Airbnb团队

Paul Graham 2020-12-01

Airbnb团队

2020年12月

为了庆祝Airbnb的IPO并帮助未来的创始人,我认为解释一下Airbnb的特别之处可能会有用。

Airbnb的特别之处在于他们有多么认真。他们做事从不半途而废,我们在面试中就能感觉到这一点。有时面试完一家初创公司后,我们会不确定该怎么做,需要商量一下。有时我们只会相视而笑。Airbnb的面试就是后者。我们甚至不太喜欢他们的想法。在那个阶段,用户也不喜欢;他们没有增长。但创始人们似乎充满能量,让人不可能不喜欢他们。

第一印象并没有误导人。在那批项目中,我们给Brian Chesky起的绰号是塔斯马尼亚恶魔,因为就像卡通角色一样,他似乎是一场能量旋风。他们三个人都是这样。在YC期间,没有人比Airbnb团队更努力。当你和Airbnb团队谈话时,他们会做笔记。如果你在办公时间向他们提出一个想法,下次你和他们谈话时,他们不仅已经实现了它,还实现了在这个过程中想到的两个新想法。“他们可能拥有我们资助过的任何初创公司中最好的态度”,我在那批项目中写给Mike Arrington。

他们现在仍然是这样。2018年夏天,Jessica和我和Brian一起吃了晚饭,就我们三个人。此时公司已经十岁了。他写了一页笔记,记录Airbnb可以做的新事物的想法。

当我们第一次见到Brian、Joe和Nate时,我们没有意识到Airbnb已经奄奄一息了。在公司工作一年却没有增长后,他们同意给它最后一次机会。他们会试试这个Y Combinator的东西,如果公司仍然没有起飞,他们就放弃。

任何正常人都会已经放弃了。他们一直用信用卡为公司提供资金。他们有一个装满了刷爆的信用卡的活页夹。投资者不太看好这个想法。他们在咖啡馆见到的一个投资者在会议中途走了出去。他们以为他是去洗手间,但他再也没有回来。“他甚至没有喝完他的冰沙,“Brian说。而现在,在2008年末,这是几十年来最严重的衰退。股市自由落体,还要四个月才会触底。

他们为什么没有放弃?这是一个有用的问题。人,像物质一样,在极端条件下会显现本性。清楚的一点是,他们这样做不仅仅是为了钱。作为一个赚钱计划,这相当糟糕:一年的工作,他们能展示的只是一个装满了刷爆的信用卡的活页夹。那么他们为什么还在为这家初创公司工作?因为他们作为第一批房东的经历。

当他们第一次在设计大会期间尝试在地板上出租气垫床时,他们所希望的只是赚足够的钱支付那个月的房租。但发生了一些令人惊讶的事情:他们喜欢让第一批三位客人住在他们那里。客人们也很喜欢。他们和客人们这样做都是在某种意义上被迫的,然而他们都有很棒的体验。显然这里有新的东西:对房东来说,是一种新的赚钱方式,就在他们眼皮底下;对客人来说,是一种新的旅行方式,在很多方面比酒店更好。

这就是Airbnb团队没有放弃的原因。他们知道自己发现了什么。他们看到了未来的一瞥,他们无法放手。

他们知道一旦人们尝试住在现在所谓的”airbnb”中,他们也会意识到这就是未来。但只有他们尝试了,而他们没有。这就是Y Combinator期间的问题:开始增长。

Airbnb在YC期间的目标是达到我们称之为拉面盈利的状态,这意味着公司赚足够的钱来支付创始人的生活费用,如果他们靠拉面生活的话。拉面盈利显然不是任何初创公司的最终目标,但这是路上最重要的门槛,因为这是你起飞的点。这是你不再需要投资者许可才能继续存在的点。对Airbnb来说,拉面盈利是一个月4000美元:3500美元房租,500美元食物。他们把这个目标贴在公寓浴室的镜子上。

在像Airbnb这样的东西中开始增长的方法是专注于市场中最热的子集。如果你能在那里开始增长,它会传播到其他地方。当我问Airbnb团队哪里需求最大时,他们从搜索中知道:纽约市。所以他们专注于纽约。他们亲自去那里拜访房东,帮助他们使他们的房源更有吸引力。一个重要部分是更好的照片。所以Joe和Brian租了一台专业相机,亲自为房东的地方拍照。

这不仅使房源更好。它还教会了他们关于房东的事情。当他们从第一次纽约之行回来时,我问他们注意到的关于房东的让他们惊讶的事情是什么,他们说最大的惊喜是有多少房东和他们曾经处于同样的境地:他们需要这笔钱来支付房租。记住,这是几十年来最严重的衰退,而且纽约最先受到打击。感到人们需要他们 definitely 增加了Airbnb团队的使命感。

2009年1月下旬,大约在Y Combinator开始三周后,他们的努力开始显示结果,他们的数字向上攀升。但很难确定这是增长还是只是随机波动。到了2月,很明显这是真正的增长。他们在2月第一周赚取了460美元费用,第二周897美元,第三周1428美元。就是这样:他们起飞了。Brian在2月22日给我发了一封邮件,宣布他们已经拉面盈利,并给出了过去三周的数字。

“我假设你知道你现在为下周设定了什么,“我回应道。

Brian的回复是七个字:“我们不会放慢脚步。”

The Airbnbs

December 2020

To celebrate Airbnb’s IPO and to help future founders, I thought it might be useful to explain what was special about Airbnb.

What was special about the Airbnbs was how earnest they were. They did nothing half-way, and we could sense this even in the interview. Sometimes after we interviewed a startup we’d be uncertain what to do, and have to talk it over. Other times we’d just look at one another and smile. The Airbnbs’ interview was that kind. We didn’t even like the idea that much. Nor did users, at that stage; they had no growth. But the founders seemed so full of energy that it was impossible not to like them.

That first impression was not misleading. During the batch our nickname for Brian Chesky was The Tasmanian Devil, because like the cartoon character he seemed a tornado of energy. All three of them were like that. No one ever worked harder during YC than the Airbnbs did. When you talked to the Airbnbs, they took notes. If you suggested an idea to them in office hours, the next time you talked to them they’d not only have implemented it, but also implemented two new ideas they had in the process. “They probably have the best attitude of any startup we’ve funded” I wrote to Mike Arrington during the batch.

They’re still like that. Jessica and I had dinner with Brian in the summer of 2018, just the three of us. By this point the company is ten years old. He took a page of notes about ideas for new things Airbnb could do.

What we didn’t realize when we first met Brian and Joe and Nate was that Airbnb was on its last legs. After working on the company for a year and getting no growth, they’d agreed to give it one last shot. They’d try this Y Combinator thing, and if the company still didn’t take off, they’d give up.

Any normal person would have given up already. They’d been funding the company with credit cards. They had a binder full of credit cards they’d maxed out. Investors didn’t think much of the idea. One investor they met in a cafe walked out in the middle of meeting with them. They thought he was going to the bathroom, but he never came back. “He didn’t even finish his smoothie,” Brian said. And now, in late 2008, it was the worst recession in decades. The stock market was in free fall and wouldn’t hit bottom for another four months.

Why hadn’t they given up? This is a useful question to ask. People, like matter, reveal their nature under extreme conditions. One thing that’s clear is that they weren’t doing this just for the money. As a money-making scheme, this was pretty lousy: a year’s work and all they had to show for it was a binder full of maxed-out credit cards. So why were they still working on this startup? Because of the experience they’d had as the first hosts.

When they first tried renting out airbeds on their floor during a design convention, all they were hoping for was to make enough money to pay their rent that month. But something surprising happened: they enjoyed having those first three guests staying with them. And the guests enjoyed it too. Both they and the guests had done it because they were in a sense forced to, and yet they’d all had a great experience. Clearly there was something new here: for hosts, a new way to make money that had literally been right under their noses, and for guests, a new way to travel that was in many ways better than hotels.

That experience was why the Airbnbs didn’t give up. They knew they’d discovered something. They’d seen a glimpse of the future, and they couldn’t let it go.

They knew that once people tried staying in what is now called “an airbnb,” they would also realize that this was the future. But only if they tried it, and they weren’t. That was the problem during Y Combinator: to get growth started.

Airbnb’s goal during YC was to reach what we call ramen profitability, which means making enough money that the company can pay the founders’ living expenses, if they live on ramen noodles. Ramen profitability is not, obviously, the end goal of any startup, but it’s the most important threshold on the way, because this is the point where you’re airborne. This is the point where you no longer need investors’ permission to continue existing. For the Airbnbs, ramen profitability was 4000amonth:4000 a month: 3500 for rent, and $500 for food. They taped this goal to the mirror in the bathroom of their apartment.

The way to get growth started in something like Airbnb is to focus on the hottest subset of the market. If you can get growth started there, it will spread to the rest. When I asked the Airbnbs where there was most demand, they knew from searches: New York City. So they focused on New York. They went there in person to visit their hosts and help them make their listings more attractive. A big part of that was better pictures. So Joe and Brian rented a professional camera and took pictures of the hosts’ places themselves.

This didn’t just make the listings better. It also taught them about their hosts. When they came back from their first trip to New York, I asked what they’d noticed about hosts that surprised them, and they said the biggest surprise was how many of the hosts were in the same position they’d been in: they needed this money to pay their rent. This was, remember, the worst recession in decades, and it had hit New York first. It definitely added to the Airbnbs’ sense of mission to feel that people needed them.

In late January 2009, about three weeks into Y Combinator, their efforts started to show results, and their numbers crept upward. But it was hard to say for sure whether it was growth or just random fluctuation. By February it was clear that it was real growth. They made 460infeesinthefirstweekofFebruary,460 in fees in the first week of February, 897 in the second, and $1428 in the third. That was it: they were airborne. Brian sent me an email on February 22 announcing that they were ramen profitable and giving the last three weeks’ numbers.

“I assume you know what you’ve now set yourself up for next week,” I responded.

Brian’s reply was seven words: “We are not going to slow down.”