Lenny's PodcastLessons on product sense, AI, the first mile experience, and the messy middle | Scott Belsky (Adobe)
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
125 min read · 24,658 words- 0:00 – 4:50
Scott’s background
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah. You know, I've had this conversation quite a few times over the years with founders and friends who were running a company going sideways or, or, or worse, and have had this question, should I continue or not? I always have the same answer. I basically say, "How much conviction do you have in the solution you're building? I know in the beginning, before you knew all you know now, you had tons of conviction. That's what caused you to leave your job. Now, knowing all you know, do you have more or less conviction in the problem and, and the solution you're building?" And I'll tell you, like, I get different answers. You know, some people are like, "Oh, Scott, I mean, I have more conviction. Like, all that I've learned, all the validation I've received from customers, we just haven't figured it out yet. It's driving me crazy. We've tried three times and it's still like, each product fails, but I have more conviction than ever before." And for those people I'm like, "You know what? You're just in the messy middle. Stick with it." You know, this is, this is, uh, par for the course. But, you know, oftentimes I'll hear a, "Honestly, if I knew now what I... If I knew then what I know now, I would not have done this." Like, "Holy shit." I'm like, "Then quit! Like, your life is short. You have a great team. Pivot, do something completely different." If you've lost conviction, you should not be doing what you're doing in the world of entrepreneurship.
- 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 Scott Belsky. Scott is an absolute product legend. He's a former founder starting a company called Behance that he sold to Adobe, where he worked up the ranks to chief product officer, and more recently to chief strategy Officer and Executive Vice President of Design and Emerging Products. He's also an author of the beloved book, The Messy Middle. He's also an angel investor in companies like Pinterest, Uber, Airtable, Flexport, Warby Parker, and many more. In our wide ranging conversation, Scott shares his advice on how to build product sense, why you should only build half the features that you want, what it takes to build a successful consumer product, and we spend a lot of time on how AI is likely to change the world of product and the world broadly. Scott is such an insightful and articulate thinker, and I learned a lot from this conversation. With that, I bring you Scott Belsky after a short word from our sponsors. This episode is brought to you by Braintrust, where the world's most innovative companies go to find talent fast so that they can innovate faster. Let's be honest, it's a lot of work to build a company. And, if you want to stay ahead of the game, you need to be able to hire the right talent quickly and confidently. Braintrust is the first decentralized talent network where you can find, hire and manage high quality contractors in engineering, design and product for a fraction of the cost of agencies. Braintrust charges a flat rate of only 10%, unlike agency fees of up to 70%, so you can make your budget go four times further. Plus, they're the only network that takes 0% of what the talent makes, so they're able to attract and retain the world's best tech talent. Take it from DoorDash, Airbnb, Plaid, and hundreds of other high growth startups that have shaved their hiring process for months to weeks at less than a quarter of the cost by hiring through Braintrust's network of 20,000 high quality, vetted candidates ready to work. Whether you're looking to fill in gaps, upscale your staff, or build a team for that dream project that finally got funded, contact Braintrust and you'll get matched with three candidates in just 48 hours. Visit usebraintrust.com/lenny or find them in my show notes for today's episode. That's usebraintrust.com/lenny for when you need talent yesterday. This episode is brought to you by Eppo. Eppo is a next generation A-B testing platform built by Airbnb alums for modern growth teams. Companies like DraftKings, Zapier, ClickUp, Twitch and Cameo rely on Eppo to power their experiments. Wherever you work, running experiments is increasingly essential, but there are no commercial tools that integrate with a modern grow team stack. This leads to wasted time building internal tools or trying to run your own experiments through a clunky marketing tool. When I was at Airbnb, one of the things that I loved most about working there was our experimentation platform where I was able to slice and dice data by device types, country, user stage. Eppo does all that and more, delivering results quickly, avoiding annoying prolonged analytic cycles, and helping you easily get to the root cause of any issue you discover. Eppo lets you go beyond basic click-through metrics and instead use your North Star metrics, like activation, retention, subscription and payments. Eppo supports tests on the front end, on the back end, email marketing, even machine learning plans. Check out Eppo at GetE-P-P-O.com. That's GetEppo.com and 10X your experiment velocity.
- 4:50 – 8:29
Why Scott shifted roles at Adobe
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Scott, welcome to the podcast.
- SBScott Belsky
Hey Lenny, and it's great to be here.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I don't know if you know this, but it's been a big goal of mine to get you on this podcast since the day I launched it, and so I'm really excited that you're here. I wanted to start with your role at Adobe. So, for the longest time you were Chief Product Officer at Adobe, and then recently I noticed you shifted to this very complicated sounding role.
- SBScott Belsky
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Um, I'm curious what this new role is and then why you made that shift?
- SBScott Belsky
Well, in this new role, I'm overseeing strategy and corporate development, all of design across the company, and emerging products for the business. If you, uh, look back at the last five years or so, it really has been about getting our core products to the cloud, making them collaborative, making some critical and interesting opportunistic acquisitions over the years, ensuring that we have connectivity between the products, that we launch new web apps that meet new types of creatives and, you know, and that, that was a incredible five-year chapter. Now, with the advent of AI and new and emerging fast-growing businesses we have, like the 3D and immersive space, the, the stock business and how that whole space is being changed by new technology, the idea of bringing that into an organization and, and being able to focus on that full-time was really exciting to me.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So what is it that you're doing day-to-day now, just to even get it even more concrete?
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I'm curious what your days are looking like.
- SBScott Belsky
Well, I think that it's... The strategy of a company always needs to be iterated. And so, being tasked with developing the strategy across the entire company, it's a really, um, you know, there's, there's no shortage of opportunities and people to meet and things to think about there. Corporate development, certainly, like new M&A stuff and integration, th- all that sort of stuff, you know, falls under me as well. And I have a lot of feelings about that, having been an entrepreneur that went through integration myself. So it's kind of fun to be on the other side and try to improve it, you know, from that vantage point. On the design side, I spend a ton of time reviewing the design across every product and really trying to raise the bar for the experiences we're shipping. Uh, and that's, that's a hard thing to do in a company that has a lot of legacy products, you know, and a lot of baggage that comes with them. And on the emerging product side, it's really about the new products we're bringing into the market and how to make them win.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Something that comes up on this podcast a number of times is how CPOs rarely last at a company. They stay... Like Kasey mentioned this and a few other people, they stay around for a couple years and they're... Like, the best they can do is just take a few swings at how things work, improve a few things, and then the CEO's like, "No, this isn't great," and then find someone else. What do you think has contributed to you surviving and lasting and thriving and, you know, taking on more and more responsibility at Adobe?
- SBScott Belsky
Well, in the, in the chief product officer role, I oversaw design, product, and engineering. And I think part of the reason I was even interested in coming into the company and taking this role is that I felt like these, these boundaries between these functions are, um, you know, at, at, at best artificial, at worst, like, really constraining. And I, uh, I always have felt like a lot of products win not because of the technology but the user's experience of the technology. And so if you have an aligned team that gets that and makes decisions accordingly, I think you can ship better experiences. So, a lot of the work I had to do was breaking some of these boundaries down over the years. And, and, uh, and I think that a lot of chief product officer roles traditionally don't oversee engineering and sometimes don't even oversee design. And, you know, for me, that wouldn't be interesting.
- 8:29 – 10:43
Advice for PMs looking to build product sense
- SBScott Belsky
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Zooming into product, if there's a Mount Rushmore of insightful product thinkers, I feel like you'd be on it. And part of the reason is that you have this incredible product sense, whatever that means. It's clear that you have strong product sense. And PMs often talk about the importance of product sense and how to build product sense, and I'm curious, how do you feel like you built your product sense? And what advice would you give to younger PMs looking to build product sense?
- SBScott Belsky
First of all, one of the, I think the, the, the biggest mistakes that teams make is they become very passionate about a solution to a problem they're trying to solve as opposed to do everything they can to develop empathy for the customer that's suffering the problem. And oftentimes, the empathy gives you the solution, whereas the passion you have for whatever you think the solution is might be 30 degrees off what the solution actually is. And, uh, and so this, this development of empathy, you know, is a key part of it. And of course, as I think about the discipline of crafting product experiences, to me, it's all about psychology. It's about understanding the natural human tendencies that people have in their most, you know, primal moments. I talk a lot about the first-mile experiences that we have across any product we use, whether we're a consumer or an enterprise user. You know, in the first 30 seconds of using a new product, you are lazy, vain, and selfish. You want to get it done super quickly, you want to look good to your colleagues or to your friends. You want to feel successful very quickly by engaging in this product. You don't want to have to watch a tour, read anything, you know, uh, really endure any learning curve whatsoever. Of course, if you can get people through the first 30 seconds, you have so much opportunity to build a more lasting relationship with that customer and have them understand your mission and the full potential of your product. But we need to, we need to kind of ground ourselves with the fact that, that that's really hard to do. It's fascinating to me that most teams spend the final mile of their time building the product considering the first mile of the customer's experience using the product. If you can just get more customers through that top of funnel, you are a world-class product team. You know, let's anchor ourselves on just doing that, and let's use psychology to do so.
- 10:43 – 13:18
The first mile
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And just to make sure people understand, when you talk about the first mile, essentially, that's the onboarding flow maybe to the activation moment?
- SBScott Belsky
I think that's right. It's the onboarding flow. It's the initial experience. It's the defaults that you see. It's the orientation of where you are. So many products, you actually don't exactly know how you got to where you are and how to get home and where to get help. So I would say it's the, um, onboarding, it's the orientation, and it's the defaults.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You've been a constant and early advocate of investing in that part of the funnel, and it's interesting how often that comes up on this podcast when people think about, "How do we improve retention? How do we improve growth?" Often, the biggest wins from stories that we get on this podcast are in that part of the flow. And so, a- another data point to spend more time there. And as... I wanted to ask you, are you finding even at the stage of like an Adobe, there's still lots of opportunity in the first mile? Or do you find that it becomes less and less and less and then they're... It's less important?
- SBScott Belsky
The answer is lots of opportunity. The reason is because the customers change. You know, every new cohort of new customers is different. The new customers you have in the early stages of your product are typically more willing and forgiving customers, and you might nail the onboarding process for them and then suddenly realize that, wait, it's not being as effective anymore. And the reason is, is because now you're engaging more of those pragmatist customers, those later-stage customers who are initially more skeptical, less forgiving, less willing to deal with your friction. And so you have to reimagine the onboarding process all over again. I mean, when you look at a product like Photoshop, for example. It used to cost hundreds and hundreds of dollars, right? Now you can get Photoshop for as little as 10 bucks a month. And so, of course, uh, the funnel's a lot larger. A lot more people come in with creative desires without the skills or the tolerance to develop them. And so that dictates an entire change in the onboarding experience for a product like Photoshop.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
It makes me think of something Shishir, the CEO of Coda, shared about how he's like, "I don't really buy this idea of product market fit." Because you have product market fit with your existing users that love it and know about it. And you always don't have product market fit with the people you want to be using the product. And it's related to what you're talking about, where like the newest people joining have no idea what you're doing.
- SBScott Belsky
I agree with that, and I actually think that the role of AI, you know, going forward, will be to have applications increasingly meet us where we are. You know, to this day, we've always had to generalize our boarding experiences, for the most part, for everyone. And I'm really excited about the day when kind of products meet us where we are, you know, based on what type of user we are.
- 13:18 – 16:33
How to develop more empathy
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I have a billion AI related questions for you, so I'm gonna hold off-
- SBScott Belsky
No problem. (laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... just a bit. And I wanted to double click on the empathy piece. So you talk about how to become better at product sense, empathy and understanding the user's problems is really important. Do you have any advice for someone that wants to build that? Like what can they actually do to become more empathetic and build that, uh, part of their skillset?
- SBScott Belsky
Well, the most humbling moments for me as a product leader have always been shoulder to shoulder to customers, watching them actually go about their day. Not just use my product, but go about their day. 'Cause what you end up getting is context for a lot of data that you're missing. When customers are using your product, they're using it amidst everything else around them. You know, in the enterprise, it's all their other, you know, meetings and other products and pings that they're getting throughout the day. And as a consumer, you know, it's between dealing with their kids or their loved ones or watching Netflix or whatever the case might be. And in order to really understand where the customer is and where their mentality is, you have to understand the context in which they're using your product. So part of developing empathy is being shoulder to shoulder and just encountering that reality, you know, alongside your customer. And that time, it just gives you better intuition. It helps you understand more. And with empathy, we can then better create, quote unquote, for ourselves, right? 'Cause by developing empathy for others, we're feeling what they're feeling. We can then be the customer. And of course, we all know some of the best pro- customers, some of the best products in the world are made when we are, you know, the, the makers are the customer.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
It makes me think of Marc Andreessen has this awesome quote that I always come back to that everyone's time is already allocated. They don't have time for your product. (laughs)
- SBScott Belsky
That's right.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
They're not like, "How do I find a new app to suck up my-"
- SBScott Belsky
And by the way, as a related note, since I know, Lenny, you talk to a lot of guests around product-led growth, you know, um, and sorry if I'm skipping around here, but-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Please.
- SBScott Belsky
... I think this is also, it's also relevant 'cause everyone's trying to get their products to grow. And the other thing that perplexes me is that people expect, product leaders expect people to talk about a product being great. And people don't talk about a product doing exactly what they expected it to do. They talk about a product doing what they didn't expect. And, you know, you look at a, a product like Tesla, you know, people are not going and talking about how they had a great drive today, but they're talking about the Easter egg they deve- they discovered on the dashboard or the, you know, cool new feature that, you know, they discovered that is associated with Christmas or whatever. And so it always is interesting to me, like in consumer and, and even enterprise products maybe especially so, like why aren't we optimizing for those things that people wouldn't expect the product to do as a way to get that surprise and delight to talk about it, to have like a, you know, to, to develop kind of a relationship with our products? I think that's another piece of the puzzle.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That is really interesting and reminds me of something I just talked about with Gustaf from Spotify, whose episode might come in, out before this or after this, about how every great consumer product pulls some kind of magic trick and feels like magic to you, like Spotify as an example. Um-
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah, I like that. You know, m- magic, uh, you know, sort of a little mystery, a little intrigue, a little surprise. It's a classic trick that Hollywood uses all the time. Why don't we use it in
- 16:33 – 20:42
How to build consumer products that work
- SBScott Belsky
our own products?
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So let me pull on that thread a little bit about just consumer products in general. You spent a lot of your career, maybe most of your career in consumer. I imagine Adobe, there's a lot of B2B elements now as well. And you also angel invest and you help a lot of consumer companies. And tell me if y- you agree, but it feels like new consumer products basically never work. And if they do work, there's like a period where they work, like BeReal's kinda going through this now, Clubhouse, Paparazzi went through this, and then they fail or, you know, fade away maybe, maybe they come back and then fade away again. I guess first of all, do you, do you generally agree that like consumer is just like so rarely successful in consumer products?
- SBScott Belsky
You know, Uber was a consumer product, right? But it built a network effect that was never there before. It leveraged excess capacity that was always there but never tapped. It did something under the hood, right? That gave it lasting power. You know, I think of Pinterest, you know, I, and I was Ben's first, uh, seed, angel, uh, or, you know, and, and product advisor and, you know, with, with, with that product, it was, you know, he had this like unique insight into the consumer psychology where it was not as much about getting likes and portraying, you know, yourself through pictures of you and seeing pictures of friends and all of this sort of anxiety that is induced by that, but rather helping people collect and, you know, represent themselves with their interests. And so again, that was kind of like a new, a new insight that I also think developed its own network effect that enabled it to be lasting. And there was a fascinating business component, which was it drove a crap load of traffic.... to every source of every pin, which then got those sites to then put pin buttons themselves because they wanted more traffic. So there were underlying things under the hood, again, that were, you know, sort of tilting the market in his favor. I think that lot of these other, more recent consumer products are just kind of clever momentary interfaces, and they are in effect at the expense of venture capitalists' R&D for the platforms that already have the network effects, and-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- SBScott Belsky
... already have the distribution channels and the ad sales and everything else. And so I think that's why we're seeing, you know, BeReal's capability is now also in TikTok and, and you're, you're seeing a lot of flashes in the pan, especially in these creative consumer apps, which I've been very, you know, paying very close attention to. They're fun and novel, but if they really work, those features are then brought into the native Apple camera, for instance.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So let's double click on that. And I know this is, like, a big question, but just what have you found is important for a new consumer product to work? You mentioned surprise would be great, network effects, maybe a new insight. What else do you find is important for a durable new consumer product to work?
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah, and it's, and it's interesting because I think my answer 10 years ago would probably be different than my answer today. I, I think that there is a nimbleness and a, and maybe it started in China with these super apps that were able to kind of do everything, and that changed the idea away from the atomized experiences of a decade plus ago, where you wanted, like, a specialized product that did exactly what you wanted in a very, like, reduced way. I think Snapchat emerged under that world. You know, I think Instagram became valuable to Facebook because of that phenomenon. Fast-forward to today, where all of us are far more technologically literate and we are able to manage a lot more cognitive load in our everyday technology lifestyles. And so there, you know, suddenly, we don't mind five tabs. We don't mind features hidden and tucked away in menus because we're sort of used to that now. And, and so maybe that's one of the reasons why these established platforms get away with, you know, basically copying any novel new capability, as opposed to those becoming apps in and of themselves.
- 20:42 – 26:15
Scott’s philosophy that you should “only do half the things you want to do”
- SBScott Belsky
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So let me shift a little bit and talk about a tweet that you tweeted about what one thing you've learned. You had this amazing thread of just, like, things you have learned over the many years you've been thinking about products and consumer products. And one of them was about how you've learned that you should do half the things that you want to do. Like, half the features you plan to do, do half the features. Uh, offer half the options you want to o- offer. Focus on half the market versus the market you're trying to go after. Can you just talk about maybe how you kind of came upon that learning and then also just, how do you actually do that? It's like, "Sure, great, we're gonna do half." But then, which half? And, "Oh, but someone wants this feature so badly. Shoot. Like, we can't do them all." So do you have any advice on just how to actually execute that sort of approach?
- SBScott Belsky
I mean, one of the first comments I'll just make is, whenever I'm asked by teams what features need to be part of their MVP, how do they decide, you know, which features they need to ship first and whatever, I always tell them to optimize for the problems they want to have. You want the problem of customers getting through your funnel, feeling successful, using your product and getting value and then saying to you, "Oh, but I need it on this platform," or, "I need this capability," or, "I want to be able to share this." I mean, you want those problems, so don't do those features now. Only do the things that prevent people from getting to the point where they care enough to ask you for anything. You know, make sure they can get through the sign-up flow, make sure they can connect their account, make sure they can use Google login if they need to or whatever the case may be. So I always remind the teams, like, optimize for the problems you want to have and make sure that you eliminate all the brick walls, the major catastrophe type things that can happen. But in terms of the, the half, the half half, you know, I learned this the hard way. When Behance was launching back in 2008, I was always, you know, trying to hedge us with product features. You know, I wasn't sure if people would be coming to join groups or if people would be coming for the tip exchange, where creatives share best practices with one another, or if people were coming to build their portfolios or just share work in progress. Maybe it's too much to build a whole project of your work. Maybe we can allow people just to share snapshots of their work. And so we actually launched with pretty much all of these features. And, and then, you know, it was the most complicated form of Behance, was ironically at the beginning. And then what we realized is that some things were taking off and some things weren't. So I remember when we decided to kill the tip exchange, and suddenly the publishing of projects in the portfolio went up. And we were like, "Oh my gosh. Like, projects being published is the core metric and it's what drives the traffic back to Behance. Let's do this again. I don't know. Let's kill groups." And so we killed groups. And lo and behold, more people published more projects. And it was like, wow. So actually, if you make the whole product about one thing, everyone does that, that core crank operates at like 10X the velocity, and if that's the most important metric for the business, that's, that's gold. And so we basically went on a killing spree, where we just started killing things. And, and over the years, we have actually tried to have this sort of... And I push this on many products that I work with now. Whenever you're adding things, consider what you can replace. Consider what you can also remove. When we, um, updated the portfolio on Behance, I remember we used to have this ability to change the colors of your portfolio in Behance. When people clicked on your profile and saw all your projects, you could control that and add your brand element to it-And, uh, and so we know, we were like, "You know what? What- what would happen if we just took this away? Would people, again, focus more on projects?" And so we took it away. For 24 hours, we had people reaching out to us, being like, "Damn you. Like, how could you take away these controls for- for color in a portfolio?" After the 24 hours, we basically never heard about it again. All the portfolios looked cleaner and more consistent, and people did the core metric more. And so I just took from that, try to kill things and everything you think you need to do, you probably only need to do half of it.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I wonder if, in reality, most of the time you only realize this afterwards versus ahead of time, and that's just the way it is. And then it's just the seal of sunsetting things that aren't actually important.
- SBScott Belsky
I do have to say though, Lenny, like some of the best product leaders that I've worked with, I do feel like they have this great, you know, uh, reductionist or minimalistic tendency by default. You know, they're just like very much, they anchor themselves on the one thing they want people to do and do well, and they just are like pretty ruthless about like everything else, being like, "Okay, but only if we have a problem with doing this core thing. Okay, put it on the back burner." You know, it's, and so, uh, it's something I've tried to, uh, I've tried to get better at over the years.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You know what's really interesting is this, is exactly like Matt Machari, who is actually the number one most popular podcast episode, talks about when you let people go, and he's helped a lot of CEOs let people go, that 100% of the time, everything just starts moving faster as soon as-
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... you have fewer people. And so it's the same exact model in people and products.
- SBScott Belsky
I think that's right, and that's why I always feel like, you know, tough decisions, you know, almost always afterwards feel like a relief. And that's true for the product, that's true for people on a team as well.
- 26:15 – 29:44
Scott’s optimism about how the world will look in five years with AI
- SBScott Belsky
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Let's shift to talking about AI, which I'm really excited about because I know you've been spending a lot of time talking with people about AI, building AI products. Y'all launched Firefly, which a lot of people are really excited about. You also have this newsletter where you kind of just share your implications on how AI and technologies are gonna impact the world. So, uh, a lot of questions I'm excited to ask you around this. And I'll just start really broad and maybe this is too big of a question, but just how different do you expect the world to be in, say, five years as a result of AI, both for product builders and then just people in general?
- SBScott Belsky
Listen, I'm an optimist, and, uh, and I feel like our human potential has always been held back by the laws of physics, essentially. The mundane repetitive labor you need to do to get anything done is what holds back our ingenuity. It's the friction, right? It's the work and workflows, that wouldn't it be great if we could just have flow and no work? A- and I think that that's what AI kind of does, is it gets us, um, from workflow to flow. It gets us into this flow state where any idea in your mind's eye, you can start to develop it. I was having this, um, discussion with, um, with Howie, um, who runs Airtable actually just earlier today, where we were talking about, um, we were talking about the leader at IBM who announced that he's not gonna hire 8,000 people that he would have hired because AI is gonna be able to do that work. And what we were talking about was, and- and- and Howie made the point, as engineers have become much more productive over the years, that doesn't mean that companies have wanted fewer engineers. It actually just means that they demand more of their engineers and engineers have more possibility to do more. And so if human ingenuity goes up, maybe we actually want to hire more people because if you have more ingenuity per human being, maybe you can actually do more as a company. Maybe companies that used to have three products will have five products or seven products or 30 products. And, you know, maybe that's actually the- the trend that we're forgetting, is that humans bring this level of ingenuity to every problem and every opportunity, whereas computers, remember like ChatGPT is basically just giving you what it would look like if, right? It's not truly finding edges that will become the center. It's actually just mining the center and it's trying to regurgitate the center, which is also very helpful, by the way. So I'm optimistic. You know, I think that there will be far more people engaged in delivering experiences. You know, I'm very long the experience economy because I think that there will be some people liberated to focus more on the non-scalable things that really move the needle for experiences for customers. And that I, uh, you know, and I'm also excited about humans having less grudge work to do.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I'm also excited for that, and it reminds me, there's a... I have a TikTok account and, uh, I have this team that helps with the TikTok and they, we haven't shared this, but a few of the TikToks are my voice generated with AI.
- SBScott Belsky
Oh, wow.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And they just read a script. And it's me reading the story and it sounds sort of like me, but like, uh, and I showed it to a friend and I was like, "Do you see anything... Do you feel anything weird about this video?" And he's like, "No. You- you sound great. You sound like really, like a great speaker." I'm like, "Okay, say hi." Um, so...
- SBScott Belsky
Well, while you were reading... instead of reading a script, you can be, uh, you know, plotting the course of the next episode.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah, exactly. So I totally see what you're talking about there.
- 29:44 – 32:55
How AI will impact product teams
- LRLenny Rachitsky
In the product team, which function do you think will be the most disrupted and/or the most, uh, I don't know, optimized through AI?
- SBScott Belsky
We're entering the, uh, era where we collapse the stack in every organization, where instead of having to go to someone for anything, you can kind of do more things yourself. It's very empowering to get the answer from data as opposed to having to go to a data scientist or a data analyst in the middle. So there's gonna be far less game of operator across the organization, and, you know, far more empowerment for people to dig their own rabbit holes, answer their own questions and get things done. You know, I happen to believe that that's the advantage typically of small teams, is that they're flat, the stack is collapsed, people all can hear each other, you know, in an audible across the room, and that's how they run circles around big stodgy like old companies that are disparate, you know, and dispersed around the world. So...Maybe, you know, maybe this technology allows cross functional work, right? And, and to happen, and I'm excited about, I'm excited about that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That is really interesting. So essentially what you're saying is a PM will be able to do more design, more engineering, more u- data potentially, and it won't... maybe one day it'll be just as good as having a data scientist on your team, but there's essentially... everyone becomes kind of this unicorn cross-functional mini team.
- SBScott Belsky
Which sort of suggests this idea of idea meritocracy. You know? It's almost like what if people get promoted, an opportunity, you know, based on how creative and how much ingenuity they have as opposed to, you know, how many reports or bug things they've gone through or whatever else. So there's something about what you're saying that I do think, yes, it's disruptive to the degree that, well, you need a data analyst in the loop. But I also would suggest that, again, a data analyst doesn't have to answer redundant requests all day. She can spend time on, you know, thinking of other things without the boundaries of functions like we just discussed.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
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- 32:55 – 35:09
How the PM role will change as a result of AI
- LRLenny Rachitsky
A lot of listeners are product managers, and so just going a little bit further even within the product management function, how do you see the PM role changing in the next five years as a result of AI?
- SBScott Belsky
Well, let me start by saying that I think that the greatest performers I've ever worked with, whether they're designers or product leaders, basically preserve the time to explore lots of possibilities. They cull those possibilities down to fewer set, they get feedback on those, they refine them even further, and then they present to the team, like, "These are the two or three things I think we should do." And that's the way a great designer works, you know, for example. That is a function of time. If you have the skills and the, and the capabilities, it's just how much time. How much time do you have to explore the full surface area of possibility and find the best possible option? In my world, in my mind, generative AI and AI for all, you know, when you talked about just, like, product leaders exploring possibilities, this should expand the surface area. I was talking to a, a pretty well-known director in, in, in Hollywood world, and he was telling me that he uses ChatGPT. I was like, "No. Are you serious? You do?" And he was like, "Yeah. I don't use it to write any scripts, but sometimes when I'm developing something with a writing partner, I will ask ChatGPT, you know, 'What would you do?' And I'll explain the full instance, you know, the full situation in, in, in extreme detail." And it will s- it will spit out, like, five scenarios. And I actually don't use any of them, but it just, like, gives me more surface area. It tells me the things that I wouldn't want to do, which is also good data." And I just found that s- that, that response so interesting. And so when you ask about product leaders, I think that's what we're gonna have, is we're gonna have the superpower of exploring far more surface area in far less time.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
It reminds me of something I always share about, like, why do you need a PM? Why do you need a designer? Why do you need a researcher? It's not necessarily that they're just, like, very good at these specific skills. It's that they just have time to do this one thing that needs to be done. Like, you can have engineers do the PM role, but they don't have time. They're- they want to code and they're not... they'd rather do that. And so this is really interesting that it connects to it'll give everyone a little more time to get better at the thing they want to be doing.
- SBScott Belsky
I think that's
- 35:09 – 36:59
How Adobe is leveraging AI tools
- SBScott Belsky
true.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Is there anything you're doing with PMs at Adobe at this point that help them leverage these tools and just the way- ways of working that you're actually using today?
- SBScott Belsky
One of my obsessions has been bringing design earlier into the process of product development. So it's not necessarily AI yet, but it's the idea of designers, first of all, being in the room, even being in the room with some of the customer research and some of the debates around even the value proposition to the customer and some of the things that traditionally happen only with the PMs. I just find that, again, like, collapsing the stack, if you will, like, having a designer hear these things and contribute gives them, like, a golden gut as they are then sitting down later and going through possible interfaces to solve the problem. So I love bringing design upstream. Like, that's... in fact, that's probably been the cheat code of my career as a product leader has, has just been disproportionately empowering design throughout the process. I think what we're gonna start seeing is generative AI augmenting the designer's work in real time. So right now, I mean, in Photoshop, we're experimenting with when, you know, instead of just reducing an image and cropping, you can also extend an image. And, uh, and that's of course using generative AI for out painting. And so y- you can imagine as you're doing edits and, and that, as well as in other forms of design, getting kind of thumbnails of what you might be trying to accomplish and then touching them, almost like predictive text, to go to the next step, to the next step, to the next step, and, and take leaps in the creative process as opposed to incremental, uh, steps. I think that that's gonna happen far more, and hopefully product designers, product, uh, managers will be involved to some extent in some of these decision points, you know, as, as designers have more options to choose from.
- 36:59 – 38:15
What the term “golden gut” means
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You threw out this term golden gut. What is that about?
- SBScott Belsky
The golden gut is when you're... When you're designing a- an experience and a... And a flow. You are playing around, right? With all kinds of options. You're moving things around. You're saying, "Actually, that's too complicated. Maybe I'll separate this one page into three steps, as opposed to one page with three steps in- in a row. How do I break this down? How do I simplify?" You know, you sometimes have instincts like, "Well, wait. What if I just remove this altogether?" You know, what if... What if you didn't even have this whole s- series of steps? What if I just had a presumptuous default instead and customers could change it if they think they need to?" And, you know, in some of those sorts of, "I wonder if, I wonder if, I wonder if," to me is the difference between a very junior product thinker and a very experienced product thinker. I think experienced product thinkers with that golden gut of, "Oh my gosh. Wait, reduction of cognitive load. Maybe if... Even if 10% of people get confused, to get 90% of people far faster through this process is a- is a big win and a great opportunity cost trade-off." Like I think those sorts of little micro-decisions that we make in the process of building products, that's the golden gut.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I love it. I have not heard that term before.
- 38:15 – 41:02
Advice for PMs to stay ahead of the new AI trends
- LRLenny Rachitsky
For PMs listening and are like, "Okay AI is... AI is happening. I don't know what to do," what would be your advice for them to kind of stay ahead and be aware of where things are going and- and not be left behind?
- SBScott Belsky
Quite simply in one word, play. You know, we all have to be playing with this technology. We have to find ways... The risk of becoming more experienced in your career is you get stuck in your ways. And you're like, "Oh no, I don't need to have that automatic draft w- in my email and get ChatGPT to suggest what I want to respond with. I'm fine without that." Make sure you try it. Make sure you play with it. You know, write poems for your friends. You know, uh, try- try a lot of these various generative AI tools out there just to see what's possible and- and pursue every curiosity. The reason I started the Implications newsletter is because I was seeing this high velocity of new stuff every day and I'm like, "I have to force myself to make sure I understand all of this and think about how these implications will change my business as well as the world that I operate in." And there was no better way to do that than to have to write about it, you know, and promise my readers I'll get a monthly thing out there. So I just think we all have to do some version of that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Let's plug Implications while we're at it. Well, how do people go subscribe, where do they find it?
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah, no. It's, uh, implications.com so it's easy to find, but this is a... It's just a... It's a monthly exercise where throughout the month I try to capture a few things that I think are important and I really try to go deep down the rabbit hole of what the implications are for, you know, various parts of our work and life. And it's, uh, it's been a fun... It's been a fun exercise, and also I get some good polarizing feedback in the process.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Oh, you do? Interesting. You should share that. That'd be interesting as like, here's what I'm getting in response-
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... to the stuff I'm writing. This also touches on a thread that comes up a lot on this podcast is the power of just writing to help you think through stuff. Like a lot of people think my newsletter is I'm just sharing all these things I know. I'm just like, "I know it in my head, I'm just gonna share it in the thing." But it's more the writing helps me figure it out and gives me an excuse. And like you said, it's a forcing function to spend the time crystallizing it. And so that's another reminder for that.
- SBScott Belsky
And capturing those things I think that, uh, thing I've kind of learned over the years with writing and also with product development is, you know, as soon as you capture these little glimpses and things or sketches and they become relevant years later. So don't always capture and write because of a foreseeable need for that content. Consider it almost like a... You know, a back burner that you're constantly tending to. And imagine that three years from now the stars will align and this will become invaluable content or some crucial idea, you know, for a problem you're facing at the moment.
- 41:02 – 41:49
How to start writing more
- SBScott Belsky
- LRLenny Rachitsky
There's a lot of people actually in your shoes that want to write more and put content out but... That also have a full-time job with a lot of things on your plate. Any advice for actually getting it done the way you've been getting it done?
- SBScott Belsky
You know, listen, uh, there's- there's no hack to it other than ruthlessness of time and prioritization, you know, saying no to most things. You know, this morning I- I went for a run and I was like, "I have 40 minutes exactly until I have to get in the shower and I have to be somewhere in 30 minutes from that moment. I'm gonna take those 40 minutes or at least 35 of them and I'm going to write." I don't care if I write five words or five pages and it's just a great, uh... You know, without that discipline though, it's... As you said, it's super hard to get it in the, uh, you know, in the- in this- in the seams of the schedule.
- 41:49 – 47:03
The messy middle
- SBScott Belsky
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Speaking of discipline, you wrote a book called The Messy Middle and without even talking about what it is, the title's pretty... I think people feel like I get it (laughs) . And imagine many people listening are founders or PMs that are feeling like they're in this messy middle. What is one piece of advice for people in this period that you might- you think might help them through the messy middle?
- SBScott Belsky
The bottom line is that these years in the middle of whether it's a venture, if you're in a startup old turnaround or in a big company, they are messy because they are full of lows. You know, it's very volatile. When you're in those lows, you need to find a way to endure them, you need to endure the anonymity and uncertainty and anxiety. I'm sure a lot of listeners are... Whether they're in big companies or starting their own company, it's hard to be doing something that no one knows or cares about. And I always like to remind myself that the life expectancy of humans 100 plus years ago was 25 years old so the idea of spending three to five years of your life on something, especially if it might fail, was a bad decision. You know? And I think biologically we feel the need for constant rewards and affirmation to stick with something long enough.And in fact, like, if any of, you know, most of your listeners are... We're all, we're all building things that take many, many years to defy the odds. And we have to overcome our natural human tendencies, in this in- instance by, uh, sticking together long enough to figure it out. So, how do you do that, right? I mean, obviously part of it is culture, wanting to, you know, serve the customers you serve and working with the team you're working with, and that being enough to kind of stick it long enough. I think part of it is short-circuiting the rewards system, you know, finding micro goals and milestones that are, you know, mutually agreed upon, "We're gonna celebrate these, even though in the greater scheme of things they don't matter much." I think that's a, a key part of keeping the team and keeping the dream alive. I always like to use the analogy of we're driving our teams across country as product leaders, with the windows blacked out in the back seat, and everyone's sitting in the back seat. And so if they don't know what we're doing, that we're making progress, this traffic is clearing, "We're, we just crossed state lines," if they, if they don't receive the narrative, they will go stir crazy. And so there's a lot of research around progress begetting progress, and how progress is a source of motivation. And so as product leaders, like, we have to merchandise progress. We have to be the steward of this narrative.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And you touched on this a bit as you were just talking, but there's a- also this moment where it m- it makes sense to quit. Like, you shouldn't stay with things endlessly and I guess any advice on just when something is like, "Okay, you should probably move on from this." Makes me think a little bit about there's all these companies that just keep going that maybe-
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... shouldn't keep going, 'cause they have enough money or they're just like, "No. Founders never quit." Any advice or thoughts that you share there?
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah. You know, I've had this conversation quite a few times over the years with founders and friends who, uh, who were running a company going sideways or, or, or worse, and have had this question, "Should I continue or not?" I always have the same answer. I basically say, and I really ask, "How much conviction do you have in the solution you're building? I know in the beginning, before you knew all you know now, you had tons of conviction. That's what caused you to leave your job. You know? That's what caused you to take all this risk and hire people and raise money and all this stuff. Now knowing all you know, do you have more or less conviction in the problem and, and the solution you're building?" And I'll tell you, like, I get different answers. Some people are like, "Oh. Scott. I mean, I have more conviction. Like, all that I've learned, all the validation I've received from customers, we just haven't figured it out yet. It's driving me crazy. We've tried three times and it's still like, each product fails, but I have more conviction than ever before." And for those people I'm like, "You know what? You're just in the messy middle. Stick with it. You know? This is, this is, uh, par for the course." But, you know, oftentimes I'll hear a, you know, "Honestly if I knew now what I, if I knew then what I know now, I would not have done this. Like, holy shit." I'm like, "Then quit! Like, your life is short. You have a great team. Pivot. Do something completely different. If you've lost conviction, you should not be doing what you're doing in the world of entrepreneurship."
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Sometimes there are moments of that, I imagine, and so there's probably some spectrum of just, like, how little conviction and how long you felt that, right?
- SBScott Belsky
I think so. But at the same time, listen, we all have ups and downs. We all have good days and bad days. However, I do think that great founders are just, they absolutely know in their core, you know-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- SBScott Belsky
... that something needs to exist. And they will just be ruthless and relentless until it does. But if you lose that, I actually don't know if you have the fuel, uh, to, to continue. So listen, I'm s- don't, you're right, don't make a bold decision on a bad day. But if the conviction, you know, generally dissipates, be open-minded about other options.
- 47:03 – 50:16
What Scott looks for as an angel investor
- SBScott Belsky
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You do a lot of angel investing, talk to a lot of founders. What is it that you look for? What do you think is important for a startup to show you for it to feel like a good bet that it'll likely work out? What, what are some of the important attributes that you look for?
- SBScott Belsky
I'll talk a few, for a few things on team and then a few things on product.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Perfect.
- SBScott Belsky
You know, you know, on team, I really value founders who listen, you know, who really learn, who long to shake shit up a bit, you know, and, and, and, and also value the mission that they're on more than the money that it yields. Because I do think that, especially during a period of time where you don't have revenue, you're gonna need to be motivated by something grander and bolder than revenue. I also have an al- allergic reaction to founders that are real promoters, you know, who are constantly trying to sugarcoat the truth, who, you know, d- like to gloss over the pa- the hard parts. I've always admired leaders that are optimistic about the future but very pragmatic and somewhat pessimistic about the present. So the founders that I have, like, a great sort of chemistry with are people who are like, "This is how big the market is. This is how amazing this is. I know this needs to exist. But, you know, we've got a lot to figure out. There are things that are not working. We don't have these data sets. These are the major obstacles we're struggling with. You know, these are the things that keep me up at night." Those are real people and you know that in that volatile middle, you know, me- messy middle that they're gonna inevitably go through, that their team, their investors are gonna have the real truth and they're gonna be able to engage and find solutions. So, I really love finding those types of founders. And I, and I'm very wary of kind of the name-dropping, overly promoting folks who are unlikely to be able to partner in that way. On the product side, I am looking for an object model way of thinking about a product that I am confident the, th- will, will, will scale, you know, in, as they, as they solve their, their problem. And when I say object model, what I mean is...Is it clear whenever you're seeing the product, like how it works, where you came from, where you're going? You know, those are the three questions I always ask when I'm doing product reviews. It's like, "How did I get here? What do I do now? And what do I do next?" And I feel like every screen and every product experience, you should be able to answer those three questions. Sometimes I'll be talking to a team that says they're design-driven, you know, says that they're building a, an incredible product. And they'll show me a demo and I'm like, "This is all over the place." Like, there's no clean, clear breadcrumbs and object model for how this thing works. How are they ever gonna get people through their funnel? Clearly, they don't value this as a core principle, and that's also always a red flag. And then finally, I just obviously have to believe in the, in the, in the problem they're solving. So, you know, those are some of the things I think about.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And you focus primarily on consumer or do you invest all over the place? And I'm asking in case people want to reach out or maybe, "Hey, Scott, you wanna-"
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah. No. I, I'm, I'm pretty agnostic.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
"... invest in this company."
- SBScott Belsky
I look for product design-oriented teams, you know, making things that need to exist. Beyond that, I try not to be too prescriptive.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Okay. Excellent.
- SBScott Belsky
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Any last words of wisdom that you think could impact the way people build product in the world, the tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of listeners listening?
- 50:16 – 52:41
Why resourcefulness will take you further than resources
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Is there anything else you wanna share before we get to our very exciting lightning round?
- SBScott Belsky
Two quick things. You know, one for the moment that we're in and then one for why we do what we do. For the moment that we're in, you know, we're in a resource-constrained environment, let's face it. Uh, we're all gonna have less money, fewer headcount, all that kind of stuff. And I've always found that resourcefulness, you know, brings you further than resources, despite the fact that over the last seven to 10 years we've basically thrown resources at every problem. Oh my gosh, this is not scaling. Throw more money at servers. Oh my goodness, you know, we need more people on the social media team. Throw more people at head- throw, throw more money at headcounts. Like we- we've had a resources way of solving our problems as opposed to a, well, let's refactor how we run that database, or let's refactor how that team answers customer service requests. Let's bring in new technology to make it more efficient. Let's leverage and play with AI to see if that can help us. You know, we are in this era now where we're being forced to be resourceful and to refactor as opposed to hire and, and throw resources at problems. I think that's a great opportunity. I feel like this is where the best teams are gonna build that muscle, that are going to go the distance. That's why all these VCs say it's so cliche that the best companies are always built in eras like these. So my one, you know, my point number one is capitalize on the crisis, everyone. You know, it's, uh, uh, if, if, if resources are carbs, resourcefulness is like muscle. It stays with you and makes you stronger, and it helps you, you know, have a, uh, better, better intuition, you know, and, and better, um, better performance over time. And then I guess taking a step back, I would just encourage folks to recognize that, you know, anything, anything amazing in the venture world is ultimately an exception. And, uh, and with all the best practices, Lenny, that you and I just discussed, and all the stuff that we read in books and whatever else, I always try to remind myself that, you know, at, at the end of the day, sometimes exceptions are the rule when it comes to doing something truly transformative, and that nothing extraordinary is ever achieved through ordinary means. And so, uh, while we should always, like, take these best practices and sure, listen to some of the lessons I learned the hard way and whatever else, but at the same time, if everyone says you're crazy, you're either crazy or you're really onto something. Um, so, uh, so take that with a grain of salt.
- 52:41 – 54:58
Adobe’s current priorities and the path ahead
- SBScott Belsky
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Love that. Speaking of extraordinary, I thought it'd be cool to just give you a ch- a chance to talk about what you're doing at Adobe. What are some of the products that you're working on? What should folks know about potentially what's happening at Adobe they may not be aware of?
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah. No, thanks, thanks for asking. Um, you know, for, for us, I would say there's really three trends that are driving, or three waves of transformation I would say, that are driving the strategy right now for us. One is just that people are becoming more creatively confident. It's kind of wild that we're, like, most confident as five-year-olds creatively when we're drawing and our parents are like, "Oh my God, that's beautiful. That's amazing. Let's put it on the fridge." And then creative confidence kind of goes down from there for most adults, and that's really sad. And with generative AI and tools, we have something called Adobe Express in market and our generative AI offering is called Firefly. These types of tools make people feel more creatively confident right away. It's pretty amazing to see people that would never pick up, you know, a pen and draw are suddenly feeling confident. So that's, I would say that's like wave number one. You know, wave number two that we talked about a little earlier were, you know, is the fact that creative professionals can now explore 10X the surface area of possibility. These tools are making them so much more efficient. And some people are like, "Oh my gosh, creative pros are gonna be replaced." No, no, no, no, they're not. They're just going to find 10X better solutions. They're gonna have that capability to explore more possibilities. And that's what makes design great, is finding, you know, is exploring more surface area. And then I would say the third wave that's fascinating to me is personalization. You know, I think we talked about this a little bit, like our apps will meet us where we are. I think that every marketing experience will be increasingly personalized for each of us. You know, every commerce experience, they'll know who we are, they'll just show us our shoe size and no one else's. You know, these sorts of transformations will really change the entire world of commerce and content and media and everything else. And Adobe has a big digital marketing business that is focused on enabling some of that. So, uh, those are, that's really the, those are the factors of strategy that I would say are driving some of the new products we have under development. And, uh, you know, now it's all about less talk, more ship. (laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs) I love that. I need a banner of that. It's been amazing to watch Adobe rise over the last decade. It just kind of felt like it was going nowhere and all of a sudden, it's,
- 54:58 – 1:02:32
Lightning round
- LRLenny Rachitsky
it's a juggernaut. And so, um, great work, Scott, and everyone else involved. Well, with that, we've reached our very exciting lightning round. I've got six questions for you. We'll try to go through it pretty fast. Sound good?
- SBScott Belsky
Okay.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Okay. Sound excited? Here we go. (laughs)
- SBScott Belsky
Sounds good. Let's do it. (laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Let's do it.What are two or three books that you've recommended most to other people?
- SBScott Belsky
First is Build by Tony Fadell. You know, Tony is just an amazing, charismatic, deeply pragmatic product builder. You know, he- he's been brave enough to do both atoms and bits, as he says, and, uh, and his book is just chock-full, chock-full of wisdom. You know, I- I do, I do appreciate like some of these kind of laws of nature, laws of power type books. I love psychology books. I'm trying to think of some offhand that have really struck me, but understanding the h- the natural human tendencies of people. I think The Laws of Power like talks about tons of wars over centuries, and you know, what- what- what sorts of natural human tendencies or inequalities drove, you know, massive rebellions and revolutions. These sorts of insights, believe it or not, uh, parlay into decisions we make in products, in- in making people, uh, feel successful and- and- and- and- and productive. So I- I don't know. I- I love those books just because I think that they remind us of sort of the limitations and opportunities or possibilities of humanity.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
What is a favorite recent movie or TV show?
- SBScott Belsky
What I love is these, uh, documentaries about like the cosmos and about, um, the- sort of the- the edge of our understanding of black holes and you know, and- and what happens out there in space. So I don't remember. I know one is called Cosmos on Netflix. There are a few of them, but in my downtime, I- I get lost in- in- in some series like that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You have kids, one or plus... one or more kids.
- SBScott Belsky
Yes.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
What are you doing to help them plan for this future?
- SBScott Belsky
I think about this all the time, you know, what are our- what are our children going to do in a world where, you know, if you no- if you believe Vinod Khosla's prediction that 80% of the work of 80% of jobs will be replaced by AI, what- what will, uh, what will people do? As we talked about, their ingenuity will be unleashed, that's great, but ultimately, I always revert back to this one belief that if people are passionate, they become successful in something. So I've always just been focused on trying to make sure that they find something they're super passionate about. And it doesn't even matter if the thing they find now is the thing they do later, because I do believe that passion in itself and taking initiative on your passion is a muscle memory that once you develop it, you know, I have a daughter who loves horseback riding. I don't know if she's gonna do horseback riding forever or whatever, but, uh, I think that the passion that she has for it, this... and this desire to be better and to constantly learn more and do more, that in itself is like a replicable muscle memory. So, um, I don't know what the future holds, but I believe that passionate people will always have a path.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Love that. What's a favorite interview question you like to ask when you're interviewing people?
- SBScott Belsky
There's a real one and there's a snarky one, right? So the, um, you know, I do- I do love trying to understand if people are introspective, you know? And, um, and so I like asking about something people have learned about themselves that reveal the limitation in how they work. You know, it's a way for- to test like introspection and once this person hits their limits, uh, or struggles, can they be open and introspective or are they gonna blame and point fingers? So I do ask that. I also like the question like, "Do you consider yourself lucky?" I think it's a fascinating question because it also... You know, some people who are super insecure about, you know, where- where they are and how they got there might decline, uh, admitting luck. You know, those who are comfortable should admit that they were lucky. I mean, I think the truth is we're all very lucky and, uh, and certainly privileged and, you know, I just think that that's always an interesting conversation.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
What's a favorite recent product you've discovered? App or physical product, anything that comes to mind.
- SBScott Belsky
I've been playing with a product called Queue. And it's Q-U-E-U-E, I think. And it's basically a way to keep a queue of all of this content you want to watch across every streaming platform.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Hmm.
- SBScott Belsky
And it's... Because there's so much content across so many streaming platforms and to make your own queue and then to see your friends' queues and to see what content is in most of the people you know's queues, like it's actually an incredible graph of kind of stuff that people want to watch or have liked that I think we're going to need in this world where there's just a billion sources of content.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I'm definitely going to check that out. I've been looking for an app like that of like I'm sitting at... in the evening, "What the hell should I watch? I've seen everything that exists on the internet."
- SBScott Belsky
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So that's awesome. What's a favorite AI tool that you've recently discovered or find useful that isn't something Adobe has made?
- SBScott Belsky
Okay, well, I'll- I'll, um... Uh, I will mention if it't okay like a product that I did invest in-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Absolutely.
- SBScott Belsky
... but, um, it's a product called Tome and, uh, and they can take a narrative or that you want to put into a presentation and with AI basically create a, um, you know, just like a draft of this presentation with imagery and compelling points and it's pretty, uh, it's almost as if you like handed this off to an intern and said, "Come back to me with something I can work with." And suddenly it's (fingers snap) like instantly there. So, um, that's been like a fun one- a fun one to play with.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I will check that out. We'll link to that. Also reminds me, um, Kevin Kelly on Tim Ferriss was talking about how AI and ChatGPT is basically an intern. That's like the level of their skill right now. They're just this intern that's helping out with stuff.
- SBScott Belsky
I think that's right, and that's why we have to see it as a resource but not a constraint because, you know, again, it's, you know, it's answering that question like, "What would it look like if..." Uh, as opposed to doing, you know, true distinct thinking per se.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Scott, this is the first time we've ever chatted, but I feel like I know you. You are wonderful. Thank you so much for being here. Two final questions. Where can folks find you online if they want to reach out, learn more, and how can listeners be useful to you?
- SBScott Belsky
Yeah. No, awesome. Li- Listen, thanks, Lenny, and, uh, your- your podcasts and your emails are probably among my more forwarded, you know, uh, pieces of nuggets and resources that I send to product teams I work with. So thank you for elevating the field for all of us, I should say, and it's an honor to be on this podcast. I'm easy to find. Uh, just scottbelsky.com or @scottbelsky on your savor- favorite social network of choice. Um, and, you know, at implications.com is where I'm writing these days, and then, you know, and I- I welcome- I welcome folks to share what they're working on. You know, I just love taking as much data points as possible. I love connecting dots for people and making introductions. I feel like, you know, that can be a contribution to this whole world of better and better products and I- I welcome you to- to reach out.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome. Scott, again, thank you for being here.
- SBScott Belsky
Thanks, Lenny.
Episode duration: 1:02:32
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