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Tim Ferriss · 2022-03-24 · 1h 34m

Mark Zuckerberg on Business Strategy, Parenting, Religion, and More

Mark Zuckerberg talks fencing, classics, long-term metaverse bets, Meta's new company values, his partnership with Sheryl Sandberg, parenting, and religion.

Mark Zuckerberg on Business Strategy, Parenting, Religion, and More
The guest

Mark Zuckerberg — Founder and CEO of Meta (formerly Facebook), the social technology company behind Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and its virtual and augmented reality efforts. He has run the company for roughly 18 years.

The gist

In this wide-ranging conversation with Tim Ferriss, Mark Zuckerberg opens with his competitive high-school fencing and love of classics before diving into how he manages long-term bets like the metaverse across a company of nearly 100,000 people. He breaks down the technical roadmap for VR and AR presence, haptics, and smart glasses, and explains his thinking on Web3, NFTs, interoperability, and content moderation. He shares Meta's six newly rolled-out company values for the first time publicly, reflects on his decade-plus partnership with Sheryl Sandberg, and discusses how his parents shaped him. The talk closes on personal territory: his nightly parenting routine, his deepening relationship with Judaism and faith, his annual personal challenges, and the role of energy management in his life.

Big reveals

  • Zuckerberg confirms he has roughly a 15-year roadmap for the metaverse, framing it as a mix of engineering and science problems with six or seven key unknowns being attacked by multiple teams.
  • He discusses Meta's six company values publicly for the first time ever, calling them the company's 'cultural operating system.'
  • He reveals 'move fast and break things' evolved to 'move fast with stable infrastructure' because the company was producing so many bugs that fixing them slowed it down more than it sped things up.
  • The value 'Meta, Metamates, Me' came from author Douglas Hofstadter, who was emailed about what to call employees and replied 'Metamates.'
  • Meta changed its performance review cycle from every six months to once a year to lengthen employees' time horizons and discourage short-term thinking.
  • He says Sheryl Sandberg, as old as he is now when she joined 15 years ago, 'almost like she raised me like a child' as a young CEO in his early 20s.
  • Zuckerberg says religion is playing an increasing role in his life; he is raising his daughters Jewish and the family does Shabbat dinner nearly every Friday.
  • He pushes back on the universal-basic-income framing of play-to-earn, predicting instead the creation of many nested virtual worlds with different rules, economies, and modes of governance.

Things worth remembering

  • Zuckerberg planned to be a classics major but took no classics courses at Harvard, focusing instead on psychology and computer science; he started Latin because he was bad at speaking French and Spanish.
  • A 2010 New Yorker profile listed Ender's Game as seemingly the only book on his Facebook profile; Meta code-named an internal communication project 'ansible' after the book's faster-than-light communication device.
  • He manages his psychology by doing something physical and meditative like foiling or surfing for about an hour each morning to reset before facing 'a ton of new context' in his inbox.
  • Colleagues lovingly refer to his attention as 'the eye of Sauron' because his unending energy will 'just burn' any team he points it at.
  • Zuckerberg reads Jocko Willink's 'The Way of the Warrior Kid' to his daughters, recommended by Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke, and the girls have started training jiu-jitsu.
  • His nightly 'goodnight things' routine with his kids covers health, loving family and friends, something they're excited about, and what they did to help someone that day.
  • In a year-of-meeting-a-new-person-per-day challenge, the self-described introvert began teaching at a local Boys and Girls Club; those mentees, none from college-going families, are now graduating college.
  • He learned enough Mandarin in a personal-challenge year to surprise Priscilla's mother during their secret wedding; he says a single tear ran down her face.
  • He recalls the 2010 New Yorker citing 'eliminating desire' as an interest, attributing it to an 'emo' phase in which he painted his room black.
  • He describes AR's hardest challenge as fitting a former 'supercomputer'—laser projector, waveguides, eye-tracking lasers, speakers, microphones—into glasses frames about 5mm thick, with heat dissipation a key limiting factor.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

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RecommendedBook

Ender's Game

Orson Scott Card (inferred)

“It is a great book. It was one of my favorites. And I was I do love it. Um it's it's a great book” — Mark Zuckerberg 00:07:57
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownProduct

Oculus

Meta (inferred)

“playing with Oculus, I was very impressed with the technology because I used a very early version years ago and the advances are really tremendous” — Tim Ferriss 00:27:29
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownProduct

Quest

Meta (inferred)

“then we got Quest which it you got rid of the wire. You got it so that now you could run virtual reality” — Mark Zuckerberg 00:23:20
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownProduct

Horizon

Meta (inferred)

“I hope that we can build into the Horizon platform that, you know, it's the social platform that we're building” — Mark Zuckerberg 00:33:38
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownProduct

Workrooms

Meta (inferred)

“Workrooms is this product it's the VR product that we built for collaboration. I think it's great. It's early still, but it's fascinating” — Mark Zuckerberg 00:50:40
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

The Way of the Warrior Kid

Jocko Willink

“I'm reading this book with them now, The Way of the Warrior Kid, which is good. I recommend” — Mark Zuckerberg 01:12:57
Find it on Amazon