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Tom Hale
Just by paying attention to the work that was happening at all levels of the company, from the lowest to the highest. By paying attention and being like, hey, that's a really good idea. Or have you considered this? It made a culture of it's okay to have ideas and have them move up and down. And by the way, people would challenge me and in challenging me then they felt confident that like we were going to get to the best idea because it wasn't just my idea. Creating this sort of non hierarchical culture that's not bound by time or, or geography or role. Really powerful.
Brian
Okay. This episode is with Tom Hale, an old friend of mine who's the CEO of Aura of Oura Ring fame. When I was in my early 50s, I had a very bad snowmobile accident and drove a snowmobile off a cliff. And you can't see my body, but it's absolutely chock full of metal. And I thought I was going to die that night. I was lying at the bottom of the cliff and I've been CEO of HubSpot for 15 years. Like, I'm done, I'm, I'm tired, I'm done, I'm burnt out. He went the other way. You know, he had been kind of a corporate exec at some really interesting companies. His whole career in his early 50s is like, I want my shot. And so we talked about that. What he didn't expect from the job, the good, the bad and the downright ugly of being a CEO, he's pretty thoughtful about that. What really is interesting to me about Tom is he spent his entire life in companies between 200 and 2000 employees. That is the messy middle. That's where things slow down, that's where bureaucracy happens, that's where middle managers happen. That's where you really slow the gears of progress down. And we talk a bunch about what it takes to keep that engine revving through that and how not to get caught in a quagmire. We also talk about he's got a team in, in Finland. This company was started in Finland and he's got a team here in the US and man, are they different. The Americans are obviously very capitalist creatures in the Finnish are much more on the socialist side and we talk about how to manage those two. And a lot of you are in the US now and thinking about going international. I think there's a lot of lessons here for you. So lots of good stuff. I'm going to be back at the end with my take on what he had to say. Thanks for being here.
Tom Hale
Hey, thanks for having me.
Brian
Brian, I have a little story for you.
Tom Hale
Okay.
Brian
Four years ago, I was snowmobiling in Woodstock, Vermont, as one does. Yes. With my son. And the snowmobile went off a cliff.
Tom Hale
Oh, my God.
Brian
It hit the bottom. Snowmobile's in a million pieces. My son and I were in a million pieces. And at the bottom of that, and no one knew where we were, and it was 4 o' clock in the afternoon. I was pretty sure we were both going to die that night. And while I was sitting there at the bottom of the cliff, I said, I need to make some big changes in my life.
Tom Hale
No more snowmobiles.
Brian
Yes, that too. But the biggest change was I don't want to be a CEO anymore. Why did you want to be a CEO after all these years?
Tom Hale
Wow. It's a good question. I think the obvious answer, and maybe really the true answer is it was a bucket list item I had to
Brian
check off my list.
Tom Hale
And the thing is, actually, and maybe this is tmi, but I also wanted to prove to myself that I had it to do it.
Brian
Is it everything you had hoped?
Tom Hale
And more. Really much harder than I thought. And I'm sure you can appreciate that, and any CEO in the world will appreciate that. Much harder. Much harder than I thought.
Brian
What's harder than you thought?
Tom Hale
It's not the work that's harder. It's the responsibility and the stress. It's the waking up at 4am and being like, oh my God, is this going to work? And what is it going to take to make it work? That I think it's pressure, it's stress, it's responsibility. It's all the people that you have, you know, they've put their faith in you, whether it's your board or your employees or your customers, and you have to carry that. And you know what they say, the buck stops here. Absolutely true.
Brian
I felt that too. I was pretty calm in the first four or five years of HubSpot, but I was kind of stricken with stress and started having. I never had them before, panic attacks, like five years in. And it was that. It was like, oh, man, we have 100 employees that are really counting on me 100%. That was the. What do people misunderstand about CEOing?
Tom Hale
Well, I think they think it's a lot more fun than it is.
Brian
Okay, so is it not fun?
Tom Hale
No, I mean, I don't think actually it's not fun. I think there is fun. I just think that the sort of ratio of kibble, you know, to champagne, favors the kibble.
Brian
Yes.
Tom Hale
Than the champagne. And I think that part of it is the responsibility, which we just talked about, but part of it is also you kind of the things about work that I really enjoy, like building something in a fine grain of detail and making it beautiful and owning that and feeling pride in that. And I still get that, but just not as much, or feeling the success you get. Everyone gets to participate in the success, but in some way, like, it's really your team. It's not you who gets to own that success. But you know what? Participating in failure, you get to own that failure because in many cases, like, it was either your decision or your direction or the system that you set. Set up. So I think that's. I think that's the thing people get wrong is they don't. They don't understand. They think it's, like, it's glamorous and it's. It's this and that and you're on podcast or whatever. Like, that's. Sure, there's an element of that, but, like, that is not the main portion of the experience, at least not for me.
Brian
I call it the umbrella. You have to, like, absorb all the. For the company.
Tom Hale
I think that's right. I mean, my. My analogy is that you're on a boat, and that boat, if it's going great, your job is while everyone's over on this side of the boat being like, hey, everything's great over here, and you have to be on this side, like, everything's terrible. We have to think about that and vice versa. When everything's terrible, you got to go to the other side of the boat and be like, hey, guys, there is light on the horizon, and where we're going is going to be great. It may feel terrible right now, but we've got to get there. And I think that that's. That's a big job, a big job of responsibility, and it's hard.
Brian
I had some CEO heroes that I copied. Yeah, I copied Steve Jobs, Jerry Garcia, and my dad. They were my Mount Rushmore inspirations. Who's on your Rushmore?
Tom Hale
Well, you know, Steve Jobs, I think, would make it for sure. And we're kind of.
Brian
We're probably similar age, and I think people who grew up.
Tom Hale
I got to work, you know, tangentially, we were an ISV on the. On the Apple platform. So we got to meet him a couple of times, and he was a hero.
Brian
Yeah.
Tom Hale
The person who came back and recovered Apple from its demise was a hero. Bonafide and the sort of champion of creative professional. So he would Be one. I think not necessarily a CEO, but Gandhi, partially because he sort of is a man of the people. And I think humility is such an important both value for me personally, but also for a CEO. It's important. So. So Gandhi would have it. And then God, if I had to think of one more. Oh, I know who it be. So Maya Angelou, not because she's such a great CEO, but because she said something which I really believe is. Which is like people remember how you make them feel. And I think as a leader, the unintended consequence is actually the greatest risk, not the intended consequence. And if you leave people feeling, you know, in a way that you don't intend to, I think that could be devastating for a company.
Brian
A lot of CEOs of the generation younger than we are. It's not jobs, it's Elon. Yeah. And they've absorbed his, for better or worse, his work ethic.
Tom Hale
Yeah.
Brian
And 996 and hardcore ness about it. This whole generation of founders is kind of like that. What's your take on that? And is. Is your company like that?
Tom Hale
I am somebody who probably works996 or, you know, something like that, some approximation of that. And I think, I think there is value in it. However, I would modify it one bit, which is that if you're working 996 or your version of that, to the exclusion of making sure that you are thoughtful and recovered and in a good state of mind, if you're in a constant state of anxiety and a constant state of activity and you don't leave room for any kind of recovery or reflection, you're probably not doing it right, at least in my book. And so at Aura, and what's interesting about Aura is that we make products that are there to help you be healthier and to find mindfulness and recovery in your life. Actually, when I came on board, we had to sort of push a little bit towards the performance. And you know, we never say 9, 9 6, but we say like, no, you're like, we get the job done and we do what it takes to get the job done. And so I had to shift it a little bit in that direction. But that at the same time, we never lost the values of rest and recovery and the importance of it. I think the thing is like finding that balance, that's what we talk about. We talk a lot about balance. How do you find balance? And I think one of the ways to think about it from a CEO perspective is that different parts of the company at different times in the Year, different stages of the product cycle are going to be at peak996 and other parts are going to be at recovery. And that's like you just ship, you know what, probably shouldn't go back996, take a couple days, recover, rest, think about what you want to do next, be intentional. And so I think that kind of idea that you can't run everybody at the red line all the time, you got to, you got to dial it up and dial it down. You got to recognize that if you're on the bomb run to ship, it's going to be996 or whatever it is to get there.
Brian
Okay. Speaking of your employees, your CEO of a company that was founded in Finland.
Tom Hale
Yes.
Brian
Very proud. Yeah, they should be. And you should be. It's a wonderful company. Tell me a little bit about your first trip to Finland.
Tom Hale
Yeah, so I have worked with Finns in the past, so I had a little bit of experience, but had never been a leader of Finn's. I'd been a partner and a colleague. And so there's also, I think, a good tradition, I think in Finland of like, they're not hierarchical, not a lot of respect for, I mean, not, not, they don't have, they're not disrespectful. It's just like, look, you know, we're all, it's very socialist, non hierarchical society.
Brian
Yep.
Tom Hale
So I show up and you know, well, we're gonna go do some sauna. And of course, as you know, it's a Finnish national tradition. So we go to the sauna, get in the sauna, it's hot, I'm very hot. And then we, you know, we go outside and it's very cold and we get in the freezing, freezing cold water and you're shaking and then you get back in the sauna. It's great. And I was like, this is amazing. I feel like I've passed the test. I've shown my true fitness. And then of course we went to the second office, which is in Oulu, which is a little bit further, closer to the North Pole, and we did the exact same thing, except no sauna. And so this time, literally, I'm not even getting hot to get in the water. I'm just like, I'm stripping down to my skivvies. I'm walking into a river where it's freezing cold. I'm sitting there for 45 seconds. I'm monitoring my heart rate on the Oura Ring app, mostly to make sure I stay alive and walk out. And there's nowhere to get warm. Just a towel.
Brian
Okay, so you passed the. Sounds like you passed the test.
Tom Hale
I think I passed the test, but maybe just barely.
Brian
Okay, you refer to Finns as socialist. Americans are very capitalist. Of course, you've got, call it close to half your employees in each country. What's it like with two different, very different cultures and trying to blend them and manage them? Like what?
Tom Hale
Maybe this is a philosophy of culture, which is that you can't make a single culture. I mean, you can. There are elements of our culture which are shared across finland in the U.S. you know, passion for the product and a sense of mission around health and you know, blah, blah, blah. But the thing is, they're very distinct. I think culture begins and ends at the door. The Finnish culture is actually different from the US culture. And what makes the company strong is that those cultures can coexist and they can stimulate each other and they can, you know, propagate ideas across. They're not, they're not like, they're not one monoculture, they're. They're two cultures and they, they generate ideas and they generate activity in ways that are different. And quite frankly, I think, you know, it's part of what makes a company good is to have a diversity of cultures and viewpoints.
Brian
Okay. I would imagine you kind of like at HubSpot and lots of other scale up companies post Pandemic, people got a little more hardcore and more into performance culture and just started pushing harder. Yeah, not easy. What was it? Sounds like you kind of went through something similar. What was that like in Finland with the Finnish employees? How'd that go over? How'd you manage through that, you know?
Tom Hale
Well, first of all, I think Covid in a weird way was a health crisis that everybody on the planet experienced. And so in some sense you had a huge commonality, weirdly. And as a healthcare kind of oriented company, it actually pulled people together.
Brian
Yeah.
Tom Hale
And in a, in a weird way it also changed a bunch of other norms about how you work, you know, remotely and all that stuff and actually quite, quite positive. But to kind of go to your question when, you know, post Covid you sort of had everybody. I don't know, I felt like the whole civilization of humanity was like in recovery post Covid. And so, you know, one of the things that I felt really strongly that we had to do was to sort of establish norms of getting people to work together in person but not come to an office. And so what we did is we set up like a fund and a practice of bringing People together, having them stay together for two or three days, making it really intense, a lot of connection. And we shifted budget and time and energy to do that. And that actually I think made a huge difference.
Brian
Make sure I got it. You're kind of a remote culture, but you fund, get, you know, whatever.
Tom Hale
Yeah. At the team level, at the organization level, at the company level, and get people together in person. Because it turns out, I don't know, 100,000 generations of humanity have optimized for connecting in person. Right. Like I can read your face and know that, like you trust me or you're listening to me or you care about what I'm saying. And that just reinforces all this cultural and social capital that you have as a team that you're sort of banking so that later when things get tough or you're remote or whatever, you can draw on it. So that was a big part of what we did. I think the other thing that, that maybe this is what I did personally was I made a point of being incredibly visible even when I couldn't be. We had hired a bunch of people during COVID so I can't drop by your office, but you know what I can do? I can kind of lurk in your Slack chat and if I see some really great work, I'm gonna comment directly right on that. And I think this is, maybe this is a hint for other folks or maybe if they wanna do this, they can just by paying attention to the work that was happening at all levels of the company, from the lowest to the highest, by paying attention and being like, hey, that's a really good idea. Or have you considered this? It made a culture of it's okay to have ideas and have them move up and down. And by the way, people would challenge me. And in challenging me, then they felt confident that like we were gonna get to the best idea because it wasn't just my idea. And he would do that. We did that in Slack or we did that in these meetings that we pulled people together and creating this sort of non hierarchical culture that's not bound by time or geography or role. Really powerful.
Brian
Okay, just kind of back to you. You've had a super interesting career. You've kind of lived in that. Kind of call it 200 to 2000 employees, roughly.
Tom Hale
Yeah.
Brian
A lot of the found CEO founders I work with are kind of in that spot. Yeah. Or about to go in that spot.
Tom Hale
Yeah.
Brian
What goes wrong between 200 and 2,000?
Tom Hale
Yeah.
Brian
Yeah, let's start there.
Tom Hale
Well, Steve Jobs famously said, right, you know when the bozos come, right.
Brian
Did they come?
Tom Hale
They did. I think in every company in that scale, you end up hiring a lot of people. And sometimes you're hiring is maybe the stakes are, I don't know, slightly less high or something like that. And somehow some bozos might come. And so the key is like, you want to resist that. You want to identify, you know that and move to correct it if you can. And by bozos, just to be clear, you know, there are people who are well intentioned, but maybe not as committed or as mission driven or as focused or whatever it is. So in that scale, you have to be careful. That's probably the biggest risk I can see. The other risk, of course, is that you lose whatever it was that got you to 200 people, which is that kind of like that passion, the spirit, the sense of mission that brings everyone together to accomplish a common goal. That's very difficult, but requires everybody to like, you know, put their shoulder against the wheel. And I think what's interesting is that if you can preserve that between 200 and 2,000 people, it's the most interesting time in a company. More than 2,000 stops being interesting because you're managing managers who are managing managers, and your influence is muted. At 200 to 2000 is a. I'm not a founder, I'm a CEO. But as a CEO, I can be in touch with directly those 2000 people, and I can touch them. Just like I was talking about this sort of idea of like going into someone's, you know, small group slack and being present and being visible. You can do that. And people can talk to me, they can walk up to me and I can know their names and know what they're working on and have an idea about, like, what they're doing. I can say that's not just, hey, clap on the back, great job, you know, it's more like, you know, I noticed what you did here and it was really great. And that those little moments with a CEO, I agree with that. Huge.
Brian
I didn't do enough of that.
Tom Hale
Huge. I mean, like, I remember coming up as a, as a, you know, know, a staffer. If the CEO noticed what I was doing and gave me a compliment, I could, I could go for a year, you know, and so I do, I make a big effort to try and pay that forward in some way.
Brian
Okay. So I took two things away from there. Be careful not to hire a bunch of bozos. Well, yeah, how do you do that? Oh, and my second takeaway is, okay, be very present and Give positive. Give positive affirmation from time to time.
Tom Hale
And negative too.
Brian
Yeah.
Tom Hale
You have to be able to let people know when they're not doing a good job and say, I'm kind of disappointed in you. And it's not like, you know, you're fired, whatever. It's more just like, hey, I expect more from you. And the thing is that that's a personal accountability that's really powerful. One other thing, and it'll come back to your question. I think one other thing about 200 to 2000 is that there's an asymmetry. And in a startup there's this amount of work and this many people to do it. So you have to be really selective about what work you choose to take on.
Brian
Yep.
Tom Hale
In 200 to 2000, there's this amount of work and this many people, which actually means you can grow someone's career really fast. And that's a great trade. Work hard and we'll move you quickly through the organization. We'll give you experience that you could never get at another company. That's a really powerful way to sort of get the most out of your human capital. Above 2000, you have this much work and you have this many people, which means they're fighting for the best work. And that's politics. Everybody talks about how they don't like politics.
Brian
How do you keep it out?
Tom Hale
You fight like hell to make sure that that asymmetry still favors work versus people. Because that's sort of the root cause in my mind, of politics. Well, you do other things too. You say we don't have a political culture or when you see someone behaving in a political manner, you make an example of it and you say, this is not how we behave. We don't do this. I think that's sort of setting a norm, hiring leaders who are not political and then allowing them or encouraging them to model non political, non hierarchical behaviors. But I think the fundamental is this asymmetry of work to people. Because what happens is people get territorial and they start to protect their work or they start to protect their opportunity and then that becomes you're talking to each other about what you should do versus your customers.
Brian
I really like that. I'm going to be. Mind if I borrow your little.
Tom Hale
You're welcome to completely steal it. I'm sure someone told me. I just forgot who it was.
Brian
One of the things I noticed in these companies is like it's the director layer comes in.
Tom Hale
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Brian
And that it's by definition a middle management layer. And I encourage founders to push that director layer off as long as possible. Yeah. Do you have any advice for like, when that comes in? How do you make that productive? How does it not turn into Dilbert?
Tom Hale
Well, and by the way, for those of you who don't know, Dilbert is a late 90s comic strip with the pointy haired boss. I guess, I guess everybody knows Dilbert. Or maybe I don't know my case, if I. My kids, I'm sure they'd be like, what are you talking.
Brian
That's a good point.
Tom Hale
Thank you for coming.
Brian
But.
Tom Hale
Okay, no, just. Okay, just setting this. I talk to a lot of millennials and a lot of Gen Z now, so I got to be really on it.
Brian
You got a lot of Riz, by the way.
Tom Hale
What's that?
Brian
You got a lot of Riz.
Tom Hale
Thank you. Thank you very much. No cap.
Brian
So like, stuff just slows down.
Tom Hale
Yeah.
Brian
And like the to do list for HubSpot, like it just got shorter. Like the bigger you get, the less you get done. You have tricks on how to keep the pace going.
Tom Hale
Yeah, yeah. Okay. I got a couple tricks I don't know, I think work, but here's, here's one. Okay, so the first thing is you keep as few layers between the top and the bottom. Meaning, you know, you don't have senior directors and directors and VPs and senior. Like you just try and kind of resist that for as long as possible. I think this is famously a flat organization if you can do that. So I think that's, that's one way to do it. I think the second one is when you think about middle management, I often favor promoting people internally into the company, into middle management as opposed to hiring them. No, I don't always do that. But one of the reasons you do that is because you're able to identify both the kinds of people who might be good at it, but also you're able to identify are they true blue believers and do they have the passion and the mission? Because the worst thing you can have is somebody who's in middle management who has no ambition. Because that's actually the Dilbert, the Dilbert's. Like, I don't want my life to be complicated. I want my work life to be as manageable as possible. And I'm going to manage everything to be managed. And that's the definition of an empty suit. Right. What you hire is an ambitious middle manager whose ambition is to be a CEO and know that at some point they're going to leave because they're going to have to. But that ambitious middle manager is one of the most effective prophylactics against sort of the propagation of bureaucracy. I think the other thing that you do is you say, listen, we really are going to empower you and we're going to hold you accountable. And then you make that true. You can't hire a dog and then bark for them. You have to hire somebody and say, like, you have got to do this and I'm going to hold you accountable for it. I might have some advice for you and I might have some guidance and like. But. But you've got to do it. And it comes back as sort of a variation on ambitious middle management. But it's basically, we're going to give you the keys to the car, so drive fast, but don't crash. And I think the last piece of it is you create a company culture that reinforces that. That's like risk taking. You know, we're going to. We're going to let you take some risk and. But we're going to support you through that and we're going to give you the best advice we can. It goes back to this asymmetry thing where if you have enough time and energy to talk to people in middle management, you can, one, root out the people who are the Dilberts because you're talking to them. And then two, you can find the ones who are not the Dilberts and you can encourage them and model and say, hey, do what Sal's doing. Sal's doing an amazing job.
Brian
Okay, related to this, this is more in B2B than B2C. And you worked in a bunch of B2B businesses. As the layers come in, the distance between the CEO and the customer increases. Do you have any hacks for. Okay, you got a bunch of layers. How do you stay in touch with the customer? How does that customer's voice propagate through the org?
Tom Hale
Yeah, well, I worked at SurveyMonkey for a couple years. This is one of the things that we did was like to make sure that the voice of the customer was sort of both programmatically pulled into the company and then distributed without the company. So I think the ways you do that are like, you know, NPS surveys and sharing the. The verbatims. And you have rituals and meetings where you do that. And I can't remember was the HubSpot where they had the customer at the table every time we did. Right. You always had, like we still do
Brian
at the board meeting, we invite a customer, you do a customer panel.
Tom Hale
And I just, I Think that's what you do. You set a culture that says it is part of your job expectations that you're going to have customer interactions. If that's cruising Reddit or talking to people on airplanes, or going to, you know, at B2B, going and talking to customers, you are just going to do that. That's part of the job expectation. And you create both the time and the expectation that you do that so that you end up with more customer input. And then you say, by the way, this is how you're successful in this organization. You're successful when you're framing things in terms of customer needs and solutions for customers and customer narratives and customer values and in health in particular. Like, it's actually really easy because the customer stories for us are things like, you saved my life, you got me pregnant. You, you saved my father's life. You helped me change my life for the better. And those narratives, by the way, are incredibly motivating. Those kinds of narratives, like, people wake up in the morning at Aura and are like, man, I could save someone's life today. What am I gonna. What am I gonna do to make that better? And the thing is that that flywheel of like, both customer understanding means you do a better job, but also customer empathy for something, you know, that's important. It just drives like, I don't know, extra 10, 15, 20, 30% of performance because people believe in what they're doing.
Brian
Okay. A lot of founders are asking me about this, the kind of the missionary to mercenary ratio, and the mercenaries start showing up around 200.
Tom Hale
Yeah, yeah,
Brian
talk to me about, hey,
Tom Hale
listen, if you're in sales and you're not a mercenary. And so, I mean, it's different by different companies, right? I mean, some companies are more sales driven, some. Some are more marketing driven, some are more product driven. So I think that that ratio, by the way, you need both. You need missionaries and mercenaries. I think if you have mercenaries in your product and engineering work, probably not the right place for mercenaries. You want people who want to build beautiful things that are amazing, that express who they are.
Brian
What do you do if you're building something boring?
Tom Hale
Same. You find the people who are passionate about it, you know, I mean, you find the people who care about what it is that they're doing, or you find a way to make them care. I mean, SurveyMonkey, it's interesting. SurveyMonkey, we translated the mission into giving a voice to all the people who don't have voices. And the thing is, like, okay, sort of. Sort of true.
Brian
Yeah.
Tom Hale
But the reality is the people came to work were like, yeah, I'm amplifying the voices of, like, employees or customers or whatever. And that was a reason for them to be committed to their mission. So I think you got to find something that does it. I just, I think it is so important that to have missionaries in the company and to elevate them at the same time. You know, if you're going to market, you want people who have commercial instincts. And commercial instincts are correlated highly with a mercenary viewpoint. Now, I think mercenary is also a caustic term. It basically implies that you're willing to kill for money. And I don't think that's what I'm saying. Like, that's what that term means. And what you really want are people who, like, they want to solve customer needs and drive a commercial outcome. And that's what, you know, the thrill of the chase, the sense of victory when a custom. When you have a customer win and, you know, it doesn't have to be a zero sum game where, like, the customer loses if the company wins. And by the way, that they get their jollies out of seeing the numbers and putting them up. And I just think you need both. Yeah, Maybe it's. Maybe it's 80, 20, I don't know. Making it up.
Brian
Okay, you've been through some dramatic moments in your career. Um, and I want to get to that. But one of those dramatic moments was you made a business model shift. Yeah, Historically, you just bought the ring and that was it.
Tom Hale
Typical hardware model.
Brian
You introduced a $6 a month subscription service. Can you. And it was controversial. Your customers were not happy. Just take us behind the scenes of that decision. Was that kind of percolating in the org in your head? Was that the first thing you did when you came in as a CEO? Was it contentious within the leadership team?
Tom Hale
I think the answer is it was the strategy. And the strategy was, in order to be the most competitive hardware company in the world, you needed to be a really great software company. And to be a really great software company, you needed a business model and a way to deliver periodic software value. The problem with the hardware model is that you ship your hardware and it's fixed and that's it. And you might ship a little bit of a software update or a firmware update, but really you're not really changing the value proposition for that product with new capabilities. And the reason why is because when you ship the next version of the hardware, you want all that value to go in that next version of the hardware. So someone moves from their iPhone 13 to their iPhone 14. So you're disincented, actually, to provide value to your customer over time. The power of a subscription model is that you got to kind of earn your stripes with your customers every month. Yeah, every month. Now, by the way, $6 a month for Aura is kind of a low bar. Whatever, two cups of coffee. And if we are delivering information that helps you with your health, the value of that is so priceless. Like the two times, you know that, like, we help you get to bed early, or we predict that you're going to be sick, or we tell you when to, you know, procreate in order to have a baby. Like, the value of that is so high that the. The ratio of v2p value to price is measured in multiple.
Brian
Was it contentious inside the org?
Tom Hale
Okay, so I'm getting to that. Right, so. But so I'm saying it was our strategy.
Brian
Yeah, it was our strategy. You brought that in as your strategy, from what I understood.
Tom Hale
Well, no, actually, it had already.
Brian
It was already there.
Tom Hale
It was already there. And I think there were things that I did maybe to sort of tune it a little bit, but. And I don't even say I. I'd say the team did this. But was it contentious? It was contentious, and partially it was contentious because going against the grain of expectation, hardware should be a single price was contentious. And this idea that, I don't know, you probably have some subscriptions that you would be really sad if you stopped paying for them, like Netflix and Spotify or something like that. You probably use those things. And if you were forced to give them away. And if you were forced to give them away, you'd be really sad.
Brian
Yes. Right.
Tom Hale
So the idea is like, well, if you can do that, then you probably have a right to charge for subscription. Now, that being said, there are lots of subscriptions that you probably pay for that you don't get any value from, and you continue to pay because of either inertia or whatever. And those things we used to call them, in the back of the days, we call them zombie subscriptions. And the customer who used them were Sleeping Bears. Yeah. You know what you don't do with Sleeping Bears?
Brian
Pokemon.
Tom Hale
Yeah. You don't poke them. And so as a result, what you want to do is avoid the situation where you got a bunch of customers who are not getting value, but you're still collecting price, in which case the value is low and the P is high. You want to avoid that. So I think we felt that that was the Strategy. And that was. Okay. So that controversy part actually was relatively easy to kind of navigate because we said, listen, one, there's a reason that we're doing this. We're creating a business model that will allow us to invest in software value and deliver feature value and analysis value on your health over the periods of time. And like, the product will get better every month. And like SaaS, you're getting a new release every time. And by the way, turns out that worked. We don't, we have some of the like, literally the best retention I have ever seen in my 30 years of working a subscription business at Aura. And that's because the value that we deliver is constantly a multiple of the p the price that we take. So that was, that was that part. The second part of it was. But what about all our customers who bought a product? How can we introduce a subscription for them? And that was easy. That was give them a pathway to get to effectively what they had before. And so in our version of it, if you were a Gen 2 customer, if you wanted to get a Gen 3, and you paid to get a Gen 3, and we gave upgrade discounts, which is crazy. Who gives upgrade discounts on hardware? If you did, you would be a lifetime subscriber. And it was to make that transition in business model as smooth as possible. And so in doing that, actually tremendous value because if you're a lifetime subscriber for the, you know, committing to just the next version, you are going to get free software for the rest of your, you know, time that you wore Nora ring, great deal. In fact, some of our most loyal, highest retaining customers are those customers because they have no disincentive to churn. So that was the second thing and then the third thing, and this was a little bit like the genius of it. Can you buy a HubSpot in a, like a perpetual license model?
Brian
No.
Tom Hale
No. Why not? Because that's how it's sold. Same thing. I think people have an expectation about subscriptions, that it's the freemium business model. I give you 50% of the value for free because I want you to try the application. And then if you pay, you'll get the other 50%. And we did something very different. We said it is a subscription product and if you pay, the product will be as functional as it is. And if you don't pay, it'll collapse down to be very minimally functional. It's not, it won't work, but it's not 50% of the value. And so as a result, interestingly, when we rolled out the subscriptions. What we saw was that some people were like, oh, I'm not gonna pay
Brian
a lot of people.
Tom Hale
Well, actually less than you would think. Oh, I remember hearing it was a lot of agita. It was a lot of agita.
Brian
But like the six months a month, there was a lot of noise.
Tom Hale
It was a lot of noise. I think, you know, you make a bargain with your customer, it's hard to change that. There's no question about that. But what would happen is like, someone would see the product and then they'd stop paying for whatever reason. Sometimes it's just like their credit card died and they didn't update it, whatever, and it would collapse down to sort of its non subscription kind of experience. And then they'd be like 24 hours later, they would renew because they would see that the value that they were getting was absolutely worth that price. And I think that that is the key. If you can keep that value over price ratio north of one and a half or two, then you know you're doing it right and your customers are going to reward you with retention and loyalty.
Brian
Okay, when, when this rolled out, it was noisy. You were newish. Yeah. And you were catching hell on the Internet. Yeah. What did that feel like inside your body? Did that bother you or does it roll out? Like that kind of thing bothered me when that happened.
Tom Hale
It did. And I'm, you know, I don't know if this is something that everybody does, but like, I spend a lot of time reading Reddit and interacting with customers and I respond to people who, you know, connect with me on LinkedIn. And people were flaming us, and I would argue with them. Not argue, but like, be like, hey, let me tell you what this means is that if we can invest in this, we can invest more in science and we can invest more in research and we can deliver you more value.
Brian
When you explain you lose.
Tom Hale
I'm not sure that's true.
Brian
Okay.
Tom Hale
Because. Because sometimes I would win. Right. And sometimes. And when I won one argument like that, that person would become, you know, an agent of making that argument 10 times to 10 other people without me in the room. And the reality is, it's like, if you think about sort of that transition, it's been an unqualified success. Unqualified success.
Brian
At any point during the very noisy parts, did you and the team say, maybe we shouldn't have done it? Maybe we should roll it back or inside your belly? You know, after a couple of rough Reddit threads, did you think, maybe I should roll it back and then talk yourself out of it.
Tom Hale
I think once. I think once. And I can't remember the exact moment, but I do remember where I was when I was having the conversation. I was in the garage in Salesforce Tower.
Brian
Okay.
Tom Hale
And I was talking to someone on the phone, and I was like, oh, this is, like, this painful. And what do we. And. And I thought, God, you know, the only way out is through the only. Because. Because if we. If we do roll it back, then everybody would have been right and we would have been wrong, and there's no recovering from that. So we went through. And by the way, like, I. I think it was the right. It was the absolute right way to approach that problem. Yeah, you get. You have to get. Maybe this is a good CEO lesson from a person who has been a CEO now for, you know, some number of years is you got to be comfortable being uncomfortable. That is the key. That is the nature of it. You can feel that discomfort, and you got to let that discomfort and sit with it, because, like, that's actually where the magic happens when you're doing something that either no one else has done or doesn't feel like it can be done. We were defining a new way to think about hardware and, like, a business model around these kinds of products. No one else was doing it this way. It was just us.
Brian
Okay. I'm a customer. You've got one. I believe you got one subscription level. Right. I have a lot of conversations with founders about pricing. Like, a lot, by the way.
Tom Hale
That's great things.
Brian
But think everyone.
Tom Hale
Let's talk about that more. Yeah.
Brian
And there's, like, there's entropy and there's, like, gravity in the world where over time, the pricing just gets more expensive for everything almost. And over time, it gets really complicated. And I think there's a big cost to that complication. I also think there's a cost, particularly for startups, for making their product too expensive. It creates friction, slows down the sales process, creates an adversarial relationship with the customer. And my thinking is that gap between what they would pay and what they pay, there's goodwill in there. That pays itself back over time. I agree. Why don't you introduce another tier with more stuff in it? Do you have these conversations?
Tom Hale
What's your pricing every time we bring a new feature and we decide to put it into the product for free?
Brian
Yes.
Tom Hale
I think about that value over price ratio and keeping it. Keeping that value over price ratio north of 1.5 or 2. And new features is part of the promise. That we've made. Now, there might be something that's completely nonlinear, Right. Some. Some value. Example, we, we partner with a company called Natural Cycles. They make a FDA clear digital contraceptive. If you use Aura in concert with Natural Cycles, it's, it's a way to not have to do hormonal birth control or have a surgical IUD and have a way to not get pregnant. Wow, Interesting. Should that be free inside of a $6 a month subscription? Probably not. And why not? Oh, well, because the value that you're getting from that much, much greater than the value you might get from some advice about your sleep or your health or how many steps you took or whatever, all the things that you do value. And so in that case, there is kind of a tier because you're buying Aura and you're paying an Aura subscription, then you're adding Natural Cycles on top of that, and that's Natural Cycle. I think it's like $20 a month. So you understand that value. So the key is, is that. And I think your, your premise is really the right one, which is the delta between what they pay and what they might pay is goodwill. And thinking about that in the right way, you're thinking about, like, what is the optimal. What's the optimal price point? I also think to your. And maybe to underscore what you said, but worth repeating, complexity kills.
Brian
It does.
Tom Hale
Complexity kills. And I know some people are like, well, it gives our salespeople a lot of ability to understand how much value we're delivering for the customer and then price into that value for consumer products or products where, like, it's a single decision and there's a low, you know, like people can turn off or they, you know, click the button.
Brian
Yeah.
Tom Hale
And they're out. You got to make it simple so that they can do the equation in their head. Am I getting enough value for this $6? And the answer is yes.
Brian
Okay. Another question that a lot of founders and CEOs I coach ask is about doing big partnerships.
Tom Hale
Yeah.
Brian
You've got some interesting ones. Very interesting ones. Gucci, I believe, is one.
Tom Hale
Gucci was one. Fascinating Great stories with Gucci, I'll tell you that much.
Brian
Okay. I want to hear that most partnerships fail over, over the long haul if
Tom Hale
the incentives aren't aligned.
Brian
Okay, so talk about that. Tell me about how the Gucci partnership happened and tell me about the incentives.
Tom Hale
Well, let's, let's zoom all the way up.
Brian
Sure.
Tom Hale
I think you have to be selective about who you partner with. And maybe one of the criteria for that selection is do you have mission alignment and do you have incentive alignment? Because if you do, then you're building something that probably has more durability than a very commercial transactional partnership, which is just about. If you make money, I make money. And, you know, there's just. There's more to it than that. And that. That alignment, by the way, will get you through those rough moments when your partnership might dissolve.
Brian
Okay.
Tom Hale
Like a marriage or something like that. Right. So I think that's really important to recognize that there are different classes of partners, too. There are people who are on your platform and, you know, your obligation to them is to provide that platform and have it be robust and performant and scalable, but you don't have to do a whole lot for them. And then there are ones that you are, like, you're, you know, natural cycles and aura. Great example of a really, really close partnership. And if one of us got into a bind, we. We would come to each other's aid in a second, in a hot second. So different scales of partnership. Now the question is, like, how do you make that decision? I actually think if you're a vertical product with a narrow customer, ICP actually, guess what? Service that customer really, really well. And if you're a broad horizontal product and you need to service a wide range of ICPs and a wide range of customer needs, then partnership is literally your best way, because it turns out you're going to need that both to be able to build a complete solution or. Or product for a customer and go to market, because you need that go to market maybe in. Famously in enterprise software, going to market in all these different categories, you need partners to do it. This is why Salesforce had, you know, force.com and like every. Every platform company in the world does it. So it's really important to understand what it is you're trying to accomplish. All right, so that's that. So with Gucci, what was interesting is they were both.
Brian
How did it start? You know, who called? Did they call you? You call them?
Tom Hale
You know, it's a good question. I'm not sure.
Brian
It wouldn't have been on my short list of.
Tom Hale
No, I'm not sure. Well, you know, we. We sell a lot to women, of course. And, you know, one of the sort of critiques from women is like, can you make it. Can you make it more appealing? Can you make it more beautiful? Can you put diamonds on it? We actually for a while had an OURA ring with a diamond in it, and people loved it. I mean, and what that sort of tells you is that there's utility value that we deliver, but there's also kind of like this intangible fashion value. So when it came time to partner with Gucci, they had the design. They had a design that was a successful design. It was a black ring with sort of what's called a gold torchon.
Brian
Wait, what do you mean they brought you.
Tom Hale
No, they already had a design that was successful in the market. It was a non tech ring.
Brian
Okay.
Tom Hale
It was just the design part. It was the fashion part of it.
Brian
Okay. They had a ring that worked. Yeah.
Tom Hale
And they sold lots of rings. And so this. But this one was protected. Particularly successful was black with gold and the interlocking GS. It was kind of like, I describe it as the kind of ring you might wear if you were a Roman emperor at a gladiatorial contest where you were about to decide whether or not, like, someone was gonna live or die. It's like that kind of vibe. Got it. And it was. I mean, it was beautiful. It was boss. I mean, you felt like a Roman emperor when you wore this.
Brian
Okay, I need, I need some more boss in my life.
Tom Hale
Yeah, of course. We all do. So, you know, the two things that I remember so distinctly about that was one actually goes to pricing. And we were like, how much do you think we should price this for? And like, we charge our 299 is what we charge. And they were like 9.99. And I was like, no way, we can't charge that much. This is the Gucci team.
Brian
Which person were you dealing with? The CEO of Gucci, Marco Bazzari. Okay.
Tom Hale
And he's a genius. I love him. He's no longer the CEO of Gucci, but he said, Look, 999, it's a no brainer. And I'm sorry for the accent, but like, it was, it was amazing because he had so much confidence. And we said, well, wait, is that because of Gucci? And he says, no, because of aura. You don't know how valuable it is. And so we priced at 999. And I remember being like my jaw was on the floor. And I was terrified that it was not going to work. And when we launched it, literally we sold through them in like five weeks.
Brian
Sweet.
Tom Hale
And it was just. And the thing is, because, again, the power of non utility value, it's an intangible, but it's one.
Brian
People care a lot about who sold it. Did you sell it or did they sell it?
Tom Hale
Well, so that was the other that was the other observation. Remember I said, like, partners can be distribution and they can be value. So they gave us this sort of value, that their value was the design and the Gucci brand and the power of their collaborations and a customer base who loves Gucci and all that stuff. They also had distribution. They had retail distribution. So they sold it. We didn't even sell it on our website. You had to go to Gucci's website or to a Gucci store.
Brian
Okay.
Tom Hale
And the thing is, they were your channel. They were our first channel partner. And the thing is, it was like hotcakes, of course, Japan and the Middle east, top two markets flying off the shelves in the Japan and the Middle East. And what we learned was, oh, my God, this thing, it's a piece of jewelry. It expresses something about you, and you want to look at it. You want to put it on your body, and you want to look at it and say, oh, does it look good as my fingers? How the shape of my finger. And we were like, oh, Insight, Retail is a critical channel for us. And that gave us the confidence to enter retail. Now we're in Target, Best Buy, Costco. We'll be everywhere. And that insight was critical because what it did is it put this object of desire in the focus of people in a way that we couldn't do that on the website.
Brian
Wait, and how did the. Don't give me anything confidential, but how did the terms work? Did Gucci pay you 299 for every one they sold?
Tom Hale
Yes.
Brian
That's basically the way it works.
Tom Hale
Yeah, they. We. They were our distribution partner. There were. There were other elements of it that had to do with. With the way the subscription worked, you know, because of course, we. You know, we had to. We had to solve that problem. But. But effectively, yeah, they were a distribution partner, and Gucci's famous for doing collaboration, so of course, that's part of what they. They knew how to do that really well.
Brian
Okay.
Tom Hale
Scarcity, by the way. So that's the. That's the. So what of that.
Brian
We just had the Ferrari CEO on. Talk about scarcity. Okay. When I was growing up at HubSpot, in the early days of HubSpot, salesforce.com was a terrific partner. They sold sales software. We sold marketing software. They were the older, bigger player in the space. I would go to the Salesforce conference every year. Dreamforce, waiting to see. Sitting there like,
Tom Hale
here's our new. It's called Salespot.
Brian
And then 2012. Yeah, yeah. We used to say salesforce is. To sales is HubSpot is to marketing. And under our breath we say, until Salesforce says, and anyway, they did it, and that was painful, but we pivoted. It all worked out great. I mean, and don't spin me on this one.
Tom Hale
Why would I spin you? What is there to even spin about Apple?
Brian
Yeah, they have their big announcement. You're sitting there watching the announcement. Do you have the same feeling in your stomach I had when I was at Dreamforce that they're gonna come out with a ring and ba ba, ba, ba, ba.
Tom Hale
You know, I mean, that's obviously one of the things we think about is like, who and which major tech platform is gonna come come out with it. But I'll give you a couple of reasons why. Actually, I sleep soundly. Okay, about that. And I'm not spinning you. I'm just going to tell you how it is. So the first one is, you might be surprised to learn this, but really, 2/3 of oura ring wearers have a second wearable, and most often that second wearable is an Apple watch. And that's because in a weird way, they're complementary. We measure at night. During the night, your Apple watch is usually on your bedside stand, charging. They provide a lot of utility during the day with notifications and alerts and a screen to display it on. We're kind of a quiet in the background check engine light for your body that's sort of so kind of complimentary. I think the world is going to be one where you're going to have a bunch of different, you know, things that deal with you and your health, and those things are going to talk and they have to talk. That's the second reason. And so in a world where you have an Apple watch or a Garmin or whatever, like your Oura ring, which is measuring over time, long periods of time, measuring at night when your body's at rest. And so the data quality and signal is very, very clean and very, very clear. And by the way, the accuracy of measuring on the finger is very different than measuring on the wrist. Our signal strength is 50 to 100 times stronger there. And so as a result, more information is stored. We can derive more things from it. All sort of interesting. So that kind of complementarity still exists. And then maybe the last one, and I think this, this is maybe more specific and germane to Apple, is that like, I think all of this stuff is data is kind of the, the oil for the predictions, the inferences that an AI might make. And in order to. To do that, you need to collect a Lot of data and we have a huge advantage in that.
Brian
Yeah, a lot of people talking about hardware these days. Any advice on getting into the hardware business and is there different ways to think about the business model and how it works? Because you kind of grew up in the software business.
Tom Hale
Yeah, I grew up in software business and so I think I always tend to think in terms of software. But like advice I might offer for hardware folks, I think the barriers are interestingly lower now, but you have to maybe resist some of those shortcuts. So for a long time, famously, we did not manufacture in China, and for a lot of different reasons today, actually, we are opening up a factory in the United States to serve one of our customers who cares a lot about security and privacy. So we made a decision that was maybe not the easy decision. The easy decision is like, find a factory and manufacture in China. It's the cheapest, fastest, and they do an amazing job. And we for a long time really kept control of that. By the way, that was a competitive advantage for us. It allowed us to build the art and science of building Lord of the Rings in a way that not everybody could copy and gave us a lead. So resist that shortcut. That might be one. I think the second one, and this goes to your business model question, is to think about the power of hardware and software and how you think about those business models having interplay. We don't say, oh, it's a piece of hardware and if you want, you can buy the subscription. Nope, it's a subscription product. That's integrated hardware and software. That is the value proposition. That's the business model, by the way. I think that's really, really useful. And then maybe the last one is you think about what are the constraints in hardware, which are like, I don't know, the laws of physics and cost and the fact that you have to have physical inventory and all those things and find ways to get really, really good at those. If you're going to build hardware, you have to be really, really good at those things and you have to be really good at forecasting. And so make sure you are good before you try and scale up or spend too much money. The last thing I'll say, and this is inspired by being here, is that I think AI is changing the game. AI is changing the game for how you do this. The ability to iterate over a thousand different designs and to test them and model them like that's unprecedented. And so if you're doing anything in hardware, think about that.
Brian
Okay, last question. A lot of People listening to this podcast or let's say a VP at such and such a company and they want to be a CEO someday, what advice would you give them? Maybe they don't want to start something, they want to become a CEO.
Tom Hale
I think again, this is sort of reflecting on my own experience and so it's an n of 1, but I was very intentional in the middle part of my career about operating every function. So, you know, I've run call centers, I've been on a sales team. You know, I was a product person by training. You know, I did a bunch of time in the field. You know what, I was an M and A executive. I did internal startups and I did like running big businesses. So I think it's about that diversity of experience as a CEO. That one gives you empathy for all the different functions that you are ultimately going to have to oversee and maybe even assess the leaders that you choose for those functions. And then maybe more importantly, you start to see how the interplay works inside of a company because you have an appreciation for each one at a finer grain than you might otherwise.
Brian
Interesting. I just interviewed the CEO of Goldman Sachs who obviously isn't the founder of Goldman Sachs. He said the exact same thing.
Tom Hale
Is that right?
Brian
Yes.
Tom Hale
That's interesting.
Brian
I appreciate you. Thanks for coming on the pod, Brian.
Tom Hale
Thank you.
Brian
Fantastic. Congrats on all your success. Thank you. Yeah, appreciate it. I'm a happy customer. Thank you.
Tom Hale
Stay, stay healthy.
Brian
Thank you. Okay. Hope you like that chat with Tom. Here's I'm giving you some of my takes on it. He's a first time CEO and I spend most of my life these days coaching first time CEOs and really great companies. And I kind of added up the things that surprise first time CEOs. So if you're a CEO wannabe, these are some of the surprises. The first surprise is it's actually way more stressful than you thought when you started it. And for me, where it got really stressful wasn't so much like 10 employees when we hit 100 employees and I just started thinking about, man, all those employees are counting on me. Their spouse and their kids are counting on me. A lot of times their parents are counting on me. And so my stress level really cranked around 100. I started getting help for it. I start, I got on an ssri. I was having panic attacks and kind of calm myself down. But the ironic thing is the bigger the organization gets, kind of the more pressure is on you. The other thing that seems to surprise most first time CEOs is really, you're constantly selling. You're selling to accounts customers, you're selling to potential employees, you're selling to investors, you're selling to partners. You're just always selling. And that surprises particularly technical founders. The third thing is just like the sense that no one's coming to save you. Like in my previous jobs, I always had a boss or I had all these resources around me in a bigger company. But like it's really on you. Your VCs aren't going to save you. Your co founder is not going to save you. The responsibility is much, much bigger than being in a zec in another startup. As part of that, like as a CEO, you get plenty of complaints. You get complaints about your VCs, you get complaints about your employees, complaints about your customers. You get up, you got a lot of complaints. If you're like me, there is nobody to complain to except your co founder. You can't really complain full hog to your VCs. You can't really complain to your employees. So it's like pretty contained. Almost every One of the 10 CEOs I've interviewed has been through some kind of really hard crisis. Like Parker, from his first start of blowing up to his big drama with deal. Almost all of them have really traumatic crises and that can kill a company quite easily unless you're quite thick skinned. So the thick skinnedness is really important. The problem when you hit those crises is you think like you're floundering in the water, you're in the middle of this crisis, you think it will never end. And then people on X and people on Reddit will dunk on you and tell you what a moron you are. That surprised me. It shouldn't have, but it did. The hours are brutal. Whether your company's 996 or not, you're 996, especially in the early days, firing people is worse than you thought. Never gets easier. The other thing that kind of happened to me is the larger the company got, I noticed that the company and I, like my brand, kind of merged with the company. And everything I said and everything I did, all the employees, everyone was watching up everything very carefully. And they may not have pretended they were listening that carefully, but if I said something in the hallway like, wouldn't it be great if it was this feature, five minutes later someone was coding it. So you really can't think out loud that much as a CEO. Those are some of the surprises of first time CEOs. He talked about a couple of those A bunch of the other ones I picked up from the CEOs I work with. Hopefully you're avoiding some of them. Tom is an expert in going from 200 to 2000 and lot not losing your mind on the way. And typically what happens from 200 to 2000 is things really start to slow down and lots of companies kind of die in there. A couple things to avoid that quagmire. One is there's an old expression, higher slow and fire fast. It's very old and it's very true. Now it's easier said than done. Lots of founders tell me, the first time I thought I should have fired somebody, I should have fired them, because I always end up firing them. I say that same thing, but I never really did it. I was always more patient than I should have been. But I'm also a homo sapien and it was hard for me to do that. The second thing I would say is you hit 200 employees and maybe get some VPs. That's when the director layer shows up. And in particular when you hire that director layer from the outside, they're kind of a professional middle manager. And so push that director layer off as long as you can. Keep the span of control. Maybe it's not Jensen Huang 60 but keep it wide and avoid that middle layer. The thing that really helped HubSpot is we talked about ev. Enterprise value versus tv, your team's value versus me v your own value. And the thing that happens inside of companies is this. They get bigger. People don't solve for themselves as much. They solve for the team. And when they solve for their team, they kind of suboptimize the team next to them. So that TV is where a lot of execs and a lot of companies fall down. So I recommend that I wrote on whiteboards all over the place, EV greater than sign TV greater than PSI me the. And I kind of pounded that into the company. Anytime someone in a meeting was talking very tv, I would push on the ev. I don't think you should have all been there, done that, folks. I think you should have 50% been there, done that, and 50% homegrown. That institutional knowledge for the homegrown is super useful. People underestimate the value of homegrown and how people can grow and learn. So I like that ratio. And the last thing I would just say is elon. This is a big Elon thing. I was at the Sequoia's basecamp event, must have been 10 years ago, where he did this vector alignment thing. And he described all his employees as vectors, and there were different sizes. Some people were more powerful than others, but they were kind of all pointed in different directions. And he said the key for him is, no matter how big or small the employee is, how do you get them all pointed in the same direction and get stuff done? Vector alignment and a little tiny bit of lightweight planning can help you a lot with that. Those are some of my tricks to not fall into the 200 to 2000 trap. Okay. Tom adds some interesting thoughts on pricing. I do, too. You know, when Moses came down from the mountain, it's well known he had ten commandments. Five on one tablet, five on the other. It's not as well known that There was a third tablet with an 11th and a 12th commandment. The 11th commitment was, over time, your product's pricing will go up. The 12 was, over time, your product's pricing will get more complicated. Now, your sales organization loves that your products don't. What I liked about what Tom did, he shifted his business model to subscription, but he kept it relatively cheap at six bucks a month. And, you know, he didn't overcomplicate it. It was quite simple. And I think a move for founders is like, if the supply and demand curve looks like this, people very quickly rush to almost perfectly match that supply and demand curve, the willingness to pay, with the pricing model, and that encourages the pricing model to get more complicated and more expensive. I think that's fine when you're 15 years old, but in startup mode, I think you want to gap between those two things. You want a less adversarial relationship with your customers. You want to be delivering maximum value. So you get word of mouth. In that gap, there's goodwill, and that goodwill pays itself back in spade. So don't maximize that supply and demand curve of me and my advice. Okay, Those are my thoughts on Tom. Some really good tips in there, I thought. I hope you enjoyed it. And I'll see you on the next episode of Long Strange Trip. Sa.
Podcast: Long Strange Trip: CEO to CEO with Brian Halligan
Host: Sequoia Capital
Guest: Tom Hale, CEO of Oura (Oura Ring)
Release Date: March 26, 2026
Episode Theme: A candid, practical conversation about the stresses, challenges, and unique rewards of being a CEO, especially in companies experiencing rapid growth and cultural complexity. The episode explores leadership lessons from the “messy middle” (200-2000 employees), cross-cultural management, transitioning hardware businesses to SaaS models, and more.
Brian Halligan (ex-HubSpot CEO, now Sequoia partner) interviews Tom Hale, CEO of Oura, to dissect the unvarnished realities of the chief executive experience. Their wide-ranging conversation dives into the mental weight of stewardship, building non-hierarchical cultures, balancing performance and recovery, managing dual US-Finnish company cultures, scaling pitfalls, pricing strategy, and bold business model shifts.
“The only way out is through. If we do roll it back, then everybody would have been right and we would have been wrong, and there’s no recovering from that.” – Tom Hale, on standing firm through customer backlash [35:06]
“You gotta be comfortable being uncomfortable... that’s where the magic happens.” [35:15]
For founders and CEOs, this episode is a masterclass in how to navigate high-stakes leadership, adapt business models, build lasting culture, and stay human under pressure.