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Peter Thiel on the importance of reducing internal conflict at a company

In his book Zero to One, Peter Thiel stresses the importance of reducing internal conflict within your startup, and the best way to do that is through a clear division of responsibilities:

“The best thing I did as a manager at PayPal was to make every person in the company responsible for doing just one thing. Every employee’s one thing was unique, and everyone knew I would evaluate him only on that one thing. I had started doing this just to simplify the task of managing people. But then I noticed a deeper result: defining roles reduced conflict. Most fights inside a company happen when colleagues compete for the same responsibilities. Startups face an especially high risk of this since job roles are fluid at the early stages. Eliminating competition makes it easier for everyone to build the kinds of long-term relationships that transcend mere professionalism. More than that, internal peace is what enables a startup to survive at all. When a startup fails, we often imagine it succumbing to predatory rivals in a competitive ecosystem. But every company is also its own ecosystem, and factional strife makes it vulnerable to outside threats. Internal conflict is like an autoimmune disease: the technical cause of death may be pneumonia, but the real cause remains hidden from plain view.”

He elaborates on this a bit more in the clip below: “If you’re a sociopathic boss who wants to mistreat their employees, the formula for doing it is to tell two people to do the exact same thing. You will automatically generate a conflict out of nothing at all.”