Modern Meditations: Sam Lessin
The Slow Ventures GP on philosophy, empowering metrics, AI hype, and John Wick.
Brought to you by Public
Lock that rate down. Right now, you can take advantage of some of the highest Treasury yields since the early 2000s on Public. It only takes a few minutes to create your account, purchase government-backed Treasury bills, and start generating a historic 5%+ yield on your cash.
For context, the national average savings account interest rate is just 0.25% APY. That means you can generate 20x more income than what you might get if you let your cash sit in a traditional savings account. Plus, once your Treasury bills reach maturity, they are automatically reinvested, so you have one less thing to think about.
Need access to your funds? No problem. You have the option to sell your Treasury bills on Public at any time—even before they reach maturity. So, it's the best of both worlds: the high yield of US Treasuries and the flexibility of a savings account. Get started today.
Actionable insights
If you only have a few minutes to spare, here’s what investors, operators, and founders should know about Sam Lessin’s meditations.
Lessons from science fiction. Science fiction has often served as inspiration for technologists. For Slow Ventures GP Sam Lessin, it’s the genre’s similarities with investing that are perhaps most interesting. Though leveraging very different mediums, both science fiction worldbuilders and venture investors advance a thesis for what the world might become.
The merits of metrics. For many years of his career, Sam considered metrics limiting. He believed that focusing too closely on certain figures “over-constrained” a problem, thwarting the ability to address its fundamentals. He has changed his opinion. Rather than a restriction, Sam now sees metrics as an opportunity for agency. Once given a certain number to focus on, team members are empowered to handle the matter as they deem best.
Delusion and honesty. By definition, founders are deluded – at least in Sam’s view. To change the world, disrupt incumbents, and remake industries, productive insanity is required. Founders have to balance that wild ambition with internal honesty. For Sam, the ideal entrepreneur understands how to balance being “strategically crazy” with deep introspection.
AI hype. As Silicon Valley rushes to capitalize AI startups, Sam is largely sitting back. Though he finds the technology compelling, the long-time VC sees it as a poor place to invest. Sam expects the value of this technology to primarily accrue to large, established players, with few new startups breaking through.
Winning big. Sam has logged remarkable successes in his investing career, backing companies like Slack, Robinhood, Airtable, Nextdoor, and Solana. Sam doesn’t see himself as a true investing craftsman despite his wins. In his view, the best investors are not only directionally correct but bold enough to double and triple down. That’s how you can hit a $10 billion return on even a single exceptional bet.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that an investor in need of capital must portray themself as a contrarian. It is a part of Silicon Valley’s dance, and there is good reason for it. By definition, venture capitalists, at least at the early stage, invest in companies nearly destined for failure. The tiny scrambling upstart rarely unseats the fat, steady incumbent, and to reckon with that fact, to skew bad odds, technology’s most adventurous financiers must make sure that when they hit, they hit big. Barring strokes of luck and acts of god, the only way to secure this kind of “grand slam” is by taking a position contrary to the herd.
There are different types of contrarianism, and some are rarer than others. The most common, unedifying version is the reflexive contrarian. This investor is less concerned with the fundamental merits of a particular investment or position, more so with where the rest of the market is positioned. Like a trader, this contrarian looks at the other side, calculates the odds, and picks their spot in hopes of generating either financial or social capital. As markets and moods change, they are happy to move, too.
Sam Lessin is not this type of contrarian. The Slow Ventures General Partner and former Facebook Vice President is what one might term a true contrarian. He does not need to try and counterposition against convention; he simply seems to think differently, to see the world and the tech industry from an uncommon vantage.
That talent has made him a very successful investor and a frequent firestarter of internet debates. As well as backing teams at Solana, Nextdoor, Ro, Robinhood, and Slack, he sparked uproar for calling Calendly links “the most raw/naked display of social capital dynamics in business” and has heralded “the end of venture capital as we know it.” Though he seems to take pleasure in going against the grain, through conversation, you quickly get the sense that his take on matters large and small comes from a place of real consideration, real thought.
In this respect, he exemplifies Warren Buffett’s dictum on contrarianism: “A business or stock is [not] an intelligent purchase simply because it is unpopular; a contrarian approach is just as foolish as a follow-the-crowd strategy. What's required is thinking rather than polling.”
Sam’s ability to authentically generate distinctive opinions is one I admire greatly. His willingness to share them, no matter how much mayhem they create, makes him an ideal subject for Modern Meditations.
What would you be doing if you didn’t work in tech?
If you asked twelve year old Sam what he would do, he’d probably say make films. Moviemaking is an awful business, but it would be really fun. I've been particularly attracted to science fiction as a genre – both in film and book form. In fact, when I worked at Facebook, I made every new PM read Snow Crash.
Ultimately, I think there are plenty of parallels between sci-fi and investing: you’re putting forward a thesis of how you think the world could change.
Which current or historical figure has most impacted your thinking?
I have two. My techie answer would be Claude Shannon. Information theory is one of the coolest topics ever — particularly when you consider how fundamental it is to how we live and think. I actually have a copy of the original Bell Labs manual where Shannon’s information theory paper was first published.
My less obvious answer would be Michel Foucault. At Harvard, I went through a program called “Social Studies,” which is a mixture of history and economics. It ended up being unbelievably useful for understanding the last 50 years of the internet. Philosophers like Foucault didn’t speak in technical terms, of course, but they considered many of the societal problems technology dramatically accelerated. Obviously, Foucault has some pretty dark theories about the world. But he seems mostly right?
What is the most significant thing you’ve changed your mind about over the past decade?
When I started working in tech, I focused on whatever I thought was the fundamental problem. I would get frustrated with people I saw as “number optimizers.” Those are the people that would spend their time saying, “Oh, we’re going to make X metric go up” or “We’re going to growth-hack Y metric.” In the past, I thought that obsessing over metrics over-constrained the problem.
I’ve changed my opinion. When you see how big companies run, you realize that for the majority of people metrics are extremely freeing. Without them, you’re forced to micromanage everything, which sucks for the people working on a project.
It turns out that if you just say, “Hey Bob, make Z metric go up,” Bob often feels way better about it from a creative standpoint.
That said, if you are going to be metrics-driven, make sure you pick the right ones. If you give Bob a certain metric to increase, he’s going to try like crazy to make it happen. You don’t want to find yourself with a paperclip optimization problem. Ultimately, focusing on metrics isn’t always the answer but the mental switch from seeing them as a prison to viewing them as freeing was a personal evolution.
What craft are you spending a lifetime honing?
The first thing that comes to mind is being a dad. We have three young children and figuring that out is a journey that changes a lot over time.
Generally speaking, I don't think of myself as a craftsman. What I like to do is figure out how to learn things really quickly – to cut to the chase of what actually matters.
In investing, I've been thematically right a few times, but I haven’t always won the biggest. There are times I’ve landed on the right narrative and been directionally correct. But I haven't made $10 billion on an investment and I think that's where you see true craftsmanship. Sure, some people get lucky. But the difference between the lucky and the good is that the really good investors go beyond.
As an example, I was one of the earliest in Solana, but others came in bigger, later. True craftsmanship, where you go from being directionally right to specifically right, is not just “let’s just do the first seed” — but doubling, tripling, and quadrupling down throughout.
What piece of art can you not stop thinking about?
John Wick 4. It’s going to be awesome. To be honest, I don’t think there’s any piece of art that I can't stop thinking about but I am, truly, very excited for John Wick 4.
What trait do you value most highly in others?
Honesty, with themselves and with others. Honesty with others is table stakes. The harder thing is to be honest with yourself and introspective about reality. I think most people are very self delusional. As an investor, I see this all the time. Founders are all crazy – almost by definition. If they were too introspective all the time, they probably wouldn't be doing what they're doing. You want someone that can be strategically crazy but deeply reflective and introspective in other ways. It's a fine line.
There are always exceptions, people who have been fabulously successful without having that internal honesty. I'll throw one name under the bus: Elon Musk. I think he’s a complete huckster. Even though I obviously missed out by not investing in him, he doesn't have that honesty trait that I care about.
I help keep myself honest by soliciting feedback. I am very into sharing shitty ideas at high velocity and relying on others to keep me intellectually in check. I think that’s a mental position worth cultivating: one where you’re willing to be wrong on almost anything, all the time, without stressing it. Trying to avoid being wrong is a path to being intellectually dishonest with yourself and others.
What is your most contrarian, high-conviction opinion?
I have a lot of pretty contrarian opinions. It's kind of my bread and butter. I pride myself on being contrarian. One at the moment is: I think AI is a shitty place to invest. You have to separate the fact that the technology is cool, from where the economic leverage is.
There is obviously leverage in AI, but it's almost certainly going to go to the big platforms. This is not a PC or internet-level disruption. This is an easy bolt on for the cloud providers, or for the companies who already have attention or data. There are going to be exceptions. Someone is going to build a $10 billion company out of AI. There will probably be a handful of them. But 99% of the value is going to the existing big players.
In that respect, AI might look more like the mobile revolution. Unlike the PC and internet waves, mobile didn’t produce any $500 billion or $1 trillion companies. Sure, you had a few new apps like Instagram, but they were immediately swallowed up by bigger players. Uber is probably one of the only examples of a purely mobile company that became big. And it’s not even that big – it’s a $70 billion business that took a ton of capital. AI companies will need even more.
What contemporary practice will our descendants judge us for most?
Eating meat, but I'm totally going to keep doing it.
What risk are we radically underestimating as a species? What are we overestimating?
I think we're underestimating contemporary AI and overestimating AGI. Today’s AI has everything you need to destroy people's trust in each other, and completely splinter society. We don't need anything more fancy than what we have today.
With AGI, everyone thinks we’re almost there. But we’re so far away. It's like the genome all over again. In the past, we thought we were so close to getting a copy of the genome. And then suddenly eighteen other things crop up, and all you’ve done is ended up further down the rabbit hole. I think AGI is a really cool intellectual, philosophical problem — but I don’t think we should view it as a practical one.
If you had the power to assign a book for everyone on earth to read and understand, which book would you choose?
The Lessons of History from Will and Ariel Durant. It’s so great, I felt sad I hadn’t read it sooner. If everyone read it, we’d have a civilization that was more honest about its history.
How will future historians describe our current era?
Imagine you wake up one morning, and all of a sudden you have superpowers. You can remember everything. You can speak to everyone on earth, for free. And you can process unbelievable amounts of data.
We’re living in an adolescent superhero movie where the protagonist gets superpowers and they don’t know how to handle it. There’s no Professor X around to guide us.
There was a period in the first half of the 18th century, where English people went crazy for gin. It was considered such a big deal that Parliament was forced to act. Thanks to legislation and rising grain prices, they eventually got a handle on it. I think that's what the internet and AI will be for us. It changes everything that we were biologically designed for, so we're completely fucked on it for a little while. But we'll figure it out.
What do you consider your greatest achievement so far?
Definitely, my kids.
From an investment perspective, I’m proudest of the times I backed companies that no one else would. When money is scarce, that’s where you feel like you can have a real impact as a VC. The last thing anyone wants on their tombstone is “market participant.” Over the years, we’ve had some great returns in crypto, backing companies like Solana. There are some others that you won’t have heard of yet, that I’m extremely bullish on.
I’m also proud of the companies I backed that might not have had the greatest financial return, but were culturally relevant. For example, I wrote the first and second check into Venmo – and then I got my dad to write the third check because no one would give them money. The financial return was fine, but it was a great cultural investment.
As a product builder, I’m proud of the ideas I pushed early that have since gone mainstream. I like it when I hear that I had an impact on people's lives, either with capital or ideas – to know that I helped them move forward in a cool direction. I definitely like being right, especially when everyone thinks I'm wrong.
The Generalist’s work is provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal, business, investment, or tax advice. You should always do your own research and consult advisors on these subjects. Our work may feature entities in which Generalist Capital, LLC or the author has invested.