Revolutionizing Customer Success with Agency’s Elias Torres

31m
Today on No Priors, Sarah sits down with Elias Torres, CEO and founder of Agency, an AI agent for customer success teams. Elias shares his journey from growing up in Nicaragua to founding several companies, leading engineering at HubSpot, and selling Drift for $1B. He also discusses his work consulting with OpenAI in 2022, which deepened his understanding of the business opportunity LLMs presented and inspired him to start Agency. In this episode, Elias offers a unique perspective on the future of AI and customer success, explaining how current software has fallen short and his vision for a new generation where customers have direct relationships, spend less time on tasks, and have software working invisibly on their behalf. They also discuss the evolving landscape of hiring as teams shrink, and Elias reveals his ambitious plan to reach $1B in revenue with fewer than 100 employees.

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Show notes:
0:00 Introduction
0:34 Elias’ journey to entrepreneurship
2:36 Growing HubSpot to IPO and founding Drift
6:19 Consulting with OpenAI, learning about LLMs, and diving into AI
9:35 Founding Agency to focus on customer success and AI-driven solutions
11:40 What will a customer experience look like in 5 years?
15:48 Company building in an era of AI, as a 5th time founder
18:32 Reducing headcount while raising the bar on hiring
20:35 Key challenges in building Agency and crafting a standout product
23:06 Addressing software flaws and transitioning to an era of intuitive, self-operating solutions
26:27 Timeline for the next-gen software revolution + the power of building from first principles

Press play and read along

Runtime: 31m

Transcript

Speaker 1 Hello and welcome to No Priors. Today we've got Elias Torres with us, Repeat Entrepreneur and CEO of Agency, which is working on enabling every company to make their customers successful.

Speaker 1 Elias is no stranger to entrepreneurship.

Speaker 1 He's founded four companies, led engineering at the Juggernaut SaaS Company Hotspot, and most recently sold his last business, Drift, for more than a billion dollars to Vista Equity Partners.

Speaker 1 Elias, welcome.

Speaker 2 It's a pleasure. It's been a dream of mine to be here with you.

Speaker 1 You're doing company number five. Can you just talk a little bit about who you are getting to this place?

Speaker 2 Yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 2 The journey,

Speaker 2 I think for me is what's interesting bits about it. I'm from Nicaragua.
So I came first generation, could not speak English, right?

Speaker 2 Imagine me at the back of a McDonald's, you know, reading the printouts to founder number five three times with Sequoia, you know, and out great outcomes, IPOs, et cetera, it's been an incredible journey, right?

Speaker 2 I worked at IBM for 10 years and then I wanted to be an entrepreneur. I just could not be inside of IBM.
I needed to be free. I needed to have a chance of huge impact.
And so here I am. I'm in Boston.

Speaker 2 That's another interesting bit, right? I'm not in the valley. I came to Florida.
from Nicaragua and then I had a shot at IBM in the Northeast and I've been here ever since.

Speaker 1 You know, one tidbit I will insert because I feel like the tech community has somehow discovered that smart kids who end up in tech often do math competitions growing up.

Speaker 1 This has been going on a long time, guys. Oh, yes, you were one of the math competition kids.

Speaker 2 I was a math competition. I wish I would be like an Andrej or something like that, right? But, but yes, we're talking, let's say, 1992, 91.

Speaker 2 This is Nicaragua, but I get picked somehow to represent the school nationally at these competitions, right?

Speaker 2 I place third in the country it's not a great accomplishment but the point you're making is that math is fundamental to this and the ability and the thinking is applicable and when i came to to the united states i'm in a low-income town in tampa florida low-income school public school and somehow again i don't speak english but somehow the math teacher says do you want to be in math competitions me you alpha theta and i'm like

Speaker 2 sure i'll join the the nerd club and i'm like just had a blast there. I did have a lot of trouble with the word problems, but I was able to do well in the other ones.

Speaker 1 I want to talk a little bit about the last two journeys because HubSpot is a company that everybody knows that is like an important public enterprise SaaS business now.

Speaker 1 And you've done leadership at different scales. Like coming out of even the success of HubSpot, where you were leading engineering, like why go start Drift?

Speaker 2 I think my whole life has been

Speaker 2 a

Speaker 2 journey of not having any clue what's, what's ahead of what's possible.

Speaker 2 Like, I mean, that math competition I had in Nicaragua to go to compete in Mexico representing my country and meeting kids from all over Latin America was like mind-boggling.

Speaker 2 Then I come to the United States, then I'm in Florida, and then you start like, you know, I don't know, like MIT and stuff like that. So there's always like more.

Speaker 2 It's just been fun not knowing what's ahead until you get there. And taking HubSpot public,

Speaker 2 when Brian Holligan came to me and bought my company, Performable, so he's like, our goal is to take it public in the next year or two.

Speaker 2 I had no clue what taking a company public meant. I mean, we had 30 million in revenue, 200 employees when he said those things.

Speaker 2 Brian says, you're in charge. You and David can do anything you want with product and engineering.

Speaker 2 We got to go public. And so in my mind, it's like, okay, we're going public, but I have no idea what going public means.

Speaker 2 That naivete is great right we go public a billion dollar company three years everything was great we went from 30 to 130 million

Speaker 2 i said if if brian can do this

Speaker 1 why can i do this too right it should be easy to go from zero to a hundred million and that's why i left hubspot really i was so naive thinking that was going to be easy well you were not uh so naive that it didn't work right so your last company drift it sold for more than a billion dollars and you could do it um And yet you told me you think of it in some ways as a failure, which is like a very odd, uncommon point of view on that sort of outcome.

Speaker 2 Why would you describe it that way? Look, I'm very happy with my life. I had almost no food growing up, right?

Speaker 2 So like to me, every year has been a better year than the one before for me ever since growing up. So like I have zero complaints.
But when we left HubSpot,

Speaker 2 you know,

Speaker 2 to start a company, I left it at a billion dollars and I saw it grow to 30, right?

Speaker 2 And so,

Speaker 2 as I'm building drift, the oh, the goalpost moved, I say the goalpost moved, right? So, the day that we sold drift to me was a very sad day. I, it did feel like a failure, it was super anticlimactic.

Speaker 2 It was literally, I was at home in bed, tired. It was like 11 o'clock.
We've been waiting to sign the papers, you know, power of attorney.

Speaker 2 I just got a text from one of the lawyers that it's done, you know.

Speaker 2 And that day I felt nothing. Right.
And the next day it felt even weirder and weirder. It took a long time for all those things to clear up what it meant to sell for a billion in cash, right?

Speaker 2 A company that we grew to 100 million in revenue, eight years of hard work. But I lost the dream.
of building a $30 billion company or taking a company public, right?

Speaker 2 And so I felt at that time I was so tired,

Speaker 2 worked straight 45 years of my life, you know, and I was like never taking vacations really.

Speaker 2 And I was worried that I didn't have it in me at the time. If you asked me, are you going to start something else? I would be like, I'm done.

Speaker 2 It's like, I'm like, how could I start over?

Speaker 2 Yeah. I know, I know.
So I was like, I'm done. It's like, people are like, I want to start a company.
I go, that's stupid. Don't do it.

Speaker 1 So you took a minute. You're kind of hanging out for a while.
Then you started doing some consulting for OpenAI and like helping their customers. Like, where did the energy come from again?

Speaker 2 As Pat says, like, I have like, I'm like, I have the energy of a teenager uh i was i was a little tired you're aging in reverse it's a little weird alias it's it's a little weird uh you too it's like wait we're lucky what happened was i was tired i was in i was november of 2022 what happened chat gpt chat gpt and the launch of conviction everybody this is very important

Speaker 2 at the same time yeah it was it's october yeah october no you you knew you you you stole the thunder so i was in brazil actually technically that was the first real vacation i took post acquisition because i worked i stayed at drift for almost two years and uh i was there and in the i i i kite surf that's one of my hobbies i have hobbies now you know nice it poor immigrant does not have hobbies but now i have hobbies for the first time i felt like i get up in the morning we'll kite surf in the afternoon we just have breakfast we feel the ocean breeze just four of us four friends and we were just like kite surfing and i'm explaining ChatGPT to them, right?

Speaker 2 And I'm like, this is insane. I don't even know how to explain ChatGPT.
I don't know what an LLM is, October 2022, technically speaking. I knew BERT, I knew Word of Act, I knew Transformers.

Speaker 2 I don't know this. And I'm like explaining to them why this is different.

Speaker 2 So that's the first moment.

Speaker 2 I had the ChatGPT moment where I was like, you know what? Again, I missed the boat. What happens? Why wasn't I working for Open AI? What wasn't like, is this it? Is this game over?

Speaker 2 Many of, many of us ask ourselves that question. People are still asking themselves this question.

Speaker 2 And so that was the first thing that happened, Catalyst.

Speaker 2 I've already gone through that journey of a post-exit founder, but I'm already coming to the conclusion. The only thing I know how to do is build and I want to learn.
And so I get introduced to OpenAI

Speaker 2 just to do like one of those networking calls. And they tell me.
We're drowning. Customers are asking us for help.
We're two, three hundred people.

Speaker 2 can't help them implement their own solutions. We don't have the bandwidth, so we're looking for people.
We're trying the big firms, um,

Speaker 2 and it was an idea they were giving me. And I said, I want to do that.

Speaker 2 I want to do that. I don't know anything about it.
I've never used the GPT API, but here I go. And so they were like, Are you sure? They look me up and they're like, Is this what you want to do?

Speaker 2 And I said, Yes.

Speaker 2 And so I did consulting for them. And I started from the bottom.
My people were like, who are you? I was doing some support tickets for them, et cetera, explanations.

Speaker 2 But then I started getting contracts like the NBA, you know, Ticketmaster. I'm in Dubai talking to customers,

Speaker 2 Red Bull, and I'm just having a blast with a small team

Speaker 2 implementing agents, LLM apps.

Speaker 2 And Clayville, one of the customers too.

Speaker 2 And it's, my whole world changes, right? It's like, this is the dream as an engineer to build solutions that are this intelligent.

Speaker 1 Okay, so you come around to the idea that you have this like capability that you're actually really inspired about. How did you end up thinking about customer success?

Speaker 1 Like, can you sort of give us a line about, you know, what agency is and then landing on that idea?

Speaker 2 Yeah, I mean, agency is really

Speaker 2 the lessons learned in all my prior four companies, right? Startups, we, we know how to like build products. I I mean, we know how to raise money, hire people, build products.
We know how to sell it.

Speaker 2 Sometimes we know how to market them, but I don't believe we know how to take care of our customers, especially in the B2B.

Speaker 2 I think managing customers, both at scale, when you have tens of thousands or hundred thousands of customers, it's, I don't think anybody has the answer to do that, right?

Speaker 2 This is something that happened in the past 10 years.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 we're struggling as companies, right?

Speaker 1 How'd you end up focusing on CS?

Speaker 2 Yeah, I ended up focusing on CS because

Speaker 2 one of the customers that I started, I'm a good friend with Andrew. So Andrew used to work with me, a performable Andrew Bilecki, CEO of ClayBio, Boston-based company, amazing success IPO.

Speaker 2 I did some consulting for him. And one of the ideas was how do we help scale the

Speaker 2 customer success organization, right?

Speaker 2 At Drift, I built in 2019 the first AI SDR.

Speaker 2 But now I was helping,

Speaker 2 how do we help customers at scale? Because he has hundreds of thousands of customers.

Speaker 2 So when I started solving that problem, which was a little bit of applying my experience between marketing and LLMs, is when I realized the amount of help that we can provide as a company to help scale

Speaker 2 benchmarking, reporting, insight generation, idea creation to the customers that they have, right, at scale. Because it's something that humans struggle, right, to do that in a very detailed manner.

Speaker 2 And so that's kind of where the idea was born, right? It was like, wow, I can do this for all B2B companies.

Speaker 1 What do you think CS looks like five years from now? It's not been a focus of a lot of AI applications to date. One would argue that investors and CEOs often don't think of it as like super strategic.

Speaker 1 You can be better or worse at it, but does it become much more powerful somehow?

Speaker 2 I think CS is everything. I think the word CS maybe is the misnomer.
I think that that's where people are getting lost. I think,

Speaker 2 no offense, right? But, you know, VCs are like saying, oh, here's CS, here's a category. How many software companies are in it? What's the TAM? How much is the revenue? Add up the valuations.

Speaker 2 Is that something that we're interested in? I'm not necessarily interested in CS, right?

Speaker 2 I'm interested in customers. I've been in the pre-sales

Speaker 2 world for like 15 years. I know that like the back of my head.
I'm a Tran True

Speaker 2 customer obsessed founder, right? All my companies, I'm the one who services the customers. And when I went to HubSpot, I went from 20 customers to 5,000.
And I was crying because I couldn't.

Speaker 2 They call me and they would say, Elias, help me get on the screen and help me fix the product. Help HubSpot, fix HubSpot for me.
And I would say, no, I'm sorry. I have 5,000 customers.

Speaker 2 So the moments where I stop servicing my customers, like if they were the only one, my soul gets crushed because because the company shifted, right? And so that's what I want to solve today, right?

Speaker 2 So that it's not CS, what I'm trying to solve is

Speaker 2 how do we service the customer? How do we give

Speaker 2 the power, the agency to the customer itself? I'll give you an example. Like, I like to have personal relationships with the business that I work with.
Ah, yes.

Speaker 1 This very much.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Right.
Like, for example,

Speaker 2 I have a guy that in the winter, I have to store a car too. Right.
And so I can text, he has a warehouse, he saves space for me, and I can text him.

Speaker 2 He lives down the street, and he can come and pick me up. We could take the car, drop off, and he's super flexible to me, to my needs, right? I'm in charge of the relationship.
Yes. I go to my barber.

Speaker 2 I just, I just booked two, two haircuts on Saturday for my son and I. My second son says, can I come? And I said, you text Mel and you go and say, like, see if we can squeeze this in.

Speaker 2 So he texts Mel and says, okay, I'll squeeze you in the two slots, right? And so I like that experience.

Speaker 2 Can we have that experience with the large, with like a service now today?

Speaker 2 Can you text, you know, you know, it's like, we want, I want to be able to provide businesses of the future the ability to put the customer in charge.

Speaker 1 Yes, at scale too.

Speaker 2 At scale. With hundreds of thousands of customers.

Speaker 2 That's the essence.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I was going to say,

Speaker 1 this is actually something I believe very deeply about venture, which is like, I do not want a bunch of could be conceivably very talented people like between me and the founders that I, you know, owe support and partnership and work to because I don't have any of the context.

Speaker 1 I don't care as much as I do. And I think it's like,

Speaker 1 you know, not a great experience when there's like four layers of people who are passing around some task for a founder. But it does mean venture doesn't scale if you're doing it in a particular way.

Speaker 1 And I guess that's true of many customer relationships with like, you know, an owner of the product.

Speaker 2 I think you and I are alike, right?

Speaker 2 I want to disrupt how startups work i want i want to break the the status quo right which is what you just said you don't want four four layers of people between you and the founders right and so the same is with me at agency there's only going to be one email address it's alias at agency that ink it's very dangerous man everyone will email I will always like take care of all the customers, right?

Speaker 2 That's the company of the future. Because at Drift, I had 800 people, like 250 in the customer organization.

Speaker 2 That cannot happen again because it wasn't working.

Speaker 2 Right.

Speaker 2 That number of people didn't necessarily solve the problem. Right.

Speaker 2 And that's something that every other company is struggling with. And so I want to maintain that relationship.
And so the only solution out of this is by leveraging AI.

Speaker 1 I want to talk a little bit about like how you think about company building now,

Speaker 1 both in the era of AI and then also like fifth time around. You don't want 800 people.
You say, like, I think I can get to a billion.

Speaker 1 You know, know is that is that value is that revenue uh i would think revenue yeah that's a better one value is too it's too easy yeah okay the goalpost move it's a billion in revenue that's a good goal it's a billion in revenue with a hundred people how do you not hire the other 700 people We have to question everything.

Speaker 2 I'm a big fan of Elon, right? I think I heard him speak about like, you know, he just thinks about building a rocket and he says, well, how much does it cost to build a rocket? Right.

Speaker 2 And instead of just saying like, how much the parts cost at the existing marketplaces, right?

Speaker 2 It's like, well i'll just build the part right it's like it's a metal i think the same way right is say i have to produce something that has high value and that is very rare right there's two ways to make a lot of money right a billion dollars you either have something that a lot of small businesses can acquire for free right with very little marketing and cost or you sell something that is very very expensive right to enterprise customers And so I'm picking to choose something to solve very, very, very big problems for big enterprises.

Speaker 2 Second,

Speaker 2 I think I want to challenge, like Paul Graham says, do things that don't scale. I think that that's game over for that statement, right? I think now we only have to do things that scale.

Speaker 2 I already know all the things that I could do before that not scaling. I could always throw a body at something and be like, okay, let's.

Speaker 2 You go do that. I think you said it in a tweet recently, right? And an X, and you're like, can we just hire an intern, right?

Speaker 2 And then I think Pranab or somebody says, well, we can throw Devin at it, right? It's like, that's the thinking that we need to have. Right.

Speaker 2 Do not do things that don't scale. I already know that they will work for a year and then they're going to break in a year.
I now have to solve the things right from the first place. Right.

Speaker 2 What are the fundamentals? Right. Customer intelligence, you know, customer communication.

Speaker 2 Understand the problem deeply, get pricing right, get pricing better, build the right relationships with the right customers. Who's going to take you there? Right.

Speaker 2 You know, I'm building a company at a much faster speed. It's only been a few months, but I'm already much further ahead than Drift was almost three years in, right?

Speaker 2 When it comes to understanding my passion, what I'm trying to solve, how big the problem is, the market, my position as a company, the team, the engineering organization, the infrastructure, the branding, the marketing.

Speaker 2 I'm moving at a speed that I just never felt before. And it just feels natural, partly because of AI and partly because of my experience.

Speaker 1 What advice do you have for people who, I think, like, one reaction is like, oh man, if you can get to a billion dollars in revenue with only a hundred employees, it's like, I want to be part of the hundred employees, right?

Speaker 1 Like, what makes those people valuable and special in their work? Like, how do I end up in that last hundred folks?

Speaker 2 You're asking for something very deep right here, but I'm going to say, I'm going to say as much as I can because I really don't care anymore. I just get deep.

Speaker 2 Look, as a founder, I see founders all the time doing this. By the way, I was part of three incubators this time around.
I've never been part of an incubator until now, until my fifth time.

Speaker 2 And I got to spend a lot of time with a lot of first-time founders. And it was amazing because he gave me a little refresher of what I was like, you know, the first time around.

Speaker 2 And so I see a lot of founders of

Speaker 2 keep making so many mistakes in hiring. I've made them all too.
right? Too many times you get excited, you meet somebody and they say the things like, I want to work for for you.

Speaker 2 I'm going to make your company get to a billion dollars in revenue, you know, 25% faster than you think. You know, they say all these right things, and they're available, and they give these pitches.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 I no longer buy any of those things. I've hired every executive, every C-level suite that you can think of multiple times.

Speaker 2 I have hired from the best companies. I have hired people that went from zero to 200 million in revenue in four years.

Speaker 2 I've hired them all. I know them all.
I'm much more disciplined in my interview process. And no one joins agency until they have work for me as a contractor.
I'm going to put you to work.

Speaker 2 And I am going to be real exactly how I am with everybody in the company today. And if you don't deliver at a level that is

Speaker 2 world-class in that one or two-week timeframe, there will be no room for you, right? And I'm focusing mostly on engineers right now. Everybody has to have a clear role

Speaker 2 of what they do. It's very difficult to be part of this 100, right?

Speaker 1 What's on the other side then? What do you think is going to be the hardest thing about building agency?

Speaker 2 Building agency is always, always about product. It's always about change management.
Everybody thinks that, oh, I'll just put an LLM on it, generate some stuff, summarizes a meeting, and

Speaker 2 ba, ba, here's the next CRM, here's the next customer platform, right? No, no, no, no. It's like

Speaker 2 being in the weeds with a building the product is the most,

Speaker 2 it's the hardest part. Like LLMs are solving one tiny part of the problem.
We still have to build the products

Speaker 2 that solve a specific problem, the solution, right?

Speaker 2 If everything was just passing it to the LLM and it does it, but we have to transform organizations from very large organizations struggling. There's a lot of chaos

Speaker 2 in the customer and the post-sales organizations that we need somebody to go in and understand them, talk to them, nurture them, see what's broken, and slowly transition into the future, right?

Speaker 2 It's not something I've talked to CEOs of public companies and no CEO comes to me and says, I want to change everything right now. Just throw it all away.
Let's swap it.

Speaker 2 And so most companies don't understand that change management is the hardest part to get through. Building a product that people can use, gaining trust from an LLM.
I mean, people are

Speaker 2 people like, it's okay if you get the summary of a meeting from an LLM. Like, nobody cares, right? It's like, whatever.
It's great. Look at this.
I can read faster.

Speaker 2 But to trust the output of an LLM to send an email to a million-dollar customer, it's like, you know, when you present that to a CSM, they're like looking at it and they're like, they're questioning every word.

Speaker 2 You have no idea. They're questioning every word in that email.
Yet when they're writing their emails, they're not questioning their words, right? And they're just as bad. And so it's like,

Speaker 2 we have a long road ahead for this. This is a problem that

Speaker 2 there's not one solution to it, right? This is not one LLM or one foundational LM is going to be able to fix.

Speaker 2 I don't know. AGI will solve everything, but whatever.
I don't, it's not, I'm not worried about that. I'm really worried about

Speaker 2 what is it that I want to build? as I listen to the customers, right? To my customers, and

Speaker 2 how do I take them where I want to take them, right? And then do they want to come along in the journey with me?

Speaker 1 I want to take the last few minutes and talk a little bit just about the software industry because, you know, for somebody who's been building software for like 30 years, you're pretty anti-software now.

Speaker 1 Like, as somebody who's quite dismissive of like, oh, I've just been putting shit in databases and taking it back out. Like, explain yourself.
Like, what, you know,

Speaker 1 why do you, why do you think that's so irrelevant?

Speaker 2 People are like, oh my God, like AGI is going to enslave humanity. What's going to happen?

Speaker 2 I'm telling people, they're enslaved today.

Speaker 2 We make fun of it, but like, who wants to be a sales rep?

Speaker 2 You know, that after you finish a meeting, goes and puts like a task to remind you, to remind the customer to do something else to put, I mean, like, it's just like, I just think it's utterly ridiculous that we just...

Speaker 2 Like the emperor has no clothes. Nobody wants to say anything about this.
Our software is shit. Everything is ridiculous.
I mean, there's no good software out there. Uber is great, right?

Speaker 2 Because you need to go somewhere. You call it, shows up, and it takes you there, right? That's good.

Speaker 1 That's the one software product Elias likes. Okay, Uber.

Speaker 2 I just want people to realize that why do you want to enter all this information in all the systems? And if it doesn't do anything for you, for example,

Speaker 2 that agency. Should I install CRM? Should I install Salesforce?

Speaker 2 Why would I buy Salesforce? It's a monstrosity of a software that I would have to hire somebody else to go configure.

Speaker 2 And then I don't know how to use it. And then that person that is going to configure it for me, do you think that person knows how to do business better than I do or knows my customers?

Speaker 2 They don't. And so they're going to tell me some

Speaker 2 antiquated way of working with my customers and what to do. And then I have to hire people to put stuff into the software.

Speaker 2 And then I have to have people to manage those people to monitor what they put into that software. At what point did we talk to the customer?

Speaker 2 I mean, like, I'm telling CEOs, you should just throw away your instance of Salesforce, just throw it in the trash. Like, it's like,

Speaker 2 what is it doing for you? We're just so busy configuring it and sending data to it, and we don't ever use the data that is in it. And so,

Speaker 2 software has to transform to do things for me

Speaker 2 without me even asking. Like, we are in the era where, like,

Speaker 2 hey,

Speaker 2 Elias, you're going to speak in San Francisco. There is a calendar of a jet blue flight on my entry and my calendar.
It should read it.

Speaker 2 Let me look at everybody that always asks you to grab coffee in San Francisco and send them a message. I'm in town and I'm in town from this day to this day.

Speaker 2 And this is, and lock out, you know, two hour slots every day and say, if you want, meet me here. I'm going to be at this coffee shop and let's catch up.

Speaker 2 Prioritize that, my customers that I'm trying to chase and send them two weeks in advance messages that are repeating every three days, right?

Speaker 2 Why can't we have software that does that? That sells for you. That sounds useful.
Yeah. That sounds useful, right?

Speaker 2 It's a that's the level that we want. Like, you know, it's like when you can text someone, it just gets done.
Like, that's that's wealth, right? And so we want software to

Speaker 2 make us feel wealthy, right?

Speaker 1 Yes, I don't, I do not feel wealthy from my software today.

Speaker 2 Exactly, right?

Speaker 1 How, how long does it take for this to happen? Like, for this disruption disruption of software that enslaves us to

Speaker 1 free us?

Speaker 1 And does anybody get to stick around?

Speaker 1 Does anybody from the old world of the databases

Speaker 1 holding our data and creating these workflows get to sustain?

Speaker 2 I think there's a lot of infrastructure that is needed, right? So

Speaker 2 there's good news for that, right?

Speaker 2 We're going to need places to store this information. We need the internet, right? I'm talking at the solution level.
The old wrappers of databases are are going to be dead.

Speaker 2 Like there's just no way they survive unless they adapt quickly.

Speaker 2 What we're missing is more people like us at agency where we're thinking fundamentally from first principles and saying, let's build this new type of software.

Speaker 2 That's the word that we need to spread, right? It's stop like, I see all these new CRMs coming up, right?

Speaker 2 And they're like, it's still the same views, the same tables, except they have like AI computer table. We need to fundamentally think software that is almost invisible, right?

Speaker 2 I think that we need more people thinking this way and not just like, oh, let me just improve, you know, workday or let me just improve, you know, Augusto or this.

Speaker 2 And just, we need to be thinking, how do we really solve the customer problems from a different perspective? Laziness, don't bother them. Don't tell them what you're going to do.
Just do it.

Speaker 2 Get verification, right? Ask for suggestions. Learn.
with the customer how they're like what they like and create that personalized experience we need more people to do that.

Speaker 2 Once we have examples of that software, which is what we're doing at agency, I think more people are going to see and say, okay, that's where we should go.

Speaker 2 And because of the LLMs, a lot of people are going to be able to build things much faster. But, and then the big rebuilding will begin.

Speaker 1 I hope that happens. I hope I get to be part of some of these companies.
I, you know, what you said that really speaks to me. I work very hard.
I have some talents. I'm a very disorganized person.

Speaker 1 And I felt bad about this for like most of the last two decades. But

Speaker 1 I think if you were more ambitious about the expectations you'd had for software, you might say, like, why am I filing shit anyway and labeling shit anyway?

Speaker 1 And like trying to force all of this into some project management or database framework or whatever for coordination purposes. Like it feels like we should be able to accept humans as they are.

Speaker 1 Cause I'm like, all right, I am not that operationally disciplined, but there are a lot of people who don't want to be organizing their data all the time, just like me.

Speaker 1 And so maybe that'll be the better way.

Speaker 2 I think you have incredible strengths, right? To be where you are, to have achieved what you have achieved is because you're special and talented, right?

Speaker 2 The good thing is that you don't need organizational skills as a necessity.

Speaker 2 It's not a need for you to become more successful than you are today, right? The good thing is that that's exactly what AI and the computer should solve for you.

Speaker 2 I hate doing, I challenge everything. If I don't need to do something, like for example, when I first came here,

Speaker 2 I'm terrible at writing in English, right?

Speaker 2 And then every time before Chat GPT came out, I would be like,

Speaker 2 maybe I should learn that skill. I mean, you know, you know that theory about the buckets that there's like five levels of something, mediocre

Speaker 2 and then really bad and then really good, that it takes like 10 years to shift buckets, you know, to be like

Speaker 2 to go from average to like, you know, top. And so it says, focus on the things where you only have to move one level up to be better.

Speaker 2 Don't try to go from the one that you're the poorest to the top, right? And so wherever you're not good at, just let it be. And the beauty is organization, like

Speaker 2 AI should tell you everything, my questions, what to ask me, prepare context, and you shouldn't lift a finger. But you can do your magic interviewing people.

Speaker 2 And that's AI can't do that, you know, because it's you.

Speaker 1 Okay, just to be clear, I came up with the questions this time, but in the future, I, you know, I, I, I very much look forward to being told what to do with the prep the minute before and actually setting my avatar.

Speaker 1 It's going to be great. And then you and I can just get a beer and that'll be it.

Speaker 2 Exactly. But that's, but that's what matters, right? It is the relationship, right? It's the friendship.
I think this is great. I think this is good.
Okay. One shot.
We one shot at the whole podcast.

Speaker 1 Thank you for the conversation, Elias.

Speaker 2 It's great.

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