Antonio García Martínez pfp
Antonio García Martínez
@antonio
One sign of a generation-defining company is possessing a real 'mafia' that produces an entire generation of builders in the space, many of whom may well go on to equal or even overshadow the original company (e.g. the PayPal mafia). https://t.co/6UJvD6TLDp
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Antonio García Martínez pfp
Antonio García Martínez
@antonio
The inverse is also true: if there's no mafia, the company probably isn't that industry-defining, at least in its second-order effects. I once got into very big trouble with Facebook OGs by citing that there wasn't really a 'Facebook mafia' in the Valley (that's changed a bit).
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Mac Budkowski ᵏ pfp
Mac Budkowski ᵏ
@macbudkowski
I once heard Thiel in a podcast say that PayPal created the mafia because it was so hard to pull off that everyone had to get to the top of their game. Facebook, Microsoft, and Google had insane PMFs almost from Day 1, which is why, despite their amazing successes, their alumni aren't so tenacious. I think the payout size might also have played a role. All these companies are 1,000X (!) bigger than PayPal was when it was being sold.
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Gabriel Ayuso pfp
Gabriel Ayuso
@gabrielayuso.eth
PayPal people left that's why they became the mafia. A lot of Google people stayed and built/led new businesses within Google. Some left and helped scale other companies such as Facebook. Overall there are definitely more companies from ex-Googlers and ex-Meta than ex-PayPal.
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Mac Budkowski ᵏ pfp
Mac Budkowski ᵏ
@macbudkowski
That's also a fair point that at Google there were many products to be built. I'd be surprised if there were less companies from ex-Google & ex-Meta people than from ex-PayPal given the raw amount of people that worked there. But how many $1B+ companies they built? 🤔
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