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The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett

CEO Diaries: Airbnb’s Founder Brian Chesky on Brutal Rejection, Great Leadership, and The Biggest Mistake Founders Make!

Wed, 28 May 2025

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From cold emails to global dominance - the Airbnb story began with rejection. In this unmissable episode of CEO Diaries, Airbnb founder and CEO Brian Chesky reveals the brutal truth about rejection, resilience, building world-changing companies, and the one thing more important than product or profit: culture. Visit - ⁠www.linkedin.com/DOAC⁠ Listen to the full episode here - Spotify -https://g2ul0.app.link/WgBxbVavJTb Apple - ⁠https://g2ul0.app.link/89nODBivJTb Watch the Episodes On YouTube - ⁠https://www.youtube.com/c/%20TheDiaryOfACEO/videos Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Chapter 1: What is the significance of hiring and culture in business?

0.089 - 20.909 Steven

This was one of my favorite business conversations that I've ever had on the Diary of a CEO podcast, and it's frankly set the bar for every CEO or co-founder that I ever interview. Brian taught me, more so than any other guest I've ever had on the show, how important hiring, culture, and team building is. The reality of running a small business is that switching off is never really an option.

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21.369 - 37.96 Steven

Even when you try, the ideas, the excitement and all the responsibility is always there. And because you're always switched on, it's only fair that your hiring partner should be too. LinkedIn Jobs, who are the sponsor of this moment's episode, has been that hiring partner for me and for years because it's always working away in the background.

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38.34 - 59.936 Steven

My team can post our jobs for free, share them with our networks and reach top talent all in the same place. So let's get into today's conversation. At the very beginning, I saw this email, which I think is really important because maybe it's the most important thing because there are going to be people starting companies now that are getting a lot of emails like that.

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Chapter 2: What was Airbnb's early funding experience like?

60.836 - 79.5 Brian Chesky

This is from August 1st, 2008. By the way, so let me give the context of this email. So Joe Nate and I were trying to raise money. For everyone trying to raise money, I want you to know that Airbnb was trying to raise $150,000 at a $1.5 million, I think, post-money valuation.

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79.7 - 80.48 Steven

I'll give you that right now.

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Chapter 3: How did rejection shape Airbnb's journey?

80.88 - 105.25 Brian Chesky

Exactly. And here's one of many rejection letters. Hi, Brian. Apologies for the delayed response. We've had a chance to discuss internally and unfortunately don't think that it's right for fill-in-the-blank investment firm from an investment perspective. The potential market opportunity did not seem large enough for a required model. Now, I want you to just put this perspective.

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105.35 - 129.195 Brian Chesky

Airbnb handles nearly as much money as the entire GDP of the country of Croatia today. One in about every $1,500 spent in the world, about $1 spent on Airbnb. That's a pretty large market. And our business is pretty much the same idea as the idea that we proposed that person who said our market opportunity wasn't large enough. So there's probably a myriad of lessons in that, aren't there?

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129.675 - 151.169 Brian Chesky

And I think that It's a reminder that the world doesn't just change, or at least it doesn't just transform towards our dreams, ideals, and ambitions that require certain types of people. We might call them entrepreneurs, inventors, all sorts of people in different domains, that believe the world could be a little different than the one that they live in.

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151.189 - 168.92 Brian Chesky

They have the audacity to believe that they can do it. And they have the ability to convince other people to go on that journey with them. But along that journey, everything's going to be different. You're going to get lost. You're going to be cold. You're going to have like obstacles. Things are going to attack you. You're going to fall down pits.

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169.58 - 187.946 Brian Chesky

And the question is when people are cold and they're shivering and they're not sure what to do and you're running out of resources and rations, can you find your way up that mountain? Do you know why you're going? Can you invent all these different apparatus? Like there's a stream you can't figure out. You can build a bridge to cross the stream with the limited resources you have.

188.106 - 209.883 Brian Chesky

Can you recruit people along the way? And can you beat the drum? And when people are tired and they say, I want to sleep, you say, yes, we're going to rest, but we got to go just 500 more steps. I know it's right over the edge. I think we can do a little bit better. And can you push people outside their comfort zone? Not enough to hate you, but enough to feel like a trainer.

210.343 - 231.775 Brian Chesky

You're like three more reps and you don't want to do it. And then that very moment, they're not your friend, but at the end of the workout, you're like – Thank you for pushing me that hard. This is that kind of person. And can you take divergent ideas that no one's ever seen before and just continue to reformulate them? Could you store these ideas in your head, a thousand competing ideas,

Chapter 4: What qualities do successful entrepreneurs possess?

232.555 - 254.808 Brian Chesky

and just reformulate them in your mind. It turns out this stuff is difficult, but you can work your way up there. Most people watching this have the skillset to be an entrepreneur. Not everyone has the skillset or the desire to run a giant company. I don't think everyone needs to do that, but a lot of people have the skill set to do something, to start something.

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255.489 - 273.803 Brian Chesky

This is what you need to get up the mountain. And the problem is, imagine we got up the mountain and then somebody was dropped from a helicopter, having never walked up the mountain, and you tell them, okay, now you lead this group up the next mountain. Can you imagine how hard it'd be for that person to drop from the sky?

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274.423 - 297.854 Brian Chesky

Or maybe they joined a third of the way up the mountain, but they weren't there at the very beginning. You see, a founder brings three things that a professional manager doesn't have. The first thing a founder has is they're the biological parent. So you can love something, but when you're the biological parent of something, like it came from you, it is you, there is a deep passion in love.

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298.911 - 317.911 Brian Chesky

The second thing a founder has is they have the permission, right? Like I can't tell another child what to do, but if they were my child, I probably could. I have the permission. And so you have a permission. I could rename the, I could rebrand the company and a professional manager would probably come and say, I can't do that, but I know how we named it. I know how we branded it.

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318.171 - 338.8 Brian Chesky

So you know what you can change. The third thing that a founder brings is you built it so you know how to rebuild it. You know the freezing temperature of a company. You know what temperature it melts. You know what this looked like before it was tooled, where it came from, the alloys, where they were sourced from. You're not just managing it, you're building it.

340.16 - 360.494 Brian Chesky

The problem is professional managers typically don't have any of those three, at least not in the abundance of founders. But the problem with founders, there's two problems. The first is most of them cannot scale to run a giant company. And even if they do, the last problem is they don't live forever. And companies, great companies, usually want to live longer than humans do.

360.935 - 382.847 Brian Chesky

And so therefore, you end up with the inevitable challenge that Disney and Steve Jobs had, which is succession planning. Actually, both of them died prematurely. And maybe Steve prepared more than Walt did. And that's the last step of the journey. But I think there's something really special about founders and founder-led companies.

383.247 - 401.737 Brian Chesky

And I think that if you want the world to change, we need more entrepreneurs. We need more founders. If you want to empower more women, you should make more women entrepreneurs. If you want to lift up more economies around the world, you should lift up entrepreneurs in those economies. It's one of the greatest ways to create wealth, to change the world, and to just change the trajectory of society.

402.887 - 426.816 Steven

So powerful, Brian. It made me think about what Steve Jobs did leave behind. And that's maybe where the word culture comes in. Because I would have bet against Apple surviving and flourishing in the wake of Steve Jobs' passing because Steve was so, so special. But he clearly left a set of enduring principles behind. You know, I spoke to Daniel, as you said, as a friend of yours.

Chapter 5: What challenges do founders face in scaling their companies?

535.364 - 551.169 Brian Chesky

Yet at its core, HR is about people and culture, and it's one of the most strategic functions within a company. That's why we don't call it HR, because it should be about bringing out the very best in people. Most of all, I want us to feel like we're building one of the most creative places on earth.

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552.327 - 574.778 Brian Chesky

A company that brings together some of the best people of our generation to dream up new products and services that capture the world's imagination. A place where years from now, people would say, if I was alive during that time, that's where I would have wanted to work. I literally wrote that email last week about culture.

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578.01 - 597.94 Steven

It's so incredible. It's so incredible because yeah, the greatest leaders that I've met all arrive at the same conclusion about culture. Even if it takes them 10 years or 20 years or whatever, they arrive there. The question though, because so many CEOs could send that email, right? Everyone could just, you know, they just heard Brian say it, so they copy and paste and send it to their team.

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598.821 - 601.582 Steven

The question is how do you actually create that?

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602.283 - 628.228 Brian Chesky

It's so great. So big, huge insight here. Okay. I used to think you talk about the culture and you talk about how important it is and you write out a list of, well, what is your culture? Well, our culture are a bunch of principles or values we live by. So what makes us most unique? Let's do a session. Let's write out a list of our values. Now let's tell everyone the values.

628.608 - 657.932 Brian Chesky

Let's print them on the walls. Let's have people repeat them. Let's keep telling people culture is important. And that stuff can help a little bit, but it's not how you build culture. So let me give you a few thoughts. Your culture is the shared way you do things. And often they're based on lessons you've learned. And the lessons you tend to remember the most are the ones that are seared in you.

658.533 - 681.898 Brian Chesky

They come from trials and tribulations, from your most difficult times. It's the way you rise the occasion in the face of adversity. Your culture is the behaviors of the leaders that get mimicked all the way down every single person. Your culture is every time you choose to hire someone, every time you choose to fire someone, every time you choose to promote somebody.

682.398 - 708.93 Brian Chesky

It's the way everyone does everything. And the way a leader designs the culture is not by writing out a list of values. It's by basically leading by example every single day and taking a survey of every single thing happening and constantly shaping it, pruning it. Like a gardener, you don't just allow the culture to happen. You design the culture. You have an idea of what you want to do.

Chapter 6: Why is succession planning important for companies?

709.491 - 727.468 Brian Chesky

And you're just constantly getting this group together. You might have a culture of excellence. And a culture of excellence means I review all the work and I say, not good enough, not good enough, not good enough. And eventually I could not join the meeting, but people know what I'd say. They'd say, it's not good enough. This is our standard.

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727.788 - 752.632 Brian Chesky

And the moment I can not be in the room and the same action happens as if I was in the room, that's the moment it goes from management to culture. So it's like a golf swing. To teach a golf swing, you've got to like, probably I don't play golf, but the instructor has to watch the person. And at some point, the person learns how to swing a golf swing without the instructor there.

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753.292 - 774.133 Brian Chesky

That's the difference between management and culture. And culture is something that people learn to develop these shared instincts. And it's so important because it's your ultimate intellectual property, not your technology, not your recipes, not your exclusive contract vendor relationships. the way you know how to do something.

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775.113 - 789.945 Brian Chesky

That is the most important thing a company has because all a company is, is a bunch of people, a bunch of money, and a direction that those people are using those resources to go towards. People, resources, strategy. And the culture is the thing that bonds those things together.

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Chapter 7: How can entrepreneurship change the world?

790.385 - 805.78 Steven

I hope you found today's conversation helpful and insightful. If you're ready to join two and a half million other small businesses already using LinkedIn for hiring, head over to LinkedIn.com slash DOAC now. That's LinkedIn.com slash DOAC to find your next exceptional hire.

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