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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
This episode of the Advice Line on How I Built This features Tony Hsu, cofounder and CEO of DoorDash, providing insights and advice to entrepreneurs across various industries. (04:15) Tony reflects on DoorDash's journey from a simple PDF menu service to a $100 billion company spanning five major business areas including restaurant delivery, grocery, international markets, and B2B solutions. (05:27)
Tony Hsu is the cofounder and CEO of DoorDash, the world's largest food delivery service. He immigrated to the US at age four and changed his name to Tony after the show "Who's the Boss." (04:36) Starting with a simple food delivery service called Palo Alto Delivery Service while at Stanford Business School, Tony has built DoorDash into a multi-billion dollar company that processed over 2.5 billion orders as of last year, operating in over 35 countries across five major business verticals.
Guy Raz is the host of How I Built This and the Advice Line. He's an experienced interviewer and entrepreneur who has built one of the most successful business podcasts in the world, conducting deep-dive interviews with legendary founders and providing a platform for emerging entrepreneurs to seek guidance.
Tony emphasizes the importance of concentrating energy on controllable factors rather than external pressures. (09:11) He explains that while you can't control competitors' actions or financial resources, you can control product quality, customer interactions, and service delivery. This principle helps manage overwhelming stress by maintaining agency and finding satisfaction in daily activities that directly impact business outcomes.
When considering product line expansion, conduct small-scale experiments first rather than betting the entire company. (17:04) Tony advises treating new initiatives as experiments where you're willing to accept losses while protecting your core business. Using DoorDash Drive as an example, he demonstrates how starting with a small dedicated team can validate market demand without risking the entire operation.
Success in fundraising and business growth comes from consistently delivering on promises made to stakeholders. (30:50) Tony explains that by setting achievable milestones and consistently meeting them, you create better customer outcomes, which leads to more financing opportunities and investor confidence. This approach builds credibility and momentum that compounds over time.
When building a differentiated product in a competitive market, identify and nurture the customers who care most deeply about your unique value proposition. (45:29) Tony advises focusing on building a "fire" with passionate early adopters who appreciate quality and authenticity, rather than trying to compete broadly against larger competitors who can outspend you.
Successful entrepreneurs often already know the answers to the questions they seek help with, but doubt their instincts. (53:53) Tony reflects that founders are no different from those who've created great products before them. The key is trusting your instincts while writing things down for intellectual honesty and using that documentation to debate with advisors and validate your thinking.