you know, they added OCR when OCR wasn't a thing. And that's what people were willing to pay for. The cloud storage, the easy sharing, the workflows, like they layer onto what would otherwise.

be this commodity transaction, the things that are actually valuable to people. And that's how they make their money and how they find that product market fit. To Jacob's point, it's like they add the value and people pay for it. Yeah, 100%. And if you're getting...

Why a longer onboarding boosted conversion 40%

200, 300 pieces of paper a month for your business and you need to be able to scan it really easily. Yeah, that fits within the broader context of your business. Adobe Acrobat Reader Edit, which is like their big scanner app on iOS, $6.3 million a month. Congratulations, Adobe. That's amazing. Yeah. It's almost $100 million run rate on a scanner. Well, I wanted to move on and talk about this company you were working with this year, Sesame Care.

who moved from a three-step checkout to a 25-step checkout and boosted conversion 40%. So I kind of stole the thunder there. Why did that happen? So Sesame is a really interesting company. It's creating an alternative to the typical health.

healthcare market within the US. So the healthcare market in the US is completely intermediated by health insurance, you know, in order to go see a doctor, you typically will give them your health insurance, and then you might have copay or not have a copay. It's a system as we can see what's happening with the government right now that is in many

ways broken. And the model with Sesame is let's actually just create a free direct marketplace between doctors and patients. Doctors can choose how much they want to charge. Patients can pay that in cash if they need to. And that makes sense for a lot of people who are both uninsured, but increasingly there's people who are underinsured where you can actually see a doctor for less than what your copay would be. One of the really key cash pay...

kind of areas within healthcare over the last two or three years has been weight loss medication. There's been, you know, with Ozempic and Wagovi and ZepBound, there are these new medications that people want access to that their doctor may or may not want to prescribe that, you know, they may or may not want to. pay cash for for the medicines themselves. And so a number of companies have launched direct to patient services around weight loss.

Sesame, we initially launched a program with Costco where you could come in, you get low price on having access to care and then seeing if weight loss medication is right. for you. We had a very typical checkout there. It was three screens, kind of get in, you check out. And then we launched a much more sophisticated version of the program as sort of like a V2 where we expanded the intake from basically just

a little bit of information to a checkout screen. Instead, we now have 20 different questions. We estimate the amount of weight that you could lose on the medication. We get your medical history. We ask why you're looking to lose weight. What are the things you've tried? really comprehensive intake. And we saw a higher conversion rate because as part of that intake, people got increasing confidence that the care that they were going to get is really good.

really comprehensive. We weren't just focusing on just being a kind of pill mill sort of approach. And so by the time that you got to the checkout screen, people were much more likely to check out. And the step to step conversion rate that we were seeing from one question to the next is north of 99.

And so it's a really good example of how sometimes the best way to optimize your intake or your onboarding is not to simplify it, but to extend it around the psychology of the user so that you're giving them the information and the motivation. that they need in order to feel really good about completing that process. But Tinder famously had a super fast less than a minute of onboarding. What's the spectrum there? How do you think about the uber simple onboarding and where that

actually works and should continue to be applied. Because I think there's a lot of apps where that probably should still be the case. And you're going to squash your conversion by introducing 25 steps between getting into the app and actually achieving some kind of goal. How do you think about that spectrum from a super frictionless onboarding as quick as possible to intentionally adding friction?

Yeah, it's a really good question. I think it comes down to what is the aha moment for your product? What's the moment where you're delivering a significant amount of value? In the case of weight loss, the value moment is when a person meets face-to-face with their doctor, and it's much better for their doctor to come in knowing all of the information that you entered about yourself and be able to use the time that you have with the doctor to...

Talk about the questions that you have to see whether or not the weight loss medication is good for you to get you the information that you need to make sure you can get it covered by insurance or whatever else it is. And so moving the information gathering out of that visit and into the intake phase, one gets people excited about the fact that this is a really comprehensive program and then makes the most use out of that aha moment where it's a patient talking.

to a doctor, and that creates the value. And so the shorter intake actually meant that the doctor was having to ask a lot of those same questions in a visit and burn up valuable time where the patient's questions weren't getting answered. But what's the aha moment for dating? The aha moment for dating is getting into a conversation with someone. And if you can shorten the time from when they go from, I'm just trying out this app to I'm actually in a conversation with a person.

that increases the aha moment. And so sometimes that's a matter of increasing friction because the friction along the way gives you the information or the motivation that you need. And sometimes it's a matter of decreasing friction because you want to get a person to a particular moment really quickly.

A framework I really like for this is Darius Contractor has a framework called the Psyc Framework, where the idea behind it is that you can psych a user up or you can psych a user down as they're going through your product. And it's important to manage that motivation in a really intentional way and keep the motivation high. Gotcha. Yeah, I pulled this up and we'll put a link to this in the show notes as well. There's a really cool chart where it kind of tracks the psych where you add...

Add five psych points, add five psych points. And then you hit an email form fill and that takes away five. psych points you have to enter your credit card that takes away 10 psych points and thinking about it in this way and kind of managing that through the onboarding and you and you'll probably you'll know the ones that are creating this negative psych because when you track in your analytics

Those are the ones people are dropping off on. Those are the ones that aren't performing as well. But you need to do some of those. But I like, you know, you build up and then you cash out and then you build up and you cash out. And I really like even the visual of it in that blog post.

Yeah, for sure. And some people don't think about this, but one of the highest negative psych moments in a typical onboarding flow is having to define your password. Because you might be using a password manager, you want it to be unique, you want it to be secure.

All of the stuff that goes into that actually decreases your motivation. And maybe you bounce and go back to scrolling on TikTok instead of completing that form. And so, so many companies, I think, that have really good onboarding flows have moved to, just give us your phone number and we'll send you a one-time password.

How shorter onboarding expanded Tinder's total market

and then you get in. And if we need to set up a password later, we can do that. Or if you want to log in with Apple or Google, you can do that. And that is like a really good example of how taking out a negative psych moment can just get a lot more people through the onboarding. And sometimes those inefficiencies lie in places that you think you have to do, but you don't necessarily have to do it. You said somewhere that by creating this really...

frictionless onboarding experience for Tinder that actually expanded the TAM for dating? What do you mean by that? How do you think about expanding TAM through more frictionless onboarding? The problem that dating had at the time that Tinder came out, and this was, I think, 2012 timeframe, was that in order to get into Match or eHarmony, you had to fill out...

20 or even 100 questions, whatever it was, you need to spend 20, 30 minutes actually creating your profile. And so only people who are really serious about I think online dating can work for me, we're actually going to end up in an online dating product. And so that meant that the total addressable market for online dating was pretty small.

Instead, Tinder massively decreased the friction to get into an online dating app through a few different things. One, by using Facebook login, so you didn't need to create an account. Two, by having you just pick pictures from Facebook that you wanted to use for your profile.

Three, by having a short kind of Twitter-like bio. And so you could go from kind of, oh, maybe I'm interested in online dating to actually swiping on people and maybe talking to someone in less time than it took to create your profile on eHarmony. Massively less time instead of 20.

minutes you could be in and swiping on people in a minute and a half two minutes and so that increased the total addressable market because all of these people who had very limited willingness to pay with their time could now actually get into a dating app for the first time and see that it could really work.

with them or work for them. And so as a result, you had a lot of younger people who had never considered online dating before come into and use the Tinder app. And that was a key moment for online dating to go from a niche market into, you know, a market that nearly every single person in America. I love the dichotomy here where we, and I didn't intentionally play it this way, but starting with increasing to 25 step checkout.

boost your conversion 40%. Everybody listening was probably like, oh yeah, you know, I really should add more onboarding. I really should do more. But then Tinder doing less is like what helped.

make it happen. And there's probably a happy middle ground for a lot of companies. No, it's an unhappy middle ground, David. You should have a long one or you should have a short one. I don't think the middle is the death zone because like, yeah, I mean, also... I don't know, buying a GLP-1, like that's a complicated, very technical, very, you know, it's risk associated and all this stuff.

I wasn't going to call Tinder a hookup app. Some people may have called it that at some point. Maybe. But like looking for hot people to go hang out with, maybe date, who knows? Like that's a very, you know, everybody knows how to do that, right? You know, there's less to explain there. You know what I mean? It's like meet this person, not meet this person.

you know attractive not attractive right like what to you like whatever like stay away from like the messy middle you know what i mean like know who you are like are you the long onboarding or are you the very very short onboarding and like go hard on either right

I'll give another really interesting example. And I think this all comes down to motivation and confidence. Like you want to keep a person highly motivated during the onboarding process and that you want them to be confident that what they're getting. is what they want at tripadvisor we had tested out a new algorithm so it used to be that you would always see hotels sorted by their traveler ranking so by their average review score

Instead, we personalized that based on your past behavior to show you hotels that you're more likely to convert on. We did some testing without doing anything other than just changing the algorithm. And we saw that people were actually converting much better with the new.

just for you algorithm. And then we rolled it out as just for you and said, okay, now your default is just for you. We've looked at your past behavior. We're showing you a set of hotels you're likely to convert on. And as soon as we branded as just for you, the conversion weight went.

went down. And the reason that the conversion rate went down when it was branded just for you versus when it was sort of a blind algorithm is that travelers don't want you making decisions for them. They looked at that and said,

TripAdvisor doesn't know what's just for me. They don't know anything. And so people converted less well, even though when we just did it for people and didn't tell them, they converted better. And so there's a combination of both actually getting to the right answer for the user, but also creating confidence around.

that right answer. And that might be a longer intake. That might be a shorter intake. If you're advising a startup and they're like, you know, should we do as long onboarding? Should we do a short? I mean, ideally you probably experiment with both, but like what would be the, the. thinking or framework to decide like, are we that short onboarding company or are we that long onboarding? I would say ask, what is the aha moment? And then what do you need to do to foster?

the confidence and the behavior to get a person to that. The GLP-1 case, as Jacob was mentioning, That's an injectable. This is the very first time in most people's lives that they're actually going to inject themselves with the medication. And so it takes a lot of information, a lot of hand-holding for a person to even consider whether or not they want to talk to a doctor about it.

versus something like dating, short profile, a couple of photos. I just want to get in there. I want to see who else is here. And I want to swipe on people, match, and have conversations. The consequence of the decision is very... different and so as a result the intake should be optimized in a different way gotcha same with travel right people travel is a very high consequence decision

People only do it once or twice a year. They spend next to their car in their house. That's the third most expensive thing they do during the course of a year. They want to make that decision with the confidence that they're making the right one, which is not an algorithm telling them this.

the right thing for them, but it's actually them coming to the decision of, oh, I looked at all of my options and now I feel like this is the right thing for me. Even if those two answers are the same, they want to go through the process of being confident about their decision.

If you could draw some lines around what your monetization is as well. And I think part of what's working for a lot of apps with these long onboardings is that you're showing the paywall in onboarding. And so you're not necessarily getting them. to that aha moment.

before they see your paywall and then especially if you're not a freemium product and have a hard paywall you got to manage that psych to getting them to the paywall before they really get to experience the product so you got to find a way to like

manufacture these aha moments, this confidence, this excitement for the product so that they get to that paywall at a state where they're willing to start that free trial to then actually get to experience the product. And so for a freemium product, maybe... Being able to get to that aha moment quicker and then have the confidence that you're going to monetize them in the long run once they've had that experience is one way to think about it. And then you can create value.

for people before they've monetized. I think calm is a really good example. As soon as you open that app, you start to hear rain sounds, right? And so their promise is we're going to make you more calm. And they do that before you've done anything. on intake in fact even their commercials do that right they have those calm commercials where they just did a timer of 15 seconds

of rain sounds. And so they're delivering that the value that the product promises from the very first touch point with the product. And if you're doing that during the onboarding, if you're creating value for people, your onboarding can be as long as you want, it can be 90 screens long, as long as you are creating

Narratives, commitments, and tasks: a better goal framework

the value promise for the user that they want to get from your app. And then at that point, they're happy to pay because they're like, it's already creating. a lot for me. If on the other hand, your onboarding is, it's like an IRS form. It's like name, rank, serial number, and you're just asking for information. It's not even really clear why you need the information. At some point, a person is going to get bored and bounce.

One of the things you talk a lot about are frameworks and mental models. Why? What's the value in frameworks and mental models and how do you even define those? Yeah, I think the value is in we're dealing with incredibly complicated problems. We're trying to build businesses. The tech industry is moving really fast. Ultimately, products live or die by user psychology.

whether it's B2C or even B2B, right? There's still a psychological element to it about whether or not a person wants to buy a particular product. And so we're making decisions in a really intense and fast moving.

environment, I think frameworks are helpful to be able to say, let me take a step back from this decision and start to think about it in a simpler way and start to pull apart some of the factors that might be conflated and come to a better understanding of actually maybe if I think about it this way.

versus that way, you can start to think about, well, what is the root cause that you're solving for? Similar to what we've been talking about, right? This idea of should you have a short onboarding or a long onboarding? is a really key fundamental question. And if you hadn't have been thinking about it in that way, you might actually end up with the middle-sized onboarding and say, okay, balance of all the factors, I'm going to do a little bit of this, a little bit of that.

and you know end up with something that's less opinionated and less incisive because you didn't pull apart the different things that were conflated and so i think the the magic of frameworks is not that they do the thinking for you, but that they help you ask the right questions to pull apart the factors that really matter. Well, request for blog posts. If you have some free time, I would love to see a Ravi Mehta onboarding framework of how to really think through these.

Things that we kind of loosely talked about, but have a more framework approach to how to think about onboarding. I think that would be really fascinating. It's a really interesting topic. I feel like, especially now with AI, onboarding is evolving very quickly. Yeah, it's interesting to see what all these different... What are you doing?

Well, you have a ton of different frameworks and mental models that you've published on your blog and talked about on podcasts, and you put out prolific in your content production. So folks, you can go to RobbieMetta.com and follow them on LinkedIn and stuff like that to hear more. So I had like a plethora of options to draw from. But the one I wanted to talk through was NTTs, narrative commitment and tasks. So why did you come up with that? And what is it?

Yeah, so it's an alternative to OKRs. And the reason that... we developed it was we originally developed it at TripAdvisor and we were trying to get really good at OKRs. We even there was a book at the time about OKRs. We did like a mini book club. We all read the book. We all started to talk about it.

And what I saw then, as well as what I've seen with other companies, is that many companies want to get better at goal setting. They have to get better at goal setting. They try to adopt OKRs, and then it doesn't...

doesn't go well as they had wanted and they spend, you know, one quarter, you try it out, you realize it didn't go well, you make some changes for the next quarter, make some changes for the next quarter. And then all of a sudden, you know, a year has passed and you haven't quite locked in your goal setting.

framework and you've burned a lot of time trying to do that. And so the question I was trying to ask is why do people have such a hard time with OKRs? And it comes down to, I think, something very simple, which is goals are a three-legged stool. You need the what?

You need the why. You need the how. And OKRs only have two of the legs. And what's interesting is, like, this idea that I got is from John Doerr's TED Talk on OKRs. He talks about goals being a three-legged stool, and then he says OKRs all for two of the legs. And the... important thing that's missing from OKRs is the third leg existed in a very clear and direct way at companies like Intel and Google because they were designed around

OKRs. And so OKRs could work in a system where you had the strategic why really well defined. But if you don't have that strategy framework to go alongside with OKRs, OKRs tend to break down because they're incomplete. behind narratives, commitments and tasks is that they are the three legs of the stool and that they are independent. And so you can work with just them without any other strategic dependencies narrative is

What is the story strategically that we're trying to solve with this set of work? Commitments are the things that you are committing to do to make progress on that story. And tasks are the things that you'll need to do in order to deliver. on your commitments. And so the narratives are the why, the commitments are the what and the tasks are the how.

And collectively, those three pieces work together to provide you with a set of goals that can stand on its own, that stand alone, that doesn't need to exist within any other system. And so as a result, I found that people that...

have adopted them, have found a really good alternative to OKRs that, you know, in some ways it's similar, but it works better for people because it's got those three parts. How do you differentiate between a commitment and a task? It's just like accountability on completion or? Yeah, it's a really good question. So one of the things with commitments is that because OKRs use the term key results, most people think about key results have to be a metric that we're moving.

commitment is just something that we say that we're going to do. It could be moving a metric, it could be completing a task, it could be launching a particular program, it could be doing some research. The commitments are the set of things that we as a team believe are necessary for us to make progress in this area. And they can be whatever you want.

If there's something that you need to do during a quarter that is not critical to making progress, is not something that you want to commit the team to, then it can be a task. But if one of the tasks is so important that you want the team to be 100% committed to achieving that by the end of the quarter, then it's... should be a commitment and it can exist in both both areas how do you uh i always find my my biggest challenge with these systems is uh

people turning them into an intellectual busy box, right? It's like, ooh, something we get to word lawyer on, right? Because, and here's my thesis. So it's like the work is hard. Arguing about these frameworks is easier. right than the work and so people go people go this is my problem and it's tractable which is why like David mentioned we tried OKRs and then we kind of nuked them and then I've just been like coming up with weird memorable things every

few quarters and i've kind of adopted this like uh security through obscurity uh in in corporate planning which is like just changing things periodically to keep people from getting too used to any one model right because i think it creates no matter what model you

use like the the org begins to kind of like like a slime mold kind of like grow around it right and kind of like like it right which is not necessarily good right so like um do you think this system like in some ways helps evade that or is it an ever-present problem at these frameworks? I think there is a problem just around process.

exactly what you're saying, which is, you know, people sort of shape themselves around the system they're working in. One thing that I have found really effective is the word commitment is kind of scary. And so people don't enjoy making commitments as much as they do making goals or making OKRs. It's like, oh, I got it. I'm committing to do

this i take my word very seriously right and so people tend to come up with fewer commitments and then are really focused on them during the quarter and actually the fact that people are talking about commitments is a great forcing function for conversation before you actually say we're finalizing our ncts for this for this quarter so i found that that really helps the narrative helps because it's like okay let's spend one or a couple sentences describing the why

The commitments help because people only want to commit to the fewest possible things. So it's usually like three to five things. And then the tasks I think about is just a scratch pad. Like it gives us a warm start on the quarter. The goal is not to come up with these lofty goals. And then all of a sudden it's day one of the quarter and nobody's talked about how you're actually going to implement any of those.

Yeah, I love getting down to this blocking and tackling level, which we don't always do on the podcast. But I mean, this is the messy work of actually building great products is that you need to think about. these kind of things you know if you just go right to tasks and you don't have any kind of narrative for why they matter like what are you even doing

But yeah, how do you fit in all the paper cuts and other things? Does that become a commitment? Like we're going to knock down the paper cuts this quarter and that's a specific commitment? Or do you see those kind of paper cut tasks as something that lives out? Outside of this framework. Yeah, I think that this goals or NCTs or OKRs or whatever you call them operate alongside with just an overall culture around product and the tenants that you have around what you're.

creating. If you have a tenant that really values design or quality, that's incredibly important and that should be factored into the OKRs or the NCTs. And it should become a commitment if you feel like you're moving away from that, right? If the product has gotten so buggy...

that actually you have a bunch of tasks on your goals for the quarter that need to get done. They're not necessarily like aligned to any strategic narrative, but they just need to get done because the product is getting kind of crappy. It's like, guess what? That is your strategic narrative. Your product quality is... going downhill, you're gonna start losing users.

make that the priority for the quarter is to get your quality back to the bar that you're setting for yourself. You know, same thing with other things that feel like maintenance. If it's gotten to the point where it's no longer maintenance, it's something that really needs to get done.

Make that part of your strategy because it's that hygiene around product that I think really undermines companies where they're so focused on what's next that they don't actually build the thing that the customer needs right now. I think a really good example of this is Spotify. I worked with Spotify product leader a number of years ago and he said, quality is our most important feature. We ship that first and then we get to everything else.

And I think that's a really good way to think about things. And that's really present in Spotify. I can't remember the last time Spotify cut out or crashed on me. It never gets in the way of listening to music. And that's very different than some of the other things that they compete against. And so if quality is absolutely essential to you, make that part of your strategic narrative. How do you advise companies to think through the narrative part? I mean, it's actually something I've...

always appreciate it about revenue cat. And, um, I know Jacob, you probably don't want to take too much. You need to advise a company to think through narrative. It's like, well, good luck. it can be so clarifying. And so at RevenueCat, our mission is to help developers make more money. And so much of what we do, we talk about the culture is to help developers make more money. And it just...

As an indie app developer working on my apps, I've just never had that kind of clarity of vision or narrative around the products I'm working on. So how do you think about helping folks do that? Yeah. So I have another framework called the product strategy stack, which I really like to use, which says that product strategy is actually five layers. It's company mission is the top. Everything flows from that. Then there's the company strategy.

and then there's the product strategy, then there's the roadmap, and then there's the goals. And so actually the goals are the output, not the input. And if you are saying our strategy is to increase revenue by 10%, next year, let's look at what our roadmap should be. I think you're in a world of hurt, because you actually have nothing that's tethering you to what you should be doing. Instead, if you're saying, you know, our mission is to help app developers make more money, then

Everything flows from that. And the goals that you get out of that process will be really aligned to the mission. And that's where you're going to get a strategic advantage. And that's where you're going to be able to create something that's really valuable. for folks jacob how did you come up with that mission did you go off on a on a mushroom retreat for three days you know i'm straight as an arrow david uh no

It was very near the beginning, almost the beginning, but not the exact beginning. But, like, it was before we hired anybody. But, you know, it kind of fell out of, you know, in that case, the software a little bit came before.

at least the phrasing but we never would have worked on that software if that mission wasn't important to us to begin with right like we would have picked a different thing to work on but then i was very specific in making sure it was pithy and rememberable you know and and you could put it on a t-shirt and then just repeating it day after day after day after day for the last uh for the last eight years um but like

I feel like software really should just be, or products or companies in general, should be the instantiation of a mission, right? Who cares if a company exists, right? That's sort of like a legal framework and sort of like a loose agreement of cooperation. you know the narrative that's why I was kind of joking is like the narrative and the mission you know come first I suppose you can retcon

a mission and a narrative onto a company and a product or a company and a product that's lost its mission maybe. But often I feel like that flows from like founders and founding team. Right. But it would be my hope that, you know, for revenue cat specifically like we've ingrained the mission so strongly like there's there could be no concept of changing the mission or changing the the narrative because like

that you wouldn't have a company be a different company right you know you'd have to like split the whole thing in two everything else though it's more fluid right strategy product roadmap like all that stuff is sort of You know, so I think I very much agree with the stack. Like it makes a lot of sense. Just like a customer of one, we like do this in so many words. We don't necessarily do it in a framework sense, but like talk a lot about.

everything else flowing from mission. But then at the bottom of these product goals, I guess it flows right into tasks and commitments, right? What are we trying to do on the product exactly, right? Yeah. And that's the NCTs and the strategy stack kind of go together to create, you know, here's how we're defining our strategy and here's how we're going to execute against it. And maybe that's a good exhortation for folks who are working on products that aren't working. Get your mission straight.

Or move on to a mission that you're passionate and excited about and start over with something that has a narrative and a mission first, not just a product. And if your customer is not mentioned in your mission, that's... a problem right i think what's really powerful about the revenue i think that's a lot of people's mission which

You know, a lot of companies operate in that way. And then it filters through the entire organization. And then all of a sudden, everyone's just like, how do we how do we just turn the screw on our customers to get more money from them? And that is like the source of disruption. Big companies get disrupted because...

you know, they start focusing on themselves, not their customers. I mean, it goes beyond company. I think if you look through like human cooperation through history, right? Like the best and greatest empires and organizations were built not under the guise of like extraction. It was all under the guise of like you know a righteous mission of some kind right of some some belief system uh and then they tend to fall

when they become bureaucratic morasses where everybody's out for themselves, right? We wouldn't know anything about that. No, you know, it's not like history is littered with examples. But yeah, I think it's exactly the same in companies. And it's a delicate balance. It's hard to maintain. It's very lucky if it survives the founders, right? I mean, you could even look at Apple now and like...

you could ask the question at least, like, did it survive the founder? In that case, I think there's probably good arguments in both directions, but it's TBD, right? And it can seem like everything's fine because the timelines are really long, right? Like if you've done well by your customer, you might have 10 years or 20 years or 30 years of product.

that you can deliver that are extractive before it catches up with you. But it's important to catch it before it becomes a vicious cycle and then it's impossible to unwind. Yeah, I should do some I'm trying to come off the top of my head of like organizations that have lasted like 100 plus years post founder post even founding family and stuff like that.

I don't know if you know any. I can't name them off the top of my head. I'm sure they exist, though, right? Where they're still very mission-driven, still very mission-oriented, even though it's been handed off many, multiple times. Microsoft is how old now? It's a good example. Okay, yeah.

I think it's 50 years old now, right? We'll say they're on iteration three of leadership, right? And they're wandering through the wilderness with Balmer. Balmer was even kind of a founder though, right? And that even goes to show how kind of... touchy it is right um and yeah now with with satya they might have somebody who's like maybe even potentially stronger than the founder he's got that founder energy for sure more adapted for the time right like he's he's a better founder for the moment

Steve Blank has a really good article about the visionary versus the operator and how visionary CEOs surround themselves with operators because they need people to execute. But then when they...

focus on their succession, they typically promote an operator into their role. And the reason is because if you had other visionaries around the visionary to begin with, that would cause conflicts. But companies need that visionary. And so a lot of times you have like... bill gates was the visionary bomber was the operator and then you had to have setia come in and bring the vision back not to

speculate too much about internal apple politics but like there were a bunch of folks that steve had worked with like scott forestall um and even johnny and johnny and scott didn't get along i think those would all be considered potentially visionary uh replacements right so we ended with tim obviously one of the greatest operators in the history of business.

But very clearly in the operator bucket. Right. And so, yeah, that's a fascinating observation and probably true. I'm going to do some research on organizations have survived 100 plus years and we think are still very mission oriented because I think it's difficult. It's difficult to find.

nintendo might be a good example this is a great example um and uh i would recommend um the acquired podcast i'm going to offer another podcast but they did a really good multi-hour breakdown on nintendo but like nintendo's also

kind of a pseudo family company in the sense that it's like passed from like one generation to the next in sort of this like way that only Japanese companies kind of can pull off. Arguably more mission focused than they were at the beginning. Yeah. Which is good. It's a good example. Yeah.

So we're starting a new thing on the podcast. I'm going to wrap each podcast with three questions. And I prepped you ahead because these are tough questions. But what is the biggest fail of the year in your mind? And for operators, this is going to be more directed at the biggest fail. But for you as a consultant, this could be, you know, broader industry or, you know, a client that you worked with. But what's the biggest fail of 2025 for you?

I think the biggest fail is AGI. I think everyone thought this was the year. Were you working on it? We have you to blame, Robbie, for the platform? Yeah, exactly. Come on. I took some time off. I didn't quite get to AGI fast enough. I think this goes to a lot of what the tech industry does bad is like either overhype things or underhype things. And either it's like...

You know, generative AI is you can't do anything and it's meaningless. It's not that useful to we're all going to die. And the truth is somewhere in between. It's been a magical year in terms of agents and reasoning models. Remember a year ago, we didn't have cursor. We didn't have Cursor. We didn't have Cloud Skills. We didn't have Atlas or Comet. We didn't have all the reasoning models. All of this stuff has gone incredibly well this year. So it's actually been a great year for...

Gen AI. And I think this whole idea that we're in a bubble right now is coming out of the fact that people thought we would be hitting AGI this year. And I never thought that was the case. I think we're still a long way off. That doesn't mean that the things that are happening right now aren't fundamental and transformational. And so what's the biggest win of the year?

yeah i think the biggest win of the year is clod like i used to use chat gpt 90 of the time and now between clod code and the clod main app i'm using that almost 100 of the time i think they've done such a good job with their models

Growth is easier when you own your audience

They write well. The reasoning is good. Their deep research works well. Cloud code is pretty exceptional in terms of how much it's really lived up to in a vision, the vision of an agentic coding tool. You know, I think they've just done. great job they focused on their core they haven't gotten distracted by other products like Sora and building a browser and they've just gotten they've focused on the essentials of what they can do well and I've become really dependent on it

And the last question is growth would be easier if? I think growth would be easier if, especially right now, people focused obsessively on turning their earned audience into an owned. audience. There's all of these distribution channels right now that are going through massive shifts, whether it's SEO or the algorithm changes on TikTok or YouTube or LinkedIn or other places.

Like it used to be that if you got a pretty sizable following, you could count on that to distribute your products. I don't think that's the case any longer. This is especially true for YouTubers, for example. Now what gets in front of users is really a matter of the algorithm, not of your following. And so I think it's very important for companies to obsess about how do I take an audience that I don't own and turn it into an audience that I do own.

And I think that's the result of three things. One is create a direct channel with your audience, whether it's email or something else. And then two is create habits around your content so people come to you.

Having a podcast that people are coming to on a regular basis and listening to is an extremely important way to... have people break through the algorithm and then the third and most important thing is create habits around your product so if you can create those listening habits if you can create those usage habits and you can have a direct channel to your audience you'll be in a much better position

to weather what's happening, which is like a pretty significant reshuffling of distribution. Yeah, such a great answer. Well, as we wrap up, anything else you wanted to share? Welcome people to follow me. I've got my sub stack. It's just blog.ravimetta.com. You can also look me up at ravimetta.com. I work with companies. So if you have a startup or a company where you're looking to figure out product strategy or monetization, feel free to.

reach out. We'd love to chat. Awesome. Well, thank you so much, Robbie. This was a ton of fun. Really great conversation. When a lot of places I didn't expect it, those are always the same. I told you I'm the bringer of podcast chaos, right? Awesome. Thank you, Robbie. Yeah, thanks for having me. Thanks so much for listening. If you have a minute, please leave a review in your favorite podcast player. to join our private community.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android