Nick Larson – 40 Under 40 USA 2025

40 Under 40 2025 usa

A Community-driven technologist amplifying integrity-led innovation

Nick Larson

CEO, Founder

Silicon Zombies

Nick Larson
40 Under 40 2025 usa

A Community-driven technologist amplifying integrity-led innovation

Nick Larson

CEO, Founder

Silicon Zombies

The idea of being “self-made” sounds compelling, but it rarely holds up under scrutiny. Most meaningful work is built through trust, shared effort, and communities that compound over time. The leaders shaping the next decade understand this instinctively. They invest less in optics and more in relationships, believing that progress accelerates when people build together.

This belief has quietly guided the career of Nick Larson, a serial founder who has started and scaled multiple companies, each generating millions in revenue. As the founder and host of Silicon Zombies (an award-winning podcast), he shares with technologists, leaders, politicians, and creators to millions of listeners across 90+ countries, decoding the noise of emerging tech to reveal the human story behind the innovation.

TradeFlock spoke with Nick Larson to explore the experiences that shaped his leadership philosophy, his approach to fast-moving technology, and how community continues to guide his way forward.

Reflecting on your journey as a founder, technologist, and community builder, which key experiences have most shaped your perspective?

Some of my most vital leadership lessons arrived long before I built any companies. When I was twelve, my mom—an early Apple employee—walked me across the lawn at 1 Infinite Loop and introduced me to Steve Jobs.

“Hello, young man!” he said, extending a hand. I told him how much I loved creating art on Kid Pix. But what stayed with me wasn’t the handshake; it was my mom’s devotion to the mission. She spent thirty years at Apple, and the dinner-table stories my brother and I grew up with made one thing clear: Leadership is not about the leader.

Jobs demanded excellence, but he also knew how to identify A-players and empower them. That lesson echoes through my career today. My goal isn’t to command with arrogance, but to attract people who see the work that needs to be done. Greatness is found in the agency of others.

How do you define success while balancing multiple roles across technology, media, and community leadership?

I believe multiple roles are not a complication. They are the future of work. For a long time, balance was explained through prioritization, organization, and delegation. Those principles still matter, but today they are incomplete without technology. For roughly 150,000 years, humans changed very little. In the last two centuries, we moved from agrarian systems to industrial economies, and now we are approaching superintelligence. Trying to manage growing responsibility without leveraging technology is a fundamental mistake. Success, for me, means using tools deliberately to extend focus rather than fragment it. Technology allows me to compress effort, protect energy, and stay effective instead of busy. When used well, balance stops being about restraint; it becomes about amplification. The goal is not to do fewer things. It is to do the right things with clarity, leverage, and intention.

How do you approach mentoring others, and what lessons should emerging leaders embrace early?

My approach to mentoring sits at the intersection of radical candor and radical care. I believe leaders grow fastest when feedback loops are short, but resilience is protected. I encourage people to focus only on what they can change and to act with integrity even when it is inconvenient. I also push them to choose adventure early and often. Great stories have compound interest, and the earlier you earn them, the longer they pay out.

The 5-Point Playbook for Emerging Leaders:

  1. Health is a KPI: Move, fuel, and rest daily. Nature is the best reset button.
  2. Storytelling: You are always painting the vision. Become a great storyteller to truly thrive.
  3. Renters vs. Owners: Attract high-quality talent, then give them meaningful equity/autonomy. 
  4. Velocity of Learning: Increase how fast you can learn,  then incorporate/share new data.
  5. Success vs. Fulfillment: Seek meaningful relationships and meaningful work.

What personal strategies help you navigate fast-moving technology cycles while maintaining long-term clarity?

Thinking in frameworks is helpful, and the one I return to most rests on three pillars: obsession, structure, and timing. Everything begins with a North Star. Simon Sinek described it as finding your “why,” and leaders like Jobs and Elon Musk demonstrate it by being deeply in love with the problems they solve. Without that obsession, clarity disappears the moment things get hard. That said, Jensen Huang offers an important nuance; sometimes you fall in love with the work through discipline and mastery rather than waiting for passion. Structure protects that commitment. I time-box aggressively so effort turns into progress. The final variable is timing. As Marc Andreessen says, timing often matters more than brilliance. You have to recognize the wave, then commit fully to riding it.

As your roles expanded, what challenges most reshaped how you prioritize focus and energy?

Some of the most instructive lessons in my career came from moments where trust was misplaced. I have made investments of time and money where I was taken advantage of, and the emotional cost was real. The first step toward growth was accepting responsibility for allowing it to happen. Risk is unavoidable, but it should never be careless. Those experiences changed how I evaluate people. Today, I focus carefully on character and capability. I look closely at someone’s family, their community, and the consistency of their behavior. I have learned that the wrong partner will drain ninety percent of your energy, regardless of how attractive the opportunity looks. That insight reshaped how I allocate focus. My rule is simple now. Do rigorous due diligence upfront so you can move with speed later. Be slow to hire, and decisive when it is time to part ways.

Leadership In Action

What Does Success Mean to You?

Meaningful work and friendships, providing for family and community, and empowering people to empower others.

One Manifestation for 2035

Ushering in a new era of abundance by amplifying innovators who lead with integrity.

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