Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Sal Khan: How AI Will Revolutionize Education | E289
Episode Date: May 10, 2024After his day job at a hedge fund, Sal Khan would tutor his 12-year-old cousin in math over the internet. When she moved to a more advanced track at school, word spread. Soon, he was tutoring over a d...ozen friends and relatives all over the country. His tutoring side project went from a humble YouTube channel to a renowned education nonprofit. Recently, they launched the first AI tutor built on GPT-4 technology. In this episode, Sal and Hala discuss how artificial intelligence could impact the future of education and work. Sal Khan is the founder of the widely used education platform, Khan Academy. In 2012, he was recognized as one of TIME's “100 Most Influential People in the World”. Sal is the author of Brave New Words, a book on AI to be released on May 14th, 2024. In this episode, Hala and Sal will discuss: - Sal’s transition from finance to education - The humble beginnings of Khan Academy - Sal’s decision to operate as a nonprofit - Misconceptions about nonprofits - Sal’s advice for entrepreneurs and nonprofit startups - Equity in education - Running a successful nonprofit - The potential of AI in education - The development of the AI tutor and teaching assistant, Khanmigo. - Guardrails for AI to ensure transparency, safety, and privacy - The power of tutoring in personalized education - How AI can enhance human creativity - Concerns about unethical uses of AI - Opportunities for entrepreneurs leveraging AI - AI for skill expansion - The potential impact of AI on hiring processes - And other topics… Sal Khan is the founder and CEO of Khan Academy, a nonprofit organization that provides free, world-class education to more than 155 million registered users worldwide. Sal’s interest in education started during his undergraduate studies at MIT, where he developed math software for children with ADHD and tutored public school students in Boston. In 2012, he was listed among TIME's "100 Most Influential People in the World". Sal’s book on AI, Brave New Words, is scheduled for release on May 14th, 2024. Resources Mentioned: Sal’s Website: https://www.khanacademy.org/ Sal’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khanacademy/ Sal’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/salkhanacademy Sal’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/khanacademy Sal’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/salkhanacademy/ Sal’s Book, Brave New Words: How AI Will Revolutionize Education (and Why That's a Good Thing): https://www.amazon.com/Brave-New-Words-Revolutionize-Education/dp/0593656954 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 Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at indeed.com/profiting Rakuten - Get 15% Cash Back during Rakuten’s Big Give Week from May 6th to May 13th, and join for free to score an extra 10% boost at rakuten.com! Yahoo Finance - For comprehensive financial news and analysis, visit YahooFinance.com Kajabi - Get a free 30-day trial to start your business at Kajabi.com/PROFITING LinkedIn Marketing Solutions - Get a $100 credit on your next campaign at LinkedIn.com/YAP 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's Services - yapmedia.io/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today's episode is sponsored in part by Kajabi, LinkedIn, Yahoo Finance, and Rakuten.
Kajabi gives you control of your content, brand, and income.
Get a 30-day free trial to start your course at kajabi.com slash profiting.
Reach top-level decision makers by advertising on LinkedIn.
Go to linkedin.com slash yap for a $100 credit on your next campaign.
Yahoo Finance is the number one financial destination.
For comprehensive financial news and analysis,
visit the brand behind every great investor,
yahoofinance.com.
Get cash back on every purchase with Rakuten,
the smarter way to shop and save.
Start all of your shopping trips at rakuten.com
or get the Rakuten app to start saving today.
As always, you can find all of our incredible deals
in the show notes.
When you really peel the onion
on almost every one of these problems in the world,
it really boils down to some form of education.
And I do think AI is actually going to have
the opposite effect on the skills that we need to develop.
It's still an imperative that you should be able to not just let the
AI do the work, but you should be better than the AI so that you can manage the AI.
The founder of the Khan Academy. It's a nonprofit organization that offers free
educational content online. An education pioneer who hopes to change how young
people learn a click at a time. The education system needs to make sure that
students leverage these tools to enhance their own learning.
So instead of being the person writing the basic code,
you're going to be more of the software architect
or the project manager.
Instead of being the entry-level writer,
the world is going to need more editors,
more people who can put things together.
When we first got access to GPT-4,
we were very excited about what it could do,
but we knew that it had some rough spots,
it could make up things.
It wasn't particularly good at math.
Then obviously we were concerned about under 18 users
having inappropriate conversations with it.
I was pretty bummed.
We saw school districts banning chat GPT,
and I was like, oh no, this is horrible.
The good news, which I couldn't have predicted was...
predicted was. Young and Profiters, welcome to the show.
And if you're an avid listener of Young and Profiting podcast, you've probably noticed
a lot more AI centered content.
And that's by design because AI is taken us by storm.
If we wanna be young and profiting,
we need to learn how to adapt to AI,
we need to be prepared and understand the trends
that are happening with AI,
and we need to learn how to embrace AI in the now.
Today, we're gonna be talking about
how AI is impacting the future of the education space and the now. Today we're going to be talking about how AI is impacting the future of the
education space and the workplace. And our guest today is Saul Kahn. Saul Kahn is the
CEO and founder of the Kahn Academy, a free online education platform, as well as a huge
YouTube channel with over 8 million subscribers. Kahn Academy, if you're a former student,
you've probably interacted with it. I know for a fact that the Khan Academy helped me pass calculus in college.
So shout out to the Khan Academy and all the work that they do to help students all around the world.
And he actually started Khan Academy as a side hustle, which I thought was so interesting and also as a nonprofit.
Even to this day, it's generating millions of dollars a year.
It's still a nonprofit.
So I was curious about that.
We're gonna be learning about his side hustle story
and how he ended up taking Khan Academy full time,
from a hobby to then a full-fledged,
very successful nonprofit business.
We're gonna ask him why he decided to create a nonprofit
and not a for-profit business and some of the myths around running a nonprofit.
And then we're going to talk about AI and its impact on education.
He's got a new AI bot called Khan Amigo on Khan Academy.
We're going to learn how that's helping students not replace doing the work, but actually supporting their work.
So without further ado, Saul, welcome to Young and Profiting podcast.
Thanks for having me.
I was doing research about you and I was
surprised to find out because we all know you as
the CEO and founder of the Khan Academy,
which I actually used since college.
So I've been a user of the Khan Academy for a really long time.
So we know you from this organization,
but I found out that you actually were interested
in AI early on and you were thinking about
becoming an AI researcher.
So I thought we could start there.
Can you first tell us when you first got exposed to AI
and how you got interested in the topic?
That's kind of a deep track that you already hit on.
You know, it's funny,
I'm writing a book called Brave New Words,
and it's the very end that I kind of make a confession.
I obviously talk a lot about AI and education,
and I just say at the end, it's like,
hey, I actually wanted to be an AI researcher at one time.
So yeah, you go all the way back to college.
I was a computer science major at MIT,
and MIT for a long time has been one of the hubs
of AI research, and I intentionally sought out Henry Patrick Winston,
who'd wrote the textbook about AI to be my freshman advisor.
And I took all of the AI courses, et cetera.
And I think for someone who is excited
about creating data from Star Trek,
the character that sent shit robots,
the mid to late nineties was not actually
a super exciting time in AI.
The state of the art wasn't really looking like
we were going to get into the realm
of science fiction anytime soon.
So I decided to do other things.
I obviously still was interested in software.
I've always been interested in education at the same time.
So my path took a different turn.
I love what I call organic entrepreneurship stories.
So this little seed of an idea
that then evolves into some amazing business,
as opposed to starting with a business plan
and raising capital,
you sort of slowly over time create something amazing.
And you did that with the Khan Academy.
So can you talk to us about how you started
your early career in corporate
and then found yourself dabbling in tutoring as a hobby,
which led you to create the amazing Khan Academy that we know it today.
Can you tell us that story?
Yeah, it's interesting.
And it almost takes off right from where our last question was,
which is late nineties, 98,
I graduated from college and the tech boom was happening.
I found out how much you could make as a first year grad, as a software engineer or product manager. I graduated from college and the tech boom was happening.
I found out how much you could make as a first year grad,
as a software engineer or product manager.
So I move out to the Bay area and I do that.
I ended up going to a couple of startups, this, that,
and then the NASDAQ collapses.
And I remember when that happened,
I told myself, because the startup I was at,
we'd kind of grown to 40 or 50 people,
then it becomes like survivor.
Here's just like, who gets laid off
on any given day or any given week?
And I told myself, you know what?
Entrepreneurship just is not for me.
I do not have the emotional fortitude
for this roller coaster ride.
And I said, well, I'm just gonna go to business school
and figure out what to do with my life.
So I go to business school while I'm there,
I just find, hey, finance is actually pretty interesting.
It's kind of a good combination of quantitative,
but it has a huge human element to it.
I end up working at a small hedge fund.
It's one of these things, even though I told myself
I wasn't an entrepreneur,
that first job at that hedge fund in 2003,
it was at a one-person hedge fund.
So I didn't admit it to it,
but I kept gravitating towards these smaller things.
But it was while I was doing that,
it was a year out of business school,
I had just gotten married, 2004,
and my family was visiting me from New Orleans,
which is where I was born and raised.
And it just came out a conversation
that my 12 year old cousin, Nadia,
was having trouble with math.
So I offered to tutor her when she goes back to New Orleans.
She agrees. It works out. I eventually got her caught up with her class a little ahead of her
class. At that point, I became what I call a tiger cousin. And I call up her school and I say,
you know, I really think Nadia Riemann should be able to retake that placement exam from last year.
They said, who are you? And I'm her cousin. And they let her. And that same Nadia who initially was put into a slower
track was put into a more advanced track.
Word spreads in the family that free tutoring is going on.
Before I know it, I'm tutoring 10, 15 cousins,
family, friends all over the country.
Once again, after my day job at the hedge fund,
and by this point we had moved out to Northern California.
A lot of my friends from business school were like,
how are you going to monetize this?
What's the business plan?
I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, this is not a business.
This is just, this is a passion project.
I'm doing it for my family.
But I did start to make tools for them.
I did start to write software for them
so that they can get practice.
And so that I, as their tutor,
could keep track of what they were doing.
My friends would say, what's the business plan?
I was like, no business plan.
This is just a family project.
But it looks suspicious to them
because it had software involved and it could scale.
And then a friend suggested that I make videos
for my cousins to scale even more.
And my cousins famously told me they liked me better
on YouTube than in person.
What they were saying, I think,
it was that they enjoyed having an on-demand version.
They didn't have to feel embarrassed.
They could watch it whenever they want,
pause, repeat, double speed, half speed.
They still appreciated, I think,
having me involved in their lives.
But then you could imagine other people
started to discover the software, the videos,
and it started to be at first hundreds of people,
thousands of people.
I still told all my friends,
no, this is still just a passion project.
I still have my day job, which I like.
But by 2008, there were about 50 to 100,000 folks
using it on a monthly basis,
which felt like a large number back then.
It's obviously small relative to where Khan Academy is now.
But I had frankly trouble focusing on my day job.
But even then I resisted.
Our first child had just been born.
So I did set it up as a nonprofit,
Khan Academy Mission Free World Class Education for Anyone,
Anywhere. But it took about a year before I finally took the leap,
which is never an easy thing to do.
It's so interesting. And I'm smiling ear to ear because it's such an inspiring story.
And like I said, it happened so organically.
And obviously what you were doing was so needed in the world
because so many people gravitated to these videos.
I remember finding those videos
when I needed homework help and things like that.
But nonprofit organizations,
there's a lot of misconceptions and myths around this.
And to me, it's really interesting that over the years,
you've stayed a nonprofit when it's so clear
that you could have become
a for-profit company.
So can you talk to us about some of the myths
and misconceptions, like for example,
people think a nonprofit, they're not in the business
of necessarily making money, or that it's only volunteers
that work at a nonprofit.
Can you talk to us about some of those myths?
Yeah, and there's a deep irony here
that I even started a nonprofit.
When I was in business school,
in business school they really didn't fail anyone out,
but they'll tell you privately
that you kind of would have failed this class.
And the one class that I fell into that category
was a class called social entrepreneurship.
And I was skeptical in my business school days
of what some of these nonprofits would do.
It felt like they were more around organizing events
than actually curing the disease or solving this or that.
Obviously I go work at a hedge fund,
which is very for-profit,
but I noticed a pattern when I talk to these,
for the most part, public corporations,
is that your capital structure
and your board dictate everything.
You could have a founder who's very mission-driven,
but as soon as they don't have full control
and as soon as you have to start dealing
with hedge fund analysts like me,
who are holding you to the fire on your quarterly earnings,
things start to change a little bit.
And so when Khan Academy was a thing,
my cousins found it valuable,
but even more I got letters from folks all over the world
saying how it was helping them.
I kind of started to imagine,
well, what if this thing could one day reach tens or hundreds of millions, Even more, I got letters from folks all over the world saying how it was helping them. I kind of started to imagine,
well, what if this thing could one day reach tens
or hundreds of millions, one day reach billions of folks,
give access to anyone?
And this should exist for a very long time.
And in the for-profit world,
you really didn't see any organizations
that stayed true to a mission beyond their founders.
And so I said, well, what's the structure I should do?
And well, maybe nonprofit.
And the main differentiators for a nonprofit
are that a for-profit has owners, the shareholders,
and the board has a fiduciary responsibility
to those shareholders to maximize shareholder value.
That's their bottom line.
A nonprofit has no owners.
It's considered a public good.
So you own as much of Khan Academy
as I own of Khan Academy.
We both, neither of us own Khan Academy.
And the bottom line,
the fiduciary responsibility of the board is the mission.
In our case, free world-class education for anyone anywhere.
And so for me, at the time I said,
well, the not-for-profit structure seems to meet this goal
of how does it stay true to its mission, And so for me, at the time I said, well, the not-for-profit structure seems to meet this goal
of how does it stay true to its mission,
regardless of whether I'm there or not?
And it was delusional.
I was just one guy doing this thing.
I was like, what if this does last 50 years or a hundred years?
How can I stay true to that?
And the not-for-profit structure seemed to make sense.
Now it opens up a whole other series of questions.
How do you raise capital?
How do you attract talent, et cetera?
But that's all that defines a nonprofit.
Obviously our mission has the word free in it,
but lots of nonprofits charge plenty.
Most universities are nonprofits,
but they're happy to charge you $50,000 a year.
But that money isn't going to any one individual or owners,
it's going to the institution itself.
But that was my thinking behind it. going to any one individual or owners, it's going to the institution itself.
But that was my thinking behind it.
Another misconception is that not-for-profits
don't make a lot of money.
It's public information.
So I saw that you guys in 2022 made $53 million
or something like that in revenue.
But then you also spent $58 million.
And I also always hear that you wanna have
a low overhead not-for-profit,
but that's not actually the case
because you need to spend money to make an impact, right?
So can you talk to us about that?
It's different ways of accounting for overhead.
And in some ways we are a bit of a bizarre nonprofit
because your classic nonprofits would be,
hey, we wanna get mosquito nets to people in Africa.
So we're going to raise money, let's say in places like the United States, and for every
dollar we raise, 90 cents of that is going to buy mosquito nets, and then 10 cents of
that is for overhead, for the overhead of the organization.
We're very different in that we raise money.
So most of that money, that budget, the year that you looked at it was in the 50s.
Now it's even higher than that.
We're approaching 60 million, 70 million dollars.
The great majority of that,
it's philanthropic donations of all sizes.
Sometimes people donating as little as $10 a month.
And obviously we have some very large donors
who give millions of dollars a year,
but we aren't just transferring that money
from one party to another. Because of dollars a year, but we aren't just transferring that money from one party to another.
Because of how we operate,
we essentially are a tech organization.
Our way of attempting to give free world-class education
for anyone anywhere is to build tools
that cost a lot to build, to your point,
cost 50, 60, $70 million a year to build and operate,
but the incremental cost for the next person
is pretty close to zero.
That's one of the beauties of technology.
And for that budget of 50, 60, $70 million a year,
which is about the budget of a large high school
in the United States,
we have 160 million something registered users,
we reach a large chunk of humanity.
We're in 50 plus languages.
And so in some ways you can say that
most of that costs it's people,
it's software engineers, it's designers,
it's content people, it's people going out there
to partner with schools.
So one way you could think about it is
it's all going towards the mission
because we're building things that then scale.
And we do have some earned sources of revenue
where say a district wants to get support
and training and things like that.
And that costs a good bit on a marginal cost basis.
So then we do have to charge some nominal amount
just to be able to cover our costs there.
You know, I think a lot of us dream
about quitting our nine to five job
and doing good for the world, just like you did.
And I bet you a lot of listeners right now
are in corporate or have day jobs and hoping to become an entrepreneur and this might have
gotten them curious about starting a non-for-profit business. So can you help us understand some
considerations and questions we should ask ourselves before we go off and start our own
non-profit organization and become entrepreneurs? You really have to dig deep and decide what you want to do with your life
and how you want to live it. For me, even before Khan Academy existed, I told myself,
and I think this was true, it was like, look, you know, I definitely wanted financial security.
But when I really thought about it, if someone transferred a billion dollars into my bank account
tomorrow, I wouldn't fight it,
but I don't think I would live that differently.
I feel like the life that I was already leading
where I live in a 2,500 square foot house,
my family healthy, knock on wood and happy,
we got two cars in the garage,
we can go to dinner every now and then and take vacations.
I feel like I'm living the life.
I don't really need more than that.
And so for me, the optimization is,
can I spend my day working on something
that I'm really passionate about?
And it doesn't have to be a not-for-profit.
In fact, I think there's many times
where a for-profit route does make more sense.
But for what I was doing and how I wanted to do it,
the not-for-profit route made sense.
And even that was a huge, huge risk.
I think whenever you're doing anything entrepreneurial,
you have to start with some delusional optimism.
And then when you take that leap and you quit your job,
and I just told you,
it took me many years before I quit my job.
Took me many years of really playing this project out.
You usually realize that
the world does not recognize the brilliance of your endeavor as much as you did. So there was a tough
time of eight, nine, 10 months where we were living off of savings. As I mentioned, our first child
had just been born where I was questioning whether I had done the right thing. And I would say on some
level, not-for-profit is harder, especially if you live in Silicon Valley like I do,
because no one really saw a pattern there.
They didn't see someone start a not-for-profit.
And as hard as it is to start a successful,
let's say tech company, where I forgot what the stats are,
but something like 80 or 90% fail,
I think you probably see even harsher stats
for the not-for-profit realm,
because there's an active venture capital community
that is looking for the next big thing
and they're willing to take flyers on startups.
The philanthropic community,
it takes a little bit more time to get that credibility.
So I would say really figure out what you wanna do
for-profit or non-profit.
I would say get close to the problem you're trying to solve,
maybe even try to solve it.
That's what I was doing with my cousins.
Once again, whether for-profit or nonprofit,
when you see that it's actually solving a problem,
then you know you're creating value in the world, hopefully.
And then think about how you're going to scale it.
And then think about what you need to scale it
and go down the appropriate path,
whether for-profit or nonprofit.
I love it, such practical advice.
So I remember using Khan Academy in college,
and it's been such a helpful resource for myself,
as well as millions of students,
and you're truly bringing equity to education.
And I know one of your goals
is to make education accessible to everyone.
How do you see AI helping
to bring more equity to education? I think all people, especially when we're young and idealistic,
we want the world to be a better place.
And I did that when I was young,
and I always used to think about, you know,
I'm thinking about myself when I'm in middle school
and high school and college.
And you see all these problems in the world,
whether it is inequity of opportunity,
whether it's the climate, whether it is wars, famine.
When you really peel the onion on almost every one
of these problems in the world, it really boils down
to what's going on in people's minds.
It really boils down to some form of education.
At the same time, I've read a lot of science fiction.
I remember one of my favorite is the foundation series by Isaac Asimov.
And in this, the protagonist wants to essentially shorten
the dark ages.
It's character Harry Seldon,
who's able to predict large scale historical movements.
And he sees that the galactic empire is going to enter
a 10,000 year dark ages,
10,000 years of war and famine and lost knowledge.
And he decides to do something about it
by collecting the world or the galaxy's knowledge
on the periphery to shorten that dark ages by 9,000 years.
And when I first read that in seventh grade,
I realized you can look at a country or a civilization
based on how tall their buildings are
or how clean their streets are
or the pillars in front of their Supreme Court
or whatever it might be.
But what really defines a civilization
is what's going on in people's minds.
If you take a bunch of people who are enlightened,
who are well-educated,
and you give them very little in resources,
they will start a great society.
If you do the opposite and you give people all the pillars
and the material wealth,
but they don't know how to use it,
it'll all over time deteriorate.
So I've always viewed education as that core issue.
I'm also the beneficiary of it.
My family immigrated to the United States
in the early 70s.
I was lucky to go to a pretty good public school system
in Louisiana, and that's why I'm here.
That's why I had the opportunity.
But I know there are folks that look a lot like me,
probably related to me, probably third or fourth cousins
who are sitting in some village in India someplace
or in Bangladesh someplace
who don't have access to an education
and their potential is going to be squandered.
And so, yeah, this idea of human potential
has always fascinated me.
I don't wanna preach what your framework is
for the afterlife, but if just for fun,
you say maybe reincarnation does happen,
what can you do in this life that maximizes the benefit
for your next life?
I think education is one of them,
because you or I, if reincarnation happens,
are much more likely to be born in a village
in rural India or Africa than we are in Silicon Valley
or New York City.
Let's hold that thought and take a quick break
with our sponsors.
Young and profitors, they may call me the podcast princess,
but I'm also the LinkedIn queen.
I've been a LinkedIn influencer for six
years now and I teach one of the most popular courses about LinkedIn. And I love to teach sales
on LinkedIn because when it comes to B2B sales, LinkedIn has got that on lock.
LinkedIn is where all the decision makers are hanging out. There are 180 million senior level decision-makers on LinkedIn
and 10 million C-suite decision-makers.
These people are on LinkedIn and they're in the mode to buy.
They're using LinkedIn for their buying journey
to research vendors or sales reps that they might work with,
to look up how to solve their problems,
to learn from industry thought leaders.
They are in the mode to buy, whereas on other platforms,
they're in the mode to be entertained.
You wanna get them in the right mindset.
You wanna cut through the noise with LinkedIn ads.
In fact, 79% of B2B marketers rate LinkedIn
as their top channel for paid media.
And LinkedIn has the best targeting
because they've got all these different inputs.
People are putting their resume basically up on there.
And so there's so many keywords that they can use
to target the right decision makers.
So they can hear about how you solve their problems.
And I've got a special gift for all you young importers
who want to try LinkedIn ads.
You can get a hundred dollar credit.
LinkedIn was super generous.
If you want to make B2B marketing everything it can be
and get a hundred dollar credit on your next campaign,
go to linkedin.com slash yap, Y-A-P.
Again, if you want to claim your credit,
go to linkedin.com slash yap.
Terms and conditions apply.
Young and Profiters, as you may know,
I launched my LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass
a little bit over a year ago.
It was my first course.
And so far, I've generated well over $500,000.
And the best part is I didn't have to figure out
how to set up my mastermind subscriptions,
how to do abandoned cart targeting,
and all of that tech geeky stuff.
I just left that all to Shopify.
Shopify is the global commerce platform
that helps you sell at every stage of your business.
And if you're in that, I need to sell more with less stage,
Shopify magic is your AI super powered sidekick,
ready to whip up captivating content that converts.
And it doesn't matter if you're selling digital products
or vegan cosmetics,
Shopify helps you sell anything anywhere
from their all-in-one e-commerce platform to their in-person POS system. Stop those online window
shoppers in their tracks and turn them into loyal customers with the internet's
best converting checkout. I'm talking 36% better on average compared to the other
options out there. It's no wonder Shopify powers 10% of all e-commerce in the US,
including huge global brands like Allbirds and Thrive Cosmetics.
It took me a day to set up my Shopify store.
I set up chat, took two minutes, and I was done.
One month from thinking of the idea to implementation,
a year later I've made half a million dollars on the idea.
That's what it takes in 2024. Just a good idea and then
utilizing a platform like Shopify that can help you make it a reality. There is no excuse these
days. If you've got a good business idea and you think you'll be a good entrepreneur, you don't
have to wait any longer. You don't have to be super techy and you never have to worry about figuring
it out on your own. Shopify's award-winning help is there to support your success every step of the way.
Sign up for a $1 per month trial period
at Shopify.com slash profiting, that's all lowercase.
Go to Shopify.com slash profiting now
to grow your business no matter what stage you're in.
Shopify.com slash profiting.
Young and profitors, I'm about to be jet setting
all over the world. I'm going to London, Cancun, New Orleans, I'm about to be jet setting all over the world.
I'm going to London, Cancun, New Orleans, and New York to speak.
I'm going to be up there with the bright lights and I want to be spiffy.
I want to look fresh.
And so I'm going on a big shopping spree.
I got to get clothes, I got to get hair stuff, skincare stuff, makeup.
But I'm not going to feel guilty about this shopping spree because Rakuten's
big give week is back. Rakuten is the shopping platform for savvy
savers. From May 6th to May 13th, they're having their biggest cashback event of
the year. I'm talking about 15% cashback at hundreds of stores with additional
cashback bonuses and they've got so many stores participating in their big
give week. So when it comes to clothes I'm looking at Splendid and Good American
and when it comes to beauty they've got so many good stores participating. They've
got Ulta, Fenty, Bobby Brown, Blue Mercury and all the products that we love now we
can get cash back. It's like getting a discount
on the stuff you're gonna buy anyway.
It's absolutely amazing.
They even have travel brands.
So that's gonna be super convenient for me
with all my upcoming trips, Expedia, hotels.com.
You can get deals on everything from electronics
to home goods to travel and beauty.
Young and Profiters, you're gonna wanna grab
this limited time deal with both hands.
You get high cash back rates for only 8 days.
So hurry!
Membership is free and when you sign up and shop today, you get an extra 10% cash back
boost.
That's an extra 10% cash back on top of the 15% cash back.
You won't see higher cash back rates than these.
Go to Rakuten.com or download the Rakuten app at R-A-K-U-T-E-N.
Shoppers get it.
So I found out in the summer of 2022,
you got a life-changing email from the CEO
and founder of OpenAI, which is the creators of Chaggbt.
And it kicked off a whole slew of events that came next.
So can you share that story with us?
I detail this in this book that's coming out,
Brave New Words.
You know, I had been keeping track of the AI world
just because I'm a bit of a nerd.
And I said, maybe it'll have some kind of implication
on what happens at Khan Academy.
But Sam Altman, Greg Brockman reach out,
as you mentioned, summer of 2022,
and they say, we're doing our next model.
And they wanted to meet with me
and our chief learning officer about it.
I'm like, oh yeah, sounds interesting.
And so they said, look, we think this next model
is going to excite and also maybe unnerve people
because it's so powerful.
And because of that, they wanna launch with organizations
that people trust doing socially positive things
that have the technical capability
to take advantage of the technology.
And by their own words,
Khan Academy was the first organization
that they thought of.
And I was skeptical.
I had seen GPT-2, GPT-3, really cool,
but it was kind of nonsensical
when you really paid attention to what it was doing.
But when they showed me what GPT-4,
and no one knew about GPT-4 at this point,
no one knew about ChatGPT, which wasn't even built on GPT-4. That was built on GPT-4, and no one knew about GPT-4 at this point. No one knew about ChatGPT,
which wasn't even built on GPT-4.
That was built on GPT-3.5.
This was months before any of that happened.
But when I saw and our team saw that,
wow, this thing seems to actually be able
to make sense of things,
that you could actually have a conversation with it,
that it could actually take on personas.
If you think about the whole journey of Khan Academy,
from me tutoring Nadia until,
let's call it the summer of 2022,
it was all about trying to scale,
using the technologies that existed,
that one-to-one personalization experience
that I was able to do with Nadia.
And obviously using on-demand video
or personalized software,
you can only kind of approximate it.
But now with AI and what looked like
what GPT-4 was capable of, it got that much further.
It didn't take us long before we were able
to have tutoring interactions with it
that were almost indistinguishable from when Nathia
and I were instant messaging each other in 2004.
And so we were excited.
We said, hey, this could just take it that much further.
And then we realized it's not just about tutoring students.
It could be about helping teachers with lesson planning
and grading and progress reports.
And then there could be a whole other class of things
that we never even thought of before.
You know, we could have new question types
that allow more open-ended responses.
We could have simulations being run by the AI.
So this was one of those moments that I kind of felt that,
okay, this changes everything,
but we have to really double or triple down on it.
So when AI first came out,
I know that a lot of educators were afraid
that there was gonna be a lot of cheating going on.
Can you talk to us about how people first perceived
chat GBT and maybe the ways that you thought
that it could actually help the education world?
A lot of people are fearful of AI replacing work
and that it's gonna enable a lot of cheating
and things like that.
What would you say to the naysayers?
You can imagine when we first got access to GPT-4,
this is August of 2022,
we were very excited about what it could do,
but it was pretty obvious
that it could have some negative use cases.
It could be used for cheating.
We knew that it had some rough spots.
It could make up things.
People are calling that hallucinations
or fabrications by the AI.
It wasn't particularly good at math, which is an issue if you're going to make it tutor.
So we had to figure out ways to do that.
And obviously we were concerned about under 18 users
having inappropriate conversations with it.
How do you handle all these things?
So we were under an on disclosure agreement
with OpenAI at the time.
We couldn't talk about it publicly,
but we were having internal debates about,
okay, we can't run away from this technology.
It's too powerful and it can have so much positive. So let's put guardrails. about it publicly, but we were having internal debates about, okay, we can't run away from this technology.
It's too powerful and it can have so much positive.
So let's put guardrails.
Let's make an AI that doesn't cheat, that provides transparency to teachers and parents,
that can actively moderate conversations so that it doesn't allow a student to get into
something that's unproductive, that it protects student data privacy that can really feel
like a real tutor. So we were working on all of these things in secret.
We were gonna launch this on March of 2023
to coincide with the GPT-4 launch.
Now in November, at the end,
I think it was the last day of November, 2022,
chat GPT comes out
and the whole world kind of explodes because of that.
And I was pretty bummed.
I immediately slacked Greg Brockman, who's the president at Open that. And I was pretty bummed.
I immediately slacked Greg Brockman,
who's the president at OpenAI,
and I said, hey, Greg, what's going on here?
You have us under this NDA.
We can't talk about anything.
You just launched something.
And Greg says, look, we didn't launch anything.
We just put a chat interface on top of GPT 3.5,
which had been out for six or seven months at that point.
And the whole world all of a sudden took note.
And the reason why I was bummed is this was a thin layer
on top of an AI that was not built for education,
had none of the guardrails that we were thinking about.
And so it was no surprise that the big headlines
in December and January of that year were,
this is a cheating tool.
We saw, started seeing school districts banning chat GPT.
And I was like, oh no, this is horrible.
Like they're gonna throw out the baby with the bathwater.
The good news, which I couldn't have predicted
was by March when we came out,
most of the education system had to some degree
come full circle.
They had said, look, this technology is going to be a part
of students' future and it's very powerful.
So students should learn how to use it.
But, chat GPT wasn't built for an education use case.
If only someone created a tool that had proper guardrails,
proper transparency, proper safety and security,
built for education, can't be used as a teaching tool,
but can support students,
that would be awesome. And then we were able to come with Conmigo leveraging a more powerful AI,
leveraging GPT-4, doing all of that. And so in some ways, the chat GPT scare primed the world
in a good way to be very ready for what we call Conmigo, which is the AI tutor and teaching
assistant on Khan Academy. So really interested in Conmigo, because I know there's, like you said, the tutoring feature.
Can you talk to us about why tutoring is so powerful for people to learn and why people
who get tutoring end up doing a lot better? You know, in some ways, this is not new news.
The oldest best practice for education is to have more personalization, more attention.
If we go back 2300 years
and we go back to Alexander the Great's time,
Alexander the Great had a pretty good personal tutor.
He had Aristotle as his personal tutor.
And what Aristotle was probably able to do
with young Alexander is if Alexander was having trouble with,
let's say understanding finance,
which you needed to do
if you were going to be the future emperor,
I'm sure Aristotle would have slowed down
and make sure that Alexander mastered it.
Or if young Alexander was just really good
at military strategy,
then the tutor could speed up
or give more challenging exercises to work on.
And that's always been the goal standard for education,
but it's always been very resource intensive.
So the only people who got that were the wealthy,
young princelings, future emperors, et cetera.
You fast forward to about 300 years ago,
we had a very utopian idea as a society,
which is free mass public education.
But there was no way of giving
everyone an Aristotle. So instead, we borrowed ideas from the Industrial Revolution, which was
happening at the same time, where, okay, let's batch students together, usually in groups of 25, 30, 35.
Let's move them all together at a set pace, align to some standards. Let's have the teacher there,
deliver the instruction, assess periodically, and
some of the students are going to do pretty well.
They are going to go into what we would now consider knowledge economy jobs.
Some of the kids are going to be in the middle.
They could be the managers at the factories of the Industrial Revolution or the shopkeepers.
And then the students who are really struggling, yeah, well, that's okay.
They can be the laborers and the less skilled laborers
in some of the factories, et cetera, et cetera.
This model of education that you and I grew up in,
that we've taken for granted,
it's not been what education has always been,
but I have to give credit for it.
It is what allowed us to give education to everyone.
I would have not gotten access to education
if not for public education.
So it's done many, many, many good things,
but now it's not okay to have a world
where only a few, let's say 20% or 30%
can participate in the knowledge economy.
We need a world where everyone is able to,
or as many people as possible are able to master concepts,
get that level of personalization.
The good news is that's where technology comes in.
Maybe there's ways to scale that.
You know, there was a education researcher, Benjamin Bloom,
who wrote a study about the benefits of tutoring
back in 1984, but he framed it as the two sigma problem.
Two sigma refers to a two standard deviation improvement
that he thought tutoring could give,
but he called it a problem because there's no way
you can afford to do this for everyone.
But the power now is you can still have the economics
of whatever they are in, say, a public school
where there's 25 kids in a room.
And I would argue the lower the ratio you can get, the better.
But that's a public policy budgetary question.
But whatever ratio that is, can we now use technology
to give more of that personalization
that I was able to do for that personalization that I was able
to do for Nadia or that Aristotle was able to do for Alexander the Great?
A lot of people think AI is this thing that's out in the future and that chat GBT is really
the only accessible AI tool right now.
But a lot of companies like yourself are embracing AI.
And you guys actually released Conmigo as a part of Khan Academy.
It's basically an AI bot that students can use with
and engage with while they're learning.
Can you tell us some of the things
that Conmigo can do today?
From the very get-go of Khan Academy,
people said, okay, it's great that Khan Academy
gives these adaptive exercises,
allowing personalization like a tutor.
It's great that you have these on-demand videos
of a student has trouble understanding a concept,
but what if a student has a question?
What if they don't understand a term?
What if they wanna understand
how something connects to something else?
And we kind of were at a loss.
I mean, my best answer was, well,
use Khan Academy ideally in a supported environment.
And if a student watches the video,
looks at the solution and still has trouble,
maybe they ask a peer,
maybe that's a good time for them to raise their hand
and the teacher can do a more focused intervention
with that student.
And that is how it's been used.
And we've had really good efficacy studies there,
but we said, well, now the AI could be there
on top of the video, on top of the exercise
to answer folks' questions.
We then also realized, but it could do more than that.
What if it could act as a simulation
of a historical character or a literary character?
So it can really act as a way to engage
and immerse students in something.
And the more you're engaged,
the deeper you're going to understand it.
What if students can have debates with the AI,
where the AI takes one side of the issue
and the student takes the other?
So we started realizing, in fact, even today,
every hour we spend more brainstorming,
we realize that we're being too narrow in our thinking,
that this can really do things
that I wasn't willing to do for Nadia.
I wasn't willing to pretend to be Harriet Tubman for a day
and do a simulation with her, but that's not possible.
And we're also doing things like writing stories,
where they won't do it for the student,
but it can support the student in their writing. And we're working doing things like writing stories where they won't do it for the student, but it can support the student in their writing.
And we're working on methods for a teacher
to be able to work with the AI to develop,
say an assignment, say a writing assignment,
create the rubric, then assign it through the AI.
And the AI won't cheat, it won't do it for it,
but it can act as a writing coach,
giving feedback, highlighting parts of it.
And then when the student feels good about it,
the AI can submit it to the teacher.
And not only will that student be more supported,
the teacher will be more supported.
And actually they can feel more confident
that the student didn't cheat,
because the AI can not just give the paper,
it can give the entire process.
Yeah, we spent four hours working on it together,
here's the whole transcript.
And by the way, out of your class of 30,
20 of your students had trouble with a thesis statement. And here's what I transcript. And by the way, out of your class of 30, 20 of your students
had trouble with a thesis statement. And here's what I recommend teacher that we can do to help
them on this. And here's a preliminary grade. So we think it can really stream support students
better in a whole, it's not just in math, not just in science, it could be in writing, it could be
in reading comprehension, and also hopefully saving teachers some time as well. This is really
interesting because a lot of the times
when we're thinking about AI, we're thinking about
how it replaces something.
But this is really all about how it's supporting students.
How do you think that this could also translate
in the workplace or in the private sector?
It is a big interesting question on what AI is going to do
to the labor force broadly. I think
the meme that has been going around over the last year, year and a half has been you won't get
replaced by an AI, you're going to get replaced by a human using an AI. And so I think the imperative
is that almost in any industry, if you learn to leverage these tools to be more productive,
you're going to be in a good place and to be more productive, you're going to be
in a good place and maybe be more productive in more domains as well. I think that's where
the education system needs to make sure that students can leverage these tools.
One, to enhance their own learning. At the end of the day, people say how AI can do writing well,
how it can do software engineering well.
The reality is you're still going to need people to be able to put those pieces together.
So instead of being the person writing the basic code, you're going to be more of the software
architect or the project manager. Instead of being the entry-level writer, the world is going to need
more editors, more people who can put things together. But no one wants an editor or a software architect who can't write or code as well as the junior writers
or the junior software engineers.
So I think it's still an imperative for people to learn
their traditional academic skills.
It's in fact maybe better than in the past,
and maybe the AI can help there,
and then be able to leverage these tools
in whatever they're actually doing.
So I know one thing that you talked about in your book
is how AI can potentially supercharge human creativity.
Can you talk to us about some of the ways
that you imagine it can do that?
This is the other fear that folks have.
I mean, I could go on to any of these generative AIs
and say, hey, write a screenplay for me,
or create an art piece in the style of whatever and it'll bam,
it was just there. And so everyone's afraid like, oh my God, this is the end of creativity.
I'll say a couple of things. One, this isn't the first time in history something like this has
happened. And I write about this in my book, Brave New Words. In the 19th century, when the camera
came out, I am sure a lot of portrait artists said, oh my God, this is cheating. This thing you just press a button
and it does essentially a real life picture of it,
but all the artistry is gone.
Now we know on one level that didn't happen.
Maybe the people hiring a portrait artist
to paint a portrait of them,
maybe that market has declined a little bit
because of the camera,
but it didn't get rid of creativity.
In fact, a whole new field, a new creative field,
not only existed, but it democratized art in some ways
where more people could do artistic things.
I think you're going to see something very similar
happening with AI.
And the other thing I emphasize is,
creativity isn't a zero sum game.
It's not that, let's say you and I,
let's consider you and I,
let's consider ourselves creative people.
Each of us by ourselves can be reasonably creative,
but if you and I are able to chat about things
and brainstorm together and riff together,
I think we're each going to become more creative, not less.
I'm not just gonna say, oh, Hala has got good ideas.
I'm just gonna check out.
I'm gonna say, oh, I love Hala's idea there. And well, what if we did this too?
I think any of us who consider ourselves reasonably
creative recognize that our most creative times
in our life were when we were around other creative people.
I think AI is going to democratize that.
Where there could be a young girl in Afghanistan someplace
and she's not even allowed to go to school,
but if she has access to this, she could brainstorm.
She could riff ideas.
She could test ideas.
Now it will be even better if it could be with the AI
and other people around, but you might not have that.
And so I think AI is going to actually be
an enhancer for creativity.
I also think it's going to lower,
I didn't even allow myself to think that I might
be able to become a filmmaker one day.
I was like, who gets to make a film?
They cost tens, if not hundreds of millions of dollars.
You gotta know the right people, et cetera, et cetera.
But now AI is going to make that much more accessible
where you can start to do movie quality production
for a hundredth or a thousandth of the cost
that you might have before.
Now, once again,
I don't think it's gonna put creatives out of work.
It's gonna allow more people to have creative expression
and that the good stuff is going to surface.
In fact, it's a lot like podcasts or YouTube.
These were both democratizing.
And yeah, they have in some ways threatened
the traditional media establishment,
but they've been good overall,
because there's a lot of creative people
who couldn't break into the traditional media establishment before,
but now they can self-publish on a podcast
or self-publish on a podcast or self-publish on YouTube and the world discovers them.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
Young and Profiters, are you dreaming about starting a course?
Do you wanna go from one to one to one to many
and scale yourself?
If you're thinking about starting a course,
then you need to hear about Kajabi.
Kajabi is the OG of course platforms.
I've got creators in my network like Jenna Kutcher
and Amy Porterfield who have been using Kajabi
for over a decade.
These ladies know what they're doing.
They are literally the course queens.
And so I took a page from their playbook
and I started using Kajabi.
I've been playing around with it
because I'm launching a podcast course next month
and I need a lot of features
that only a course platform would have like Kajabi.
And they've thought of it all.
No matter your niche,
Kajabi makes it easy to turn your skills,
passions and experiences into enriching online courses,
exclusive membership sites, subscription podcasts,
thriving communities, personalized coaching,
and so much more.
One of the smartest things that I did
when I launched my course is I focused on the content.
I lasered in on that.
I made sure people were getting the best investment
they could, that I wouldn't get any refunds,
that people would tell their friends
and my course would be successful by word of mouth.
And I did that by focusing on my content,
what I was good at, and not all the tech.
Leave the tech stuff for your course to Kajabi.
They are experts in that area,
and they've thought of everything
that you would ever need for your course.
So if you wanna start your course, now is your chance.
As you guys may know, I always ask my sponsors
for a free trial for any software
that we talk about on the show.
And Kajabi was super generous.
They gave us a free 30-day trial
that you can get at kajabi.com slash profiting.
Right now, Kajabi is offering a free 30-day trial
to start your business if you go to kajabi.com slash profiting.
That's K-A-J-A-B-I dot com slash profiting. Go to kajabi.com slash profiting. That's K-A-J-A-B-I dot com slash profiting.
Go to Kajabi.com slash profiting
and join the creators and entrepreneurs
who have made over $7 billion.
Young end-profiters, YAP Media is growing so fast.
I have 10 open roles just this month.
In the past, it would take me so long to find hires.
I have to go on all these different job sites.
I have to create my own skills assessments.
That's why I let Indeed do a lot
of this heavy lifting for me.
Indeed is the powerful hiring platform
where I can attract, interview,
and hire all in one place.
Indeed has things like skills assessments
where when we have specific roles,
we can find an assessment that matches that role
and we can make sure they have the skills that we need.
Then I can focus on culture fit.
I can make sure they're scrappy enough and are obsessed with excellence and
do all the things that we need to do for them to fit in at Yap.
And indeed, streamlines hiring with powerful tools like Instant Match.
And Instant Match basically matches you with candidates
as soon as you put up a job post
with people who are qualified right away, it's instant.
And the best part is it gets better as you use it.
So now when I use Indeed,
especially when I'm hiring for similar roles,
I get people right away where they know
that I'm gonna like the candidates
because they can see what my preferences were in the past.
It gets better as you use it.
According to US Indeed data,
the moment Indeed sponsors a job,
over 80% of employers get candidates
whose resumes are a perfect match for the position.
It's like waving a magic wand
that gets better as you use it.
So I love using Indeed.
We've found a lot of our A players on there.
Join more than 3 million businesses worldwide
who count on Indeed to hire their next superstar like we do at YAP Media.
Start hiring now with a $75 sponsored job credit to upgrade your job post at Indeed.com
slash Profiting.
Offer is good for a limited time.
Claim your $75 sponsored job credit at Indeed.com slash Profiting.
Again that's Indeed.com slash Profiting.
And support the show by saying you heard about it on Young and Profiting again that's indeed.com slash profiting and support the show by saying you heard about it on young and profiting podcast again it's indeed.com
slash profiting to get your $75 credit terms and conditions apply need to hire
you need indeed young and profitors we are all making money but is your money
hustling for you meaning are you investing putting your savings in the bank is just doing you a total disservice.
You gotta beat inflation.
I've been investing heavily for years.
I've got an E-Trade account, I've got a Robinhood account,
and it used to be such a pain to manage all of my accounts.
I'd hop from platform to platform.
I'd always forget my Fidelity password,
and then I have to reset my password.
I knew that needed to change
because I need to keep track of all my stuff.
Everything got better once I started using Yahoo Finance. and then I have to reset my password. I knew that needed to change because I need to keep track of all my stuff.
Everything got better once I started using Yahoo Finance,
the sponsor of today's episode.
You can securely link up all of your investment accounts
in Yahoo Finance for one unified view of your wealth.
They've got stock analyst ratings,
they have independent research.
I can customize charts and choose what metrics I wanna display for all my stocks so I can make the best decisions.
I can even dig into financial statements and balance sheets of the companies that I'm
curious about.
Whether you're a seasoned investor or looking for that extra guidance, Yahoo Finance gives
you all the tools and data you need in one place.
For comprehensive financial news and analysis, visit the brand behind every great investor,
yahoofinance.com. you need in one place. For comprehensive financial news and analysis, visit the brand behind every great investor,
Yahoo Finance.com, the number one financial destination,
Yahoo Finance.com.
That's YahooFinance.com.
I wanna read a quote from your book
that's really related to this.
You say, the best ideas will come not from the AI
creating for us, but when the AI is creating
and riffing with us.
Much like poets hanging out in a cafe in Paris,
humans and AI can augment each other
and inspire a mutually creative process.
So I loved that.
And I know that entrepreneurs also have to be super creative.
What kind of opportunities do you think
that AI is gonna bring for entrepreneurs?
I think if I wasn't looking to start it,
and whenever I talk to young people,
I've got a lot of ideas for businesses
that I don't have the time to work on.
AI is such a general and transformative technology.
It's very tempting for people to get enamored
with the technology itself and just wanna make a better AI.
I think that's gonna be a game for about six or seven big players
are going to be working on that like hardcore R&D.
But the real opportunity, I think,
especially for new entrepreneurs is go into any field
that you have an interest in and get to know that field well,
and then think about how you could leverage things
like generative AI to create products for that field.
And probably the further that field is away from technology, the more opportunity there will be.
So let's just imagine I'm thinking of something that might, you know,
is very far removed from technology. Let's say that you are a...
A farmer?
A farmer, a farmer, right? If you understood all of the tasks that a farmer does,
I'm sure a lot of it is around like,
oh, I gotta order the seeds, I gotta look at the weather,
I have to use the weather to figure out this,
I have to then go and negotiate with these people
for whatever my fuel costs.
Okay, could you potentially,
the same way that Conmigo is doing that for teachers,
where we're helping them with lesson planning,
we're helping them with grading papers,
we're helping them with writing progress, we're helping them with grading papers, we're helping them with writing progress reports.
Are there tasks like that that farmers are spending
10 hours a week doing?
Automate that.
You'll be the only, I probably, I guess maybe more
than one person might hear this idea, you know?
But it's not going to be a crowded space.
And if you're out there in the next couple of years
creating the farming management system using AI,
you might get a lot of traction. It might even be more powerful. You might even be able to use
generative AI. Maybe the generative AI can read the newspaper or recommend to you which crops to
plant so that it improves your yield and improves the market prices that you're able to get or your
ability to market into the distributors
or whoever else.
So, you know, you just threw out a random industry, farming,
but you can see that there's probably a lot there
that it's not as obvious,
but if you take these really powerful tools,
there's probably an opportunity.
So just get to know a space deeply and start making stuff.
And if you start to see that there's value being created
and getting traction,
then I think there's going to be people
who'll want to invest in it.
So I noticed that you've been saying a lot,
get specialized in one area.
Why do you feel so strongly about getting specialized
in one area in preparation for the AI revolution?
I'll say it two ways.
I would say, especially if you're an entrepreneur,
I would say get to know an industry well,
but not to necessarily be narrow in your skills.
I think if anything, get to know industry well
will allow you to make tools for that industry
that actually create value for the people in the industry.
So that's why you should know that.
But I do think AI is actually going to have
the opposite effect on the skills that we need to develop.
I think the time where you say,
I am only a software tester, I am only a designer,
I am only a technical writer,
I think that's a very troubling mindset
because the AI is going to allow you
to do more and more of the pieces.
I thought it was funny,
this whole screenwriters guild strike
that happened many months ago in Hollywood
where they were negotiating with the studios to say, you are not allowed to use generative AI to write screenplays
I think the Screenwriters Guild had a too overly narrow view of it. It should actually be the other way around because
Today a really good screenwriter screenplay writer has a great sense of story creativity
they write a screenplay and if they're lucky,
someone's gonna take it up and produce it.
And they might get paid, I don't know, at best,
tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars
for that screenplay.
And then $100 million are gonna be spent on that movie,
and then if it's successful, it's gonna generate
hundreds of millions or billions of dollars
of screenplay writer who actually created the story.
They get a very small cut.
In the future, let's say five years,
10 years in the future, not that far,
if you are really good screenplay writers,
you don't have to stop at the screenplay.
You'll be able to create the whole movie
with the help of AI.
In order to do that though,
like you're gonna have the tools
to be able to create the scenes, do that,
but you have to be more of a generalist.
You're gonna have to think about the business,
the distribution, et cetera, et cetera,
but all of the tools are going to be at your disposal.
So I would say, get to know an industry well
so that you can help people in that industry,
but broaden your own skillset so that you can manage the AI
to do more and more pieces of the puzzle.
And are there any specific skills that you feel
are gonna become more and more important to have?
Yeah, I've always been a little bit of a traditional,
even when things like Google came out,
a lot of people would say,
oh, well, kids don't have to know their facts anymore.
They don't even have to know math anymore
because there's calculators.
I've always disagreed with that because it's very useful
to have that on demand in your mind,
and it allows you to form connections and see patterns in the world
that if you don't know those facts,
if you don't have those skills,
if you can't have that numeracy,
you're just not going to see.
And it also, even in the world of pre-AI and the internet,
someone with a knowledge of history
is going to be able to make much better web searches
about history than someone without a knowledge of history.
And so I think the same thing is true now with AI.
For my own kids, for everyone I know,
it's even more imperative that you should be able to
not just check out and let the AI do the work,
but you should be better than the AI
so that you can manage the AI.
So the three Rs, which have always bothered me
because arithmetic does not start with an R,
but reading, writing, and arithmetic, I guess,
plus things like oral communication,
I think is going to be more and more important
because people are not even gonna know
where that written communication came from,
being able to manage relationships.
And this, you know, you mentioned about creativity.
I think creativity is going to be king
because in the past,
creativity has been bottlenecked by gatekeepers.
As we said, the internet has helped,
YouTube has helped, podcasting has helped,
but now AI is going to be the ultimate opening of the gates
where anyone is going to be able to find creative expression.
Something else that you wrote in your book
is that AI could revolutionize
the way that we actually hire people.
Can you talk about how hiring can change?
Yeah, and this is a sensitive topic
because when people imagine dystopian scenarios for AIs,
one of them they imagine,
oh, people are gonna use AIs to look at resumes
and then what if the AIs have biases
and no one knows about it,
all of a sudden the AIs are distorting the world
and the European Union, in fact,
some of the early regulations have explicitly called out,
like, hey, don't use this for hiring, et cetera, et cetera.
The point I make in the book is there's nothing
that's going to be bias-free.
And in fact, there are some biases you want.
If I'm hiring someone, I have a bias towards people
who are gonna show up on time.
I have a bias towards people who are going to be pleasant
to work with, who aren't going to yell at people,
who are open-minded.
Those are positive biases.
Now, it should not bias
on gender or race or religion or age. So those are the ones you have to watch out for.
And what I argue in the book is no AI system is going to be perfect, but you shouldn't measure
against perfection. You should measure against the status quo. And I can guarantee you that
the human beings who are right now looking through stacks of resumes
and interviewing people are incredibly biased.
You know, you can do bias training and all of that stuff,
but at the end of the day,
they've been studies where people looking
at the same resume at 5 p.m.,
they have a different point of view
than when they look at it in the morning and they're fresh.
What's interesting about AI is it can give more energy
to the process than most human beings can.
Most jobs at Khan Academy, for every job opening,
we get 100 or 200 resumes.
Our screeners at best filter it down to about 20 people
that they'll interview.
When they're looking at those 200,
and we have 30 open job openings,
so they're having to sift through 3000,
there's no way that they can spend more
than tens of seconds per resume.
So they're indexing on just a few keywords,
this, that, and then moving on.
We're probably losing a lot of great talent.
So if AI could one,
make sure we're getting a deeper look at more of them,
and that AI can also be audited
in ways that a human being can't. I can't go to one of our hiring managers
and kind of like, I don't even have the bandwidth to do this
or where we give them 10 equal resumes,
but different genders, ages, ethnicities, religions,
whatever, and see whether they are statistically equal
through our process.
That's very hard to do, but you could do that with an AI.
In fact, you could do that with an AI.
In fact, you could use AI to generate
these statistically equivalent resumes
and then filter them in to scale thousands or millions
to see how the AI evaluator evaluates them and says,
okay, at least on that dimension,
it does not seem to have a bias.
And for sure, it's a better bias than what human beings have.
So I actually think this used well,
it's going to be a chance to go deeper and richer.
But the only way we're going to have a chance to use it
if people don't hold it to too high of a standard,
the standard really should be,
is it better than the status quo and can we measure it?
Because nothing's going to be perfect.
So interesting.
Well, thank you so much, Sal.
I always end my interviews with two last questions that I ask all my guests.
You don't have to relate it to the topic of the episode.
The first one is, what is one actionable thing our young improfiters can do today to become
more profitable tomorrow?
The one thing I would do is start understanding problems in the world that you might discover
you can solve
and that use whatever tools are at your disposal.
We've talked a lot about AI.
AI might be part of it.
In fact, I suspect it will be part of it,
but it could be something very easy too.
It does not have to be technology for technology's sake,
but if you know a space well and you start solving problems
and you have traction with that,
then I think you're off to the races.
And what is your secret to profiting in life and this can go beyond business and financial?
I think it's very important.
And you change as you get older and you realize things,
but audit what's important to you,
what's truly important to you
versus what you think is important to you,
what your family is projecting onto you,
what your friends are projecting onto you.
We all remember being in college
and you have these late night conversations
out in the hallway in your dorm room and everyone's saying, oh, if I only had a million dollars to you, what your friends are projecting onto you. We all remember being in college and you have these late night conversations
out in the hallway in your dorm room
and everyone's saying, oh, if I only had a million dollars
or a billion dollars, I would do this, I would do that.
And now I have friends who have actually made
their tens of millions or hundreds of millions
or billions of dollars,
but some of them are pursuing their passions,
but a lot of them have forgotten
what they got into it
in the first place.
Or they might not fully appreciate that at some point,
once you have your financial security,
that actually the most valuable thing,
I mean, I remind myself this every day
when I'm working extra hours or I'm like,
wow, I have a limited amount of time on this planet.
I have a limited amount of time with my wife, with my kids.
I have to embrace that, I have to really enjoy that.
I have to put energy, at least as much energy
as I put behind work, arguably more energy,
to make sure that I get the most out of that
and they get the most out of it.
So I think it's just, yeah, really auditing
what you care about.
I'd argue in most cases, not to be judgmental,
but I think money matters.
You need to get to a level of security.
But once you get to that level of security,
the number one things,
or actually even before that level of security,
the number one things are always
your health and your relationships.
The money can help give security
to your health and relationships sometimes,
but after a certain point,
that's what I think most people should be optimizing for.
I think that's really good advice.
And where can everybody learn more about you
and everything that you do?
I'm all over the internet.
Obviously anyone can do a web search for Khan Academy,
find those resources.
The second book, the first one was One World Schoolhouse,
this new book, Brave New Words about gender of AI
and education and work coming out.
People can do a search on that.
And there's plenty of me on YouTube.
Yeah, so he's really easy to find.
We'll stick all the links in the show notes.
Thank you so much for joining us
on Young and Profiting Podcast.
Thanks for having me, Hala.
I love speaking with entrepreneurs like Sal Khan, who have made such a big splash in the
nonprofit space because we don't hear about that often.
And I never think about entrepreneurs being in a nonprofit, but it totally works.
And you can totally have a huge innovative company that makes a lot of money and you
can make a great living by running a nonprofit while also doing something you feel passion about. And that's just so cool. So I love this
conversation. And I also found Sal's own passion for human potential to be really contagious. And
it was fascinating to hear what it was like for him to be able to kick the tires on ChatGBT
in the early days before any of us had access. We tend to think of AI now as something that will help students by doing their work for
them.
But Sal and his team saw AI and they saw that it could revolutionize teaching by helping
students, not doing the work for them, by helping them work through problems.
Sal was also optimistic about how AI will help us
unleash creativity across the board
among students and professionals alike.
In the same way that podcasts, social media,
and YouTube have democratized content
and fueled a new generation of creatives,
AI may supercharge that productivity,
providing additional ways to succeed in the future.
Entrepreneurs could be extremely well-placed to benefit from this revolution, according to Sal.
After all, we entrepreneurs are by nature generalists and creatives.
We have many different skill sets and we excel at putting resources together to create value.
And the more you broaden your own skills and learn to incorporate AI in everything that you do,
the better placed you'll be to ride this AI wave in the future rather than sink
beneath it. Thanks for listening to this episode of Young and Profiting podcast.
We'd love you to help this podcast ride into the future too.
Every time you listen and enjoy an episode,
please share it with your friends and family.
Spread our podcast by word of mouth.
And if you did enjoy this show and you learned something new,
then please drop us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts.
It just takes a couple minutes
and it's the number one way to thank us.
Apple Podcasts, Spotify, wherever you drop a review,
I'd love to read it.
And if you prefer to watch your podcast as videos,
you can find us on YouTube.
Just look up Young and Profiting
and you'll find all of our episodes published on there. You can also find me on Instagram or on
LinkedIn by searching my name. It's Halla Taha. And I did also want to shout out my amazing
production team. I am so grateful for all that you do. And today I want to give a special shout
out to Maxi, our audio engineer. He's been doing such a great job.
I appreciate all the hustle that he puts into his job. So just thank you for all that you
do Maxi and thanks to the whole team. I've got the best team in the world. This is your
host Hala Taha, AKA the podcast princess signing off. Thanks for watching!