Alisa Cohn
Transcript
Lenny Rachitsky[00:00:00)]I want to dive right into talking about your advice on having difficult conversations, where like in performance review season, what do you suggest when someone's being told they're not going to get the promotion?
Alisa Cohn[00:00:10)]Hope for the future is so important. I know this is going to be challenging for you to hear, not going to promote you, but I want you to know this. It's really important to me that you're able to succeed in your career here,
You're big on helping leaders understand that their job is not to make employees happy. Alisa Cohn[00:00:29)]They're trying now to be the leader who everyone loves, but what really needs to happen very often is, we need to drive towards results. This employee continuing to not really do a great job at their job, you don't want to push them because you don't want to upset them. You don't want to give them difficult feedback, so you're just going to keep hoping it works out. Ultimately,
My three questions to end the meeting are... Lenny Rachitsky[00:01:00)]Today my guest is Alisa Cohn. Alisa is an executive coach who has worked with C-suite execs at both startups like Etsy, Wirecutter, Venmo, and DraftKings, along with Fortune 500 companies like Microsoft, Google, Pfizer, and the New York Times. She was named one of the top 50 coaches in the world by Thinkers50 and the number one startup coach for the past four years by Global Gurus. What I love about Alisa is that she gives her clients very specific and actionable advice. In her conversation, Alisa shares specific language and phrases that you can use when having a difficult conversation with your reports to make these conversations go much smoother and be less difficult. Also, three questions you should ask at the end of every meeting to make the most possible forward progress after each meeting. Plus, why your job as a leader isn't to make people happy and what you should be focused on instead, and a set of questions that she calls the founder prenup that you should talk through with potential founders to make sure that these are the people that you want to be working with for a long,
long time.[00:01:59)]There's also so much more advice. If you're a leader of people or a founder, and especially if you dread hard conversations, this episode is for you. If enjoy this podcast, don't forget to subscribe and follow it in your favorite podcasting app or YouTube. It's the best way to avoid missing future episodes and it helps the podcast tremendously. With that, I bring you Alisa Cohn. This episode is brought to you by Eppo. Eppo is a next generation A/B testing and feature management platform built by alums of Airbnb and Snowflake for modern growth teams. Companies like Twitch, Miro, ClickUp and DraftKings rely on Eppo to power their experiments. Experimentation is increasingly essential for driving growth and for understanding the performance of new features. And Eppo helps you increase experimentation velocity while unlocking rigorous deep analysis in a way that no other commercial tool does. When I was at Airbnb, one of the things that I loved most was our experimentation platform where I could set up experiments, easily troubleshoot issues,
and analyze all on my own.[00:03:00)]Eppo does all that and more with advanced statistical methods that can help you shave weeks off experiment time and accessible UI for diving deeper into performance and out-of-the-box reporting that helps you avoid annoying prolonged analytic cycles. Eppo also makes it easy for you to share experiment insights with your team, sparking new ideas for the A/B testing flywheel. Eppo powers experimentation across every use case, including product, growth, machine learning, monetization, and email marketing. Check out Eppo at geteppo.com/lenny and 10X your experiment velocity. That's get E-P-P-O.com/lenny. This episode is brought to you by Rippling, a single platform to build and scale your startup on. Rippling handles all the, can't get it wrong admin work of payroll and benefits giving you back hours every week, but it does a lot more than that. Rippling is a game changer for the entire company with tools for HR, IT and spend,
all built from the ground up and designed to work together seamlessly.[00:04:01)]Just hired someone? Rippling makes onboarding easy. Whether your new hire is sitting next to you or halfway across the world, in just a few clicks, Rippling automatically generates an offer letter, ships a laptop with the necessary apps and permissions, and even delivers a corporate card. An employee needs to update their benefits contribution. When they do it in Rippling, the change automatically syncs to payroll. CTO forgot her laptop in an Uber? Lock it remotely with Rippling. Many startups I've invested in like Sprig, [inaudible 00:04:30] and ClassDojo, use Rippling because it's a force multiplier for lean teams, helping them eliminate major headaches and operate their business more efficiently. For a limited time, Rippling is giving Lenny's listeners three months off. To redeem, visit rippling.com/lenny. That's rippling.com/lenny. Alisa,
thank you so much for being here and welcome to the podcast. Alisa Cohn[00:04:54)]Lenny,
it's so great to be here and thanks for having me. Lenny Rachitsky[00:04:57)]I want to dive right into talking about your advice on having difficult conversations. I personally dread difficult conversations. I feel like I practice ahead of these things. I'm like, "I'm going to say these things. It's going to go like this,"
Totally. Lenny Rachitsky[00:05:19)]I know you work with a lot of execs on this specifically, and what I love is you've actually come up with a bunch of scripts that help people make these conversations less difficult. So how about we talk through some of these scripts that people can actually start applying?
Alisa Cohn[00:05:32)]Let's do that. I love that idea. And also Lenny, as you just said, very relatable and also, so you're not alone. If I could ask you a question, if you're picturing a difficult conversation that you have had, should have, might have, and you're nervous about, it's hard for you, can you sum it up? What's hard about it? Because it's helpful to clarify what is hard about it?
Lenny Rachitsky[00:05:56)]Great question. I just don't want to make people sad and upset, and I worry about their reaction, how to deal with that, and them just getting really upset and mad and just like, "Oh, man. This really made things worse." So I worry about the reaction,
I guess. Alisa Cohn[00:06:11)]Okay, about making things worse or about their reaction?
Lenny Rachitsky[00:06:13)]The reaction,
just making someone upset and sad. I don't want to do that. Alisa Cohn[00:06:17)]Making someone upset. Okay, good. And again, you're not alone about that. Just one more question on that. What's the problem if they're sad and upset? What does that mean to you?
Lenny Rachitsky[00:06:26)]Oh, I love this life coaching we're doing. Yeah, so it's like what happens if they get sad and upset?
Yeah. Lenny Rachitsky[00:06:36)]I feel like it's stuff that I'm going to have to deal with. It's like this drama all of a sudden, this new fire I have to think about. And yeah, it's like the additional work it creates and also just, I don't know. Yeah,
it's a good question. Alisa Cohn[00:06:48)]You can think about it some more, right? I'm not going to put you on the spot right now, but just to say for all of us, the reason they're difficult, to your point, they're difficult. But we're putting meaning on things all the time, every day, all the time, and I think it's important, it's actually helpful in motivating you to have difficult conversations, but also in helping them go well. If you can get to the bottom of what you're putting on top of it, what you're weighting it with, because I can understand that again,
you are not alone. I don't want to make people upset. Totally.[00:07:20)]And also, I would just say on the other hand, when you're enlightening someone or you're working out a situation with someone and it's difficult, if you don't give them the opportunity to hear what you have to say, if you don't bring this up, then you're never going to have the opportunity to help them see something differently or help them improve or help you improve the relationship or whatever it is you're trying to do. And so,
I can understand it's a natural thing. I don't want to make them upset.[00:07:51)]No one wants to make anybody upset, but through that upset on the other side of that, can often be a whole new possibility and a whole new revelation, and actually a lot of joy and freedom. I think that we forget about all the other possibilities that come out of difficult conversations and we just land on these really uncomfortable parts about like, "oh, it's going to be a lot of extra work" or like, "They're going to get uncomfortable or even maybe cry."
And I think it's just really helpful to tap into what you make it mean and then also what other possibilities it could mean. Lenny Rachitsky[00:08:23)]I love that. And it's one thing to hear that and say that, it's another to actually feel that deeply and feel like I shouldn't be as worried as I am. I think part of it is doing these enough times where you're like, "Okay, it's actually not so hard." And the other is having some of this support. To make this even more real, let's give some examples of what we say when we say difficult conversations. There's like, "You're not getting a promotion that you thought you would, we're going to let you go." What other examples or common difficult conversations that you run across?
Alisa Cohn[00:08:50)]Those are two very common ones. And then of course, the most common one is just difficult performance feedback. Or [inaudible 00:08:56] what we say, quote unquote, "constructive performance feedback," which we never made positive. It only is the sort of things that you're not doing well. I think there are two flavors of that. One is, "You're screwing up" and the other is, "Developmentally, I'd like to see you add something or change something."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:09:12)]Yes. And as you say that, one of the other fears I have is them just disagreeing and me feeling like maybe it's not right,
maybe I'm wrong and feeling shit maybe. I didn't see something and then just looking worse after the whole thing. Alisa Cohn[00:09:27)]Yeah. And so then I think what's also really helpful to, and part of the process that we can talk about this for sure is getting a difficult conversation is number one, tapping into what's uncomfortable for it, for you, about it. And then number two, also getting your mindset right. So to say the obvious, are you doing this to hurt someone's feelings? No, never, right?
The opposite. Alisa Cohn[00:09:50)]That's not the reason that anyone's doing it. Sometimes people are giving the performance feedback or talking about something that's been bothering them in order to express themselves and vent. And actually, that is very helpful to identify for yourself, that's why I'm doing it. And then, maybe not do it then, until you can transform your reasoning. But at the end of the day, the hope is as a manager, the reason that you're giving someone this so-called constructive feedback is because you're helping them get better. You need them to change the behavior. They'll never get promoted if they keep doing that. They'll never be successful if they keep doing that. And so, it's your job as a leader and as a manager,
to help them out of that problem and help them do something different. Lenny Rachitsky[00:10:33)]The best story I've heard to make that really real for me, I think it was Kim Scott when she came on the podcast. She told a story of, I think it was Bob, where everyone just knew he was terrible and it was like, everyone's was just like knew he was not good and eventually, the boss had a conversation with him eight months into it and told him, "It's not going to work out. You're just doing a bad job." And he's like, "Why didn't anyone tell me? I didn't realize that. If you told me, I would've changed." And everyone assumed he knew. And so I think to your point,
this is to help the person. It's not not to hurt them. Alisa Cohn[00:11:05)]Yeah, a hundred percent. One of my clients, he was running a division and one of his people was not doing it right, not doing it right, not getting the right kind of data, not having to do the right kind of analysis, whatever it was. We were talking about it and I said, "Well, how come you have another feedback with her?" And he said, "You know, she's just going to cry. She's just going to cry. She's older, whatever, she's just going to cry. It's going to be too uncomfortable, whatever." So we worked, we talked and talked and talked. I gave him a script. We really worked it out and he agreed that he would go in and have that conversation with her,
which he did.[00:11:40)]And he reported back to me and he was shaken. She cried. Of course she did. She cried. That's what he knew she was going to do. And so she was upset and she went home early and the whole thing. The next day she came in and she said, "Thank you so much for telling me that. I wish someone had told me that 15 years ago. I think I could have had a different career." And I think that is so meaningful for all leaders and people who are responsible for other people to understand that you're uncomfortable when they start crying, of course, or they have this difficult reaction or whatever. But honestly,
the only way you're going to be able to help someone grow in their career and become the best person they can be is by leaning into these tough conversations. Lenny Rachitsky[00:12:23)]What I love about the scripts we're going to talk about, which we probably should transition to, is it's again, one thing to hear that and be like, "Yes, okay, I need to do this. I need to get better at typical conversations. I need to have that talk without someone that we should let go." It's another when it's like tomorrow is the meeting and you're like, "Oh, my God. I have to have this conversation now." And so, I love that you actually give people a really simple approach to how to lay this stuff out in various different contexts. So let's talk through some of these approaches and scripts you've come up with. What do you think would be a good one to start with?
Alisa Cohn[00:12:55)]Well, we can start with performance feedback and we can just sort of take a typical example. So first of all, once you've done your work to get your mindset right to kind of know what you're doing it, and then you just really want to really be able to wrap your mouth around the words. So what that looks like is practicing, and the script could be, "You know, Matilda, I want to chat with you about the way you're interacting with your peers. So what I'm hearing from them is that you're missing deadlines on a regular basis and not letting them know you're missing the deadlines,
and that also you're not fully keeping your team up to speed.[00:13:27)]And so they're kind of confused running around. Now, we both know that the most important way you can be successful here and also achieve your goals is to make sure that you are working with your peers in a way that's consistent and that they can count on you and you can count on them. So I wanted to let you know about this. I want to certainly hear what you have to say, but the most important thing is that we leave this discussion knowing how you're going to make sure that you're keeping your peers in the loop and also your team in the loop."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:13:55)]Yeah, there's so many elements there that are really interesting. Just focusing on what I'm hearing versus just coming from you or something you've done wrong. It's, here's what I'm hearing from multiple sources. I think that helps people. Okay, it's not just you and just like, "Oh, my manager hates me."
Right. Lenny Rachitsky[00:14:14)]It's like, "Okay, other people are saying this." And then I love this phrase of, we both know where it's not just me telling you this. It's like, "You also know this. I know you're smart and you also know that this is, something is wrong here." And then this goal of, here's what we need to [inaudible 00:14:31]. You're like very clear call to action, almost action item, like leave this meeting with, "Let's just be aligned on this thing."
Alisa Cohn[00:14:36)]Yeah, thanks for calling those out. I hope, and again, what I'm trying to convey in my tone is also, "You know what? It's Tuesday. We got to have this conversation. I'm sure it's going to end well. I'm not mad." The whole point about my manager hates me, right? "I'm not yelling at you." The more even keeled and even matter of fact you can be about something that's kind of just run-of-the-mill feedback, the better. And I think it's just also what I didn't say before, and I think it's also important is that, as you are recognizing that one of your jobs is to give this feedback, is that you have to build a relationship with people so they can hear you through the lens of, "Oh, Alisa wants to help me." Not, "Oh, Alisa hates me. It's always a problem."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:15:21)]How did you start that phrase again? Because the starting is always the hardest part for me. How do you kick off the conversation? What was the couple sentences used?
I wanted to have a conversation with you about some things I've been hearing from your peers about the way that you all are interacting together. Lenny Rachitsky[00:15:35)]Awesome. So there's an element of, don't make it feel like a huge deal. Just like, "I want to have this conversation with you about something." And it's just like, "Let's have this conversation and here's what we want to leave this conversation with."
Alisa Cohn[00:15:46)]Yes. And I can't stress enough that it's actually really helpful to also have spent some time with Matilda or whoever saying, "Great job on the way that project landed." Or, "Hey, launches, when they happen on time and they're smooth, sometimes we don't notice anything. I want you to notice, we didn't notice anything. That's fantastic. You did a good job in that launch," or whatever it is. Because then, you've had the conversation with them to give them positive feedback and point out what's working, that builds the relationship so that you have the lens of, "Oh, yeah. When something's working, they tell me. When something's not working, they tell me, too."
That's how you build trust as well. Lenny Rachitsky[00:16:23)]They want to be criticizing them [inaudible 00:16:25]. We need to have another conversation what we're hearing about, problems [inaudible 00:16:28].
Yep. Lenny Rachitsky[00:16:29)]Obviously, if you say it the same way every single time, they're going to feel like this is weird. Do you recommend it's this kind of Mad Libs approach or is it make it your own as much as you can? What are kind of the key? Or is it like, here's actually how you want to say it every time?
Alisa Cohn[00:16:42)]In my book and when I work with my clients, I give specific scripts and what I will regularly say when I'm working with my clients is, "Okay, so this is how I would do it," and then I'll land it for them. But they have to make it their own. You always have to make it your own and I don't think it's a problem of doing it the same way every time. It's not like people are going to notice you because you're talking about different topics, theoretically. If you have a formula that can work for you, that's going to motivate you to do it, that is what's important. And what's important is that it's neutral,
not loading on or not venting on someone and not unloading on someone. Lenny Rachitsky[00:17:19)]I love that we started with this one because it feels like the most common one of just your employee is underperforming and you want to make sure they understand and adjust. What if you're not hearing something from a bunch of people? What if it's just your perception of their writing? You need to work on your writing skills or you're coming in late. Is there another way you phrase it where it's not, "I'm hearing it from other people?"
Alisa Cohn[00:17:43)]Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. So I'll talk about writing. I think it would be something like, okay, "Matilda, part of your job is to be able to create these documents and I appreciate that you do them on time. What I've observed is that they can often be not as structured as I'd like them to be and they also lack a conclusion. So what I'd love you to do is look at these three or four examples of some folks who are doing them really well and see if you can model your writing on theirs. If you need to take additional classes or if you need help in any way, let me know. But ultimately, I want to get your writing to the level where everybody is appreciating what you bring to the table because the level of your writing really reflects the level of your thinking."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:18:27)]Mm-hmm. Wow, I like that. I'd want to follow your advice if I got that. So the way you started that is what I've observed, which also is not like, "Here's what I think" or "Here's what you just need to do." It's more like, "Here's what I've noticed, here's what I've seen, here's what I've observed about what you're doing." And then it reminds me of, what is it, nonviolent communication, that whole framework of just focus on what you see, not what is wrong with them, not what they've done. I guess, is there anything there you want to say of just the importance of focusing on what you've heard from people or what you've observed versus maybe what people often do instead?
Alisa Cohn[00:19:05)]Yeah, I mean you just really said it and I think it's such an important point, observable facts. The idea that this is not a judgment. This is not... Sort of as less judgy as possible is also very helpful. It makes it neutral. It's observable facts and it's also sort of based on expectations, right? So the writing is, we expect it to be at a certain level and it's not that way. And here are the reasons it's not, the specific reasons,
it's not.[00:19:35)]The way you interact with your peers, it's important to be at a certain standard, and here's why. Because when we all work together, we're going to be able to execute and when we don't,
unfortunately we won't be able to. So you staying in sync with them is important and the observation is that they don't feel fully in sync with you.[00:19:52)]And so every time we talk about this, it doesn't become this, "Oh, I don't know. I just feel..." By the way, some things you have to give feedback on and they are kind of a feeling and those are more difficult, but so many things if you do the work to really think about what is the observable data, I always ask my clients, what's my evidence that this is happening? And you have to spend some time thinking about it,
but it's really worth it because it makes the feedback easier for you to give and easier for them to hear. Lenny Rachitsky[00:20:20)]Is there anything else along the lines of this specific type of feedback that is worth sharing before we move on to a different type of feedback?
Alisa Cohn[00:20:29)]Well, I think just that the reason, one of the many reasons that people have gone uncomfortable giving feedback is that somebody might get defensive or they might start crying as we talked about. And so I have a script also, which is if someone gets defensive, which is it's like I'm giving you this feedback and you're getting defensive and I say, "Well, let's pause for a second. First of all, I want you to know that I'm telling you this actually, just to make you better because I know how important your career is to you. I know how important the success is to you and it's important to me too as your leader. The second thing is, my observation is that you're getting a little bit emotional. I want to know if we can continue having this conversation now or if we need to kind of pause it. At the end of the day, we really have to have this conversation and I really want to see you make changes, but I understand you might need a few moments to digest it." (00:21:18): The importance of that for you is not even what you say, but that you have prepared and you are prepared for if someone has that kind of reaction and that you don't have to, yourself, react to it. You know, "No, I'm not doing that. No, no, no, no, whatever." And you can say, "Yes, you are."
Now we're in a fight and that is not cool for anybody. It's certainly not cool for you as a leader. So it gives you the opportunity to recognize that you have another tool in your toolkit rather than just react. Lenny Rachitsky[00:21:48)]So if you find yourself feeling defensive or they are just not hearing and just fighting back, the tool is just pause. Let's just pause for a moment and it feels like there's kind of two parts to which you just shared. One is, remind them why this is important to them and why you're talking about this. And then two is, if there's just emotions kind of taking over, give them a chance to like, "Let's just pause and maybe come back to this because maybe you're not in the right state right now to listen."
Alisa Cohn[00:22:18)]Yeah,
exactly. Lenny Rachitsky[00:22:20)]Sometimes people get upset when you mention like, "You're getting emotional," or I don't know. Is that a thing that you deal with of just like, "How dare you say I'm feeling emotional?"
I'm just... Alisa Cohn[00:22:29)]I'm not emotional. Why do you think [inaudible 00:22:31] emotional? Right, exactly. Yes, of course. Now, when someone's crying, they're obviously getting emotional. When they're defensive, it's possible that you might want to use a different word. I can see that this is really upsetting you or this is really triggering you, or I can see that the temperature between us has just changed. You could say something like that. I do think also it's helpful to know your people because sometimes you could realize that actually they can deal with that, but then sometimes you have to really [inaudible 00:23:00]
the delicate words that you need to use to pause the conversation. Lenny Rachitsky[00:23:05)]Yeah. And I find, to your point, it's helpful to you too as the person giving it. And I feel like sometimes, you may be feeling like I should just pull back and maybe I'm wrong, maybe they're right, maybe I should stop and instead this gives you a chance to know I'm actually, I can't. I need to stay strong about what I believe because I... You put so much thought and effort into this already, it's unlikely you're just like, oh,
totally wrong about what you're saying. Alisa Cohn[00:23:30)]Yeah, exactly. There's something going on. There's something going on. And then also, the whole point about it being a conversation is that actually it's a conversation. Actually, Lenny, if you have a different point of view, I would like to hear it. Let's talk about it, but we can't keep going on like this, where I don't feel I can count on you for whatever it is that we're talking about. So we need to have this conversation and recreate a set of expectations between ourselves. Ultimately, that kind of conversation has the potential to really build the relationship and build trust, and that's another reason I encourage everybody to get over their discomfort and to lean into having these conversations because on the other side of that, is a much better,
Yes. Lenny Rachitsky[00:24:12)]Following this advice. So okay, so again, if somebody's feeling defensive, can you again say how you start that, if you notice that?
And then I'll highlight the two elements again of the... Alisa Cohn[00:24:25)]So the way to pause is to actually say, "Let's just pause for a second because I'm feeling the energy has changed and I can see that you're getting a little bit heated by what I'm saying and I want you to know that I have no intention of upsetting you. I just want to be able to talk to you about the things that are going to help you in your career."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:24:45)]Awesome. And I love, again, just the reminder of here's why this is important to you, here's the benefit to you and why this will help you. And then it's like, "Okay, let's just maybe take a pause and come back to this conversation if you're feeling like this isn't the best time." Awesome. Anything else along that line before we go to another type of a hard conversation?
Alisa Cohn[00:25:02)]I mean, I can talk all day about this [inaudible 00:25:06],
but I'm happy to move on. Lenny Rachitsky[00:25:07)]Well, let's pick another topic. I know you have kind of five buckets and types of conversation. Maybe the promotion one. That feels like I think we're in performance review season. It feels like these are happening a bunch. What do you suggest when someone's being told they're not going to get the promotion they expected or wanted?
Alisa Cohn[00:25:24)]Of course that's challenging. So again, getting your mindset right, recognizing they're disappointed, they're going to be disappointed, recognizing how you felt, the time that when you didn't get a promotion or whatever. And so kind of coming to it with some compassion. And also,
you have to get your reasoning right. So sometimes people think they should get a promotion because they were here for a year or whatever. Sometimes people think they should get a promotion because they're the only internal candidate who's qualified for this or they might have a sense of themselves succeeding or achieving that is more inflated maybe than you see them. So trying to think about where they're coming from.[00:25:56)]And then the conversation is just, "Matilda, I know this is going to be challenging for you to hear. I know you were hoping to get that promotion, but I want to let you know that we are going to actually be looking for an external candidate. I want to give you a few thoughts about why. First of all, in discussing this with my peers, I'm realizing that we need someone who has done this role multiple times in the past and has that experience. Number two, I think it's really important that they have an expertise in a specific realm that we've identified as really important. So for those reasons, we're going to bring someone in from the outside, not going to promote you, but I want you to know this. Number one, it's really important to me that you're able to succeed in your career here. And so I want to continue to help you find opportunities to build your skills and to advance. And then number two, when we bring this person in, I'm committed to finding someone who's a great people leader, who is going to help you build those skills."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:26:54)]So a few elements there that stood out to me. One is just being very upfront and not bearing the lead. Telling them very early, "Here's what I've decided." As you said it, I could see my heart sinking immediately when I feel that. So at least that's over and then it's, here's why. And that starts to help you feel like, "Okay, I get it. I understand at least how you thought about this." And then there's the hope for the future, your painting of,
here's how I can get there eventually. Alisa Cohn[00:27:21)]Yes, that hope for the future is so important and I think sometimes we're such in a rush to kind of deliver the bad news that we forget there's a human being over there who needs hope for the future. And hopefully. If they're a good employee,
hopefully they have hope for the future. Lenny Rachitsky[00:27:35)]I love that. Is there anything else to that script that you think is really highlighting or do you think I touched on the key elements?
I think you touched on the key elements. Lenny Rachitsky[00:27:43)]Okay. And again, the way you started is,
I have some bad news for you or I have some disappointing news for you. Alisa Cohn[00:27:48)]Yes, because it's just [inaudible 00:27:50].
Just get right into it. Yeah. Alisa Cohn[00:27:51)]Yeah, just get right into it. Yeah. By the way, the other piece on that might be, if it's appropriate, I'd love you to digest this information and then let's talk about it again next week to see what you've come up with or see how you feel about it because you want to send, this is not the script, this is for me to you. You want to send the, I care about you message because that's the other thing. In the workplace, people, they're going through all their feelings, all their emotions, disappointments. They're going to go home and tell their spouse,
didn't get the promotion or whatever. It's going to loom large. It's going to be demoralizing.[00:28:24)]When you, as a leader signal a lot, I care about you, I care about your feelings, I care that you're disappointed, I care about your career, you are always going to be able to help people stay resilient in the face of setbacks and ultimately, do extra work, do the right work for you and be engaged in your company because you've spent the time and energy making sure they know that even when things are not going their way,
they have an ally in you. Lenny Rachitsky[00:28:56)]What do you do if they just disagree, if they're just like, "But I do have those skills and I don't think this is fair." Thoughts on responding to that sort of feedback? I guess,
that's the defensiveness stuff. Alisa Cohn[00:29:06)]Yeah, that's the defensiveness stuff. And again, I hope you've done your homework to identify that actually that person doesn't have those skills and if there is a [inaudible 00:29:16] for example, but I do have those skills or sometimes people, I think more, even more often,
they don't respond to what you just said. They will instead explain to you that they've been here for a year or they're the only internal candidate or their peer got promoted.[00:29:31)]Right, they'll sort of explain to you things which are not part of your decision-making process and then it's helpful for you to say something like, "Yeah, listen, Matilda, I really understand that you were thinking that after a year, you'd get promoted around here. And in the past, I do think because of the stage of our company, probably people have been promoted at that period. That's not the place we're at right now. As we scale, we really need to think about not just what we need for today and tomorrow, but for the future. And that's why I want these specialized skills in here. I think it's going to help the entire company." (00:30:02): So that's an example of a discussion that you could have. I do have the skills. That's kind of interesting. I'd love to hear what you see as those skills. And it's not a problem to have the conversation right there then, but if there's a "Yes, I do, no, I don't, yes, I do, no, you don't," that pushback is never productive. And so, that's where you want to probably again take a pause and say, "Listen, I totally hear you. You and I have a different point of view about this. I'm not sure if it's productive to continue to discussing right now. Let's talk about it again in a week. But I also want you to know this is a decision that I've made."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:30:39)]I love though, when they come back to you and like, "But here's X, Y, Z." And you're like, "That's not what I was saying necessarily." I love that you basically mirror back. I hear what, I understand you believe, I understand you've been here for a year. I understand you're the only internal candidate," like making them feel very heard. That's a really powerful mechanic there. That is a good tool. Is there another script that you think might be helpful to talk through that is a common hard conversation people have?
Alisa Cohn[00:31:05)]Well,
Let's do it. Let's get into it. Alisa Cohn[00:31:13)][inaudible 00:31:13]. I'm willing to get into it. I just want to say two things about that. First of all, when you're firing someone, the hope is that it's not a surprise to them. You've had multiple conversations with them that they're not living up to your expectations. It's essential because the truth is, you want to create a culture where people are not surprised by being fired. And that's not even true for this one person you're dealing with. That's true for the entire company. So just kind of getting in the mindset of recognizing that if you shied away from those conversations, kind of like, "You're the problem here and you have some catch up to do." (00:31:43): The second thing is that before you fire someone, I think it's helpful to have the conversation before the firing conversation because something you said Lenny is like, "Oh, but maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I'm not sure." And that bleeds into, "Maybe I haven't been clear with this person." Regularly with my clients, I'll say, "Okay, have you been crystal clear about what you need from this person?" And what they always do is the hand motion like well, sort of, but well, maybe. Which means no,
which means no. You've not been crystal clear or you don't perceive even crystal clear. The way to make sure that you're crystal clear is by having the conversation before it comes to that.[00:32:23)]What that looks like is, "Listen, Matilda, we have to have a difficult conversation right now. I've talked to you multiple times about coordinating with your peers and not having them surprised about missed deadlines, and I've talked to you multiple times about keeping your team in the loop on different things. After six months of these conversations, I want you to know that the peers continue to feel like that you're operating on your own without coordinating with them. And I continue to hear from your team that they're not fully on the same page. I need you to know that this is very important. I need you to fix this within the next 30 days. Otherwise, I'm sorry to say, we're going to have to find a way to part ways because I can't keep this going with you. I know you have it in you to change. I value all you bring to the table, but if you don't fix these things, we're not going to have a future together."
That is very crystal clear. Alisa Cohn[00:33:20)]Yes,
Yeah. Okay. Alisa Cohn[00:33:22)]What do you think of that?
Lenny Rachitsky[00:33:24)]Yeah, that was great. So it starts with being upfront. This is a difficult conversation, just to set expectations. They're like, "Oh, shit." And then it seems like you come back to, again, multiple times this happened, observing here's what's happening. It's happened multiple times. I keep hearing from multiple people, [inaudible 00:33:44] be a problem. And so it's just like, "I need you to know," and you're just very clear. "Here's what will happen if this doesn't change."
Yes. Lenny Rachitsky[00:33:52)]Yeah. And I love that you also give them a little, there's always that hope for who they are and how you see them as. They're not worthless. It's just like, "You are great at a lot of things. You have these skills. You're great at blah, blah, blah, but still this is a big problem." And it's communicating how critical this is. [inaudible 00:34:08].
Alisa Cohn[00:34:08)]Yeah, and it's a deal breaker. It's a deal breaker. Right?
Yeah. Alisa Cohn[00:34:12)]If you have so many talents, but if you can't do these two things,
Yeah. Alisa Cohn[00:34:16)]And I think it's important to really sort of see that both. Sometimes people think, "Well, but I'm so talented." Yeah,
but your talents are not going to make up for these two deal breakers. Lenny Rachitsky[00:34:25)]Yeah. And I feel like I know we were going to talk about the firing conversation, but I think this is even more important than that because hopefully, this addresses the problem and you don't need to fire them,
which is more valuable. Alisa Cohn[00:34:36)]Yes. Yeah, hopefully. But even if you do, it's actually easier because you've already had the conversation. Right?
They're not surprised. It's clear. We've had the discussion. Lenny Rachitsky[00:34:46)]Yeah. So basically the script is like, "There's going to be a difficult conversation. I've seen multiple times this thing and we've talked multiple times and it's still not fixed and here's what I just want to be very clear about." Is there also a script you have for just actually doing the firing or is that less scriptable?
Alisa Cohn[00:35:05)]Well, the script for doing the firing is again, please everybody, talk to your HR professional. Talk to your lawyer. Okay, I'm not a lawyer, I'm afraid. So you have to make sure that you're all buttoned up on what you're going to do. But the conversation is actually very simple, which is just, "Matilda, we talked about this multiple times. The last time we had this conversation, I told you I needed you to make these changes. You haven't made these changes and we're going to part ways. So I have here, Sarah from HR or whatever, and we're going to talk through the logistics of that. I'm happy to have a longer conversation with you, but I want you to know we've made the decision to terminate you."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:35:42)]Feels very reasonable to me. Is there anything else along these lines?
Alisa Cohn[00:35:46)]I think what I want to say is that the conversations you need to have at work are not just difficult conversations. What I call them is sort of delicate conversations because what I think people also shy away from is just simple praise, specific praise. And I think it's really important to get in the habit of pointing out what your people are doing well as carefully as you need to prepare for pointing out what they need to improve. And sometimes leaders feel like, "Yeah, it's all working. It's all working. I don't have to tell you." Or if I do tell you, it's kind of like "Good job." Right? One time a leader or a manager I was doing in a training program, she said, "I don't like getting positive feedback. I only like getting negative feedback." And I said, "How come?" And she said, "Oh, positive feedback is just like, oh, good job. Negative feedback, you can learn something. You get something from it." (00:36:40): So the positive feedback should have the same standard, which is, "I saw the way you ran that launch, it was fantastic. All these different benefits came from it. You're so organized, keep doing that." Or "The way you're keeping your peers in the loop, considering you've only been here three months is extraordinary. I've never seen someone so communicative. It's fantastic. Keep doing that. That's really working for you." If you do that often enough, you do get in the... First of all, it's positive, obviously. You become in the habit of getting better at positive feedback, which is extremely motivating to people at work. It helps them see their progress because that person I just mentioned, she's barely keeping her head above water and she's having trouble fitting in or whatever, but you come around and point out the things that are working. Again, it's very morale boosting. She knows where she stands, and then one day, if you have to give her these difficult messages,
you've already sort of laid the reservoir of goodwill. Lenny Rachitsky[00:37:37)]I love giving positive feedback. It's obviously so much easier, but to your point, it's like you have to really think about how to do it well. It's not just a, it's not that easy if you do it well, which is a really good point. And [inaudible 00:37:49]
Yeah. Lenny Rachitsky[00:37:53)]That's interesting. There's less demand for that. How do I have better great conversations or compliments?
Alisa Cohn[00:37:59)]Right,
right. True. Lenny Rachitsky[00:37:59)]No man. Today's episode is brought to you by Liveblocks, the platform that turns your product into a place that users want to be. With ready-made collaborative features, you can supercharge your product with experiences that only top tier companies have been able to perfect until now. Think AI copilots like Notion, multiplayer like Figma, comments and notifications like Linear and even collaborative editing like Google Docs,
and all of that with minimal configuration or maintenance required.[00:38:31)]Companies from all kinds of industries and stages count on Liveblocks to drive engagement and growth in their products. Join them today and give your users an experience that turns them into daily active users. Sign up for a free account today at liveblocks.io/lenny. I want to go on a little bit of a tangent, something that it's kind of touches on all the things we've been talking about, which is, you're big on helping leaders understand that their job is not to make employees happy. What is your job instead? Why do people think this is their job to make their employees happy and what should they be thinking instead is their job as a leader?
Alisa Cohn[00:39:09)][inaudible 00:39:09], I work with a lot of founders and so, don't forget that the entry-level position for a founder is leader, and they have it, they often not had a lot of other experiences being a leader or a manager, and so they're just doing the best they can. It makes sense, right? And they kind of get all this information from other people and their HR leader wants to have a happy engaged workforce and they don't want to upset people for all the reasons we talked about,
why you don't want to upset people. Nobody wants to upset people.[00:39:40)]And so there's this idea of, they're trying to now be now be the leader who everyone loves and makes people happy. So they would often bend over backwards to make people happy, to keep people, their morale up. But what really needs to happen very often is, we need to drive towards results. And the way this system is working is not going to drive us towards results or this employee continuing to not really do a great job at their job and not really pushing themselves. And you don't want to push them because you don't want to upset them, you don't want to give them difficult feedback,
so you're just going to keep hoping it works out.[00:40:23)]Ultimately, that leads to the demise of your company. I mean, ultimately right, as you're a startup? If you're not in a startup and you're a large company, it still is very subpar performance, obviously. And you're dancing around hoping and praying they're going to get there and they don't really know there's a problem. And so, I think it's very misguided for leaders to have this notion that their most important role is to keep people happy,
is to create this high engagement workforce. High engagement workforce is great.[00:40:56)]I think what that comes from is winning culture, which means we're set up for success. We've got the structure for success, we have the culture for success, everyone understands their role, they know the impact of their role. So doing the work to figure out and help them figure out the impact of their role and that when they work together and achieve these milestones, they win and then we celebrate the wins and then we do it all over again. And when you create that kind of a workforce, I think it's much more dynamic, even though sometimes in doing that,
you have to redirect people and ruffle their feathers. Lenny Rachitsky[00:41:26)]Essentially, the way I think about it is you think making people happy is not having hard conversations, not pushing them, when really, it's almost working backwards from, if we win and are killing it, people will be happy and what does it take to do that?
Alisa Cohn[00:41:40)]A hundred percent. And then the right people are going to want to join your team,
people who like to win and like to get results. Lenny Rachitsky[00:41:48)]Is there a story, an example of a founder you worked with or that comes to mind of this kind of where they thought this was their approach and then they shifted? Or is there kind of a pattern you see often?
Alisa Cohn[00:41:57)]One company comes to mind. One leader I worked with. Sometimes I think to myself, if I'm writing a book, the book would start with, "It all started with the avocado toast," because he wants to do right by his workforce. And so they have avocado toast at 10 AM, like tea time kind of a thing. And it became this great ritual where people would kind of hang out together and that was great. And then that turned into other longer periods of just hanging out together. Again, these are good things. And that turned into evening socials and everybody was enjoying spending time together, but they continued to be not fully clear on what they were actually supposed to do. And there began to be kind of a cliquey, gossipy culture of who's in and who's out. And that would take up a lot of the socialization time discussions. So rather than talk about expectations about the work and about results, and again,
the results were not showing. So it wasn't a lot to celebrate.[00:43:05)]They started at a culture committee. So they had a culture committee to talk about how we can make people happier around here. And you can imagine there's now layers and layers of things where we're trying to focus on engagement and we're trying to focus on the employees having a great experience. And the leader I'm working with is completely sincere. It actually want to have a great workplace. But I think the misguidedness was that he hadn't done a great job setting expectations. He had not done a great job of quote unquote "codifying their culture" because culture is not just avocado toast and working together and having socials, culture is things like, we go the extra mile or culture is we make sure, or it could be, we measure twice and cut once. Those are kinds of things that are really about the way we get work done around here. And certainly, a focus on results is like, are we following the process to then get the revenue and to then build a profitable company or are we just kind of hanging out together? (00:44:07): So he had to come to terms with his own discomfort of addressing this with employees and his own discomfort in being a corporate drone of, "Oh, expectations and in the workplace and how we do things." And it turned out that's the whole thing with coaching and with working with people is that you kind of see what their underlying assumptions and beliefs are and there's a reason everyone does what they do. So there's a reason he's doing what he's doing. We had to come to terms with that and then he had to really courageously make some changes about the way he was operating. And ultimately, they had to part ways with one or two really toxic people who were creating this gossipy culture and making people feel not included and not focused on results. And then when they all got on the same page,
they were able to gain a lot more traction. Lenny Rachitsky[00:44:56)]I feel like a lot of leaders and founders can relate to this, of wanting to create a great culture and keep it nice and friendly and everyone's a family and then things don't quite work out often in those cases. And there's a shift to, "Okay, we actually need to make a business that works."
Right. Lenny Rachitsky[00:45:12)]It always reminds me, Sheryl Sandberg came to talk at Airbnb once and people are asking, "What do you do with all this...? We're just constantly in chaos. Things are always reorging or changing, just never... I'm on different teams every six months. Our goals are shifting. What do you do with all this... Our culture's changing as we grow." And she's like, "That is a sign of hyper growth and success. And the opposite is even worse when you are not growing and you don't want that. And so you should be happy this is the challenge you're running into."
I love that. It's so true. Lenny Rachitsky[00:45:42)]So along these lines, you talk about how a lot of founders have to come to terms, and it's not just founders, it's just execs and leaders you work with, have to come to terms with, "Here's what I thought leadership was going to be and how to be a great leader, and here's what it really is." Is there anything more there that you find is commonly what they're wrong about or what they miss and what they have to realize?
Alisa Cohn[00:46:01)]Yeah. And I think as we grow as leaders, we all have to realize our own blind spots and the difference between what we thought and what is actually going on. So I worked with a founder who she wanted to be was a visionary leader, which is fantastic. I would love that. And she was an incredibly visionary person, very inspirational. But what she didn't see is that what her company needed was somebody to structure and hold people accountable and help them create goals and achieve milestones and course correct when they got off course. And she'd be very frustrated when all those things happened. People got off course, people didn't have goals, people weren't structured to work together. But what she didn't realize was that was, in one way or the other,
her job to make that happen.[00:46:49)]Now, maybe she needed to have, and I would talk to her a lot about this, a partner, like a COO or somebody else who could be the person who would be sort of managing the internal while she got to be more visionary, inspirational, but ultimately, it was her job to make sure that that was in place. And she didn't sort of see that and she did not adjust her style. And so there's a lot of wheel spinning that happens from that. Even though, by the way,
she was an incredibly inspirational person and incredibly inspirational leader and she meant so well. There was nothing malicious about it. It's just that she didn't see the situation for what it was and then adjust. Lenny Rachitsky[00:47:30)]It reminds me, we had this coach on the podcast, Joe Hudson, and he had this phrase that I think a lot of people use, but it just stuck with me. What you resist, persists. So if you hate confrontation, you're going to have much more confrontation. If you hate structure... Actually, this reminds me, Joe Gebbia at Airbnb. He was very anti-process at the beginning of Airbnb. He's like, "We're not going to have a process. I hate process. We're going to run... That's the big company stuff." And then it just chaos constantly. And then eventually it's like, "Okay, we need to have some process to how we build things."
Yeah. Lenny Rachitsky[00:48:03)]And so it's interesting. A lot of people have to realize the thing they think was bad is actually,
I see why people do it this way. Alisa Cohn[00:48:10)]Yeah, totally. Actually, I'd like to say something about that because so many... Founders are kind of mavericks and they come into a situation or they start at this company and they want to do things their own way and that's fantastic. Otherwise, they wouldn't be a founder. That's actually fantastic. And so many of the founders I've worked with want to reinvent leadership. Right? They want to have it with no process, they want to have no hierarchy, they want to have autonomy,
whatever it is.[00:48:37)]And my feeling is like, "God bless. You should absolutely try to do that." But at the end of the day, what happens is, they kind of invent for themselves the understanding that they need to have process, hierarchy, roles and responsibilities, goals, OKRs, whatever it is. And I think it's helpful sometimes to go through that fire of thinking we can do it a different way. But ultimately, I think that the ways to structure a group of people and get them organized so that they can win,
are kind of well trod. And I would say that it's helpful to get through that stage quickly so that you don't have to constantly reinvent the wheels of leadership. Lenny Rachitsky[00:49:19)]Such an important context. Obviously, one of the... The most successful founders come up with, have first principles thinking into how to do stuff, and oftentimes they find something no one has ever thought about. So it's always this balance of try a bunch of stuff, a lot of it won't [inaudible 00:49:34]. Some of it was, what will help you win. And I think that's a really good point. I want to get into a couple more tactical things that you often work on with founders. One is, running meetings. Meetings come up a lot on this podcast. People hate them, people love them. There's some are great, some are bad,
most are bad. You have some cool advice on just how to make meetings more effective and how to especially end a meeting to help you move forward. Talk about what your advice is there and just generally any advice for better meetings. Alisa Cohn[00:50:01)]Yeah. I'm one of the few people that loves meetings. Or I should say I don't love meetings. I love the potential for meetings. We have all this smart people in the room. We have the potential to talk about these great things and make decisions. And unfortunately, they don't go that way. So what happens often, I mean there's so many downfalls with meetings, but one thing that happens is, we keep meeting. Either we make decisions or we don't make decisions, but then we come back to meet again and we don't have any continuity from the last. So then we re-meet, we re-decide, and that is a big problem. So my three questions to end the meeting are, what did we decide here? Who needs to do what by when? And who else needs to know? And if you can capture those, articulate those as deliverables, I promise you,
you're going to have better meetings. Lenny Rachitsky[00:50:51)]Okay, so it's, what did we decide here? Who's going to do what by when? So basically, action items with dates. And then, who needs to know about what we decided here? Is that how you put it?
Alisa Cohn[00:51:01)]Yes. Who else needs to know? There's so many executive teams that I've worked with and at first, they go into their room, they have their meeting, they make their decisions and then they leave and they don't tell anyone. "I made this promise for my team that you guys need to kind of go do." Or, "We decided on a policy of some sort and we forgot to tell everybody." And again, no, absolutely no maliciousness, just that they forget or they're too busy and there's not part of the protocol and the process inside of the company that encourages and really insists that people share important information,
so cascading that down.[00:51:37)]But even the first question, what did we decide here? If you really go around the room at the end of a meeting or six people in the meeting, let's say, and you say to everybody, "What did we decide here?" And they all write it down, you will get six different answers, even though we're in the same meeting. I love that it's so powerful, but also, so helpful to really raise that up,
to surface that and then to figure out what to do about it. Lenny Rachitsky[00:51:58)]I love that you highlighted that. I was going to say exactly the same thing, that everyone in their head has the thought of, "Here, oh yeah. Here's what we decided." And to your point, it's often not the same. So is the advice here, is this like a template or something you fill out at the end of a meeting or is it someone's job to make sure these three things happen or how do you operationalize these three questions?
Alisa Cohn[00:52:19)]I like it that it's someone's job, the person that I sort of think of as the meetings are. And typically, that's somebody who enjoys follow-up, who enjoys putting lists together and putting things into boxes and whatnot, and there's usually someone like that on the team. And so then it's kind of exciting for them to be the follower upper. But one way or the other, so you could use a template. I think that actually baking it in as a ritual to the meeting, because the other thing about meetings is that we never have enough time. We go right to the end and we don't leave the five or 10
minutes at the end to make sure that we ask these three questions and make sure that we have an understanding of what the follow through is on these meetings. Lenny Rachitsky[00:52:57)]What I'm imagining is, say it's the product managers. Put this doc on the screen in the meeting as the meeting's ending and just have it filled out basically, and just confirm, "Does this look good to everyone?"
Alisa Cohn[00:53:09)]Love that. That's a great way to do it. By the way, with... Well, I just would say what's interesting about that is that if we ask people what did we decide here, I think there's value in just asking that question in particular because somebody might say, "We decided," I don't know, "Something." And other people would say, "No, we didn't. But that's actually a good idea. It sort of crystallizes what we did talk about in a more comprehensive way." I think there's value in raising the differences and I think there's value in stitching those together. So just putting it up on the board is good, especially if you're running short of time. I worry that somebody might not weigh in and say, "Actually, I have a very different point of view of what we decided here." So maybe it's also about building the culture to break in and say, "No, that's not what I see. Let's spend some time on that."
Lenny Rachitsky[00:54:03)]Let's actually spend more time on this because this is really, I think, really this specific detail I think could be really powerful if you do it right. So say you're the PM in the meeting, who do you ask? Do you say to the room, "What did we decide here?" Or do you look at the most senior person? Otherwise, it feels like it could just lead to a whole discussion the last couple of minutes, which I guess could be valuable, but who do you point this question to?
Alisa Cohn[00:54:24)]Yeah. So I picture this for let's say, a six-person executive team meeting, which means everyone go around quickly and say, "What did we decide here?" Now, if you're in a meeting with a large executive team, which I do work with sometimes or non-executive team, like a group of some sort, then you probably want to get a few people just to... I would just even say as a facilitator, two or three people, "Okay, two or three people, what do we decide here?" And if you can kind of get common,
great. That's fantastic. Lenny Rachitsky[00:54:52)]Got it. Okay. So if it's a small meeting, go around the room and everyone just shares, here's what we decided here. And they could just be like, "Yep, he's got it or she's got it." Awesome. Okay. This is great. So the advice here is, next time you have a meeting, especially an exec meeting, just at the end of the meeting, you, the listener of this podcast, just ask, "Okay, everyone. Let's just make sure we're on the same page. What did you decide here? Who needs to do what by when?" And then everyone chimes in and you're writing this in this doc, and then what else? Who needs to know about what we decided here?
Alisa Cohn[00:55:22)]Yeah. Lenny, I love that because also, do you have to be the leader of the meeting to do that? No. You could just be the person in the meeting and just chime in and just start it yourself. And if you do that and everyone kind of picks it up,
it can become a ritual just by virtue of your own agency. So I love that you just encouraged everyone to do that. Lenny Rachitsky[00:55:42)]And this is how you become a leader, is you just start doing these things and people are like, "Oh, Alisa is so helpful. She's just on top of it. Every time she's in a meeting, the meetings go better. We get things done."
Exactly. Lenny Rachitsky[00:55:57)]Amazing. Okay. Another topic that I know you spend a lot of time on is something you call the founder prenup. And what I love about this is, a lot of the problems that a company trickle down from the founders having their challenges with each other. And I started a company in the past and I don't think people realize how significant this decision is in your life. It's basically, you are marrying someone in a business context and you're stuck with this person for a long time and you basically came up with a prenup, which is a set of questions of just things you need to talk about to make sure you're aligned before you start this company. Is there any context around this thing before we talk through actually the questions that you recommend people talk through?
Alisa Cohn[00:56:41)]Well, I just want to reiterate what you just said. Exactly right. And it turns out that according to Noam, Noam Wasserstein, 65% of startups fail because of conflict with founders or the founding team. So it's really essential to get this right,
and I agree that people step into this relationship with a lot less care than they should. And bad things can happen because you haven't done the work of getting to know each other before you decide to co-found. Lenny Rachitsky[00:57:12)]Yeah. It's so easy just to like, "Yeah, I'll start a company. We have this cool idea. Let's just do it. It's going to be so awesome." And then you don't realize how much you're committing to and how often things don't work out because of that quick decision. And oftentimes, it's like friends and then it becomes even more challenging because I want to be friends,
but we're in business together. So yeah. Let's talk about what you recommend folks talk through as much as we can on this podcast. Alisa Cohn[00:57:36)]So I do have kind of an extensive questionnaire, so we just touch on a few things, but one thing I think first and foremost is, what are your values? And I think it's really essential to do some sort of values clarification exercise. You can find a ton of them online. You can find a list of values and just pull out your core values and just compare them with each other because when you are aligned, it's great. Or when you're adjacent,
it's also great.[00:58:01)]I might care a lot about excellence, Lenny, you might care a lot about learning. Fantastic. Those are great values that we can kind of, go together. I might care about excellence and you might care about work-life balance. Wow, let's talk about that because I think it's going to be really important as we go through our startup journey that we understand both of us, what does work-life balance mean and what does excellence mean? Because those two things can at times be at odds with each other,
just as kind of an example.[00:58:30)]So talking through those core values in advance and updating them regularly, even as you go down the path together is so essential. Just so you know where the other person's coming from. Because the other problem is, someone acts in a certain way, you don't know them that well maybe, or maybe you've known them as an eighth grader. A lot of founders do know each other from their youth and they've matured into different kinds of people. And so you think they're acting strangely, but actually, they're acting in accordance with their values. And so getting a handle on that upfront can solve, I would just say,
solve a lot of problems before they start. Lenny Rachitsky[00:59:08)]So signs that your values don't align. It's basically you both can't be true is almost the way I think about it as we talk. It's hard to be the excellent, focus on excellence and also not work long hours, which it's possible,
but it's hard. Those are challenging and worth the conversation. Alisa Cohn[00:59:26)]Yeah, worth the conversation because in fact, as you say that, I'm like, "Well, I guess you can do that. Right. You can do that." And so therefore, that's where the conversation has to figure out how you're going to marry these two values, which might be at odds or might be aligned, but let's talk through what work-life balance means to you and let's talk through what excellence means to me,
and let's see if we can have a meeting of the minds about it or at least I know where you stand.[00:59:50)]One of the founders I worked with, he would text or Slack his co-founder on weekends and the co-founder wouldn't respond. And that was extremely frustrating to the person, to the co-founder I was talking to. And it turned out, after they finally addressed it, it really was about wanting to have some downtime and some, quote unquote, "Balance." Nothing wrong with that, but because they didn't talk about it, both sides made [inaudible 01:00:20]
big assumption about it and then it caused this conflict that didn't have to happen if they'd had the conversation in advance. Lenny Rachitsky[01:00:25)]Comes back to where we started of having these conversations is necessary and almost helps the other person because this small issue could become a huge issue over time, if you just start assuming and it keeps happening and it keeps scratching and scratching at you. And letting that person's [inaudible 01:00:45] is screwed up because you're, "I can't do this with you anymore." Right?
So it's just another reminder of how it's good for the other person for you to engage in a difficult conversation. Alisa Cohn[01:00:54)]Yes,
very true. Lenny Rachitsky[01:00:55)]Okay, what else? So values. By the way, is there a values framework you most love that you can point people to or there just a bunch and don't worry too much about which one you go [inaudible 01:01:05]?
Alisa Cohn[01:01:04)]I mean, the one I use is super simple, which is on the thing called the internet. There's a lot of lists of values and I think when you see a list of values, you can pull out the ones that are most meaningful to you,
and that's a very simple and helpful and free tool. Lenny Rachitsky[01:01:19)]Got it. So you just Google list of values, there's a PDF, and just circle the ones that are most and pick whatever small number, don't... Half of [inaudible 01:01:27]-
Alisa Cohn[01:01:26)]Actually, well, just to give you the process, right? It's helpful to pick 20, for example. Great. And then you winnow them down to, let's say, 10. And then you do the difficult work of winnowing them down to three to five that you feel are core to you. And that's a good exercise for everyone to do actually, every year because things can change. It also forces you to make the difficult decisions about when it comes down to it, what are the things that really are important to me? The more you know your values,
the more you can operate in the world with just more clarity for yourself. Lenny Rachitsky[01:01:58)]Awesome. All right. So values. What else?
Alisa Cohn[01:02:01)]Yeah. So another one is, vision of the company. So when this company is successful, what does that look like? And what that might look like is, we're in control of our destiny and we are able to operate this business independently and we have a lot of freedom. What that might look like is a big venture outcome that we all read about. And if you are both assuming that you both think the same thing but aren't talking about it explicitly or talking about the trade-offs you need to make inherent in that,
then what often happens if you have differences is they come home to roost while it's too late or when it's too late.[01:02:40)]So an example is the two co-founders I worked with, one of them would said to me wistfully, this is like five or six years into the company, and the company was going well, but it was challenging and they had all their growing pains and like you mentioned about Sheryl said all the chaos. And he said to me, "Gosh, I don't see why we have to grow. I just wish we could actually have fewer employees. And I used to love it when I knew everybody's name and I would just much prefer an environment where we didn't have to grow." Well, unfortunately, they were already venture backed and also, the other co-founder had a very lofty ambition for a very big company. And since they hadn't talked about that,
it was way too late to even have that conversation and it was a very painful reckoning for both of them to realize they were not on the same page. Lenny Rachitsky[01:03:33)]Totally, see the value of this one. I could totally see how people would have different goals. I imagine it also changes over time, so there's probably an element of, if something has shifted for you, you should probably also have that conversation. I don't want to build an IPO venture scale business, I just want to build something chill. So basically, a line on what is... How would you phrase that? What does winning look like to you?
Alisa Cohn[01:03:52)]Yeah, what does success look like?
Lenny Rachitsky[01:03:54)]What does success look like to you?
Alisa Cohn[01:03:54)]Or what's the vision for the company when it reaches its full potential?
Lenny Rachitsky[01:04:01)]Okay. Great. What else?
Alisa Cohn[01:04:01)]Another one is, it's sort of a two part question. How do you handle conflict? So how do you handle conflict? But then, you might want to ask your spouse, someone close to you, "How do I handle conflict?" Because you might think, "Oh, I handle conflict with such an enlightened person. I'm so neutral about it. I'm so great at bringing things up." But the person who's close to you might say, "You seethe until you're ready to bring something up and it's really uncomfortable in the seething period."
So it just gives you a little more self-awareness about how you actually handle conflict.[01:04:42)]And that's really important because I might be the kind of person who wants to bring up conflict and talk about it immediately. The other person might be a person who totally wants to talk about the conflict but wants to let it settle first and wants to also go through their own thinking process about what's important to them and might actually feel like they've resolved it themselves without having to have a conversation with you. And if you're the person who's like, "Let's talk about it, let's talk about it, let's talk about it." And they're like, "I'm working through it myself."
Now you have conflict over the conflict and it just turns into dynamic that's not necessary. Lenny Rachitsky[01:05:22)]As you go through these questions, it's absurd to imagine people don't do this when they find a co-founder and work through stuff, and I know nobody does. The percentage of people that do this sort of work ahead of time, it's very low. And so I love that we're helping this percentage go up, but it also reminds me of just how crazy it is people don't have these conversations and how it explains why so many founder relationships don't work out. So these are awesome. What else? I know you have a whole list and we'll link to it, right? There's a PDF we can link to?
For sure. Lenny Rachitsky[01:05:55)][inaudible 01:05:55]
post. Awesome. Let's do a few more. Alisa Cohn[01:05:57)]Another one is, how do we decide when we disagree? And that is a very good thing to explore because there's actually a lot of different ways to decide when you disagree and they're all good. And if you have it sort of upfront and it's just for an ongoing discussion, but if you have it up front like when we disagree, because that's definitely going to happen, let's assume that the person who cares the most can win that argument. That would be a great way to do it. It might be, the person who's got the best perspective and the most expertise can win that argument. It might be, we'll go back and forth when we really disagree. First you win and then I win, like that,
back and forth.[01:06:41)]There's so many different ways to handle it and if you talk about it upfront, you'll be much more likely to be able to actually put that into practice when you do disagree because you will definitely disagree. There's no way around that. And that's not even a bad thing. You're smart people. You have this dynamic tension in the relationship. You bring different things to the table. You've got different perspectives. Disagreeing is normal. Working through it and having a practice and a process of working through it,
will help it be a good conversation rather than this sort of sulky difficult conversation. Lenny Rachitsky[01:07:12)]I love it. Maybe one more?
Alisa Cohn[01:07:14)]Yeah. So another one is, what kind of company culture do I think is important? People definitely don't talk about this before they found the company and they assume they're on the same page. So one founder might be, "I want to have this great company where everyone loves it and we're all loving together and working hard together. And it feels like a..." To use your word before, "It feels like a family." By the way, that's great. That's fantastic. "I want to have a get it done, results-focused culture where we're just executing the hell out of everything and that we're just focused on winning." (01:07:52): By the way, those two can actually exist together. But if you're pushing in one direction without the other and your co-founder is pushing the other direction without yours, it really can feel like two different companies. And that's... When I go into a situation at one of my client sites, often I will hear from the employees, "It feels like we have two different companies and two different cultures depending on whose team you're on." And that, of course,
leads to lack of coherent working together and certainly even just lack of different standards and expectations. Lenny Rachitsky[01:08:24)]Awesome. Okay. To kind of start to wrap our conversation, I want to take us to a recurring segment of this podcast that I call, Fail Corner. We've talked a lot about failure at this point and just all the ways people fail. I'm curious if, in your career or life, there's a story that might be helpful for folks to hear when things didn't go great and you've failed, and if you learn something from that experience. And the reason this is something I do is I feel like people listening to this podcast, everyone's like, "Sounds so amazing, everything's always going great. They're killing it." When in reality, that's not actually how things go. So these end up being really helpful for people like, "Oh, wow. Even Alisa had a really hard time sometime." Is there a story that you could share?
Alisa Cohn[01:09:04)]Absolutely. I mean, so many examples. I'm going to give two quick examples. One is, when I first started my coaching practice, I just kind of started and so I just did everything I could to get clients, to build a business, to build a practice, to build my brand, all the things. And I was working so hard and I think I'd had this conversation with somebody that didn't go very well. And I just thought, in my mind's eye, I thought, "Well, what will become of me?" That was my voice in my head for quite a long time, "What will become of me?" And I was living in Boston at the time. I got onto the floor, my hardwood floors in my Brookline condo, and I just balled in the fetal position. I just balled and balled and balled for an hour. It wasn't 10 minutes,
it was an hour.[01:09:50)]And I was so frightened and just upset. Am I going to be able to make this work? And it was a while and I got into the couch and took a little stress nap. And then I got up from my stress nap and I just started making more calls and doing more things. And that was definitely a rock bottom moment for me. And I think what I learned is, you have to literally pick yourself up from the ground and pull yourself forward. And when you keep taking action, action, action, win or lose, win or lose, you'll get where you need to go. And that turned out to be true. But in those moments,
I was not thinking that was going to turn out to be true. Lenny Rachitsky[01:10:32)]Wow. Amazing story. I imagine many people feel those moments and it's empowering to hear that it can all turn out really well,
even when you're lying in the floor crying for an hour. An hour is a long time to cry on the floor. Alisa Cohn[01:10:45)]It is a long time to cry. It really... I thought about it because most people just cry for 10 or 15
Great story. You said you had another story. Alisa Cohn[01:10:56)]Yeah. I'll tell you a second story, which is more focused on actually my work life. So one thing that I do is I do coaching of course and I do off sites. And this was early, early days of my coaching career and I was doing this off site and it wasn't going well. And I was debriefing with my client during the breaks and at one point she said something like, "I just think we should end this offsite. I just think we should just decide it's over and it's not working." And I felt horrible, obviously, humiliated, certainly, and just like that's a failure. That's like, "Oh, fail."
And I know that what I took away from it was that I can improve my skills in every aspect of running an offsite.[01:11:40)]So getting aligned with the client in advance, making sure that I had the right activities getting us to our goal, being very goal-oriented and focused, and making sure that I had kind of understood the rhythm of what it takes to bring people together. So I took some training on that. I worked my mentor on that, and I got so great at offsites after that experience. I'll tell you that was a real low because in the moment, in that moment, I'm not thinking, "I'm going to get great at offsites." In that moment I'm thinking, "Oh, my God. I'm going to get... What will become of me?" But I turned it into, in my mind's eye, or I should say, I turned it into the ability to build my skills. And I just want to tell everybody, even at your lowest moments, anything that you're learning from that,
can then be turned into fuel to build your skills to get great at the thing that you're not great at. Lenny Rachitsky[01:12:31)]What I also love about this is there's this feeling of imposter syndrome, is specifically this fear that I do something wrong and it'll all crumble and everyone will see I suck and I never... I don't know anything and everyone will see it. And I love both these stories are like, it doesn't go well and doesn't crumble. You build from there. And no one's like, "Oh, Alisa's terrible forever." No,
it's like move on to the next thing. And then you use that as fuel to become really good at this thing that didn't go great. Alisa Cohn[01:12:57)]Yeah,
that's really well said. Lenny Rachitsky[01:13:00)]Amazing. Alisa, we covered a lot of stuff. Is there anything that you were hoping to cover or you think might be useful for folks to hear before we move to our very exciting lightning round?
Alisa Cohn[01:13:10)]The only last thing I want to talk about, just sort of circling back to your role as a leader, I was one time working with the CEO who was handling the fact that this launch was not going well, as in the launch wasn't happening. [inaudible 01:13:25] foot off, foot off, foot off. And his point of view was, you need to have patience with it as it goes. And my point of view is, because I've talked to a lot of the people around, was that there was a massive process problem going on that he was not kind of touching into and really investigating because the product manager wasn't experienced, was kind of hiding it because he knew he didn't have the skills, was fighting with engineering,
it just wasn't working.[01:13:53)]And when the CEO was telling me, and we really had a long discussion about this where I kind of enlightened him about some of the issues that he needed to get involved and fix, he kept thinking, "I need to have patience." So what I want to say to everybody is, sometimes you need to have patience and sometimes you need to look at the process. And I think you, as the leader, need to have the wisdom to know the difference, but also your finger on the pulse to recognize, is this an issue with patience or an issue with process?
Lenny Rachitsky[01:14:22)]I guess, is there a sign that you're like, it's probably a process thing and you're just ignoring a glaring problem that everyone else sees?
Alisa Cohn[01:14:30)]I think the sign is when, if you search your mind, you don't really know how this thing is going to come together. There's no plan in your mind. You haven't touched in with people or talked to people about what's going on. You kind of hear this uncomfortable silence about it. Those are symptoms that you just need to dive deeper and just be a little more in touch with what's going on and talk to some folks and look at some data. And by the way, it might not be a massive process problem. It might just be one little thing that needs to get unstuck but you, as the leader, need to recognize that and figure out a way to make that unstuck. And if there's, of course,
a big problem that needs to somehow be just surfaced. Lenny Rachitsky[01:15:09)]So if there's this hope this'll work out versus I see a path to this working out,
it's probably a problem. Awesome. Alisa Cohn[01:15:16)]Yeah,
well said. Lenny Rachitsky[01:15:17)]Is there anything else that you wanted to share or touch on that you think might be helpful?
Alisa Cohn[01:15:21)]We talked a little about the co-founders prenup, which I think people would think, "Well, I'm not a co-founder, I don't need that." I just want to invite everyone to also think about a different tool that I have, which is called the Personal Operating Manual. And it helps prompt you to talk about working style together because you may not be co-founders, of course,
but you're working on a team with a bunch of people and they all have their different working style.[01:15:42)]So it's kinds of questions like, what communication style do you like the best? How do you like to work? Do you like large uninterrupted blocks? Do you like meetings here and there? When I'm trying to get a hold of you for something important, what's the best way to do that? What is one of your pet peeves or some of your pet peeves? How can I get a gold star with you? Also, this is my favorite. What's your delegation style? (01:16:10): Do you want me to check in with you regularly, like once a week as I'm working down the path of a project? Or do you want me to just let you know when it's done and just tell you at the end that it's been complete? So lots of different ways people assume other people work because it's like your style,
but actually it's just your style. So those kinds of conversations can be great for working together and also be a great team activity. Lenny Rachitsky[01:16:34)]So this kind of what goes into these READMEs people put together,
Yes. Lenny Rachitsky[01:16:37)]... work with me. I really love the gold star concept because I feel like people want to know how do I be super awesome? How do I be really successful working for you? And I like that visual of the gold star and the pet peeves. I feel like a lot of people will identify that. What are my pet peeves so that people don't do these things because they don't know, right?
They don't know until you tell them. Alisa Cohn[01:16:55)]Nobody knows what's your operating style until you tell them. And the more you can showcase, the more everybody will be able to do it right for you and you'll be able to do it right for them. And then you'll be able to have better workplace harmony and save your conflict with things that are really important. Not just because like, "Oh, you didn't text me when I wanted you to text me."
Lenny Rachitsky[01:17:13)]Being clear. What do you know? Is there anything else that you think might be helpful to share before we get to a very exciting lightning round?
Alisa Cohn[01:17:20)]No,
just that. Lenny Rachitsky[01:17:21)]Well, with that, Alisa, we reached our very exciting lightning round. Are you ready?
I can't wait. I'm ready. Lenny Rachitsky[01:17:26)]Here we go. First question, are there two or three books that you find yourself most recommending to other people?
Alisa Cohn[01:17:33)]So we already talked about Kim Scott, the wonderful, amazing Kim Scott and her book, Radical Candor, is one I recommend a lot to people. It's fantastic. Working Backwards by gosh, Colin Bryar and Bill something, is about sort of the Amazon way of working backwards from the customer. Super geeky and tactical. I love it. I slurp it up like Harry Potter. It's so good. And I definitely recommend to my clients about Amazon's Management Science. And the third is Walt Disney by Neil Gabler because it really shows how Walt Disney,
sort of it's everything about his youth and how he turned into a very bad entrepreneur and ultimately into a fantastic inventive entrepreneur. And it shows all the origins of how he invented these different pieces that now make up the Walt Disney Company. Lenny Rachitsky[01:18:26)]The first two recommendations we've had on the podcast, Kim Scott and Bill Carr,
Bill Carr. Lenny Rachitsky[01:18:30)]...
co-author. He's been on the podcast and people love that episode. I haven't had Walt Disney on. I got to work on that. Alisa Cohn[01:18:37)]Or the writer,
Neil Gabler Lenny Rachitsky[01:18:38)]Or the writer. Yeah, yeah. Good tip. Okay, next question. Is there a favorite recent movie or TV show you really enjoy?
Alisa Cohn[01:18:44)]Yeah, I enjoyed Inside Out 2. I thought it was fantastic, the idea [inaudible 01:18:49].
I could see why you love it. I feel like it's for all coaches in the world. Alisa Cohn[01:18:51)]Totally. Just the idea that like, oh yeah,
we're all this complex stew of emotions and it's okay. Lenny Rachitsky[01:18:56)]Mm-hmm. I also love that movie. Next question. Do you have a favorite product you recently discovered that you really love?
Alisa Cohn[01:19:03)]Yes,
Say more. Alisa Cohn[01:19:09)]The Ninja Creami turns anything into ice cream. So you can actually make ice cream. Good, God bless. But I take my protein shake, which is okay, and turn it into ice cream, which is delicious. And it takes 10 minutes and very little prep, and it's simple to use and it works as expected, which so many things do not. The Ninja Creami,
go get it. Lenny Rachitsky[01:19:28)]That's the first for the Ninja Creami. And I love, the holidays are coming around, so this is going to be good for people. Do you have a favorite life motto that you often come back to you find useful in work or in life?
Alisa Cohn[01:19:41)]This quote by Joseph Campbell animates my life, which is, "If you can see your path all the way through to the end, you are following someone else's path. Your path only becomes clear moment by moment as each foot hits the ground."
Lenny Rachitsky[01:19:57)]Wow, that's so good. It's so empowering because it helps you realize if you don't see where it's all going, that's normal and that's good. Wow. Great one,
Send them out. Lenny Rachitsky[01:20:18)]Yeah, that's the easy path. Okay. Last question. So I'm curious, and not to create more competition for you, but I feel like a lot of people think about becoming a coach of some kind, like a product coach, exec coach. If someone is thinking about going down that path, is there one piece of advice you could share to help them pursue this path, even explore if it's right for them?
Alisa Cohn[01:20:38)]If you think you want to become a coach and you immediately want to build up your coaching skills, listen to people more deeply and ask deeper questions, not just respond to what they just said, but why do you think that? Or where is that coming from? And you will see if you enjoy that process of really going deeper with people. I think that would be helpful for everyone to do. But certainly if you want to become a coach,
I think that's essential to be able to get really beneath the surface. Lenny Rachitsky[01:21:13)]I love how your energy just changed into coaching mode when you said that. I love that. That was such an interesting thing to see and that was great advice. That's easier said than done. And it's interesting, you could tell people are so good at that specific skill versus not. And so I love that that's the thing to work on, is ask better questions, think deeper about the person and what they're coming from. Alisa, this was incredible. Two final questions. Where can folks find you if they want to reach out, maybe work with you, what kind of people do you work with in case people are interested in that, and finally, how can listeners be useful to you?
Alisa Cohn[01:21:47)]Oh, thank you. Well, I work with executives at startups and also at large public companies, so feel free to reach out if you want to have a conversation about coaching. And you can find me at alisacohn.com. And actually, I'm going to take some resources and put them at a special link,
which is alisacohn.com/lenny. If you want to download the Co-Founder Prenup. I also have a Personal Operating Manual and a few other resources I will put there. So alisacohn.com/lenny and you can also join my newsletter from there.[01:22:20)]And I think in terms of helping me, I guess there's two things I want to say. My life's work genuinely is to make a difference. When I became a coach, it was because the music in my head was to make a difference. And so I hope I've made a difference for all of you today and I would invite you to try one thing that makes you uncomfortable, this week. As soon as you hear this, this week,
try something that makes you uncomfortable and feel free to let me know on LinkedIn or even send me an email and let me know what you did that made you uncomfortable.[01:22:51)]So that would be very meaningful to me. And the second thing that would be very meaningful to me is if you would go find my podcast called, From Start-Up to Grown-Up and give it a listen. Maybe give it a rating and review because as you know, Lenny,
Thank you. Lenny Rachitsky[01:23:12)]Alisa,
thank you so much for being here. This was awesome. Alisa Cohn[01:23:15)]Thank you so much for having me,
Lenny. It was great. Lenny Rachitsky[01:23:17)]Bye everyone. Thank you so much for listening. If you found this valuable, you can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review as that really helps other listeners find the podcast. You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at lennyspodcast.com. See you in the next episode.