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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.
In this compelling episode, Ali Rowghani shares insights from his remarkable journey as COO at Twitter during pivotal years (2010-2014) and a decade at Pixar working alongside Steve Jobs. (01:42) Rowghani reveals how Pixar operated as a "miracle factory," consistently producing cultural masterpieces by going "all in" on every project without hedging or backup plans. The conversation explores the psychological demands of startup building, particularly in what he calls the "sapling phase" - the dangerous period between initial traction and true scalability where most startups die. (30:51) Throughout the discussion, Rowghani emphasizes the power of maintaining impossibly high standards, the importance of deeply understanding your customers, and why founders should resist the "thinking in bets" mentality that dominates Silicon Valley.
Ali Rowghani is a seasoned technology executive and investor who served as COO at Twitter from 2010-2014, helping scale the company from zero revenue to $2 billion and from 15 million to 300 million users. Prior to Twitter, he spent a decade at Pixar (2000-2010) working directly with Steve Jobs during the studio's golden era of films like Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, and Wall-E. He later joined Y Combinator where he started and ran the YC Growth Fund for nearly ten years, working with close to 4,000 companies. He now runs his own investment firm focused on helping founders in the critical "sapling phase" between initial traction and true scalability.
The most successful organizations don't hedge their commitments - they go "all in" on making everything they touch exceptional. (00:00) Rowghani observed this at both Pixar and Apple under Steve Jobs, where there were no backup plans or contingencies. At Pixar, when Toy Story 2 wasn't meeting their standards, they completely remade the film nine months before release, nearly killing the studio financially but establishing a culture where mediocrity wasn't acceptable. (03:24) This approach requires courage to sacrifice short-term safety for long-term greatness, but it's what separates true "miracle factories" from companies that produce mixed results.
Steve Jobs was "obsessed with the nature and quality of his own thinking" and constantly worked to improve his basic skills like communication, problem-solving, and decision-making. (10:10) Rather than taking these abilities for granted once they reached competency, Jobs treated them like a musician practicing scales - always seeking to reach "level 20" when most people stop at "level 3." (08:24) The compounding effect of improving these daily-use skills over a career creates exponentially greater impact than any single strategic decision.
Pixar's success came from creating "story reels" - rough animated versions of their films that were remade dozens of times based on continuous feedback from the creative team. (04:36) This process of "making and remaking" allowed them to identify and fix problems early when changes were still possible, rather than discovering fundamental flaws after years of expensive production. The key was creating a safe environment where showing imperfect work was not only acceptable but expected, enabling constant improvement rather than defensive perfection.
In the dangerous "sapling phase" of startup growth, founders face immense pressure to accept any paying customer, but this leads to failure. (31:02) Rowghani observed that successful founders had the courage to be extremely selective about their initial customers, focusing on deeply satisfying a narrow group rather than trying to please everyone. (31:48) This requires turning down growth in the short term, but it's the only way to build something that can eventually scale to millions of users with a small team and immature product.
Twitter's biggest mistake was not staying curious about how their users were actually behaving as the platform evolved. (20:06) Their mental model of Twitter users severely lagged reality, leading to product decisions like the conversation threading feature that broke the experience for their most engaged users - teenagers using the platform to subtweet with pseudonymous accounts. (21:18) Companies must develop disciplined processes and rituals to continuously update their understanding of who their customers are and what they actually need, not what the company thinks they need.