Brian Chesky Says Big Things Are Coming for Airbnb in 2025

Big changes could be coming to Airbnb next year. In a conversation at WIRED’s Big Interview even in San Francisco on Tuesday, the company’s cofounder and CEO Brian Chesky told global editorial director Katie Drummond that he hopes that, in 2025, “people say ‘that was one of the biggest reinventions of a company in recent memory.’”

Though Chesky kept details scant, he did say that the company hopes to reimagine its Experiences section, which he says consumers really like but that he doesn’t think has caught on as much as it could. The move seems to be an extension of Chesky’s belief in the value of physical experiences and physical community, which he still thinks trump most digital experiences, even in the age of AI.

In an effort to prove that, even two years into the AI revolution, fundamentally very little has been changed for most people, Chesky challenged the room to look at the apps on their phone home screens and think how much any of them have been substantially changed by generative AI. He posits that it’s very few, including Airbnb, but he also sees change on the horizon, likening the AI adolescence we’re in to the “internet of 1993, before search engines” when you’d use what he called ”a phone book” to find websites.

“AI is beginning to change our digital world, but it has not yet changed the most important part of our lives, which is the physical world,” Chesky said. At Airbnb, where the product isn’t the company’s app but its connected homes and experiences, that’s still what’s valued most. When AI will truly start to change the physical world, Chesky posits, is “when the apps on your phone are totally different.”

“Ten years ago, everyone thought we’d all be in self-driving cars right now,” Chesky said, noting that while there are a lot on his street, they haven’t permeated the rest of America. “We overestimate how much technology can change in the short term, but we probably underestimate how much it will change in the long term. AI is going to take some time to permeate the physical world but once it does, I think it’s going to change everything.”

“No one ever has to go up the chain to get to me,” Chesky said. “They can get to me in front of everyone, and if they don’t agree with what I have to say, I’ll tell them to talk me out of it or to change my mind.”

To wrap up the session, Drummond asked Chesky to drop a little optimism on the crowd, prompting him to explain what gives him hope in humanity and technology’s future. Chesky seemed uniquely positioned to answer this question, which had been asked a few times earlier during the day, saying that when he first told a friend about the idea for Airbnb, that person told him that he shouldn’t put all his eggs in that basket since “strangers will never trust one another.”

More than 16 years later with more than 2 billion people having spent time in an Airbnb, Chesky believes more than ever that, as he said in the session, “at some fundamental level, people are good” and that even despite all recent divisions, people are “99.99 percent the same.”

If people take some time to walk in someone else’s shoes—or spend some time sleeping in their bed, in the case of Airbnb—Chesky said, they’ll realize the same thing.

“If we can get people back into the physical world, connecting together with one another, I think that’s the ultimate promise of the internet, which was always meant to bring us together,” he said. “I’m optimistic that this is maybe one of the greatest times in human history to be alive with one of the biggest technological revolutions in front of us and if we can just see beyond our differences, we can come together to create such a wonderful world together.”

Source : Wired