Lenny's PodcastLeading with empathy | Keith Yandell (DoorDash, Uber)
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
115 min read · 23,046 words- 0:00 – 3:41
Keith’s background
- KYKeith Yandell
Every business that you have heard of has gotten rejected by at least a handful of venture capitalists at one point or another. And so that drive to keep going if you believe in the business is critical, absolutely critical. I mean we- we were weeks of runway situation and had been told no by everyone, and it was just Tony's drive really to keep going. And the way he explains it to me is it's just the difference between a founder and a non-founder. Like if you're really a founder, you just have to find a way, you have to keep going, there's no question. And I mean, that- that's the only advice I can give folks is it only takes, only takes one yes, but you got to keep going.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(Instrumental music) Welcome to Lenny's Podcast where I interview world-class product leaders and growth experts to learn from their hard-won experiences building and growing today's most successful products. Today my guest is Keith Yandel. Keith is a longtime leader at DoorDash where he's been for about seven years, and in that time, get this, he's led the legal team, the HR team, the marketing team, the customer support team, and currently, he leads the BD and corporate development teams. Before DoorDash, he led litigation at Uber. He's also managed folks like Gokul Rajaram, who was previously on this podcast and who suggested that I have Keith on, and damn was he right. Before I had this chat with Keith, I didn't know that much about him, but now you can count me as a huge Keith fanboy. I suspect you'll feel the same way after you listen to this episode. I'm just gonna jump right in and bring you Keith Yandel after a short word from our wonderful sponsors. Today's episode is brought to you by OneSchema, the embeddable CSV importer for SaaS. Customers always seem to want to give you their data in the messiest possible CSV file and building a spreadsheet importer becomes a never-ending sink for your engineering and support resources. You keep adding features to your spreadsheet importer, but customers keep running into issues. Six months later you're fixing yet another date conversion edge case bug. Most tools aren't built for handling messy data, but OneSchema is. Companies like Scale AI and Pave are using OneSchema to make it fast and easy to launch delightful spreadsheet import experiences, from embeddable CSV import to importing CSVs from an SFTP folder on a recurring basis. Spreadsheet import is such an awful experience in so many products. Customers get frustrated by useless messages like error on line 53 and never end up getting started with your product. OneSchema intelligently corrects messy data so that your customers don't have to spend hours in Excel just to get started with your product. For listeners of this podcast, OneSchema is offering a $1,000 discount. Learn more at oneschema.co/Lenny. This episode is brought to you by Amplitude. If you're setting up your analytics stack but not using Amplitude, what are you doing? Anyone can sell you analytics while Amplitude unlocks the power of your product and guides you every step of the way. Get the right data, ask the right questions, get the right answers, and make growth happen. To get started with Amplitude for free visit amplitude.com. Amplitude, power to your products. Keith welcome to the podcast.
- KYKeith Yandell
Thanks so much for having me, Lenny.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
First off the bat, I just want to give a big thank you to Gokul Rajaram and Micah Morowi for suggesting you be on the podcast helping make this happen and also just suggesting a bunch of questions to ask you, so I hope you're ready to be in the hot seat.
- KYKeith Yandell
Definitely as ready as I'm going to be and those are two good folks to talk to.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome. And Gokul's been on the podcast maybe we'll get Mike on the podcast at some point. I wanted to start off with a story. Apparently
- 3:41 – 6:39
The time Keith asked a potential hire if he was an asshole
- LRLenny Rachitsky
there's a story of you, um, interviewing what is now your VP of engineering and I hear that in the interview you called him an asshole, and more interestingly he joined DoorDash because you did that. Can you just talk about that story and share that story?
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. It actually wasn't during the interview.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- KYKeith Yandell
Uh, we were debriefing and for me one of the top things I always hear about DoorDash from an executive standpoint when we do the internal survey is it's a no politics, no asshole culture. And I'm not one to- to swear a lot but after interviewing Ryan Sokol who's now our- our VP of Eng he was just kind of aloof, he came off as aloof to me, really curt answers and I just didn't have a great feeling about him and I pride myself on being able to discern when people are really engaged or not and I went to Tony Xu who's our founder and CEO I said, "Tony, I think this guy's a jerk. I don't think we want him at the company." And Tony was great and he said, "Keith, I want you to just have dinner with him please 'cause I got a completely different impression and if you have dinner with him and you still think he's a jerk we won't hire him." And so I ended up meeting Ryan down the street, we actually live in the same general area, we went out to dinner and I started right away I said, "Ryan during the interview you kind of seemed like an asshole. Are you an asshole?"
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
And he was so great. It- it completely changed my perspective in a good two minutes. He wanted to know what he- he had said. He said, "I'm super embarrassed and what could I do differently? Regardless of how this works out for me in this circumstance it's just not how I want to be perceived." And we talked and joked about the things he had done and he kind of told me the background for how he reacted or why he reacted the way he did and by the end of the dinner, we ended up staying super late, we had a couple beers afterwards, Ryan and I have become really good friends, and like six months later he told me that one of the reasons why he joined DoorDash was that we were going to back- blackball him potentially from joining just because of his attitude because his perspective is life's too short to work with people you don't really enjoy and a lot of people pay lip service and he knew he was going to be a tough hire for us at the time and the fact we were willing to go all the way down the path and have someone super qualified but didn't meet the culture bar for him was what pushed him over the edge to join the company.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I love that. I love the directness of that meeting it was just like, "Are you an asshole?" (laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
Think about it, right? And if someone really was a jerk, they probably wouldn't have taken it very well, right? It, it's just like when you're interviewing someone, giving them tough feedback after the interview if there's an area of concern but you otherwise like them can be a really great way to see how they would interact with you personally as well as how they take feedback. And so that was my learning from this situation is to, is to ... if you really enjoy an interview, except for maybe something on the culture side, to give the direct feedback and see how people engage.
- 6:39 – 8:40
DoorDash culture
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
This touches on another question I wanted to ask you, which is just about DoorDash's culture, which feels really unique, just feels very driven, very pragmatic. There's a story I heard where when you guys celebrated one of your biggest milestones, you bought, like, the cheapest champagne and, like, plastic flutes, and I think the founders brought that to everyone. Could you just talk about what makes DoorDash's culture so interesting and unique? And maybe if there's a story of just, like, a microcosm of what DoorDash's culture is like, that'd be awesome to hear.
- KYKeith Yandell
Founder-led companies tend to take on the personality of their founders. And if you've spent any time with our founder, Tony Xu, you realize that he's a humble leader, he's competitive, he really wants to win, and he'll do whatever it takes to win. And, uh, the example you're, you're referring to, I think, is when we raised our series D funding, which was a really tough fundraise for us. We had very little runway left. We almost went out of business, and it was a huge relief when we, we had finally gotten the funding secured. And I remember I was in a meeting, I was running policy and, and communications among other things at the time, and I was in the meeting with a couple other folks, and we were talking about the, the press release strategy. Tony was there. And someone ran down and got some, I think it was like Korbel or something champagne and some plastic flutes. And one of the women who was in the meeting with me was gonna leave to go put those together. This is a very smart woman who, who I think Tony recognized could add more value and he said, "Whoa, whoa, whoa. You stay here. I'm gonna go put together the champagne flutes." And he called the other two co-founders, Andy Fang and Stanley Tang. They came, stayed up all night, put together, I don't know, 500 champagne flutes, plastic ones for this cheap champagne, and let the people who were closest to the problem try to work out the comms piece. And I do think that's, that's one great example of the culture. The other thing I think that really exemplifies DoorDash's culture is a level of, of customer obsession. And that manifests in a few
- 8:40 – 13:16
The WeDash program
- KYKeith Yandell
different ways. We have a program called WeDash where four times a year, all employees are required to go do deliveries. And I love doing it. I do it more than, than four times a year and I usually take my daughters with me. And, uh, one time, I was out with my daughter who was eight at the time. We got a delivery and it was not ... It was not the best delivery. There's clearly something wrong with the system. We got a sandwich and a coffee and we're supposed to drive 18 and a half miles to drop it off.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs) Right.
- KYKeith Yandell
And that didn't make sense for the customer. It didn't make sense for, for us as drivers, and she'd gotten to know Tony over the years and she said, "I really want to call Tony and tell him this thing's broken." "Honey, I, I like my job. I'd like to keep my job. Can," (laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
"Can we not, can we not call Tony right now?" But she was adamant and I was so proud of her for feeling so strongly that she wanted to fix this thing that was broken. I figured he's not gonna answer anyway. We can just call him. So call, Tony picks up on the first ring and I'm like, "Oh, you know, this, this might go badly." And she just lays into him. She said, "You know, this is gonna take us 36 minutes to drop off. The coffee's not gonna be hot. How could you allow this experience if you really care about your customers?" Whoa. And I kind of sucked in my breath and said, "Well, that's how my time at DoorDash ended." But T- Tony was great. He, he was like, "Hey, Ellis, you know, we have people who do deliveries for, for months. We have people with deliveries for years and they're always providing me feedback. And this is one of the most insightful pieces of feedback I've gotten recently, and you've only been Dashing for, like, a few different times." And by the time we got home, he'd actually sent an email out to the product organization calling out the problem, suggesting the fix, and they were already working on it. And that shows the bias to action that I think really is at the heart of DoorDash alongside that customer obsession. And it's not unusual for Tony to do customer support. It wasn't like just because he heard this from my daughter that he actioned it. He does support every day. And again, this goes back to that level of humility and companies really taking on the ethos of their founder.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
What an awesome story. I want to chat a bit more about the, what is it called, WeDash? Is that the program?
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So you say that you're supposed to do it how many times a year? Four times a year?
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah, at least four times a year.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And then you said that you do it a lot more often. How often are you doing it? And then is there any other (laughs) uh, fun stories of that experience, like, you know, someone like you delivering someone's sandwich?
- KYKeith Yandell
I probably do it once a month.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Wow.
- KYKeith Yandell
And there, there's all kinds of great WeDash stories, but I don't know how interesting they're gonna be to the, (laughs) to the broader public because f- f- for me, it's just about getting out and experiencing the product. I almost always find something that's broken and I send an email to... We have a Slack channel that's devoted to experiences via WeDash. It's everything from... I found a bug once where it wasn't routing you necessarily the, the fastest route. It was going using straight line as opposed to road. That was something that we fixed. And for me, the best parts about WeDash are, are the experiences, the interactions with the restaurants, the interactions with colleagues. So I'll go delivering with Ryan Sokol, the head of engineering. I'll give him a hard time about-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
... problems we find in the product and things like that. But that's by far my favorite WeDash story, is the one with my daughter.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That's a good one. So at Airbnb, we actually had a similar program where Brian wanted everyone to be a host at Airbnb. But as you can imagine, that's much harder. Not everyone is able to, not everyone has a place to. So it was always kind of a challenge to make people do that. I imagine with DoorDash, it's a lot easier 'cause a lot of people can go around and deliver things. But yeah, such a killer idea, some... Such a good way of dogfooding your product.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. It's, it's a good point that n- not everyone is able, for a host of reasons, at DoorDash to do it. And so there are alternatives. So you can do customer support, for example, in lieu of actually going and doing deliveries.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Hmm.
- KYKeith Yandell
It's just about making people have empathy and get closer to the product. It's also, going back to the culture point you raised, it's a great way to weed out people that maybe we wouldn't want to work with, right? Because not everyone wants to... Not every software engineer wants to hop in their Tesla and go out and deliver McDonald's to some kids, right? It takes a certain level of humility, a certain amount of customer obsession to even sign up for that. So we're really vocal during the interview process that this is something that's expected and it serves as a governor to attract the people that we think are gonna be most successful at the company.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I love that. Imagine all your programs have the Dash in there somewhere, something Dash.
- KYKeith Yandell
(laughs) We try.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
I, I, I think when I was head of, uh, marketing, we did a much worse job. I think we're doing much better now.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Nice. At Airbnb, it was always A or something.
- KYKeith Yandell
(laughs)
- 13:16 – 16:08
How Keith was able to lead so many different teams at DoorDash
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Okay. So I think one of the most interesting things about you and your background, and maybe unusual things, is the number of teams that you've led over your time at DoorDash. I have a list here. So over your time at DoorDash, you've led the HR team, you led the customer support team, led the sales team, the marketing team. Now you lead the BD and corp dev team. Initially, I think you were chief legal officer. So here's my question. As someone that I imagine doesn't have a ton of expertise and experience in a lot of these areas, how were you able to credibly lead these teams? And I ask partly because as a founder, you have to learn how to lead teams and people that you don't actually know what they're doing as well as they do. And so I'm just curious what you've learned about being able to lead teams in such disparate skill sets and functions.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. The one thing I'll say is I did not run sales. That's, uh, maybe one of the very few non-technical functions I, I did not lead. But the, the question is, is a good one, and I had massive imposter syndrome the first time Tony asked me to take on something that I wasn't a subject matter expert in. And I told him I, I didn't want to do it. And he had me read this book called Range by David Epstein. And the general thesis is that generalists are better than specialists, and it goes through all these examples about how, you know, Nobel Prize winners are usually amazing in something other than the field that they actually win the Nobel Prize in. And Tony believes pretty deeply in this philosophy, and the way he explained it to me is as follows. If you want to achieve a 10X outcome, hiring someone that's an expert in a field, it's maybe unlikely you're gonna achieve that 10X outcome because they're likely to do things the way things have always been done. So you might achieve incremental benefits, but the odds of completely reinventing the system and doing something that's vastly superior to others is much lower. And he said, "I know you don't know how to do this stuff. That's why I'm putting you in the role." (laughs) And I said, "Okay." So first thing he helped me do was, was believe that I could add value here. And then the second thing for me was to go out and find the best people that really were the subject matter experts and add the value I could to help them be successful. And I found that they were actually really attracted to wanting to work with someone like me who came into the interview process and said, "Good news, bad news. I don't know your field anywhere near as well as you do. Here's the ways I intend to help you. Here's what I think you can provide. And at the end of the day, I'm gonna get out of your way." And that's really proven true. So I ran marketing, hired initially a head of brand, uh, Kofi, who, who now is our CMO, hired a head of legal, who's now our GC, Tia Sheringham. And these people have really just excelled at their function. And with the warmup that I was able to provide, have really proven that they're much better at the jobs than, than I
- 16:08 – 18:21
Hiring the best experts and then getting out of their way
- KYKeith Yandell
was.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You don't strike me as someone that is, like, trying to build empires and take over all these teams. I imagine this kind of came at you because you've been doing a great job at other things. Is that how it worked? And I guess-
- KYKeith Yandell
Uh-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... is there anything, any lessons there that you can take away?
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah, h- hundred percent. I run a 12-person org today.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
So I've gone from running 1500 people in the company to, to 12. And y- for me, people talk a lot about hiring people better than you are. People don't talk a lot about what you do when you hire those people. And if you really care about the company and your long-term brand as an individual, as a manager, you realize what you want to do when you find the person that's better than you is you want to slowly get out of the way. (laughs) And it's really good for the company. It's my favorite part of my job is seeing people that either I've hired or, or managed be successful on their own. And I think it's a big part of, of our success is this desire to be successful regardless of who's in charge. And that comes from the fact, when I joined DoorDash, we were getting our tails kicked. We were in fourth s- fourth place in the space. Uber-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Hmm.
- KYKeith Yandell
... had just launched food and rocket to market share leadership. And I think that was really good for us as a company because we realized unless we all worked together, and it wasn't about who was doing what or, or things like that, we weren't gonna have a shot at being successful. And I think that ethos has really pervaded and, and persisted since then.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah. I, I, I think most people don't realize DoorDash actually is the biggest market share in food delivery. I imagine that's still true. I've see- always seen these, like, line charts of market share and DoorDash is always at the top. I think people kind of, uh, think Uber Eats is, is winning, but it's not true.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. I mean, the, the category charts I've seen are consistent with what you said by a pretty wide margin. But we try not to focus on things like that. We try to focus on the customer experience. And it's humbling in our space because we're doing millions and millions and millions of deliveries a day, and those deliveries will go wrong no matter how hard you try. And, uh, we read those experiences. You know, we do customer support and we understand that there's a long ways to go. So, uh, we're just getting started and we know
- 18:21 – 21:52
The “How to Work with Keith” document
- KYKeith Yandell
that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You mentioned that you ran this 1,500-person org at one point, and something that I've heard you do that helps you do that is you have this document that you put together that kind of explains how to work with Keith and also just broadly how things work at DoorDash. Can you talk about this document, why you thought it was necessary, and kind of the impact something like this has had? And then we're gonna share a link to a redacted version of this in the show notes.
- KYKeith Yandell
One thing I've learned is it's super hard to scale culture, especially when you're growing as fast as DoorDash has since I joined. We were 2 or 3x-ing the company from a headcount perspective for the vast majority of my time every year. And so one thing I noticed is it's hard to come into a place and be new and understand how things work and what it means to be successful there. And so the idea was to do our best to scale that. And one thing that Tony taught me is one thing that scales really well is written work product. And so I put together this document. There's- there's three basic subject matters. It's kind of my expectations/what I've seen as traits in successful people within the company. Two are how I can improve, like basically feedback I've gotten in- gotten in things I'm working on. For example, I'm a litigator by training and so I tend to argue about things even if I agree with people to test levels of conviction. And I got feedback from my team that that was really confusing 'cause I'd be arguing against something and then we would execute that exact thing. And so I try to be transparent about that and-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm.
- KYKeith Yandell
... explain how I work through problems but also in saying, "Hey, this is something I'm trying to improve on is not being quite so argumentative for- for sport." And- and then it talks about what my commitments are to team. So I'm committed to finding you your next job, even if that's not at DoorDash. Life's too short to be in a job you don't like. Things like that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I've heard from a few people how impactful this document ended up being. I guess what impact have you seen this have on the org that you've run and the company and then... And yeah, any- any other examples of just like why this is powerful 'cause I imagine some people listening are like, "Oh, I should do something like this."
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah, I mean for me, one of an executive's main jobs is to attract and retain top talent. And going back to why people have joined DoorDash, Kofi Amu Gottfried who is now our CMO joined me as head of brand when I was running marketing. And it's- it's comical 'cause this person is a legend in the marketing space and I had no idea what was going on.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
And so convincing him to join, I- I was really nervous about. And the point where he decided to join, I had sent him this document. He wanted to know what it was like to work with me. I said, "Well, I've actually written that down." And he later told me that that was a really important factor for him that someone was so transparent about their areas for growth, how they thought they could be helpful. And- and he liked the fact that I knew that I didn't know. And so he knew he was gonna have a lot of autonomy on the role and that was really important to him. But more broadly within the organization how it's been helpful is just being able to have people engage with me in a way and- and with the company in a way that is so consistent with the culture from day one. I've had people come and tell me that I'd never met before that they'd read the doc even if they're on a different team and just how helpful it's been to try to acclimate to this fast-paced environment where you- you're learning and while drinking from the fire hose effectively.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah. That makes sense. Touching a little bit on... You talked about all these amazing people you've led and how you've been able to do
- 21:52 – 27:22
How and why Keith helps his employees land new jobs
- LRLenny Rachitsky
that. Something else I've heard that you do that's pretty unusual is you help people that you manage find their next job, which may not necessarily be within the company, maybe another company. You kind of like help them land it and find something else to do. I've never heard of that before really. I'd love to hear why- why you decided to do that, how- how you do that and just the kind of impact, second order impact maybe that has, maybe that leads you to be doing this.
- KYKeith Yandell
It wasn't a calculated decision why I- I started doing it but then I gave it a lot of thought 'cause I was afraid that I might get some blowback (laughs) when people started taking jobs elsewhere. And as I thought about it, I realized it really is better for the company to have that type of open dialogue with people that work on your team. I think that's true for a few reasons. First of all, when you're opening in this How to Work with Keith document I say, "I will help you find your next job."
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm.
- KYKeith Yandell
And what that means is, number one, people are gonna be transparent with you or more transparent if they're looking for something else or if they're not happy. That's gonna allow you to lay the foundation for a backfill so you're much less likely to get surprised when someone leaves. Number two, what's gonna happen is if someone runs a blind reference on- on me at this point with someone that I managed which in the current environment is more and more common, people diligencing the managers, what they're gonna hear is Keith's gonna put you first. And I think that's really motivating for a lot of people. So if you're thinking on a five, 10-year horizon of your career as a manager, whether you're an entrepreneur hiring people into your company, whether you're a product manager who's trying to build a team, building that long-term reputation I think people take a much too short-sighted perspective on that. And so now if I get a blind reference people are gonna hear that it's not all about the company, it's not all about Keith, it's about you and your career. And that's gonna pay back 10x. Maybe you lose one really talented person but they probably shouldn't be there anyway, they're probably gonna leave anyway, and this way you can participate in that and really drive value for them as well as for the company in the future by creating a- a much better reputation for the group of managers. So it's- it's been really helpful for me. I keep in touch with a lot of people who have left and we get a lot of boomerangs too. There's a lot of people who leave DoorDash and come back and that's something I- I love seeing because it shows that people have gone out and seen what else is out there and realized this is the right place for them.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Can you talk a bit about how you operationalize this? Like 'cause it's just out there. Tell me if you're gonna... Thinking about a new job and I will-... talk to you through your options and help you find something? Or is there anything of it else there for folks that maybe want to offer this to their employees?
- KYKeith Yandell
So first of all, I put it in this document. And so I say how I run one-on-ones in my how to work with Keep document and the last 10 minutes of my one-on-ones are career development conversations.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Hmm.
- KYKeith Yandell
That's a really fertile ground for having the discussion. But for particularly more senior folks, if I get pinged for a GC job or when I would get pinged by a recruiter for a GC job, I would forward that to Tia Sheringham, who's now our general counsel, but was basically head of legal for, for years before she got the general counsel title. And I'd say, "Hey, Tia, I don't know when this job is going to be available here. I'm still liking what I'm doing. I think I'm still adding value. If you think it's time for you to leave, I think this is a really good opportunity."
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs) Wow. That's, uh ...
- KYKeith Yandell
And I say, "In addition to that, you're going to learn the questions they ask during the interview process. You're going to learn what type of qualifications they're looking for, and if I'm not getting you that experience, you can, you can tell me." And thankfully for me, Tia decided to, to stay and has now grown into the general counsel of DoorDash and doing a much better job at the role than, than I ever did. But she had the opportunity to leave and I think she learned from some of those inbounds and the experiences she had.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Wow. That is a, that is amazing that your bosses forwarded you, uh, recruiter pitches to go work somewhere else.
- KYKeith Yandell
I think it made her want to stay, right? Like if I wasn't invested in her success, she could have got, left any time and gotten a job super qualified. But I think she felt a sense of, of loyalty based on my sense of loyalty, and I think it worked out best for, for all involved.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
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- 27:22 – 29:26
How he leverages empathy to unify board members
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Something else I hear about you, which I'm sensing as we chat more and more and I could see why this is true, is that on the DoorDash kind of C-suite and board meeting and board in general, you play this really strong unifying force that helps the group come to fast decisions on really complicated topics. And I'm curious, one, would you agree with that? And two, what is it that you do that helps a lot of strongly opinionated people come to decisions on some, on really complicated decisions?
- KYKeith Yandell
I hope that's true. I think that for me it all comes down to empathy. And what I mean by that is you have to understand what different people's motivations are in the room, different people are goaled on different things, people come from different life experiences and different work experiences. And I think it's really important to make each person feel heard. We've had a situation, for example, where we were deciding between a trade-off between two business lines. It was a profitability question for one business line that would, to make one business line much more profitable to do a certain partnership, but it would come at the expense of the growth of another business line that was more nascent. And so it's hard when you get the, the GMs for all these businesses together and they have very strong perspectives and good reasons on both sides about why path A is better for profitability, path B is better for growth. And they're out, you know, arguing very strenuously in part because they want to hit their numbers and part because they believe it. One thing I found super effective in those contexts is I try to ask the other side, so let's take the, the profitability side. I ask them to make the growth case. I say, "Tell me the three best reasons why we should actually focus on growth here." That generates instant empathy for the other side, right? And sometimes they'll even persuade themselves as they're talking and say, "Actually this, I think you're right that we should focus on growth here. We can achieve this profitability measure later," or vice versa. And so generating empathy and having empathy for the other side, understanding how they're goaled and what they're bringing to the conversation, I think is the first step to having those really tough conversations.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I love
- 29:26 – 31:15
The importance of assigning a decision maker and a time horizon for the decision
- LRLenny Rachitsky
that. What other steps are there? I like that as a first step.
- KYKeith Yandell
(laughs) .
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Is there anything else, yeah, that, that you end up being, you end up finding is really helpful there?
- KYKeith Yandell
Sometimes these conversations can go on forever, right? People just want to keep going back to an argument they've already made because they're not willing to, to settle and there needs to be someone that says, "All right, we got to be clear on who the decision maker is here. If we haven't reached a consensus, who's the tiebreaker?" And a lot of time that's our CEO, Tony Xu, but a lot of times it's the, it's the GM for a certain business line or a head of product or a head of engineering depending on the decision to be made. I think being really clear about, "Hey, we're all going to come together. We're going to have a healthy debate. We're going to make sure everyone's perspectives are heard. We're going to try to reach consensus, but at the end of the day, here's the person that's going to make the decision and we're going to make it on this time horizon. And once the decision is made, we're going to debate and commit." And I think that having someone that's in the room that ha- has run a lot of the functions that are trying to articulate their perspective is helpful.... and someone who's been at the company as long as I have, and given up as much as I have. Right? To your point earlier, everyone knows I'm not trying to build an empire. (laughs) I'm trying to find a way to win, and s- I think it gives me some credibility to call the question, figure out who the decision-maker is, set a timeline, and move on. But it's all... The only way it works is if there's empathy on both sides.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
This is great. So I just took a few notes. So one is just essentially the steel man component, like have them steel man the other side, argue why that's the, the better decision. Clarify the decision-maker, make it clear like there's a tiebreaker. If we don't... if you can't get there, this person's gonna make the decision. And then create a time horizon of like, "We need to make a decision by this time." Is there anything else before we move on to a different question?
- KYKeith Yandell
No, I think that's the right framework. I can tell you're, uh, a product guy. You're very good at distilling it down to the essence. I think that's a
- 31:15 – 33:12
One-on-ones with Keith, and the T3 B3 framework from Uber
- KYKeith Yandell
good summary.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah, you gotta do it. Uh, you mentioned the one-on-one meetings, and I took a note on this actually, and, uh, I wanted to come back to it. So you have... You mentioned at the end of your one-on-one meetings, you have this kind of coaching career conversation. Is there anything else you could share about just your approach to one-on-one meetings, your, like, agenda, or how you think about one-on-ones?
- KYKeith Yandell
This is super tactical, but something that I think is really important is... I'm very clear in the document I... we talked about earlier, about how I like to work is I demand feedback from you. And so we set aside time during one-on-ones where I want the feedback, first constructive feedback, and I expect it. And if you don't give it to me, I'm going to press you on constructive feedback. And then I give feedback. And it, it's a lot easier if... I tell this to managers all the time, if you're, if you create a space where you require constructive feedback, it's a lot easier to give feedback. So one of the top things I hear from managers, especially new managers, they don't like giving constructive feedback. They want to be positive, they want to be liked, and things like that. And so-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah.
- KYKeith Yandell
... it's a nice way to create space to have that dialogue, and that's something I actually learned from, from Travis when I was at Uber. We had a, a system called T3B3 where, during reviews or, or pulse check-ins, you'd have to say three positives about your manager and three constructive pieces of feedback for your manager. And the first time I did it, I just did the T, the top things for my manager, who was the general counsel at the time. And Travis came over and went, "This is totally unacceptable. You have to provide constructive feedback." Which made me super uncomfortable, but created, uh, the right environment where people could have these tough conversations because my manager can't get mad at me 'cause she knows the CEO's gonna come give me a hard time if I don't provide some constructive feedback. And I think having that as, uh, expectation is super important to building open lines of communication.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Wow, I like this T3V3. So T is top good things and V is three bad things.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Cool.
- 33:12 – 34:49
How to encourage constructive criticism from employees
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I'm trying to imagine you in this meeting with, you... the CFO you mentioned, the CMO you mentioned, and them, like, having to give you constructive feedback. That's always hard, even though you expect it. Is there anything else you do to help people feel comfortable giving you hard feedback in meetings like that?
- KYKeith Yandell
Uh, you have to thank 'em for it, right? I mean, every... there's a saying, "Feedback is a gift," but you have to say stuff and you have to action. I mean, that's one thing I've found that can be really demotivating for folks, whether it's... A lot of these companies have these pulse surveys or they talk about what company can do better, and they put the results on the screen, and we're gonna work on it, and that's the end of it. And that was something I learned early on at DoorDash that people didn't like unless you were going to come back and say, "Hey, this was our lowest performing area in the pulse survey. Here are the three things we did to action it." Because that's how you would treat the business, right? If we got feedback from a customer or from another business line, you would say, "Heard it, we're gonna come back and report out on what we're gonna do differently, and then we're gonna track the progress." And so I think that's really important when you receive feedback. You have to show people that you're actioning it and say, "I heard this from you. Checking in, am I doing better? Here are the things that I've changed." A- and so making sure that there's that feedback loop, I think, is another important part of creating the, the right structure for, for a good, healthy culture.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Another guest on the podcast had the same exact advice for getting feedback, and the way he described it is you want to be enthusiastic about, like, "Thank you so much for that," y- in the way (laughs) he described it as even though you're melting inside 'cause you don't want to hear it. "Thank you so much. That was so helpful."
- KYKeith Yandell
It's re- It's really good advice.
- 34:49 – 37:42
What it’s like to lead in tough times and why it can actually make your org stronger
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I want to zoom out a little bit and talk about the DoorDash kind of journey. There's been a lot of high highs with DoorDash. There's been some low lows. I know that there was a funding round at one point where it was, like, very precarious and may not have worked out. Question I have for you around that is just, like, leading through hardships and through tough times, what have you learned as a leader about w- how to lead through challenging times? And I ask partly because a lot of companies are going through that right now. It's pretty hard for a lot of folks out there, a lot of layoffs. And so, yeah, I'm curious what you've learned about leading through challenging times.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. I'm, I'm gonna regurgitate some advice I got from some folks on our board at the same time when we were having really tough times, which I really didn't like hearing at the time, but I was kind of new to the space, and that is tough times make companies for a host of reasons. I mean, this is... this is super healthy for the startups out there right now. It's because, number one, you're gonna find out who the mercenaries are on the team that are r- people that are there for the mission versus, uh, they're there because they think this is gonna be a quick road to riches. We had a lot of people leave the company when Uber launched Food and, and we fell quickly behind. And that was good for us because the people that stayed were there because they wanted to work on this team, on this mission, and they really believed in it. The second thing is it forces discipline. It's a good thing to focus on your economics. And we didn't have the funding that a lot of our competitors did, which forced us to be super focused on our new economics and efficient and serve the customer in unique ways from, from the start. And I think a lot of our success, even to this day, emanates from, from those tough times.The last thing I'll say is if you're a founder and you're looking for talent, tough times is, are great, 'cause there's a lot more talent out there. I saw, um, I can't ... I think it might have been Bill Gurley. Someone tweeted this is the best time in recent memory since 2008 to start a company. And that really resonated with me because there's a lot of talented folks out there who are looking for their next thing, and, you know, three years ago, it was tough to find talent. And so, I think there's a lot to like about tough times. The last thing I'll say is one thing that I found surprising is from our surveys internally, people actually like crises at DoorDash, and I dug into that recently. I was trying to figure out, you know, why people like these crises. And it's because there's singularity of focus. You know what the job is. You know you're going to get whatever resources the company has when you're focused on the main thing. And these tough economic times will, will create that work. It's crystal clear. You gotta cut burn, and everyone's going to be doing what they need to do to achieve that outcome. And, and I think talented folks really like that, one, resourcing, and two, singularity of focus about what the main thing is. And crises manifest those for folks.
- 37:42 – 39:11
How creating urgency compounds gains
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
It's interesting that we ... Like there's all these benefits to tough times. It's hard to recreate artificially. It reminds me a little bit of Frank Slootman, I think, his name, in his book Amp, Amp It Up, where he talks a lot about the importance of urgency, always creating urgency, and obviously a downturn like we have today is, is an urgent situation. Have you found that to be true, the power of creating urgency? And then is there something you've learned about to create that urgency at a company continue?
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. This is something Tony's talked about since the day I joined, and he's very good, frustratingly good at that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
'Cause y- you ... Just when you think you've achieved the goal, the goal might go up. It might get shorter if you're s- from the product side. And, you know, speaking specifically on the product, compound interest is a really hard concept to fully explain to people to make them truly appreciate, but that's something Tony's fantastic at, which is he understands that by pushing a roadmap up even by a week, if you can continuously push up what you ship by a week, you're gonna end up lapping competitors who are just one week behind, 'cause you're gonna start the next thing a week sooner, and you're getting that 1.1, 1.01X return, and then it grows and grows and grows. And he's as good as I've ever seen combined with our, our president, Christopher Pena at creating that sense of urgency and just pushing people. Do we really need to test this thing again, or can we ship it? How can we move that much faster? Even if it's by a small margin, understanding that you can compound those gains over time has been really impactful for our success.
- 39:11 – 40:20
IPO day at DoorDash
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I saw the same thing at Airbnb. It feels like things are going well. Maybe we could take a little break. But it's constant just, like, how would we go faster? How do we go bigger? Okay, what's the next? We launch this thing. Let's move on. And it feels like such a pattern across companies that do really well is the founders continuing to keep that pressure on.
- KYKeith Yandell
I remember our IPO day. We had a, like, this thing. I had to wake up super early. We ... It was a virtual bell ringing, and the second it was over, we had our weekly business review, and there were tough questions being asked. There was not champagne being passed around. People were in ... I mean, people were in a good mood, but it wasn't like, "Wow, this is so great." This is like, "Hey, how are we gonna serve our customers today?" And I thought that was really emblematic of, hey, if we take too deep of a breath and are patting ourselves on the back, it reminds me of the saying, "Somewhere someone out there is practicing, and when you meet them, they will beat you." It's the same kind of thing. It's like if you take too long to be self-congratulatory, you're gonna fall behind the people who are still hungry, so it's important to stay hungry.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Wow, reminds me. I think it's Bill Gates talking about someone's in a garage building the next Microsoft, and he's always trying to stay ahead of them.
- KYKeith Yandell
So true.
- 40:20 – 41:33
The characteristics of top founders
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
The other thing this makes me think about is just, like, it's wild that founders, like Airbnb founders have been at this 15 years. Tony, I'm not exactly sure, but probably a similar amount of time. It's just, like, they have to keep that pressure on within the company and also keep themselves motivated and excited and continuing to push such a hard path, you know. There's, like, benefits to being that founder, but it's such a challenging life, too.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah, I think it's ... I think it can be lonely to be a founder, for sure. I know that, you know, Tony's tried to develop a community for him of, of people who are similarly situated from other companies, and that's been helpful. And the real founders that I've come across, that drive, though, is something they can't turn off. They don't have to try to keep it, because there's a handful of traits I've seen that are pretty common. One is a level of obsessiveness. Two is hypercompetitiveness. And I think they're good at manufacturing straw men, even if everyone's saying nice things. It's like Michael Jordan used to take things out of context and put ... Make bulletin board material. There's definitely an element of that in, in, you know, the great founders that I've come across. And there's just a raw curiosity, and they, they ... So it's the competitiveness but the curiosity and learning how things are working, and those all come together to create a drive that just never stops.
- 41:33 – 44:40
How the pandemic impacted DoorDash
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That resonates. Coming back to the DoorDash journey a little bit, I imagine the pandemic was kind of this microcosm of high highs and low lows, where as an external observer, it felt like everyone needed DoorDash immediately, and it was just, like, probably the best thing for your business. On the other hand, I imagine you had to scale like crazy and keep the wheels on the bus through this time. Can you just talk about that part of history for DoorDash?
- KYKeith Yandell
I mean, it was just a wild rollercoaster. We were trying to get ready to go public, first of all, and so there was that overlay. And then what you saw was our volume dropped right away, like, on the, like, the first or second day of lockdown. And I was like, "Well, this is going out of business 'cause no one wants to order food from restaurants anymore." People didn't know how COVID was transmitted, and so just basically volume dropped off a cliff. And I was like, "Oh." Went from super high, we're getting ready to IPO, super low, volume's going to zero, and then all of a sudden, volume doubled. And that was really exciting for a second till we realized that our customer support center, I was running support at the time, all the support centers around the world shut down. So you're doubling volume, and you have no one to serve it from a customer support perspective.And our infrastructure, we weren't planning to grow that fast. We didn't think there was a chance of two or three exiting in a very short window. And so every Friday night, the app would crash. (laughs) It just ... And if you're, as, if you're running customer support, there's few things you like less than the app going down. Set aside what it means for the customers and for the business, selfishly, it's just super painful. The irony of it was, is our MPS was going up, and, and people were just so grateful to have the product, to be able to safely get the things they needed, for people to be able to, to earn money at times when they really needed it, because maybe their job had been shut down or they weren't allowed to go in, it became a, a really essential service for folks. And that was really motivating for, for me, and I think for the team, is to really be able to fulfill the big part of our mission about empowering local economies in, in a very unique way and a very special time. And the last thing I'll say on, on the pandemic was, I remember vividly, one of my most vivid DoorDash memories was being on a Zoom call where we were trying to figure out what to do to help restaurants. And again, we were trying to go public, and Tony made a decision, and I admit, I was on, on the wrong side of history. I was arguing that it just seemed extreme just to cut commissions by basically 100 million bucks for restaurants to help them stay in business. And I'm like, "Hold on, we're trying to go public. This is gonna completely change the bottom line perspective. No one's asking us to do this." And Tony says, "Keith, you're just ... You think too short term." He's like, "This is the right thing to do." And it reminded me of that Ted Lasso quote, which is, "Doing the right thing is never the wrong thing." And like I talked about how sometimes there's healthy debate. He didn't want to hear any debate on this one. He said, "Just shut it down," and he's like, "Founder led decision. This is the right thing to do. We're gonna cut these commissions." And I woke up the next morning and never been happier to kind of been overruled in a debate before than there. It was just such, such a meaningful moment for the company, and I was so proud to be a part of the organization.
- 44:40 – 45:24
Advice for new parents that is applicable in business
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Is there anything else you took away from that experience of just living through this up and down of, of pandemic times at DoorDash?
- KYKeith Yandell
It actually reminds me of the best advice I got when we were having our first kid, and everyone thinks they're going to give you the insight that's really going to be transformative. But one that, that stuck with me is, for better and for worse, everything's temporary. So the highs, you can't get too high. The lows, you can't get too low. That really has resonated with me during, during that period of time, as, as well as this general idea that you have to try to find opportunities to, to reach the potential for the business and, and decisions sometimes have to be made in very short time horizons. And, you know, being able to seize those moments I think is really important.
- 45:24 – 46:58
The difficulty of gaining funding
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I have a few questions about product (laughs) that I want to get to, but one bigger question about DoorDash is, you've been involved in a lot of the bigger fundraising moments, DoorDash. I think you've worked probably with every major firm out there, uh, raised large dollar amounts for DoorDash. Are there any memories or lessons that you can share from that experience?
- KYKeith Yandell
We've definitely tried to raise from everyone. (laughs) We've been told no many, many times.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
I mean, raising the series D was really difficult. Tony and I worked together very closely on that one, and there was a, a lull in the tech market publicly, and it translated pretty quickly to the private markets. And people didn't believe in both the TAM, either the TAM or the profitability of the business model. And it was difficult. I think one thing that that process taught me is after we raised the D, almost every round, or I think every round ended up being led by someone who had passed in a previous round.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Hmm.
- KYKeith Yandell
And that was because we put up numbers we were highly confident we were gonna hit. And I didn't realize until now, I'm operating partner at a venture firm on the side, and I see that most people put up stretch plans, but they don't hit it. (laughs) But that was just not in our DNA. We wanted to make sure that we, we put forth numbers that we knew we were gonna hit. And that cost us some dilution upfront in the form of lower valuations, I think. And there's this, a trust that builds from that, where when we tell people we're gonna do something, that they have conviction that we're gonna do it. And I would trade, you know, a couple of points of dilution for that level of trust among, with the right investor base over time.
- 46:58 – 48:02
Advice for founders struggling with fundraising
- LRLenny Rachitsky
For founders that are going through fundraising right now maybe having a hard time, any just advice from that period for founders, yeah, that are having a hard time raising these days?
- KYKeith Yandell
It's fortunate 'cause you only need one yes, right? (laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- KYKeith Yandell
And, you know, you see all the ... You know, people post the how many rejections they got. Every business that you have heard of has gotten rejected by at least a handful of venture capitalists at one point or another. And so it, that drive to keep going if you believe in the business is, is critical, absolutely critical. I mean, we, we were weeks of runway situation (laughs) and had been told no by everyone. And, and it was just Tony's drive really to keep going, and you know, the way he explains it to me is, it's just the difference between a founder and a non-founder. Like, if you're really a founder, you just have to find a way. You have to keep going. There's no question. And I mean, that, that's the only advice I can give folks is, it only takes, only takes one yes, so you gotta keep going.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome.
- 48:02 – 50:27
How Keith developed a strong relationship with the VP of Product and Design
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Shifting a little bit to a few product questions. Most of the listeners to this podcast are product builders, growth people, founders, and so I have a couple questions here. Today, you're currently leading the corp dev and BD team, and I imagine you work closely with the product team. And so I'm curious what you've found to be an effective relationship between BD and product and from the experience you've had at DoorDash doing that.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. I, I joke that our head of product, Rajat Shroff, is actually the head of BD, because-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- KYKeith Yandell
... he's, he's both interested in it and good at it. And to do impactful BD, the, the two really have to go hand in glove. So when I think through h- how to make that-... relationship work. The, the first challenge I've confronted and maybe a mistake I made is, is trying to figure out what the right cadence is. When do you bring in the product team? Because if you bring them in too early on a deal that really has no chance of getting done, you, you waste valuable cycles. And our, our tech talent is our most precious resource probably at, at DoorDash. And so you have to be really mindful about when you bring them in. But if you bring them in too late, it may be a situation where you've given on terms that you really shouldn't have, and that can be really detrimental to th- to the partnership as well. So I think one thing to do is just give visibility. So without actually bringing them and having a full discussion, like, "Here's the pipeline. If you think, see things that are super impactful, let us know. If you think things you're not so sure that are going to make a difference, please let us know." That's been really helpful. Another thing that Rajat's taught me is the importance of building platforms and whenever you can. So what we used to do is I'd go out and negotiate a deal. We had a lot of deals around DashPass, which is our subscription product. And I'd asked the product team to go build a bespoke thing for tha- for this particular partnership, Chase, or, you know, whatever partnership we were negotiating at the time. And Rajat said, "Why don't you figure out what a scalable solution is for this? We will build you a product. You won't need to come ask us every time to build something. And then you'll know the parameters in which you can negotiate. You can negotiate um, at better velocity. And we'll, you know, we might spend more time on the first version of this, but very little effort for the next, and we'll have a higher return on the product hours and engineering hours spent." And so that was a super valuable insight that I, I garnered from him is to try to figure out how to create these type of, of platforms.
- 50:27 – 52:36
Building an effective BD team within a product company
- KYKeith Yandell
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Any other lessons of just building an effective BD team within a product company, especially at the scale you're at?
- KYKeith Yandell
Uh, a few other things. Number one, this is something else that Rajat taught me, which is to, one of our core values is dream big, start small. And he really brought that to the, the BD product org. And there were some painful times (laughs) . We invested heavily in a partnership with a, a hotel chain. We thought we were gonna build... "Hey, we're gonna, we're gonna make sure that this is the new dine-in experience when you're at a hotel. We can, we can actually replace room service." And asked for a lot of product work, and it was a total flop.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Hmm.
- KYKeith Yandell
And the realization I had is that we should have gone out and tested this at one hotel with just some hacky operations and seen what the uptick was. And what I would have realized is this particular hotel chain was franchised. So even though corporate thought this was an important thing they were going to prioritize, if the franchisee doesn't care about it, they're not gonna give you the visibility, in-room or otherwise, to make it work. So we built all this great integration product work that was totally wasted 'cause the operations weren't right. And I, I have probably two or three other examples of situations where I learned I should have just gone out and stood out front with a promo code and handed it out in certain forums and seen if that changed customer behavior before going and asking for the product resources. And Rajat correctly was like, "Hey, this is how we have to think about these things going forward." So yeah, definitely building platforms, dream big, start small, use operations to test a thesis around a deal before you actually expend the product resources, I think has been super helpful. And then the last thing would be to engage early, but not too early, on d- deal opportunities.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
It's interesting how the advice of doing things that don't scale just continues to be useful, even at the scale of a DoorDash. Like, like you said, you could just stand out there and see if people want room service through DoorDash before building a whole solution.
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah, early DoorDash, that was, that was a core value. Do things that don't scale. And s- it's as relevant today as it was then.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Same at Airbnb is something the founders brought up all the time. And speaking of that,
- 52:36 – 55:50
How to engage with legal teams
- LRLenny Rachitsky
another area that you have a lot of expertise on is legal. So you led legal for a while at DoorDash. And I was thinking, as I was thinking about this question, like, I wonder what's more, uh, difficult to be head of legal at Airbnb or head of legal at DoorDash? Both fraught businesses (laughs) and ideas. But we'll avoid that question for, for now. So my question is just legal and product. It's always this interesting relationship, how much legal has say over what happens versus how much product has final decision-making powers. Any lessons there about just how to set up a product and legal relationship within a software business?
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah. I mean, both for the, the product folks that are listening, as well as the entrepreneurs who want to be founders. I've had the pleasure of working with, with two founders who are very product-driven, product-first folks, in, in Travis and, and Tony. And I found that the way they engage on the legal side is with a curiosity I referenced earlier, which is they're both hyper-curious, and they will ask questions until they understand the law in the particular area about as well as the lawyers. And then they will apply a first principles product mindset to their understanding of the law. And they will push the lawyers to make sure that they're not being overly conservative, which sometimes they can be. And so, when you're on the product team, especially if you're in a consumer-facing business, it may not be as pronounced for SaaS businesses, but if you're in a consumer-facing business working on a consumer-facing product, you had better have at least a general understanding of what type of regulations are gonna apply to your business and what type of constraints there are and how to push those constraints. Yeah, and so for me, it's just about that level of curiosity and actually engaging in the profession, right? There's nothing magic about the law. There's a finite number of things that you can learn. Just like all the other functions I've, I've learned, I think you can engage them in a way 'til you are proficient and can actually be really accretive to your business.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Keith, this has been incredible. I can see why people want to work for you, why they keep giving you more teams to run. I learned a ton. I'm really excited for folks to listen to this and learn from you. Two final questions. Where can folks find you online? Or if they want to reach out or learn more, where do you point them? And then two, how can listeners be useful to you?
- KYKeith Yandell
If people want to find me, uh, LinkedIn is the place. You can locate me, you can locate me there. I don't do any other social media. I know that i- is maybe unusual in this day and age. But that's my preferred medium. And then, a-as far as being helpful, always looking for, for referrals for great people. Th- that would be the number one thing. And everyone has an opportunity to use our products. So if you have product feedback, I always welcome that as well.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
For folks that maybe want to join DoorDash after hearing this, is, is there specific roles you're hiring for? Anything you want to share there for folks that might be interested?
- KYKeith Yandell
Yeah, I mean, select roles definitely on the, the product and engineering side is, is a place we're focused right now. But even if there's not a role open today, I like meeting great people. I've found that building relationships over time, even when you're not looking, is, is impactful.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome. Keith, thank you so much again for doing this.
- KYKeith Yandell
Thanks, Lenny.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(instrumental music) Thanks for listening. You can find the full episode on YouTube or head on over to lennyspodcast.com.
Episode duration: 55:50
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