Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Anne Wojcicki: How 23andMe is Disrupting the Healthcare Industry | E246
Episode Date: September 25, 2023Anne Wojcicki and her co-founders started 23andMe back in 2006 with a clear mission: to make genetic testing and its results, including findings about predisposition to disease, widely available to co...nsumers. And, in exchange for a swab of spit and a fee, 23andMe provided its customers with unprecedented insight into their own genetic makeup. Now, Wojcicki and her company are at the forefront of a broader movement to expand personalized care and drug options in healthcare. In today’s episode, Anne talks about the challenges in understanding the code of life, the benefits of DNA testing, concerns over privacy in the healthcare industry, and the future of medicine and new drug discovery. Anne Wojcicki is a biologist, entrepreneur, and the co-founder and CEO of the personal genomics company 23andMe, which provides genetic testing for individuals curious about their ancestry and genetic makeup. In this episode, Hala and Anne will discuss: - Anne's disillusionment with the U.S. healthcare system - The power of the human genome - The challenges of direct-to-consumer DNA tests - The real reason 23andMe was so controversial - Handling FDA concerns - Challenges of achieving transparency and privacy - How people’s lives have been changed by taking the 23andMe test - Integrating genetics into patient care - How large datasets are helping solve health mysteries - Building a direct-to-consumer healthcare movement - Combining genetics with drug discovery research - Expanding 23andMe’s non-European databases - How AI will change the medical landscape - And other topics… Anne Wojcicki is a biologist, entrepreneur, and the co-founder and CEO of the personal genomics company 23andMe. She has been on Forbes’ list of the World's 100 Most Powerful Women and has been named “The Most Daring CEO” by Fast Company. Her company 23andMe provides genetic testing for individuals curious about their ancestry and genetic makeup, but it is doing a lot more than that, including helping to revolutionize how we think about drug discovery and the genetics of health. Resources Mentioned: Anne’s Website: https://blog.23andme.com/tag/anne-wojcicki Anne’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/annewojcicki/ Anne’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/annewoj23?lang=en Anne’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/annewoj23/?hl=en Where you can order a 23andMe Health and Ancestry Kit: https://www.23andme.com/dna-health-ancestry/ LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify Green Chef - Go to GreenChef.com/60yap and use code 60yap to get 60% off plus free shipping. Rocket Card - Go to rocketcard.com/profiting and get up to 5% cash back on every purchase toward a new loan Relay - Apply online and sign up for FREE! Go to relayfi.com/profiting **Relay is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services and FDIC insurance provided through Evolve Bank & Trust and Thread Bank; Members FDIC. The Relay Visa® Debit Card is issued by Thread Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and may be used everywhere Visa® debit cards are accepted. More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In healthcare in general, you as the individual as a healthcare consumer, you are never
the customer.
Ever.
It's the closest thing I've ever seen to communism.
I want to overthrow it. I want to create a system. I want to create a community where you're
empowered to actually be healthy. And I found that the healthcare system overwhelmingly has given up on you.
only has given up on you.
If you want to improve healthcare for everyone, it cannot be dependent upon a one-to-one interaction
with a clinician.
So, healthcare has to find ways to scale.
It has to be about how do you deliver care
for many people with the oversight of just one.
So, similar to like you are surprised now,
if you ever have to call a hotel to book a reservation.
Like now you just go online and you book it, you just can do all these things on your own,
and healthcare has to transform in that same way.
What is up, young and profitors?
You're listening to YAP, Young and Profiting podcasts where we interview the brightest minds in the world
and unpack their wisdom into actionable advice
that you can use in your daily life.
I'm your host, Hallitaha.
Thanks for tuning in and get ready to listen, learn and profit.
Young and Profters, we have a very special guest today, Ann Wojcicki. Ann Wojcicki is an innovative biologist and entrepreneur and the co-founder and CEO of
the personal genomics company 23&Me.
She's been named by Forbes as one of the world's 100 most powerful women and has been
named the most daring CEO by fast company.
Her company 23Me provides genetic testing for individuals curious about their ancestry and genetic makeup and you may have already taken one of their tests.
But 23Me is doing a lot more than that, including helping to revolutionize how we think about drug discovery and the genetics of health.
And I'm thrilled to have you on here.
Welcome to Young & Profiting Podcast.
Thank you for having me.
Excited to be here.
All right, let's talk a little bit about your own genetic materials to start.
You came from a family of very high achievers.
Can you talk to us about what it was like growing up for you in an environment like that
and around the Stanford campus where I understand you spend a lot of time as a child?
And how did that influence you as a person and your career trajectory?
Definitely.
You know, what's interesting is our childhood was obviously extraordinary in some ways in
retrospect.
And it was extraordinary while we were growing up.
You know, not everyone has particle physics as parents.
And the campus will up was unusual.
But I did.
We had an amazing peer group of other people who I always like to point out.
The friends that I grew up with have gone on to do extraordinary things, slightly less
public than what we have done.
But I really do credit in many ways the community as a whole for raising a whole community of children that were really raised
to think big and think creatively and not worry about making money, but really to follow
your passions.
And I would say another thing that was also very aligned with this community being an academic
community, we were very much aligned with how to not spend money.
And so because again, we were all on academic budgets, there wasn't that luxury of actually
spending a lot.
Like we all had sort of a common sense of thriftiness of actually how you were going to make small
amounts of money and be able to still enable yourself to do lots of interesting opportunities.
So my parents, my father is a particle physicist at Stanford.
My mother was a high school teacher at Palato High School.
And the thing that was interesting,
I'm a child of immigrant parents.
And so my parents really brought that work ethic
and this appreciation for the country.
And overwhelmingly, my father is a particle physicist
who was studying
whether or not neutrinos have mass. That's a very academic pursuit. I was always envious of people
who had parents where it was like, oh, you work on fruit loops. That's something you can really
understand. Searching for mass was not necessarily something people could relate to. And then my mother, she taught high school journalism,
was unusual in how much she was a believer
in children's potentials,
and really in that importance of self-advocating.
And my mother was definitely unusual in our area
for her community activism.
When she wasn't happy about something.
She was extraordinary at driving change.
She was extraordinary at seeing an idea and then making it happen.
I grew up my mom was also sold in cyclopedia Britannica's door to door.
So I grew up also kind of with that mentality.
It's like, you were kind of doing whatever you needed to do
to make things happen.
And obviously I have my two older sisters
who've both gone on to do extraordinary, interesting things.
But again, kind of all at that,
with that same upbringing that we were encouraged
and raised to really follow our passions.
And academics was definitely prioritized in our life over sort of everything else, but
really I'd say the number one thing was finding your passions.
I love that.
And I love to see three powerful women, all three of her sisters, like you said, very successful.
One of your sisters was a former CEO of YouTube.
And you're the CEO of 23 Me.
Like it's just pretty incredible that all of you became so successful.
So when I did my research, I found out that you went to jail.
You went to jail.
Yep.
My old boss used to say, I went to jail.
So I'd rather go to a whale than to jail.
So.
You studied biology at Yale and then you ended up working
on Wall Street for about a decade.
And you worked on some hedge funds in healthcare,
but then you ended up becoming disillusioned eventually.
What was the problem with you working on Wall Street?
Why did you feel unaligned?
You know, I took a job on Wall Street.
I didn't even know what it was.
I knew what stocks were.
I knew the stock market.
I always loved playing in Wistox and understanding the stock market. But I loved playing in with stocks and understanding the stock market.
But I didn't know that you could actually have a job on Wall Street, like a banking job.
When I graduated college, frankly, it was like a huge surprise that I was even asked to
interview at this company.
And I really only took the job interview just because I wanted the frequent flyer miles,
not because I was actually interested in the job, going back to that thrifty side of the family.
And my dad is the one who encouraged me to take the job,
in part because he's like, I don't know,
he's like, it's so outside of our comfort zone,
you should totally try this.
It's so unusual.
And so I took it kind of on a whim,
and I was really lucky because I worked
for spectacular people. And I would say
one of the most important lessons I learned over time was finding extraordinary mentors in an
extraordinary place that's really willing to invest in you. And the Wallenberg family and
an investor AB was that kind of place. Like they really invested in me. They had a mission that
I aligned with. It was all about long-term investing in healthcare,
identifying the transformative technologies
and being a big player in them.
And it was also just really, really good people.
Over time, as I moved on to hedge funds
and I wanted a more aggressive trading experience,
I started to also realize the profit-making side
of healthcare.
And not that it wasn't when I was working in an investor A.B., but it kind of felt like
it was aligned with sort of transplantation, xenotransplantation we're looking at.
Like the revolutionary change that you could bring with having pig organs going to humans.
When I was investing, it was really just about how could I do a roll-up of dialysis centers
and each dialysis
patient is worth a certain dollar amount and how do I maximize the profits there?
How do I increase collections in a hospital setting?
If I move collections into the emergency department, if I change the protocol for when you ask
people for the insurance, what are all those things that optimize billing?
And I became really sort of most dissolution.
I went to this one meeting on billing optimization.
And I realized that all this data we had and all the new analytics power was really going
into not how to keep me out of the hospital, but really into how is it that when I go in
for a procedure, I can maximize the amount of money that I'm getting out of billing.
And I go to these meetings and I kept thinking well what happens if you're 90 years old and you have no health conditions and you're healthy.
No one makes money on you and I got really interested in the world of prevention and realized that all these
people would kind of pat me on the back and they're like, it's so cute that you think about
prevention, but no one rewards you for the absence of a disease. And it's true. If I have
a big population and nobody gets diabetes, no one's going to reward you. There's no financial
reward with that kind of system. But if you have diabetes and you successfully manage them, there's lots of money.
And I used to use this example about the diabetes prevention plan that was started by the CDC
and it was funded with $14 million every year for diabetes prevention.
And it's an incredibly effective program.
And then I'd compare that to the $200 billion or so that spent on diabetes. And
you just realize there's just no comparison. There's overwhelmingly an incentive to just
have people manage their disease once they have it. I became also really at the same time
inspired by the HIV community. And back when I was in high school, you had that passion, that penetrated even high school kids of, you
know, silence equals death and the quilt project.
You couldn't avoid the activism of HIV activists, like it was just, you knew that community.
And if you watch a movie called How to Survive a Plague, it's extraordinary to see the
role that those activists had in actually transforming the
course of the disease and how much they were a central figure in actually coming up with
that plan of like how are they going to do drug discovery, how are they going to enroll
people, what are those trials going to look like.
And I realized I wanted to be part of that kind of movement.
I want to be part of that kind of movement where people were standing up and advocating for themselves. And I realized in healthcare in general,
you the consumer have almost no role. It's the closest thing I've ever seen to communism.
Like if you just think about for all these people, like you had the whole show about profits
and etc. Like you're usually have this relationship between the customer and the provider, but
in this case you as the individual as a healthcare consumer, you are never the customer. Ever.
Doctors go out of the room and they talk about you, and then they come back and they tell
you where you're not part of the decision process in any way.
And so I came increasingly cynical, and at the end of 10 years I kind of came out more with this mentality. It's like I want to overthrow it. I want to create a system. I
want to create a community where you're empowered to actually be healthy and
where we have a direct-to-consumer relationship with you and we're all about
investing in you as an individual
to be as healthy as possible.
And I found that the healthcare system
overwhelmingly has given up on you.
They kind of believe like,
ah, if you're already sick and you're overweight
and this and this, you're not gonna do anything.
They just like, ah, we already know.
And it's an awful, like when I work in hospitals,
it's like, it's an awful experience.
There's no other business that fundamentally doesn't believe in their customers.
Like imagine if, like, you know, your TV shows were like,
you know, you're incapable of understanding this.
And it's a totally different kind of world and healthcare,
where they're kind of betting on your failure,
rather than betting on your success,
for any kind of behavior change.
Yeah.
I have a family of doctors, and I've witnessed this myself.
I've always felt a little bit unaligned in terms of the fact that people make money off
of other people's sickness.
And a lot of doctors are really well-meaning.
They want to help people, but the system is set up where everybody just profits off of
people's sickness.
So to your point, now that there's more direct to consumer options for
people to be able to take control over their health, there's an opportunity for some change to
happen in the healthcare system. Totally. I always said the healthcare system is full of people
who really care and they're all incredibly well-meaning. You don't go and suffer through seven
years of medical school just to have the wrong incentives. People are there because they really care, but the incentives of the system are just
pointing in a direction that don't align. And I think there's been all kinds of articles lately about
the misalignment between the medical care provider and the institution and what they're doing. For
instance, there is the hospital system that was denying payment or like, wouldn't treat
people anymore if you had outstanding bills.
Hmm.
I mean, it was these awful stories of people who they knew couldn't take care of themselves
and they were just putting them out on the street.
So I think you do have that issue as like the systems are not aligned and we do, you know,
fundamentally, I'm not positive that you can get around that if you don't have a single
pair system. So it's just really, really challenging because right now you can't
ask anyone to work for free and I completely understand there is an economy around healthcare
and you can't expect people to work for free, but I do wish that there was a way that
we could align incentives so that what is best for you is actually going to be what's
best for the entire healthcare ecosystem.
Can you just clarify, you said single pair?
What do you mean by that?
Right now we have a healthcare system where it's very fragmented who's paying the bill.
And if I'm employed by GE, and let's say the average employee works three years there,
that means GE is paying for my healthcare, but only for three years there. That means GE is paying for my health care, but only for three years.
And so why would they pay $10,000 for something today that is not going to save them money
in the next three years, but it's going to save them money over 15 years?
So everyone looks at what we think about in financial terms, what's your ROI,
people start to look at their ROI based on how long likely is the employee going to stay.
So if you're only going to be there for three years, it has to be an ROI within three years
if we're going to pay for some kind of preventative investment.
Otherwise, you pass the buck and it's a game of
pass the buck and it's a game of a game of manage the risk over your whole lifetime and can you invest in something that is important
in your 20s that will pay out then in your 40s or 50s. So right now no one wants to invest
in that way, but if you actually had a single pair system, you potentially have more of a
likelihood of actually seeing the return on investment for that institution.
Okay, got it. So you were on Wall Street, you started to have a change of heart.
So, you started to think that you could maybe help start to change things now that you
had an insider view of what was going on.
And from my understanding, you thought about going to med school, but that didn't end up
happening.
What happened next?
I had always thought about going to med school ever since I was a kid.
And I would take off time at different times to think, oh, maybe now is the time I'll go
back to medical school.
But what was unusual in 2000 to 2003 is that you started to see really the rise of the
web and internet.
And people that I got to know, the catarena fake, who would explain like web 2.0, you know,
web's not just about flat information,
but you're actually gonna have the connectivity.
And obviously now it's so obvious to all of us
that it's hard to imagine that that was even
a revolutionary concept at the time, but it was.
So I recognize I was like, well, what's really exciting
is that there's a technology that is inexpensive enough now
that individuals could actually get access to their human genome.
And to me, your genome is the foundation of your health
and your health risks.
So if you can understand your genetics,
you know whether or not you potentially have a predisposition
for a certain kind of condition.
Are you higher risk for blood clotting?
Are you more likely to not metabolize a certain kind of medication? are you higher risk for blood clotting, are you more likely to not metabolize a certain kind of medication, are you higher risk for breast cancer?
So if you know what your risks are, then you can actually do something to prevent them.
And I also really believed in this concept of big data.
How is it that you could crowdsource millions and millions of people to participate in research to really uncover
the mysteries of health.
And I realized all these healthcare is done
and healthcare research is done
in these little cohorts.
Like Stanford will have a cohort.
Harvard has a cohort, you know, NIH has a cohort.
And occasionally they come together and collaborate,
but it's complicated, it's a lot of people.
It's not easy.
So my idea again was how do you just go direct to consumer?
How do you enable people to say you can get access to this revolutionary technology to
learn about your genetics and your genetic health risks?
And then how do I leverage all those concepts that are coming out of Web 2.0 to say it's not just about you and your information, but now it's actually going to be a social concept where you're going to learn about yourself, but then you're going to learn from the crowd and we're going to crowdsource research, meaning it's going to have research about breast cancer and what that means for you, but then also a huge community of individuals who may have
risk factors for breast cancer, may have had breast cancer, or maybe they have no breast
cancer in their family.
Each individual can be useful in that pursuit of research.
So started the company with this idea that people can get access to their own genome,
that it's going to be direct to consumer, and that we're going to create this kind of research community online.
And so when you first started 23 and me, it was pretty controversial.
23 and me was very controversial, but for reasons that people don't fully understand.
The reason why we were super controversial in those early days is that healthcare, again, I gave that example to me healthcare is like a communist system.
And so you have a system that decides
what's the healthcare for you,
and they control the information.
Today, when you go to the doctor,
your insurance company, your PBM, your physician,
various academies and those policies,
they all decide what you get.
You don't just walk in and say,
like, hey, I want this menu of options.
Here's what I want.
So 23Me, everyone is talked about genomics.
Everyone talks about, oh, one day,
every child will have their DNA at birth
and it's going to be using this way.
Like, ever since Star Trek,
we've been talking about this for a long time.
So suddenly 23Me comes in,
we circumvented the entire system.
And we just said, like, hey, guess what, you guys want this information? You can have it. So suddenly 23Me comes in, we circumvented the entire system.
And we just said, like, hey, guess what?
You guys want this information?
You can have it.
And there was sort of an uproar over, do you have a right to get access to this information?
Doesn't it need to go through a clinician?
Doesn't it need to be moderated by the system that controls all the other health that you
have?
Think about, if you want to go and get like a simple iron test,
that's a blood test, you have to get a prescription
from your doctor.
So suddenly something as revolutionary as genetics
was going direct to consumer, and that didn't sit well.
The most controversial aspect of us
is that we're direct to consumer,
not as much as the genetics, but that we're direct to consumer
and that we bypass the entire system.
So in those early days, some of the medical meetings
we went to, it was like pitchforks out for us.
I had one doctor, I remember standing up,
who was like, I can't even sit at the table with you.
And it was interesting, everyone had different reasons.
Some people were like, oh, this information's so controversial, people will kill themselves. Someone said,
you are going to have women all over the country abandoned because you're going to uncover the
non-beterny rates in this country. We had all kinds of things. And frankly, it was a lot of
conjecture about like, what was it that was going to happen? And then obviously, the one of the more well-manowed moments for our company's
history was in 2013 when the FDA actually gave us a warning letter that came out and said,
you can no longer deliver the health information. 23 and me at that time had to stop offering
our health reports. We didn't have to stop selling, but we couldn't return our health reports anymore. And a lot of people at that time thought that would kill us.
And we would do one of two things.
We would either just become an ancestry testing company and not do anything else in the health space,
or it would force us into compliance with the rest of the system,
and it would force us to go through a doctor.
And I think the path that we took was the one that was the hardest and frankly the most surprising,
which is that we said, we are actually doubling down on direct to consumer.
And not only are we not going to change, but we're going to prove to you in data
that the test we have is safe, and that people are capable of spitting on their own
and that they can understand this information without the supervision of a healthcare provider.
And so it took us years, and we're still getting FDA submissions, like it took us about
seven years to get back all the submissions, all the reports that we had had, but we've proven out now over time that you can get really medically meaningful
information like your breast cancer risk or your Alzheimer's risk.
And you can buy that online, you can spit in a tube at home, and we can deliver those
results to you and that you do not need clinical oversight of that.
And I think more and more, like one of the most important things for me,
again, as a takeaway from my healthcare days,
if you want to improve healthcare for everyone,
it cannot be dependent upon a one-to-one interaction with a clinician.
So healthcare has to find ways to scale.
It has to be about how do you deliver care
for many people with the oversight of just one. So similar to like you are surprised now,
if you ever have to call a hotel to book a reservation, this probably hasn't happened in most
of your listeners lifetime. But like that used to happen to me, like I would have to call the hotel
and you said, wait, like now you just go online and you book it, you just can do all these things on your
own.
And healthcare has to transform in that same way.
Let's hold that thought and take a quick break with our sponsors.
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This is so interesting. I have a lot of follow up questions about what you just said.
First off, when it comes to people doing the 23 and me test, like you said, you find out
about any diseases that you might be predisposed to. You also find out about your ancestry and
you end up maybe indirectly getting information about your parents or your outside family.
Talk to us about some of the consequences, I guess, of this data when it comes to getting inside about other people's
data from learning more about your own DNA. Does that make sense?
A hundred percent. Yes. So, since we started the company, privacy and transparency and
choice were top priorities for us. We spent an extraordinary amount of time with ethicists and privacy experts really thinking
through the process.
And so for that reason, I actually have an extraordinary privacy team now, an extraordinary
ethics team.
Like from day one, we are very different than all of the other tech companies because we've had that since art like it was such a core part of our foundation, our first scientist that we hired outside of the founding team actually ran our whole ethical legal social interaction.
So it's always been a really hot priority. And in part because there are so many ethical issues. So we wanted to be really thoughtful about how you approach them.
So one of the most interesting ones that we've really embraced head on
is the fact that you share DNA with all of your family.
So who's right is it to learn about your DNA?
So for instance, you can do 23 and me and you can learn things that impact your entire family,
but your family might not have wanted to learn that. So you might learn that your father is not your
biological father. You could learn that you are of Jewish descent and you didn't know it. You could learn that you have African descent
and you didn't know it.
You could learn that your father is a sperm donor
and you didn't know that.
So there's all kinds of things that you could learn
that you did not necessarily know about.
So first thing for us was always the consent process,
like making sure people really know
that there's a lot of unexpected information
that they can gather from doing 23 in me.
And so some people are specifically coming to us
looking for that kind of information.
And for other people, it's just, it's a surprise.
Second, we try to make sure people are respectful
of the fact that your information will impact
family members and that not all family members want to know.
So I've seen, for instance, people who were adopted, who say, I'm not going to do 23
me until my adoptive parents have passed away out of respect for them.
So we'll see things like, as well, where people find out like, oh my father,
I found additional siblings,
but I'm not gonna contact them.
I don't wanna disrupt my parents.
So what we have found,
and we've taken that position, it's your DNA,
and you have the right to access
what is fundamentally about you.
But it's important that we make sure our customers
are aware that there are consequences for the entire family
and that you learning, for instance, that you also are a carrier.
Let's say you have two copies of the Alzheimer's, the ApoE4,
so you're higher risk for Alzheimer's disease.
If you find out you have two copies, you just found out something.
Like you know that both your parents have a risk factor.
So maybe they didn't want to know, but then you find that both your parents have a risk factor. So maybe they didn't want to know,
but then you find that out.
So making sure people are sensitive to that information
and that they communicate it directly
or they communicate it appropriately within a family,
and sometimes that means not communicating it at all.
So many more people now have access
to their genetic information.
I think over 13 million, perhaps more by now,
have taken your test.
And now they're bringing their results to their doctor. And I don't think these doctors have been
formally trained on genetics. So what issues arise from that? And how do you see that changing
in the future? I think what's interesting now. So in those early days, that was 100% one of our issues,
is that it wasn't just that it was like, okay, there's a, like, it's controlled medical
information is controlled by this, by the population, but also does that population know how to
disseminate the information or the guidance of what to do with it. And there's always been
this crisis in the country that we have a complete shortage of genetic counselors.
So you can't necessarily, like we don't have enough people to train all the clinicians
out there.
And I think that also fundamentally we've taken that position that it needs to be all healthcare
providers who understand the integration of genetics.
They don't have to be experts in all aspects of it, but in cardiology, they should know
some of those basics and then be able, they should know some of those basics
and then be able to refer on to some of the specialists.
So in those early days, it was an issue.
People did not know.
And we took the approach right or wrong
that we were gonna work by educating customers.
We didn't have like most medical device companies
and healthcare companies have huge budgets
for educating clinicians.
And we took the approach that the most effective way we could educate clinicians was to actually
have a printout that somebody could take to their doctor's office, but that it would actually
speak to the clinician as well as the customer.
So we actually had a physician printout version that they could take in. We had CME courses, continuing medical education courses. We have a physician website so we could
train and educate physicians. So we've done what we could within a small budget to educate individuals,
but we've also completely recognized it's an issue where people could take their genetic
information and they hit a wall. So back in 2021, I think it was we acquired a company
called Lemonade Health.
And the reason why we acquired Lemonade was specifically
because I wanted to bring a medical infrastructure
into the company where I have access to clinicians,
I have telemedicine, I have access to a pharmacy,
and I could actually really deploy genomic
healthcare.
So my customers then will be able to say, hey, I've learned about my risk factor for chronic
kidney disease, and I'm eager to know what to do.
I will have a team of experts who they could call to say, hey, we want to understand better.
How do we actually implement this in our life?
So I do agree there's a need for more clinical education
and we hope to play a role in that.
But I think in the short term,
while we realize there is still that gap,
we want to offer a complete service
so that people have the ability to get direct access
to their genetic data.
And then I will have a team that will help guide them
on how do you actually take advantage of information, how do you integrate in your life.
And just one other point to emphasize there, and it ties back to some of the things I
said before, again, if you think back why I was interested in genomics, it's because of
the prevention elements.
So, and again, always recognizing that prevention is often poorly reimbursed or doesn't pay
in the healthcare care system,
a lot of the things that our clinical team will help people think about are things that are not
necessarily part of the standard system because the standard system is not as focused on prevention
in some of these areas. So for instance, you know, if you find out you're genetically
high risk for type 2 diabetes, what should you do? And then can our team of clinicians help advise
and help coach you to take advantage of that information
to get more frequent blood tests, to actually teach you
what is a hemoglobin A1C test?
How can you actually use that to monitor yourself?
What are those little diet changes you can make?
So we'll look to actually coach people more
to really drive the outcome of true behavior change.
When you started 23 and me, like you were mentioning before, it was sort of like a rocky road.
You got this FDA warning letter.
I read it was pretty difficult to acquire your first customers because people didn't really
understand it.
So there was a lot of controversy with what you were doing, but you kept your head high,
you kept going. And now 23 and is this really well-known company.
It doesn't feel controversial anymore.
When I read back on the history,
it was like, wow, it was really that big of a deal.
So what is your advice to entrepreneurs
who are trying to do something with good intentions
that they think is going to help the world,
but getting backlash?
What's your advice for them to keep going?
Yeah, that's a great question.
We used to always tell ourselves internally
that we were on the right side of history.
And I think knowing that the future is going in your direction
and that one day your reality will become the norm
and knowing that it is going there
is really motivating for people for just sort of weathering the storm and treading water.
My head of marketing, who was really a brilliant, brilliant brand marketer, had the vision.
She like, look, we're going to take the weird and we're going to make it wonderful. And
that's really what she did. She took genetic testing from these early days where it was like, why would I want this?
It was like kind of an esoteric, interesting gift.
People didn't know what would you potentially want to do
with it.
And we made it, the brand recognition is extraordinary.
And we made it something that is truly wonderful.
And again, thinking back to those days
where we'd say we're on the right
side of history, I am really proud. There's an incredible direct to consumer healthcare movement.
And I think overwhelmingly, everyone looks around, says like, healthcare is moving in this
direction where you should have rights to your medical record. You should have rights to
information about the medications you're taking. You should have rights to getting access to your blood information at the same time as
a doctor.
Don't wait for a doctor to release it.
I'm very proud, like even in the state of New York, you can now buy oral contraceptives
without a prescription, which is crazy, like that you couldn't do that before.
So I think that the world has really moved, and I think that we helped shape that.
So I do think it's helpful for founders to have a vision.
Where's the world going and knowing that it's going to be better and then you stick through it.
And I loved telling my younger employees that when we started the company, gay marriage was illegal,
which is kind of mind-blowing to them.
But I'm like, Obama even came out and said, like, he did not support gay marriage.
I was like, the world was so different,
but it was so clear that the world was going to evolve.
So you know you're on the right side of history,
but sometimes you just have to be patient.
So we took this approach, again, as a team of scientists,
you lead with science.
And I don't argue just for the sake of argument,
I argue with my data.
So now when people come and they would say,
like, oh, 23 me is dangerous,
people can't understand it,
I was like, we'll show me your data.
Because I have over 250 publications
that talk about how people can understand it.
And they're contributing to research,
and they're understanding it,
and they're changing their lives,
and they're saving lives.
So show me your data.
So I love, I love having
like substantial data behind me in an argument. And that's also one thing I would encourage
founders to do is making sure that you know you're on the right side of history, knowing
how to tread water and then making sure that you have that data to support your thesis
that like where is the puck actually going?
That's really good advice.
So I've never taken 23 May,
and I'm actually of Palestinian descent,
which that part of the world has been taken over a million times.
So I'm excited for that.
We've talked so much in the past about
we've had a number of researchers who want to do sort of
this really Palestinian genetic testing project
because there's so much connectivity
and there's so much familial relationships between those communities.
So it's been interesting.
There's been some small studies looking at that, but that's actually, it's always an interesting
example where you can take areas where there's high conflict and actually show that you are
genetically family.
Mm-hmm.
I know.
I think you could bring a lot of peace, honestly.
Those studies.
Well, the more you start to see that you are all genetically so similar and you can find
a genetic relationship with almost anyone.
So being able to find that connectivity between any two people, that would be one of my dreams
ultimately is have, you know, all of humanity on a map and be able to say, here's there's a single human tree
and you can connect yourself back to anyone within, there's the famous six generations
or seven generations back, you should be able to connect yourself to almost anyone.
So, talk to us about what is this process going to be like for me? What do I do? What do
I get? Talk to me about the process,
and then I want to hear about all the stories from these testing that you want to talk about.
Oh, yeah, okay. Well, the process is remarkably simple. You just go online and you buy it. You
can buy it through Amazon, you can buy it through us, you go online and you buy it. We send you
then a little box, it has a tube, You spit in it. It's a fair amount
of saliva that's required. We made that decision in those early days. So that way, like no one could ever
steal your saliva. Other companies would have like a little buckle swab and we said, like, no, we want.
We want an intentional amount of saliva. And then you send it back in. We extract the DNA. We run it
through our processes and our algorithms. And then we send you an email that says your
DNA is ready.
And in that, you have sort of two experiences, well, actually three experiences.
The first and the one that gets the most publicity is ancestry.
So you ask the questions like, where are you from?
How does that break down?
We get a lot of customers who are surprised, who find
out they have African ancestry, they have Jewish ancestry, they think they're 100% Irish
and then they're half Italian. Like we get, you got all kinds of interesting surprises.
And it is interesting because like no one's really just something. You always have these
little bits. So it's really fun.
People see that.
That's the ancestry composition side.
We have another feature where you can find relatives,
your DNA relatives, and that is something else.
You have to consent into that, but you consent in to see,
do you wanna see who in the database are you connected to?
And that's, for instance, we found that I have a first cousin.
So my uncle had a child,
we never knew about. So I think back on the guy who's now, he's very close to the family,
but the day that he opened up his 23-me account, and he was like, wow, I'm related to the founder of
the... Oh my God. And it's funny, so we talk about it all the time, and he comes out on all of
our vacations. It's amazing. And he's one of those stories of about it all the time. And he comes out on all of our vacations, like it's amazing.
And he's one of those stories of,
he was adopted by an amazing family
and tried to decide when's the right time to actually spit.
And again, he's so genetically similar to us.
So it's been an amazing experience
having our own 23-me story and finding family in that way.
So we have that.
Then we also have all these fun things like your knee
underthol.
So people love to talk about how much knee underthol they have.
We just recently had a paper about ancient DNA.
So you have some of these burial sites
where you find individuals who have been buried.
So being able to now connect some of those burial sites
to customers is a really interesting opportunity,
particularly for the African-American community. And then you get into the health world. In health world,
it can be all kinds of conditions we can let you know about. So if you're thinking about having
children, conditions that are more common like cystic fibrosis, we can tell you if you're a
carrier for that. We have some fun characteristic, like lactose intolerance, which, you know, it was,
like when my son started, you know, eating dairy and having issues, I could just look
online and I was like, oh, you're lactose intolerant, that's it.
So a number of those types of conditions to look at, and then some of the more serious
health related.
So breast cancer, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, prostate cancer, a number of conditions, which again, it can sound scary
when we put together the whole list, but the goal here really is for people to be empowered.
And so if you know your higher risk for breast cancer, there's things you can do to be proactive
in terms of monitoring. We have a number of customers who've gone into gotten misectomies, who
do proactive monitoring. People who find their higher risk for Alzheimer's, I find like
are really active. Well, do I shy learn additional languages? Do I read a book all the
time? Like, what are the things I can do that treat my brain like a muscle so I can keep
exercising that? We have a lot of customers then who really take the information
and they look to be proactive with it.
What is it that you can do?
And how can you be as healthy as possible?
I love it.
I'm so excited to take my test.
I can't wait.
The third area I forgot about,
which is like, again, one of the big missions
of the company is the research side.
And so we do ask our customers
to take an intake survey when they join.
And then we find that every individual has a disease that they care about. So I might
care about Parkinson's because I ran in my ex-husband's family. You might care about Crohn's
disease. We can be controls for each other. So people we find take all kinds of surveys
and they participate in research because
those really simple answers help us make discoveries that then can either turn into another kind of
test for prevention and helping customers know that they're higher risk for a condition
or it can actually put in she turned into something that could lead to drug discovery.
So we find that research side is another really important component of the company.
It's something that people opt into.
It's never defaulted, but you opt in over 80% of customers
opt in, but there's this huge opportunity then
to really advance science and advance our knowledge
about genetics.
And there was an argument at one point that would say
that people didn't want their data to be shared.
When in fact, most people are actually opting in to your point to share their data. I think, again, it goes to that hypothesis
about you as a healthcare customer. I think in healthcare, you're just treated so poorly
that people don't want to participate because you're treated like a human subject. You're also
treated like somebody who's, you know, we're never going to find you again. You're not going to
be responsible. You're not going to be responsible.
You're not going to come back like we're going to take as much as we can.
Like, it's not a consumer experience.
You would never design healthcare in a way if it was actually truly a drug to consumer
experience.
So, what I think we've proven out is that people are actually quite willing to participate
in research.
They want to be a partner in research.
They don't want to be a human subject.
And again, part of what inspired me is when I looked at things
like Susan G. Coleman and Liv Strong,
you get incredible enthusiasm of people participating
in disease research.
So how is it that you can capture that kind of enthusiasm,
but frankly actually make it more data-focused
and realize, help people realize that the most valuable thing
they have is not necessarily their wallet, but actually their data.
So participating in research, using your data, using this information about you and helping
people say we're all in this together, we're all going to find the cures together.
And now, how does this data about our genetics help us actually make better drugs?
Oh, good question.
So when we started the company that was always a hypothesis,
would we have enough data?
Do we get enough information from our customers?
Could you ever get insights that could truly be
transformative for drug discovery?
So there's a well-known example that I'll tell you about.
It's called PCSK9.
So that is where there was actually a patient who came in who had very low LDL,
which is you want your LDL levels to be low.
Clestral, right?
Correct.
From my dad.
Yeah.
He always talked about LDL particles.
Exactly.
So a type of cholesterol.
So you want it to be really low, but hers was extraordinarily low.
So they started sequencing. They did a research
project on her, and they found that she had a mutation actually in this gene called PCSK9,
and because of that mutation, she has very low, naturally LDL. Scientists then took that information,
and they are working to say, can you actually mimic the function that that mutation causes in the body?
Can you actually recreate that kind of same process in other individuals who potentially have
high-di-LDL and can you actually turn that into a drug?
So, by understanding natural human genetic variation, you can potentially start to understand, okay, how is it that I could mimic that same biology and
translate that then to other individuals so they could have that same kind of health outcome.
Another example is actually an HIV, which is interesting where some customers have a
mutation that's known. If you have that mutation, you are
resistant to HIV. You cannot get infected
if you have two copies of that variant. So that's another area where you can study, well, what is it?
What happens in that mutation? What's that biology? Why do those people not? Are they not susceptible
to HIV? And then how is it that you can actually translate those understandings into
Peninsula clinical program? So we now have, we have a whole therapeutics team,
and we did a big project with GSK
where we spent the last five years
actually going through and mining our data
to see can we actually turn these insights
into therapeutic programs?
And by understanding the genetic variant,
how that potentially influences biology,
can you then create a version where
mimics that in the human body?
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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So another question about all of your data
that you're collecting with this genetics.
I understand that about I think 60 to 70% of that data
is European genetics.
Why is it important to have more diverse genetics
and what are you guys doing to work on that?
I mean, we are definitely still Eurocentric
and we are constantly working on that.
That said, we're over 14 million customers
and so the fact that we are 60 plus percent
European means that we're the largest non-European databases in the world. Something that I find amazing
is that there's more genetic variation in Africa than in the entire rest of the world. So,
Africa is really complex, and it's an incredibly exciting opportunity to understand all that variation in the human genome and how it manifests in Africa.
So there's a lot of enthusiasm and I think people see that by looking at diversity, you're just going to better understand human conditions and making sure that a finding that occurs in a European
population, how is that also relevant in other populations? So it's a really
exciting research opportunity because when you have different populations, you're
getting more diversity and we're on a point in scale where that additional
diversity, it's something that we can actually now effectively mine
and actually really effectively learn from.
In the early days, people tried to find,
for instance, one of the earliest companies
that come here called decode where they just wanted
to go into Iceland because it was like such a,
in some ways, it's a very concentrated population
or the Ashkenazi Jewish population.
It's a very concentrated.
So now we're at a scale we're actually having that kind of diversity
could be truly transformational for discovery.
Really cool.
Okay, so I wanna close out the interview
talking about the future of genetics
and getting your perspective on that.
Before I do that,
any stories that just come to mind,
because I'm sure you hear so many stories
based on all the findings that people find about their genetics,
anything that's super meaningful or like crazy wild that you could share with our listeners.
I mean, there's so many. We have actually a whole team that would mind for stories.
The woman who did it was that used to say, she's like, oh, once a week, I sit back and I'm like,
wow, that was crazy. One of the earliest stories that I used to tell in the company, and this actually kind
of goes with sort of our mission about lead with science, is that she was adopted and
always wanted to know more about her ancestry and found that she was part of the reindeer
tribe in the Arctic Circle. And she had a sort of high-powered Silicon Valley job,
and she quit her job, and she moved to the Arctic Circle
to learn about the people up there enjoying
essentially the reindeer tribe, living there, breathing it,
and she wanted to devote all of her experiences
to really bringing publicity to
this population and her marketing abilities to making sure that again this community was thriving.
And she wrote me years later talking about how meaningful the last few years had been,
how she felt for the first time in her life. She felt at peace and at home and that she
was incredibly grateful for this information because she felt like she finally found her home.
And I took that letter over to the company and I was like, listen, you guys, because we're
regulated on the house side, we're not regulated on ancestry. And I was like, you know, you guys,
I read them the letter and I go, you know, you guys better be right because this woman just changed her whole life based on our
data. And it shows how much our information is impactful and meaningful to people. And how
important, like sometimes we're different than a lot of tech companies, like we never run fast and
break things ever. We think through that letter, which we got really in those early days,
about the consequences of every date of release
and every set of information,
and what are those consequences that come out,
and how are people going to use this?
And we have people who write in an ancestry,
we get a lot of stories.
We'll say, I'm, you know, 0.4% Japanese,
and I started taking Japanese lessons and I was moving
to Japan and then suddenly you guys did a refresh of your data and I'm now only 0.1% Japanese.
Like where did my Japanese go? And that's what you guys like people, they love clinging
and understanding that diversity. So the one other story that I do love that's actually was written up in People Magazine,
which also goes into some of the ancestry side and some of the conversations that we talked
about was an individual who was related to a grand clansman who found out through 23
me that he had by racial grandchildren.
And People Magazine does a pretty extraordinary job with the story of talking about the gathering
of that whole family.
Of this individual who obviously comes from a family of white supremacy to having children
who are biracial.
And then the father of the children who is like, let me tell you, it's not easy, but we're
going to make it work.
And it's a really honest story because I think it does show. Again, the things that we talked about is that genetics is connecting people who
might not have ever been connected, but it has really that opportunity of showing that
your differences are fabricated rather than biological. We're all quite similar.
So their life experiences rather than biological experiences.
I could see you guys turning these stories into like a book that gives like all these life lessons.
Oh really?
It's really entertaining to hear.
And I haven't tapped into the hell stories.
The thing that is the most rewarding aspect of 23 of me is how much we really do transform lives.
It's a total honor for me to do something that I think is really meaningful because every
single customer gets a story that transforms them in some capacity.
And there's almost no one.
Like, and if you don't have a story yet, you just sit back and wait, it will come to you.
But it's remarkable how much it has really changed
people's lives. And so I take that responsibility really seriously, but it's also a real privilege
that we can be so eye-opening to so many people.
Yeah. I mean, you should be really proud of what you accomplished. You created such an amazing
company. You're helping so many people and me as a woman, entrepreneur, seeing you as such a successful woman,
entrepreneur, I'm just really happy that you exist
and there's people like you out there.
So let's talk about the future of genetics
and we'll close this out
because I want to be respectful of your time.
I know we're running out of time here.
How do you think AI is going to impact everything
that you're doing?
I think it's so exciting.
As a child of a particle physicist,
what I used to love talking to my dad about was,
and this is like way before I was even working
in any capacity, and again, my dad would think about,
okay, the probabilities of a particle being in a certain spot
and that you should be able to predict the function
and you could then translate that into a cell
that would be part of a molecule
that could turn into a human.
So theoretically, you should be able to start
to predict behaviors and pattern,
like, what's your biology gonna do?
So I think about DNA is so interesting
because it's data.
You have AC, G, and T.
So you get this endless, this three billion base pairs,
and different combinations lead to me,
different combinations lead to you,
different combinations lead to a banana, or a slug.
I think the potential for really understanding
the human genome, like this code,
and understanding how that translates really into your biology,
the human body is so complex.
It's amazing to me that we all go to bed every night
and all those processes that are just happening in us,
all the machinery, it's unbelievable.
I used to stay awake at night just thinking about
what are all these processes,
and I'm not in charge of any of them, like they just happen.
So I think that AI will really help us have transformative breakthroughs in biology.
And I think that with that, the downstream consequences for consumers are considerable
because part of the reason why biotech in the drug industry is so, like, drugs are so expensive,
and it's so hard is because we have so many failures because we just fundamentally don't really
understand biology. And so the more you can apply AI to some of them, like, in established rules
and understand patterns and have become more efficient with the drug discovery process,
that's going to really translate into a material benefit for all of us.
So that's that I think it's still a ways out.
I think that there's a lot of early academic projects.
I think that are going to be really transformative, but I think it's coming.
And I think it's biology is enginomics.
It's just, it's really exciting.
I feel so lucky every day that I work in this area of the world.
You want to share anything else in terms of your predictions for the future in your industry?
Every generation is so, so it's like they look at the next generation. We're like, oh,
your generation's never going to tolerate healthcare in that same way. And I think that that is
increasingly true. I think that the direct to consumer opportunities in healthcare, and with the combination of data and AI,
I think it's gonna be really transformative.
I think the direct to consumer movement
has the potential to really break healthcare
and make it truly something that is in your best interest.
And I think AI will, for the first times,
and I said this early on,
like a lot of analytics were applied to billing optimization.
So by having more of a consumer movement,
you have more data that's actually applied
to keeping you healthy,
like things that are actually in all of our best interest.
So I think even all the tech companies getting involved,
there's a lot of money out there now that is
interested in longevity. And so how you can actually stay healthier and understand basic biology,
there's just a tremendous amount of opportunity. And there's a tremendous amount of money.
I would say also the rise of big data, like you've had big data in, you know, broadly,
like you look at that with Google and Facebook and all the in Apple
and all these companies, like there's just, there's so much data that's out there.
And I think having large data sets in healthcare could really be used for incredible good
and understanding the mysteries of health.
This goes along with the theme of almost everything that we have in our reality right now.
Like, for example, in the past, it used to be
that only news outlets controlled the news.
Now, like, we, as people, have the ability
to communicate with each other, same with entertainment,
you know, it would be you'd have to go to the movie theater.
Now, we have more control.
So, it sort of just goes along with the theme
of basically everything that we interact with in our lives.
I totally agree.
I mean, I think that's why people are getting used to it.
And I think that's why there's actually a fighting chance
that it can happen.
The difference with healthcare is it's regulated.
Like, don't forget, like I was shut down.
I was 23 and stupid.
For instance, like the fact that telemedicine
can't work over state lines is insane.
You can't do a telemedicine with somebody in Boston. So there's a lot of
regulations that are still there that need to change. Again, you look at the right side of history.
This is a good example. In 30 years, people are not going to be thinking about like, oh, sorry.
You're in Las Vegas and I'm in California. And so we can't, like I can't treat you. It's just
crazy. The same way kids today who don't remember,
like I used to wake up in the middle of the night
to call a hotel in Paris to book a room.
It was a one-to-one interaction.
Now you have Expedia and it's all scalable.
And so healthcare has to become scalable.
Like that to me is like one of the most interesting,
most fundamental principles.
I think AI in the delivery of care, absolutely.
You should have your version of AI health delivery
for diagnoses.
It's like already starting to happen, you can see
how much you can actually put this information in.
And I have no doubt it's going to be better.
Like physicians are people.
They get tired, they have bad days.
I think you're going to be able to make physicians
truly being great at what they're doing,
which was actually taking care of people
and also some of the empathy that should come with that.
And allow the AI to actually be able to become
an incredible diagnostic tool for everyone.
And I'm very excited for the future of healthcare.
Thank you so much for all of your insights.
This is such a great conversation.
I end my show with two last questions.
The first one is what is one actionable thing
my younger profitors can do today
to become more profitable tomorrow.
Don't spend your money today.
Mm, good one. The most important thing. My mom taught me when I
was in fourth grade, I had pneumonia and my mom was slightly unusual, but she gave me for reading
one page or about compound interest. And honestly, it's like all I can think about, like every time
I would save money, all I could think about was the future value that I was spending.
Love it. Okay. And then what is your secret to profiting in life? And this can go beyond
financial. So how do you hope for people to profit in all areas of their life?
I think the way you profit in life is by really being passionate about what you do. I feel very
rich in the capacity. I love what I do. I'm also a big believer. I would, I hesitate to also say like work-life balance. My children were in my last call
with me. I'm surprised my daughter hasn't joined this one yet. But by being
passionate about the things in my life, my children, my environment, my work, my
friends, I always feel incredibly fulfilled. I love that. Well thank you so much
Anne. This was an incredible conversation, thank you so much, Ann.
This was an incredible conversation.
I learned so much, and I think my listeners did as well.
Thank you for your time.
Thank you. So nice to see you.
I learned so much from my conversation with Ann.
She is such a badass, such a role model,
and in addition to leading a successful company,
and wants to be part of a movement where healthcare consumers are empowered She is such a badass, such a role model, and in addition to leading a successful company
and wants to be part of a movement
where healthcare consumers are empowered to advocate
for themselves and find healthcare
and drug solutions that are created just for them.
Here are some of my favorite insights from Anne
about her 23-Amey journey and where it might go next.
Your genome, she says, is the foundation
of your health and your health risks.
If you can understand your genetics, you can learn everything from what diseases you might
be predisposed to have to what types of medications might cause you trouble.
And then once you start pairing your own genetic insights with those from millions of others
who have taken the 23-me test, you have a powerful data set that can help you uncover the solutions
to all kinds of medical mysteries.
These insights have already made the difference in the lives of countless people, from those
who catch breast cancer early on to the woman and mentioned who reconnected with her own
tribe roots in the Arctic Circle after learning more about her heritage.
And we can expect these transformative breakthroughs to continue in the coming years, especially
as AI and big data start to further grow our understanding of how our bodies work. Finally, I loved
Anne's point about how genetics is revealing our similarities far more than our differences.
It's connecting people who might not have ever been connected and showing us that our differences
are far more superficial than biological. Thanks so much for listening to this episode
of Young and Profiting Podcast.
If you listen, learned and profited from this conversation
with the incredible Ann Wigiski,
please share this episode with your friends and family.
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Thank you so much for your hard work and dedication.
This is your host, Halataha, aka the podcast princess, signing off.
you