Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - Unlocking Tesla's Hiring Secrets - Interview with Ex-Chief People Officer, Gaby Toledano | EP #81

Episode Date: January 18, 2024

In this episode, Peter and Gaby discuss the ins and outs of hiring for top companies. They talk about how to hire successful candidates, what the key to interviewing is, and the strategy behind firing.... 17:21 | The Art of Hiring Successfully 32:51 | Do Tech Companies Need Degrees? 55:41 | The Truth About Salary Transparency Gabrielle ‘Gaby’ Toledano is currently the Chief Operating Officer at Keystone Strategy. She has nearly 30 years of experience in the technology, gaming, and online space with Fortune 500 companies such as Tesla (Chief People Officer), Electronic Arts (Chief Talent Officer), and Microsoft. She also serves as a board member for the firm. She is bilingual, and her portfolio includes a wide range of assignments, including international work, most notably in Latin America. Gaby currently also serves as the Board and Chair for Vaxxinity, VELO3D, and Lilum. Learn more about Keystone here: https://www.keystone.ai/  ____________ I only endorse products and services I personally use. To see what they are, please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors:  Use my code PETER25 for 25% off your first month's supply of Seed's DS-01® Daily Synbiotic: seed.com/moonshots  ProLon is the first Nutri-technology company to apply breakthrough science to optimize human longevity and optimize longevity and support a healthy life. Get started today with 15% off here: https://prolonlife.com/MOONSHOT  _____________ Get my new Longevity Practices 2024 book: https://bit.ly/48Hv1j6  I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now: Tech Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:49 Conditions apply. Offer ends June 30th, 2024. New eligible clients only. Complete criteria by August 30th, 2024. Visit rbc.com slash student 100. I think probably the hardest thing for me is hiring. And it's the most important thing. How do you want to lead, attract, engage people?
Starting point is 00:01:20 How do you want your customers and clients to see your company? If you don't have that right, it doesn't matter how good your code is if your team is not marching in the same direction. If you have a very mission-driven company, automatically some elements of the culture are there. More than a mission, it's what defines you. Every single one of us is either a leader that's open to ideas and alternative ideas to our own, or is not open. That element of a culture is critical and defines much of the culture and it needs to be transparent from the founder and CEO from day one. I have talked to so many entrepreneurs and they regret that. You're trying to build a place where people want to work and do their best work. Everybody, Peter Diamandis here. Welcome to Moonshots. I'm
Starting point is 00:02:06 about to have a conversation with Gabby Teledano, who is one of the most extraordinary HR individuals. She's head of people. She worked with Larry Ellison at Oracle, with Bill Gates at Microsoft, at Slack for two years, with Elon Musk at Tesla. We're going to talk about how to hire people, how to fire people, how to create a culture, how to deal with Glassdoor. If you're a Moonshot engineer or a leader in a company, you need to understand how important HR is and how to deal with it. It can make or break your company. All right, let's jump in. This is one of the most important entrepreneurial conversations I've had in this entire Moonshot podcast program. Enjoy. Everybody, welcome to Moonshots. I'm here with a new friend, Gabby Taladano. Gabby, good to see you.
Starting point is 00:02:56 Good to see you, Pierre. Yeah, so full disclosure, Gabby and I are on a board of directors together for an amazing company called Vaccinity that's creating a whole slew of vaccines, Lou and Mei Mei. We've had Lou Reese on this podcast as well, Mei Mei Hu, who's the CEO. You've known them. And I was so excited when they recruited you onto the board because of your extraordinary record. But it was fun to see you in Telluride, where I guess you are today. I am.
Starting point is 00:03:23 Thank you. Great to see you. And very, very fun I guess you are today. I am. Thank you. Great to see you. And very, very fun to be on the Vaccinity Board together. Yeah. So, you know, you have been on an extraordinary tear of dealing with amazing moonshot companies, you know, from Slack and Tesla to, you know, to Lilium. It's amazing. And so I want to dive in, in you know i think as an entrepreneur myself
Starting point is 00:03:47 and to the moonshot entrepreneurs we serve here in this podcast dealing with the squishy human carbon life form issues is really hard compared to actually just algorithms and ai and uh i have a lot of questions to ask uh that we got into a little bit in person while we were driving together. I was like, oh my God, this wisdom is awesome. And I can't wait to share it with people. So with that, if you don't mind, let's jump in. Do you often find that the CEOs, and again, we're in service here of the entrepreneurs who are trying to do some difficult things, some non-traditional things, or trying to start companies that have never been started before, and you've been part of that. Do you find that entrepreneurs coming into these sort of moonshot companies get how important HR is, or are having to like bring them up to speed? It's a great question. I don't think they initially do realize how hard the people
Starting point is 00:04:50 side of the business is, just the collective people side of the business. I think, you know, they'd spent years working on a product or a service and they're intimately into that topic and they've already come up with a go-to-market strategy usually, but the whole idea of the difficulties of working on the talent side are not clear, but they quickly become clear. So most CEOs that I've talked to say the big surprise as a founder or CEO is the talent people side because people are unpredictable and it's complicated and they didn't anticipate and they didn't have experience dealing with the stuff they suddenly have to deal with. Yeah. And it can bite you really bad. I've heard of CEOs who had entire groups walk out on them, CEOs who find themselves embattled in the human issues. And if you don't
Starting point is 00:05:47 have that right, it doesn't matter how good your code is if your team is not marching in the same direction. When I think about a team coming together to form a company, especially in the generative AI world and the tech world today, you're talking about getting this kind of engineer and that kind of engineer and a marketing person and so forth. I don't hear people talking about, we need HR right away. When should a company that's getting going start thinking about bringing in a head of people, head of human relations and such?
Starting point is 00:06:26 Yeah. I mean, in my opinion, it's often done too late. So it isn't unusual for a company very early to bring in a recruiter, a talent acquisition recruiter. In-house is usually the first job they fill because they are hiring people. But they're often late, sometimes waiting until after IPO to really get a seasoned head of people. And I have talked to so many entrepreneurs and they regret that. And many have talked to me before they've gone public and I gave them that advice to start earlier. They didn't do it and they've always come back to regret it. And I think as much as you need a CFO, a head of your finance department, a head of your legal department, it is at that point you should be thinking about a head of talent, a head of people. And if you do it right, that person
Starting point is 00:07:20 really can be a consigliere to you that can be quite important. You are building out your organization team and that is their expertise. Yeah, that's fascinating. And I remember someone said, listen, you need your head of HR to report directly to the CEO. And at first I was surprised by that idea. And I was like, actually, I totally get it. And the term you just use, a consigliere of someone who can whisper in your ear, like we're weak over here, that person's being majorly underutilized, or there's a forest fire about to start over here. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:07:52 Really valuable, really valuable, because your head of legal is keeping you out of legal trouble. So they're not focused in that sort of area you just described. The CFO, the head of finance is focused on the financials as they both should be. And you really don't have anyone just advising you as you're building out this company. A company is built out with the people. So it's just a critical role. And I believe, I mean, I see it again and again, people wait too long. Sometimes they hire a junior person and that person often can't scale as the company grows and then you have to restart.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Yeah, I totally get that. You know, I want to hit with you on all the key subjects of building culture and hiring and how to hire and if you're in hyper growth and then firing and then if you miss a financing, what do you do? And incentives. I mean, these are the things that are the soft side and the hard side. That's the soft side of the business and the hardest part that if you don't get it right, it doesn't matter how good your tech is, you could crash and burn really fast. So let's jump into culture. It's often said, you know, the founder, and really we're speaking to
Starting point is 00:09:05 founding entrepreneurs here, listening to this podcast to a large degree, that in the founding is when you set the culture. What's your experience there? What advice do you have for the founding team in creating their culture? I mean, you've been part of amazing companies, right? It's like, I'm looking at the list of the places you've been chief people officer or you've consulted, or you've been on the board and you must have some incredible stories there. Can you, can you share something about culture and about like where you've seen it done really right and where it's gone amiss? Well, I mean, I would start with, it's been said that some leaders who've built great companies don't care about culture. So it's a really interesting question if you start there.
Starting point is 00:09:56 And I think what people mean by that is when you talk about culture in a positive way, you're talking about, I mean, the assumption is you're trying to build a place where people want to work and do their best work. And they're motivated to do their best work. So if you have a very mission-driven company, automatically some elements of the culture are there by virtue of what work are we doing. And that in and of itself can define the culture in beautiful ways. And you may even in such a place have a founder or CEO who really doesn't care about other aspects of the culture.
Starting point is 00:10:34 They believe maybe the mission in and of itself is enough to attract really smart, hardworking people. And there's truth to that. So the culture is defined by the mission of the company. So that's one element that is all about what your company does versus who runs your company. And then there are other elements of culture, which have a lot to do with the founder, with the early leaders. And those other elements have to do with, you know, really defining intentionally, you know, how do you want to lead, attract, engage people?
Starting point is 00:11:09 How do you want your customers and clients to see your company? And again, outside of what the product provides, obviously customers are going to really be centered around the service or the product. But they're also going to be looking at the company as a brand as to whether they want to buy from that brand. So you do want to define all of these elements so that the people you're attracting to the company and keeping in the company as well as your customers see you in the way that you think is important. So you have to define it. And it basically comes down to the behavior and the
Starting point is 00:11:46 norms that are created in that day-to-day environment, right? It's how do the people who work at the company treat the customer? That's going to define your culture and how you're perceived outside the company culturally. Inside the company, it's the same thing. How leaders behave, how they communicate, how they don't communicate. Communication is a huge part of culture. I would also imagine how hard the founder or founding team work sort of sets the bar, right? So when I hear about Elon sleeping on the factory floor at the Tesla plant to hit deliveries, I mean, that's got to sort of set the bar of, okay, we're a company that works hard. That's exactly right. If he doesn't take vacation, then he's telling everybody else,
Starting point is 00:12:33 I'm not really a fan of vacation. Or if he sleeps on the factory floor, to your point, he's saying, I expect that of you. What's funny is that a lot of founders do that sort of thing, but the people inside the company, that might be once a year that happened. It's not that the person sleeps in every night. But it becomes the lore, right? Yeah. Yes. Yeah. It's the myths.
Starting point is 00:12:57 And myths, some things that define a culture are the lore and the myth. They're not fact-based, many of these things. They really, really are not fact-based, but those things definitely help define and set an expectation for the people in the company. There's no question about it. How the leadership behaves, what they say, how they say it, how they treat people. Many cultures are defined by, is it customer first or not? And when I worked at one of my early companies at CHRO, customer was first. It defined the culture. Which one was CHRO? Which company was that?
Starting point is 00:13:34 That was Siebel Systems where everything was very sales enterprise centric. And so, in many respects, it felt like the customer was more important than the employee. And we were there no matter what for the customer. Yeah. And then one of the things we talk a lot about on Moonshots is the idea of a massive transformative purpose, sort of more than a mission. It's what defines you, right? For SpaceX, it would be becoming a multi-planetary species and getting humans on Mars. There is the equivalent for Tesla for electrifying the fleet and so forth.
Starting point is 00:14:06 And I assume that that becomes part of the culture, the mission-driven organization, right, that inspires people to come and to give everything they have there. That's right. I mean, healthcare has some of the same attributes and it really draws people who want to make a difference in the world
Starting point is 00:14:23 as the companies you've defined. But, you know, every company needs to try and figure out their vision, their mission. And it's harder for some companies where it's not naturally obvious what the mission is, right? I worked at Electronic Arts for 11 years and, you know, some people are anti-gaming and then there's others of us that absolutely love gaming and think that fun in life is important. So, even we, you know, help figure out a vision around fun and entertainment that's important to all, you know. So, it is important to figure that out. I mean, there's other aspects of culture, like, is it a culture that takes risks? Is it a first principles thinking culture where nothing is predefined and there's an
Starting point is 00:15:12 expectation that you don't walk into a meeting and say, well, Microsoft does it this way, so we should do it that way. They're successful. Or Facebook, you know, Meta does it this way, so we must do it this way. There's some companies that that's just not tolerated, right? You start from scratch. You start from first principles thinking. I mean, that's probably Elon's favorite term is first principle thinking. And I assume that that was the culture there.
Starting point is 00:15:42 That's right. But even at Electronic Arts, you know, we used to always say fail fast. And that innovation hinges upon taking risks. And many people would argue that. We had many debates around is structure and elements that people call bureaucracy, is that antithetical to innovation? And we concluded no. You know, chaos doesn't mean innovation. Innovation means creative thinkers who take risks and think about failing fast, right? So let's start, when do you put your culture in place? Is it on day one, is the founding team, let's say you've got three guys or gals coming together to form a company. There's a principal founder, but there's a small founding team. Are you defining a culture there? Can the founder say, this is the culture I want and dictate it? What have you seen? It's really done at the outset. I would say cultures evolve based on where the company's at and the growth of the company. There's different phases of a company, but there's immediately some form of a culture. And it usually starts in my experience with storytelling. I think what happens, I don't think many founders sit down. Some do today, actually,
Starting point is 00:16:55 and fair enough, some do sit down and really sit with their leadership team and their other founders, co-founders, and try to define the culture they want to be. They do more of that today than used to be done. But a lot of it naturally happens through storytelling because what founders do do, as they start hiring people, they do the obvious, which is we need to onboard these people. And when they're recruiting them, they have to recruit them and try to attract them. So they start storytelling like, look, we started this in a garage. And we started because in my, you know, for some, for some personal reason, and that's that really starts building the culture. And as I found, even when I've been recruited by, you know, founders and
Starting point is 00:17:39 CEOs, even for boards, it's, it's the story, you know, They're trying to get me to join their board versus another board, and it's all about that conversation. And why do you think your company is going to make a difference? Why do you think this product is going to make a difference? And then we all make choices based on that. So the storytelling is critical because people join a company based on those stories, and then they carry the stories along and it's part of the onboarding weekly meeting and the all hands meetings yep i i feel that and it's you tell the story over and over again and sometimes it grows in uh and it's uh like a fishing story um you know i i think probably the hardest thing for me is hiring. And it's the most important thing. And I really want to drill down into this. And then we'll talk about firing next, the other flip side of the equation.
Starting point is 00:18:48 three years since 2000 thereabouts. And I'm always amazed at how many people are being hired all the time, especially as he's starting new companies. And I asked, you know, is he just have this mental Rolodex of people he's run into that he wants to, you know, it's like, I'm going to grab them on this company. And I learned that, I'm sure he does. I'm sure he meets amazing people all the time and wants to bring them into one of his companies. But when you grow so large at Tesla and SpaceX, and again, you were at Tesla for a couple of years, you told me about the internal recruiting engine you had. And you told me about the internal recruiting engine you had. So, how would you describe the recruiting engine? How did that work for hiring people in Tesla? Well, again, it has different phases. Elon himself started on the board of Tesla. Yes, as an investor and a board member, right. Exactly. And so there was already sort of a leadership team and an evolution for the company when he came in. Recruiting an early stage company is a lot of friends and family. I mean,
Starting point is 00:19:58 at the early stages, it's your investors on the board who are often people you have a relationship with, not always. And the leadership team is, is often a group of friends who went to school together or whatever it may be. So I do think in the early days, it is people, you know, and I think continually through the evolution of a company, if a CEO meets someone they're super impressed by, there's no question that person may end up joining and so forth. But the vast majority, when I was there and we were 40 or 50,000 people, we were already at a size where he had probably run through anyone he knew previously. And sure enough, the head of
Starting point is 00:20:40 talent acquisition and I would meet with him specifically weekly to introduce candidates for the important jobs, director and above. He was certainly very hands-on at the director and above, which is a pretty low level at that size company to be involved in as a CEO. I think there are pros and cons to that. It's not really scalable. It's how much can do you want to dedicate to what but he you know i do respect the fact that he understood how important hiring the right people is and so we would meet weekly and introduce you know candidates this machine of recruiters hundreds and hundreds of recruiters had sourced i'm i'm i was amazed when you said that really really. I was like, wow, okay, weekly for looking at resumes at the director and above level. And like, how many resumes would you go through in that meeting?
Starting point is 00:21:32 Well, not, you know, in that meeting, maybe a dozen, but there was more to it. I mean, I would tell you that the head of TA was on my team. They, she and her team, and most of it filtered through her just to keep it simple for him. And that's what we generally try to do with CEOs, keep it simple. But she would send multiple resumes a day, even to him, not just for directors and above, but for important engineering jobs. Absolutely. So it was engineers, in his case, that he cared about,
Starting point is 00:22:06 and product people, and then directors and above and any other function. So there would be resumes. And again, there's flaws with that, because he didn't have that much time, and he really did open the resumes, and he would look for certain things. So I would tell people, resumes matter in a case like Eli's. Like if he saw a red flag on a resume or something he didn't appreciate, then those would be filtered out. But he very hands-on, I mean, just a huge amount of email traffic to review resumes. And it's a key importance. I mean, your people having an aligned organization and having ever, having an aligned organization and having ever, you know, the aligned background and vision, uh, it can be really useful. I mean, diversity is, is important, but alignment in an engineering
Starting point is 00:22:52 organization is, is, is critical. So that's, that's fascinating. Uh, total respect for that. And, uh, you know, let's talk about recruiting for a company that's trying to do something extraordinarily difficult versus an everyday company. I have to also imagine that Elon's celebrity helped attract people to the company. Right. So me. Well, and then that's good and bad. I mean, I, you know, I think that's obviously more so now. Even when I went there, I wasn't, I mean, not to say, not to be, but to people's surprise,
Starting point is 00:23:33 I didn't really follow him. Obviously knew who he was. I knew who he was more in terms of SpaceX and Tesla's companies and the missions. But now the celebrity is more forefront. And that could be a bad thing. That happened in my early days at Oracle as Larry Ellison became more and more a known name, just as with Steve Jobs at Apple. Sometimes you end up attracting the wrong people for the wrong reasons, right? It's not a great, as a CEO or founder, you're really not trying to attract
Starting point is 00:24:03 people who just want to be around you. A groupie. A groupie, right? And so you really want people who care about what you're doing. And so I do think it's actually quite a negative over time. We'd have a ton of resumes, and this has been true of all the tech companies. Once Oracle became well-known, and I was at Microsoft seven years when Bill and Steve were more well-known and popular, at Microsoft seven years when Bill and Steve are more well-known and popular.
Starting point is 00:24:26 We would have to filter through groupies. We really did. Wow. You've been working for some of the most amazing companies in the world. That's incredible. Gabby, you know, I asked you,
Starting point is 00:24:38 do you hire outside recruiting agencies? Do you do it internally? And you snapped and said, all internal. It like you know you need a team um yeah i've certainly used the top recruiting firms and i have some you have to have as a head of talent great relationships with those firms and they are quite helpful and absolutely i've used uh the top firms for ceos i CEOs. I've been involved with boards as a CHRO replacing the CEO, and we use, of course, top firms.
Starting point is 00:25:09 And sometimes for governance reasons at public companies, bigger companies, you really do need to use agencies. But yeah, my preference is to, I remember when a friend of mine was running Apple, and he was a mentor. He was running talent and HR at Apple decades ago, and he was a mentor. He was running talent and HR at Apple decades ago, and he was a mentor and he brought recruiting and executive recruiting in-house. Not only was it more cost effective for obvious reasons, but it was so efficient and effective. And it also helped
Starting point is 00:25:39 you filter and hire better for the culture you were trying to build. So it's just that you have in-house people who know the culture intimately versus an outside firm. And so it's cost efficient. It helps reinforce your culture and alignment. So I'm a big fan of in-house all the way through to executive recruiting. Yeah. As soon as I heard that, I was like, okay, I need to find a good internal recruiter because I'm recruiting across all my companies all the time. And you're right, someone who, it's like the most important. The difference between a very good person and a great
Starting point is 00:26:16 person is near infinite. I know amazing people I have in my organization that I feel so blessed and lucky and I would kill for that person to be able to clone that individual. One of the things I want to offer in hiring, which is a subtle but a crazy thing is, you know, recruiting is a sales pitch and that's somewhat unideal. It's not ideal because the last thing you want to do is hire somebody. I mean, I've met with, you know, CEOs and founders that are selling me the opportunity or they're selling whoever we're trying to recruit the opportunity. And it's probably the most positive experience one might have with that person from that point forward. That's just no good, right?
Starting point is 00:27:05 I mean, you need to be transparent even in the interview process and let people opt out if they're not right for your style or for that culture. That's a fascinating point, right? If you're not authentic as to who you are and who the company is, and you sort of wine and dine them and bring them in. And then a month later, they realize reality. What a waste of time for both of you. And that happens all the time, right? You go into it, you think you want this person, and you represent yourself as the founder, CEO, or as a senior executive in a way that is not consistent once they come in the door. And again, as a CHRO, we're dealing with those issues later constantly, which is an executive comes in and says,
Starting point is 00:27:51 my expectation was so different based on my interview process and what the founder told me than what it is, and they opt out. And that's just a waste of money and time and morale. So it's often said that B players hire C players and A players hire A players and so forth. And can you talk about that? How do you maintain and up the game? Because I've seen sometimes where in a pocket of one of my companies, one of my companies, the level of work ethic or the intelligence or the culture, it's just, it's gone awry and you have to let go of the entire group. Well, I mean, again, that's part of the scaling of a company, in my opinion. I mean, in other words,
Starting point is 00:28:43 as you become bigger, the CEO who really filtered all the hires in the first year or two, really, I mean, some founding partners look, interview every hire for the first couple of years. As you grow, that becomes impossible. I mean, it just becomes impossible. They have other priorities they have to balance. And so then you have someone else taking that on and then someone else as you become bigger and suddenly three layers down,
Starting point is 00:29:02 you have newer people who just aren't part of that initial sort of founding of the company making the hires. And it's just a scaling issue often. And that's a big one. I mean, that's discussed in many firms. And so some CEOs try to hold on as long as they can to a point of that's almost crazy, but just to holding on to those decisions, you know, that's not a perfect solution because they make snap decisions. Sometimes they have five minutes to interview somebody and then they just, you know, make decisions on instinct. So I just think it's something that you just want to make sure. Well, I'll tell you this. The other thing I see deteriorating in hiring is, you know, as people become busier and busier, they don't show up for
Starting point is 00:29:52 interviews on time. They don't show up at all. They're not the right people to be interviewing for that important job. It's delegated down. They put too much on the recruiters to make decisions versus themselves. So that you have to keep talent acquisition and recruitment of people top of mind, even if you have to delegate. So how do people hack that? I mean, if you're in a meeting and you've scheduled 30 minutes for interviewing somebody and two minutes into the meeting, you just know personality mismatch, doesn't know the right stuff. Do you hang out and be polite or do you leave? I mean, I think you politely leave. You politely leave, right? I mean, especially if you're a founder or someone senior and you often
Starting point is 00:30:39 have somebody who knows how to do that for you. So we had a little system in all my companies where I had it for myself. I can't imagine Elon tolerating somebody that he's made a decision on. No, no, no. But we had a system where even when I interview people, I don't have the time for an hour if I know in five minutes it's the wrong person. So everyone has their phones. You have a system, and most companies do. You text your recruiting person who's right outside the room
Starting point is 00:31:07 and they come in and interrupt you or your assistant. So it's just politely done would be preferable. I've also had founders and CEOs not do it politely and it does leave a bad brand. I mean, there's no good in walking out and saying you're the wrong person and it's just not. So just have a system where you text your assistant and they come knocking like emergency. There's a concept called bar raiser. And I remember one of my friends, Jeff Holden, speaking about this at Amazon and Uber,
Starting point is 00:31:38 where you've got like, you select who inside your organization are the top talent, and you want more of those individuals. And they have to be, at least one of those individuals has to be in a hiring decision. Have you used that a lot? I have used that. We also, as well, profile those people. So that once you decide who those super high performance potentials are, you profile. A lot of talent acquisition departments, we would profile and just see the patterns and then go source people with those similar pattern patterns um but absolutely and they should be part of the interviewing filtering process but also
Starting point is 00:32:17 again sourcing from the beginning people with their profile in the first place i'm also a big fan of um the group that interviewed getting together we did this at microsoft in the first place. I'm also a big fan of the group that interviewed getting together. We did this at Microsoft in the early days, and it was magical for doing what you're asking about, which is keeping A, people in. So you get the whole group of interviewers together. And Microsoft was so committed in the earlier days. I'm sure they are today too, I hope. But it was required that the interview group get together and talk about the candidate. It doesn't work on email. It's just not effective. And you get in the room and someone says, that's all true, but I had this
Starting point is 00:32:58 experience or they said this. And it's really going to help your hiring 100x. If you all get in the room, it's a 15-minute process and discuss the candidate. Yep. Got it. I love that. How about testing? Stuff like Colby testing and other kinds of personality testing. Useful, not useful? I mean, I think for some types of business, some industries, it's imperative, you know,
Starting point is 00:33:24 depending on certain requirements. But I haven't, I've tried testing a few times, and it just hasn't so critical, you know, there are certain tests that can really test for these critical needs. Necessity for a college degree or a graduate degree, right? How are you seeing that shift? Because I just remember, again, I'll use Elon as the example here. When he was tweeting about a hackathon, I think it was at Tesla, and he's like, someone asked, do you need to have a college degree? And he says, I don't care if you have a high school degree as long as you're technically competent. It's interesting because he definitely looked at what school's people would do when we looked at resumes. That's funny.
Starting point is 00:34:29 But I get, I mean, but his point is also true, which is if you're, you know, naturally brilliant and school was not your path to your learning and your ability to code and do things at a higher level, then it doesn't matter. So, I mean, I don't, I think that's right, what he said. I'm not sure everyone really, you know, recruits irregardless, because we do a lot of recruiting in, in university and colleges. That's where we go source so many of our hires
Starting point is 00:34:59 at any tech company. It's a huge part of the recruiting organization at Microsoft. It was, it's been, it's just been an enormously important part of recruitment at every firm I've been in. And to get early talent has just been through the academics that are just really relevant in the moment. So many hires come from college and university that it's not true to say it doesn't matter at all. It does matter, but in exceptional cases, it doesn't. Do you know? I know it's interesting, right?
Starting point is 00:35:29 You ask where do you go to school, but you never ask like what was your GPA or any of that other stuff. So it's like the ability to get into MIT or Stanford or Harvard is the only filter point that is noted. Going back to the interviewing process, how long do you typically interview for? And I am curious if there are any really magic questions that you've learned to ask that
Starting point is 00:35:55 bring out something in a different kind of candidate. Well, I would say the best companies, first of all, they always keep recruitment of talent as a top priority. The best founders keep it in their top five list of importance. And you can do recruiting fast. In fact, when I was introduced to Tesla, I think it was a two-day process, three-day process, but I had sort of back-to-back, a lot of conversations with board members, the executive team, with Elon. But he made sure it took two days instead of two weeks. And I believe that's the right.
Starting point is 00:36:32 I believe speed is important. The best people have competitive opportunities, other opportunities. People don't want to work at a company where they were left waiting with no feedback for weeks. where they were left waiting with no feedback for weeks. You know, I think the other tip, which you didn't ask, but I think, you know, you don't let recruiting make the offer. I once had an opportunity where the recruiting leader made the offer to me versus the CEO, and it was not a good process.
Starting point is 00:37:03 It was not appealing. I did not take that opportunity. And you don't, and in my case, you know, credit to Elon, for example, he made the offer to me. He called me from Australia when he was traveling and he communicated his offer to me. So I, there's no, and then of course I said yes in the moment. Otherwise, when a recruiter does it, I can say, let me think about it. Let me talk to my spouse. And you can do all these delayed and look at other opportunities. And you have easy outs.
Starting point is 00:37:31 So that's important. That's just a tip. But in terms of what you said, what questions? I mean, I have had a lot of success using what they call behavioral interview questions. And those go something like this. Like, hey, Peter, you know, and you're just talking about your history and your experience. And I say, well, listen, let's say I talked to your boss, you know, at Microsoft or Amazon, I, you know, I talked to your boss, what's your boss's
Starting point is 00:37:57 name? Oh, it's Sally. I talked to Sally. Let's say I talked to Sally. What would Sally tell me about your top two strengths and your top weaknesses? And you just psychologically, you would tell me because you're like, did she talk to Sally? Is she going to call Sally? Now she knows Sally's name. And so behavioral interviews are great because you're just, it's that kind of questioning like, well, they tell you something and you say, well, let's say there was a scenario where you had to do X, Y, and Z. Who did you work with on that project? Oh, a guy named Bob. Great. Well, let tell you something and you say, well, let's say there was a scenario where you had to do X, Y, and Z. Who did you work with on that project? Oh, a guy named Bob. Great.
Starting point is 00:38:29 Well, let's say I talked to Bob. What would he say that you did well on that project and didn't? Mostly people will tell the truth. So this is a good line of questioning, I think. Over the years, I've experimented with many intermittent fasting programs. The truth is I've given up on intermittent fasting as I've seen no real benefit when it comes to longevity. But this changed when I discovered something called Prolon's 5-Day Fasting Nutrition Program. It harnesses the process of autophagy. This is a cellular recycling
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Starting point is 00:39:35 Is it a, you know, sort of a two-on-one? Do you, is it good to do a group interview? Another thing is I've used in the past is giving a sort of a homework assignment. Like, like, you know, what would you want to accomplish in the first 30 days and the first 90 days? Things like that. Do they work for you? Yeah, no. And we do some of that throughout many companies. I mean, there were certain companies early on that were famous for that, like Travis at Uber would make people do presentations for any sort of job where he was involved in interviewing. Did you work for Uber as well? No. I was like, wow. I just knew Travis did that.
Starting point is 00:40:13 Okay. But, you know, I mean, personally, group interviews aren't ideal. I think, you know, one-on-one and then coming together and saying, really, they told you that? They told me the opposite. You learn a lot more if you do it individually and then come together. And I think in group interviews, sometimes the interviewers themselves are competing with each other and talking and, you know, look, you know, they might just be talking more than they're listening as a group. Yep. And length of time for an interview, we talked about sort of the shorter side, if you think it's wrong, you can bug out. But do you typically schedule it for 30 minutes
Starting point is 00:40:53 or an hour for an initial interview? I mean, no more than an hour. I prefer 30 minutes to 45 max. I only need, my best, I personally prefer 30 minutes because why? If you do recruitment in the process, right, you've already reviewed the history of this person, their experience, their resume. And so, you know, if you're not going to meet with them unless you already know if they're qualified on paper. So I don't actually talk a lot with the people I interview around their capabilities and experience because a lot of the people I interview around their capabilities and
Starting point is 00:41:25 experience because a lot of that's documented and you can see work they've done. You can ask for that in advance. The recruitment department could say, send us certain things you've done in this area. And so then you sit there and you try to get to know who they are and how they tick and how they work and will they be part of the culture? Will they fit into the culture? So a lot of the academics and experience, that can all be previewed in advance. You shouldn't wait to the interview to say, where did you work last?
Starting point is 00:41:54 That's a terrible interviewer. It's a waste of their time. Yeah. Waste. You're not getting deep into the fit with the company and the passion of the person and why are they even talking to you? Why this company versus another? Do they want to be there? You know, I remember I'd gotten to know the head of people at Google and he'd written a book,
Starting point is 00:42:16 blanking on his name right now. Laszlo. Laszlo. Yeah, Laszlo. Exactly. And Laszlo showed a video in which they basically did some machine learning and they videotaped the person coming in, interviewing the individual, and then they matched that against did the person get hired or not hired. did the person get hired or not hired? And then they narrowed it down to trying to guess, could you know the first three minutes? And could you know in the first 30 seconds? And there was a high core, like they knew in like the first 30 seconds.
Starting point is 00:42:55 Do you remember that story? Yeah, I do remember. I know Laszlo and I remember that story. They used so much data, his group in particular, so much data to figure out, obviously they were fit they're famous for hiring back then and actually overdoing it in some respects right just but um yeah i mean i think you can know pretty early and in fact you should so much of recruitment happens before the interview
Starting point is 00:43:18 it has to i mean you're going out and sourcing people the recruiting department has already talked to them in detail and done some back channeling. You don't put candidates, especially in front of a founder or CEO, where you haven't fully almost vetted them. So then it's really... So in that sense that we didn't put people in front of any of the founders or CEOs I worked for unless they'd been fully filtered. So those interviews didn't have to be long. It was at that point, the instinct. So the founder and CEO were relevant. I mean, it was, it was there a, a gut connection, right? And there are a lot of times you, the conversation's easy or stilted and you feel chemistry or you don't feel chemistry.
Starting point is 00:44:00 And I think especially if it's, if you're, if that person is recruiting someone that works for them, that chemistry is really important. Really important. Really important. And in that respect though, so on the one hand, I'd say shorter interviews. On the other hand, if it's a critical job working for you and you're a CO or founder, so I'm now going to backtrack a little bit on what I said. I mean, I think you can do that initial in your guts, right? I think you should, during COVID, for example, there are many examples where executive hires were made without an in-person meeting. Big problem. I mean, there were stories written about so many things that didn't work out and I get it. You need to
Starting point is 00:44:40 meet. So I think if it's a critical job, then that founder CEO goes to have lunch and has a cocktail together or has a coffee together and see someone at least a second time in person. I think it's critical. study was, I guess, at the end of the day, that they knew within 30 seconds of the person walking in, sitting down, shaking hands, that that initial interaction had the super high correlation of knowing whether you're going to hire that person. That blew me away. I don't know if it's sixth sense or whatever, but fascinating. All right. Yeah, go on. No, I was just going to say the other thing to keep in mind on recruitment that comes up a lot as I have thought it through over the decades of doing this is on the one hand, you profile a certain type of person and referrals, all companies like referrals versus going to find random people. I mean, the negative to that is you're hiring people like yourself. They often look like yourself. You're really not helping diversify the company in all respects. So if you have a bunch of people who are just like you in terms of how they make decisions and how they solve problems and they look and have your same linear thinking or global thinking, you have a
Starting point is 00:46:06 problem. You're not going to have a room of, you know, sort of people able to debate a topic and think about it in different ways. So there are some things that we think are the, you know, the golden ticket to hiring that really have an adverse effect on diversifying the firm and, you know, and another aspect in culture, so I'm going back to culture a little bit is, you know, every single one of us is either a leader that's open to ideas and alternative ideas to our own or is not open and is more autocratic. And I think that element of a culture is critical and defines much of the culture and it needs to be transparent from the founder and CEO from day one. And I
Starting point is 00:46:54 have worked for a lot of autocratic leaders where it's their way or the highway. And so it doesn't make sense for people who are the opposite and really like a good debate and really like to have input to go to that kind of company. It's not going to work out in the end. So that's a really important aspect of both hiring and building a culture. Let's go to the flip side here. You find yourself in a situation with a problematic employee. You sort of begin to have the inkling like this isn't working. And I've been there and I'm like, huh, I notice it. I notice it.
Starting point is 00:47:34 It's starting to bother me. I'm really clear it's not working. And I delay and delay and it is ended in the worst situations. So talk to me about that. Because the old adage, hire slow, fire fast, I think is probably true. So you're a founding CEO, you've got a person on your team. Maybe you spend a lot of time recruiting them and they come in, but whether they don't fit the culture, they're divisive, they, how do you do it? What do you do? Yeah. I mean, I've seen all kinds of versions of that. I mean, I would say as a general philosophy, if it's a hundred percent clear that the person is a problem, it's not a good fit, whatever it may be, it's important to move fast. I mean, if it's really clear is what I'm saying though. Impulsive firing, I'm not a big fan of when the problem may not be- Who would ever impulsively fire? I cannot imagine anybody out there who would
Starting point is 00:48:38 do that. I don't think it behooves a company's brand or a leader in any real, you know, you can get away with it somewhat, but, you know, impulsive hiring where it's not clear the person that you're firing is a problem and it might be a style thing or, you know, if you're an autocratic leader and they say, but what about this? And that ticks you off, then, you know, you might fire that person for the wrong reason. But sure, if it's very clear that the person's just absolutely, you know you might fire that person for the wrong reason but sure if it's very clear that the person is just absolutely you know negative in the culture can't get the job done and it and then then you exit that person and and my philosophy is you exited them with kindness you're the one who brought them in made you know convince them to leave their last company in many cases or
Starting point is 00:49:22 come to you as an deployer versus others. There's no reason in the world to not take a minute to, and then also to the extent it doesn't have to be a surprise, that's the better way to do it. You still do it quickly, but you do it thoughtfully. And it's not that hard. I mean, it's really, I've had to fire presidents, CEOs, senior executives, and you absolutely can do it kindly and just say, this clearly isn't the right place for you, so let's give you the opportunity and let's work it out. And if it means letting someone have two weeks or resign versus announced to the company you fired someone then do it there's nothing wrong with that yeah no i i hear that i'm curious about um any definitive signs i guess the signs i think about for myself is i stop trusting the person or i stop actually utilizing them and I start bypassing to get information. And that for me is sort of like got to be the obvious sign that it's time for that person to go.
Starting point is 00:50:31 Yeah. And that happens. I mean, obviously trust breaks down and people know this more personal relationships through therapy, but trust breaks down kind of both ways. Like sometimes we stop trusting someone because they're disgruntled about something else. And what always helps is getting way in front of that and breaking that tension or misunderstanding. And sometimes things are completely fine after that. But to build up tension and passive aggressive behavior, of course, you lose trust on both sides. So, you know, when anyone approaches me
Starting point is 00:51:05 with, you know, I think this is this, my first question is, have you talked to them? And more often than not, the answer is no. And say, go tell them that their behavior in that meeting made you feel this way and find out why they did it. And if it repeats again, then we exit the person. But they may say, well, yeah, yeah. What about like performance improvement plans, I guess called PIPs and so forth? I mean, do you use those? I've seen them simply delay an ultimate firing versus actually change the direction of somebody. I'm not a, I'm personally not a big PIP fan.
Starting point is 00:51:43 They really were originally created by legal departments and they've worked against companies. So, and you know, this, this, I learned a lot about this and Microsoft and also about performance ratings. A lot of this stuff was legacy legal stuff. And I absolutely love most legal people I work with because we're partners in any firm, I work with because we're partners in any firm, but it was law that made us say, okay, document when somebody's performing badly, not so much to turn them around, but to document it, right? And you know what? People have a very difficult time documenting well poor performance. And we also are weak at giving the right ratings, performance ratings to people.
Starting point is 00:52:25 We tend to curve up versus down. And so then somebody gets a good rating. And the next month, the manager says, this person is not performing well. And I'm like, really? You just gave them a four out of five and a bonus. So that doesn't demonstrate that. So I'm not a big fan of pips. I think if somebody, I am a big believer in anyone who's worked for me knows this um I don't hesitate and the best manager I think do this is feedback in the moment I mean I I'm a very transparent person by nature and I know it's difficult for some people and but it is so good if you can simply say in the moment or right after something goes wrong. I do practice this all the time and I do it because I want them to be successful.
Starting point is 00:53:14 If you truly are a leader or a manager who realizes your team is a reflection of you, then real-time feedback, even that conflict-oriented or negative feedback is so valuable. I hired this person. It took me a lot of money and time. The best thing I can do is say, when you said that, it turned off the team. You talk too much. You're not listening. Anything that would help them turn around and improve. So PIPs to me are a legal documentation. It's not a way to develop and mentor. I completely get that. And there is an issue.
Starting point is 00:53:53 I mean, a lot of employees these days, I think especially in California, maybe other places too, their first reaction when they get fired is to turn around and sue the company. And that sucks. It does. And there's more of that than you know.
Starting point is 00:54:07 I mean, obviously. I'm sure there is. And I'm still in, most of my companies are relatively small compared to Tesla or other companies. But it's like, and then what, so I'm suing you because of age discrimination or gender or whatever discrimination.
Starting point is 00:54:27 And people can sue for any reason. And then a lot of times it's just that much easier to settle out of court. What are you seeing in the companies you work for? I mean, there's got to be some companies that say, bullshit, I'm not going to settle. We're going to just not. Because if you get a reputation of settling all the time. That's right. That's right. No, but I mean, I would, I mean, my biggest learning along these lines, and there have been, I have many examples, but so much of that can be avoided.
Starting point is 00:54:58 And I mean, I remember there was a class action lawsuit at one of my companies that predated my coming in. And when I came in and sort of had to fix the problem and sort of studied why this even happened, like how did this turn into a class action? I mean, I found out that the person who started the whole case and solicited other employees to join in tried, tried and tried to talk to the right people, be it NHR or be the management, his or her management. And they were listened to, they were ignored. They didn't take the problem seriously. So, you know, many companies put themselves in this position because if you're not there for the person to vent to, if you don't resolve their salary and equity problem and really look
Starting point is 00:55:46 at it, they're going to go talk to a lawyer or they're going to be at a dinner party where somebody is a lawyer and says, I'll help you with that. And that happens at companies all the time. And so I always tell my teams, one of the most important things in the talent function is you better answer every email you get that day, not the next day, and you better take every call. And it's a lot. But you ask, and then, and sometimes team members of mine would come and say, this person, this woman came to me and said they're paid less than their colleagues. It's not that big a deal. It's only, you know, 5k difference from the rest of the guys in the group. And, you know, people who've worked for me will tell you,
Starting point is 00:56:25 I say, go change it. If this person is equally a good performer, that's just because they came in at a different, and fix it. Get rid of this problem now. And like today. Cheaply, get rid of cheaply. Yeah, cheaply. Yeah. So how do you think about transparency and what people get paid and incentives and so forth? You know, it's a lot of times it's judgment. A lot of times it's how good a negotiator the person is.
Starting point is 00:56:54 And there are differences. You know, have you seen both sides of the equation? Yeah. I mean, I think over time, I think, I mean, I don't, you know, I'm not a huge fan of let's post everybody's salary, unless you are like the government can do that, because all the salaries are the same for the, you know, so, you know, for the same job. And there's a reason for that. But I mean, I am a big believer in fairness, though. So unless, you know, I always tell, you know, in that sense, I always say, assume salary is never a secret. We cannot control that people share this amongst each other. So assume it is posted on the wall
Starting point is 00:57:34 and never make an unfair decision. And if someone says, well, we can't hire this person unless we pay them 50K more than most of the team members. My first response is, don't do it. Give them a 50K sign-on bonus that's, you know, they pay back if they leave in the first year or something. But it cannot be part of, we cannot have this one-off person have 50K more in salary than the rest of the group. So I do think those things come back to haunt you, not only in litigation, which for sure,
Starting point is 00:58:05 but it's just not fair. It doesn't, it's back to culture. People do talk. And if you can't explain why this person makes 50K more than that person. Now, if you can clearly explain it and say they had these credentials and 10 years more experience and are a higher performer, it's no problem. But if you cannot clearly explain the differences, then you shouldn't have the differences. Smart. All right. My last firing
Starting point is 00:58:32 question, but an important one. Let's say you're a company, you miss your financing, you miss your revenues, or the economy slows down and you make the decision you need to let go of a significant chunk of your team, right? We've seen this in a few different places, or, you know, you saw Elon do this on Twitter. I know you're not, haven't been involved in X, I guess I should call it now. But what's your advice if the leadership team, the CEO, the board is needing to make a significant layoff? How do you deal with that? Well, I've had to obviously do that many times at many companies and you do it. I mean, if it's for all the reasons you described, you do it. And then the question becomes, how do you do it? And how do you
Starting point is 00:59:26 do it sometimes very quickly? And it can be done quickly. Now I've had teams working for me and I might come back from a meeting with the executive team and say, you know, we have a 2000 person layoff we need to do in four days. And they're just like, no way. And all this noise. I'm like, guys, we're doing it. The question is, let's get started now. And the question is how to help the leaders. HR doesn't make the decision on who to cut ever at any firm, except in their own department. There's a myth around that. So how do we help these teams make sure that they're cutting not the, you know, wrong people, and that the process is done with integrity and respect as much as possible. It's very difficult. And, you know, I was on a board once that insisted upon communicating that a reduction for cost reasons was all about, you know, profitability and cost.
Starting point is 01:00:20 Instead, felt a need, wanted the founders to communicate it was performance, even though I had warned this person not to do it. That was horrible. And it did exactly what I thought it would do. It completely hurt that company's brand. It wasn't true. There was not a real tight filter on which of these individuals are bad performers and which individuals are we just cutting
Starting point is 01:00:43 because we're cutting this organizational unit, we're cutting these particular jobs, we're cutting these offices. So if you're doing a cost-cutting exercise, call it a cost-cutting exercise. Why defame everybody departing and communicate publicly that these are just all bad performers? And if some individual you're letting go is a bad performer, I also don't think there's any goodness in members of the board or the management team or anyone defaming that person. It's just there's not much goodness in it. Sure, sure, sure, sure. I guess announcing that and getting that out the door and not letting it leak out, not creating panic and really stabilizing the rest of the organization is the other half of the situations where we had to do it, you have to acknowledge and anticipate that you're going to have higher voluntary turnover following that. And you can reduce that job insecurity fear, but you can reduce the negative reaction of the workforce that stays by treating
Starting point is 01:01:59 all those exited people more kindly. They are watching that. They consider that could have been them. And we've seen in tech over the last nine months, just so many bad examples where sometimes you have to do these things quickly, but you have to do it legally. You have to understand what the regulations are, the severance regulations. And frankly, you should do it not through AI, not through an email to the whole group of people. Each person has a manager, right? Each person has a manager, a management, or somewhere there's a hierarchy. Somebody can give them a phone call or have a meeting. And the firms that have just thought it's okay because of the volume not to do that are
Starting point is 01:02:45 mistaken and no no talent or hr department people department should allow that to happen um and exits over email or automated messaging that's ridiculous yeah you all of a sudden your email is cut off and your phone no longer works your passkey is over it's just it's just hurting the brand from everybody's perspective. Hey, everyone. I want to take a quick break from this episode to tell you about a health product that I love and that I use every day. In fact, I use it twice a day. It's Seed's DS01 Daily Symbiotic. Hopefully by now you understand that your microbiome and your gut health are one of the most important modifiable parts of your health. You know your gut microbiome is connected to everything.
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Starting point is 01:04:15 just go to seed comm slash moon shots and enter the code Peter 25 at checkout that's seed comm slash moon shots and use the code Peter 25 to get your 25% off the first month of Seeds Daily Symbiotic. Trust me, your gut will thank you. All right, let's go back to the episode. Let's talk about Glassdoor, one of my favorite subjects. Oh my God. Or blind. Or blind. I don't actually know blind, but you can tell me about it. But I am, I was, how do I put it? I was kind of shocked and surprised by Glassdoor on how it became a tool for weaponizing situations there. And I've had a few, so a lot of times I'll take the role
Starting point is 01:05:07 as executive chairman and founder of a company and I've got CEOs that have worked for me in my companies. And I'm like, this is a great CEO. And I'm reading the reviews on Glassdoor and I'm like, I'm just getting angry. I'm saying, if you feel that way, leave, just leave. How do you get out of here? And if you're, you know, again, if you're a moonshot entrepreneur trying to do something difficult and hard, you know, you're going to turn through a lot
Starting point is 01:05:34 of people and you're going to be turning the ship a lot of times to get your product market fit. And a lot of people just don't like that instability or don't like, you know, oh my God, now we're going here, we're going there. Give me your advice for an entrepreneur who's dealing with this as the leader of a company and the Glassdoor reviews are less than stellar. And then how important is it today? You know, I agree with you, but, you know, we're Gen X or a baby, I don't know. But we have a different way of thinking about it. I agree that it's just, I would never go publicly or talk to a reporter, even about an experience that may have been negative for me. I would try not to do that.
Starting point is 01:06:18 And I have no need to go on social media and criticize, you know, anyone about much of anything. and criticize anyone about much of anything. If it's not a deposition where you have to speak under oath, then there's no reason to go out with all this. But that said, it is a norm. It is a norm today. I mean, any aspect of social media. I mean, there was a recent article on Blind,
Starting point is 01:06:43 and it's where every CEO's worst nightmare nightmare it's just the replacement uh even a more negative uh spot to complain uh but it's it's very similar to glass door and and uh you know some some employees think glass door became very corporate and and you know they can pay glass door and the company can you know respond and it's not the pure truth. But these sites are everywhere. And it's not just those sites, you know, well-known employees have, you know, posted social media stories about their experience at very executive levels. In some cases, you know, you could argue it was the only way they could be heard. And that's, again, horrifying. But and there's been a lot of truth to many of those articles and and so forth.
Starting point is 01:07:31 So, again, I don't think you should try to sweep illegal activity and so forth under under the rug. So in some cases, some of these postings need to be done. It's sad that that's the only way you can get it out. But that said, I do think is often the most disgruntled employees. And I'm sort of in your camp, like I said, which is just leave. Now, again, you know, you have time to look for something else. You know, they're not the company's not firing you. You're the one who's choosing to leave. You're clearly unhappy. Go focus on what's next. Go where you can be happy and positive and posting as if you're
Starting point is 01:08:04 warning everybody else there's not a lot of truth in that but it does i mean new recruits look at that stuff and they get affected by it i mean i want to get it like hold a company-wide meeting and saying i'm not sure who posted this but if you're listening to me and you're here just leave this is obviously not the right company for you so i'm not not going to address that. We're not going to change our policies. That's just not who we are. So please depart. I mean, is that one way to deal with it? It could be. I mean, listen, I've seen postings. I mean, I've seen so many postings and reported to CEOs on what CEOs care. I've had to write up on a weekly basis. This is
Starting point is 01:08:41 what's on Glassdoor. This is, you know, and some of it, I can tell you, is very accurate and truthful. And it's something the company should be addressing. And sometimes it is the one thing that finally gets the CEO or founder executive to change behavior. So in some regards, it works sometimes. But in other, you know, but there's the other more, you know, common part of those postings, which is just somebody who was recently, had recently been fired or was part of a layoff, and they just get negative. And I don't, I, you know, I think, I think a lot of them, by the way, Peter, are people who've already left. I mean, you have to carefully read, it'll say whether there's still an employee left, but it's really the place to go blind and glass door
Starting point is 01:09:26 after you've been fired or laid off. And then, of course, on occasion, you do see the active employees and their other media sites, social media sites where they're talking amongst each other. And again, if you don't have a place where somebody can go within the company to complain and vent,
Starting point is 01:09:46 then they're going to go on social media or they're going to talk to a lawyer. So my philosophy is open door, have enough HR people, to your point, early on in the company so when something comes up and people feel whatever they're feeling that has to do with the work environment, they have someone to talk to. If they don't, they will go online or they will go, worst case, eventually to a lawyer. Amazing. Can you get people, is it legal or a good thing to ask your employees that you have a good relationship with to help give you positive ratings on Glassdoor? employees that you have a good relationship with to help give you positive ratings on Glassdoor?
Starting point is 01:10:31 Oh, no, that happens all the time. It happens all the time. I mean, I think if it seems obvious or employees pick up on that, it's just going to be perceived negatively. Sometimes I've seen CEOs have asked me, get the employees to post the opposite message now. And I can tell you, most companies do do that. It can work against you if you don't do it very clandestinely. And with thoughtfulness, I've answered on Glassdoor. I've taken it on as a role at one point just because I wanted to get close to it. And all my replies were trying to be balanced,
Starting point is 01:11:04 which is to say, there's no question your personal experience doesn't sound positive. I would love for you to come talk to me, whoever you are, so that we can address it with confidentiality and in the right way. I mean, a lot of it is just trying to get people to find someone they're willing to talk to and see if we can resolve it.
Starting point is 01:11:25 That is sort of like, I hear you. I don't think that was the intention of the company, that kind of a tone. There's no goodness in, you know, but you can respond and you can have other employees put more positive posts on. All right. I want to go to a few questions I mentioned to people on Twitter. I was going to be interviewing you and asked for questions. And there are some really good questions that popped up.
Starting point is 01:11:52 And so let me jump into some of those for fun. So Bob asks, how do you keep an organization from being dominated by HR and not lose sight of the product or the company really missing its mission and dying. Have you seen HR dominate in the wrong direction? I mean, I haven't seen HR. I think maybe Bob might mean people stuff, activism, people issues, or maybe that's what he means. I mean, or he could mean, you know, everything is around policies and, you know, people perceive HR as like an extension of legal
Starting point is 01:12:33 and policies and rules. And I think those are both valid issues. Um, um, you know, I don't think, I mean, I'm not a big believer in sort of follow the policy HR. Maybe it is a little bit of first principles thinking, which is, you know, what is the best way to solve this problem? I mean, I think great talent, great HR organizations are problem solvers. person reports to the CEO, the CEO reports to the board. But I don't think great heads of HR just do what the CEO says. In fact, I know that's true, particularly in public companies. We have to work with the board, which is the boss of the CEO. So there's a lot of governance. So I think great heads of people, and not all of them are great, try to do the right thing. And I think it's really a problem-solving role you do you in your hr role and with your recruiting team also help shape the board of directors and recruit board members so as a head of hr for sure less so in private smaller companies that really the founder ceo gets heavily involved in other board members get
Starting point is 01:13:45 heavily involved. But in a public bigger company, again, it is the board nominating governance committee's job. Usually it's that committee that does board recruiting. There's a chair of that committee and they work with the CEO. I think great companies also involve the CHRO in that process. I think great companies also involve the CHRO in that process. I was involved in that process at EA. You know, I remember when Gary Kusin was our chair of NOMGOV. He, you know, asked me to help him and work with the recruiting firms. And, you know, even if a process role, and I think that involvement was positive in the sense that not only do you keep the train
Starting point is 01:14:25 running on the tracks and somebody to deal with the recruiting firms, but you make sure that the board members are also a good fit. And I'll tell you, a lot of founders and CEOs in my experience have not spent much, seen that as so important. This is their boss. And to not pay a lot of attention to who you're asking to be on your board and making sure you have that chemistry as CEO with that person and making sure they're coming on for the right reasons. I've seen it again and again. I've had many CEOs I've worked for fired by their bosses as a board, and they even recruited some of the board members that voted against them for continuing CEO.
Starting point is 01:15:06 So I just think it shouldn't be taken lightly. I think the CHRO is a consigliere. The CEO can really help in that process and really make sure they're paying attention to the process, carving out time to get to know that person and making sure it's the right person for the board. Nate has a few good questions here. How do you separate a good interviewer from a great interviewer? Well, some of it's just the basics, right, that we talked about.
Starting point is 01:15:30 Talking too much. Exactly. A great interviewer does homework before the interview. Yeah. And knows exactly, like, you did homework on me, Peter, and so did your team before we had this podcast. I mean, that's the way you do things. And so you do your diligence, your homework, you've already combed through the resume, you've gone on LinkedIn, you've looked on social media. I mean, I remember once I was interviewing somebody, and I went on the internet and searched on the person's name and found out
Starting point is 01:15:58 some past legal issues that were absolutely a red flag. And my recruiting department didn't even catch those things. I mean, you do your homework before. You filter out the people that you shouldn't be wasting time with in a face-to-face or phone interview. And at great interviews prepared, they use behavioral interview questions, not just tell me about your experience. You really don't need someone to get on the phone or meet with you and walk through their resume. You should be past that. You want to pinpoint certain things like, why'd you leave that company?
Starting point is 01:16:31 You were only there a year. I mean, in other words, the best interviewers are really direct. Hey, I noticed on your resume, there were two companies back to back and you were only at nine months at both. What happened? Why'd you leave?
Starting point is 01:16:43 If I called your boss at each company, what would they say? Oh, they say just what I told them? There's that trick again. Yeah. Yeah. I'm calling Sally. I'm calling Sally. I'm calling Sally. Let's go to this one from Bruno. He says, how do you handle disagreements with a strong sort of founding CEO, aka Elon or other senior executives, when there's a disagreement in strategic HR decisions? I mean, I've been in conversations with Elon where I've watched a disagreement and he doesn't tolerate a disagreement. And I'm sure people feel the same for me, probably not at that level, but how do you deal with a strong
Starting point is 01:17:25 founding CEO when you're in disagreement with them? Yeah, no, it's a really great question. And I've had to deal with that, as you say, quite a bit. And I've learned over time, I'm not naturally great at just not speaking my mind. So if I have experience or a point of view that I think is helpful to that founder or CEO or the company and helpful and know that the impact of what their decision is would be negative. Again, there's nothing in it for me. I don't, it's not about ego. It's just about, in my experience, doing that will lead to this. Some CEOs or founders don't even want to hear that. They might not even care about your experience.
Starting point is 01:18:08 I mean, it might even be hard to just, to your point, counter at all. These are people with very little time. They're in a rush. This is what they think everyone should be doing or you should be doing, and there's little tolerance for it. So, I mean, the little tricks I've learned are, and not no, like like i say do such and such will do and you know in other words or if you have to get them to do something find a way
Starting point is 01:18:37 to make them think it's their idea not yours it seems to help with a certain autocratic style like you know even if you're a little tricky about it, like, you know, when you said that, it made me think of this. It really triggered this amazing idea, really, which you made me think of when you said X, Y, Z. So you can turn it into their idea that helps. But there is no no. That is really hard with those kind of leaders.
Starting point is 01:19:00 It is understood. I mean, there's certain language around some of these leaders it's quite common it's you know understood will do and not but and would it be okay if we also did x yes and would it be helpful you know if i could also so if you have to turn it into a positive somehow, or it's just not tolerated, and it's very hard. Great advice. So you're in a company, maybe it was in Tesla, maybe it was in EA, someplace else, and there are harassment claims, and there are conflicts. And how do you go about today, you know, investigations? And I just, I can't, I have to imagine that gets more and more difficult, the risk involved.
Starting point is 01:19:57 So Bruno asks, you know, he says, how did Tesla handle internal conflicts or issues of harassment and what systems were in place to ensure unbiased investigations? Yeah, I, my philosophy is be all over that stuff. When I was at Tesla, I had an incredible woman lead the legal department and come work for me and ran an investigations group. It's become more and more common of big types of companies. Not all companies have these groups. And it's not your HR manager, your HR business partner. Those groups exist too. But it's an investigations group because if you have high volume in terms of complaints,
Starting point is 01:20:45 just by the sheer size or the type of company or whatever it may be, you absolutely need to very quickly respond to these complaints and investigate them. And that's under the law, right? It's in the eye of the victim to decide whether that person felt it was a hostile environment or they felt they were harassed. And it is really up to the company to prove otherwise. So these investigations are critical. And some companies are very, very, very high volume. And as I said, in my case, I pulled somebody from the legal department to run it. She was fabulous. And much of it, you know, would turn into litigation ultimately. So I also reported back to the CEOs, you know, here's the top 10. And, you know, I don't want any surprises. I mean, this might revert from the investigations HR team to the legal department soon. And at that point, once it's in legal hands, it's lawyer to lawyer. But it's just, and many of these, you know,
Starting point is 01:21:37 situations are very real. And the employee needs protection, and then we need to solve the problem and get rid of the manager or get rid of the person who did it. And both happen. I mean, I wouldn't say they're all false. I would say 90% of what I had to deal with under investigations were true. 10 to 20 would not be true, but most are true. And so it's not just that we have a legal requirement to an investigation. I want to stop whatever's happening that got to the point where the person had to make the complaint to us in the first place. There's something that's not working. Get rid of the problem. Great. Bruno has another great question. He says, given the intense work environment at Tesla, how did you possibly manage burnout and mental health concerns. And is that, you know, is that your responsibility at the end of the day?
Starting point is 01:22:28 Because I do imagine, I know in my own organizations, I operate 24-7. And a lot of people, you know, and I'm sending out emails at midnight, not expecting people to respond, but, and I've had to tell them, you know, you can wait till the morning to respond. Don't think because I send it to you, it's just, you know, I'm not going to program it to go out in the morning. So how do you deal with that? I wouldn't say it's just a Tesla thing. I mean, I, you know, in the gaming industry, there's crunch time when you're supposed to ship a game on time and they slip all the time and people work 24 by seven. And, you know, there's some legal considerations,
Starting point is 01:23:06 which is to say, there's some laws around, you know, are you a salaried employee or you are a non-exempt hourly employee? Many companies have their employees misclassified. And so if you have these crunch times or burnout periods, and the job is supposed to be under the state or federal law, what I'm calling non-exempt or hourly, you may be paying those people wrong. And that can turn into a class action lawsuit in these times of 24 by 7. So if you're 24 by 7 or a over eight hour work environment, make sure you've classified your jobs correctly.
Starting point is 01:23:40 So whoever is supposed to be certain jobs are absolutely not exempted under law and they are paid hourly with overtime and double time and time and a half etc so that's something that has surprised many of my companies um many many companies because if that will come up any lawyer loves to grab that lawsuit this class action lawsuit and secondly though in terms of mental health and just burnout it's a real issue I mean, it took a different form during COVID even where people couldn't separate their personal and workspace and life. I think it's a big concern and there are a lot of new companies that have popped up to help us from a healthcare side, you know, support and help pay for behavioral health
Starting point is 01:24:27 in different and new ways. These point solution healthcare companies like Lyra are fabulous to help companies really support the needs of their employees. You know, it's just much more of a need right now. So I think, you know, the engagement, everyone has a survey. People need to chime in and make sure a company realizes where their pockets of extremes and issues. But there are certain companies, I mean, consulting is like this a little bit, you know, companies maybe like Tesla, where the culture is a 24 by 7. And you want to opt in or opt out.
Starting point is 01:25:06 And you want to understand what each culture is about and make personal choices. But at least I do think most companies that have an obligation, you know, they have some obligation today, at least to provide health care benefits that can support people in dealing with this because they do bring it to the workplace or it's created by the workplace.
Starting point is 01:25:26 And I'm a big supporter of mental health support. All right. Last question here, but an important one, especially now. This comes from Paramendra, who asks, best practices for hiring a remote-only team? And I want to also add on to that question, I think from Amber, it's like, should we be moving back to offices or are UK, you know, sort of staying remote? So let's, let's tackle as our final subject, the, the pluses and minuses and the HR challenges of, of remote only and a mixed team here, because it sure has made things interesting. Yeah. And I am not an expert in the category, although I am part of a board group that gets together to learn and be better board members. And we did have
Starting point is 01:26:18 a Stanford professor who is an expert in this area come talk to us. So I know a little bit about it and I've experienced it. I mean, I would say, you know, there are a lot of companies today that are 100% remote. They were created that way. I actually advise one of those companies and talk to their head of HR regularly, every week. And it can be tough, you know, I am, so to answer the second question, philosophically, I am in the camp of in-person is better. It's better for building loyalty and that stickiness of a culture. It's better for collaboration. It's better for community building.
Starting point is 01:27:00 And I think a lot of the leadership today is in the sort of Gen X age group and we happen to be and I'm in the age group we happen to have loved that ability to work from home I'm generalizing now but to work from home or work from wherever we may be and so while we might be okay with being remote we're often in the leadership roles and our Gen Z folks, our millennials would rather be in the office. They're forming relationships. Remember, we all met our friends and even maybe our partners in the workplace. And we're taking that away from the younger generations. And it's a problem, not only from a social and mental health,
Starting point is 01:27:42 but from a work collaboration standpoint. So I'm a believer in it. I just don't think it's a problem, not only from a social and mental health, but from a work collaboration standpoint. So I'm a believer in it. I just don't think it's easy to do. Now that so much of it has been reversed. I mean, I'm also, I just think the companies that went totally remote, you know, I'm not a big fan of it. And then it kind of killed like San Francisco and the downtown commercial real estate situation too. That's a whole other problem. It's changed you know cities do you think i mean so everyone forced remote and it was fascinating and um but do you think that the pendulum swang all one way i don't think it's ever going back to the way it was right right? It's too hard. It's too hard to reverse it. And there's some great aspects of it.
Starting point is 01:28:29 There's some great aspects of it. And it works. It works, you know, it works, I don't think, as well. Although, look, there's some upsides to it. You know, you cut out maybe up to two hours. I commuted two hours a day most of my career. So it's, you know, there really are some positive aspects of it. You can be home, you know, to grab a bite and you might run into your child, which is like something I never experienced as I was raising my kids. I was never home. So believe me, I think there's a lot of
Starting point is 01:28:57 things that are very positive about it. I don't think it's going back to the way it was. I think it's sort of more of a hybrid situation at this point. We've allowed people to move. So I'm not a fan of a company doing a total reversal and saying, come in. And many of the tech companies are doing that. Or forcing people to come in. Yeah, forcing people. Right. Now, if you're a manufacturing company, you're talking about the manufacturing group, they never even went remote during COVID. They had to work. So there's certain companies where remote doesn't work at all. But there are other companies where it is working.
Starting point is 01:29:29 As I say, I'm an advisor. One, it is working, but they, well, we talk about a lot of what they do is they have in-person meetings on a regular basis. So a quarterly all company meeting and departmental meeting. So it's not as if you never get together. You have to get together to keep the, if nothing else, the culture and the alignment. But I agree, it's never going to go back to the way it was, but there's pros and cons with a new arrangement. Yeah. I miss offices and that's what most of our companies do right now. Not all of them, but a lot of them still have, you know, Fountain Life, our medical operation has centers and we operate there and such. But a number of companies, we do, you know,
Starting point is 01:30:12 quarterly meetups for a week. We have a meet a week, a quarter, and then we're on Zoom constantly and we pair up and have meetings as needed. But I miss having an office that was a center gathering place and running into people and having an idea and knocking on the door, hey, can I ask you a quick question? Exactly. And we'll get the virtualized version of that. One of the companies of Adam I'm a board member of is heading in that direction, but it's still not there.
Starting point is 01:30:41 Hiring a remote-only team, I mean, that's fascinating, right? I mean, the geographic arbitrage of being able to hire, you know, great AI engineers in Romania or Brazil, you know, I mean. Access to talent, right? I mean, it really opened the doors for like almost any company to be able to access some of the best engineering talent so listen i mean they're they're pros and cons and maybe the hybrid once we settle into the perfect hybrid is the right answer um and it may indeed be i just think the extreme of one or the other you know at this point is either impossible or not ideal and forcing people back in the office and losing potentially some of your best talent seems short-sighted you know gabby this point is either impossible or not ideal. And forcing people back into the office and losing potentially some of your best talent
Starting point is 01:31:26 seems short-sighted, you know? Gabby Taldano, I am so grateful. Thank you. I actually wish I had had this conversation with you 20 years ago. I mean, I've been a lot more effective. I have learned the value of having a great head of HR as your partner, as your consigliere, as you said,
Starting point is 01:31:47 across everything. Until we have real AGI or artificial super intelligence, humans are still a super critical part of our company. Gabby, so grateful. Thank you so much. Thank you so much, Peter. I really enjoyed it. Thank you. Real pleasure.

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