Oct. 20, 2022

Humanizing product development | Adriel Frederick (Reddit, Lyft, Facebook)

The player is loading ...
Lenny's Podcast

Adriel Frederick is VP of Product Management at Reddit X, where he helps incubate and scale new products. He is a former Product Lead at Facebook, as well as a former PM and Director of Product at Lyft. In today’s episode, we focus on what it takes to become a better product leader. Adriel shares anecdotes from his time at Lyft and Facebook, insights about how to lead through tough times, why there isn’t an algorithmic solution to everything, why R&D teams need to be a part of the core mission, the tangible benefits of working on diverse teams, and his thoughts on the future of AI. He also introduces the concept of cannonballs, why you should focus on the marginal user, why organization and empathy are the most important PM skills, and so much more.

Where to find Adriel Frederick:

• Twitter: https://twitter.com/drellf

• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adrielfrederick/

Where to find Lenny:

• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com

• Twitter: https://twitter.com/lennysan

• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/

Thank you to our wonderful sponsors for making this episode possible:

• Linear: https://linear.app/lenny

• Flatfile: https://www.flatfile.com/lenny

• Eppo: https://www.geteppo.com/

Referenced:

• Jules Walter on Twitter: https://twitter.com/julesdwalt

• Jules Walter’s guest post on Lenny’s newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/product-sense

• Mark Zuckerberg on The Joe Rogan Experience: https://open.spotify.com/episode/51gxrAActH18RGhKNza598

• Sam Harris’s TED Talk on AI: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nt3edWLgIg

• Facebook’s 7 friends in 10 days: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/how-chamath-palihapitya-dramatically-improved-user-malinda-senanayake/

The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power: https://www.amazon.com/Prize-Epic-Quest-Money-Power/dp/1439110123/

The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nationshttps://www.amazon.com/New-Map-Energy-Climate-Nations/dp/0143111159/

Revisionist History podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/revisionist-history/id1119389968

Tuned In podcast: https://www.hpacademy.com/blog/tuned-in-high-performance-academy-podcast/

Mo on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/81134264

• Radiant Nuclear: https://www.radiantnuclear.com/

In this episode, we cover:

(00:40) Adriel’s background

(06:13) What he does at Reddit X

(07:27) Reddit X’s avatar marketplace and NFTs

(08:33) Why R&D teams need to be a part of the core mission

(11:12) What it’s like to be the first black PM at Facebook

(14:58) How to foster diversity

(19:40) Being a PM at controversial companies, and how to evaluate criticism

(28:25) Adriel’s most stressful time at Lyft

(30:35) The importance of operational control and what it means

(32:35) Why there isn’t always an algorithmic solution to everything

(37:47) Thoughts on AI

(42:42) Growth hacking and algorithms at Facebook

(48:18) Cannonballs in growth—fundamental changes in the product for optimization

(49:07) Facebook’s “7 friends in 10 days” push

(51:30) What is a marginal user, and what can you learn from their experience?

(56:06) How to think about doing experiments

(59:10) Why organization and empathy are the most important skills 

(1:02:59) Lightning round 

Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.



Get full access to Lenny's Newsletter at www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe

Transcript

Adriel Frederick:
There are probably, I call them techno utopians who would say, feed all data to the algorithm, give it an objective, and it will do the right thing. And I was like yeah, the reason that falls down is the algorithms don't understand long term effects often, nor do they understand how people might respond to it, nor do they understand your intent for the product, and I think it's really important for product managers to play that role. That is our job. When you are working on algorithmic heavy products, your job is figuring out what the algorithm should be responsible for, what people are responsible for, and the framework for making decisions.

Lenny:
Welcome to Lenny's Podcast. I'm Lenny, and my goal here is to help you get better at the craft of building and growing products. Today my guest is Adriel Fredrick. Adriel is a VP product at Reddit where he focuses on incubating and scaling new products within Reddit. Before that, he was director of product at Lyft where he led the marketplace teams and the pricing teams over the course of five years, and before that, he was an early PM at Facebook where he spent four years leading the user acquisition team. Adriel is one of these incredible product leaders who's way too under the radar because he doesn't spend all day on Twitter and instead is executing and building great products. One of the goals of this podcast is to highlight incredible product leaders who you may not be aware of. And Adriel is a great example.

Lenny:
In our chat we talk about the origins of growth hacking, how to get better as a product leader, ways to increase diversity at your company, what it was like to work on Facebook's growth team early on, the future of AI and a lot more. It was such a joy chatting with Adriel and I am really excited to share this episode with you. With that, I bring you Adriel Frederick.

Lenny:
This episode is brought to you by Linear. Let's be honest, the issue tracker that you're using today isn't very helpful. Why is it that it always seems to be working against you instead of working for you? Why does it feel like such a chore to use? Well, Linear is different. It's incredibly fast, beautifully designed, and it comes with powerful workflows that streamline your entire product development process from issue tracking all the way to managing product roadmaps. Linear is designed for the way modern software teams work. What users love about Linear are the powerful keyboard shortcuts, efficient GitHub integrations, cycles that actually create progress and built in project updates that keep everyone in sync. In short, it just works. Linear is the default tool of choice among startups and it powers a wide range of large established companies such as Versal, Retool and CashApp. See for yourself why product teams describe using Linear as magical. Visit linear.app/lenny to try Linear for free with your team and get 25% off when you upgrade. That's linear.app/lenny.

Lenny:
Hey Ashley, head of marketing at Flatfile. How many B2B SaaS companies would you estimate need to import CSV files from their customers?

Ashley:
At least 40%.

Lenny:
And how many of them screw that up and what happens when they do?

Ashley:
Well based on our data, about a third of people will consider switching to another company after just one bad experience during onboarding. So if your CSV importer doesn't work right, which is super common considering customer files are chop full of unexpected data and formatting, they'll leave.

Lenny:
I am 0% surprised to hear that. I've consistently seen that improving onboarding is one of the highest leverage opportunities for both signup conversion and increasing long term retention. Getting people to your aha moment more quickly and reliably is so incredibly important.

Ashley:
Totally. It's incredible to see how our customers like Square, Spotify and Zoro are able to grow their businesses on top of Flatfile. It's because flawless data onboarding acts like a catalyst to get them and their customers where they need to go faster.

Lenny:
If you'd like to learn more, get started, check out Flatfile at flat file.com/lenny.

Lenny:
Adriel, welcome to the podcast.

Adriel Frederick:
It's good to be here, Lenny. Thanks for having me, man.

Lenny:
It's absolutely my pleasure. I actually found out about you through a guy named Jules Walter who we both know.

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah.

Lenny:
He's a PM at YouTube and I actually asked him, who should I have on this podcast that is maybe a little bit under the radar that is just amazing and immediately he suggested you. And so I'm really excited to be chatting.

Adriel Frederick:
Man, that is hype praise coming from Jules. Jules is my boy. I love him. He's such a great guy. Awesome product manager and dedicated to the craft that I just like being in his presence.

Lenny:
Yeah, and we're going to get him on this podcast at some point. He's busy with some kind of secretive project that we can't talk about. He's scheduled, I could talk about Jules all day, but he actually has the 10th most popular guest post on my newsletter still. How about that?

Adriel Frederick:
Wow. Yep, he's awesome.

Lenny:
Anyway, enough about Jules. So to give listeners a little bit of context on yourself, can you just give us a 55 second overview of all of the wonderful things that you've done in your career?

Adriel Frederick:
Ooh, we'll do real fast. So big highlight about me is I'm originally from Trinidad and Tobago, an island in the Caribbean. Came to the US for college, double E, got seduced by consulting and did that for a couple years, worked in oil and gas, electric power, heavy industries, loved that stuff, but also liked writing code on the weekends for fun. So I thought I should move into tech and I did. Worked at Intuit and helped develop their first iPhone app, which was a thing back in the day. Worked at a startup growth team at Facebook for four years working on user acquisition, which was really fun and a good kind of strong formative experience. I had. Quick stint in biotech and then worked on marketplace at Lyft. So rider pricing, realtime driver incentives, matching rider with drivers, and then a lot of the operational tools that we use to manage our marketplace. And so that's a bit of my journey in maybe 45 seconds.

Lenny:
That was great. I don't have a timer for these, but that sounded right. So we're going to talk about a lot of the things that you've learned along the way at all those places. Can you also share what you do now?

Adriel Frederick:
Awesome. Yes. So I'm the Vice President of Product Management for Reddit X, which sounds like we're out launching balloons into space, but that's not exactly what we're doing. We're more of a team at Reddit that's thinking about the evolving the modes of interaction with Reddit. So content, temporality, the audience that you're talking to, if you think about it, Reddit is primarily about asynchronous conversations between anonymous strangers about shared interests. Sometimes other people find answers to their questions on Reddit, but we're looking into and on the X team, evolving that to look at problems like helping people communicate fast during easier about shared interests, perhaps changing who they're having conversations with. Maybe it's about something other than a shared interest or maybe they have something else in common that brings them together. Maybe bringing video, audio, and other media into being a part of the product and playing with permanence and things like that.

Lenny:
Whoa, I felt like you were going to go into a metaverse direction. Is there metaverse angles to this?

Adriel Frederick:
Not really. I think we look at that as a potential technology, but our primary focus is a lot more on, I see modes of interaction and platforms that are a lot more at scale today.

Lenny:
Got it. Is there anything coming out in the near future we should be looking forward to? I imagine you can't talk about too much of what you're actually working on more concretely.

Adriel Frederick:
I think there's a few things that we've done recently that have been fun. We have an avatar marketplace that we've been working on recently where creators have been able to make art, put it up for sale on Reddit and make that available for other folks to buy and use. And that's been performing amazingly well. The underlying technology behind it is NFTs and we thought that technology was really important to use because it gives a creator a public way of acknowledging their rights to a piece of content. And so they have some form of IP protection, especially in a marketplace where you're doing something like selling digital art, we felt like that was incredibly important. I think the technology behind NFTs has been used for some really nefarious things, but I think we're still in the infancy of using these technologies appropriately. There's a lot of terrible use and a lot of uses that are wastes, but I think there's some gems in there and we're hoping to find some of those.

Lenny:
Sweet. I will avoid getting pulled into a web3 rabbit hole here, but that is very cool. Something I wasn't planning to ask about, but I'm curious because I was just talking to some other guest about this topic is the idea of these kind of R and D ish teams at larger companies and companies that have been around for a while. I know you're relatively new there and that's kind of maybe a new thing, but I'm curious, is there anything you've learned about how to set up teams like this and investments like this, these kind of long term horizon bets R and D teams?

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah, I think it's really good coming to this from being on the other side of it. If you think about where I've been, I've been on growth and on marketplace, which is as far as you get from seeing where on the new stuff kind of team and what I've seen happen a lot is organ rejection, that this thing looks so different to the rest of the body and the rest of the organization that you get some form of rejection of the ideas entirely. So I think what I've learned is a few things.

Adriel Frederick:
First is the rest of the company needs to see what you're doing as being core and critical to the mission. It can't seem like these guys are just playing off in a corner on something that isn't related to what we are doing every day. Because I think that leads to some of the resentment because you can imagine any team internally is fighting for resources and they look at this group as having resources that they can't get. They're like, Oh we got to get rid of that because they're not helping us do what we are here to do. So you have to be part of the core mission, otherwise you're going to have problems culturally with that. So I think that's one thing.

Adriel Frederick:
The second is it has to be everyone's success. So if you end up doing something on one of these R and D teams, it shouldn't just be the R and D team that wins. Everyone should feel like they win. And that is kind of relates to that first goal I was talking about. I think the third is you have to set up the work that these teams are doing such that people don't believe all innovation is going to happen on that team. It can like, okay, we're just stuck with the operational stuff and they're getting to have all the fun. Other teams are still going to innovate, but maybe we're taking on something that other teams don't have capacity for, that the organization needs and it's part of the core mission. And so I think that's been a lot of what I think about when working on and setting up these teams is to make sure that we are part of the organization and everyone wants to hug us as being, yes, you are one of us not, you kind of need to go off in your little corner and behave.

Lenny:
Amazing. That is really helpful. So just to kind of recap, you want it to feel like it's core and critical to the company. You want it to feel like it's everyone's success. It's not just, oh, Adriel over there is doing great, but we're stuck with these terrible hard problems. And then this idea of not all innovation's going to be just coming from that. We can all innovate but they're just working on this one specific innovation.

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah.

Lenny:
Awesome. Okay, great. Another question I definitely wanted to ask you. So you said you were born in Trinidad and Tobago, not something that you hear very often in tech. I'm curious your background and your journey to what you do now, how does that impact the way you lead, the way you build product, the way you just think about your career broadly?

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah, it's not something that I really think about consciously, but it affects me every day and it's tough not to see it in retrospect. I was the first Black product manager at Facebook.

Lenny:
Oh wow.

Adriel Frederick:
And so it's tough for me to not see that having some effect on what was built or how things were built or on me. So it's pretty meaningful. But I think one of the ways to see how it effects things is actually just to understand a little bit about Trinidad. It's kind of its own little unique animal. So Trinidad is an island in the southern Caribbean all the way up bottom next to Venezuela. It's a really diverse place. So ethnically it's 35% Indian, like from East India, 35% African, 25% mixed, and that last 5% is everything under the sun. European, Chinese, Arab, et cetera.

Adriel Frederick:
And then for religions it's about 60% Christian, but then that's a lot of different forms of Christianity in that 60%, 20% Hindu, 7% Islam. The media diet is a mix of British and American TV. You have a really broad range of incomes, but then schools are a melting pot, so you don't have as much of the kind of class and income segregation with schools that you get in most of the west. And so when you have that kind of a melting pot of ethnicities, religions, media consumption and kind of socioeconomic status in one place, you learn a lot of them because in school you're mixing up with everyone. One of the jokes we have is Trinidad probably has the most public holidays of any country because you have to celebrate everyone's holidays from Diwali for Hindus, Eid al-Fitr, to Christmas, I have friends who were fasting for Ramadan. I know a lot of the names of Hindu gods and I always love shocking my coworkers with my knowledge of this stuff. So that gives me this really different perspective that shows up at work.

Adriel Frederick:
So I'll give you an example. Something I've noticed in almost everybody I worked with in tech, as we work on mobile devices, people make an assumption that one phone number plus one device tied to one person. And growing up in Trinidad, I just knew that wasn't true. Someone who is using a prepaid phone could have their number change all the time, so that one person could have multiple phone numbers just because they were using prepaid. You have phones for two sim cards, that was pretty common. And a phone is and definitely was a really expensive digital device. It's a computer. So it was often shared and people couldn't just have one for themselves.

Adriel Frederick:
So when I was working on user acquisition and designing registration for Facebook, that knowledge was incorporated into the design of the product in ways that I think other companies not caught onto yet. And I know for a fact that a lot of that thinking that went into designing how you think about a phone number and a device and it's use among one, it's how to say pairing with an individual, has been helpful for Facebook's growth back then and even after I left, I know that's still been providing benefit. So that's a simple example of how just being in that environment and soaking up information could help product design in a way that I think wouldn't have happened if I and others like me weren't there.

Lenny:
You said you were the first Black PM at Facebook. I didn't realize that. How many PMs were there at that point when you joined?

Adriel Frederick:
Oh man. I remember we all fit into this conference room called Canada and that was probably my second week. It was probably about maybe 30 of us in there.

Lenny:
Wow. Yeah. Is there anything that you learned from that experience about just how to help with diversity at a company? Did Facebook do this well? Have you seen other companies do this better? Is there something you could share there for folks that are trying to work on this?

Adriel Frederick:
Man, that's a tricky one. So there's two parts of that, what was that like for me? I think it went quickly from being a little bit of imposter syndrome, like that day when I was sitting in that group was like, Dude, I'm one of 30 people working on Facebook. What am I doing? I'll belong in this group. This is crazy. And then I recognized after talking to a lot of the other PMs and the engineers, it's like no, no, no, they want me for what I know from my perspective because they're really trying to grow this product globally. And being this guy from Trinidad working on growth with the perspectives I just mentioned was appreciated. I think I was lucky enough to be on the growth team and having leaders on that team really valued diversity. I think about some of the teams I was on and they were awesome. I joke about them sometimes.

Adriel Frederick:
I remember being on a team where I was a Black Trinidadian product manager with a female Israeli engineering manager, a female Brazilian tech lead, then the rest of the engineering and design team was from all over the world. We had Russians, Chinese, some folks from Slavic countries and it made designing products fun because a lot of times when you're building a product and you want to think and get into your head of your customer, you have to go out and talk because you don't necessarily get them really well. Man, we didn't need to on that team. We would just argue with each other. We would think about how our friends would use it, how our cousins would use it, and we are covering a broad swath of the world when we were arguing about how to design a product. But I think the original leadership of the growth team, I think starting with Chima but then followed up with Javi.

Adriel Frederick:
[inaudible 00:16:51] that and kept bringing in that diversity of, again, ethnicities, religions, cultures from all over the world so that you could actually build a product that way. And it just makes you so efficient because an argument that might take two weeks to resolve because you have to go recruit a panel of users and talk to them and figure out what's going on. We kind of knock out in 15 minutes just throwing it back and forth with each other. And I can't stress how much that's important for building products that you want people across the world to use. You got to have your teams look like the world, it just makes you so much faster. It's not perfect. You still have to go out and talk to folks because we still have our own kind of monocultures that form that we need to get out of. But it helps a lot.

Adriel Frederick:
To your second point about diversity and how to foster it, man, from the beginning of my career at McKinsey to today at Reddit, I've been in rooms where everyone's asking the same questions about how to fix it and here's what I've seen work. When you recognize that you get business value from it, then it all of a sudden becomes something that you look out for and you take care of. That's it. And there's definitely a lot more to it, but I think when it goes from frankly something people feel they need to do to be PC or for cultural reasons or because they're getting social pressure to do it to something that you really recognize concretely, no, I get value from this and you are willing to take the other steps to have a culture at your company that utilizes it, then it becomes easy because when you bring folks in from diverse backgrounds, they retain and that's always the number one step to growth as you will know.

Lenny:
Retention.

Adriel Frederick:
You have to retain them, you have to retain diverse talent. And so you have to have an environment that values it, cares about it and uses it and rewards it because it's part of the core system of the company. Then once you have that working, it becomes a lot easier to recruit because people see you valuing it and bringing it in and wanting it. And it's not just lip service that you're paying. That's been what I've seen to be true in all the conversations I've had on the topic.

Lenny:
That first piece is interesting that it answers the second piece, which is the point you made about how having a large diverse global group of employees early on, especially for a company that's trying to go global and international is so powerful, you just save all this time. You don't have to necessarily interview people that you don't already have.

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah, there's something that feels like the approach to not doing it that way feels colonial. It almost feels like we're a group of people sitting down in this tower in this country, in this relatively sterile environment and don't worry, we know exactly what you need and these are the parts of the world. It just doesn't work well. So doesn't feel right to me also.

Lenny:
Yeah. Awesome. Thanks for sharing all that, that was really helpful. There's another topic I definitely wanted to spend a little time on, which is this interesting trend that I noticed when I was looking at your LinkedIn and your background. You worked at Facebook, Lyft, Reddit, and interestingly, they're all very in the news full of controversy type places. People like to tear them down and show all the reasons that they're doing bad things to the world. And I imagine as a PM that's just a challenging place to be and the fact that you've been at three different places. I imagine you've learned some stuff about how to operate as a product leader at companies full of chaos and fires and bad PR and things like that. So is there anything to share about what you've learned there?

Adriel Frederick:
I think the biggest thing is that as a PM you are a leader. You have to provide a buffering or damping effect on the team, and that goes two weeks. Sometimes we're doing stuff that everybody thought was amazing, this is the best thing we've ever seen, and you kind of got to bring people back down to earth and go, Look, that was cool, but we got a lot more stuff to do. We are really not there on providing the value that we want to provide to people in the real world, so slow your role and recognize that there's a lot more to do. And then when it's terrible and the press is telling you that you're the worst thing to ever happen in the world, you kind of have to also go back and say, Guys, slow down. We're not anywhere near as bad as what they think you see and know what we're doing and they're going to misunderstand us sometimes. And so pull your team up at this point in time and keep charging forward with the mission.

Adriel Frederick:
I think some controversy is necessary and so I may be at a different point on that one. I don't think you're going to have any meaningful influence on the world without changing some pattern of behavior. And if you're changing a pattern of behavior, there's somebody who's invested in that pattern of behavior and that's going to create some conflict. The most fun news stories to read involve conflict, so that's always going to make for a great story and put you in the press. For Facebook, it was traditional media and other social networks were one side of the fight and then Facebook was the other side of the fight and then it became other tech companies now and that always makes for a great story. With Lyft it was taxis and unions, and so you have to recognize that you're always going to have some bit of a challenge.

Adriel Frederick:
Now, the really hard part about dealing with this is understanding what criticism is valid and how much of it is just because the source of power is being changed. So I'll give you an example. Let's say with Lyft, rich medallion owners in New York, I had no sympathy for them when they were complaining about trying to ban Lyft because when I was in New York City putting my hand out to get a cab, they were tried right by my Black ass. So I'm sorry, I'm like, I do not feel that much empathy for them, but I think there were really legitimate complaints about the structure of driver pay that were coming up and that were behind I think some of the complaints and some of the big stories in the press and some of the big kind of legal action that was taken. Paying for pickup time when a driver's on their way to pick you up or when they drive somebody far out of town and they have a dead head to come back into a place where they can work, that's real.

Adriel Frederick:
That's a real problem that I think we got called out for that we weren't paying enough attention to and it got us off our ass to go fix it. I don't think we've, and I say we, but I'm not there, I don't think the problem has been fully solved, but I think as a PM listening to this, you kind of have to find the truth behind it and try to find a way to work on that and not get too lost in responding to the specific criticism. And so to walk this line between kind of going, yeah, some of this controversy is just part of the game, versus like, nah, this is really valid. Dude, to figure out where that is, you got to do what is so cliche, but you got to stay close to your users. And so to give you an example of how I did that, when a lot of the complaints were happening about driving on Lyft, I drove, I would just pick up the car and I would get out and I'd go drive and I'm like, let me me go feel this for myself. Let me go see what these guys are talking about.

Adriel Frederick:
But I can give you a story about Rick. I still remember this drive I did with Rick in Berkeley. So I'm at home, I just get in the car, I turn on the app, it's time to go driving. I get up ping 15 minutes away and I'm thinking do this, I go do this right now, this guy might cancel on me, I'm not really getting paid for this, but maybe the ride is worth it. So I drive on over, I'm dodging traffic, pedestrians, drunk college kids, stop signs, I make my way over to Rick, he's coming out Chez Panisse, and he's about 80 years old, jumps in the car and then I pushed the button to figure out the destination and it says the ETA to the destination is two minutes. So I was like, "Hey Rick, you get this right? What's going on?"He's like, "Hey, I had a little bit too much to drink. I'm worried about breaking my hip, so that's why I called a ride." And so I went from wanting to curse Rick out for making me drive 15 minutes to come pick him up to feeling like, all right, no, no, no, there's real value I'm providing you in driving him just two minutes. But I recognized that wasn't embedded in the structure of paying. Rick would've been happy to pee for my 15 minutes to come pick him up, but we weren't one, giving drivers compensation for that, nor were we finding a way to pass that through into pricing for Rick. It's a much more difficult problem than it seems from that simple example. But it clued me into why drivers were complaining. So then I went, got it. I understand what we need to do. So when there were all the PR was going on about AB5 and prop 22, I was out driving and I was out sitting with the team trying to figure out how we're going to design our product that helps pay a driver for this.

Adriel Frederick:
It still keeps prices reasonable for users, doesn't create bad incentives where you end up with riders not getting picked up when they really need a ride because I didn't want Rick to break his hip. He still needs a price that makes him feel like it's okay for him to take that ride, and finding a way to balance this out is actually more complex than you might think. And that's what I stayed focused on whether prop 22 passed or not, I was ready for either side with a solution that was going to work for rider and drivers. That was the job. And so I think for PMs it was so easy to get sucked into the press and it's like, Yo, plan the work, work the plan, go back to your job. That's what you're supposed to do. Solve for customers in the middle of this. And then you figure out how to communicate it well.

Lenny:
What I love about that strategy is it also helps you see that it's not everybody that is worried about something. I think of Airbnb, like all hosts are pissed off about this one feature, there's going to be a revolt. And then to your point, you talk to some, like nobody even knows about it. Nobody cares. Everyone's fine.

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah.

Lenny:
And so this, there's so many benefits to what you're talking about doing, which is talking to customers, not just paying attention to the loud voices.

Adriel Frederick:
Absolutely. I also have empathy for reporters too. The story that with the headline, some Airbnb hosts are annoyed by the-

Lenny:
Right.

Adriel Frederick:
I mean, come on, this is not a great headline. I recognize that they have a job to do and sometimes they hold people accountable and sometimes they're getting people to read a story that maybe has a bit of hyperbole in it. And so they have to do their job and I have to do mine too.

Lenny:
Yep. This episode is brought to you by Eppo. Eppo is a next generation AB testing platform built by Airbnb alums for modern growth teams. Companies like Netlify, Tenfold and Cameo rely on Eppo to power their experiments. Wherever you work, running experiments is increasingly essential, but there are no commercial tools that integrate with a modern growth team stack. This leads to waste of time building internal tools or trying to run your experiments through a clunky marketing tool. When I was at Airbnb, one of the things that I loved about our experimentation platform was being able to easily slice results by device, by country, and by user stage. Eppo does all that and more, delivering results quickly, avoiding annoying prolonged analytics cycles, and helping you easily get to the root cause of any issue you discover. Eppo lets go beyond basic click through metrics, and instead use your north star metrics like activation, retention, subscriptions, and payments. And Eppo supports test on the front end, the back end, email marketing, and even machine learning clients. Check out Eppo at geteppo.com, get E-P-P-O.com and 10x your experiment velocity.

Lenny:
Well you shared this really heartfelt story about Rick, what's your most stressful memory of working at Lyft?

Adriel Frederick:
I think the most stressful time was when I had to unwind a bad product I did and actually make a better version of it. It was really a pricing algorithm change, it was something behind the scenes that nobody would really see, but this was a fairly big initiative that we worked on. We had experts in revenue management to work like PhDs and the people who wrote the textbook on the subject helping advise us on this. We build this model, you launch it and you're expecting this big change. And it goes poof, just does a little bit. And then we work at it and we work at it and we work at it and eventually we get it to be good and it works really well in three cities. We start rolling it out to more cities and it's a pain in the butt to roll it out to more cities because it's super complex.

Adriel Frederick:
And eventually we get it rolled out to maybe a hundred cities and then someone says, "All right, cool, I want to change prices." And oh, we struggled for months to implement price changes and man, the sentiment around this product was just rough for a while. And I remember being on our walk after a particularly bad week of this and trying to figure out what I was going to do about this thing. Do we stay the course? After a while, the answer was kind of simple even though it was emotionally difficult. And the answer was like, Yo, we got to rebuild it. There was no answer where we couldn't have a product like this. We needed some ability to be able to influence prices so that we could actually run an effective marketplace. The current solution didn't work. It wasn't as operationally flexible as we needed it to be because we didn't consider that requirement when we were building it and we got caught up in the kind of algorithmic complexity and sweet sauce of it.

Adriel Frederick:
And so I recognized that we just needed to own up to it, tell everyone we didn't get it right and we needed to come at it in a different approach that was actually more flexible operationally. And we did. I think the big learning, at least in that business was you have to think about operational requirements and operational control as a first order requirement. And I think when a lot of us were building product at a lot of the other consumer internet companies, you didn't have to think about operational control. You gave the algorithms an objective, you feed them some data, you let it run, you observe it and make sure it's doing nothing crazy and you tweak it, but you didn't need to have day to day operational and strategic control over the product and we just needed to snap our brains into being able to put people in the loop with the algorithm.

Lenny:
For folks that haven't worked at a company with this kind of on the ground ops team, can you just unpack what that is? Like operational control, what does that actually mean in practical terms?

Adriel Frederick:
Okay, so I'll give you an example. So back in the days Lyft is in 300 cities, probably roughly across the US, and in every single one of those cities you don't have exactly the same pricing. It's a little bit different. And so sometimes you might need to make a change seasonally because traffic gets worse or because fuel prices were different or because there's a new tax or because your competitor did something that you need to respond to and your algorithm cannot see this. It has zero visibility into this. And so you need a person in the loop to not only give that visibility but also to make a decision about how you respond. Because I think also, let's say you're in Chicago and there is a snowstorm and you need to change the way, let's say you need to update pricing so that it handles the increases in driver pay that you need to create to get people out during a snowstorm. You don't know exactly how you want to respond, every snow storm's different and a person has to make that judgment call and provide the right information to the product to be able to get to utilize it. Now algorithms were handing a lot of that and they could generally respond, but to be a lot more precise and needed a person to help handle that, to make that call.

Lenny:
Got it. Cool. Thanks for sharing that. So you're making this point about when you're at a company that has a big operations component and obviously the core central product team, you were sharing some learnings about what you've learned to work in that environment. So yeah, I just wanted to come back to that.

Adriel Frederick:
For sure. For sure.

Lenny:
So the main thing you said is just ops as a first order component when you're designing the software. Is that the big learning?

Adriel Frederick:
I think it's not just treating ops as the kind of first order requirement. The bigger picture for me was when I look across my career is the algorithms need people to help make judgment calls. And so I saw it really, I got a heavy lesson in it at Lyft, but when I look back I recognized it was there at Facebook too. It just wasn't in my domain. There is always a judgment call that has to be made between how often are there going to be ads versus how often are we going to show organic stories from your friends and family? How often are we going to show content that you might be interested in that's not quite in that group? How often might be want to show you things that help you find your friends or help other people find their friends? And that is a judgment call that varies for different markets and different situations and there may be algorithms behind the scene that are making that call for every single person in real time, but there still have to be people applying some strategic judgment to that.

Adriel Frederick:
And I wasn't in the position of needing to do that at Facebook, but once I saw how much I needed to do it at Lyft and I kind of looked back at history, I saw that it was there too. But I think there are too many people who don't see this and believe that there's an algorithmic solution to everything. I think as a product manager and especially product managers working on systems that are heavy on machine learning or operations research and optimization, to think about where you want a person to make a decision and where you want the machine to be off to the races and to think about that as a product design problem because there actually is actually a computer interface that you have to think about there. You need information about what's going on, let's say at Lyft, what's going on with my market? How long does it take for somebody to get picked up? How expensive am I versus the competition? What are my goals in this market and how am I performing today with that? Give somebody information, but also give them the tools to execute the right decisions without creating trouble. And that's like a product design problem, that's a first order product design problem like anything else that you have to think about. And I'm not privy to it, but I would guarantee that there are people thinking about those same kinds of problems at other companies.

Lenny:
That reminds me, I was just listening to Zuck on Joe Rogan and he made this point that when you look at a post, you can add a little emoji reaction and you can have a little angry emoji reaction. And he made the call that we're not going to use the angry emoji reaction in our algorithm in any way, we're just going to ignore that because naturally you'd be like, okay, people are angry, that's interesting. Let's show that because it's interesting to people. But he specifically wants to avoid anger and facilitating anger probably because a lot of the feedback that they've gotten.

Adriel Frederick:
Exactly. And I think they're probably, I'd call them techno utopians who would say feed all data to the algorithm, give it an objective and it will do the right thing. And I was like, yeah, the reason that falls down is the algorithms don't understand long term effects often, nor do they understand how people might respond to it, nor do they understand your intent for the product. And I think it's really important for product managers to play that role. That is our job. When you are working on algorithmic heavy products, your job is figuring out what the algorithm should be responsible for, what people are responsible for and the framework for making decisions.

Lenny:
Is there an example that comes to mind where you did that or didn't do that well or someone on your team should have? Just something to make it a little more concrete even.

Adriel Frederick:
Let's assume that you are a person working on pricing and you say like, great, I have an objective that is I would like to win market share in a region. And you left that to an algorithm to say I need you to optimize prices such that you maximize market share, but what would the algorithm do? Drop your prices to the floor. All the way to the floor, and then you don't make any money. Okay great. So then you say, okay, what's the next step of that? Let's give it a constraint. Let's set some target that we might want to have for how little profit that you might be willing to take. Okay, go do it now.

Adriel Frederick:
What if the guy on the other side is doing the exact same thing? Both of you will hit your constraints and then the game will stop. Okay great. So now it then flips to, oh we have to choose where we want to win. And so I think one of the things we did that I'm particularly proud of is building products that help people see and understand that game a little bit more and decide where they want to. I think the first few pieces of that are not shockers, but that conclusion at the end where you get to, oh wait, I need to create a tool that gives people information to then decide how to play this game is actually what's critical.

Lenny:
Interesting. So kind of what I'm hearing is a lot of the work is giving humans more information versus giving machine learning algorithms more information and there's a lot more leverage potentially there, giving humans more ways to tweak and dial.

Adriel Frederick:
Let me refine that a little bit more. It's more about giving people the information that they can use for decisions that they alone are good at and giving machines the power to amplify a person's intent. So one of the ways I like to think about it is all software in any form including ML, is just a tool like a screwdriver and you could try to put a flat head into a Phillips and maybe it'll work a little bit but it's better to use a Phillips screwdriver. And we're tool designers generally and especially in part development function, you figure out how much do I put into the tool and how much do I leave it up to the person and I give the person the ability to choose what they want to do. I give them a screwdriver, a flathead, a Phillips, a torques and you let them decide how they want to use the tool for the application at hand.

Adriel Frederick:
And so going from that analogy to concretely with ML you say look, machine learning's going to be amazing at optimizing for a given objective, but it's not going to understand the constraints or strategic choices I need to make. The constraints and strategic choices that we need in the external world are always going to have to be decided by a person. You make that incredibly easy for people to do and intuitive for them to do and then you go that algorithm can then amplify their effect by making decisions on hundreds of thousands, potentially millions of individual decisions to take that person's intent and amplify it given all the information that they can learn in that single context. So I think about it as designing an interface and make it an extension of yourself rather than a black box on its own that you just need more information to. Is that helpful?

Lenny:
Yeah, it makes me think about a neural link and what Elon's trying to do, I don't know if this is how he thinks about it, but the [inaudible 00:39:56] guy described it as Elon's worried that AI will take over at some point and so he wants to build a tool that connects straights our brain that can access the power of AI to kind of have a chance against just a rogue computer in the future.

Adriel Frederick:
Even then you've got to make sure the person is still in control. I hear that thought and I go, okay, you build the interface but then who's in control? Is the person still in control or did they become a slave to the machine and you just made a better interface to make them a slave?

Lenny:
Oh shit, we're in trouble.

Adriel Frederick:
I am not yet as worried about these visions of them taking over. Thus far and maybe I haven't fathomed what they can do, they still seem like tools that need our guidance to be useful. Even the most amazing, we've been seeing the image generation and I've seen the cutting edge like text generation stuff. They can fool you into believing that they're like near human capability, but there is a lack of decision making and judgment that I see coming out of them. I see them as being again, extensions and useful like text generation algorithms. A lot of them can't write a paper for you and that's what I think people are scared of because it still requires your judgment to decide. Now when you decide what the salient topics are in something you've read, let's say you're doing a book report, you've decided what the topics are, it can help you write the paper faster for sure, but it can't write the paper for you. It can't choose the topics that your background and history and interest find useful or compelling to tease out.

Lenny:
This isn't where I was expecting our conversation to go, but I'll add another thought here because it's interesting, the way I think about it is there's nothing magical about our brain and so if that's true, why isn't there a world where we could just completely simulate it? Sam Harris talks about this a lot that it feels like once you get close then it could just accelerate so quickly beyond human potential. It'll start from 20% as good as a human to 40, 50, 60 and then it goes to a million times better. It can move so fast beyond us very quickly. So I think that's where a lot of the, not that I'm afraid of this, but I feel like that's where a lot of fear comes from. It could just dolly coming out and co-pilot just like holy shit.

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah, our brains are good with linear thinking, not exponential. So I've heard that argument that like, yes, this is increasing exponentially and you can't fathom it. I'm like, yes, that is definitely potentially true. Completely see that possibility and recognize that I have that cognitive defect in being able to understand it and even if it's a remote possibility, we should be paying attention to it. So I'm all for paying attention to it given the, let's just say the high cost of a low probability outcome is still a high cost and so it's still worth paying attention to.

Lenny:
Yep. Okay, good tangent, I wanted to chat about your learnings at Facebook. We've been chatting about all these other places and especially about growth, just stuff you've learned about growth and growth hacking and I was thinking about this interesting world that Facebook is in slash Meta where on the one hand when they started, and I'm talking about growth hacking, like Facebook did a lot of growth hacks, emailed all of Harvard, he had all these interesting dating thing happening and got a lot of controversy and it was all these interesting tactics to start Facebook, but now people use Facebook to growth hack and grow like Zenga famously, a few other places. So all that to say, I'm curious, what have you learned about growth slash growth hacking from your time at Facebook and other places?

Adriel Frederick:
I think growth hacking as traditionally assigned, finding those small changes you can make to a product to give you outsized impact, that is absolutely valuable. Where I've seen people get lost is they assume that if you do that alone, it will work. You can grow your way into something successful if you just find those few hacks and patch them together. And there's something about that that I find disrespectful to the people using the product. It's like you assume that they have no intelligence and they won't catch on to what you're doing eventually. The old saying fool me once, fool me twice, it kind of applies. So if you don't have a product that's providing real fundamental value to people, you can be a one hit wonder and have a flash in the pan and growth hack your way into something that might last for a few months but people will catch on it and then it'll disappear.

Adriel Frederick:
So I think that stuff is helpful, especially early on to get your initial traction. But you got to have something people and want to continue using. And when I think back over the products we did that really moved the needle, they were all things that just focus on the marginal user and figured out to make the product easier. It's easy to get seduced to thinking that there is a fast secret way to do it. And I'm like, no. The vast majority of it was just hard work and finding ways to solve the real problems. And what are those real problems? They were pretty damn simple but we just grinded on them for a long time it just stayed on it. One, make it easy to find the product. Number two, make it easy to get into the product. Three, stupid easy to find your friends. And then once you did that you were off the races and those were the things we were doing over and over again.

Adriel Frederick:
I think another big piece of it is reminding people that there's something interesting here and building the habit of coming back to the product and it was also part of it, but we just grinded on those few things over and over again. And some of the really big wins weren't hacks, they were just paying attention to little details. I'll give you an example. I remember sitting one day thinking about how to help people find their first few friends and we would do this thing where we'd have recommendations, if you could get one or two friends, you'd be off to the races and we could find you more people that were in that same friend group. So I thought about the way the people you may know algorithm worked, I get one or two friends, they would find your mutual friends and then would help find you more of those kinds of folks.

Adriel Frederick:
And I was like, you know what that does is it spirals you down one friend group but it doesn't get you all your other friends. I remember just looking at somebody using the product and recognizing that we were only taking them down this one path. So I was like, man, how do I see all your friend groups? And so we had this idea that we came up with that would do it. I'm not going to let that one out. And it was like game changer, like absolute game changer. Especially for users helping them find those first few friends in a few different friend groups, which then meant we could get you down one group and another and just continue building out that graph just by using recommendations. Because we had a great tool for seating it and that was not easy. That was not a hack. That was hard work.

Adriel Frederick:
I also remember one of my favorites is something Tom Allison did, Tom Allison I think now is responsible for the Facebook App, and when he was working on the engineering manager for one of those teams, there was a change we wanted to do to one of these algorithms and it was a bitch, it wasn't a hack and it was going to take a few months to pull off and Tom just hit it in a corner. He just let everybody know that we were really going to change the way this product worked. He had a really smart guy working on it, [inaudible 00:47:03], and they just hid off in a corner, rebuilt the product in the way it needed to be built to make it easier for us to operate it and scale it and then put it up there. I know of course they crushed it and they were incredibly modest about it, but it was not a hack. And it came from them looking at this deep problem of finding that thing that mattered and then saying, we need to make a fundamental change to make it easier to recommend friends to folks and just grinding on it.And so one of the things I recommend for people when they're thinking about growth for their product is figure out what the core actions are and then grind on them. Think about removing them, removing friction and some of them. But just keep staying at it and as you grind on it, you'll do little hacks. You got to figure out how to put the right text in the button and get it above the fold, create the right copy. All the things that we traditionally associate with growth marketing, you got to do those things. But to me that's stable stakes and just doing good product communication with your user, but then you got to think about this person who can't yet figure out your product and it's trying to take this action and making it stupid easy for them. I got a million more examples of that one, but that's the game. It's not just finding some trick to [inaudible 00:48:18] a site.

Lenny:
I love that. The way I think about this that I've heard well described is just there's no silver bullets, just many lead bullets.

Adriel Frederick:
Yes. And a few massive cannonballs every now and then. Every now and then there's some cannonballs.

Lenny:
What's an example of a cannonball as you think about that?

Adriel Frederick:
Sign up with phone numbers, which is now par for the course, that was a cannonball. Getting SMSs delivered to people all over the world. Doesn't sound glamorous, really hard to do. That was cannonball. Good friend recommendations, another big one. There's more, I'm not going to go into all of them. What I mean by cannonball here is that there was sometimes some really big fundamental changes you needed to make to the product to make these things work.

Lenny:
Got it. So you think about that in terms of investment, not necessarily the impact-

Adriel Frederick:
Investment.

Lenny:
Impact plus massive investment. Cool. I have so many questions along these lines. Okay, I'm going to pick a couple. One is Facebook is famous for this kind of activation milestone of getting 10 friends or seven friends, whatever it was, like there's some number friends you got to get and the good things will happen. Were you involved in that? Do you have any insight into how that came to be? Is that real?

Adriel Frederick:
That decision came before me. I saw it. I understood the data and I worked on this problem. What I thought was brilliant about that was not the metric, it was the designing it to be understood and communicated. What I think is fabulous about it is that you are talking about it now because it's memorable and it got people to take the right actions to start chasing the goal. There was literally nothing magic about the number or the date, but basically it was a way of saying like get people as many friends as possible as fast as possible. And if you said that generically to someone, they'd be like, Yeah, I kind of get it, but yeah, I'll go do that.

Adriel Frederick:
When you create a discreet number and a discreet time and there is a concrete goal to chase and there's a number and a graph that everybody can look at and see, we are going to go make that thing go up, the organizational effect of that is galvanizing. So what I thought was brilliant about it is, and as I've heard the stories, this is all secondhand. There was a lot of debate about what the number should be, what timeframe should be, and at some point Zuck just said 10 friends, 14 days, go. And it just got people past the academic debate of like, All right, got it. As many friends as possible, the fast as possible, let's go.

Lenny:
I love that. That's exactly how I've always thought about it, that it's not the number exactly, it's just a rallying cry that everyone can just get around and just go, doesn't need to be this perfect number that has incredibly correlated link to retention or anything like that. It's just like, this is good enough. It's directionally I'll just try to do this. Let's just go.

Lenny:
There are downsides of it. Some of them are really funny. I remember looking at a graph of retention versus number of friends and what actually dropped with 11 or 12 versus 10 because somewhere in code, somebody had done something with 10 friends is the limit to help improve retention. And it shut off at 11 or 12 and it came back up, but I was like, You know what, that's fine. That's completely fine. Because if we didn't get that organizational momentum, that graph would've just been lower. So I could take the kink where it drops, it's fine.

Lenny:
You also mentioned this term marginal user and I thought it'd be helpful just to unpack what you mean by that.

Adriel Frederick:
For me, it's a person who is just on the cusp of taking the action you want to take. I'll give you the concrete example. When working on registration, I would try to find a country where we had a lot of growth, but for some reason our conversion rates were terrible. So we had a lot of traffic, but conversion rates were terrible. And I was like, okay, that's the marginal user. This is the person who is just on the cusp of coming in, wants to come in as you can see by the traffic, but we can't get them in. So why? And when you go to the extreme and you find that person who's the worst, and most likely it was a person on a feature phone on edge, trying to access Facebook in a country that was far from one of our data centers. And then you go like, All right, what's wrong with this person's experience?

Adriel Frederick:
Let's go check it out. And you're like, Oh, you see everything that's wrong with the product. So then it gives you your list. Okay, the language is probably wrong. We didn't get that. Are we detecting the country properly so that we can actually get their phone number formatted properly? Probably not. Oh man, it's far from the data center, so that connection's slow and they're on edge. Oh, that's terrible. And you just see and package up all those, it gives everything that's wrong and they can just start figuring out what to do with them. Something I caution people against though is don't use the data alone to figure out who the marginal user is. It'll give you a clue where they are and what might be wrong, will give you some hints. It's not going to give you the answer. You have to go watch them to find the answer.

Adriel Frederick:
Because I think in a lot of these data driven places, somebody will say, Great, just create a funnel. Figure out all this drop offs of the steps in the funnel, Look at it yourself and then figure out what might be wrong and go fix those things. But what I think happens is often there's a problem that's orthogonal to that funnel that you can't see from looking at the data. And you have to go look at the person and talk to them. I remember one example we had is was watching someone sign up up for the very first time for Facebook in India and they're about to put their name in it and they ask them, So what name are you going to put in? They're like, Okay, my full legal name. All right, cool. Does anybody in the real world call you that? No. And I was like, Oh dude, we're screwed.

Adriel Frederick:
If you send out friend requests, it's not going to get accepted because nobody knows who this person is, and then the reverse, if they find you, they don't know who this is. And so it was like, Yo, you're going to look at some problem deeper in the funnel, yo, what's going on my accept rate? And then you're going to go tear I that little mini funnel and then recognize that you had a problem that happened ways back. And so when you thinking about that marginal user, you got to go out and look at them, talk to them, watch them use it, try to get into their shoes yourself as much as you can, and then make the call from there from what you do. But that data isn't going to tell you, it's going to give you the answer. I'll just tell you how bad.

Lenny:
Wow. I love that connects back to the same advice you gave in all these other contexts of just talked to people. Don't rely on just this aggregate data.

Adriel Frederick:
Now, don't get me wrong, I've built the experimentation platform at Lyft. I'm a guy who loves data and loves using it and looking at experiments. I think it's just too easy to try to sit in your laptop, pull up a funnel or pull up some charts or look at an experiment results and think that's going to give you the clue to what to build. It's a compliment. It's not the only thing. And I watch people fall into that trap of assuming, especially when you're working at companies with lots and lots of data, you fall into the trap of thinking that you're swimming in answers because you have all this data and just need to tease it up. Just go out and talk, you'll find it faster.

Lenny:
I really like this advice of when you're trying to optimize things, focus on your marginal user. And there's two parts to it that you talked about. There's the next most likely person to sign up and then there's the worst case and going to like them to see all the things that are wrong and that be your north star, make this person successful and make so many more people successful. Is that how you think about it?

Adriel Frederick:
Yeah, I do. So marginal user I think is the fun word to think about because you think of families, think about children, the person who's right on the cusp. But I like to go to the worst. It shows me everything that's wrong, but the marginal user thinking helps you prioritize what thing to do next. So that person, that example marginal user I was talking about, they're on a future phone with edge too. There's a lot wrong that's just going to be tough. But I might look at that experience and go, All right, let's say somebody was perfectly equipped the best phone and a great internet connection in that country. What would still be wrong? I was like, Oh, language is still wrong and the latency to their phone is actually still pretty high to our data centers, which is why it's taking a long time to sign up. I could still fix that. So that's how you can see the worst case to tell you everything, but then decide what is marginal by removing a few of the barriers that you know are difficult for you to attack and then see which ones are closer to being resolved.

Lenny:
Awesome. I wanted to ask one more question about experiments at Facebook back in the day. So we talked about there's all these lead bullets or some cannonballs, maybe a silver bullet somewhere. In your experience, what percentage of experiments end up being impactful and successful?

Adriel Frederick:
Okay, that's a difficult and different question. So I'd say probably 60% successful, 40% you should turn off. But within that 60%, I think there's a hidden cost to the experiment, which is that you're futzing around with something small. You could have used your time on something bigger and more meaningful, but you're futzing around with a bunch of these small ones. Some of the small things were incredibly meaningful and you needed to do them. So I think this is actually, it's almost like the same problem about, I don't know which of my marketing is best. You have to try a bunch of stuff and then figure out what was terrible. You don't know before you do it, before you do the experiment, what the impact is. But sometimes what I've seen is let's take a bunch of them as a program and let's say you have over the course of three months, you're going to experiment with 10 things.

Adriel Frederick:
You might have been able to push on two really big ones. And what I've seen is there's a laziness, and this is broadly, this is not just at Facebook, it's broader. There's a laziness that can creep in where you're just finding a lot of little things because they're easier to come up with and they're easier to design and think about. It's easier to build, it's easier to talk to your boss and say, remove the number by 0.02% and you feel good about doing those few small things. And so it creates this incremental thinking where you're just trying to do a bunch of small things that just don't meaningfully add up to something big.

Adriel Frederick:
I think what's healthy is having a good portfolio because basically you say like look, I'm going to have, using our analogies from before, I'm going to have some cannonballs. I'm going to work on a couple cannonballs and I'm going to have a bunch of lead bullets. And maybe it's 80% of your energies on those big cannonballs, 20% on the lead bullets, and having a constraint like that forces you to choose the fewer experiments that are actually probably the really good ones and it's not just a whole bunch of crap that you're trying out.

Lenny:
And is that actually how you divide up those bets broadly? Is that like a rule thumb you have or is that just numbers you're putting out there?

Adriel Frederick:
Those are just numbers I'm putting out there. It's always going to be a gut call based on where you are. I think depending on the stage your product is at, it should be a different set, a different bite. Very early on when you're building a product, you kind of know what the big things are. You've talked enough people, you have enough, just go build it. You should not be playing around with experiments. It might be a hundred percent cannonballs. Just go knock the big pieces out, don't worry, it'll work.

Adriel Frederick:
Also, the cost of experimentation is time. So if you are experimenting on every little thing and waiting for the data to come in and then also screwing up some other part of the product because your experiment's on 50 50, it's just not worth it. Just bang the big things out. As you get more mature, the balance needs to switch in the portfolio. Probably not that many big cannonballs anymore, probably just one. And there's probably a lot of the refinements that you need to work on. And by then you have this scale that the time to experiment isn't as high and the cost of experimenting is lower. So it's fine. It's good to do with that way.

Lenny:
Okay. One last question before we get to our very exciting lightning round. So you've moved from IC a while back at this point to now VP of Product at one of the most trafficked sites on the internet. And I'm curious, what skills have you grown or had to grow most as you've gotten more senior in your career?

Adriel Frederick:
Organization design and empathy.

Lenny:
Whoa, I love that.

Adriel Frederick:
Oh dude, for a long time, and I think this is, I and many others had this idea that the people who are the smartest are the ones who rise. The people who are the most technically competent are the ones who rise. People who are the best individual contributors are the ones who rise. And somewhere along the way I had that idea disabused of me and I recognize the job's different. It's more about building a great team, creating the right incentives for the team on blocking them, guiding them, and helping them work efficiently. Those mattered way more than anything else. And I guess one of the ways I slowly recognize it is as I started going up in my career, I recognized that if I wanted to have more impact, I couldn't do everything myself. There was just more that needed to be done. And in today's world, you can't do anything meaningful by yourself.

Adriel Frederick:
You need a lot of people to do stuff with you. There's nothing meaningful that gets done by any single person, even though people like to make you think that in their hustle porn that they post online. So it may be just a step back and think about what helped me be productive in environments when I was productive and how I could do that for others because then that would just naturally help me. And so there were simple things like clear goals, helping people feel safe and understand that you got their back. Making it easy to do their jobs. But my job is to make sure the processes for you doing your work and the people who you have to interact with are just buttery smooth and everything just runs easily. And so that was lesson one. It was just designing a good organization, culture, skills, people, processes, et cetera, all necessary.

Adriel Frederick:
That's one piece. The second is empathy. Where a step of that was just like you have to have that as a PM for your user, but I think it's different to having it for a peer and another function or somebody else on one of your teams. And the hardest part of it is they say getting in somebody else's shoes. The hardest part is taking my own shoes off. Basically going, Yo, okay, I came into this, there's something I wanted, I wanted to get rid of that. Now just talk to this person and try to understand what's going on with them, what they care about for their life goals and motivations, what they're scared of, what they're excited by, how you might be able to help them. Once I was able to get out my shoes, clear my mind, try to get into their head, then I could be like, All right, cool, let's find a nice happy middle ground in the middle here. But that's something that works for both of us together.

Adriel Frederick:
And sometimes for me it was, Yo, what I care about, I'm good. I'm going to let you do your thing. I've gotten into your shoes, I need to leave you alone. Like you're good. Other times I'm ready to push. But I think once I have the empathy, I'm then able to think about what we as an organization broadly want to achieve and try to put the two shoes on at the same time and find something that works for both of us. So what's that common objective? And I think that's how I try to approach almost every conversation is, especially being a guy who looks different, talks different, comes from somewhere else, first thought they might have is and unconsciously might be like this guy isn't one of us. But then once I make it clear to them that we have the same objectives, we're about the same thing and I want to know what's going on with you so that I can help you achieve what you want to achieve. Dude, problems go away.

Lenny:
Okay. I know I have to let you go and you have to get back to real work. So we've reached our very exciting lightning round, the final part of our little chat.

Adriel Frederick:
Darn right.

Lenny:
Basically I'm just going to ask you five quick questions, whatever comes to mind, share it and we'll go through a pretty quick.

Adriel Frederick:
All right.

Lenny:
Sound good? Okay. What are two, three books that you recommend most to people?

Adriel Frederick:
The Prize and probably now The New Map by Daniel Yergin. They are books about the history of oil and the geopolitics of oil. It is a fascinating way to understand the world. It's like the best books I've seen to understand geopolitics and how they work and why they work. It does it through the lens of oil, which explains way more than you might think. And so this comes from the early part of my career working in energy.

Lenny:
I will link that into show notes. I've not heard of that one before. What's a favorite podcast of yours other than this one?

Adriel Frederick:
Oh, of course, you took the easy one away. Revisionist History with Malcolm Gladwell, just gives you a different look into things. I'm also a huge car nerd, like deep into modifying and tweaking and tuning cars. So there's this esoteric one called HP Academy that I'm into, but most of your listeners will not beat to that.

Lenny:
Wow. Very out there and awesome. And I think there's a new season of her Revisionist History coming out soon.

Adriel Frederick:
Yep.

Lenny:
Okay. Favorite recent movie or TV show?

Adriel Frederick:
Last night I discovered Mo on Netflix.

Lenny:
Mo.

Adriel Frederick:
And it's short for Mohammed. It is semi autobiographical about a Palestinian refugee living in Houston, his journey to seek asylum and live and work and date in this multicultural environment, he speaks Arabic, Spanish and English fluently. Funny as hell, but also dramatic. It is fabulous.

Lenny:
Amazing. Okay. Wow, these are all very unique. I love it. In a different direction, what's a favorite interview question that you like to ask?

Adriel Frederick:
These days at work, I have to go through the standard interview questions, but when I got to play and sometimes when I feel like playing a little bit more, I'll see something like, teach me something you don't think I know. It's a really good test of what you've heard me say a lot, empathy. I heard [inaudible 01:04:58] use it once and I kept trying it to see what it was good for and it helps you understand how good somebody is at reading you, how much knowledge they have and their ability to communicate and share knowledge. So it was like it actually could test a lot of things at once and a lot of times you learn something, it's awesome.

Lenny:
Okay, final question. Who else in the industry would you say that you most respect as a thought leader?

Adriel Frederick:
Well look on the discipline, [inaudible 01:05:24], discipline of product management, definitely [inaudible 01:05:26]. I think just in terms of technology development, it's the team behind Radiant Nuclear.

Lenny:
What is that?

Adriel Frederick:
While taking a break between jobs, I'm studying climate change and energy because of my background and I just basically became convinced that nuclear is a bigger answer than we're giving a credit for. A lot of the barriers are political, not technical, but the solution they're working on I think is a technical solution to some of the political problems we have around nuclear, which seems really interesting and I am really hoping that they pull off what they're trying to do.

Lenny:
Wow. I love how out there all these recommendations are. These are great. Adriel, I am so appreciative of you making time for this. I'm also really appreciative to Jules for connecting us. This was amazing. You're awesome. Two last questions. Where can folks find you online if they want to reach out, learn more, and then how can listeners be useful to you?

Adriel Frederick:
Awesome. Before I jump into that, thank you for having me on here. It's just good to reflect about life and work for a little bit and hopefully share some insightful stuff with the folks who listen to your podcast. So thanks for having me. You can find me on LinkedIn, Adriel Fredrick, there might be one other. Pretty sure I'm the only one. And then how can listeners be useful to me? Number one, keep listening to this podcast because if everybody keeps listening to the insights that you are teasing out, a lot of things will work well and not necessarily me. Another thing they could do to be useful to me is find somebody that's just different to you and talk to them for five minutes. That's it. I think that will come back to me eventually.

Lenny:
Love these and really flattered, really appreciate it. Thank you for being here.

Adriel Frederick:
Thanks for having me, Lenny, take it easy.

Lenny:
Thank you so much for listening. If you found this valuable, you can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review as that really helps other listeners find the podcast. You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at lennyspodcast.com. See you in the next episode.