Brian Chesky had a bad dream just before Airbnb’s IPO filing. It changed how he ran the business

Airbnb is, by nearly every measure, a Silicon Valley success story.

The company was founded during the Great Recession, shot up through the prestigious Y Combinator program, made its market debut during the pandemic, and is now worth more than $70 billion. But things might have looked different if it weren’t for a bad dream in late 2019 that caused CEO and cofounder Brian Chesky to reconsider how he runs the company.

“I always thought it was made up when people actually have these dreams,” Chesky said during a conversation on stage at the Fast Company Innovation Festival with FNDR CEO James Vincent. “I had this terrible dream that I left the company. I came back and I was horrified of what I found. And then I realized that it was exactly what we’re doing right now.”

James Vincent, founder and CEO, FNDR, and Brian Chesky, cofounder and CEO, Airbnb. [Photo: Celine Grouard for Fast Company]
Chesky divulged this dream to his fellow cofounders during a weekly meetup, where they asked him what he planned to do since the company was about to file to go public.

“It turns out the one time you should not rebuild a company from the ground up is right before you submit your S-1. And I was stuck and the growth was slowing. Expenses were rising. And all of a sudden I realized as a designer running this company: How did I end up in this position where it just seemed a little bit conventional and like every other company?” Chesky said.

It’s not that Chesky thought the company would be doomed, he stressed. But he wanted to settle that uneasy feeling and get back to his roots of being a designer. (Chesky studied industrial design at the Rhode Island School of Design.) The company was operating with nearly a dozen divisions that created their own subdivisions which, in turn led to a central message being left out and, essentially, a lack in strategy.

[Photo: Celine Grouard for Fast Company]
At the time, Chesky had a vision of running his company differently. “Like if a designer ran a company, not like every other company, and I don’t know how to change it,” he said of this thought process at the time. Shortly after this realization, the COVID-19 pandemic began to spread across the globe, forcing Airbnb to shift its business.

Airbnb began to cut down some of its divisions to streamline the organizational structure. It dramatically decreased marketing spend and saw little impact. “We realized our brand is stronger and more differentiated and we’re going to to lean into our differentiation,” Chesky said. “We’re going to do fewer things, we’re going to be totally functional. We’re going to be a creatively driven company.”

“It’s not that creativity should drive everything,” he said. “It should be in the room. It should be in the conversation. And if you ever have those bad trade offs where there’s no good solution, that’s when creativity’s really helpful. Because when you have two bad options, creativity sometimes allows you to design a win-win, a third path.”

“And I think that there’s a creative renaissance that could happen because when you look at the next generation, they are really different,” Chesky continued. “They have this creative spirit and I think creativity is very correlated with [the] humanistic. I think that people want to buy things from companies or work for companies that are deeply humanistic.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/90791748/brian-chesky-airbnb-bad-dream-ipo-fcif-2022?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creato 3y | 22 set 2022, 14:21:12


Accedi per aggiungere un commento

Altri post in questo gruppo

Slash uses AI to build custom banking tools for niche industries

A fintech company called Slash offers business banking accounts tailored to the needs of specific kinds of entrepreneurs.

Slash provides business che

20 mag 2025, 18:30:05 | Fast company - tech
Space tourism’s rise challenges how we define astronauts and exploration

On April 14, 2025, Blue Origin launched six women—Aisha Bowe, Amanda Nguyễn, Gayle Ki

20 mag 2025, 18:30:04 | Fast company - tech
Google’s AI Mode goes prime time, a direct answer to ChatGPT Search

Google is rapidly expanding its AI search capabilities, as reflected in the announcements it made Tuesday at its Google I/O developer conference. The search giant announced the general availabilit

20 mag 2025, 18:30:03 | Fast company - tech
Beyond Imagination raises $100 million to build humanoid robots

A humanoid robotics startup co-founded by prominent artificial-intelligence futurist Ray Kurzweil said on Tuesday that ven

20 mag 2025, 16:10:04 | Fast company - tech
The environmental impact of LLMs: Here’s how OpenAI, DeepSeek, and Anthropic stack up

The companies behind AI models are keen to share granular data about their performance on benchmarks that demonstrate how well they operate. What they are less eager to disclose is information abo

20 mag 2025, 11:30:05 | Fast company - tech
Agentic AI is the future of customer service. Here’s how you need to prepare for it

Twenty-four-hour customer support with zero hold time, infinite personalization, customized care, and behavior-based response are all aspects of the customer experience that will be expected soone

20 mag 2025, 11:30:04 | Fast company - tech
Microsoft launched Copilot+ PCs a year ago to mockery. Is the world finally ready for them?

A year ago today, Microsoft unveiled what it believed would be the future of home computing.

20 mag 2025, 11:30:03 | Fast company - tech