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  • Bill Gurley on Mental Models, Systems Thinking, AI Investing, Stablecoins, and the Future of Venture Capital

    Bill Gurley spent his career at Benchmark backing some of the most consequential marketplaces and network-effect businesses of the internet era, including Uber, and he is one of the few investors who pairs deep Wall Street fundamentals with a real feel for the bleeding edge. In this wide-ranging conversation on Shane Parrish’s The Knowledge Project, he lays out the mental models he keeps returning to, how systems thinking keeps you out of trouble, why the history of your field is a hidden superpower, where AI investing is headed, and how stablecoins and tokenization could quietly rewire finance. It is a masterclass in thinking clearly about complex systems while staying obsessively curious about what is happening on the edge.

    TLDW

    Gurley anchors his thinking in systems thinking and complexity theory, warning that multivariable nonlinear systems produce second and third order consequences that punish anyone who optimizes for a single metric. He argues that mastering both the deep history of your field and its newest edge is wildly differentiating, whether you are interviewing for a marketing job or breaking into venture capital. On AI he is measured: he doubts a single model eats every vertical, sees real moats in workflows and proprietary data, flags that we may be painting in the corners on training data, and explains why Chinese open source models may innovate faster because forced knowledge sharing compounds. He thinks the AI buildout looks overfunded and that circular deals both raise the odds of an eventual correction and delay it. He makes the case that the IPO process is a rigged power grab, that stablecoins and instant payments threaten Visa, Mastercard, and the entire 2 to 3 percent credit card stack, and that proxy advisors like ISS have drifted from shareholder interest into a black-box heist. He closes on the craft of storytelling and writing as thinking, the equal-partnership design of Benchmark, why venture bends toward youth, and what success means now that his dream job is behind him.

    Thoughts

    The most useful idea in this conversation is also the quietest one: most bad decisions are not bad in the moment, they are bad in the second derivative. Gurley’s dating-site story, where lengthening profiles raised engagement in the test and then quietly killed conversion months later, is the whole argument in miniature. A linear model would have shipped that change and called it a win. A systems thinker assumes the variable you optimized is connected to three others you cannot see yet, and waits to find out. That posture, refusing to get deterministic about a single metric, is the difference between a clever experiment and a durable business. It is also the most transferable thing in the episode, because it applies to product changes, hiring, policy, and your own career just as cleanly as it applies to a dating app.

    His pairing of old and new is the second idea worth stealing. Everyone in tech tells you to live on the edge, and Gurley agrees, he keeps five premium AI accounts running so he never misses a release. But he insists the edge is only half of it. Knowing the deep history of your field, the masters of marketing, the forefathers of physics, the classic cartoons that taught animation, is rare enough that it instantly creates contrast and signals genuine passion. The compounding move is to hold both at once. If you understand the legends and you actually get TikTok, you are a power player in a way that someone who only knows one end of the timeline can never be. Most people pick a side. The leverage is in refusing to.

    On AI specifically, Gurley is refreshingly unwilling to pick the consensus lane in either direction. He does not buy that one near-sentient model swallows every vertical, and his reasoning is grounded rather than vibes-based: workflows and proprietary data create real switching costs, which is why he watches the legal AI startups ingesting case law and building new databases rather than assuming everyone reverts to a general chatbot. At the same time he respects the Microsoft pattern of platforms climbing the stack and crushing the apps above them. The honest answer is that it is genuinely up for grabs, and his comfort sitting in that uncertainty is itself a model. The cheap takes are “one model to rule them all” and “it is all wrappers.” Gurley holds both possibilities and keeps testing.

    The systems lens does its best work on China. Rather than moralize, Gurley runs the mechanism: roughly ten open source models, intense domestic competition, and a culture of publishing techniques and weights so every model can learn from, train, and test every other model. His two-farmer metaphor, one market where farmers only trade goods and another where they are forced to share best practices, makes the prediction obvious. Forced knowledge sharing compounds faster than secrecy. The uncomfortable corollary he names is that American startups are quietly forking those open models all over Silicon Valley, and that incumbents may be lobbying for heavy regulation precisely because it pulls up the drawbridge against open source competition. That is the systems thinker’s signature move: follow the incentives to the consequence nobody is saying out loud.

    Finally, the money section is a clinic in spotting rent extraction. The IPO process where bankers pick both the price and the favored buyers, the 2 to 3 percent credit card toll that exists for no defensible reason while the rest of the world built instant bank transfer decades ago, and the proxy advisors who score companies in a black box and then sell you the cure, are all variations on the same pattern: an intermediary that captured a choke point and defends it through regulatory capture rather than value. Gurley’s optimism is that crypto rails, stablecoins, and tokenization may finally route around these tolls the way WeChat Pay and Alipay leapfrogged cards in China. Whether or not you agree on the timeline, the analytical habit is the takeaway. When something costs far more than it should and has for decades, ask who captured the rules, and watch the edge for whoever is about to make those rules irrelevant.

    Key Takeaways

    • Systems thinking means treating the world as multivariable nonlinear systems where one variable flipping can change the entire system’s behavior, the way weather and stock markets do.
    • The real danger is second and third derivative effects, consequences that only show up much later, long after the metric you optimized looked like a win.
    • A dating site lengthened profiles because longer profiles tested as more engaging, then discovered months later it was negative for conversion, the textbook second order trap.
    • Never get too deterministic about a single metric or single variable, and always know what is actually important and what sits on top.
    • Gurley built his foundation on the canon: Peter Lynch’s One Up on Wall Street, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, the Buffett letters, Ben Graham, and Howard Marks.
    • A firm grasp of the financial bedrock is what lets you innovate on top of it, and many Silicon Valley VCs would benefit from understanding finance better.
    • Bill Miller reframed value investing as buying an asset that is underpriced relative to what you think it will be worth in the future, which is how he justified holding Amazon for its network effects.
    • Wall Street is the buyer of the product that venture capitalists create, so even at the two-people-in-a-PowerPoint stage you should ask whether the eventual public market will be excited by it.
    • Trajectory matters more than the starting place, because the trajectory is where the company actually ends up.
    • Knowing the deep history of your field is remarkably differentiating, and tedium while learning it is a signal you are in the wrong lane.
    • John Lasseter served Gurley a ten-course meal where each course was tied to a classic cartoon essential to understanding animation, a display of mastery over the history of the craft.
    • Magnus Carlsen won a trivia contest on the history of chess, and Picasso was a wildly successful realist painter by 14, both proof that the greats master the fundamentals first.
    • Obsessive, constant learning is the trait Gurley sees most in great entrepreneurs, because disruption always happens on a moving edge they need to understand at the top one percentile.
    • The compounding advantage is mastering both the old history and the new edge at once, the way understanding both marketing legends and TikTok would set you apart in any interview.
    • Most people underestimate how much AI can do, so push more of the downstream work into the prompt: identify the top ten, list pros and cons, rank them on one dimension, then another, and add up the numbers too.
    • Gurley uses ChatGPT for project structure and memory, Gemini for restaurant research powered by Google review data, and notes that coders swear by Claude while some prefer Perplexity for finance.
    • He doubts one model dominates everything; verticals like coding already let users swap models, and price optimization will push more swapping over the next few years.
    • Heavy, expensive regulation could ironically create oligopoly, and some players may be quietly begging for regulation because it pulls up the bridge against Chinese open source models.
    • China’s roughly ten open source models compete intensely and share weights and techniques, creating a system that can innovate faster, like farmers forced to share best practices instead of just trading goods.
    • A quiet secret is that startups all over Silicon Valley are forking those Chinese open source models at real volume.
    • Gurley comes down against the idea that one near-sentient model removes the need for vertical models; workflows and proprietary data, like legal startups ingesting all the case law, create durable moats.
    • We may be running out of training data, painting in the corners, which is why one of the most powerful improvements is hiring experts at thousands of dollars an hour to fine-tune the models.
    • Yann LeCun’s view is that the next leap is broader than LLMs, since language-based models hit an asymptote and are weak at math and numbers.
    • AlphaGo’s shocking move proves models can innovate beyond their training, but it lived in a constrained game; the real world has infinite paths a computer cannot exhaustively search.
    • Gurley’s non-consensus view is skepticism of the China vilification mindset, noting the US is only 3 to 5 percent of the global population and wondering how the other 95 percent hears American exceptionalism.
    • The AI buildout looks overfunded: the Magnificent Seven took free cash flow from 50 to 100 billion a year down toward zero by pouring it into capex.
    • The venture community has become more risk-seeking because it now deeply believes in increasing returns and power laws, and the pre-profit losses keep scaling, from Amazon’s 2 to 3 billion to Uber’s 15 billion to far more now.
    • Circular deals, where a cloud provider funds a model company that spends the money right back on its services, inflate growth, which both raises the probability of an eventual correction and extends the time before one hits.
    • Burn rate is a measure of risk; ten years ago a million a month was scary, now companies burn five billion a year and cannot really know their unit economics.
    • Tokenization without financial-disclosure regulation invites speculation and manipulation, which is part of why companies like Stripe stay private and negotiate liquidity prices with trusted investors.
    • The IPO process is unfair because bankers pick both the price and the shareholders; a freshman would simply match supply and demand anonymously in an auction, the way direct listings and ICOs do.
    • Stablecoins threaten the 2 to 3 percent credit card stack; USDC holds dollar-for-dollar Treasuries and rides fast global crypto rails, while US transfers still suffer three-day ACH settlement and 25 dollar wires.
    • The rest of the world built instant transfer long ago, from UK Faster Payments 20 years ago to Argentina’s PIX-style system reaching 60 to 70 percent of transactions, while US bank regulatory capture stalled Fed Now.
    • Visa and Mastercard run roughly 60 percent operating margins as a bank-created duopoly, and China leapfrogged them entirely with WeChat Pay and Alipay QR-code wallets.
    • Moody’s power is being the trusted standard, the watermark, so AI on the back end does not displace it; ISS and proxy advisors, by contrast, score companies in a black box and get paid on both sides.
    • Proxy advisors drifted from shareholder interest into a fraud-and-risk-mitigation mindset, which is why they reflexively opposed the Tesla pay package that only paid out if the stock soared.
    • The rise of passive index funds concentrated voting power in firms that lack time to evaluate votes; it would be healthier if they abstained or voted in proportion to active holders.
    • Storytelling is one of the top founder traits, because founders are recruiting, raising money, and closing customers and partners constantly, selling all the time.
    • Writing is thinking: Bezos’s six-page memo forces you to find the loose ends and tie them up, and a public blog becomes a calling card that magnetizes founders and deal flow.
    • Other founder unfair advantages are product instincts, which fewer than 5 percent of non-product people ever truly learn, and sheer determination, Bezos’s single angel-investing test of whether someone will do it no matter what.
    • Uber had no HBS case study to lean on; its winner-take-all network effects forced mega burn rates with no precedent and no mentor to call, a situation every AI company now faces.
    • Benchmark’s equal partnership, with no king, president, or lead and five equal partners, makes recruiting easy, kills comp politics, and aligns everyone, at the cost of being hard to scale or run new initiatives.
    • Venture bends toward youth because young investors can match founders’ age, master a fresh niche faster, and have the free time to study something 80 hours a week.
    • Gurley defines current success through Arthur Brooks’s From Strength to Strength, hoping to apply his synthesizing and writing skills to bigger societal problems and dent the universe a little.

    Detailed Summary

    Systems Thinking and Second Order Effects

    Gurley opens with the mental model he keeps returning to: systems thinking, shaped by Donella Meadows’s Thinking in Systems and his board seat at the Santa Fe Institute, which studies complexity theory. He describes complex systems as multivariable nonlinear systems that are very hard to predict, capable of behaving one way for a long time until a single variable flips and the whole system behaves differently, like weather or stock markets. The practical payoff is staying out of trouble by anticipating first, second, and third derivative consequences. His clearest example is a large dating site that lengthened user profiles because the test showed more engagement, only to learn many months later that knowing more at that stage was negative for conversion. The lesson is to never get too deterministic about a single metric and to keep the whole system in view, because a change here can ripple to there in ways you only discover much later.

    Learning the Craft of Investing

    Because he started on Wall Street rather than in venture, Gurley absorbed the investing canon first: Peter Lynch’s One Up on Wall Street, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, the Buffett letters, Ben Graham, and Howard Marks, people who spent careers assembling and publishing their thinking. That financial bedrock, he argues, is exactly what lets you innovate on top of it. His friend Michael Mauboussin introduced him to Bill Miller, the Legg Mason manager who beat the S&P for 15 straight years and was Amazon’s largest shareholder for a long stretch. Miller reframed value investing as buying an asset underpriced relative to its future worth, which combined with a belief in network effects justified holding a company that could grow at an unreasonable rate for years. Gurley also frames Wall Street as the buyer of the product venture capitalists create through eventual M&A or IPO, so founders should think early about whether the public market will be excited by what they are building, since trajectory matters more than the starting place.

    Mastering Both the History and the Edge

    Gurley makes an unusually strong case for studying the deep history of your field. He recounts a dinner with Pixar’s John Lasseter, who served a ten-course meal where every course was tied to a classic cartoon he considered essential to understanding animation, and notes that Magnus Carlsen won a chess-history trivia contest and Picasso was a master realist by 14. In a world that skims for the executive summary, walking into a marketing interview with command of the masters of marketing is wildly differentiating and signals genuine passion; if learning that history feels tedious, you are probably in the wrong lane. The counterpart trait he sees in great entrepreneurs is obsessive learning on the moving edge, where disruption actually happens. Gurley keeps five premium AI accounts so he never misses something. The real power player holds both at once, the legends and the newest thing, the way a candidate who knows the marketing greats and truly gets TikTok stands out completely.

    Using AI Well and the Model Wars

    People underestimate how much AI can do, Gurley says, so you should build more of the downstream work into the prompt: instead of asking for the top ten and studying them yourself, ask it to list pros and cons, rank on one dimension, rank again on another, and add up the numbers too. He uses ChatGPT for its project structure and memory, leans on Gemini for restaurant research because it carries Google review data, and notes coders swear by Claude while some prefer Perplexity for finance. On whether one model dominates or models become niche commodities, he points to coding, the largest vertical, where tools like Cursor already let users swap models, and predicts price optimization will drive more swapping. The counterforce is regulation: if it gets expensive and mundane it could create oligopoly, and some players may be quietly begging for it because it pulls up the bridge against Chinese open source models.

    China, Open Source, and the Systems Advantage

    Asked to apply systems thinking to China, Gurley describes roughly ten open source models locked in intense domestic competition, all learning from one another because the ecosystem chose openness, with models able to train and test other models and teams publishing the techniques behind their breakthroughs. His metaphor: two agricultural societies, one where farmers only trade goods at market and another where they are forced to share best practices; the second evolves far faster. The result is a system capable of innovating faster than the more secretive Western approach. The quiet secret he names is that startups all over Silicon Valley are forking those open models at real volume, and a key open question is whether regulation tries to stomp that out. He extends this into a broader non-consensus discomfort with the vilification of China common in Washington and parts of Silicon Valley, observing that the US is only a few percent of the global population.

    AI Investing, Moats, and the Limits of Models

    On how AI changes investing and whether a startup is just a wrapper, Gurley calls it up for grabs but lands on the side of durable verticals. If models become near-sentient, one model does everything; he doubts that, pointing to workflows and data moats, like the several legal AI startups ingesting all the case law and building new databases that customers will not simply swap for a general chatbot. He balances this against the Microsoft pattern of platforms climbing the stack past Lotus 1-2-3 and WordPerfect. He also flags scaling limits: we may be running out of data, painting in the corners, which is why one of the most powerful improvements is paying experts thousands of dollars an hour to fine-tune models, though human knowledge has an edge. He invokes Yann LeCun’s argument that the next leap is broader than language-based LLMs, which hit an asymptote and struggle with math, and the AlphaGo debate, where a shocking innovative move proves creativity within a constrained game but says little about the infinite paths of the real world. He notes AlphaGo and Tesla’s FSD are constrained, non-LLM systems.

    Is the Buildout Overfunded

    Gurley admits he is shocked by the scale of money, noting the Magnificent Seven drove free cash flow from 50 to 100 billion a year down toward zero by spending it all on capex, something he would not have believed five years ago. He traces it to the venture community’s growing conviction in increasing returns and power laws, where proven companies grow far beyond expectations, which makes investors more willing to take risk on the come. The losses before turning cash-flow positive keep scaling, from Amazon’s 2 to 3 billion to Uber’s roughly 15 billion to far larger now. On corrections, he recalls the dot-com crash producing a three to four year nuclear winter before Amazon climbed back, and explains that circular deals, where a cloud provider funds a model company that spends it right back on its services, inflate growth and therefore both raise the probability of a correction and extend the runway before one arrives. Burn rate, he stresses, is a measure of risk, and at five billion a year it is nearly impossible to know your unit economics.

    Tokenization, the IPO Heist, and Going Public

    There is no shortage of capital, so funding is not the bottleneck; the risk with tokenization is that, absent disclosure regulation, it invites speculation and manipulation, as seen in retail-loved names like GameStop and Palantir. Tokenizing a private company like Stripe could create the wild price swings companies stay private to avoid, since private liquidity events let them negotiate a price with trusted investors rather than expose the constantly moving underlying value, and Robinhood’s tokenization plans already drew legal pushback. Gurley reserves his sharpest critique for the IPO process, calling it insanely unfair because bankers pick both the price and the favored shareholders. A freshman computer science and finance student would simply match supply and demand anonymously in an auction, the way an ICO or a direct listing does, but Wall Street will not let go of the greedy power grab and reverted to a controlled oligopoly after direct listings were available.

    Stablecoins Versus the Payment Cartel

    Gurley argues stablecoins could be deeply disruptive to credit cards. Most of the developed world built instant bank-to-bank transfer long ago, from UK Faster Payments 20 years ago to Argentina’s PIX-style system that quickly hit 60 to 70 percent of transactions, while US bank regulatory capture stalled Fed Now and left an ecosystem living under 2 to 2.5 percent card fees. A USDC stablecoin holds dollar-for-dollar US Treasuries and rides proven, fast, global crypto rails, letting anyone move a dollar in seconds for pennies, against the backdrop of three-day ACH settlement and 25 dollar wires. He sees Visa and Mastercard, a bank-created duopoly with roughly 60 percent operating margins, as heavily threatened, and points to China, where WeChat Pay and Alipay built ubiquitous QR-code wallets that leapfrogged the entire card system, all because the government made money transfer easy.

    Moody’s, Proxy Advisors, and Index Funds

    Moody’s power, Gurley explains, comes from being a trusted standard, the watermark, so even AI on the back end does not displace it. Proxy advisors like ISS are a different story: they score companies in a black box, refuse to reveal the criteria, and then get paid by the same companies that want to learn how to score better, which he calls more of a heist than a service. They drifted from a shareholder-interest mandate into a corporate-governance, fraud-mitigation posture obsessed with rules, which is why they reflexively opposed the Tesla pay package that only paid Elon Musk if the stock soared, a deal Gurley says he would sign for every company he has worked with. The rise of passive index funds compounds the problem, concentrating voting power in firms without time to evaluate votes; he would prefer they abstain or vote in proportion to active holders, since closet indexing during the MAG 7 run already distorted active management.

    Storytelling, Writing, and Founder Advantages

    Gurley fell in love with the craft of writing in business school, moving from business books to personal development titles like Dale Carnegie and Seven Habits, then biographies, then long-form narrative nonfiction by Malcolm Gladwell, Michael Lewis, and Jon Krakauer, the New Journalism that reads like fiction. Writing forces clarity: he cites Bezos’s six-page memo as a tool that makes you think through corner cases and tie up loose ends, and notes that codifying his marketplace knowledge and publishing it turned his blog into a calling card that magnetized founders and deal flow. He lists the top founder traits as storytelling, product instincts, understanding the edge, and determination. Storytelling matters because founders are constantly recruiting, fundraising, and closing customers and partners. Product instinct is nearly unteachable, present in well under 5 percent of non-product hires. And determination is Bezos’s single angel-investing test: will this person do it no matter what, come hell or high water.

    Uber, Benchmark, and the Shape of Venture

    The Uber lesson with no HBS case study was that a winner-take-all category with network effects demanded funding ad nauseam, producing burn rates bigger than any public company would dare, with no precedent and no mentor to call, exactly the situation AI companies now face, only with a zero added. Gurley credits Benchmark’s design, an equal partnership with no king, president, or lead and five equal partners, for making it easy to recruit top talent, encouraging senior partners to develop newcomers since everyone shares the upside, and eliminating annual comp politics. The downside is that without a CEO it is hard to scale or run new initiatives, famously captured by the firm settling on a single splash-page website. Founders choose a VC for reputation and network effects, the stamp of approval that carries weight, and young investors can break in because they often match founders’ age and can outwork everyone to master a fresh niche like esports or YouTube, which is why the industry bends toward youth. Asked what success means now, Gurley says his venture career was a dream job he would have done for free, but it is done; inspired by Arthur Brooks’s From Strength to Strength, he wants to apply his synthesizing and writing to bigger societal problems and dent the universe a little.

    Notable Quotes

    “We do live in a world where information is really cut up, but we also live in a world where you can have access to more information than you ever could.”

    Bill Gurley, on why the abundance of knowledge rewards the curious

    “You got to be really conscious of the consequence and not get too deterministic about a single metric or a single variable.”

    Bill Gurley, on the discipline of systems thinking

    “Value just means that the asset is underpriced relative to what you think it will be worth in the future.”

    Bill Gurley, relaying Bill Miller’s reframing of value investing

    “I’ve always thought of Wall Street as the buyer of the product that venture capitalists create.”

    Bill Gurley, on why founders should think about the public market early

    “One society, when the farmers come to market, they just sell each other goods and then they go back. The other society, when the farmers come to market, they’re forced to share best practices. Which one is going to evolve faster?”

    Bill Gurley, on why open source models can out-innovate

    “If you took a freshman computer science student and a freshman finance student and said imagine how a company should go public, they would match supply and demand anonymously like you would in any auction.”

    Bill Gurley, on the rigged IPO process

    “When I meet an entrepreneur, there’s only one thing I ask myself. Is this person gonna do this no matter what? Come hell or high water, they’re doing this.”

    Bill Gurley, quoting Jeff Bezos on his single test for angel investing

    “You’re recruiting employees, you’re recruiting executives, you’re raising money, you’re closing customers, you’re closing partnerships. You’re selling all the damn time.”

    Bill Gurley, on why storytelling is a top founder trait

    “I often said that if we lived in a socialist society and everyone had to work for free, I would still take that job.”

    Bill Gurley, on loving his venture career

    “I would like to see if I can apply those techniques to bigger, broader problems in society and dent the universe a little bit that way.”

    Bill Gurley, on what success looks like in his next chapter

    Watch the full conversation with Bill Gurley on The Knowledge Project here.

    Related Reading

  • Dana White’s UFC Empire: How He Turned a $2 Million Bankrupt Company Into a $7.7 Billion Paramount Deal

    Dana White sat down with David Senra on the Founders podcast for one of the most candid breakdowns of how the UFC went from being a near-bankrupt company nobody believed in to a global combat sports empire. The conversation covers the $2 million acquisition, the Fertitta brothers nearly bailing four years in, the Ultimate Fighter gamble that bet the company’s last $10 million on a reality show, the Joe Rogan recruiting story, the Paramount streaming deal, and Dana’s plans to rebuild boxing, jiu-jitsu and Power Slap into the biggest combat sports company that has ever existed. Watch the full conversation here.

    TLDW

    Dana White and his partners Lorenzo and Frank Fertitta bought the UFC for $2 million in 2001 when the sport was banned from pay-per-view and dismissed as human cockfighting. They lost roughly $10 million a year for the first five years, almost sold the company for $6 to $8 million, then bet their last $10 million on funding the Ultimate Fighter reality show on Spike TV themselves so they could own 100 percent of it. The Forrest Griffin vs Stephan Bonnar finale changed everything. Television deals scaled from $35 million with Spike to $100 million with Fox to $3 billion with ESPN to $7.7 billion over seven years with Paramount. Dana sold the UFC for $4.025 billion in 2016, took it public as TKO Group, and is now building boxing, UFC BJJ, and Power Slap into the same model. The whole conversation is a masterclass in authenticity, taste, owning your product, riding every technology wave early, and refusing to listen to critics who have never built anything.

    Key Takeaways

    • The UFC was bought for $2 million. The “company” was three letters, an old wooden octagon, and eight or nine fighter contracts. Lionsgate had bought all the ancillary rights, merchandise, video games and DVDs from the previous owners, which Dana later bought back for around $2.5 to $3 million.
    • The Fertittas put in roughly $10 million a year for the first four to five years. Dana ran the company for 10 percent equity. Lorenzo nearly pulled the plug. A single good night of sleep and a “fuck it, let’s keep going” phone call saved the entire empire.
    • UFC was not allowed on pay-per-view at the time. Porn was on pay-per-view but the UFC was not. Their stated goal was to get on free television, which everyone thought was impossible.
    • The Ultimate Fighter on Spike TV was the Trojan horse. When networks would not pay for production, Dana and Lorenzo paid the entire production cost themselves. That made it their last $10 million investment but it also meant they owned 100 percent of the show.
    • The Forrest Griffin vs Stephan Bonnar finale changed everything. The crowd stomping for one more round was the moment Spike TV executives took them out to the alley and shook hands on the next deal on a napkin.
    • TV rights values exploded over 25 years. Spike $35 million. Fox $100 million. ESPN $3 billion. Paramount $7.7 billion over seven years for everything UFC, plus boxing.
    • Joe Rogan did the first 12 UFC fights for free. Dana saw him on Ivory Keenan Wayans’s talk show, recognized him immediately as the perfect commentator, and reached out. They split radio promotion duties for years, getting up at 3 a.m. on the West Coast to hit East Coast drive time markets.
    • Dana operates the company as a self-described dictatorship. There is no committee. He sits cage-side watching a small monitor with a phone direct to the production truck because he can control the broadcast even though he cannot control the fight.
    • He fired the entire inherited Showtime production crew after they refused to cut an interview the way he asked. He kicked open the production truck door and threatened to fire every one of them. He did.
    • His current production, art, and PR teams have almost zero turnover. He calls them “sick animals wired the way I am.” This is the Mr. Beast cloning approach applied to live sports.
    • Authenticity is the moat. Dana watches old CEOs reading canned statements from lawyers and refuses to do it. He tells you a fight sucked when a fight sucked. He says this is exactly the storytelling job founders cannot delegate.
    • UFC built fighters as characters from before they signed. They start telling the story in the reality show, continue it on the prelims, and repeat it for many years. Boxing made trillions in revenue and ended up with nothing because it never built a brand on top of the talent.
    • Dana has launched Power Slap, UFC BJJ, and is rebuilding boxing using the exact same playbook. Power Slap was profitable from event one. The Power Slap reality show is at roughly 50 million YouTube views.
    • The DVD era was a “holy shit” moment. Checks were millions of dollars. Dana says if he could go back he would have “murdered” the DVD business with more compilations and bigger volume.
    • Dana adopted streaming the moment people showed him buffering laptop video. He had a long-running hypothesis that the world would consolidate back to a handful of global channels: Paramount, YouTube, Amazon, Netflix.
    • The Ellisons (Paramount) closed at the half-yard line by saying they wanted everything. Netflix was in the deal too. Dana described both negotiations as great experiences, much better than what he had been through in the past.
    • Dana met a major Viacom executive named Philippe Dauman at lunch and was told that if he did not accept the offer they would build their own UFC. Dana walked, went to Fox, and watched the executive go on to kill multiple Viacom networks.
    • Dana is on the Meta board. Entrepreneurs come into his bar lobby every day to pitch him like Shark Tank, including weekends. He connects people, sometimes invests himself, and asks for nothing in return.
    • His advice to young founders: stop trying to “set your own hours.” Entrepreneurship is going to war every single day. Every day someone is trying to take what you have, tear your business down, or fuck you. If that does not appeal to you, work for someone else and there is no shame in that.
    • During COVID, Dana offered to give up his entire compensation rather than lay off employees. Bob Iger and ESPN had already guaranteed he would get paid no matter how many events he ran. He ran the events anyway, did massive ratings, and the business blew up.
    • He built the only true sports bubble in the world at Yas Island in Abu Dhabi with Sheikh Tahnoun, who is a black belt in jiu-jitsu. Athletes and crews lived there for months.
    • Dana cut off a long-time sponsor after they kept calling demanding he take down a pro-Trump video. He says he only does business with people he is aligned with now.
    • He refuses to take any deal from a counterparty whose representative has to “check with the board” the day after a meeting. Decision-makers only.
    • Influencers and content creators get full access to UFC events. Film what you want, post what you want. He does not tell them how to make content because that would be insane.
    • Dana believes traditional media has lost almost all of its influence. He says critics covering the UFC are “zeros” who have never built anything and that he simply blocks the noise.
    • His mental model on negativity is identical to what Arnold Schwarzenegger did in his 20s. Brainwash yourself with positive affirmations. Cut out negative people, including family. Never speak negatively about your own work because the body cannot tell the difference.
    • Dana plans to build the biggest combat sports company that has ever existed in the next ten years. UFC, boxing, UFC BJJ, Power Slap. Every way you can kick someone’s ass is on the menu.

    Detailed Summary

    Buying the UFC for $2 million when nobody believed in it

    Dana White and the Fertitta brothers bought the UFC in 2001 for $2 million. They had two and a half to three weeks to put on their first event. They had never produced live events. The previous production team came from Showtime. Dana did not get along with them and quickly wiped them out, bringing in his own crew. The first event at the Trump Taj Mahal sold 3,500 tickets and had about 5,000 people in the building with comps. The actual deal was even worse than the headline number. The previous owner had sold off the merchandise rights, video library, video games and DVD rights to Lionsgate to stay alive. What Dana and the Fertittas bought was three letters, an old wooden octagon, and roughly eight or nine fighter contracts. Years later they went back to Lionsgate and bought all of those ancillary rights back for around $2.5 to $3 million. Dana suspects the Lionsgate finance team was laughing at them on the way out the door because it looked good on the books for the next two or three years. With hindsight, those rights are worth a fortune.

    Five years of bleeding cash

    The first five years were brutal. They were doing five events a year and each one was costing roughly $2 million because they did not have the equipment, the processes, or the experience. Revenue and spend were both around $10 million a year. The Fertittas kept funding it. Dana ran it for around 10 percent equity. Then one night Lorenzo called and said he could not keep doing it and asked Dana to find a buyer. Dana came back with an estimate of $6 to $8 million. Lorenzo said he would call back. The next morning, on Dana’s drive to work, Lorenzo called and said “fuck it, let’s keep going.” Dana credits a good night of sleep for the survival of the entire empire. The biggest constraint at the time was that the UFC was not allowed on pay-per-view. Porn was on pay-per-view but the UFC was not. The goal became free television, which everyone said was impossible.

    The Ultimate Fighter as the Trojan horse

    Around 2004 and 2005 reality television was booming. Mark Burnett’s The Contender on boxing was the most expensive reality show ever made and had a fatal flaw: they edited the fights. Dana, who is the world’s most jaded fight fan, knew you never edit a fight. You let it play out. You let the fans decide if it was good or bad. They pitched the show around Hollywood. Everyone passed. The Nashville Network had just rebranded as Spike TV. Spike was not interested in paying for the show. Dana and Lorenzo said they would pay for the entire production. Spike could just put it on the air. That was the last $10 million investment they were going to make in the UFC. If The Ultimate Fighter failed, the company was done. The show was a runaway hit. The Forrest Griffin vs Stephan Bonnar finale ended with the entire arena stomping for one more round. Dana gave both fighters contracts on the spot. Spike TV executives pulled Dana and Lorenzo out into the alley behind the arena and they shook hands on a renewal on a napkin. Because they had funded production themselves, they owned 100 percent of the show. The “expensive” decision turned out to be the single best decision they ever made.

    How Joe Rogan became the voice of the UFC

    Right after the acquisition Dana flew to New York alone to go through every document and VHS tape in the old UFC offices to figure out what came back to Vegas. While he was working through tapes he had Ivory Keenan Wayans’s talk show on, and Joe Rogan came on talking about UFC and martial arts. At the time Rogan was the host of Fear Factor, a massive television show. Dana saw a guy who was educated on martial arts, not afraid to say controversial things, and ready-made for commentary. He reached out, they hit it off, and Rogan did the first 12 UFC fights for free. Dana also explains how he and Rogan promoted the company. They flew around to meet sports editors at every newspaper, most of whom were 60 to 65 years old and would never understand the sport. Radio was still huge. The problem was that fighters are terrible at radio. They are late, they sound like they are still asleep. The only two people who were good at it were Dana and Rogan. So they took turns. Dana did UFC 30. Rogan did UFC 31. Dana did 32. Rogan did 33. They lived on the West Coast and got up at 3 a.m. for years to do East Coast drive time slots. Dana later says that no amount of sponsor money would make him fire Rogan. Loyalty is the most important thing.

    Riding every technology wave: DVDs to streaming

    When DVDs exploded the UFC started producing Ultimate Knockouts and Ultimate Submissions compilations. The DVD checks were the first multi-million dollar moments. Dana would go to the local wow! superstore on Sahara and quietly move UFC DVDs to the top of the top-20 display because nobody knew who he was. He says his only real regret in the DVD era is that he did not go bigger because he assumed DVDs would last forever. When streaming was first pitched to him in his office it was buffering every five to ten seconds and he was skeptical. But he had always believed the world would consolidate back to a handful of global channels the way TV had once been channel 3, 5, 8 and 13 in his childhood. That hypothesis was right. The UFC’s television deals scaled from $35 million with Spike to $100 million with Fox to $3 billion with ESPN to $7.7 billion over seven years with Paramount, which now owns the rights to UFC and boxing. Netflix was bidding too. Dana describes both negotiations as far better than past dealings. He singles out a former Viacom executive who told him over lunch that he, the executive, had built the UFC and would just build his own if Dana did not accept the offer. Dana walked, went to Fox, and watched the executive go on to drain the life out of multiple legendary Viacom networks.

    The dictatorship: taste, control, and an alarming production truck story

    The UFC is run as a self-described dictatorship. No committee. Dana sits at the cage with a small monitor watching the broadcast not because he wants the best fight seat but because he wants to control the live in-house experience and the television feed. There is a phone next to him that goes directly to the production truck. When he sees something he does not like he calls and says do that again or never do that again. Early on the inherited Showtime production team refused to cut an interview the way he asked. Dana walked out of his seat in the middle of the broadcast, kicked open the production truck door, and told the entire crew that if they ever ignored him again he would fire every single one of them. He later fired all of them. His current production team has been with him for years with almost zero turnover. He compares it to how Mr. Beast clones himself through his editors and thumbnail designers. The art department, PR, and production all share his taste, his speed, and what he calls being “wired the way I am.”

    Going public, then doing it all again

    In 2016 the UFC sold for $4.025 billion. Lorenzo Fertitta wanted out. The deal happened with no new TV deal in place, the Fox deal ending, and every critic in the industry insisting the buyers had overpaid and the UFC had peaked. Ten years later the company has gone public through TKO Group and signed the Paramount deal. Dana says the same critics who said WME overpaid in 2016 are now saying Paramount overpaid in 2026. He calls them zeros and says he simply blocks the noise. He has now applied the same playbook to other combat sports. Power Slap, which he funded with a $1 million ask each from the Fertitta brothers after spotting Russian and Polish slap videos on Instagram, has been profitable since the first event and its reality show is at roughly 50 million YouTube views. He has launched UFC BJJ. He is rebuilding boxing inside the Paramount deal. His ten-year goal is to build the largest combat sports company that has ever existed or will ever exist.

    How he treats fighters, influencers, and his team

    Dana treats fighters as an unmanageable product. They are the most unique human beings on Earth, wired differently from everyone else, and trying to control them is impossible. He embraces it. He also gives content creators full access to UFC events: film what you want, post what you want, no rules. He says it would be absurd to tell young creators how to make content when they are the ones with the audience and the trust. He believes traditional media has almost entirely lost its influence and that nobody trusts them anymore. With his own team his moves are unusual. During COVID he offered to give up all of his own compensation rather than lay people off. Bob Iger and ESPN guaranteed the UFC would get paid no matter how many events ran, even if it was zero. Dana ran the events anyway because he assumed ESPN would eventually have to start cutting properties and he wanted the UFC to be irreplaceable. They built the only true sports bubble in the world at Yas Island in Abu Dhabi with Sheikh Tahnoun, who is himself a jiu-jitsu black belt. The numbers were enormous. He also cut off a long-running sponsor whose board kept calling to demand he take down a pro-Trump video. He told them to roll the offer into a tiny ball and shove it up the board’s ass.

    His mental model: know yourself, block noise, and never stop

    Dana’s repeated advice for entrepreneurs comes down to two things. Know who you are. Know what you want to do. Then wake up every day and chase it. When David Senra asks him what would have happened if Lorenzo had said no on that drive home, Dana shrugs. He would have figured it out the next day. There was no plan B. He never thinks about failure. He just keeps going until it works. He cuts negative people out of his life immediately. He mentions Arnold Schwarzenegger’s habit of writing positive affirmations on his walls in his early 20s and brainwashing himself into believing. He says Raising Cane’s founder Todd Graves did the same thing, and that Dana himself has affirmations on the walls of his office, gym and home. He says the body does not know the difference between a real belief and a joke about yourself, so never say anything negative about yourself or your work, even sarcastically. He blocks the noise. He listens to his team. He trusts his gut.

    Thoughts

    The most quietly valuable lesson in this entire conversation is not Dana’s grit or his TV deal numbers. It is the structure he built around ownership. The pivotal moment is not the Forrest Griffin vs Bonnar fight. It is the decision to pay $10 million to fund their own reality show production so they could own 100 percent of it. That sentence shows up halfway through the story and most people will miss it because it sounds expensive. It was actually the entire game. Spike paying for the show would have made the UFC a hit on Spike. Spike not paying for the show is what made the UFC a global empire.

    The second underrated lesson is taste as a competitive moat. Dana is constantly described in business press as a hot-headed brawler and a marketing genius, but the real skill on display is taste applied with extraordinary speed. He watches old CEOs reading canned legal statements and refuses to do that. He watches The Contender editing fights and refuses to do that. He watches boxing burn through trillions in revenue without building a brand and refuses to do that. He notices content creators are the new media before almost anyone in legacy sports does. Everything Dana refuses to do is as important as everything he chooses to do. Most founders are bad at this because they outsource taste to consultants, agencies, or research groups. Dana keeps taste in-house and runs the company as a single nervous system with a phone line that ends at the production truck.

    The third lesson is how he handles people. He runs the place as a dictatorship and yet has almost zero turnover at the senior level. The reason is obvious if you listen. He pays loyalty back with loyalty. He covered his own people during COVID. He kept Rogan when sponsors demanded otherwise. He cut a sponsor whose board called once too often. He gives content creators total freedom because he knows freedom is what creates anything good. The dictatorship is on direction and standards. The autonomy is on craft. That is exactly the configuration almost every great founder converges on and it is almost the opposite of how MBA management theory tells you to run a company.

    The fourth lesson is the cost of a single decision. The Fertittas almost sold the UFC for $6 to $8 million in roughly year four. That same business sold for $4.025 billion twelve years later and now sits inside a TKO Group entity with a $7.7 billion Paramount deal. The delta between a phone call that says “sell it” and a phone call that says “fuck it, let’s keep going” was somewhere north of four billion dollars and counting. Dana’s comment about a good night of sleep is not a cute aside. It is the most important sentence in the interview.

    The fifth and final thing worth sitting with is how Dana thinks about the next ten years. He is 56. He could have retired ten years ago. Instead he is rebuilding boxing inside the same machine, launching UFC BJJ, scaling Power Slap, and openly stating he intends to build the largest combat sports company that has ever or will ever exist. Most founders at his stage are looking for the exit ramp. Dana is loading more onto the plate because he loves the building itself more than the result. He says it explicitly: he loves entrepreneurship slightly more than he loves fighting at this point. That is the tell. People who love the work itself simply do not stop, and the numbers keep getting bigger than anyone watching can imagine.