Embracing Curiosity and Competition in the Age of AI with Bill Gurley | Impact Theory W/ Tom Bilyeu
Tom Bilyeu's Impact Theory
Impact Theory
4.7 • 5.2K Ratings
🗓️ 23 April 2026
⏱️ 56 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | One of the greatest tennis players who ever lived, retired, came back just two years later and got absolutely destroyed by players with half his talent. |
| 0:10.0 | So what happened? |
| 0:11.0 | My guest today, Bill Gurley, has the answer and it applies to everyone facing down AI. |
| 0:18.0 | Bill is one of the greatest venture capital investors of all time, an early |
| 0:22.7 | backer of Uber, Zillow, and OpenTable. He spent his career studying the exact pattern of who |
| 0:29.1 | wins and who gets wiped out when a technology wave hits. He believed that Bjorn Borg, the tennis |
| 0:35.8 | player whose career died fast, |
| 0:37.6 | got left behind for the exact reason AI is going to destroy so many careers. |
| 0:44.2 | Bill and I discuss the most dangerous response to AI, |
| 0:47.5 | how to navigate the AI transformation well, |
| 0:50.4 | and why some people want AI while others fear it. Without further ado, I bring you, Bill |
| 0:56.8 | Gurley. Bill Gurley, welcome to the show. Thanks for having me on, Tom. Truly my pleasure. |
| 1:06.5 | We were talking about that before we began. You are an incredible legendary investor, somebody who's |
| 1:11.7 | been on my radar for a long time, specifically because you intersect with something that |
| 1:16.3 | means a lot to me and to this moment. So where I want to start is between AI and massive political |
| 1:24.5 | upheaval, this is a moment of profound transition for basically everybody. |
| 1:30.4 | As an investor, how do you think about identifying what the future is most likely to hold, |
| 1:36.8 | given there's no certainties, and how should people position themselves for that well economically? |
| 1:43.3 | When I'm talking about investment advice, you know, I'm always very careful to separate |
| 1:49.6 | kind of an individual from an institution, right? |
| 1:52.6 | I just think they're two very different things. |
| 1:54.6 | For an individual, I think you have to, I always say, if you haven't read a random walk down |
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