Friday, 15 May 2026

The Most Productive Founders Don't Talk About Productivity

When founders ask how to be more productive, they're almost always asking the wrong question. The actual question is priority. The two get conflated all the time, and the conflation is expensive.

YC's group partners spent an episode pulling this apart, and the punchline lands hard: most of the founders they think are exceptional don't have elaborate productivity stacks. They aren't waking up at 5am to cold-plunge before journaling. They aren't comparing notion templates. They are just hyper-focused on the one or two things that move their business and aggressively saying no to everything else.

If you're reading articles about how to be more productive, you are probably engaged in what they call productivity porn. It feels like work because you are absorbing tactics. You aren't actually doing anything. The tactics are extreme, often performative, and the people most loudly evangelising them are usually not the people building the most valuable companies.

Fake work is more dangerous than goofing off. Watching Netflix for four hours is obviously a waste. You know you wasted it. What's deadly is the kind of work that feels like work — rebuilding your CRM, refining your notion architecture, tweaking the new AI chatbot for your sales reps — but doesn't move the needle on the only metric that matters. Pre-PMF, an elaborate doc system is the equivalent of cleaning your room because you don't want to do your homework. It looks productive. It is avoidance.

The trap is especially tempting for technical founders. It's draining to call ten VPs of sales and dig into their tedious operational pain. It's fun to fiddle with new tooling. The accessible thing is rarely the right thing.

Priority is just a few stupid simple questions

The questions are not clever. They are aggressively obvious:

  • What is my number one goal?
  • What is the bottleneck blocking it?
  • Are the things I'm spending time on actually aligned with that?

Eighty percent of the gain comes from asking these out loud and answering honestly. The remaining twenty percent is having the discipline to actually audit your calendar against the answer.

A YC board member used to make founders stack rank their projects every quarter — one to ten, no ties. The forcing function did the work. Once you've ordered them, you realise you can only do the top three anyway, so the bottom seven get killed instead of starved. Most founders don't kill those seven; they let them limp along, taking partial attention from each. That partial attention is fake work in slow motion.

Steve Jobs's version of the same idea: focus is saying no. The best founders the YC partners have worked with all share one trait — they have no FOMO. They turn down interesting events, ignore non-priority emails, and disappoint people on purpose. Pretty aggressive about what is not a priority. That stance, more than any tool, is the productivity hack.

The maker / manager split

The one productivity concept the partners said is genuinely valuable comes from Paul Graham's old essay: maker schedule vs manager schedule.

Makers — engineers, writers, designers — need long uninterrupted blocks. You cannot write good code in thirty-minute slivers between meetings. Managers need the opposite — back-to-back meeting blocks so they can stay in conversation mode all day.

The mistake almost every founder makes is mixing them. A meeting at 10, a coding sprint at 11, a sales call at 1, more code at 2. Result: no real meetings happened and no real code happened. One YC partner's solution as a technical founder was to put every meeting in the morning and protect the entire afternoon and evening for six hours of uninterrupted code. That's how he kept shipping years into the company even after the engineering team scaled.

You do not have to mimic that exact split. You do have to pick a side per block and defend it.

Social media, validation, and which audience matters

Founder social media has a specific failure mode: you start believing the press-release version of your company instead of the real one. TechCrunch wrote you up, retweets are flowing, the conference invites are coming. None of that moves the product. The customer pain does. The best founders the partners know don't spend much time on social — they get their validation from customers, not comments.

There's a real exception. If your customers genuinely live on a platform — GitHub stars for an open source project, Hacker News for a dev tool, sometimes Twitter for a particular market — then go where they are. But link every social action back to the actual hypothesis you're testing. If it doesn't tie back, it's distraction dressed up as marketing.

Hyperfocus and self-awareness

Two more things separate the productive founders from the hustlers:

They don't multitask. Most people think they're great at it. They are not. The actual secret is hyperfocus on a tiny number of things. "My job is to talk to customers and build the product. Anything else is probably not a priority."

They know what they're uniquely good at. As the company scales, the best founders develop sharp self-awareness about which problems only they can solve — and which they should hand off completely. They protect the energy for what they do best and they empower other people to own the rest.

What it actually comes down to

There is no shortcut. The pattern across the most productive founders is unglamorous: they love what they're working on, they put in the hours, and they don't have complicated systems for extracting more output from themselves. The mind that is always looking for the shortcut is usually the mind that struggles. The mind that is just willing to put in the time is usually the one that wins.

So: stop asking how to be more productive. Ask what is the one thing. Stack rank everything else. Block your calendar by maker or manager. Say no on purpose. And then go work on the thing.

Source: The Founder's Guide to Radical Priority and Real Work — Y Combinator

Thursday, 14 May 2026

AI Isn't a Faster Internet. It's a Cognitive Revolution.

Every wave we've lived through - internet, cloud, mobile, social - was a revolution in communication. Faster pipes for distributing information. AI is a different shape of wave: a revolution in computation. It changes how information is processed, not how it's moved.

That sounds like a semantic distinction. It isn't. Communication revolutions speed up the existing economy. Computation revolutions rewrite which jobs can exist.

Sequoia's 2026 keynote made the case that we just crossed a hard break. Three inflection points: ChatGPT in November 2022, the o1 reasoning model two years later, and Claude Code / Sonnet 4.5 / Opus 4.7 over the last few months. The first two were continuous progress. The third one is discontinuous - long-horizon agents that can dispatch on a job, fail, recover, and persist until done. By any practical, commercial, functional definition, that's AGI. You don't have to call it AGI. You do have to notice that the ground moved.

For most of the last few years, AI applications were faster horses. They made you 10 to 40 percent more productive. Now we're getting cars. Applications that make you 10 to 40 times more productive - and change the shape of the work entirely. Nathan from Zed shipped a three-year moonshot over Christmas with Claude Code. Brett Taylor rebuilt Sierra over a weekend. Notion rewrote 8 million lines of code in six weeks.

Whatever you imagined building over the next hundred years is now possible in a hundred days. That's not hyperbole; that's the operating reality at the labs.

Services is the new software

Here's the part that should reorder how every founder thinks about TAM. The first 15 years of the cloud transition grew the global software market from $350B to $650B. Services - legal, medical, accounting, financial, marketing - sits at roughly $10 trillion. US legal services alone is $400B, the same size as the entire software industry, in one vertical and one geography.

Until now, services was off-limits to software. You couldn't sell software to do litigation; you had to hire lawyers. With agents, that changes. You can hire an agent to negotiate a contract, file your taxes, run a generative media campaign, or inspect your genome and prescribe medication. Humans cost salaries. Agents cost tokens. Tokens are cheaper than salaries today, and the gap is widening.

This isn't "SaaS is dead." It's the opposite. The tools SaaS built over the last two decades - Slack, terminal, browser, file system - turn out to be perfectly portable to agents. The value of those tools explodes as agents start using them at scale. But the new TAM, the trillions, sits in the services layer that agents can finally touch.

The MAD playbook for building on top of the labs

If you're building on foundation models, the framework for not getting flattened is MAD: Modes, Affordance, Diffusion.

Modes. The capabilities under you change every week. Your customers don't. Wrap yourself around the customer, not the model. Best product still wins, but in a world where product capability turns over monthly, customer intimacy is the durable wrapper.

Affordance. A hammer doesn't need a manual. Claude Code is staggeringly powerful - and the average Fortune 500 employee can't get past the terminal. Your job is to take frontier capability and create paths of least resistance for a specific customer with a specific problem. Make the powerful thing braindead simple to use.

Diffusion. The rate at which capabilities ship from the labs is wildly faster than the rate at which they diffuse into the average enterprise. That gap is your opportunity. Every day the labs move faster than the market adopts, the gap gets bigger. Live in that gap.

And before anyone gets too settled - no lead is safe. You can't pass fifteen cars in the sun. You can in the rain. There's a torrential downpour of new capability coming out of the labs every week. Anybody can win. Nobody is safe.

Aluminum, alien design, and the part nobody is ready for

Aluminum was once the most precious metal on earth. The cap of the Washington Monument was 100 ounces of it, on display at Tiffany's because it was rarer than gold. Then a young inventor cracked electrolysis. Within a few decades, aluminum was wrapped around sandwiches and tossed in the trash.

Aluminum is intelligence. Electrolysis is AI. PhD-level skills that took decades to acquire are about to be invoked instantly and discarded just as fast. That should terrify anyone whose moat is credentialed expertise. It should excite anyone whose moat is anything else.

A second consequence: the world starts to look weird. NASA handed antenna design to an evolutionary algorithm in 2006. The result was wildly more efficient - and looked like nothing a human would draw. When AI does the cognition, the output doesn't have to make sense to us. AI-designed chips, buildings, drugs, businesses are going to look alien. Get comfortable.

What's still ours

Cognition is on its way to being mostly machine work. 99.9% of it, eventually. That's the trajectory. The honest answer to "what's left for us" isn't a productivity tip; it's relationship. The reason anyone shows up to a keynote, signs a deal, picks one founder over another, or stays loyal to a brand isn't going to be the cognitive labor - that's commodified. It's going to be the human connection.

That's not a soft observation. It's the part of the moat that AI can't take.

Source: The Cognitive Revolution: Sequoia AI Ascent 2026 Keynote

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Debt equals prison

Forget the good-debt-bad-debt framework. That's a story written by people who sell debt for a living. The truth is simpler. Almost all debt is bad for you.

The moment you owe money to someone, your spine bends. You stop saying no the way you used to. You stop taking the stand you'd take if the balance in the account were actually yours and not the lender's. Every meeting, every negotiation, every fork in the road — there's a quiet voice doing the math on the EMI. That voice is your jailer.

People forget what debt used to mean. For most of human history, when you couldn't repay a creditor, they took everything. Land. Tools. Wife. Children. You and your bloodline became the collateral. Debt slavery was a literal institution — Babylon, Rome, India, all of them. The legal framework has softened. The psychology has not.

When you owe someone money, you are not a free person. You are a tenant in your own life, paying rent to whoever holds the paper. The bank. The credit card. The VC who marked you up. The supplier extending you credit. You wake up working for them before you work for yourself.

This is most dangerous for entrepreneurs.

The early years of a business are the years you need maximum spine. You'll be told no a thousand times. You'll need to walk away from bad customers, bad partners, bad terms. You'll need to bet on yourself when nobody else will. None of that is possible when you owe somebody money you can't comfortably repay.

Debt in the early years doesn't fund your dream. It funds the lender's leverage over your decisions. They don't even need to call you. The fear of the call shapes every move you make. You start optimising for survival of the loan instead of survival of the business — and those are very different things.

I've watched founders take a working capital loan at 14% and spend the next two years making decisions designed to service that loan instead of build the company. The debt didn't accelerate them. It tied a rope to their ankles and told them to run faster.

If you're starting up, my advice is unfashionable and absolute: no loans. Not for inventory. Not for ads. Not for hiring. Not for the office. Build slower. Stay smaller. Earn the next rupee before you spend it. Bootstrapped and broke beats funded and obligated. Every single time.

The freest people I know are not the richest. They are the ones who owe nobody anything. They walk into rooms without a calculator running in the back of their head. They say no without flinching. They sleep without doing arithmetic.

That's the asset class nobody talks about.

The absence of obligation.

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Why VCs Push for Growth at All Costs — An Evolutionary Answer

I never understood why VCs used to push for growth at all costs. Growing fast means having a rate of return, a rate of change, faster than everyone else around you. Why is that the thing that matters? Why not profitability first, or product quality, or customer love? Why this obsession with the slope of the curve?

I had an epiphany today, and I think I finally see it.

It connects back to evolutionary history.

In evolution, it is not the biggest that wins. It is not the fastest that wins. It is not the strongest that wins. It is the one who adapts quickly — the one who changes the quickest according to what the current environment is asking for, and who is able to change and grow very quickly inside that environment.

There are really two cases, and both are about rate of change.

One: the environment changes. If you change very quickly in response, you survive. The slow ones, however large or strong they were in the old world, simply don't make it across.

Two: the environment doesn't change — it persists. In that case, if you grow very quickly inside that environment, you take more of it than anyone else, and you survive on the other side of the squeeze.

Either way, the variable that decides who is around in the long run is rate of change. Rate of adaptation. Rate of growth. Not size. Not strength. Not history.

And once I saw that, the VC model snapped into focus.

The VC push for growth at any cost is not really about growth as a vanity number. It is a bet on rate of change as the deciding factor. They are pattern-matching, consciously or not, onto the same logic that has been running for billions of years in biology. The companies that compound their rate of change the fastest are the ones that get to define the next environment. Everyone else is fossil record.

This also explains, very cleanly, why incumbents die.

In a particular category, in a particular section of capitalist society, incumbents don't have incentives to change. They are already winning the current frame. Their org charts, their P&L, their bonus structures, their internal politics — all of it is optimized to keep the current shape of the company intact. The whole machine is built to resist a fast rate of change. That is what kills them. Not laziness, not stupidity — a structural disincentive to move quickly.

Meanwhile, the challenger has nothing to protect. The challenger is rewarded for changing fast and growing fast, because that is the only path that gets them to "alive" in the next round. So the challenger evolves, and the incumbent freezes, and the gap closes from the bottom.

If you change super fast and grow very quickly, you will win. That is the rule. Hence the VCs' push to grow at a very fast rate actually makes sense, because what they are really funding is rate of change.

Looked at this way, "growth at all costs" stops sounding like greed or recklessness. It starts sounding like a survival instinct, dressed up in a term sheet.

Sunday, 10 May 2026

The Utility Exchange

There is a single act around which all of human commerce — and arguably all of human society — organises itself. It is not sales. It is not marketing. It is not branding, retention, loyalty, or any of the words we have invented to slice the work into departments. It is the utility exchange: the moment one person hands something of value to another and receives something of value back.

Everything else is scaffolding around that moment.

The Two Halves of Every Business

Once you accept that the utility exchange is the centre of gravity, every activity in a business sorts itself into one of two buckets, and only two:

  1. Everything done before the utility exchange. This is what we usually call marketing — but it is wider than that. It is awareness, positioning, education, trust-building, the entire choreography of getting two parties into the same room with aligned intent. It is the work of arriving at the exchange.
  2. Everything done after the utility exchange. This is retention — but again, wider. It is the experience of the product, the support, the follow-up, the reason someone comes back, the reason someone tells a friend. It is the work of honouring the exchange.

The act of exchange itself — what we usually call "sales" — is the hinge. It is not a department. It is the instant at which "before" becomes "after."

Once you see the picture this way, the org chart starts to look strange. Why do we have a marketing team and a sales team and a customer success team as if they are three different sports? They are three positions in the same game. There is one act, and there is what comes before it and what comes after it.

The Order Most People Follow

The default sequence in almost every company is:

Marketing → Sales → Retention.

Get attention first. Convert it. Then, if there's budget left, take care of the people who said yes.

This order feels natural because it tracks the customer's chronology — first they hear of you, then they buy, then they stay. So we build the company in the same order. Marketing is the loudest team, sales is the most measured team, and retention is the team that gets attention only when churn becomes a board-meeting word.

This order is exactly backwards.

The Order I Believe In

Retention → Sales → Marketing.

Build retention first. Build the act of exchange second. Build marketing last.

Here is why the inversion matters.

Retention is the truest signal a business has. It is the only metric that cannot be bought, faked, or front-loaded. A customer who stays is telling you, in the most expensive language available to them — their continued time and money — that the utility you delivered was real. If you do not have retention, you do not have a product. You have a leaky bucket, and pouring marketing into it is not strategy, it is theatre.

So the first job is to make the after-exchange experience so good that people would feel the loss if you disappeared. This is harder than it sounds because it cannot be solved with copy or campaigns. It can only be solved by actually delivering the utility you promised — and then a little more.

Once retention is real, the act of exchange — sales — becomes almost easy. A salesperson selling a product with great retention is selling something that is true. A salesperson selling a product with poor retention is selling something that is, in some quiet way, a lie. The first is sustainable; the second corrodes the salesperson and the company together.

And only after both of these are working should marketing come in. Because marketing without retention is amplification of a leak. Marketing without a believable act of exchange is amplification of friction. But marketing on top of a tight retention engine and a clean sales motion is leverage — every rupee spent compounds because the system catches what marketing brings in and keeps it.

The conventional order spends the most on the weakest foundation. The inverted order spends the most on the strongest.

Why This Generalises Beyond Business

Step back further. The utility exchange is not just a commercial act. It is the molecule of social life.

A friendship is a long sequence of utility exchanges — emotional, informational, sometimes material. So is a marriage. So is a teacher and a student, a doctor and a patient, a government and a citizen. Each of these relationships has a before (how trust was built, how the parties arrived at the willingness to exchange) and an after (whether the exchange honoured what was promised, and whether the parties wish to exchange again).

The reason society holds the shape it does is that an almost incomprehensible number of these exchanges are happening at once — across categories, across planes, across spheres — and each one is reinforcing or eroding the next. The social fabric exists, in a real sense, to service the utility exchange. Roads, language, contracts, courts, currency, manners — all of it is infrastructure built around the simple need for two parties to safely hand something to each other and trust that the handing meant something.

If you accept this, then the retention-first principle is not just a business idea. It is a way of being. In any relationship, in any role, the question worth asking first is not how do I attract more counterparties — it is am I worth coming back to?

The One-Line Version

Marketing is the work of getting to the exchange.
Sales is the exchange.
Retention is the work of being worth the exchange.

Most people build in that order. Build in the reverse.

Saturday, 9 May 2026

The game you choose picks your life

The type of game you choose to play in life decides almost everything about you. Your stress. Your social circle. Your health. How rich you'll end up.

It's not your effort. It's not your discipline. It's the game.

There are different games available. Employment is one. Entrepreneurship is another. And inside each, more games.

You can be self-employed and call it a business — that's one game. You can build something where thousands of people work under you — that's a completely different game. You can pick a specific financial freedom number and play only for that. Or you can opt out and play no game at all.

Each game ships with its own growth rate. That's the part most people miss.

If you're running a real business, you have to grow — your thinking, your deduction, your understanding of the customer — at the speed your sector demands. If you don't, a competitor will. They'll get there before you. They'll kill you. The growth rate is not a choice inside the game. It's the floor.

Employment has its own floor. Usually 10–20% a year. That one number silently decides what your life looks like. Your house. Your car. Your kids' school. Your weekends. What you can refuse and what you have to swallow.

If your game is 10x a year, your life is unrecognizable from the 10–20% person's life. Different stress, different friends, different health, different wealth.

If the game is 100x or 1000x in two or three years, the person playing it is a different species by the end. Not the same human who started.

So the question isn't "how do I work harder."

The question is: which game am I in, and is it the one I actually want?

Most people never ask. They inherit a game from their parents, their school, their first job. They optimize inside it. They never look at the game itself.

But the game decides the math. The math decides the life.

Pick the game first.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Talking To Yourself Isn't Crazy. It's One Of The Most Underrated Mental Tools You Have.

For most of my life, I assumed talking to myself was something I should hide. You catch yourself muttering in the mirror, narrating your to-do list out loud in the kitchen, rehearsing a difficult conversation in the shower — and the cultural reflex is to feel a little embarrassed about it. "Don't let anyone catch you doing that."

Turns out, the people who do this regularly might be quietly running one of the most effective self-regulation hacks the human brain has.

The Research Nobody Told You About

Ethan Kross runs the Emotion and Self-Control Lab at the University of Michigan. He's spent the better part of two decades studying what he calls "the inner voice" — the running monologue that lives in all of our heads. His research, summarized in his book Chatter, lands on something counter-intuitive:

The problem isn't talking to yourself. The problem is how you talk to yourself.

Specifically, Kross found that when people refer to themselves in the second or third person — "Kumar, you've got this" instead of "I've got this" — three things happen, measurably:

  1. Cortisol drops. Stress hormones decrease within minutes.
  2. Performance under pressure goes up. Public speaking, hard conversations, high-stakes decisions all improve.
  3. Problem-solving gets clearer. People give themselves better advice than they give themselves when stuck in first-person rumination.

He calls this self-distancing. Stepping back from your own experience just enough to look at it like you'd look at a friend's problem.

Why Speaking It Out Loud Matters

Thinking and speaking aren't the same thing.

Silent thoughts loop. They're vague, emotional, half-formed. You can spend forty minutes "thinking about" a problem and emerge with nothing because your brain was just churning the same anxiety over and over.

The moment you say it out loud, three changes happen:

  • It has to become a sentence. Vague dread turns into "I'm worried this client will churn next month." That alone is half the work.
  • You hear it. Auditory feedback engages a different processing system than internal thought. Your brain reacts to your own voice the way it reacts to someone else talking to you — which means you can actually consider the statement instead of just being inside it.
  • It externalizes the load. Journaling works for the same reason. Once a worry is outside your head — on paper, in the air — your working memory frees up.

This is why people who narrate their work out loud often code faster, debug better, and make fewer mistakes during complex tasks. Rubber-duck debugging is a real engineering technique for a reason.

The Founder Angle

I run a company. Most days I'm shifting between four or five completely different contexts — an Amazon listing crisis, a new hire decision, a tech product roadmap, a cash flow question, a sales call. Each one demands a different mental model.

What I've noticed — and what Kross's research backs up — is that talking to myself is the cheapest possible context switch. Walking from one room to another, narrating "okay, we're done with ops, now we're thinking about hiring," is doing actual cognitive work. It's flushing the previous frame and loading the next one.

It's also the cheapest possible therapist. A two-minute monologue while making coffee, where I literally say "Kumar, what is actually bothering you right now?" — out loud, second person — surfaces things that hours of silent worrying never would.

When To Worry, And When Not To

The line between healthy self-talk and something concerning is actually pretty clear:

Normal and healthy:

  • Narrating tasks
  • Rehearsing hard conversations
  • Venting and problem-solving
  • Motivating yourself
  • Processing emotions out loud
  • Running through plans before executing

Worth paying attention to:

  • The voice feels like it isn't yours
  • You're hearing responses you didn't generate
  • It's replacing, not supplementing, human connection
  • The tone is consistently cruel and you can't stop it

The first list is just thinking with your mouth open. The second list is when it's worth talking to someone.

The Practical Takeaway

If you already do this, stop being embarrassed about it. You're not the weird one — the people who don't do this are missing a tool.

If you don't, try the smallest version: next time you're stuck on a problem, walk into a room alone and describe the problem out loud, in second person. "Okay, you're stuck on X. What's actually the blocker here?" Two minutes. Watch what happens.

The most useful conversations of my week are usually the ones I have with no one in the room.

Inspired by Ethan Kross's work at the University of Michigan and his book Chatter: The Voice in Our Head, Why It Matters, and How to Harness It.