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In this compelling episode of HD in HD, Enrique Dubugras sits down with Dara Khosrowshahi, the legendary executive who has led transformational journeys at both Expedia and Uber. The conversation reveals the remarkable story of an Iranian immigrant family who lost everything during the revolution, yet rebuilt their legacy in America through relentless focus on education and talent. (07:00)
• Main themes include the immigrant experience as a driver of ambition, the evolution from investment banking to operational leadership, building sustainable competitive advantages through supply-first strategies, and the discipline required to turn around struggling companies while maintaining growth.
Dara is the CEO of Uber, where he has transformed the company from losing $3 billion annually to generating over $8.5 billion in free cash flow. Prior to Uber, he spent 13 years leading Expedia through major acquisitions and global expansion, serving as CEO after rising through the ranks at IAC. He began his career at Allen & Company, becoming their youngest VP, after studying bioelectrical engineering at Brown University.
Enrique is the co-founder of Brex, a financial technology company serving over 25,000 businesses including major companies like Anthropic, DoorDash, and Scale AI. He hosts the HD in HD podcast, where he interviews exceptional founders and business leaders about their journeys and insights.
Herbert Allen's philosophy at Allen & Company became a cornerstone of Khosrowshahi's approach: "Good companies come and go. Good people stay good." (25:08) This lesson shaped his entire career approach, from investment banking through to running Uber. Rather than relying solely on financial models, Khosrowshahi learned to identify leaders with integrity and loyalty—those who tell the truth about both good and bad aspects of their companies. At Uber, this translated into maintaining an exceptionally high talent bar, even if it meant taking eight months to find the right person instead of settling for a B-player in one month.
One of Khosrowshahi's most painful but valuable lessons came from Expedia's competition with Booking.com. While Expedia focused on building audience first with a 30% take rate, Booking.com started with supply, charging only 15% and signing up more hotels. (48:48) Each additional hotel became another opportunity to sell to new audiences, creating better conversion rates. This supply-first approach proved superior because in aggregation platforms, more supply creates better customer experiences, which naturally attracts more demand. The lesson applies broadly: in marketplace businesses, whoever has the most comprehensive supply wins, even at lower margins initially.
Khosrowshahi transformed Uber from losing $3 billion annually to generating $8.5 billion in free cash flow by implementing strategic constraints rather than unlimited capital deployment. (71:16) He maintains deliberate "cut lines" in project funding, ensuring there are always good projects that don't get funded. This forces teams to compete for resources with their best ideas and work harder with existing resources rather than simply hiring more people. The discipline prevents the "excess capital problem" where throwing money at markets destroys the careful optimization work that creates sustainable competitive advantages.
Khosrowshahi's biggest M&A lesson was learning when to overpay strategically. (35:55) The best deals at IAC were ones where they overpaid but recognized assets with compounding growth potential over 10-20 years. Traditional valuation frameworks focusing on current worth often miss transformational opportunities. When they bought Match.com and Hotels.com as top bidders, they were betting on the massive offline-to-online travel shift continuing for decades. This long-term compounding view allowed them to pay premiums that seemed expensive initially but proved prescient as these businesses grew exponentially.
One of Khosrowshahi's clearest frameworks is that M&A integration must be either complete or completely hands-off—never in the middle. (52:09) When they bought TripAdvisor, they ran it as a completely separate entity under Steve Kaufer, maintaining full independence, which proved highly successful. Conversely, when they acquired Travelocity, they executed a complete nine-month integration, reducing headcount from 3,000 to a few hundred employees. The "middle ground" approach creates confusion and muddy accountability. This binary approach prevents the organizational chaos that destroys value in acquisitions.