On a long enough timeline, playing positive-sum games with your customers is the ultimate growth hack.
Tobi Lütke
Founder and CEO, Shopify
9 quotes across 1 episode
Tobi Lütke's leadership playbook: First principles, infinite games, and maximizing human potential
The moment a metric becomes a goal it's no longer a useful metric. The overlap of most valuable things you can do with a product, and for things that happen to be fully quantifiable, it's like maybe 20% which leaves 80% of a value space unaddressable by the people who will only look at quantifiable things.
Every single time we make a complex thing simpler. It is actually that more businesses will exist on a platform. So I think this is intuitive or at least directional, but sometimes people are not like, 'Well, don't you just need to have all these features?'
The rarest thing in the world, it's not even creativity or genius, it's courage. So let's lower the net amount of courage needed.
The most powerful unquantifiable things in the word of business are fun and delight. If people have fun when they're doing something that is just upstream from so... Sorry, downstream from so many other things.
What you have to do is to actually have, when you come up with a new product or you discuss a new product, you have to derive it from first principles. You have to say, 'How would we solve this problem given every fundamental building block that we have available right now?'
The business world only talks about tactics. The positional game is like, what is the territory on the map that you are taking? What role do you play? How much trust do you have of merchants? This is the positional game.
Every product in the world, the quality at the end of the day is simply a reflection of how much the people who created it gave a shit about the product. And it is not possible to make great products if the people work on it do not give a shit about the product.
My energy source is dissatisfaction with status quo. My fundamental belief is all this talk about technology where all... So many books are about just technology leading to dystopia. You know what dystopia is? Today, compared to what it will be in 20 years ago or any. I think today is the dystopia of future.