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Mike Cannon-Brookes, co-founder and CEO of Atlassian, sits down to discuss his journey building one of tech's most successful bootstrapped companies into a $50 billion software giant. The conversation covers the evolution from co-CEO to solo leadership, navigating the AI revolution, and what it takes to build a multi-decade technology company. (00:00)
• Main themes: Leadership transitions, AI adoption strategies, founder-driven businesses, and the importance of unreasonable ambition in driving innovation
Co-founder and CEO of Atlassian, the $50 billion software company behind Jira, Confluence, and Trello. Since founding the company in 2002, he's scaled Atlassian to over 300,000 customers and $5 billion in annual revenue for 2025. He's also an active climate investor and co-owner of several major sports teams, representing one of tech's most successful bootstrapped-to-IPO stories.
Host of 20VC, one of the world's leading venture capital podcasts. Harry has been interviewing entrepreneurs and investors for over eleven years, building a platform that reaches millions of listeners globally.
Cannon-Brookes embraces being called "the unreasonable man" by his co-founder Scott, referencing George Bernard Shaw's quote that "all progress depends on the unreasonable man." (05:03) This mindset involves refusing to accept boundaries and conventional limitations when they don't make logical sense. The key insight is that reasonable people live within established boundaries, but breakthrough innovation requires someone willing to challenge and change those boundaries. This applies to everything from household appliances to global technology problems - if something doesn't work the way it should, the unreasonable approach is to simply fix it rather than accepting the status quo.
The most critical factor in Atlassian's successful co-CEO structure was true equality between the founders - not just in equity, but in life stage, experience, and naivety. (07:38) Both founders started families around the same time, faced similar challenges, and maintained 60-80% overlap in their responsibilities while having distinct swim lanes. Cannon-Brookes emphasizes that both partners believing the other is "far better" creates a dynamic where each stretches to match their partner's perceived superiority. The magic happens in the balance between shared understanding and individual expertise areas.
Cannon-Brookes highlights Shopify's Tobi Lütke's profound insight that "the founder's job is to fight the entropy of ambition." (49:24) Despite Atlassian's massive scale - over 10,000 employees, 300,000 customers, billions in revenue - they must maintain the mindset that they're still minute in the global economy. The moment a company stops being ambitious and fighting for every customer and user, it begins to decline. This requires constant vigilance against complacency and maintaining hunger even at significant scale.
Building a multi-decade technology company requires surviving multiple technological disruptions through creativity, not defensiveness. (45:59) Atlassian has navigated the internet era, SaaS transition, mobile disruption, and now AI - similar to how Adobe, Microsoft, and Intuit survived DOS, client-server, Windows, internet, and mobile transitions. The key is maintaining an environment where teams can kill existing products and build new ones. Success isn't about protecting what you have, but about having the culture, people, and openness to continuously create and adapt to whatever comes next.
While foundational models and data are important, Cannon-Brookes believes design will be the key differentiator in AI applications. (20:48) As software becomes cheaper to create and more abundant, what differentiates products is how they feel and work for end users who don't need to understand technical concepts like "probabilistic" or "deterministic." Atlassian has heavily invested in design talent to create intuitive AI experiences that solve real problems without requiring users to become AI experts. Good design is scarce and difficult to copy, making it a sustainable competitive advantage.