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[00:00] You started Perplexity with the ambitious mission of taking on Google
[00:04] using AI. And what most people don't know is that
[00:08] you were actually an intern at Google DeepMind in 2019.
[00:13] It was your first job after studying for your Ph.D.
[00:17] at UC Berkeley. Go Bears
[00:20] Did you know when you were interning at Google that you would just a few years
[00:23] later start a multibillion dollar startup going against it?
[00:28] Definitely not. But I did.
[00:31] I did everything an intern will do. Just sleep in the office.
[00:35] They had all these pods which you can use to sleep in the office,
[00:40] and they had a library. They had a lot of food.
[00:43] A lot of junk food, too. You know,
[00:46] definitely I put on a lot of weight, but I was at London and so it was one of the
[00:52] best times I had in my life, I think. There's a lot of things.
[00:57] Like I'll say, the deep mine was almost like a different company.
[01:02] I even remember how, like, the Demons had all these crazy visions of how like,
[01:08] Hey, I will just be a scientist by itself and it'll solve all theorems and
[01:13] proofs and like they were on a completely different trajectory.
[01:16] So now, like, they got folded back into Google to, you know, get them back into
[01:21] this race on the product stuff. But, but to me, like, DeepMind meant a
[01:26] lot more in terms of just going for that core
[01:29] artificial general intelligence dream. And it was fantastic time.
[01:34] So you went on to work at Openai and its early days and then eventually decide to
[01:39] break out and start perplexity. And for those who don't know, can you
[01:43] tell us a little bit about what perplexity is?
[01:46] So perplexity is an answering machine. You get answers that you can really
[01:49] trust. We were the first to re-imagine search
[01:53] in the form of conversations and answers, but trusted sources.
[01:58] And we did it in a way that essentially became the blueprint for every other
[02:01] chatbot out there. Yes, everybody else's integrated search
[02:04] tool. But when we started, people made fun of
[02:06] us saying in a hallucination, this meant to be a feature, not a bug.
[02:12] And so I even had a former Googler who was one of my early seed investors, and
[02:17] he said, This looks good.
[02:20] But the reason tragedy is going viral now is because people want to laugh at
[02:25] AI's mistakes and your product is fine, like designing in a way where you do not
[02:30] make mistakes because you are always building sources and summarizing what
[02:33] humans are saying and aren't telling what they and things.
[02:36] So I don't think this will work. That was one of us told me, like he
[02:40] literally said, You should go and build something.
[02:41] That character I like or people actually enjoyed, like acing arbitrary random
[02:46] stuff. And, you know, I'm glad I didn't listen
[02:52] to that. And I believe that like this
[02:56] fundamentally a completely different tool.
[03:00] And we didn't even build it as a like a Google replacement, actually.
[03:04] We just built it because it was really useful to us.
[03:06] I was a very newbie founder CEO. I didn't take any health insurance
[03:12] because I was like, I'm all in on this company.
[03:14] I don't care if, you know, the company doesn't work.
[03:16] Like, you know, that's my health insurance, actually.
[03:19] And then my founders, the co-founders, were married, so they had health
[03:22] insurance through their lives. So that was the first employee we hired.
[03:26] He asked for insurance. And I had no idea like which are able to
[03:30] use water. What are all these different plans?
[03:32] How do you even like like figure out which plan to go for?
[03:36] And of course, insurance is that one AdWords category that Google makes like
[03:39] billions of dollars a year. So they have literally zero incentive to
[03:43] tell you, like, which plan to pick or which provider to go for.
[03:46] And that's when we started building these tools that could just give you
[03:50] answers directly in a chat interface, but plug in to the web.
[03:54] And so we can essentially build it as a tool we wanted and our friends wanted
[03:58] it, our investors wanted it, and then we put it out into the world.
[04:02] Never thought about it as like, oh, like links and little links to answers.
[04:08] But once we put it out, that's when we realized, like, based on what people are
[04:11] saying, hey, this is actually like a much better way to, like, consume the
[04:14] Internet. Like, we're all living on the Internet.
[04:17] And so I would rather just feel the Internet through answers and sort of
[04:21] links. Got it.
[04:23] So, yeah, you guys were really one of the first companies to do real time
[04:28] research focused on that linking back. Now everyone's doing that, right,
[04:33] Including Google, including Openai. So what are you doing to differentiate?
[04:37] And do you want to talk a little bit about Comet?
[04:40] Your new browser, which I took a sneak peek at, is really interesting.
[04:43] Sure. Look, with respect to Google, I mean, I
[04:46] don't mind saying this like every year it's the same feature announced in the
[04:50] i0i think it 2023. They called it search generative
[04:54] experience in 2024, they called it A.I. overview.
[04:58] This year they call it AI mode. Next year they'll call her another name.
[05:01] But at the end of the day, the feature never gets shipped to the user, right?
[05:05] Like, like literally, this is not real hard.
[05:07] Like they have all the models, they have the best index, they have all the best
[05:10] infrastructure, they have their own hardware, data centers, everything.
[05:15] 3 billion, 4 billion users. So why not just change it?
[05:18] Why change google.com? Make it like perplexity if any way and
[05:22] mode is nearly like even the font is like basically perplexity.
[05:26] Now that's the extent to which they've started on product.
[05:29] Great. So.
[05:30] So why don't we go out and ship and you cannot because you lose all the ad
[05:35] revenue. Like if you can go and ask like, what
[05:38] are the best sneakers for you to buy for?
[05:40] Or like, what are the best jackets for you to buy our best airlines to pick for
[05:44] this something or best hotels to stay at a place?
[05:47] How are you going to charge all these people for money?
[05:49] Or if you learn, in fact, like leave the answers these days, you could just go
[05:55] and ask for and be a score before even before even triggering the score widget.
[06:01] They put the Ticketmaster ads right at the top because they need the money.
[06:05] And if that that's the money that's paying for all the R&D spend on Gemini.
[06:09] Right. And but what Google does have is reach,
[06:12] right. So they have, you know, billions of
[06:14] users use it, but they cannot they cannot ship it.
[06:17] So that's that's and that's been consistent over the last three years.
[06:21] And let's talk about, though, I mean, they do ship a lot, but let's talk about
[06:24] what you are going to do to try to get that same kind of reach and that same
[06:29] kind of integration that users have with Google in your everyday life, which, as
[06:32] I understand it, the browser is a big part of that strategy.
[06:35] So can you tell us that why why do you think browsers of the next frontier for
[06:38] successfully AI companies? Yeah, often watch like look, why did
[06:42] Sundar become the CEO of Google is because like he he focused on the Chrome
[06:47] project right he was the one running the Chrome project and that ended up being
[06:52] one of the biggest weapons for them. His battle against Microsoft.
[06:56] And it took them many years, like probably ten years, to actually become
[06:59] the leading browser. The browser is the front end.
[07:04] They are Internet like experiencing the Internet and the omni box, the search
[07:10] boxes where almost all the Google properties are going.
[07:13] That's why if you go to Google Trends and see the the top most queries by
[07:17] volume, it's obvious whether or like Amazon or Reddit or Instagram, Twitter,
[07:22] like this one word queries. So most people are just using Google as
[07:26] a navigational tool. But if you can blend navigation
[07:30] information and activity like transactions and like doing actual
[07:35] browsing sessions all in like one clean interface using the browsing
[07:40] infrastructure, you can actually like go for it all in like one one single tool.
[07:46] So that's and if you really want to transition from answers to actions to
[07:54] doing stuff for you, answers are essentially like four or five searches
[07:58] and one actions are like an entire browsing session in like one prompt.
[08:03] You really need to actually have a browser and hybridize the compute on the
[08:08] client and the server side in them. Seamless way possible.
[08:12] And that's because for rethinking the whole browser, we may not actually like
[08:16] thinking about it as a yet another browser.
[08:20] It'll be a cognitive operating system. It'll have it'll be there for you every
[08:25] time, any time for work or life as his assistant on the site or like just going
[08:30] and doing browsing sessions for you. And I think that'll fundamentally make
[08:34] us rethink like, like how we even think about the internet.
[08:37] Like earlier we would browse the internet, but now people are
[08:40] increasingly living on the Internet like a lot of our life actually exists there.
[08:44] And, and if you want to build a proactive, personalized A.I., it needs
[08:48] to live together with you. And that's why we need to rethink the
[08:51] browser entirely. I want to talk a little bit about
[08:54] growth. You all have tripled your valuation, I
[08:58] believe, twice in the past couple of years.
[09:02] Let's talk about where you're at in terms of how many people are using
[09:05] complexity. Can you give us the latest on how many
[09:08] people are actually searching on perplexity using it every day?
[09:10] Yeah, I believe in May we did about like 780 million queries
[09:15] per server per month. Is that.
[09:18] Yeah, per month. And I think that's growing like a more.
[09:22] And 20% month or a month. So give it a year.
[09:25] We'll be doing this like we'll be doing like a billion
[09:28] queries a week. If we can sustain this growth rate and
[09:31] that's pretty, pretty impressive because we we were like first day in like 2022,
[09:36] we built 3000 queries, just this one single day.
[09:39] So from there to like doing 30 million a day now, it's been phenomenal growth.
[09:45] And we still think that same trajectory is possible even now, especially with
[09:50] all the kind of distribution partnerships we are like trying to seek
[09:55] and like all the browser that we're working on and like if people are in the
[09:58] browser, it's infinite retention. So everything on the search box,
[10:01] everything on the new tab page, everything you're doing on the sidebar,
[10:04] any webpage you are in, these are all going to be extra queries
[10:08] for active user as well as seeking new users who just are tired of like legacy
[10:13] browsers like Chrome. I think that's going to be the way to
[10:16] grow this over the coming year. Yes, and I want to talk about those
[10:20] partnerships in a second. But before we do, just on the
[10:22] fundraising route, as I mentioned, you tripled your
[10:25] valuation last year, tripling again a few months.
[10:27] A few months later, we reported that you're now in talks to raise another 500
[10:30] million at a 14 billion valuation. Taking a step back, is it challenging to
[10:36] raise these mega rounds that get bigger and bigger?
[10:40] It is expensive to run and a company going against the big guys.
[10:44] What is the what is it like fund raising in this market as a startup?
[10:47] Fundraising super interesting to you? It's actually I would prefer not to do
[10:51] it at all. You know,
[10:54] I think it's look, I think we are attracting the funding because the
[10:59] product is really good. I think our vision for the future is
[11:03] always like unique and like original. And we're not like chasing others.
[11:07] We're actually like setting the roadmap for other people, including like taking
[11:11] our font and like UI and everything. Sure.
[11:14] But literally, like you said, search. But it's not just that even the agent
[11:20] like. The tool calls out iterator.
[11:23] We call the tools are research agents like the recent feature labs.
[11:29] These are all setting the next steps for how people will use these tools.
[11:33] And I think the browser will be very unique in its own way to
[11:37] so people. Investors are excited about the
[11:39] possibility of like, you know, completely changing the front end in
[11:43] which we experience the whole web. And the web was so valuable.
[11:47] And the other thing that's most important to consider about perplexity
[11:49] is we're the only company like Razer focused on all the accuracy aspects of
[11:55] the AI. Like we really want us to be the
[11:58] accuracy layer for AI, and that's going to influence both human and
[12:03] AI decision making. And every day, like trillions of dollars
[12:06] worth of decisions are made across retail finance markets, exchanges,
[12:11] everything. And if we can influence a big chunk of
[12:14] that, then that will automatically mean like we can be worth trillions of
[12:19] dollars in market cap one day. You mentioned the major partnership
[12:24] distribution deals that you're doing with hardware makers.
[12:27] Perplexity is going to be pre-installed on Motorola phones.
[12:30] We've also reported that you are nearing a deal to get perplexity pre-installed
[12:34] on Samsung phones, potentially replacing Google's Gemini assistant.
[12:39] Can you tell us a little bit more about these hardware partnerships and why
[12:43] they're important to your strategy? Yeah.
[12:46] So towards the end of last year, we started thinking about how can we go
[12:50] beyond just an app on the phone to being a native assistant?
[12:55] The Google assistant is a terrible experience.
[12:58] And so but I think even they know that's why they're deprecating it themselves
[13:03] and trying to replace it with Gemini. So there's literally no assistant that
[13:08] you can have with the invoked with the action button or gesture at the bottom
[13:12] of your screen. And just quickly talk to it and voice
[13:15] and ask questions and ask them to do stuff for you, like simply playing media
[13:18] or setting alarms, reminders, sending your emails, you know, setting
[13:24] smarter reminders. These things never even worked.
[13:27] And so we start to think about complexity more as an API.
[13:31] This is helpful and right there for you all the time.
[13:33] Like I use the word cognitive operating system.
[13:36] You can fundamentally rethink the OS on all your devices if you think A.I.
[13:41] first. And so we started building the Android
[13:43] assistant. We put it out in January this year.
[13:45] It was super exciting and a lot of OEMs saw that and they were like, Damn, this
[13:49] is the coolest thing we've seen. And like we just can completely like
[13:55] make Android look like really much better.
[13:57] And so they started talking to us. That's how the Motorola partnership came
[14:00] out and that's how every other partnership that we're in talks with are
[14:03] like merging. Because when you confirm that Samsung is
[14:06] also going to be a partner, we're talking to a lot of people.
[14:09] So that's all I can say. Is it difficult negotiating with phone
[14:13] makers who may not want to compromise their relationship with Google?
[14:17] I thought so. And definitely Google has given us an
[14:19] extremely hard time. Like every time we were very close to
[14:22] signing a deal like this. All this like some calls from Mountain
[14:25] View, there are being made. I don't know it's from where, but
[14:30] so, you know, they definitely don't want us to succeed.
[14:33] So but we are not going to like I mean, if I thought like it's hard to succeed,
[14:39] we wouldn't be doing this company. So I think it's good for the world that,
[14:43] like finally someone is trying to like, actually fight and compete against this
[14:49] distribution. Larkins And they have and the DOJ case
[14:53] is going on and I hope something good comes out of it.
[14:56] We've made our statements that how Android as an OS needs to be a lot more
[14:59] open and perplexity needs to be not just perplexity.
[15:02] By the way, I'm happy for Chargeability or Cloud or like Microsoft Corp, every
[15:07] contender in the space should be an option for the default AI and Google
[15:11] cannot pay their way to be the default, especially when they don't even have the
[15:14] best. And.
[15:18] And. Any.
[15:21] And that's, you know, one thing that's interesting about perplexities you offer
[15:25] all are many different AI models right on your platform.
[15:31] I want to also talk about, you know, you mentioned how important it is to be
[15:34] accurate. And right now, it is a tough market
[15:37] economically to produce accurate information.
[15:41] I know that firsthand as a journalist. Right.
[15:43] You've had some issues with media companies in the past who have accused
[15:47] complexity of creating content. You've since struck revenue share deals
[15:50] with other major outlets like the L.A. Times.
[15:54] What do you think? Well, we have been very interested in
[15:57] doing a Bloomberg View so that that's not my department.
[16:02] But what do you think is a sustainable business model here for accurate,
[16:08] truthful information to be produced at the same time that spots are bringing
[16:13] more of this information into their tools and not to publisher sites?
[16:16] Yes. So fundamentally, like sources and
[16:19] citations, has been the forefront of our product.
[16:24] I think I think we use albums as engines that are doing the reasoning and
[16:29] synthesis and summarization, but the actual authentic sources of content are
[16:33] always mentioned as citations in our UI, and I'm happy others are adopting the
[16:38] tool and we hope to drive traffic through those citations whenever like
[16:43] I'm never going to like lie and say stuff like all of the various things,
[16:46] sending a lot of traffic and all the stuff that the bigger companies are
[16:50] trying to say, Oh, that's definitely wrong.
[16:52] We have been very transparent that, yes, there will be less traffic referrals
[16:56] from this device and we are being open about it and.
[17:01] On the other hand, what we're saying is like, okay, like imagine we make some
[17:04] revenue per query through some experimental work that we're doing on
[17:08] advertising or even like, say we we upsell somebody or like someone converts
[17:13] to becoming a pro user through a query that cited like a very valuable piece of
[17:17] content. We could potentially like just share the
[17:19] revenue with them. That was the model we came up.
[17:22] But again, this is grounded in Jeff Bezos,
[17:26] the start of the year margin space opportunity, who has the least incentive
[17:29] to share any revenue with the publishers?
[17:31] It's Google. Like they drive traffic to others, but
[17:34] they take all the ad revenue, right? We don't have to have the margins to
[17:38] have. So we're happy sharing revenue with the
[17:40] publishers. So that's that was the origins of our
[17:43] publisher program and we're happy that it's slowly expanding.
[17:47] It's not growing at a crazy pace because everybody wants to like everybody's
[17:51] skeptical, like of how how much revenue can be generated in these platforms at a
[17:56] query level. No one's really manage that.
[17:59] People are still doing the subscription based monetization, but in future, you
[18:03] could imagine research agents like this deep research agents can plug in to like
[18:06] different data providers, and then the user can even like pay for accessing
[18:12] some things just like they pay for these paywalls.
[18:15] And then the agent can like, you know, see through the paywalls
[18:19] because the user actually paid for it. And that revenue can be shared between
[18:23] the publisher and the I. There's a lot of ways to do this, but
[18:27] the number one thing to understand here is like the intention to share revenue
[18:31] and the intention to be open about like, okay, that's definitely not going to be
[18:34] the old school style of like just traffic referrals from these new you
[18:38] guys. It's, it's just how these tools work.
[18:42] And it's important to like also remember, like the more you get cited in
[18:46] an eye to the branding for the source also like increases it's like I would
[18:52] argue that maybe years from now it's probably better to be an authoritative
[18:56] source consistently in an eye rather than ranking number three on the ten
Bluelink UI.

Nikhil Kamath