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Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has revealed the most important thing that he does everyday. He noted that this part of his job is not developing AI models or overseeing product launches, but ensuring that the company's culture remains strong as it continues to grow.
Speaking on the Dwarkesh Podcast from earlier this year, Anthropic CEO Amodei said that the most important thing he does each day has nothing to do with training AI models or shipping products. He dedicates a significant portion of his time to maintaining alignment across the AI startup's workforce.“I probably spend a third, maybe 40%, of my time making sure the culture of Anthropic is good,” Amodei said. The CEO's comments offer insight into how he manages Anthropic, which has expanded to around 2,500 employees and recently confidentially filed for an initial public offering after raising funding that significantly increased its valuation.As the company has grown, Amodei said it has become increasingly difficult for him to be involved in every technical and product decision. Instead, he focuses on ensuring employees understand the company's mission, trust one another, and remain aligned on shared goals.“I think we’ve done an extraordinarily good job, even if not perfect, of holding the company together, making everyone feel the mission, that we’re sincere about the mission, and that everyone has faith that everyone else there is working for the right reason,” he said.
How communication plays a central role for Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei
Amodei said constant communication is a key part of maintaining culture at Anthropic. One of the primary ways he does this is through a biweekly company-wide meeting known internally as "DVQ," short for Dario Vision Quest.During these sessions, he presents a multi-page document and spends about an hour discussing topics that range from product strategy and company priorities to geopolitics and developments in the broader AI industry.
Employees can attend either in person or virtually.Beyond those meetings, Amodei said he regularly communicates with staff through an active Slack channel, where he answers questions and shares thoughts about the company's direction.According to Amodei, the goal is to communicate directly and avoid corporate jargon when discussing challenges and decisions.“The point is to get a reputation of telling the company the truth about what’s happening, to call things what they are, to acknowledge problems, to avoid the sort of ‘corpo speak,’ the kind of defensive communication that often is necessary in public.
But if you have a company of people who you trust—and we try to hire people that we trust—then you can really just be entirely unfiltered,” he added.His emphasis on candid communication resembles the "radical transparency" management philosophy associated with Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio, which encourages employees to provide direct feedback across all levels of an organization.Amodei's focus on culture comes as Anthropic faces growing competitive pressure in the artificial intelligence sector. Earlier this year, the company revised its Responsible Scaling Policy, removing a previous commitment not to continue training advanced AI systems unless certain safety thresholds could be met. Anthropic said the change reflected competitive realities and the absence of comprehensive regulation.Despite such challenges, Amodei said openness and trust remain central to keeping employees aligned as the company navigates its next stage of growth.




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