Quantcast
Latest Stories

Facebook billionaire shuns luxury for startup life

By

SAN FRANCISCO – Facebook co-founder and former Mark Zuckerberg roommate Dustin Moskovitz is by many accounts the world’s youngest self-made billionaire. But the 27-year-old isn’t sipping champagne in the Caribbean.

Instead he’s thrown himself back into San Francisco’s startup mix, even as Facebook’s looming IPO seems likely to send his wealth spiralling even higher.

Moskovitz and his friend Justin Rosenstein, a former Facebooker himself worth $150 million, head a company called Asana, which just launched the first paid version of its online project management service. During a recent interview at their inconspicuous Mission District offices, the pair said they come to work every day because, their fortunes already made, they still have to do something with their lives.

“When we think of work, we think of work as an act of service, as an act of love for humanity,” said Rosenstein, 28.

Added Moskovitz: “If we were just retired, we wouldn’t be serving anyone.”

While such idealistic sentiments might sound too easy coming from two guys who never have to worry about money again, they both do keep working even though they’d never have to again.

And like Zuckerberg himself they seem uninterested in the flash and status-hoarding that great wealth makes possible.

In keeping with the recent startup trend of shunning hierarchies, the pair does not have separate offices but sit among the other employees at Asana, which numbers 24 in all. They don’t have an entourage. Rosenstein likes to cycle (he recently had his bike stolen).

Also like Zuckerberg, they dress down, Moskovitz in an untucked shirt, Rosenstein in a sweater and Chuck Taylor sneakers. On the streets of their neighborhood, which brims with twenty-something hipster geeks, they’d blend right in.

What sets them apart, they acknowledge, is their absolute freedom to pursue their particular vision of how to change the world. And they seem to have no doubt that their software will do just that. After all, as some of Facebook’s earliest engineers, they’ve seen their code change the world once already.

Asana will speed human progress by changing the way people work together, Rosenstein said.

Too much time at work is spent doing “work about work,” Moskovitz said. They say Asana will free people up to do more important things.

“We could go work on curing cancer. We could go work on building spaceships. We could go work on art projects,” Rosenstein said. “What’s fun about working at Asana is we get to work on all of them at the same time.” Or as Moskovitz, the more circumspect of the two, said, “We’re working on a meta-problem.”

Whether Asana’s world-changing potential exceeds that of competitors in the crowded project and task management software marketplace remains to be seen. Like other similar products, their software lets users set up Web-based to-do lists that any group focused on a common goal can use to assign jobs and keep track of what gets done.

The pair believes Asana will win out on its speed, versatility and ability to maintain the flow alluded to in its name, which in yoga refers to the poses meant to aid the flow of spiritual energy in the body. (Regular yoga sessions are among the perks of office life at Asana. Other benefits include an in-house chef and $10,000 for new hires to set up their desks with whatever computing gear they want.)

Several marquee tech companies have embraced Asana, the company reports, such as Twitter, LinkedIn and Foursquare. Individual backers betting on Asana include venture capital celebrities like Peter Thiel and Mark Andreessen, as well as several of Facebook’s earliest employees.

None go as far back as Moskovitz, however. He spent two years at Harvard where he helped Zuckerberg start the site before they dropped out and moved to Palo Alto. He left Facebook in 2008 and started Asana with Rosenstein.

According to Facebook’s pre-IPO filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Moskovitz holds nearly 134 million shares of Facebook stock, giving him a 7.6 percent stake in the company. Based on the value placed on Facebook’s stock in its $1 billion cash-and-stock deal for Instagram, Moskovitz’s pre-IPO net worth stands at more than $4 billion.

Like many of the richest Americans, Moskovitz has signed a pledge initiated by Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett to give away most of his money. His wife runs his philanthropic foundation, which is still getting off the ground.

For now, he said he’s focused “110 percent” on Asana. To hear Moskovitz tell it, the choice of coming to the office doesn’t come at the expense of some wished-for life of luxury.

“It feels very much like a default. Of course you do that,” Moskovitz said. “We’re fortunate not to have things that would distract us from being able to act.”

Follow us on Facebook Follow on Twitter Follow on Twitter




Recent Stories:

MILF, MNLF sign peace pact 6 mins elapsed Suicidal jumper’s fall kills South Korean girl 43 mins elapsed Tsunami warning in Russia’s Far East after 8.2 quake 53 mins elapsed 5 climbers feared dead on world’s 3rd highest peak 1 hour elapsed Pop songwriters find excitement in stage musicals 1 hour elapsed 2 former sex slaves cancel Japan mayor meeting 1 hour elapsed Man gets life for less than a gram of ‘shabu’ 2 hours elapsed Neighborhood fire spreads to Comelec office in Antipolo 2 hours elapsed
Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines.

Tags: Asana , Dustin Moskovits , Facebook , Internet , social networking

  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/XY4AW6ZJBAPIJ33L7KX6M3IOQI c

    enough of developing social networking sites for the world, please!

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_52T6CKJDHR7I6P7LYWGHD6VG5A Mark

    Facebook is being the medium for giving advertisement for many companies

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_VDMUJ6NKKCLWRMVMJRLJFI633I Rene V

    America runs on ideas, ideas and ideas. china just copies,copies and fakes,fakes and fakes more. it is the inherent strength of America that encourages people to think out of the box then innovate and innovent. china inherently condemns people who think out of the box. for the next decade, this attitude will make china more inclined to just copy, fake and steal. i hope our educational system can encourage our young people to innovate, innovent but also invent. hey! you educational systems in the Philippines, get your S_it Going!

    • http://profile.yahoo.com/YFXRRDRKGHWMCFX6XJWEBPDDNI religiously not

      Sorry. Phil. educational system went down the toilet..And it’s getting worst. My cousin owns a public school in the South. Teachers get paid about 3,000 pesos a month, if they get paid..They don’t even know how to make a lesson plan!!!!!

      • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/XY4AW6ZJBAPIJ33L7KX6M3IOQI c

         ha? cousin mo may public school? sure ka, dong?

      • bridgetmd

        Korek… public school is owned by government LOL

      • Ronnie Orleans

        syur, dong!!! ahahah!



Copyright © 2013,
.
To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate. Or write The Readers' Advocate:
c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94
Advertisement

News

  • MILF, MNLF sign peace pact
  • Suicidal jumper’s fall kills South Korean girl
  • Tsunami warning in Russia’s Far East after 8.2 quake
  • 5 climbers feared dead on world’s 3rd highest peak
  • Man gets life for less than a gram of ‘shabu’
  • Sports

  • Man City beats Chelsea 4-3 in US friendly
  • Nadal favored, but not seeded No. 1 at French Open
  • Lady Bulldogs’ poor reception key in V-League finals game one downfall, says coach
  • Lady Eagles seize Game 1 in 3
  • Azkals call off Kyrgyzstan friendly
  • Lifestyle

  • Imperial and ‘monarchic’ scent–it could only be French
  • ‘Asian fit’ menswear by way of Savile Row
  • Punk meets history in first Chanel show in Asia
  • Wild cinnamon bark tea, berry wine, coco sugar brownies–Hindy Tantoco’s ‘Balik Bukid’ buys
  • Don’t be afraid of color, says this Japanese makeup artist
  • Entertainment

  • Pop songwriters find excitement in stage musicals
  • ‘This Century’ hopes third time’s a charm with Manila fans
  • Actress Bynes arrested in NYC on marijuana charge
  • ‘We are the In Crowd’ all set to dig in at Makati Circuit Fest
  • ‘Before You Exit’ seeks to ‘influence’ Circuit Fest Saturday
  • Business

  • BPI taps solar energy
  • Yen weakens in Asian trade
  • Hong Kong stocks open 0.35 percent higher
  • Cockroaches can sense danger in sugar
  • US stocks end slightly lower after Asia, Europe rout
  • Technology

  • Filipinos in flight want to go online
  • SMC pledges to put more capital in Liberty Telecom
  • Smart to stop offering ‘dumb’ phones
  • DOJ wants online libel junked
  • Media watchdog criticizes UAE over tweeter’s jail term
  • Opinion

  • Editorial cartoon, May 24, 2013
  • Out of the doldrums
  • Fighting over champagne
  • The poor didn’t benefit
  • Post-op
  • Global Nation

  • 2 former sex slaves cancel Japan mayor meeting
  • Brown hounded for calling Manila ‘gates of hell’
  • PH, Taiwan seen to start talks on fishery agreement by June
  • Australia to PH aid totals P5.7B
  • Sex raps filed vs envoy–DFA
  • Marketplace
    Advertisement
    © Copyright 1997-2013 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved