BREAKING: Twitch Founder/CEO Resigns - What I Learned From Him
What's up, y'all? Sean here. I wanna do a special episode because the CEO of Twitch resigned today. And this is a guy I got to know well because Twitch acquired my last startup and I worked with Emmett for a while. He's been there for 16 years. He was the founder, the creator of Twitch, which is basically a, you know, one of the biggest platforms in the world, one of the biggest social networks in the world, millions and millions and millions of users. I think they have 8 million streamers, let alone viewers that they, that they talk about. And it's a multibillion-dollar company. So probably somewhere between $5 and $10 billion in terms of what he's built. And I got to sit in the room with this guy, you know, every week for a few hours at least interacting with him. And over time you observe what is it about these people? I've always wondered, like, what would it be like to work with Mark Zuckerberg? What are they actually like? How do they actually work? Are they any different? Did they just get lucky? Are they just— am I looking at a lottery ticket winner? Or is there something different about this individual that led them to do this? And, you know, no surprise, I think there are some differences, some amazing things. So I want to share with you some stories because at Twitch's office, there was 9 floors. And so at the 9th floor, the top floor, there's this boardroom, it's got like 20 chairs. And Emmett would just sit at the head of the boardroom at the table, like, you know, some emperor or something like that. And he would— team after team would come in and they would present whatever's going on in that division of the company, ads or marketing or whatever it may be. And what he would do is he would sit there, he would talk to that team for 45 minutes or 1 hour, and then boom, onto the next. And so this guy operated at an extremely high pace. And I wanna share with you 8 or 9 things that I think were different or special, or at least the stories I remember from having worked with this guy. So the first story I'm gonna call the birds fly story. Okay? So I remember sitting in a meeting with Emmett And, uh, this team walked in and it was the, I think the partnerships team or marketing team or whatever. And they were super excited because, um, they had just, they were like, hey, we had this great meeting with this company. They said they wanted to pre-install Twitch on all these phones. And, uh, you know, this is going to get Twitch, you know, a big head start in this market. And, uh, it's going to be great. We're going to, we're projecting this much growth, this much revenue, blah, blah, blah. And they were, you know, they were so excited. They thought they were bringing in, you know, this trophy and, um, and they were going to just hold it up and get applause. Applause from everybody. And, and hey, it was, it was a good deal. But Emmett sat quietly for a bit, he asked questions, and then he, um, he kind of reminded them something. And he said, you know, I learned this phrase from Paul Graham at Y Combinator: birds fly, fish swim, and deals fall through. Like, that's what they do. Deals fall through. That's just a thing that happens. And sure enough, over the course of that year, I saw so many teams come in and present deals that were on the table, verbally agreed, being discussed, maybe even signed. And this is exactly— he would say this line, and more often than that person was willing to admit, the deals fell through. And so this is something I took with me, which is never to get too high or too low when it comes to deals, M&A, uh, partnerships, anything like that. Just remember, this is what deals do— they fall through. Birds fly, fish swim, deals fall through. All right, let me give you a second story. After we got acquired, my first day I go up to his office and I'm gonna have my first one-on-one with him. And I don't really know what to do. I've never been an employee really like this in my life. So I don't really know. I've only been the guy on the other side of the table. So I go in and I start to tell him, you know, about what I'm working on. And he just kind of like stops me. He's like, hey, What's your question? And I'm like, what do you mean? I haven't gotten to that yet. I'm giving you the context. He goes, I think this will help. In our one-on-ones, there's probably— he gave me almost like an instruction manual of here's how you work with me, which is really here's how you work with any leader, any CEO. There's 4 ways you could frame anything you're going to tell me. Number 1 is, hey, I'm doing this FYI. Just, I'm doing this, I just want you to be in the loop. Number 2 is, I'm doing this, but I want your approval, or I need your approval. So I plan to do this, do you approve? Number 3 is, I'm trying to decide between A and B, or A, B, and C. Can you help me think that through? And then the last one, number 4, the last way we interface with them is to say, remember that thing we agreed on? Here's what happened. It's the status update of the closing the loop on what we had talked about. And basically anytime I interact with him, that was the sort of like the base frame that I needed to have, which was, um, I'm doing this, FYI, I'm doing this, do you approve? Uh, can you help me think through which way to go? I'm not sure which way, which one I want to do. Or lastly, here's what happened. Here's the learning that we had from it. That just simplified so much and it made our communication so much tighter. In a very short amount of time, we could immediately sync up. We could get through that and then we would spend the rest of the time just sharing interesting things or talking about what's going on in our lives, uh, because we weren't wandering around and he's sitting there waiting to find out like, what does this guy want from me? And I'm sitting there trying to tell him a full story before I finally get to my point or my question. Um, so that was one great framework that you sent me. The second one was I wrote an update once. This is point number 3. I wrote an update and he just took a pen and he just drew circles and rearranged things and he basically said, Here's how I want you to write this: what, why, so what. So that's a format of communication. You tell me what happened, why it happened, and so what are we going to do about it? Or if we're planning something, what are we going to do? Why are we going to do it? And so what do you need from me in order to make that happen? And, um, that what, why, so what framework again tightened up my communication. It took away so much wasted energy of trying to sit down with a blank piece of paper and figure out how I'm gonna communicate something. Now I sit down with a paper and I just write what, why, so what, and then I fill in the details underneath. So that was a great little communication framework that, that I got from him. Okay. Number 4, he is a fierce nerd. So this is a phrase that I took from Paul Graham. Paul Graham wrote this essay talking about fierce nerds, which is basically his observation of the best YC founders. So the most successful YC founders, he, he felt, he felt fall into this bucket. And he talks about fierce nerds as people who are competitive. In fact, they're often more competitive than non-nerds, right? Like typically if you think competitive, you think of a jock. In this case, he's saying almost a fierce nerd is almost more competitive because they are all in on this. They don't have a bunch of other, you know, social things to fall back on. They don't have the emotional maturity to separate themselves from the competition. It is deeply personal to them and they are fully obsessed. Um, he talks about how they tend to be overconfident sometimes, especially when they're young, because they feel like they can get to the right answer the fastest. Um, and he talks about how being a fierce nerd is so advantageous in the world of business today. And, you know, so, so Emmett falls into this category. When I asked him what he does on Friday nights or for the weekend, you know, it was like, I'm gonna play Settlers of Catan with the, you know, with the Collison brothers from Stripe and the founders of Reddit. This is what they would do. They would get together, drink beer, play Catan. I play a competitive board game. Or, um, during our first M&A conversation, I asked the Corp Dev guy after we got out of the meeting, I said, how'd you think that went? I thought it was pretty good. What'd you think? Uh, you know, is he always like that? He goes, no, he goes, half of these meetings he's just playing Hearthstone on his phone and he's talking, but he's playing Hearthstone. He goes, he put down his phone. He wasn't playing Hearthstone. So that was a good sign for you guys. And, um, This guy competes like a beast. In fact, I one time asked him, I said, uh, can you send me something from the archives? Can you send me, uh, an old fossil? So basically when you started Twitch, did you ever make any plans or, or pitch decks or anything like that? I'd love to see it. Cause I, I'm just like a, I'm a nerd about that sort of thing. I, I like seeing what people were thinking at the start, because we all know what it looks like today, but what were you thinking at the start? And he sent me a pit, a deck that he had made, an investor update that he had made right when they pivoted to Twitch. And, uh, there was this one, it was a white, it was no design. It was white slides, black text, Times New Roman. And, uh, he just, he was saying, here's what we're doing, you know, here's why we're doing it. And here's, here's what's coming next. Um, and then on one slide, he, he filled up the entire slide to almost to make a point with every product thing they had shipped and improved that month. It was just full. Like there was no white space on that slide. And then on the next slide he wrote, we are a, we are a steamroller plowing through a field of flowers. And I thought it was awesome cuz today he's older, he's wiser, he's more mature. He wouldn't talk like that. He's not like pounding his chest or whatever. But at the time you could tell like that was that young bravado energy of feeling the momentum of, hey, look, nobody on earth at that point knew really what Twitch was. It wasn't a big deal, but he knew, he knew they were onto something. He knew that they were making tons of progress. And I always remember that we were a steamroller plowing through a field of flowers. Like, what, what a picture. And, uh, and I love that. And I, I've, I since now write that in my startups. I'm like, this month I'm gonna be a steamroller plowing through a field of flowers. What would that mean? What would I need to get done in order for that to be true? And I just work backwards from that. I'll give you maybe, I think this is number 5, maybe the most remarkable thing of the whole thing. I talked about the early pivot. So what people don't know is that Twitch, before Twitch, him, Emmett, Justin Kan, Michael Seibel, they were working on something called Justin.tv. A lot of people know this story. It was like Justin Kan was wearing a webcam on his head and he was walking around. It was like a reality show of his life. Then it became anybody can broadcast anything, which was like, mostly people broadcasting illegal sporting events and stuff like that, like just bootleg streaming. Um, and so the site was kind of popular, but it really wasn't going to be successful because most of their best content was illegal. And they had a decision to pivot. At the time, Instagram had come out. Instagram was hot, but Instagram only did, uh, photos. And so the majority of the company, including Justin and Michael and Kyle, they all wanted to do Instagram for video, and they called it SocialCam. And they pivoted to that and they wanted to do that. And they, you know, all the top talent in the company wanted to go do that. And Emmett had a different point of view. He's like, you know, on Justin.tv, I really like watching these video game streams. It only made up 2% at the time of, of all the content or all the watch time that was happening on the network. But he's like, I like that content the best. It's not illegal to do. So it's the only good content that's not illegal. I kind of wonder what would happen if we just went all in and made a video game streaming platform. And he was kind of alone in that. So Emmett went that way, Justin and the others went the other way, and maybe the rejects sort of, you know, got, got put on Emmett's team to do that. Now Socialcam went way up and then way down. It had this crazy spike in virality, then it crashed and ended up selling for like $60 million. But Twitch was a slow burn, just brick by brick by brick, all the way into a multi-billion dollar company. And so the reason I bring this up is because To this day, Justin Kan is often referenced as the co-founder of Twitch or the founder of Twitch. And I don't— from what I understand, I might be wrong. From what I understand, that wasn't actually true. He started Justin.tv, which, uh, and then he went to SocialCam. But like Emmett and his crew built Twitch up from there. Um, I don't think Justin really— they were in the same office, but I don't think he was working on Twitch actively at the time. I don't think he ever was an employee of Twitch. I think he was helpful. And Emmett and Justin are best friends growing up, and you never hear Emmett try to take credit away from Justin or more towards himself. I've never once heard him do that, which is kind of incredible. Um, and so I give a lot of props to that because a lesser man, aka me, would have been trying to set the record straight and, and say, you know, no, actually it was more me than it was this other guy who's more popular than me. But, uh, Emmett couldn't care less. That's his best friend. And, uh, I think that says a lot about somebody. So, okay, that's, that's 5. Let me do a couple more. So, uh, okay, if you go into a meeting with Emmett, you're going to notice 2 things. The first is that this guy's really, really, really smart. He's smarter than you. And, uh, I always wondered this because I think people like to think that it's actually hard work that separates people, or it's luck, or it's one of these other factors. But it's not all, not everybody's equally intelligent. His oven burns hotter. Like Twitch uses the Amazon method of 6-minute, sorry, 6-page memos before meetings. So basically you write a memo about what's going on. You write a, you basically write down everything. You come into the meeting, you hand out the printed out copy of that to everybody at the table. Everybody silently reads for 15, 20 minutes, and then everybody has all the same information and now they discuss. It's an amazing way to build a very good culture in your company of writing, thinking, and talking. Uh, so it's a great way to run meetings. But the first thing you notice is that 7 minutes in, Emmett's pen's down. He's on Hearthstone because he's read the whole thing faster than everybody else. And of course, when the discussion starts, he lets other people talk. But then when he finally raises his hand and says, you know, here was my question. It would always be the most on-point thing that would cut to the heart of the matter. And it's like, oh, why have we been wasting our time talking about these other things? He's right. You know, he made it— he simplified the 6-page memo into a really simple question and conversation. And so his oven just burns hotter. He gets to the right answer faster than most people. He retains more info than most people. He's able to connect dots and is more widely read. I remember sitting in a meeting where we were talking about some policy, you know, uh, how do we handle this situation? Uh, streamers are doing this, should we enforce it? Should we not enforce it? Should we change the policy? How should we decide? What— how do we take into account what the community wants? And he would, you know, be like, well, you know, we could do it like, you know, the feudal system in Northern Ireland back in the 1400s. Like, you know, you'd say some shit like that and you'd be like, Emmett, we don't— none of us know what you're talking about. No, nobody knows how the feudal system ran. Well, can you Can you explain? And then he would explain how their court system worked and then he'd be like, why don't we do that? And he'd connect these dots. And all I could think about was like, I can't believe this guy even reads about that. I can't believe he knows about that. Is he is he's just like sort of insatiably curious, very widely read. And then, you know, his brain has this ability to connect data points in a way that I haven't really seen since then. So his oven burns hotter. I think the people that run these platforms are smarter. And hardworking and blah, blah, blah, right? They're the Olympic athletes of business. And I think he's no different. Having said that, he's got flaws. So my next point, let's call it point 7, he's flawed and he knows it. So when I got there, a lot of people would joke almost behind his back, like, well, you know, Emmett's all IQ, he's no EQ. For me, it was honestly further, you know, it couldn't be further from the truth, but I also met him, I don't know, 14 years into running this company. I bet if I met him at year 3 or 4, he probably didn't have the same managerial skills or social skills or EQ skills that he has today, but he knows what's flawed and he works on it. So his favorite book, I think, was Nonviolent Communication, uh, cuz that had helped him so much, uh, of how can he communicate with people in a way that doesn't put them on the defensive but still gets, you know, gets things done. He only cared about getting things right, not being right. So he would use what I call the Socratic method of leadership, where when you would come in, you would say something, then he would start to ask you questions and he would break up your whole argument piece by piece, assumption by assumption. Why is this true? How do we know that? If that's true, then what does that imply next? And he would just go one by one until we would get to the right answer. For most people, it was exhausting and they took it as almost a personal attack. He's questioning everything I say. He doesn't just take it at face value. But the reality was I thought it was a tremendous, like, approach to getting to the truth. And the truth is all he cared about. He didn't care if he came up with it or you came up with it. He just wanted it to be closer to the truth, to the actual answer. Um, he also hired this coach, this executive coach, uh, a woman named Flo who's amazing. I think she's like 80 years old. So she's like, you know, doesn't know the first thing about gaming or streaming or Twitch or any of this stuff. But she knew about people. And I remember sitting in an ex— in one of the exec offsites, and Emmett has this nervous tic, which is that when he's really thinking about something, he would grab his neck, like where his neck beard was, and he would start to like twist it. And it was like, to anybody who's talking to him, it's like so obvious. You could see this. And it's not like a normal mannerism people do, but that was his twit. That was his tic. He would do that anytime he was thinking hard. He wasn't sure about something, or he was trying to figure out how to say something to you. He would do that. And I loved that. And I'd worked there for maybe 9 months at this point. He did it all the time. I'm never going to point that out. What am I going to say? It's just something he did. And everybody just sat there quietly. All of his leaders, all of his peers sat there quietly letting that happen. And Flo walked in and she was like, "Emmett, what are you doing with your neck? Put your hand down. Sit up straight. Say that like a leader." And she just told it to him like it is. It was amazing. She's amazing. But also his reaction had 0% defensiveness. He was like, oh yeah, thanks. Like, thank you. That's a gift. Thank you for reminding me, uh, about that. You know, I'm, I'm working on that. And, um, I thought that that was, you know, a good sign as to how do you, how do you get better, right? This guy was there for 16 years. How do you get better every year? Well, you're surrounded by people that are kind of afraid to tell you the truth cuz you're their boss and you're the CEO and you're the smartest guy in the room. So I think he did a good job of identifying his weaknesses and hiring people that would literally tell him the truth. Um, so those are some of the things that I picked up from Emmett. Uh, you know, Emmett, you had a great run. I hope you, you don't listen to the pod, but I hope you, uh, listen to this one because, uh, yeah, working with you was a lot of fun. You know, I really found it fun because it pushed me to be better. I could not walk into a meeting or do my job and be able to get away with it just on talent or charisma or some hand-wavy bullshit that you can say in a meeting that if it wasn't for him, pretty much anyone else in the company, if I went to the meeting, I could kind of just say whatever and I could talk my way out of any situation or into any situation or whatever I wanted to do. But with Emmett, you know, I kind of felt like a higher bar was there where I really needed to have, um, the right answer. I needed to have the truth, uh, because he would not, uh, his standard was there. And so, you know, he made me better. I appreciate that. And, um, it was a, it was kind of cool to be able to be in the room with somebody who is, you know, one of these, these rare individuals who has built one of these mega, mega companies. Um, and I don't know what he's gonna do next. I think he's just had a kid. Uh, so, you know, maybe he's gonna go full dad mode. I'm not sure what he's going to do, but I will, I will watch eagerly to see because I know it's not going to be, it's not going to be average, whatever it is. There's nothing, nothing just mediocre or average coming from this guy. So anyways, hope you enjoyed that. Those are some of the lessons I learned working with Emmett from Twitch. And all right, that's it. That's the pod.