The Netflix Playbook: Fewer Rules, Greater Results (TIP748)
Summary
Investment Theme: The podcast emphasizes the importance of company culture as a significant driver of long-term value, using Netflix as a prime example of how culture can lead to immense shareholder returns.
Company Insights: Netflix's culture is built on three principles: talent density, candor, and control reduction, which collectively foster a culture of freedom and responsibility, contributing to its success over competitors like Blockbuster.
Market Insights: The discussion highlights the potential pitfalls of traditional business models that exploit customers, such as Blockbuster's reliance on late fees, and contrasts this with Netflix's customer-centric approach that disrupted the market.
Management Practices: Netflix's unique management strategies include removing vacation policies, focusing on context over control, and encouraging transparency and feedback through practices like the 4A feedback guideline and live 360 reviews.
Compensation Strategy: Netflix's approach to compensation involves paying top market rates to retain high performers and eliminating incentive-based bonuses, which aligns with research suggesting that large financial incentives can hinder cognitive performance.
Innovation Framework: The podcast outlines Netflix's innovation cycle, which includes socializing ideas, testing them on a small scale, and encouraging sunshining of failures to foster learning and trust within the organization.
Leadership Philosophy: Reed Hastings' leadership style at Netflix is characterized by dispersed decision-making, allowing employees to innovate without bureaucratic constraints, and focusing on alignment with the company's north star.
Key Takeaway: The podcast underscores the critical role of a strong, adaptable culture in driving business success and innovation, suggesting that companies should prioritize talent density, transparency, and a supportive environment to thrive in competitive markets.
Transcript
(00:00) So the interesting thing about corrective feedback is that it tends to have a much greater impact on success compared to positive feedback. A 2014 study concluded that by a 3:1 margin, people believe that corrective feedback is more effective in improving their performance than positive feedback. Here are some of the stats from that survey. (00:17) 57% of respondents claimed they would prefer to receive corrective feedback over positive feedback. 72% felt their performance would improve if they received more corrective feedback. And then finally, 92% agreed with the comment that negative feedback if delivered appropriately improves performance. (00:36) I couldn't agree more with these results and I think it really reminds me of something that Monry said and I'm paraphrasing here, but he said something along the lines that you just learn most from your losses. [Music] Hey, real quick before we jump into today's episode, if you've been enjoying the show, please hit that subscribe button. (00:59) It's totally free, helps out the channel a ton, and ensures that you won't miss any future episodes. Thanks a bunch. We're going to discuss the book No Rules Rules by Netflix founder Reed Hastings and author Aaron Meyer. Now, there's a fascinating image that's been circulating on the internet for the past few years depicting the ultimate value drivers of a business's long-term value. (01:19) It's not sentiment. It's not multiple rerating. It's not business cycles or even high rates of capital efficiency that can create the highest long-term value. It's culture. Netflix is a prime example of how a company's culture can generate immense shareholder value. Since it's an initial public offering, Netflix has become an 1100 pegger, achieving just incredible results. (01:42) Now, I didn't put much thought into business culture before I joined TIP because the culture at TIP is just so much different from anything that I've ever used in the past. But it's not really any coincidence that I think Stig Broers gets all of his new employees to read the book The Culture Code by Aaron Meyer. (02:00) So when I sought to research more about Netflix and came across the book No Rules Rules by Netflix founder Reed Hastings and Aaron Meyer, I was very excited to read it and it was a really really good book offering a ton of valuable lessons that business owners and investors alike can use to help identify the nuances of a company's culture. (02:15) And that's what we're going to be diving into very very deep today. So, the book's central question is, "What if having fewer rules makes your company better?" It's a great question and one that I think that many business owners and investors just never ask. It's not something I necessarily place a lot of importance on when I'm evaluating a business. (02:33) While I do like businesses that have a high degree of decentralization, I never really thought too hard about how that relates to a company's culture. However, just as decentralizing certain aspects of a business can be value creative if done correctly, Netflix has demonstrated that taking that step to a business's underlying fabric can be a truly powerful augmentation. (02:53) Now, Netflix is interesting here because much of its culture was developed by Reed Hastings's own experiences. So, Hastings sold a business called Pure Software, where many of the foundational principles of Netflix were first built. Throughout the book and this episode, we're going to cover some examples of what he learned specifically at Pure Software and why he was so intentional about creating Netflix's culture in the way that he did. (03:16) So Netflix's culture is really based on three primary principles and they're very simple. So the first one is talent density. The second one is cander and third is control reduction. All three of these principles are designed to create a culture of freedom and responsibility which I'll refer to as FNR for the rest of the episode. Hastings and Meer further break down FNR into three steps for each of these principles. (03:38) So first you build up talent density, you increase cander, and you begin removing controls. Second, you begin fortifying talent density, pumping up cander, and removing even more controls. And then third, you're just maximizing talent density, maximizing cander, and eliminating almost all other controls. So, let's use inversion here and examine a company that I think failed to execute on probably two of these, ultimately leading to its demise. (04:02) Most listeners above the age of 30 are going to be very familiar with this company, and even if you aren't, you probably know it as Netflix's chief rival during Netflix's early days, and this is Blockbuster. So, Netflix soundly defeated Blockbuster because of principles one and two. I can't speak to exactly how Blockbuster was attempting to maximize talent density, but I think that the culture inside of Blockbuster was just not one of innovation. (04:25) Blockbuster reminds me of one of these legacy businesses you see today, like uh, you know, a utility. These are rent seekers. They're essentially just sitting on their assets and milking every last dollar out of them while they still can. The problem with this business model is just capitalism. Capitalism allows individuals to come and steal your customers away with better products and better services. (04:46) If you intend to just rest on your laurels and have too big of an ego to see that maybe your industry is rapidly changing in front of you, you're going to lose. I think this is precisely what happened with Blockbuster. Now, in terms of cander, it's hard to see how Blockbuster wouldn't have had other upper level management types that were observing Netflix's giant red boxes. (05:06) I remember seeing these giant red boxes at Safeway down the road from where I used to live. Then I remember seeing them popping up in more and more locations. If Blockbuster had a culture that encouraged, you know, maybe some more cander, someone might have brought up the issue that Netflix had come up with maybe a crude way to improve the movie renting experience. (05:23) For those unfamiliar with Netflix's early strategy, they had a few. So the first one was that they would just mail you a DVD and then you would mail it back after a predetermined period. While doing that, they also had these physical red boxes almost like a vending machine. You'd go to the vending machine, you'd put some information, put some money in it, and you'd get your movie. (05:43) It's very simple and low tech, but it was an intriguing uh business proposition at the time. No retail stores were needed. Minimal storage was required to hold inventory. Much fewer employees were needed, and you had the luxury of putting the movie vending machines in very hightra areas where you'd be giving your partner a cut of these profits. (06:00) Additionally, and this is very, very important, Reed Hastings noticed that Blockbuster was profiting off its customers mistakes. which he felt was just a horrible business model. Now, the mistakes I'm referring to here are late fees. Any business that's just exploiting its customers in this manner is going to be very, very ripe for disruption. (06:18) And that is precisely what Reed Hastings did. So, I recently did an episode on customer loyalty modes. It was tip 744. I'll link it in the show notes. In that episode, I discussed how businesses can build and create modes by focusing on building customer loyalty. And I think that's exactly what Netflix did. (06:35) They saw that the legacy model was simply not built to foster customer loyalty and they in turn targeted that audience to specifically build customer loyalty. Now, since Blockbuster didn't have many competitors, its customers had pretty limited experience with switching to other movie rental companies. And even if they tried another, they were kind of a commodity product. (06:57) As a result, many of Blockbuster's customers were satisfied with the status quo. However, once Netflix entered the arena, it showed Blockbuster's customers that there was a superior option that was cheaper, more convenient, and offered just a better experience. Once Netflix achieved a critical mass through its evolution into streaming services, that was it for Blockbuster, which now has just one remaining location. (07:18) One last part on Cander that I'd like to share is that Blockbuster could theoretically have been around today if they had just made one different decision. So Reed was actually ready to exit Netflix and sell out to Blockbuster for a measily $50 million, but Blockbuster said no. Now to be fair, given the information at the time, it might have been the best possible decision. (07:39) The Netflix business recorded a loss of $57 million. So, if Blockbuster had people willing to speak their minds maybe to Blockbuster CEO, perhaps they might have seen a path to make the two of these businesses work together and maybe make a path towards Netflix achieving profitability. Or if they had bought it, then maybe we'd be watching Blockbuster on our TVs instead of Netflix. (08:01) And those physical stores maybe just would have been removed due to their underlying weaknesses stemming from their higher costs. However, let's start here with the first layer of talent density, cander, and control reduction. So, the first step to building talent density is what Hastings refers to as developing a work environment that consists solely of stunning colleagues. (08:20) So, this concept was bred out of the.com bubble, specifically in the spring of 2001. Netflix was not a profitable company at this time, and the funding available to internet related companies was about as scarce as water in the Arabian desert. As a result, Netflix had to lay off a third of its workforce. And while the experience was not enjoyable at all for Netflix, Hastings actually observed something that was astonishing. (08:42) Everyone who survived the layoffs was pretty stable and calm despite the rapid disruption. And after only a few weeks, the atmosphere actually dramatically improved. Hastings writes that we were in cost cutting mode and let go a third of our workforce. Yet, the office was suddenly buzzing with passion, energy, and ideas. (09:01) By early 2002, Netflix was cruising. DVD players were selling like hotcakes, providing a further headwind for Netflix's DVD bymail subscription business. At this point, Netflix was doing more than it had ever done with 30% fewer employees. Now, on the face of things, it just didn't make much sense. One of Reed's colleagues and Carpool partners, Patty McCord, who he had brought with him from his days at Pier Software, told Reed that it felt like everyone was passionately in love with their work. (09:30) While on their carpool rides, they began to disseminate what exactly happened to cause Netflix to enjoy this rapid productivity improvement. And the key was in talent density. When they decided who to let go and who to keep, talent was a key factor in their decision. This meant that 80 leftover employees were the cream of the crop. (09:48) There was a lower number of people, sure, but the average talent level rose substantially as a result of letting go the less talented individuals. This makes me think of critical mass in a much different way. So most of the time in a critical mass, you're adding things until they can self-reinforce. But in this example, it was really addition through subtraction. (10:06) By raising the average level of talent, the business achieved a critical mass that it may never have reached if the talent density had remained the same at that lower level. Now, I'd love to touch on this a bit more as part of my job here with TIP. So the hosts and our support staff are very talented and I interact a lot with both. (10:25) But since TIP has so many great podcast hosts, it raises the bar for everyone else. If I want to search for inspiration on an episode, a topic or a theme, I can go back and research older episodes. Alternatively, I can reach out directly to, you know, Stig, Clay, or William for their advice on how they approach their work, which helps me improve my own approach. (10:46) Because the talent density is high, it just spreads. And Stig is very well aware of this. He wants hosts who will constantly raise the bar as much as they can realistically do. And when you're around other people who are very intentional about improving their abilities in their job, you get swept away trying to improve as well. (11:02) At least I know I do. In other jobs I've had, talent wasn't something that management paid too much attention to. If you accomplish the job, that's all that really mattered. Sure, there might be people better at it than others, but even if you were objectively worse than others in the company, it was unlikely that you'd be fired. (11:20) This illustrates the importance of culture. If you lack a culture of productivity and innovation, it's unlikely that your business will survive for very long. And it doesn't matter if your business is a more complex one like Netflix or a small simple business like a restaurant with five employees. Here is how Reed breaks down what happens if you have a team of, let's say, seven people with five stunning employees and just two adequate ones. (11:44) So, the adequate ones are going to do things like suck energy for management, so management has less time to spend with top performers. They're going to reduce the quality of group discussions, which therefore reduces the group's IQ. They're going to force outperformers to develop ways of working around their deficiencies, which further decreases efficiency. (12:01) They're going to drive staff who seek excellence to quit. And then lastly, they're going to show that the business accepts mediocrity, allowing employees to justify a lower level of performance. So Aaron Meyer mentions a particularly useful study in this chapter that really contradicts a lot of conventional wisdom. So, Professor Will Phelps from the University of New South Wales in Australia conducted the study, which examined the contagious behaviors in work environments. (12:29) He created a team of four college students, each tasked with accomplishing a task in 45 minutes. the team that did best received a $100 reward. Now, as in many of these types of studies, researchers often add their little variables to make the findings more interesting. And in this case, certain teams had actors who would play specific roles. (12:48) So, the roles were the slacker or people who would be disengaged from the activity. Then there would be the jerk who would insert sarcastic remarks to his team. And then there was the depressive pessimist who would make depressing remarks about the unlikelihood of success. Now, what Phelps found was that the actions of just these one team members actually brought down the overall talent level of the other individuals on the team. (13:11) And this study wasn't just some one-off affair. Phelps ran the study for a whole month and had dozens and dozens of trials. And the results weren't great. Groups with an underperformer did worse than the other teams by 30 to 40%. Now, I mentioned that this study contradicts conventional wisdom, and that's because with most previous research, the conclusions were that individuals within a group would conform to the group's values and norms. (13:36) Theoretically, one of these actors in the presence of a talented individual should actually elevate their performance rather than dragging down everyone else. It's also important to note that these results occurred over a short 45minute period. If you had, you know, years or decades of underperformers, I'd assume that they might drag down the outperformers even more. (13:57) The main takeaway from this chapter is to focus on increasing talent density within your workplace. As we'll discuss later in this episode, this approach has many other benefits such as paying your top performers more rather than bringing in outside help and keeping their salaries at or below market rates. To accomplish this, you must monitor the performance of your organization. (14:15) This is why having a workplace that prioritizes meritocracy is so essential. When you do this, you can identify outperformers more easily compared to just the adequate ones. And it means it becomes easier to see who really deserves promotions and who doesn't or who you might need to let go of if layoffs become necessary. Additionally, meritocracy helps you bring out the best ideas regardless of an employees tenure. (14:40) Ray Dalio said, "A system that doesn't differentiate between more and less credible thinkers will not produce consistently good decisions." This transitions well into the next chapter which is about increasing cander. Hastings learned the power of cander as a CEO of pure software. He admits to being miserable at the people part of leadership. (14:59) One example was when he had a product that he thought was just taking a little bit too long to develop. Reed then actually went behind this product developer at Pure Software and hired an outside company to help get the project going. Once his developer found out, he was furious, telling Reed that he should have just told him how he felt so that they could come to a solution together rather than going behind his back. (15:20) At Netflix, Reed realized that reducing backstabbings and office politics was a key to increasing efficiency. And if his group of incredibly talented people had ways of doing things faster and better, they shouldn't be afraid to share their techniques with anyone inside of the company. (15:36) As a result of this thinking, Netflix came up with the term only say about someone what you will say to their face. So when someone would come to read with a problem, he would directly ask them, "What did that person say when you spoke to him about this directly?" The interesting thing about cander is that most people just don't really enjoy receiving it. (15:54) It can cut pretty deeply when someone tells you that, you know, you're doing something wrong or you're doing something less optimally. Criticism triggers feelings like self-doubt, frustration, and vulnerability. Examining this in an evolutionary context, these feelings tend to prompt response that activates our fight orflight mechanism. (16:12) the same reaction towards a physical threat. Another interesting perspective on cander is how is it delivered. So there's a significant difference between receiving criticism in a one-on-one setting and receiving it in a public setting. Warren Buffett has said, "Praise in public, criticize in private." And I think that's excellent advice. (16:30) The praise means a lot because it's being said in a public domain where all your colleagues can share in the appreciation for your hard work and value creation. But things obviously aren't all rainbows and butterflies. If things aren't going in the direction that, let's say, Warren wants, he'll address it, but not in a manner that he feels would maybe humiliate someone in front of their peers or the general public. (16:49) Warren is an absolute master at this. If you read his annual reports or listen to him talk at any of his annual meetings, he's constantly peppering praise to the superstars who are part of Berkshire Hathaway. He'll criticize certain, you know, broad behaviors, but he's very rarely singling out any individual. And in the rare case he does single out an individual, it's not someone who's inside of the Berkshire Hathway organization. (17:12) The book mentions some incredible data about corrective feedback. So the interesting thing about corrective feedback is that it tends to have a much greater impact on success compared to positive feedback. A 2014 study concluded that by a 3:1 margin, people believe that corrective feedback is more effective in improving their performance than positive feedback. (17:29) Here are some of the stats from that survey. 57% of respondents claimed they would prefer to receive corrective feedback over positive feedback. 72% felt their performance would improve if they received more corrective feedback. And then finally, 92% agreed with a comment that negative feedback if delivered appropriately improves performance. (17:49) I couldn't agree more with these results and I think it really reminds me of something that Mon Pry said and I'm paraphrasing here but he said something along the lines that you just learn most from your losses. When you have a win you just pat yourself on the back and you move on. However, the best feedback that you'll receive from investing comes specifically from making mistakes. (18:09) In that case you can look at things you overlooked or other errors and then examine ways how you can prevent yourself from ever making them again. If you do this long enough, you'll make fewer and fewer mistakes, and your results will improve. Feedback in a corporate setting is going to be a lot different from what you might experience if you were operating solo. (18:28) Netflix makes sure that feedback isn't a one-way street. It's not meant for managers to just give feedback without hearing any in return. One way that Netflix attempts to gather feedback from management is by including it in their agenda for their one-on-one meetings. As a manager, this helps your employees provide valuable feedback to management that can then be used to elevate the entire organization. (18:49) But this culture, you know, it's not normal. There's a great example in the book when Netflix's chief content officer, Ted Sarandos, who is now co-CEO of Netflix, brought on someone named Brian Wright, a senior vice president at Nickelodeon, to help improve Netflix's young adult content. Brian here is talking about a previous experience with feedback. (19:09) So he says, "In all my past jobs, it was all about who's in and who's out of favor. If you gave the boss feedback or disagreed with her in a meeting in front of others, that would be political death. You would find yourself in Siberia." So in a group meeting that Brian had with Ted on his first day at Netflix, Ted was actually receiving criticism about an idea from a lower level worker. (19:30) Brian was astounded that someone would speak to their superior in the way that he did. But when the meeting was over, Brian noticed that Ted put his hand on the guy's shoulder who provided that criticism and said, "Great meeting. Thanks for the input today." When Brian was asked later about how his first day was going, he explained that he was surprised at how the guy seemed to be attacking Ted's idea. (19:51) Ted replied by saying, "Brian, the day you find yourself sitting on your feedback because you're worried you'll be unpopular is the day you'll leave Netflix. We hire you for your opinions. Every person in that room is responsible for telling me frankly what they think. The key here is truly in the culture. Suppose you have management that just can't accept criticism with open arms. (20:10) In that case, it's very unlikely that you'll foster a culture of cander. In the example above, Ted made it explicitly clear that he expected Brian's honest opinion, whether that was good or bad. When you create this as an explicit part of your business, you're helping to build a culture that prioritizes improvement over ego. (20:28) If you're looking to give and receive feedback optimally, the book provides a pretty straightforward framework for doing so. It's called the 4A guideline. So, there's two parts to it. There's giving feedback and there's receiving feedback. So, in giving feedback, the first part is aim to assist. Feedback should be given with positive intent. (20:47) It's not meant to, you know, tear someone down, but actually build them up. Feedback isn't a tool to hurt someone, express your frustration, or further any specific agenda. The second one is to make it actionable. Great feedback will prompt the receiver to instantly improve by adjusting their inputs. (21:05) Vague feedback like it wasn't your best work doesn't offer much help for someone. Instead, explain what it was that they could specifically improve on that is actionable. Then when it comes to receiving feedback, the third one is appreciate the feedback for what it is. Remember the whole fight orflight thing that I discussed earlier? When receiving feedback, we want to try to avoid the desire to flee. (21:25) If you feel your blood pressure rising while receiving feedback, remember that the criticism is intended to help you improve at your job. You can even show appreciation for feedback and express gratitude to the person providing it for trying to help you improve. And the fourth one is to accept feedback or discard it. Not all feedback is helpful. (21:44) You must decide whether to accept the feedback and make adjustments or toss it and continue as you were. This is a very simple and practical framework. I resonate a lot with the third A on appreciating feedback. I get feedback from Stig on every single episode that I produce for tip and he has a great job of giving me both positive and negative feedback even though I tend to remember the negative feedback much more vividly than the positive. (22:08) However, this is very beneficial because if I can continue to improve, it enhances your listening experience, making what I say more powerful and efficient. While I know I sometimes feel defensive when receiving negative feedback from Stig or the audience, I understand that they're doing so in the best interest of making the show better. (22:25) After taking a moment to think about it, I genuinely appreciate the feedback because I believe it helps me elevate my own podcasting skills. As I read the book, the connections between Netflix and Bergkshire Hathway became increasingly apparent. The concept that really cemented this for me has to do with Netflix's culture of FNR. (22:42) So at Bergkshire, Buffett trusts many of his businesses to just simply do the right thing. And it's not too different at Netflix. So the next part of the book that I'd like to discuss is how to cultivate this culture towards what Hastings calls a culture of freedom and responsibility. The first point that he makes on building FNR is to remove the vacation policy. (23:03) One of the reasons that Hastings thought this was beneficial was because he didn't believe that a person's value should be measured specifically by time. Let's say you had two people who can accomplish the same amount of work, but someone else can do it in half the time. Why should they be punished if they want to take more time off than the person who is slower? Hastings right, when it comes to how we judge performance at Netflix, hard work is irrelevant. (23:25) Another hidden benefit of vacations that Netflix noted was the increased clarity and innovation that some people experienced after taking time away. For instance, Neil Hunt, one of their chief product officers, loved vacationing in extreme outdoor places. When Neil took off on a vacation, it was often to some remote location that nobody had ever heard of. (23:46) And upon his return from one such vacation, Neil conceived a new algorithm that could be used to enhance Netflix's movie selection for its customers. So, one problem with having a no vacation policy was that employees might not take advantage of it if they didn't observe their boss taking advantage of it as well. So, in some workplaces, you may arrive before the boss and leave after they depart. (24:08) And that demonstrates that you're putting in a lot of hours and working hard. And while this is not the culture that Netflix promotes, this is the culture that probably most people are used to rather than Netflix's more radical approach. So to combat this issue, it had to start from the top. Reed would ensure that he vacationed for more extended periods just to set the tone for everybody underneath him. (24:31) Additionally, he would actively discuss these adventures with his colleagues. This was done intentionally to ensure that all levels of employees at Netflix knew that everyone else was taking vacations and that not taking a vacation would make them into an outlier. This type of leadership modeling was the first step that Hastings suggests. (24:48) However, there are additional roadblocks to consider. So, let's say you're running a large organization. You can't necessarily have employees just taking vacations around huge deadlines, especially if they're key personnel in that initiative. So, this led Netflix to focus on reinforcing context to guide employee behavior. (25:09) This meant that a business or a management team must provide context to their employees, helping them better understand when and how long they can take a vacation. So that could mean things such as giving advanced notice of vacations that are longer than two weeks, but maybe not giving any notice for just taking an extended weekend. (25:27) Jim Ran once said that you're the average of the five people you spend the most time with. And I really could not agree with him more. And one of my favorite things about being a host of this show is having the opportunity to connect with highquality like-minded people in the value investing community. Each year, we host live in-person events in Omaha and New York City for our tip mastermind community, giving our members that exact opportunity. (25:54) Back in May during the Bergkshire weekend, we gathered for a couple of dinners and social hours and also hosted a bus tour to give our members the full Omaha experience. And in the second weekend of October 2025, we'll be getting together in New York City for two dinners and socials, as well as exploring the city and gathering at the Vanderbilt 1 Observatory. (26:16) Our mastermind community has around 120 members. And we're capping the group at 150, and many of these members are entrepreneurs, private investors, or investment professionals. And like myself, they're eager to connect with kindered spirits. It's an excellent opportunity to connect with like-minded people on a deeper level. (26:35) So, if you'd like to check out what the community has to offer and meet with around 30 or 40 of us in New York City in October, be sure to head to the investorspodcast.com/mastermind to apply to join the community. That's the investorspodcast.com/mastermind or simply click the link in the description below. If you enjoy excellent breakdowns on individual stocks, then you need to check out the intrinsic value podcast hosted by Shaun Ali and Daniel Mona. (27:07) Each week, Shaun and Daniel do in-depth analysis on a company's business model and competitive advantages. And in real time, they build out the intrinsic value portfolio for you to follow along as they search for value in the market. So far, they've done analysis on great businesses like John Deere, Ulta Beauty, AutoZone, and Airbnb. (27:28) And I recommend starting with the episode on Nintendo, the global powerhouse in gaming. It's rare to find a show that consistently publishes highquality, comprehensive deep dives that cover all the aspects of a business from an investment perspective. Go follow the Intrinsic Value podcast on your favorite podcasting app and discover the next stock to add to your portfolio or watch list. (27:52) The interesting thing about having the no vacation policy is that it can work wonders as a benefit to certain companies. Aaron Mayer mentioned a business called Mammoth that decided to clone Netflix's policy and test it out for themselves. So, the no vacation policy was then ranked number three in terms of the benefits behind only health insurance and the business's retirement plan. (28:14) So, for companies that are looking to retain talent, a policy such as this could actually be a significant draw for both attracting and retaining top talent. So, here's another example of just how disruptive travel and expense approvals can be for a company such as Pure Software, Reed's first company. So, he tells the story of one of his sales directors, this gentleman named Grant. (28:33) While on a work trip, he rented a car. As part of his job, he went to a party and he knew that others and himself would probably consume alcohol. So, he took a taxi to and from the event. Now, when he provided Pure Software with the invoice for his taxi, he was actually denied. (28:52) So, according to Pure Software's employee handbook, employees are permitted to either rent a car or take a cab, but they must choose one or the other. His point was that according to the handbook that Pure Software gave him, he should have just drunk and drive, which is obviously nonsense. Months later, Grant resigned because he felt that management was just wasting too much time on non-productive tasks such as editing the employee handbook, which was not well written. (29:18) Now, when Netflix was started, this lesson was top of mind for a read. So, he decided that his first expense guideline would be to spend company's money as if it were your own. Now, while this sounded good on paper, the problem was that not everyone spends their own money frugally, which was what Reed was kind of hoping for when he wrote that guideline. (29:38) The book shares a story of David Wells, who served as the VP of finance and later became Netflix's CFO. So, Wells was a frugal guy, and on a work trip to Mexico, he was very surprised to find a bunch of his colleagues in first class seats while on his way to his seat in economy. And these colleagues were embarrassed for David, not because he was in economy and they were in first class, but because an executive like David would ever be in economy. (30:02) So this indicates that individuals have varying perspectives on how they would allocate their own money. Some people are naturally more frugal than others, but assuming everyone will treat the company's money responsibly is very unrealistic. Because of this event, Netflix changed its spending and travel guidelines to act in Netflix's best interest. (30:24) To help clear up any confusion once Wells became the CFO of Netflix, he helped set the context of this guideline for new employees. And it was pretty simple. He told them to imagine that he or she was standing in front of her boss and the CFO and explain why they chose to purchase that specific flight, hotel, or phone. (30:42) If they can comfortably explain why it was in the company's best interest to make that purchase, then they proceed. If on the other hand, you feel any discomfort explaining yourself, then you should probably consider skipping the purchase, checking in with your boss, or just buying something cheaper. Hastings makes the point that this FNR probably increases Netflix's expenses compared to having a more set of rigid rules. (31:06) However, he believes the cost of giving them that freedom is less than having a workplace where they must ask about every little thing, wasting times on these tasks rather than creating, you know, new and innovative products and features. We've now covered the first steps to how Netflix has created their culture. So, here's what Hastings says. (31:24) Once you have a workplace made up nearly exclusively of high performers, you can count on people to behave responsibly. Once you've developed a culture of cander, employees will watch out for one another and ensure their teammates actions are in line with the good of the company. Then you can begin to remove controls and give your staff more freedom. (31:40) Great places to start are the lifting of your vacation, travel, and expense policies. These elements give people more control over their own lives and convey a loud message that you trust your employees to do what's right. The trust you offer will in turn instill feelings of responsibility in your workforce, leading everyone in the company to have a greater sense of ownership. (32:01) So the next section of the book outlines the three principles and further refineses them. So the first section is once again regarding talent density. However, this time it involves compensation. The title of the chapter tells you much of what he thinks about how to compensate employees. Pay top of personal market. (32:18) Netflix has reached its current position primarily due to its high talent density. But hiring talent is different than keeping talent and Hastings is very well aware of this. So he came up with offering his employees just rockstar pay. So he came to this conclusion through trial and error. Reed was an engineer and was very familiar with this concept called the Rockstar principle. (32:38) So, the Rockstar principle originated from a famous study that was conducted in Santa Monica in 1968. At the bright and early hour of 6:30 a.m., nine trainee programmers were led into a room filled with computers. Each of them was tasked with accomplishing a series of coding and debugging tasks that they would have to complete to the best of their abilities in the next 2 hours. (32:58) The researchers hypothesized that the best performers would outperform the average by a factor of maybe two or three. However, within that group of nine, the best performers outperformed the worst by a significantly larger margin. The best guy was actually 20 times faster at coding, 25 times faster at debugging, and 10 times faster at program execution than the programmer with the lowest rank. (33:21) So Reed's conclusion here was simple. He had a fixed amount of money to spend on talent. So with his funds, he could either one hire 10 to 25 average engineers or two hire one rockstar and pay them significantly more. This is a fascinating subject because it genuinely relies on culture that prioritizes productivity. If you have that type of culture, you should be able to then have a smaller and more efficient workforce that can produce at a much higher level than a larger and less efficient one. (33:50) It's kind of the dream scenario, isn't it? Reed admits that the performance gap might actually be even greater than what was quoted in that study. So Reed Hastings was on the Microsoft board and Bill Gates once said, "A great la operator commands several times the wages of an average LA operator, but a great writer of software code is worth 10,000 times the price of an average software writer. (34:13) If you manage businesses where the majority of your talent is in kind of operational roles, this framework may not be the best fit. If you operate something like an ice cream parlor, your best ice cream scooper can probably scoop maybe at double the pace of your worst one, but there's no chance they're going to scoop 10,000 times faster. (34:32) So, this framework really depends on what type of employees you have. If you only require operational people, then you can get away with paying market rates for average employees, as you won't get the same torque from your rockstars. But if you own a business that requires your workforce to innovate and execute creatively, then having a few rock stars is a better decision than having a diluted group of people. (34:52) And for any startup founders out there listening, there's good news. If you want to pay top of the market to bring in exceptionally talented people, a study concluded that 44% of people would be willing to leave their job if they got paid more elsewhere. And this figure won by a landslide as a second category was only 12%. (35:10) Now comes an area of Netflix's compensation that I was kind of shocked to see to be honest. If you've listened to any of my episodes over the years, you know how much emphasis I place on the power of incentives. One of, if not the greatest thinkers of our generation, Charlie Mer said that he always underestimated the power of incentives despite the fact that he thought that he understood it better than 95% of other people. (35:31) So I was stunned to see that Netflix does entirely away with incentive based bonuses. Hastings developed this framework early in Netflix existence around the year 2003. So Reed was having a meeting with his chief marketing officer, Leslie Kilgore. While trying to find what KPIs worked best for her, he came up with an incentive based on new customers. (35:50) Seeing as Kilgore's job was in marketing, this made sense theoretically. But she told Reed, "The number of customers we sign is no longer what we should be measuring. In fact, it's irrelevant." She went on to show us numerically that while new customers had been the most important goal last quarter, it was now the customer retention rate that really mattered. (36:10) Reed's takeaway was that as Netflix scaled up, its KPIs would change for a CMO, should her KPI be tied to new customers or some sort of customer retention metric. With how fast Netflix was really just disrupting its industry, Reed felt that it was nearly impossible to know the answer to that question. Many of Netflix employees had jumped ship from companies such as, you know, Warner Media or NBC. (36:35) And in those places, it was customary to get incentives based off of KPIs. But Netflix was a different type of company just doing other things. At Warner or NBC, employees might be compensated to increase operating profits by, let's say, 5% in a year. And that's fine given what those companies were doing. But at Netflix, what if employees needed to take maybe a loss on something in order to make the business better a few more years down the road? In that sense, a KPI like this would actually serve to block innovation and creativity, which (37:05) is what Netflix is all about. Reed also had a hunch that high performers don't require a bonus to incentivize them. If they're paid well, they will do whatever it takes to continue performing well. Aaron Mayer added that Reed's hunch was actually true and that research by renowned behavioral economist Daniel Erily actually confirmed it. (37:25) So he had a study which involved tasks that required things like attention, memory and creativity and he found that offering a higher bonus actually led to worse performance when the tasks involved cognitive skills. So initially tested in India where the highest bonuses was equivalent to about 5 months pay, participants who were promised the most significant rewards performed the worst. (37:45) A follow-up study at MIT showed the exact same. Higher bonuses improved results for purely technical tasks but harm performance when even basic thinking was involved. The takeaway for cognitive work large financial incentives can actually reduce effectiveness. Now I find this fascinating because it potentially shows that incentive based compensation works best for jobs that have very specific tasks and that's mainly mechanical based jobs. (38:15) But jobs which require creativity can actually be harmed by these incentives. I'm still not completely sold on this premise though. There's just too many examples of executives performing at a very high level and it's hard not to believe that they are performing at that level specifically because they're being incentivized correctly. (38:31) When I'm analyzing a business, I'll always look at executive compensation and I want to know a few things. Number one, what is their base pay? Number two, what is their bonus pay? And three, how do they maximize their bonus? Perhaps the difference comes here in the fact that someone making $300,000 per year isn't going to try too much harder if they can earn an additional, say, $50,000, but this isn't necessarily the case with executives. (38:56) Some executives can earn multiples of their base salary if they achieve their KPIs. And in those cases, I think that's a really huge incentive. And whether that incentive is achieved through mechanistic or creativity, my guess is they'll use whatever is possible to achieve their incentive. I will say that I do like one part of this incentive system. (39:14) So in many corporations, if an executive is underperforming, they still get their incentive, but Netflix has a culture, as I've discussed, that just removes underperformers from the company. If you want to cruise along at your job and take it easy, Netflix is not the place to do that. But I think there are some corporations where the CEO is doing just that. (39:34) And often that comes at the expense of shareholders. I try to avoid these situations at all costs. Now, back to that study. So Aaron writes, "If part of what you focus on is whether or not your performance will get you that big check, you are not in that open cognitive space where the best ideas and most innovative possibilities reside. (39:52) You do worse." An interesting part of how Netflix does things is to allow its employees to take calls from its competitors. For instance, Reed learned that one of his top engineers, this guy named George, was offered a higher pay to work at Google. At first, he was just insensed at the lack of loyalty that this employee displayed by taking that call with Google. (40:12) But as he thought more and more from a rational standpoint, he understood that George took the interview to better understand what he was worth. And since George was irreplaceable, Netflix ended up paying him top of market value. Additionally, this would dissuade other tech companies from thinking they could come and poach talent from Netflix's talent pool. (40:29) As a result, they ended up paying George even more than he would have gotten at Google. Then they made a list of employees who Google might contact within Netflix and just paid them out more as well. I think what Reed was doing here was just trying to get ahead of his competitors. And if these top engineers were really worth, you know, 100 times, a thousand times or 10,000 times more than a potential replacement, then bumping their salary a little bit would have a massive ROI. (40:54) The following section I want to discuss is based on pumping up cander. So the chapter is based on secrets and how keeping them often does more harm than good. So, the book discusses something they call the stuff of secrets, SOS. And these are composed of things like whether to tell employees you're considering a reorganization that could cost them their jobs. (41:14) Whether you should discuss with other employees why someone was fired, as the real reason may harm their reputation, how much insider information you should share with others that risks being leaked to potential competitors if someone were to leave. Dulging personal mistakes that could hurt your reputation or ruin your career. (41:30) the rocky relationship between two leaders that if made public would cause unrest inside of a company and expressing vital financial information to employees who could theoretically be sent to prison for sharing that information. So Reed has many ways to handle all of these problems and he has an interesting term that he used when it comes to secrets. (41:48) He calls it sunshining. Here's what he says about it. Big things, small things, whether good or bad. If your first instinct is to put more information out there, others will do the same. At Netflix, we call this sunshining, and we make an effort to do a lot of it. I think this is smart, and if you want to build a culture of trust, sunshining is the way to do it. (42:08) People shouldn't be afraid to highlight mistakes and vulnerabilities, as dealing with those things by talking about them with others can be a great way to improve. You may notice in my episodes that I often highlight a number of my own investing related mistakes. I love sunshining these because it shows that I'm just very far from perfect and it lets me express my mistakes in my own way so that I can do my best to avoid making them again. (42:33) I could easily hide my mistakes and deal with them internally. But for me, this isn't an optimal way to help myself improve and to be transparent, which is one of TIP's primary principles. Now, the book poses four questions related to transparency from what I was just discussing here and gives Reed's response to each one of them. (42:52) So the first one here is in regard to releasing information to your employees that would be illegal to leak to the public. In Netflix's example, this would be specific financial information. The question here is, do you continue sharing numbers with your team after Wall Street knows or do you give numbers to Wall Street before sharing them with your team? Reed would choose to continue sharing this information with his employees before Wall Street and put trust in his employees to just do the right thing. (43:19) The reason he takes this approach is that he wants transparency in the business from top to bottom. And if all your employees are correctly trained to read a profit and loss statement, it can be a massive advantage. Here's a passage from the book I highlighted. My goal was to make employees feel like owners and in turn to increase the amount of responsibility they took for the company's success. (43:41) However, opening company secrets to employees had another outcome. It made our workforce smarter. When you give low-level employees access to information that is generally reserved for highle executives, they get more done on their own. They work faster without stopping to ask for information and approval and they make better decisions without needing input from the top. (44:02) It's worth noting that if you take this route, you will encounter some bad actors, but you can just deal with them on an individual basis. So the second question here relates to possible organizational restructuring. So the example here is when a restructuring relates to how you might handle employees who may potentially lose their job as a result of the reorganization. (44:20) So there's a couple questions here. The first one, do you let time take its course and wait to tell your employees that they may be let go while nothing is for sure? Do you hint at what could maybe happen without revealing the full potential of what could happen? Or do you just tell them the truth that they may lose their job in 6 months and if they need to make necessary arrangements in the future to do so? You probably won't be surprised at this point to see that Hastings chooses the final option. (44:43) If you want a culture of transparency, then keeping secrets such as potential firings makes you a hypocrite. It also will erode trust in the company's culture. Another point that I appreciate is that if the company culture is transparent and the business genuinely cares about its employees, it should treat them fairly. (45:01) And that means allowing your employees to seek alternative employment before it's too late. The third one here is how do you handle postfiring communication? Do you tell your team the truth? describe some of the truth or cover for them. This is more of a question related to employees who are maybe highly likable and decent in terms of effectiveness, but certainly not rock stars. (45:21) When you fire them, they will likely be upset, and after it's done, you're probably going to have employees who want to understand better why he or she was let go. Reed would choose the first option and tell the truth, but with a caveat. So, in the spirit of transparency, Netflix decides not to try to spin things to its employees to make itself or even a former employee look better than reality. (45:42) It's better to tell other employees why the fit wasn't right, but to respect the dignity of the person leaving. So, this leads to the caveat. Netflix had an employee who checked himself into rehab for alcohol addiction and had to take 2 weeks off of work. In this case, Reed believes that personal matters such as these can be left for the person to reveal if they wish to do so. (46:01) Reed has a heristic he uses when describing why someone was fired. He asks managers to be able to respond yes to the question, "Would I feel comfortable showing the person I let go of the email I sent?" So, the fourth one here is in handling personal mistakes. Let's say you're managing a startup with 100 employees. Let's say over 5 years you hire and fire sales directors. (46:20) Do you hide the mistake you made in your judgment of these hires or do you share these mistakes with your employees? You can probably guess Reed's answer to this one is to tell the truth. Reed provides a superb example from real life as the question is actually based on Reed's history at Pure Software. (46:36) Reed had actually hired and fired five sales directors over 5 years and believed it to be just an egregious mistake. He took the issue to the board and offered his resignation as a result of these mistakes, but they didn't accept it. The board appreciated his honesty and showed an even stronger belief in his leadership as a result of this honesty. (46:54) Reed felt better about being honest and about showing some of these vulnerabilities that he had. So this part about displaying vulnerabilities leads to a phenomenon known as a pratt fall effect. The prat fall effect is a psychological tendency in which people tend to like someone more after they make small relatable mistakes provided that person is otherwise competent. (47:12) And being transparent is just a great way to take advantage of the prat fall effect because you will inherently be more honest about your past mistakes. And chances are the people with whom you're discussing the error can actually resonate very well with that error, which helps you improve your connection with them. (47:29) Let's transition here and discuss some additional details on how we can release more control to a business's employees by removing unnecessary approvals. So, one quote from this chapter that I found powerful was, "Don't seek to please your boss, seek to do what is best for the company." This is an interesting quote because it doesn't apply to a large percentage of businesses simply because most companies are run where making your boss happy is a primary lever for furthering yourself inside of a company. (47:55) For instance, at Netflix, they aim for a culture where decision-m can be made throughout the entire company rather than just being concentrated at the very top. This allows everyone to just flex their creative muscles and innovate at high levels without the bureaucratic red tape that suppresses this at many companies. When Aaron was working on this book with Reed, she asked him when he'd have time to work on it and was very surprised that his schedule was pretty much wide open. (48:21) She writes, "Reed believes so deeply in dispersed decision-m that by his model, only a CEO who is not busy is really doing his job." This is fascinating to me because I see some parallels between this specific framework and how Stig runs Tip. Stig is pretty hands-off when it comes to me running the two communities that I'm involved in. (48:40) While I run things by Stig and he will definitely give his opinion, he's very fond of finishing it with all that said, I rely on your better judgment. Hastings says that if an employee comes to you with an idea that you might not necessarily agree with, ask yourself four questions. Number one, is the employee stunning? Number two, do you believe they have good judgment? Number three, can they make a positive impact? And number four, are they good enough to be on the team? If the answer is no to any of these, then you should fire them. And we'll be covering that in (49:08) some more depth shortly. But if the answer is yes to all of them, then that means you can put more responsibility on them to make the right decision. And even if you don't think it's the best idea, you should give them a leash to try it out. You'll probably be shocked by how successful their ideas are, if they are truly exceptional employees. (49:25) This framework is ideal for companies that require innovation to continue thriving or to even survive. If you're running a business that doesn't require much innovation, then I can see how this framework wouldn't necessarily be the best fit. However, with the increasing pace of innovation just everywhere, it's becoming increasingly rare to find companies that can just stay in business without requiring any innovation. (49:47) Let's have a look at the innovation cycle that Netflix have created. So, you start by analyzing an idea by doing the following. You farm for disscent or you socialize the idea. If you have a big idea, you test it out. And as the informed captain, you make your bet. And lastly, if it succeeds, celebrate. And if it fails, sunshine it. (50:07) So farming for descent means you actively seek contrary opinions to your idea. This is so important for Netflix that Reed made a fundamental rule. It is disloyal to Netflix when you disagree with an idea and do not express that disagreement. By withholding your opinion, you are implicitly choosing not to help the company. (50:26) This is an interesting rule because while I agree with it, it could also cloud the person's judgment with the idea. I was just reading a quote that I had from Jim Rogers who's one of the best international investors of all time. And this is from the book Money Masters of Our Time. The important thing in his view is to develop a way to think independently as he and George Soros did so profitably. (50:47) He says, "I have always found it much better just to sit and do your own reading. When I talked to people, it would muddy up my thinking. I was much more successful just sitting back and reading and figuring things out. Now, the idea here really depends on your personality. I think if you're a solo employee running, you know, a fund, then discussing your strategy with others who might have misaligned incentives is probably a mistake. (51:10) However, if you're a business like Netflix with just a ton of very well-aligned employees trying to move the company forward, it makes a ton of sense. Now, socializing an idea refers to sharing with others internally just to kind of gauge the temperature of that idea. It may reveal that you have overlooked things and maybe open up new opportunities or illuminate just a dead end that you thought might have had potential. Next up is testing ideas out. (51:35) And this is vital to a good business. If you have a good idea that you can test out for, let's say, $100,000, why try rolling out the entire thing for a million dollars? you're basically just increasing the risk on that idea if it hasn't yet been validated by the market. A great example of this was Starbucks's order and pay service. (51:54) So they created this mobile order and pay service specifically in Portland, Oregon to test out and gauge the reception and it was a massive success and today I see mobile orders at pretty much every single Starbucks that I've ever visited. The third part of this framework is about being the captain of your idea and making your bet. (52:11) So this refers to the fact that Netflix does not foster a culture where consensus is required to move forward with a decision. Sure, it's great to get the opinions of others, but ultimately the decision maker must either proceed with the decision or move on from it. And lastly, there's kind of this post-mortem of a decision. (52:27) If it's a win, celebrate it. And if it's a loss, sunshine it. The sunshining part is probably most crucial as that's where you're going to learn the most and will be able to pass on those learnings to your colleagues so they don't make the same mistakes that you did. It also builds trust and fosters innovation. When employees know they won't be punished for thinking of innovative ideas, it encourages them to continue innovating rather than doing what is safe but may not actually move the company forward. Now we move to the (52:52) final section of the book which aims to maximize talent density, cander, and then eliminate nearly all controls. To maximize talent density, Netflix does something called the keeper test. It's a very simple heristic that Netflix asked their managers. Which of my people, if they told me we're leaving for a similar job at another company, would I fight hard to keep. (53:14) The point here is to keep the ones that you would fight tooth and nail to stay around and let everyone else go. Another concept I enjoyed from this chapter is how Netflix doesn't think of themselves as a big family. This thinking can be rife with errors for specific businesses. The problem with thinking of a company like a family is that, you know, inside of a familial unit, mistakes and shortcomings are often accepted because they're just seen as being part of a family. (53:38) Nobody's perfect. However, in the cutthroat world of business, especially a hyperco competitive one like Netflix, they can't accept this. Otherwise, a company would never have grown to where it is today. Instead, Hastings has used the term team instead of family. On a team, underperformance is just unacceptable. A sports team can sign, trade, or release players as it sees fit to construct the best possible roster to help it win. (54:01) And this is what Netflix tries to do. Athletes on a professional sports team demand excellence. Train to win and know that effort isn't enough and understand that performance it really is everything. There's no place for just adequate performance at Netflix. However, if you do perform adequately, you will be offered a very generous severance package to facilitate your job search elsewhere. (54:23) The severance package provides about 4 to 9 months of salary. though it's very overly generous. Now why is it so generous? Reed believes that performance improvement plans pips are costly and timeconuming. Instead of taking months to complete these pips to save time and protect the company from lawsuits, Netflix eliminates them, pays its former employees a substantial severance package, and requires that they sign a document stating they won't sue Netflix. (54:47) Now, we've spoken a lot about feedback today because it's vital to Netflix's culture, but Hastings was very aware of how feedback is often just a one-way street. Managers provide feedback but very little is returned. In a culture of transparency, this just is not a good fit. So Reed Hastings came up with two workarounds. (55:04) So the first one was something called a 360 written report and the second one is called a live 360 dinner. So the written report might seem standard, but it's not. The written report requires the names of people providing the feedback and removes any numerical ratings. Netflix also doesn't link these reviews to raises or promotions. (55:23) These reports are open to anyone who wishes to help provide constructive feedback. Netflix utilizes the start, stop, continue method to provide feedback. So, the start, stop, continue method helps make sure that the feedback is genuine and honest. It can be easy to simply give your co-workers a high score and avoid any constructive feedback. (55:41) So, this method allows feedback to be constructive for the person who's receiving it. After all, since Netflix requires only rock stars, all employees need to know what they can do to maintain that rockstar designation. So, while these 360 written reports were good, there was one issue. So, Aaron Meyer writes, "Although the 360 written exercise established regular candid feedback, and many chose to discuss the feedback after the reports came out, it didn't ensure that those open discussions were actually happening. If (56:10) Chris Anne gives written 360 feedback to John Paul that his whispering in client meetings is hurting his sales, but John Paul never talks to Chris Anne or anyone else about the comment, it turns into the stuff of secrets. Reed's next process was put in place in order to help address that problem. So the solution was a live 360. (56:30) This would be a live discussion where Netflix workers would openly discuss feedback and level up together. So the framework for this was to keep the length to several hours and do it outside of the workplace. So you wanted to keep the group size small. For let's say a group of eight, it might take 3 hours. (56:44) For a group of 12, it might take 5 hours. And all feedback given during these live 360 should follow that 4A feedback guideline which I've already gone over. It should all be very actionable. You can use the start, stop, continue method, but 75% of the feedback should focus on the start and stop to make sure that time is spent efficiently. (57:03) And then to just set the tone of some of these types of meetings, you might want to get the person who can provide the harshest feedback to go first. One Netflix employee when speaking about her first live 360 said, "I hated that evening at the Waldorf, but without it eventually, I would have failed the Keeper test. I don't think I'd be at Netflix. (57:21) " While these live 360s are probably an experience that would take some time to get used to, it's probably worth it as long as you're open to improving and accepting feedback that will make you better at your job. The final chapter really resonates with me because it's all about taking responsibility as a way to achieve freedom. (57:38) The way to accomplish this is through context, not control. So, let me explain that. Aaron Mayor makes a great point that there's nothing wrong with leadership from control or from context. Some businesses that must focus on error prevention are best led through control. She gives the example of Exxon Mobile which has these safety protocols that it must follow closely to ensure the safety of everyone who works there. (58:01) In Exxon's case, control makes a lot of sense because they don't want people dying under their watch. Therefore, they have hundreds of safety protocols that must be followed very closely. But the problem with control is that it can stifle innovation. If you put clamps on what people can and cannot do in a creative setting, you're basically just handicapping their abilities to innovate. (58:22) So culture of control is not something that would have worked well at Netflix. Reed Hastings says that leading through context requires four key elements. High talent density, a focus on innovation rather than error prevention, work that is loosely coupled, and alignment. We've already spent so much time on the first two here. (58:39) So let's look closer at this concept of work that is loosely coupled. So coupling can be either tight or loose. For tight coupling, two things are directly connected and depend heavily on each other. If you change one, you almost always have to change the other. An example might be when you know two gears are locked together. (58:57) If one turns differently, the other one must also adjust. But for loose coupling, two things work together but have minimal dependency. You can change one without breaking the other. An example of loose coupling is, you know, a TV and a remote. You can replace the remote without having to rewire the TV. Tight coupling is closely tied to control. (59:16) A culture that requires a high degree of control will be tightly coupled. Any significant changes to the company's culture might be at odds with a tight coupling of that business. Netflix follows a loose coupling model where changes can occur throughout the system and do not require significant and disruptive changes to other parts of the company. (59:35) Now, let's talk about alignment because it's vital to making context work. In Netflix, they have a north star that they seek to achieve. How you get to this northstar is completely up to you. Now, I just love this concept of having a north star. On a personal note, a north star is something that helps me guide me to where I want to go. (59:52) In the richer, wiser, happier master class, we have discussed extensively what we would like written in our orbituary. If you have a northstar that's aligned with what you want in your obituary, it can then help you take the steps to actually get there. But two people can have a similar northstar and get to that northstar in completely different ways. (1:00:10) This is where context comes in at Netflix. So the book presents an excellent analogy for thinking about control and context through the lens of hierarchies. This is to think of context as a pyramid or as a tree. So in a pyramid, the bottom level has to ask the next level up for permission to do something creative. (1:00:31) In the movie industry, the bottom might be someone like a creative executive and that might go all the way up to the CEO. However, you might have multiple levels on this pyramid between those two positions and that means that significant decisions have to go through various layers to determine whether they can ever actually be implemented. (1:00:47) This is pretty normal in many businesses. But Netflix uses the tree analogy. So in this analogy, you can imagine just a tree growing out of the ground. The CEO is actually at the bottom of the tree and as the trees branch out, decisions are made by what's called informed captains. And the informed captain does not need to look anywhere other than inside themselves to make the decision. (1:01:09) I'll once again use myself as an example here. So Stig is very good at setting context for the host at TIP. He seeks excellent podcast episodes that empower investors and to foster genuine connections and help build TIP's brand. So I'm really able to make episodes about anything that I think is pertinent to helping our audience become better investors. (1:01:29) And I have free reign to really take this in whatever direction I want. I can discuss the pros and cons of discounted cash flow analysis or I can take a different approach and explore the concepts of financial independence. Alternatively, I can discuss Netflix's unique culture as I'm doing with you today. (1:01:45) One area that is crucial when it comes to leading through context is dealing with people who make mistakes that the CEO or management believes should not have been made. In this case, it's up to the manager to take responsibility for not sending the proper context. Reed suggests asking the following questions in this case. Are you articulate and inspiring enough in expressing your goals and strategy? Have you clearly explained all the assumptions and risks that will help your team to make good decisions? And are you sure your employees are highly (1:02:12) aligned on vision and objectives? He points out that managers must continuously ask themselves these questions when meeting their managers to ensure everyone is aligned correctly and on the same page. If you skip this crucial step, you risk having poor context, which can negatively impact efficiency and performance. (1:02:29) As long as you set the context, your informed captains can make the right decisions to help your business move towards its north star. That's all I have for you today on Netflix's novel culture that was created by Reed Hastings. Want to keep the conversation going? Follow me on Twitter at irrational KTS or connect with me on LinkedIn. (1:02:47) Just search for Kyle Griev. I'm always open to feedback, so feel free to share how I can make the podcast even better for you. Thanks for listening and see you next time. I think this is why hidden monopolies resonates with me so much because similar to that aspect of Scuttlebutt, it focuses heavily on the customers of a business rather than its competitive positioning against competitors. (1:03:08) And at the end of the day, it's the company's customers who are signing those checks which determine how attractive that investment can be. So why is customer loyalty so important? Because if you have loyal customers, your benefits are significantly higher compared to businesses that just don't have loyal customers. (1:03:23) This means that a company with loyal customers will have more repeat customers.
The Netflix Playbook: Fewer Rules, Greater Results (TIP748)
Summary
Transcript
(00:00) So the interesting thing about corrective feedback is that it tends to have a much greater impact on success compared to positive feedback. A 2014 study concluded that by a 3:1 margin, people believe that corrective feedback is more effective in improving their performance than positive feedback. Here are some of the stats from that survey. (00:17) 57% of respondents claimed they would prefer to receive corrective feedback over positive feedback. 72% felt their performance would improve if they received more corrective feedback. And then finally, 92% agreed with the comment that negative feedback if delivered appropriately improves performance. (00:36) I couldn't agree more with these results and I think it really reminds me of something that Monry said and I'm paraphrasing here, but he said something along the lines that you just learn most from your losses. [Music] Hey, real quick before we jump into today's episode, if you've been enjoying the show, please hit that subscribe button. (00:59) It's totally free, helps out the channel a ton, and ensures that you won't miss any future episodes. Thanks a bunch. We're going to discuss the book No Rules Rules by Netflix founder Reed Hastings and author Aaron Meyer. Now, there's a fascinating image that's been circulating on the internet for the past few years depicting the ultimate value drivers of a business's long-term value. (01:19) It's not sentiment. It's not multiple rerating. It's not business cycles or even high rates of capital efficiency that can create the highest long-term value. It's culture. Netflix is a prime example of how a company's culture can generate immense shareholder value. Since it's an initial public offering, Netflix has become an 1100 pegger, achieving just incredible results. (01:42) Now, I didn't put much thought into business culture before I joined TIP because the culture at TIP is just so much different from anything that I've ever used in the past. But it's not really any coincidence that I think Stig Broers gets all of his new employees to read the book The Culture Code by Aaron Meyer. (02:00) So when I sought to research more about Netflix and came across the book No Rules Rules by Netflix founder Reed Hastings and Aaron Meyer, I was very excited to read it and it was a really really good book offering a ton of valuable lessons that business owners and investors alike can use to help identify the nuances of a company's culture. (02:15) And that's what we're going to be diving into very very deep today. So, the book's central question is, "What if having fewer rules makes your company better?" It's a great question and one that I think that many business owners and investors just never ask. It's not something I necessarily place a lot of importance on when I'm evaluating a business. (02:33) While I do like businesses that have a high degree of decentralization, I never really thought too hard about how that relates to a company's culture. However, just as decentralizing certain aspects of a business can be value creative if done correctly, Netflix has demonstrated that taking that step to a business's underlying fabric can be a truly powerful augmentation. (02:53) Now, Netflix is interesting here because much of its culture was developed by Reed Hastings's own experiences. So, Hastings sold a business called Pure Software, where many of the foundational principles of Netflix were first built. Throughout the book and this episode, we're going to cover some examples of what he learned specifically at Pure Software and why he was so intentional about creating Netflix's culture in the way that he did. (03:16) So Netflix's culture is really based on three primary principles and they're very simple. So the first one is talent density. The second one is cander and third is control reduction. All three of these principles are designed to create a culture of freedom and responsibility which I'll refer to as FNR for the rest of the episode. Hastings and Meer further break down FNR into three steps for each of these principles. (03:38) So first you build up talent density, you increase cander, and you begin removing controls. Second, you begin fortifying talent density, pumping up cander, and removing even more controls. And then third, you're just maximizing talent density, maximizing cander, and eliminating almost all other controls. So, let's use inversion here and examine a company that I think failed to execute on probably two of these, ultimately leading to its demise. (04:02) Most listeners above the age of 30 are going to be very familiar with this company, and even if you aren't, you probably know it as Netflix's chief rival during Netflix's early days, and this is Blockbuster. So, Netflix soundly defeated Blockbuster because of principles one and two. I can't speak to exactly how Blockbuster was attempting to maximize talent density, but I think that the culture inside of Blockbuster was just not one of innovation. (04:25) Blockbuster reminds me of one of these legacy businesses you see today, like uh, you know, a utility. These are rent seekers. They're essentially just sitting on their assets and milking every last dollar out of them while they still can. The problem with this business model is just capitalism. Capitalism allows individuals to come and steal your customers away with better products and better services. (04:46) If you intend to just rest on your laurels and have too big of an ego to see that maybe your industry is rapidly changing in front of you, you're going to lose. I think this is precisely what happened with Blockbuster. Now, in terms of cander, it's hard to see how Blockbuster wouldn't have had other upper level management types that were observing Netflix's giant red boxes. (05:06) I remember seeing these giant red boxes at Safeway down the road from where I used to live. Then I remember seeing them popping up in more and more locations. If Blockbuster had a culture that encouraged, you know, maybe some more cander, someone might have brought up the issue that Netflix had come up with maybe a crude way to improve the movie renting experience. (05:23) For those unfamiliar with Netflix's early strategy, they had a few. So the first one was that they would just mail you a DVD and then you would mail it back after a predetermined period. While doing that, they also had these physical red boxes almost like a vending machine. You'd go to the vending machine, you'd put some information, put some money in it, and you'd get your movie. (05:43) It's very simple and low tech, but it was an intriguing uh business proposition at the time. No retail stores were needed. Minimal storage was required to hold inventory. Much fewer employees were needed, and you had the luxury of putting the movie vending machines in very hightra areas where you'd be giving your partner a cut of these profits. (06:00) Additionally, and this is very, very important, Reed Hastings noticed that Blockbuster was profiting off its customers mistakes. which he felt was just a horrible business model. Now, the mistakes I'm referring to here are late fees. Any business that's just exploiting its customers in this manner is going to be very, very ripe for disruption. (06:18) And that is precisely what Reed Hastings did. So, I recently did an episode on customer loyalty modes. It was tip 744. I'll link it in the show notes. In that episode, I discussed how businesses can build and create modes by focusing on building customer loyalty. And I think that's exactly what Netflix did. (06:35) They saw that the legacy model was simply not built to foster customer loyalty and they in turn targeted that audience to specifically build customer loyalty. Now, since Blockbuster didn't have many competitors, its customers had pretty limited experience with switching to other movie rental companies. And even if they tried another, they were kind of a commodity product. (06:57) As a result, many of Blockbuster's customers were satisfied with the status quo. However, once Netflix entered the arena, it showed Blockbuster's customers that there was a superior option that was cheaper, more convenient, and offered just a better experience. Once Netflix achieved a critical mass through its evolution into streaming services, that was it for Blockbuster, which now has just one remaining location. (07:18) One last part on Cander that I'd like to share is that Blockbuster could theoretically have been around today if they had just made one different decision. So Reed was actually ready to exit Netflix and sell out to Blockbuster for a measily $50 million, but Blockbuster said no. Now to be fair, given the information at the time, it might have been the best possible decision. (07:39) The Netflix business recorded a loss of $57 million. So, if Blockbuster had people willing to speak their minds maybe to Blockbuster CEO, perhaps they might have seen a path to make the two of these businesses work together and maybe make a path towards Netflix achieving profitability. Or if they had bought it, then maybe we'd be watching Blockbuster on our TVs instead of Netflix. (08:01) And those physical stores maybe just would have been removed due to their underlying weaknesses stemming from their higher costs. However, let's start here with the first layer of talent density, cander, and control reduction. So, the first step to building talent density is what Hastings refers to as developing a work environment that consists solely of stunning colleagues. (08:20) So, this concept was bred out of the.com bubble, specifically in the spring of 2001. Netflix was not a profitable company at this time, and the funding available to internet related companies was about as scarce as water in the Arabian desert. As a result, Netflix had to lay off a third of its workforce. And while the experience was not enjoyable at all for Netflix, Hastings actually observed something that was astonishing. (08:42) Everyone who survived the layoffs was pretty stable and calm despite the rapid disruption. And after only a few weeks, the atmosphere actually dramatically improved. Hastings writes that we were in cost cutting mode and let go a third of our workforce. Yet, the office was suddenly buzzing with passion, energy, and ideas. (09:01) By early 2002, Netflix was cruising. DVD players were selling like hotcakes, providing a further headwind for Netflix's DVD bymail subscription business. At this point, Netflix was doing more than it had ever done with 30% fewer employees. Now, on the face of things, it just didn't make much sense. One of Reed's colleagues and Carpool partners, Patty McCord, who he had brought with him from his days at Pier Software, told Reed that it felt like everyone was passionately in love with their work. (09:30) While on their carpool rides, they began to disseminate what exactly happened to cause Netflix to enjoy this rapid productivity improvement. And the key was in talent density. When they decided who to let go and who to keep, talent was a key factor in their decision. This meant that 80 leftover employees were the cream of the crop. (09:48) There was a lower number of people, sure, but the average talent level rose substantially as a result of letting go the less talented individuals. This makes me think of critical mass in a much different way. So most of the time in a critical mass, you're adding things until they can self-reinforce. But in this example, it was really addition through subtraction. (10:06) By raising the average level of talent, the business achieved a critical mass that it may never have reached if the talent density had remained the same at that lower level. Now, I'd love to touch on this a bit more as part of my job here with TIP. So the hosts and our support staff are very talented and I interact a lot with both. (10:25) But since TIP has so many great podcast hosts, it raises the bar for everyone else. If I want to search for inspiration on an episode, a topic or a theme, I can go back and research older episodes. Alternatively, I can reach out directly to, you know, Stig, Clay, or William for their advice on how they approach their work, which helps me improve my own approach. (10:46) Because the talent density is high, it just spreads. And Stig is very well aware of this. He wants hosts who will constantly raise the bar as much as they can realistically do. And when you're around other people who are very intentional about improving their abilities in their job, you get swept away trying to improve as well. (11:02) At least I know I do. In other jobs I've had, talent wasn't something that management paid too much attention to. If you accomplish the job, that's all that really mattered. Sure, there might be people better at it than others, but even if you were objectively worse than others in the company, it was unlikely that you'd be fired. (11:20) This illustrates the importance of culture. If you lack a culture of productivity and innovation, it's unlikely that your business will survive for very long. And it doesn't matter if your business is a more complex one like Netflix or a small simple business like a restaurant with five employees. Here is how Reed breaks down what happens if you have a team of, let's say, seven people with five stunning employees and just two adequate ones. (11:44) So, the adequate ones are going to do things like suck energy for management, so management has less time to spend with top performers. They're going to reduce the quality of group discussions, which therefore reduces the group's IQ. They're going to force outperformers to develop ways of working around their deficiencies, which further decreases efficiency. (12:01) They're going to drive staff who seek excellence to quit. And then lastly, they're going to show that the business accepts mediocrity, allowing employees to justify a lower level of performance. So Aaron Meyer mentions a particularly useful study in this chapter that really contradicts a lot of conventional wisdom. So, Professor Will Phelps from the University of New South Wales in Australia conducted the study, which examined the contagious behaviors in work environments. (12:29) He created a team of four college students, each tasked with accomplishing a task in 45 minutes. the team that did best received a $100 reward. Now, as in many of these types of studies, researchers often add their little variables to make the findings more interesting. And in this case, certain teams had actors who would play specific roles. (12:48) So, the roles were the slacker or people who would be disengaged from the activity. Then there would be the jerk who would insert sarcastic remarks to his team. And then there was the depressive pessimist who would make depressing remarks about the unlikelihood of success. Now, what Phelps found was that the actions of just these one team members actually brought down the overall talent level of the other individuals on the team. (13:11) And this study wasn't just some one-off affair. Phelps ran the study for a whole month and had dozens and dozens of trials. And the results weren't great. Groups with an underperformer did worse than the other teams by 30 to 40%. Now, I mentioned that this study contradicts conventional wisdom, and that's because with most previous research, the conclusions were that individuals within a group would conform to the group's values and norms. (13:36) Theoretically, one of these actors in the presence of a talented individual should actually elevate their performance rather than dragging down everyone else. It's also important to note that these results occurred over a short 45minute period. If you had, you know, years or decades of underperformers, I'd assume that they might drag down the outperformers even more. (13:57) The main takeaway from this chapter is to focus on increasing talent density within your workplace. As we'll discuss later in this episode, this approach has many other benefits such as paying your top performers more rather than bringing in outside help and keeping their salaries at or below market rates. To accomplish this, you must monitor the performance of your organization. (14:15) This is why having a workplace that prioritizes meritocracy is so essential. When you do this, you can identify outperformers more easily compared to just the adequate ones. And it means it becomes easier to see who really deserves promotions and who doesn't or who you might need to let go of if layoffs become necessary. Additionally, meritocracy helps you bring out the best ideas regardless of an employees tenure. (14:40) Ray Dalio said, "A system that doesn't differentiate between more and less credible thinkers will not produce consistently good decisions." This transitions well into the next chapter which is about increasing cander. Hastings learned the power of cander as a CEO of pure software. He admits to being miserable at the people part of leadership. (14:59) One example was when he had a product that he thought was just taking a little bit too long to develop. Reed then actually went behind this product developer at Pure Software and hired an outside company to help get the project going. Once his developer found out, he was furious, telling Reed that he should have just told him how he felt so that they could come to a solution together rather than going behind his back. (15:20) At Netflix, Reed realized that reducing backstabbings and office politics was a key to increasing efficiency. And if his group of incredibly talented people had ways of doing things faster and better, they shouldn't be afraid to share their techniques with anyone inside of the company. (15:36) As a result of this thinking, Netflix came up with the term only say about someone what you will say to their face. So when someone would come to read with a problem, he would directly ask them, "What did that person say when you spoke to him about this directly?" The interesting thing about cander is that most people just don't really enjoy receiving it. (15:54) It can cut pretty deeply when someone tells you that, you know, you're doing something wrong or you're doing something less optimally. Criticism triggers feelings like self-doubt, frustration, and vulnerability. Examining this in an evolutionary context, these feelings tend to prompt response that activates our fight orflight mechanism. (16:12) the same reaction towards a physical threat. Another interesting perspective on cander is how is it delivered. So there's a significant difference between receiving criticism in a one-on-one setting and receiving it in a public setting. Warren Buffett has said, "Praise in public, criticize in private." And I think that's excellent advice. (16:30) The praise means a lot because it's being said in a public domain where all your colleagues can share in the appreciation for your hard work and value creation. But things obviously aren't all rainbows and butterflies. If things aren't going in the direction that, let's say, Warren wants, he'll address it, but not in a manner that he feels would maybe humiliate someone in front of their peers or the general public. (16:49) Warren is an absolute master at this. If you read his annual reports or listen to him talk at any of his annual meetings, he's constantly peppering praise to the superstars who are part of Berkshire Hathaway. He'll criticize certain, you know, broad behaviors, but he's very rarely singling out any individual. And in the rare case he does single out an individual, it's not someone who's inside of the Berkshire Hathway organization. (17:12) The book mentions some incredible data about corrective feedback. So the interesting thing about corrective feedback is that it tends to have a much greater impact on success compared to positive feedback. A 2014 study concluded that by a 3:1 margin, people believe that corrective feedback is more effective in improving their performance than positive feedback. (17:29) Here are some of the stats from that survey. 57% of respondents claimed they would prefer to receive corrective feedback over positive feedback. 72% felt their performance would improve if they received more corrective feedback. And then finally, 92% agreed with a comment that negative feedback if delivered appropriately improves performance. (17:49) I couldn't agree more with these results and I think it really reminds me of something that Mon Pry said and I'm paraphrasing here but he said something along the lines that you just learn most from your losses. When you have a win you just pat yourself on the back and you move on. However, the best feedback that you'll receive from investing comes specifically from making mistakes. (18:09) In that case you can look at things you overlooked or other errors and then examine ways how you can prevent yourself from ever making them again. If you do this long enough, you'll make fewer and fewer mistakes, and your results will improve. Feedback in a corporate setting is going to be a lot different from what you might experience if you were operating solo. (18:28) Netflix makes sure that feedback isn't a one-way street. It's not meant for managers to just give feedback without hearing any in return. One way that Netflix attempts to gather feedback from management is by including it in their agenda for their one-on-one meetings. As a manager, this helps your employees provide valuable feedback to management that can then be used to elevate the entire organization. (18:49) But this culture, you know, it's not normal. There's a great example in the book when Netflix's chief content officer, Ted Sarandos, who is now co-CEO of Netflix, brought on someone named Brian Wright, a senior vice president at Nickelodeon, to help improve Netflix's young adult content. Brian here is talking about a previous experience with feedback. (19:09) So he says, "In all my past jobs, it was all about who's in and who's out of favor. If you gave the boss feedback or disagreed with her in a meeting in front of others, that would be political death. You would find yourself in Siberia." So in a group meeting that Brian had with Ted on his first day at Netflix, Ted was actually receiving criticism about an idea from a lower level worker. (19:30) Brian was astounded that someone would speak to their superior in the way that he did. But when the meeting was over, Brian noticed that Ted put his hand on the guy's shoulder who provided that criticism and said, "Great meeting. Thanks for the input today." When Brian was asked later about how his first day was going, he explained that he was surprised at how the guy seemed to be attacking Ted's idea. (19:51) Ted replied by saying, "Brian, the day you find yourself sitting on your feedback because you're worried you'll be unpopular is the day you'll leave Netflix. We hire you for your opinions. Every person in that room is responsible for telling me frankly what they think. The key here is truly in the culture. Suppose you have management that just can't accept criticism with open arms. (20:10) In that case, it's very unlikely that you'll foster a culture of cander. In the example above, Ted made it explicitly clear that he expected Brian's honest opinion, whether that was good or bad. When you create this as an explicit part of your business, you're helping to build a culture that prioritizes improvement over ego. (20:28) If you're looking to give and receive feedback optimally, the book provides a pretty straightforward framework for doing so. It's called the 4A guideline. So, there's two parts to it. There's giving feedback and there's receiving feedback. So, in giving feedback, the first part is aim to assist. Feedback should be given with positive intent. (20:47) It's not meant to, you know, tear someone down, but actually build them up. Feedback isn't a tool to hurt someone, express your frustration, or further any specific agenda. The second one is to make it actionable. Great feedback will prompt the receiver to instantly improve by adjusting their inputs. (21:05) Vague feedback like it wasn't your best work doesn't offer much help for someone. Instead, explain what it was that they could specifically improve on that is actionable. Then when it comes to receiving feedback, the third one is appreciate the feedback for what it is. Remember the whole fight orflight thing that I discussed earlier? When receiving feedback, we want to try to avoid the desire to flee. (21:25) If you feel your blood pressure rising while receiving feedback, remember that the criticism is intended to help you improve at your job. You can even show appreciation for feedback and express gratitude to the person providing it for trying to help you improve. And the fourth one is to accept feedback or discard it. Not all feedback is helpful. (21:44) You must decide whether to accept the feedback and make adjustments or toss it and continue as you were. This is a very simple and practical framework. I resonate a lot with the third A on appreciating feedback. I get feedback from Stig on every single episode that I produce for tip and he has a great job of giving me both positive and negative feedback even though I tend to remember the negative feedback much more vividly than the positive. (22:08) However, this is very beneficial because if I can continue to improve, it enhances your listening experience, making what I say more powerful and efficient. While I know I sometimes feel defensive when receiving negative feedback from Stig or the audience, I understand that they're doing so in the best interest of making the show better. (22:25) After taking a moment to think about it, I genuinely appreciate the feedback because I believe it helps me elevate my own podcasting skills. As I read the book, the connections between Netflix and Bergkshire Hathway became increasingly apparent. The concept that really cemented this for me has to do with Netflix's culture of FNR. (22:42) So at Bergkshire, Buffett trusts many of his businesses to just simply do the right thing. And it's not too different at Netflix. So the next part of the book that I'd like to discuss is how to cultivate this culture towards what Hastings calls a culture of freedom and responsibility. The first point that he makes on building FNR is to remove the vacation policy. (23:03) One of the reasons that Hastings thought this was beneficial was because he didn't believe that a person's value should be measured specifically by time. Let's say you had two people who can accomplish the same amount of work, but someone else can do it in half the time. Why should they be punished if they want to take more time off than the person who is slower? Hastings right, when it comes to how we judge performance at Netflix, hard work is irrelevant. (23:25) Another hidden benefit of vacations that Netflix noted was the increased clarity and innovation that some people experienced after taking time away. For instance, Neil Hunt, one of their chief product officers, loved vacationing in extreme outdoor places. When Neil took off on a vacation, it was often to some remote location that nobody had ever heard of. (23:46) And upon his return from one such vacation, Neil conceived a new algorithm that could be used to enhance Netflix's movie selection for its customers. So, one problem with having a no vacation policy was that employees might not take advantage of it if they didn't observe their boss taking advantage of it as well. So, in some workplaces, you may arrive before the boss and leave after they depart. (24:08) And that demonstrates that you're putting in a lot of hours and working hard. And while this is not the culture that Netflix promotes, this is the culture that probably most people are used to rather than Netflix's more radical approach. So to combat this issue, it had to start from the top. Reed would ensure that he vacationed for more extended periods just to set the tone for everybody underneath him. (24:31) Additionally, he would actively discuss these adventures with his colleagues. This was done intentionally to ensure that all levels of employees at Netflix knew that everyone else was taking vacations and that not taking a vacation would make them into an outlier. This type of leadership modeling was the first step that Hastings suggests. (24:48) However, there are additional roadblocks to consider. So, let's say you're running a large organization. You can't necessarily have employees just taking vacations around huge deadlines, especially if they're key personnel in that initiative. So, this led Netflix to focus on reinforcing context to guide employee behavior. (25:09) This meant that a business or a management team must provide context to their employees, helping them better understand when and how long they can take a vacation. So that could mean things such as giving advanced notice of vacations that are longer than two weeks, but maybe not giving any notice for just taking an extended weekend. (25:27) Jim Ran once said that you're the average of the five people you spend the most time with. And I really could not agree with him more. And one of my favorite things about being a host of this show is having the opportunity to connect with highquality like-minded people in the value investing community. Each year, we host live in-person events in Omaha and New York City for our tip mastermind community, giving our members that exact opportunity. (25:54) Back in May during the Bergkshire weekend, we gathered for a couple of dinners and social hours and also hosted a bus tour to give our members the full Omaha experience. And in the second weekend of October 2025, we'll be getting together in New York City for two dinners and socials, as well as exploring the city and gathering at the Vanderbilt 1 Observatory. (26:16) Our mastermind community has around 120 members. And we're capping the group at 150, and many of these members are entrepreneurs, private investors, or investment professionals. And like myself, they're eager to connect with kindered spirits. It's an excellent opportunity to connect with like-minded people on a deeper level. (26:35) So, if you'd like to check out what the community has to offer and meet with around 30 or 40 of us in New York City in October, be sure to head to the investorspodcast.com/mastermind to apply to join the community. That's the investorspodcast.com/mastermind or simply click the link in the description below. If you enjoy excellent breakdowns on individual stocks, then you need to check out the intrinsic value podcast hosted by Shaun Ali and Daniel Mona. (27:07) Each week, Shaun and Daniel do in-depth analysis on a company's business model and competitive advantages. And in real time, they build out the intrinsic value portfolio for you to follow along as they search for value in the market. So far, they've done analysis on great businesses like John Deere, Ulta Beauty, AutoZone, and Airbnb. (27:28) And I recommend starting with the episode on Nintendo, the global powerhouse in gaming. It's rare to find a show that consistently publishes highquality, comprehensive deep dives that cover all the aspects of a business from an investment perspective. Go follow the Intrinsic Value podcast on your favorite podcasting app and discover the next stock to add to your portfolio or watch list. (27:52) The interesting thing about having the no vacation policy is that it can work wonders as a benefit to certain companies. Aaron Mayer mentioned a business called Mammoth that decided to clone Netflix's policy and test it out for themselves. So, the no vacation policy was then ranked number three in terms of the benefits behind only health insurance and the business's retirement plan. (28:14) So, for companies that are looking to retain talent, a policy such as this could actually be a significant draw for both attracting and retaining top talent. So, here's another example of just how disruptive travel and expense approvals can be for a company such as Pure Software, Reed's first company. So, he tells the story of one of his sales directors, this gentleman named Grant. (28:33) While on a work trip, he rented a car. As part of his job, he went to a party and he knew that others and himself would probably consume alcohol. So, he took a taxi to and from the event. Now, when he provided Pure Software with the invoice for his taxi, he was actually denied. (28:52) So, according to Pure Software's employee handbook, employees are permitted to either rent a car or take a cab, but they must choose one or the other. His point was that according to the handbook that Pure Software gave him, he should have just drunk and drive, which is obviously nonsense. Months later, Grant resigned because he felt that management was just wasting too much time on non-productive tasks such as editing the employee handbook, which was not well written. (29:18) Now, when Netflix was started, this lesson was top of mind for a read. So, he decided that his first expense guideline would be to spend company's money as if it were your own. Now, while this sounded good on paper, the problem was that not everyone spends their own money frugally, which was what Reed was kind of hoping for when he wrote that guideline. (29:38) The book shares a story of David Wells, who served as the VP of finance and later became Netflix's CFO. So, Wells was a frugal guy, and on a work trip to Mexico, he was very surprised to find a bunch of his colleagues in first class seats while on his way to his seat in economy. And these colleagues were embarrassed for David, not because he was in economy and they were in first class, but because an executive like David would ever be in economy. (30:02) So this indicates that individuals have varying perspectives on how they would allocate their own money. Some people are naturally more frugal than others, but assuming everyone will treat the company's money responsibly is very unrealistic. Because of this event, Netflix changed its spending and travel guidelines to act in Netflix's best interest. (30:24) To help clear up any confusion once Wells became the CFO of Netflix, he helped set the context of this guideline for new employees. And it was pretty simple. He told them to imagine that he or she was standing in front of her boss and the CFO and explain why they chose to purchase that specific flight, hotel, or phone. (30:42) If they can comfortably explain why it was in the company's best interest to make that purchase, then they proceed. If on the other hand, you feel any discomfort explaining yourself, then you should probably consider skipping the purchase, checking in with your boss, or just buying something cheaper. Hastings makes the point that this FNR probably increases Netflix's expenses compared to having a more set of rigid rules. (31:06) However, he believes the cost of giving them that freedom is less than having a workplace where they must ask about every little thing, wasting times on these tasks rather than creating, you know, new and innovative products and features. We've now covered the first steps to how Netflix has created their culture. So, here's what Hastings says. (31:24) Once you have a workplace made up nearly exclusively of high performers, you can count on people to behave responsibly. Once you've developed a culture of cander, employees will watch out for one another and ensure their teammates actions are in line with the good of the company. Then you can begin to remove controls and give your staff more freedom. (31:40) Great places to start are the lifting of your vacation, travel, and expense policies. These elements give people more control over their own lives and convey a loud message that you trust your employees to do what's right. The trust you offer will in turn instill feelings of responsibility in your workforce, leading everyone in the company to have a greater sense of ownership. (32:01) So the next section of the book outlines the three principles and further refineses them. So the first section is once again regarding talent density. However, this time it involves compensation. The title of the chapter tells you much of what he thinks about how to compensate employees. Pay top of personal market. (32:18) Netflix has reached its current position primarily due to its high talent density. But hiring talent is different than keeping talent and Hastings is very well aware of this. So he came up with offering his employees just rockstar pay. So he came to this conclusion through trial and error. Reed was an engineer and was very familiar with this concept called the Rockstar principle. (32:38) So, the Rockstar principle originated from a famous study that was conducted in Santa Monica in 1968. At the bright and early hour of 6:30 a.m., nine trainee programmers were led into a room filled with computers. Each of them was tasked with accomplishing a series of coding and debugging tasks that they would have to complete to the best of their abilities in the next 2 hours. (32:58) The researchers hypothesized that the best performers would outperform the average by a factor of maybe two or three. However, within that group of nine, the best performers outperformed the worst by a significantly larger margin. The best guy was actually 20 times faster at coding, 25 times faster at debugging, and 10 times faster at program execution than the programmer with the lowest rank. (33:21) So Reed's conclusion here was simple. He had a fixed amount of money to spend on talent. So with his funds, he could either one hire 10 to 25 average engineers or two hire one rockstar and pay them significantly more. This is a fascinating subject because it genuinely relies on culture that prioritizes productivity. If you have that type of culture, you should be able to then have a smaller and more efficient workforce that can produce at a much higher level than a larger and less efficient one. (33:50) It's kind of the dream scenario, isn't it? Reed admits that the performance gap might actually be even greater than what was quoted in that study. So Reed Hastings was on the Microsoft board and Bill Gates once said, "A great la operator commands several times the wages of an average LA operator, but a great writer of software code is worth 10,000 times the price of an average software writer. (34:13) If you manage businesses where the majority of your talent is in kind of operational roles, this framework may not be the best fit. If you operate something like an ice cream parlor, your best ice cream scooper can probably scoop maybe at double the pace of your worst one, but there's no chance they're going to scoop 10,000 times faster. (34:32) So, this framework really depends on what type of employees you have. If you only require operational people, then you can get away with paying market rates for average employees, as you won't get the same torque from your rockstars. But if you own a business that requires your workforce to innovate and execute creatively, then having a few rock stars is a better decision than having a diluted group of people. (34:52) And for any startup founders out there listening, there's good news. If you want to pay top of the market to bring in exceptionally talented people, a study concluded that 44% of people would be willing to leave their job if they got paid more elsewhere. And this figure won by a landslide as a second category was only 12%. (35:10) Now comes an area of Netflix's compensation that I was kind of shocked to see to be honest. If you've listened to any of my episodes over the years, you know how much emphasis I place on the power of incentives. One of, if not the greatest thinkers of our generation, Charlie Mer said that he always underestimated the power of incentives despite the fact that he thought that he understood it better than 95% of other people. (35:31) So I was stunned to see that Netflix does entirely away with incentive based bonuses. Hastings developed this framework early in Netflix existence around the year 2003. So Reed was having a meeting with his chief marketing officer, Leslie Kilgore. While trying to find what KPIs worked best for her, he came up with an incentive based on new customers. (35:50) Seeing as Kilgore's job was in marketing, this made sense theoretically. But she told Reed, "The number of customers we sign is no longer what we should be measuring. In fact, it's irrelevant." She went on to show us numerically that while new customers had been the most important goal last quarter, it was now the customer retention rate that really mattered. (36:10) Reed's takeaway was that as Netflix scaled up, its KPIs would change for a CMO, should her KPI be tied to new customers or some sort of customer retention metric. With how fast Netflix was really just disrupting its industry, Reed felt that it was nearly impossible to know the answer to that question. Many of Netflix employees had jumped ship from companies such as, you know, Warner Media or NBC. (36:35) And in those places, it was customary to get incentives based off of KPIs. But Netflix was a different type of company just doing other things. At Warner or NBC, employees might be compensated to increase operating profits by, let's say, 5% in a year. And that's fine given what those companies were doing. But at Netflix, what if employees needed to take maybe a loss on something in order to make the business better a few more years down the road? In that sense, a KPI like this would actually serve to block innovation and creativity, which (37:05) is what Netflix is all about. Reed also had a hunch that high performers don't require a bonus to incentivize them. If they're paid well, they will do whatever it takes to continue performing well. Aaron Mayer added that Reed's hunch was actually true and that research by renowned behavioral economist Daniel Erily actually confirmed it. (37:25) So he had a study which involved tasks that required things like attention, memory and creativity and he found that offering a higher bonus actually led to worse performance when the tasks involved cognitive skills. So initially tested in India where the highest bonuses was equivalent to about 5 months pay, participants who were promised the most significant rewards performed the worst. (37:45) A follow-up study at MIT showed the exact same. Higher bonuses improved results for purely technical tasks but harm performance when even basic thinking was involved. The takeaway for cognitive work large financial incentives can actually reduce effectiveness. Now I find this fascinating because it potentially shows that incentive based compensation works best for jobs that have very specific tasks and that's mainly mechanical based jobs. (38:15) But jobs which require creativity can actually be harmed by these incentives. I'm still not completely sold on this premise though. There's just too many examples of executives performing at a very high level and it's hard not to believe that they are performing at that level specifically because they're being incentivized correctly. (38:31) When I'm analyzing a business, I'll always look at executive compensation and I want to know a few things. Number one, what is their base pay? Number two, what is their bonus pay? And three, how do they maximize their bonus? Perhaps the difference comes here in the fact that someone making $300,000 per year isn't going to try too much harder if they can earn an additional, say, $50,000, but this isn't necessarily the case with executives. (38:56) Some executives can earn multiples of their base salary if they achieve their KPIs. And in those cases, I think that's a really huge incentive. And whether that incentive is achieved through mechanistic or creativity, my guess is they'll use whatever is possible to achieve their incentive. I will say that I do like one part of this incentive system. (39:14) So in many corporations, if an executive is underperforming, they still get their incentive, but Netflix has a culture, as I've discussed, that just removes underperformers from the company. If you want to cruise along at your job and take it easy, Netflix is not the place to do that. But I think there are some corporations where the CEO is doing just that. (39:34) And often that comes at the expense of shareholders. I try to avoid these situations at all costs. Now, back to that study. So Aaron writes, "If part of what you focus on is whether or not your performance will get you that big check, you are not in that open cognitive space where the best ideas and most innovative possibilities reside. (39:52) You do worse." An interesting part of how Netflix does things is to allow its employees to take calls from its competitors. For instance, Reed learned that one of his top engineers, this guy named George, was offered a higher pay to work at Google. At first, he was just insensed at the lack of loyalty that this employee displayed by taking that call with Google. (40:12) But as he thought more and more from a rational standpoint, he understood that George took the interview to better understand what he was worth. And since George was irreplaceable, Netflix ended up paying him top of market value. Additionally, this would dissuade other tech companies from thinking they could come and poach talent from Netflix's talent pool. (40:29) As a result, they ended up paying George even more than he would have gotten at Google. Then they made a list of employees who Google might contact within Netflix and just paid them out more as well. I think what Reed was doing here was just trying to get ahead of his competitors. And if these top engineers were really worth, you know, 100 times, a thousand times or 10,000 times more than a potential replacement, then bumping their salary a little bit would have a massive ROI. (40:54) The following section I want to discuss is based on pumping up cander. So the chapter is based on secrets and how keeping them often does more harm than good. So, the book discusses something they call the stuff of secrets, SOS. And these are composed of things like whether to tell employees you're considering a reorganization that could cost them their jobs. (41:14) Whether you should discuss with other employees why someone was fired, as the real reason may harm their reputation, how much insider information you should share with others that risks being leaked to potential competitors if someone were to leave. Dulging personal mistakes that could hurt your reputation or ruin your career. (41:30) the rocky relationship between two leaders that if made public would cause unrest inside of a company and expressing vital financial information to employees who could theoretically be sent to prison for sharing that information. So Reed has many ways to handle all of these problems and he has an interesting term that he used when it comes to secrets. (41:48) He calls it sunshining. Here's what he says about it. Big things, small things, whether good or bad. If your first instinct is to put more information out there, others will do the same. At Netflix, we call this sunshining, and we make an effort to do a lot of it. I think this is smart, and if you want to build a culture of trust, sunshining is the way to do it. (42:08) People shouldn't be afraid to highlight mistakes and vulnerabilities, as dealing with those things by talking about them with others can be a great way to improve. You may notice in my episodes that I often highlight a number of my own investing related mistakes. I love sunshining these because it shows that I'm just very far from perfect and it lets me express my mistakes in my own way so that I can do my best to avoid making them again. (42:33) I could easily hide my mistakes and deal with them internally. But for me, this isn't an optimal way to help myself improve and to be transparent, which is one of TIP's primary principles. Now, the book poses four questions related to transparency from what I was just discussing here and gives Reed's response to each one of them. (42:52) So the first one here is in regard to releasing information to your employees that would be illegal to leak to the public. In Netflix's example, this would be specific financial information. The question here is, do you continue sharing numbers with your team after Wall Street knows or do you give numbers to Wall Street before sharing them with your team? Reed would choose to continue sharing this information with his employees before Wall Street and put trust in his employees to just do the right thing. (43:19) The reason he takes this approach is that he wants transparency in the business from top to bottom. And if all your employees are correctly trained to read a profit and loss statement, it can be a massive advantage. Here's a passage from the book I highlighted. My goal was to make employees feel like owners and in turn to increase the amount of responsibility they took for the company's success. (43:41) However, opening company secrets to employees had another outcome. It made our workforce smarter. When you give low-level employees access to information that is generally reserved for highle executives, they get more done on their own. They work faster without stopping to ask for information and approval and they make better decisions without needing input from the top. (44:02) It's worth noting that if you take this route, you will encounter some bad actors, but you can just deal with them on an individual basis. So the second question here relates to possible organizational restructuring. So the example here is when a restructuring relates to how you might handle employees who may potentially lose their job as a result of the reorganization. (44:20) So there's a couple questions here. The first one, do you let time take its course and wait to tell your employees that they may be let go while nothing is for sure? Do you hint at what could maybe happen without revealing the full potential of what could happen? Or do you just tell them the truth that they may lose their job in 6 months and if they need to make necessary arrangements in the future to do so? You probably won't be surprised at this point to see that Hastings chooses the final option. (44:43) If you want a culture of transparency, then keeping secrets such as potential firings makes you a hypocrite. It also will erode trust in the company's culture. Another point that I appreciate is that if the company culture is transparent and the business genuinely cares about its employees, it should treat them fairly. (45:01) And that means allowing your employees to seek alternative employment before it's too late. The third one here is how do you handle postfiring communication? Do you tell your team the truth? describe some of the truth or cover for them. This is more of a question related to employees who are maybe highly likable and decent in terms of effectiveness, but certainly not rock stars. (45:21) When you fire them, they will likely be upset, and after it's done, you're probably going to have employees who want to understand better why he or she was let go. Reed would choose the first option and tell the truth, but with a caveat. So, in the spirit of transparency, Netflix decides not to try to spin things to its employees to make itself or even a former employee look better than reality. (45:42) It's better to tell other employees why the fit wasn't right, but to respect the dignity of the person leaving. So, this leads to the caveat. Netflix had an employee who checked himself into rehab for alcohol addiction and had to take 2 weeks off of work. In this case, Reed believes that personal matters such as these can be left for the person to reveal if they wish to do so. (46:01) Reed has a heristic he uses when describing why someone was fired. He asks managers to be able to respond yes to the question, "Would I feel comfortable showing the person I let go of the email I sent?" So, the fourth one here is in handling personal mistakes. Let's say you're managing a startup with 100 employees. Let's say over 5 years you hire and fire sales directors. (46:20) Do you hide the mistake you made in your judgment of these hires or do you share these mistakes with your employees? You can probably guess Reed's answer to this one is to tell the truth. Reed provides a superb example from real life as the question is actually based on Reed's history at Pure Software. (46:36) Reed had actually hired and fired five sales directors over 5 years and believed it to be just an egregious mistake. He took the issue to the board and offered his resignation as a result of these mistakes, but they didn't accept it. The board appreciated his honesty and showed an even stronger belief in his leadership as a result of this honesty. (46:54) Reed felt better about being honest and about showing some of these vulnerabilities that he had. So this part about displaying vulnerabilities leads to a phenomenon known as a pratt fall effect. The prat fall effect is a psychological tendency in which people tend to like someone more after they make small relatable mistakes provided that person is otherwise competent. (47:12) And being transparent is just a great way to take advantage of the prat fall effect because you will inherently be more honest about your past mistakes. And chances are the people with whom you're discussing the error can actually resonate very well with that error, which helps you improve your connection with them. (47:29) Let's transition here and discuss some additional details on how we can release more control to a business's employees by removing unnecessary approvals. So, one quote from this chapter that I found powerful was, "Don't seek to please your boss, seek to do what is best for the company." This is an interesting quote because it doesn't apply to a large percentage of businesses simply because most companies are run where making your boss happy is a primary lever for furthering yourself inside of a company. (47:55) For instance, at Netflix, they aim for a culture where decision-m can be made throughout the entire company rather than just being concentrated at the very top. This allows everyone to just flex their creative muscles and innovate at high levels without the bureaucratic red tape that suppresses this at many companies. When Aaron was working on this book with Reed, she asked him when he'd have time to work on it and was very surprised that his schedule was pretty much wide open. (48:21) She writes, "Reed believes so deeply in dispersed decision-m that by his model, only a CEO who is not busy is really doing his job." This is fascinating to me because I see some parallels between this specific framework and how Stig runs Tip. Stig is pretty hands-off when it comes to me running the two communities that I'm involved in. (48:40) While I run things by Stig and he will definitely give his opinion, he's very fond of finishing it with all that said, I rely on your better judgment. Hastings says that if an employee comes to you with an idea that you might not necessarily agree with, ask yourself four questions. Number one, is the employee stunning? Number two, do you believe they have good judgment? Number three, can they make a positive impact? And number four, are they good enough to be on the team? If the answer is no to any of these, then you should fire them. And we'll be covering that in (49:08) some more depth shortly. But if the answer is yes to all of them, then that means you can put more responsibility on them to make the right decision. And even if you don't think it's the best idea, you should give them a leash to try it out. You'll probably be shocked by how successful their ideas are, if they are truly exceptional employees. (49:25) This framework is ideal for companies that require innovation to continue thriving or to even survive. If you're running a business that doesn't require much innovation, then I can see how this framework wouldn't necessarily be the best fit. However, with the increasing pace of innovation just everywhere, it's becoming increasingly rare to find companies that can just stay in business without requiring any innovation. (49:47) Let's have a look at the innovation cycle that Netflix have created. So, you start by analyzing an idea by doing the following. You farm for disscent or you socialize the idea. If you have a big idea, you test it out. And as the informed captain, you make your bet. And lastly, if it succeeds, celebrate. And if it fails, sunshine it. (50:07) So farming for descent means you actively seek contrary opinions to your idea. This is so important for Netflix that Reed made a fundamental rule. It is disloyal to Netflix when you disagree with an idea and do not express that disagreement. By withholding your opinion, you are implicitly choosing not to help the company. (50:26) This is an interesting rule because while I agree with it, it could also cloud the person's judgment with the idea. I was just reading a quote that I had from Jim Rogers who's one of the best international investors of all time. And this is from the book Money Masters of Our Time. The important thing in his view is to develop a way to think independently as he and George Soros did so profitably. (50:47) He says, "I have always found it much better just to sit and do your own reading. When I talked to people, it would muddy up my thinking. I was much more successful just sitting back and reading and figuring things out. Now, the idea here really depends on your personality. I think if you're a solo employee running, you know, a fund, then discussing your strategy with others who might have misaligned incentives is probably a mistake. (51:10) However, if you're a business like Netflix with just a ton of very well-aligned employees trying to move the company forward, it makes a ton of sense. Now, socializing an idea refers to sharing with others internally just to kind of gauge the temperature of that idea. It may reveal that you have overlooked things and maybe open up new opportunities or illuminate just a dead end that you thought might have had potential. Next up is testing ideas out. (51:35) And this is vital to a good business. If you have a good idea that you can test out for, let's say, $100,000, why try rolling out the entire thing for a million dollars? you're basically just increasing the risk on that idea if it hasn't yet been validated by the market. A great example of this was Starbucks's order and pay service. (51:54) So they created this mobile order and pay service specifically in Portland, Oregon to test out and gauge the reception and it was a massive success and today I see mobile orders at pretty much every single Starbucks that I've ever visited. The third part of this framework is about being the captain of your idea and making your bet. (52:11) So this refers to the fact that Netflix does not foster a culture where consensus is required to move forward with a decision. Sure, it's great to get the opinions of others, but ultimately the decision maker must either proceed with the decision or move on from it. And lastly, there's kind of this post-mortem of a decision. (52:27) If it's a win, celebrate it. And if it's a loss, sunshine it. The sunshining part is probably most crucial as that's where you're going to learn the most and will be able to pass on those learnings to your colleagues so they don't make the same mistakes that you did. It also builds trust and fosters innovation. When employees know they won't be punished for thinking of innovative ideas, it encourages them to continue innovating rather than doing what is safe but may not actually move the company forward. Now we move to the (52:52) final section of the book which aims to maximize talent density, cander, and then eliminate nearly all controls. To maximize talent density, Netflix does something called the keeper test. It's a very simple heristic that Netflix asked their managers. Which of my people, if they told me we're leaving for a similar job at another company, would I fight hard to keep. (53:14) The point here is to keep the ones that you would fight tooth and nail to stay around and let everyone else go. Another concept I enjoyed from this chapter is how Netflix doesn't think of themselves as a big family. This thinking can be rife with errors for specific businesses. The problem with thinking of a company like a family is that, you know, inside of a familial unit, mistakes and shortcomings are often accepted because they're just seen as being part of a family. (53:38) Nobody's perfect. However, in the cutthroat world of business, especially a hyperco competitive one like Netflix, they can't accept this. Otherwise, a company would never have grown to where it is today. Instead, Hastings has used the term team instead of family. On a team, underperformance is just unacceptable. A sports team can sign, trade, or release players as it sees fit to construct the best possible roster to help it win. (54:01) And this is what Netflix tries to do. Athletes on a professional sports team demand excellence. Train to win and know that effort isn't enough and understand that performance it really is everything. There's no place for just adequate performance at Netflix. However, if you do perform adequately, you will be offered a very generous severance package to facilitate your job search elsewhere. (54:23) The severance package provides about 4 to 9 months of salary. though it's very overly generous. Now why is it so generous? Reed believes that performance improvement plans pips are costly and timeconuming. Instead of taking months to complete these pips to save time and protect the company from lawsuits, Netflix eliminates them, pays its former employees a substantial severance package, and requires that they sign a document stating they won't sue Netflix. (54:47) Now, we've spoken a lot about feedback today because it's vital to Netflix's culture, but Hastings was very aware of how feedback is often just a one-way street. Managers provide feedback but very little is returned. In a culture of transparency, this just is not a good fit. So Reed Hastings came up with two workarounds. (55:04) So the first one was something called a 360 written report and the second one is called a live 360 dinner. So the written report might seem standard, but it's not. The written report requires the names of people providing the feedback and removes any numerical ratings. Netflix also doesn't link these reviews to raises or promotions. (55:23) These reports are open to anyone who wishes to help provide constructive feedback. Netflix utilizes the start, stop, continue method to provide feedback. So, the start, stop, continue method helps make sure that the feedback is genuine and honest. It can be easy to simply give your co-workers a high score and avoid any constructive feedback. (55:41) So, this method allows feedback to be constructive for the person who's receiving it. After all, since Netflix requires only rock stars, all employees need to know what they can do to maintain that rockstar designation. So, while these 360 written reports were good, there was one issue. So, Aaron Meyer writes, "Although the 360 written exercise established regular candid feedback, and many chose to discuss the feedback after the reports came out, it didn't ensure that those open discussions were actually happening. If (56:10) Chris Anne gives written 360 feedback to John Paul that his whispering in client meetings is hurting his sales, but John Paul never talks to Chris Anne or anyone else about the comment, it turns into the stuff of secrets. Reed's next process was put in place in order to help address that problem. So the solution was a live 360. (56:30) This would be a live discussion where Netflix workers would openly discuss feedback and level up together. So the framework for this was to keep the length to several hours and do it outside of the workplace. So you wanted to keep the group size small. For let's say a group of eight, it might take 3 hours. (56:44) For a group of 12, it might take 5 hours. And all feedback given during these live 360 should follow that 4A feedback guideline which I've already gone over. It should all be very actionable. You can use the start, stop, continue method, but 75% of the feedback should focus on the start and stop to make sure that time is spent efficiently. (57:03) And then to just set the tone of some of these types of meetings, you might want to get the person who can provide the harshest feedback to go first. One Netflix employee when speaking about her first live 360 said, "I hated that evening at the Waldorf, but without it eventually, I would have failed the Keeper test. I don't think I'd be at Netflix. (57:21) " While these live 360s are probably an experience that would take some time to get used to, it's probably worth it as long as you're open to improving and accepting feedback that will make you better at your job. The final chapter really resonates with me because it's all about taking responsibility as a way to achieve freedom. (57:38) The way to accomplish this is through context, not control. So, let me explain that. Aaron Mayor makes a great point that there's nothing wrong with leadership from control or from context. Some businesses that must focus on error prevention are best led through control. She gives the example of Exxon Mobile which has these safety protocols that it must follow closely to ensure the safety of everyone who works there. (58:01) In Exxon's case, control makes a lot of sense because they don't want people dying under their watch. Therefore, they have hundreds of safety protocols that must be followed very closely. But the problem with control is that it can stifle innovation. If you put clamps on what people can and cannot do in a creative setting, you're basically just handicapping their abilities to innovate. (58:22) So culture of control is not something that would have worked well at Netflix. Reed Hastings says that leading through context requires four key elements. High talent density, a focus on innovation rather than error prevention, work that is loosely coupled, and alignment. We've already spent so much time on the first two here. (58:39) So let's look closer at this concept of work that is loosely coupled. So coupling can be either tight or loose. For tight coupling, two things are directly connected and depend heavily on each other. If you change one, you almost always have to change the other. An example might be when you know two gears are locked together. (58:57) If one turns differently, the other one must also adjust. But for loose coupling, two things work together but have minimal dependency. You can change one without breaking the other. An example of loose coupling is, you know, a TV and a remote. You can replace the remote without having to rewire the TV. Tight coupling is closely tied to control. (59:16) A culture that requires a high degree of control will be tightly coupled. Any significant changes to the company's culture might be at odds with a tight coupling of that business. Netflix follows a loose coupling model where changes can occur throughout the system and do not require significant and disruptive changes to other parts of the company. (59:35) Now, let's talk about alignment because it's vital to making context work. In Netflix, they have a north star that they seek to achieve. How you get to this northstar is completely up to you. Now, I just love this concept of having a north star. On a personal note, a north star is something that helps me guide me to where I want to go. (59:52) In the richer, wiser, happier master class, we have discussed extensively what we would like written in our orbituary. If you have a northstar that's aligned with what you want in your obituary, it can then help you take the steps to actually get there. But two people can have a similar northstar and get to that northstar in completely different ways. (1:00:10) This is where context comes in at Netflix. So the book presents an excellent analogy for thinking about control and context through the lens of hierarchies. This is to think of context as a pyramid or as a tree. So in a pyramid, the bottom level has to ask the next level up for permission to do something creative. (1:00:31) In the movie industry, the bottom might be someone like a creative executive and that might go all the way up to the CEO. However, you might have multiple levels on this pyramid between those two positions and that means that significant decisions have to go through various layers to determine whether they can ever actually be implemented. (1:00:47) This is pretty normal in many businesses. But Netflix uses the tree analogy. So in this analogy, you can imagine just a tree growing out of the ground. The CEO is actually at the bottom of the tree and as the trees branch out, decisions are made by what's called informed captains. And the informed captain does not need to look anywhere other than inside themselves to make the decision. (1:01:09) I'll once again use myself as an example here. So Stig is very good at setting context for the host at TIP. He seeks excellent podcast episodes that empower investors and to foster genuine connections and help build TIP's brand. So I'm really able to make episodes about anything that I think is pertinent to helping our audience become better investors. (1:01:29) And I have free reign to really take this in whatever direction I want. I can discuss the pros and cons of discounted cash flow analysis or I can take a different approach and explore the concepts of financial independence. Alternatively, I can discuss Netflix's unique culture as I'm doing with you today. (1:01:45) One area that is crucial when it comes to leading through context is dealing with people who make mistakes that the CEO or management believes should not have been made. In this case, it's up to the manager to take responsibility for not sending the proper context. Reed suggests asking the following questions in this case. Are you articulate and inspiring enough in expressing your goals and strategy? Have you clearly explained all the assumptions and risks that will help your team to make good decisions? And are you sure your employees are highly (1:02:12) aligned on vision and objectives? He points out that managers must continuously ask themselves these questions when meeting their managers to ensure everyone is aligned correctly and on the same page. If you skip this crucial step, you risk having poor context, which can negatively impact efficiency and performance. (1:02:29) As long as you set the context, your informed captains can make the right decisions to help your business move towards its north star. That's all I have for you today on Netflix's novel culture that was created by Reed Hastings. Want to keep the conversation going? Follow me on Twitter at irrational KTS or connect with me on LinkedIn. (1:02:47) Just search for Kyle Griev. I'm always open to feedback, so feel free to share how I can make the podcast even better for you. Thanks for listening and see you next time. I think this is why hidden monopolies resonates with me so much because similar to that aspect of Scuttlebutt, it focuses heavily on the customers of a business rather than its competitive positioning against competitors. (1:03:08) And at the end of the day, it's the company's customers who are signing those checks which determine how attractive that investment can be. So why is customer loyalty so important? Because if you have loyal customers, your benefits are significantly higher compared to businesses that just don't have loyal customers. (1:03:23) This means that a company with loyal customers will have more repeat customers.