Samuel Harris Altman is an American entrepreneur and investor. He is the co-founder and CEO of OpenAI. He previously served as president of Y Combinator from 2014 to 2019. Sam Altman has been involved in various technology and business ventures throughout his career. He has also been an influential figure in Silicon Valley, contributing to discussions about the future of technology, artificial intelligence, and other important industry trends.
Some of the best quotes from Sam Altman are listed below.
- “A board member of mine used to say sales fix everything in a startup, and that is really true.” – Sam Altman
- “A lot of people treat choosing their cofounder with even less importance than they put on hiring. Don’t do this.” – Sam Altman
- “A related advantage of mission-oriented ideas, is that you yourself will be dedicated to them.” – Sam Altman
- “A single mediocre hire in the first five will often in fact kill a startup.” – Sam Altman
- “A small communication breakdown is enough for everyone to be working on slightly different things. And then you lose focus…” – Sam Altman
- “A successful startup takes a very long time – certainly much longer than most founders think at the outset. You cannot treat it as an all-nighter. You have to eat well, sleep well, and exercise. You have to spend time with your family and friends. You also need to work in an area you’re actually passionate about – nothing else will sustain you for ten years.” – Sam Altman
- “A winning team feels good and keeps winning. A team that hasn’t won in a while gets demotivated and keeps losing.” – Sam Altman
- “Aim to be the best in the world at whatever you do professionally. Even if you miss, you’ll probably end up in a pretty good place.” – Sam Altman
- “AirBnB happened because Brian Chesky couldn’t pay his rent, but did have some space.” – Sam Altman
- “AirBnB spent 5 months interviewing their first employee, before they hired someone and in their first year, they only hired 2 people.” – Sam Altman
- “Always keep momentum, it’s this prime directive for managing a startup.” – Sam Altman
- “Another way of looking at this, is that the best companies are almost always mission oriented.” – Sam Altman
- “As long as you keep doing the right thing and have the best product, you can beat the bigger company.” – Sam Altman
- “As the company grows and about this 25 or so employee size, your main job shifts from building a great product to building a great company.” – Sam Altman
- “As you grow, it feels hopelessly corporate but it really is worth putting in place these compensation bands.” – Sam Altman
- “As you grow, the productivity I think, goes down with the square of the number of employees if you don’t make an effort.” – Sam Altman
- “At the beginning, you should only hire when you have a desperate need to.” – Sam Altman
- “At YC we have this public phrase, and it’s relentlessly resourceful.” – Sam Altman
- “Be suspicious of any work that is not building product or getting customers.” – Sam Altman
- “Because it’s one of these sort of connections between nodes- every pair of people adds communication overhead.” – Sam Altman
- “Because so few people make an actual long-term commitment to what they’re building, the ones that do have a huge advantage.” – Sam Altman
- “Before 20 or 25 employees, most companies are structured with everyone reporting to the founder. It’s totally flat.” – Sam Altman
- “By the way, that’s my number one piece of advice if you’re going to join a startup: pick a rocket ship.” – Sam Altman
- “Cofounder relationships are among the most important in the entire company.” – Sam Altman
- “Developing a personal connection with anyone you’re trying to do a big deal with is really important.” – Sam Altman
- “Don’t let the company get distracted or excited about other things. A common mistake is that companies get excited by their own PR.” – Sam Altman
- “Employees will only add more value over time.” – Sam Altman
- “Even though plans themselves are worthless, the exercise of planning is very valuable and totally missing in most startups today.” – Sam Altman
- “Every company has a rocky beginning.” – Sam Altman
- “Every first-time founder waits too long, everyone hopes that an employee will turn around. But the right answer is to fire fast…” – Sam Altman
- “Everyone starting a startup for the first time is scared, and everyone feels like a bit of an imposter.” – Sam Altman
- “Everything at a startup gets modeled after the founders. Whatever the founders do becomes the culture.” – Sam Altman
- “Experience matters for some roles and not others.” – Sam Altman
- “Facebook has this famous poster that says move fast and break things. But at the same time they manage to be obsessed with quality.” – Sam Altman
- “Firing people is one of the worst parts of running a company. Actually in my own experience, I think it is the worst.” – Sam Altman
- “For early employees you want people that have somewhat of a risk-taking attitude.” – Sam Altman
- “For most of the early hires you make in a startup, experience doesn’t matter very much, and you should go for aptitude.” – Sam Altman
- “For most software startups, this translates to keep growing. For hardware startups, it translates to don’t let your ship date slip.” – Sam Altman
- “Founders are usually very stingy with equity to employees and very generous with equity to investors. I think this is totally backwards.” – Sam Altman
- “Founders need to figure out what the message of the company is going to be.” – Sam Altman
- “Founders that are hard to talk to are almost always bad.” – Sam Altman
- “Good startups usually take 10 years.” – Sam Altman
- “Great execution towards a terrible idea will get you nowhere.” – Sam Altman
- “Growth and momentum are what a startup lives on and you always have to focus on maintaining these.” – Sam Altman
- “Here’s a good rule of thumb: don’t worry about a competitor at all, until they’re actually beating you with a real shipped product.” – Sam Altman
- “I believe in fighting with investors to reduce the amount of equity they get and then being as generous as you possibly can with employees.” – Sam Altman
- “I care much more about the growth rate of the market than it’s current size and I also care if there’s any reason it’s going to top out.” – Sam Altman
- “I myself used to believe ideas didn’t matter that much, but I’m very sure that’s wrong now.” – Sam Altman
- “I prefer to invest in a company that’s going after a small but rapidly growing market than a big but slow growing one.” – Sam Altman
- “I think as a rough estimate, you should aim to give about 10% of the company to the first 10 employees.” – Sam Altman
- “I think the best thing you can do is be aware that as a first-time founder you are likely to be a very bad manager.” – Sam Altman
- “Ideas by themselves are not worth anything, only executing well is what creates value.” – Sam Altman
- “If it takes more than a sentence to explain what you are doing, it’s almost always a sign that what you are doing is too complicated.” – Sam Altman
- “If it works out, you’re going to be working on this for 10 years.” – Sam Altman
- “If someone is choosing between joining McKinsey or your startup it’s very unlikely they’re going to work out at the startup.” – Sam Altman
- “If someone is difficult to talk to, if someone cannot communicate clearly, it’s a real problem in terms of their likelihood to work out.” – Sam Altman
- “If someone is getting every decision wrong, that’s when you need to act, and at that point it’ll be painfully aware to everyone.” – Sam Altman
- “If you can just learn to think about the market first, you will have a big leg up on most people starting startups.” – Sam Altman
- “If you compromise and hire someone mediocre you will always regret it.” – Sam Altman
- “If you compromise in the first five, ten hires it might kill the company.” – Sam Altman
- “If you don’t love and believe in what you’re building, you’re likely to give up at some point along the way.” – Sam Altman
- “If you don’t need it yourself, and you’re building something that someone else needs, realize you’re at a big disadvantage.” – Sam Altman
- “If you ever take your foot off the gas pedal, things will spiral out of control, snowball downwards.” – Sam Altman
- “If you have several ideas that all seem pretty good, work on the one that you think about, when you’re not trying to think about work.” – Sam Altman
- “If you look at successful pivots, they almost always are a pivot into something that the founder wanted. Not a random made-up idea.” – Sam Altman
- “If you pivot, do it fully and with conviction. The worst thing is to try to do a bit of the old and the new-it’s hard to kill your babies.” – Sam Altman
- “If you want something in a deal, just ask for it.” – Sam Altman
- “If you’re not in college and you don’t know a cofounder, the next best thing I think is to go work at an interesting company.” – Sam Altman
- “In addition to relentlessly resourceful, you want a tough and a calm cofounder.” – Sam Altman
- “In general don’t start a startup you’re not willing to work on for ten years.” – Sam Altman
- “In general though, if you look at the track record of pivots, they don’t become big companies.” – Sam Altman
- “In general, it’s best if you’re building something that you yourself need.” – Sam Altman
- “In the beginning of a company, there is no management and this actually works really well.” – Sam Altman
- “In the early days of a startup, people’s compensation is whatever you negotiate with a founder and it’s all over the place.” – Sam Altman
- “In the early stage of a startup, hiring senior people is usually a mistake. You just want people that get stuff done.” – Sam Altman
- “In YC experience, 2 or 3 co-founders seems to be about perfect.” – Sam Altman
- “In YC’s case, the number one cause of early death for startups is cofounder blowups.” – Sam Altman
- “Investors will sort of like write the check and then, despite a lot of promises, don’t usually do that much; sometimes they do.” – Sam Altman
- “It really is true that you become an average of the people you spend the most time with.” – Sam Altman
- “It takes years and years, usually a decade, to create a great startup.” – Sam Altman
- “It’s become popular in recent years to say that the idea doesn’t matter.” – Sam Altman
- “It’s better to have a few users love your product than for a lot of users to sort of like it.” – Sam Altman
- “It’s better to have no cofounder than to have a bad cofounder, but it’s still bad to be a solo founder.” – Sam Altman
- “It’s difficult to get large groups of people, to the extreme levels of focus and productivity that you need, for a startup to be successful.” – Sam Altman
- “It’s easy to move fast or be obsessed with quality, but the trick is you have to do both at a startup.” – Sam Altman
- “It’s worth some real up-front time to think through the long-term value and the defensibility of the business.” – Sam Altman
- “Just put a little pin in your mind: when you cross 50 employees, there are a new set of HR rules that you have to comply with.” – Sam Altman
- “Keep salaries low and equity high. Keep the organization as flat as you can.” – Sam Altman
- “Later, you should learn to hire fast and scale up the company, but in the early days the goal should be not to hire. Not to hire.” – Sam Altman
- “Losing focus is another way that founders get off track.” – Sam Altman
- “Many of the best YC companies have had phenomenally small number of employees for their first year, sometimes none besides the founders.” – Sam Altman
- “Mediocre founders spend a lot of time talking about grand plans, but they never quite make a decision.” – Sam Altman
- “Momentum and growth are the lifeblood of startups. This is probably in the top three secrets of executing well.” – Sam Altman
- “More important than starting any startup, is getting to know a lot of potential co-founders.” – Sam Altman
- “Most founders have not managed people before, and they certainly haven’t managed managers.” – Sam Altman
- “Most good founders that I know at any given time have a set of small overarching goals for the company that everybody in the company knows.” – Sam Altman
- “Most investors are obsessed with the market size today and they don’t think about how the market is going to evolve.” – Sam Altman
- “Most of the best hires that I’ve made in my entire life have never done that thing before.” – Sam Altman
- “Most things are not as risky as they seem.” – Sam Altman
- “Move fast. Speed is one of your main advantages over large companies.” – Sam Altman
- “No growth hack, brilliant marketing idea, or sales team can save you long term if you don’t have a sufficiently good product.” – Sam Altman
- “No matter what you choose, build stuff and be around smart people.” – Sam Altman
- “Obsess about the quality of the product.” – Sam Altman
- “Once your product is working, switch from not caring about this to caring about this a little bit.” – Sam Altman
- “One of the biggest advantages that startups have is execution speed, and you have to have this relentless operating rhythm.” – Sam Altman
- “One of the great and terrible things about starting a startup is that you get no credit for trying.” – Sam Altman
- “One of the hardest parts about being a founder, is that there are a hundred important things competing for your attention each day.” – Sam Altman
- “One of the pieces of advice that we give at YC is: try to work together on a project rather than just doing an interview.” – Sam Altman
- “One thing I tell startups all the time is that the best way to grow is to make their product better.” – Sam Altman
- “One thing that founders always underestimate is how hard it is to recruit.” – Sam Altman
- “One thing that founders forget is that after they hire employees, they have to retain them.” – Sam Altman
- “One thing that often disrupts momentum and really shouldn’t is competitors.” – Sam Altman
- “Or a way to stay on strangers couches, that just sounds terrible all around.” – Sam Altman
- “People that are really smart and that can learn new things can almost always find a role in the company as time goes on.” – Sam Altman
- “Press releases are easier to write than code, and that is still easier than making a great product.” – Sam Altman
- “Really dig into projects people have worked on and call references; that is another thing that first time founders like to skip.” – Sam Altman
- “Remember that the idea will expand, and become more ambitious as you go.” – Sam Altman
- “Remember that you are more likely to die because you execute badly than get crushed by a competitor.” – Sam Altman
- “Someday everyone will find out everyone else’s comp, if it’s all over the place, it will be a complete meltdown disaster.” – Sam Altman
- “Someday, you need to build a business that’s difficult to replicate. This is an important part of a good idea.” – Sam Altman
- “Starting a business is like riding a wave between life and death. If you can hang on long enough, you’re bound to succeed.” – Sam Altman
- “Startups are not the best choice for work-life balance, and that’s sort of just the sad reality.” – Sam Altman
- “Startups are very hard no matter what you do; you may as well go after a big opportunity.” – Sam Altman
- “Stay focused and don’t try to do too many things at once. Care about execution quality.” – Sam Altman
- “Study the unusually successful people you know, and you will find them imbued with enthusiasm for their work which is contagious. Not only are they themselves excited about what they are doing, but they also get you excited.” – Sam Altman
- “The best founders work on things that seem small but they move really quickly. They get things done really quickly.” – Sam Altman
- “The best ideas often look terrible at the beginning the truly good ideas, don’t seem like they’re worth stealing.” – Sam Altman
- “The best people know that they should join a rocketship.” – Sam Altman
- “The best source by far for hiring is people that you already know and people that other employees in the company already know.” – Sam Altman
- “The biggest PR hack you can do, is not hire a PR firm.” – Sam Altman
- “The company just needs to see you as like this maniacal execution machine.” – Sam Altman
- “The cost of getting an early hire wrong is really high.” – Sam Altman
- “The hard part is that this is a very fine line. There’s right on one side of it, and crazy on the other.” – Sam Altman
- “The idea should come first, the startup should come second.” – Sam Altman
- “The most important thing is that there is clear reporting structure and everyone knows what it is.” – Sam Altman
- “The natural state of a start-up is to die; most start-ups require multiple miracles in their early days to escape this fate.” – Sam Altman
- “The other piece besides focus for execution is intensity. Startups only work at a fairly intense level.” – Sam Altman
- “The role of the board is advice and consent. If the CEO does not lay out a clear strategy and tries to get the board to set one, it will usually end in disaster.” – Sam Altman
- “The second part of how to hire: try not to.” – Sam Altman
- “The single word that matters most I think to keep the company productive as it grows is alignment.” – Sam Altman
- “The startups that do well are the ones that are working all the time.” – Sam Altman
- “The tenth social network, and limited only to college students with no money, also terrible. Myspace had won.” – Sam Altman
- “The thing that kills startups at some level, is the founders giving up.” – Sam Altman
- “The thirteenth search engine- and without all the features of a web portal, most people thought that was pointless.” – Sam Altman
- “The track record for founders that don’t already know each other is really bad.” – Sam Altman
- “The way to have a company that executes well is you have to execute well yourself.” – Sam Altman
- “The way you get deals done and the way you get good terms, is to have a competitive situation.” – Sam Altman
- “There are 3 things I look for when I hire people. Are they smart? Do they get things done? Do I want to spend a lot of time around them?” – Sam Altman
- “There’s at least a hundred times more people with great ideas than people that are willing to put in the effort to execute them well.” – Sam Altman
- “There’s no way I know, to get through the pain of a startup without belief that the mission really matters.” – Sam Altman
- “These all sounded really bad, but they turned out to be good. If they had sounded really good, there would have been too many people working on them.” – Sam Altman
- “To get the very best people- they have a lot of great options, and so it can easily take a year to recruit someone.” – Sam Altman
- “Unfortunately, the trick to great execution is to say no a lot.” – Sam Altman
- “Unpopular but right is what you’re going for.” – Sam Altman
- “Wait to start a startup until you come up with an idea that you feel compelled to explore.” – Sam Altman
- “We hear again and again from founders, that they wish they had waited to start a startup until they came up with an idea they really loved.” – Sam Altman
- “We pretty much won’t fund a company now where the founders don’t have vested equity because it’s just that hard to do.” – Sam Altman
- “What you want to do is innovate on your product and your business model, management structure is not where I would try and innovate.” – Sam Altman
- “Whatever the founder cares about, whatever the founders think are the key goals, that’s going to be what the whole company focusses on.” – Sam Altman
- “When it comes to starting startups, in many ways, it’s easier to start a hard startup than an easy startup.” – Sam Altman
- “When lack of structure fails, it fails all at once. What works totally fine from 0-20 employees, is disastrous at 30.” – Sam Altman
- “Why couldn’t it have been done 2 years ago, and why will 2 years in the future be too late?” – Sam Altman
- “Why now, why is this the perfect time for this particular idea, and to start this particular company?” – Sam Altman
- “You also want people who are maniacally determined and that is slightly different than having a risk tolerant attitude.” – Sam Altman
- “You can basically change everything in a startup but the market.” – Sam Altman
- “You can create value with breakthrough innovation, incremental refinement, or complex coordination. Great companies often do two of these. The very best companies do all three.” – Sam Altman
- “You can have a startup and one other thing, you can have a family, but you probably can’t have many other hobbies.” – Sam Altman
- “You can win with the best product, the best price, or the best experience.” – Sam Altman
- “You can’t be focused without really great communication.” – Sam Altman
- “You cannot create a market that doesn’t want to exist.” – Sam Altman
- “You certainly don’t need to have everything figured out in the path from here to world domination.” – Sam Altman
- “You don’t get to make their decisions but you do get to choose the decision makers.” – Sam Altman
- “You don’t need to make the structure complicated, in fact you shouldn’t. All you need is for every employee to know who their manager is.” – Sam Altman
- “You have to be decisive. Indecisiveness is a startup killer.” – Sam Altman
- “You have to be intense. This only comes from the CEO, this only comes from the founders.” – Sam Altman
- “You have to find a small market in which you can get a monopoly, and then quickly expand.” – Sam Altman
- “You have to let your team get all the credit for all the good stuff that happens, and you take responsibility for the bad stuff.” – Sam Altman
- “You have to save the vision speeches for when the company is winning. When you’re not winning, you just have to get momentum back…” – Sam Altman
- “You need conviction in your own beliefs, and the willingness to ignore others naysaying.” – Sam Altman
- “You need someone that behaves like James Bond more than you need someone that is an expert in some particular domain.” – Sam Altman
- “You need this sort of a tailwind to make a startup successful.” – Sam Altman
- “You need to figure out what the 2 or 3 most important things are, and then just do those.” – Sam Altman
- “You need to have a culture where people have very high-quality standards in everything the company does, but still move quickly.” – Sam Altman
- “You need unstoppable people. You want people that are just going to get it done.” – Sam Altman
- “You never want to be in a place where an employee has vested 3 out of the 4 years of stock and they start thinking about leaving.” – Sam Altman
- “You only get points when you make something the market wants. So, if you work really hard on the wrong things, no one will care.” – Sam Altman
- “You really want to know your cofounders for a while, ideally years.” – Sam Altman
- “You should always know how you’re doing against your metrics. You should always have a weekly review meeting every week.” – Sam Altman
- “You should always stay on top of people’s vesting schedules.” – Sam Altman
- “You should be giving out a lot of equity to your employees.” – Sam Altman
- “You should think about for the next 10 years, you’re going to be giving out 3-5% of the company every year.” – Sam Altman
- “You think you have this great idea that everyone’s going to come join, but that’s not how it works.” – Sam Altman
- “You want an idea about what you can say. I know it sounds like a bad idea but here’s specifically why it’s actually a great one. You want to sound crazy but you want to ask to be right.” – Sam Altman
- “You want an idea that turns into a monopoly. But you can’t get a monopoly, in a big market right away; too much competition for that.” – Sam Altman
- “You want to continue to be run by great products, not process for its own sake.” – Sam Altman
- “You want to sound crazy, but you want to actually be right.” – Sam Altman
- “You want to think about what is the path for my first 10 or 15 employees going to be as the company grows.” – Sam Altman
- “You’ll get more support on a hard, important, project than a derivative one.” – Sam Altman
- “You’re either not hiring at all or it’s probably your single biggest block of time.” – Sam Altman
- “You’re saying no ninety-seven times out of a hundred, and most founders find they have to make a very conscious effort to do this.” – Sam Altman