Terra

Integration

API
Unified API
SDK
SDK
Authentication
Authentication
Streaming
Streaming
Blood
Blood Report API
Planned Workout
Planned Workout
AI Interface
AI Interface

User engagement

Graph API
Graph API
Scores
Health Scores
Rewards
Health Rewards

Use cases

Enterprise
Enterprise
Insurance
Insurance

Developers

Wearable Data
Wearable Data
Community
Community
Documentation
Documentation

Learn

Blog
Blog
Podcast
Podcast
Events
Events
Reports
Reports

Company

Customers
Customers
Careers
Careers
Partners
Partners
Support
Support
Become an integration
Become an integration
All episodes
All episodes

Terra Podcasts

AllTrails CPO: Ivan Selin


Kyriakos Eleftheriou
Kyriakos EleftheriouHost
·
Ivan Selin
Ivan SelinGuest

April 2, 2025

Get new Terra Podcast episodes and insights as soon as they're released.

By continuing, I agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

Guest: Ivan Selin

Cookie Preferences

Essential CookiesAlways On
Advertisement Cookies
Analytics Cookies

Crunch Time: Embrace the Cookie Monster Within!

We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience and analyse our traffic. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to our use of cookies according to our Cookie Policy. You can change your mind any time by visiting out cookie policy.

In this episode:

  • 01Introduction and favorite trail
  • 02Career before AllTrails
  • 03Joining AllTrails
  • 04Product changes at AllTrails
  • 05Team structure and planning
  • 06SEO and user-generated content
  • 07AI integration and competition
  • 08Product and company culture

Key takeaways

  • AllTrails expanded from 10 million to 75 million users in just five years, showcasing significant growth.
  • Ivan Selin emphasizes the importance of creating products that people love to use and share, which naturally leads to success.
  • AllTrails collaborates with OpenAI to enhance user experience by providing the best information about hiking and trails.
  • Ivan describes his career path as akin to dating, focusing on finding companies whose missions and products he loves.
  • AllTrails aims to be a 'park ranger in your pocket,' helping users prepare and enjoy their outdoor adventures more fully.

In this podcast with Kyriakos the CEO of Terra, Ivan Selin discusses his journey from user to CPO at AllTrails. He reveals how the app grew from 10 million to 75 million users and his vision to make AllTrails the 'Airbnb for the outdoors.' Ivan shares insights on product development, emphasizing the importance of user love and strategic growth.

Share

Introduction and favorite trail

Kyriakos

Ivan, it's good to see you. We had some fascinating conversation already. You have been working in the best product companies out there. I'm super excited to hear a number of advices that you have around products. I've seen from your past experience, companies like Motorola, Continental, Apple, Uber, Airbnb, and now as Chief Product Officer of AllTrails. Before we jump there, what's your favorite trail?

Ivan

My favorite trail. Well, first of all, thanks for having me. I'm super excited to be here as well. My favorite place to explore the outdoors is by far Lake Tahoe. I still remember the first time I visited Lake Tahoe a few years ago.

Kyriakos

Did you go during the winter or the summer?

Ivan

I went during the shoulder season, around October or November. I remember zigzagging through the mountains, trying not to get car sick, and then suddenly, Lake Tahoe opens up in all its glory. It's a place we keep going back to and just love.

Career before AllTrails

Kyriakos

Let's speak about what you have done before AllTrails that led you to the company.

Ivan

I've been part of companies like Motorola, Apple, Uber, Airbnb. I've always been intentional about the companies I pick, ensuring I love both the mission and the product, and of course, the people there. I've been lucky to work at companies at the intersection of technology and the real world. AllTrails is similar, helping people connect with nature using technology.

Kyriakos

Can we get some of your learnings from these companies?

Ivan

Every company is different. Apple and Airbnb are similar in their product philosophy, having focused roadmaps and a shared company vision. Companies like Uber and Facebook focus on data and experimentation. At AllTrails, we integrate both approaches, starting with the vision of connecting people with the outdoors and translating that into a product strategy.

Joining AllTrails

Kyriakos

How did you hear about the AllTrails opportunity? Did someone reach out to you?

Ivan

Yes, Ron, our CEO at the time, reached out to me. It's been a theme in my career; companies have reached out to me. I was a user of AllTrails before joining and loved their product and mission. I was looking for a company in the sweet spot between big companies and startups, and AllTrails fit that perfectly.

Kyriakos

What did your first three months look like at AllTrails?

Ivan

I spent time absorbing information, listening, and having conversations. I'm a big believer in the workshop culture, where ideas are workshopped with different team members. The first three months were about listening, learning, and understanding how the company operates.

Product changes at AllTrails

Kyriakos

What changes happened in the product after you joined AllTrails?

Ivan

I give a lot of credit to the team for the product that was already there. The discovery experience was well designed. We started thinking about frequency of use and engagement, giving people more reasons to use our product. Last summer, we had the biggest upgrades in the past 10 years, including a redesign of our homepage and trail detail pages.

Kyriakos

You mentioned a big update. Why the focus strategy versus experimentation?

Ivan

We're somewhere in the middle of that spectrum. We believe in the benefit of a launch approach but also want to move fast and improve our products regularly. We delivered hundreds of features throughout the year, some smaller, some bigger, but all part of a cohesive story.

Team structure and planning

Kyriakos

Can we speak about the organization structure? How do you structure the teams?

Ivan

My philosophy is smaller, flatter teams. At AllTrails, we have about 200 people, with the product team being around 30. Smaller teams lead to having more senior people who can take on bigger initiatives independently. We organize teams around user journey phases and product surfaces, ensuring clear responsibilities.

Kyriakos

How far out do you plan, and how do you keep increasing the vision of the company?

Ivan

We have both long-term and short-term planning. Long-term planning is more high-level, focusing on the company's vision. Short-term planning involves detailed product roadmaps. We use a now-next-later planning process, continuously evaluating and defining future projects.

SEO and user-generated content

Kyriakos

You mentioned SEO. What's the approach when it comes to SEO?

Ivan

SEO is a big channel for us to get in front of more users. It starts with our trail pages and content, both generated internally and user-generated. User-generated content, like photos and reviews, is the secret sauce of our product.

Kyriakos

How do you keep encouraging users to generate content?

Ivan

It's easier for our product because people feel compelled to share their experiences. We've redesigned our review flow to make it simpler and encourage more detailed feedback.

AI integration and competition

Kyriakos

What are your thoughts on AI and its impact on SEO?

Ivan

Our approach to AI is intentional, focusing on building useful features. We had a partnership with OpenAI, introducing our AllTrails plugin. We also use AI for features like PhotoTour and review summaries. The SEO landscape is changing, and we're excited to be part of it.

Kyriakos

What's the best way to compete? Do you focus on competitors or your own path?

Ivan

It depends on the company and its stage. For AllTrails, the only competition we're worried about is AllTrails two or three years from now. We're focused on building value for our community and making the outdoors more accessible.

Kyriakos

What makes a good product?

Ivan

It's about ease of use and leaving an impression. A product should be useful, beautiful, and crafted with attention to detail. We take inspiration from companies like Apple and Airbnb.

Product and company culture

Kyriakos

What makes a good company culture?

Ivan

It's about finding people who are skilled, hungry, and low ego. We look for people who understand our mission and can imagine what it means to work on our products. We focus on building features that align with our health and wellness app philosophy.

Kyriakos

It's interesting. From your perspective, it sounds like you are looking for ways for the technology to be removed instead of being added. How do we get people outside and just use less technology, making it easy for the technology to disappear?

Ivan

We're very cognizant and intentional about this tension. Don't get me wrong, technology has been helpful to both get people outside and ensure they have the right information when they're outdoors. We want to make sure people don't get lost and have information on what to expect on a particular trail or route. We're thinking about ways to improve that even further and elevate the user experience.

For example, how can we tell people more about the world around them when they're outside? Not just through navigation and knowing where to go, but learning more about places around the trail, points of interest, flora, and fauna. To me, that's an example of value-add technology when you're outdoors. We have many more exciting ideas in store around that too. It's a tension, and it's important for us to think about the value we bring and ensure we don't build features that just keep people on the screen for the sake of getting more screen time.

Kyriakos

I have two last questions. The first one is, do you have any mental models that you're using for decision-making?

Ivan

Oh, mental models for decision-making. It's a good question. I don't know if there's one particular framework I use, but maybe I can tell you a little about how I approach decision-making in general. To me, it starts with listening and collecting information. It's listening to other experts, whether within the company or outside. It's about collecting information through user research and data that we have at our disposal based on how people use the product today.

Then, forming a point of view. I think it's important to have a strong point of view, loosely held. It's important to have an opinion to start and then evolve that opinion based on different inputs and feedback from others. I tend to start with a point of view, and the decision we make often evolves and becomes different. So yeah, that's the process. Intuition is really important to rely on.

Kyriakos

For the last one, I wanted to ask you, say we go 100 years into the future, what does hiking look like? What does the outdoors look like?

Ivan

Fascinating. I hope that hiking and the outdoors don't look as different as they do today, to be honest. One of the goals of AllTrails is to connect as many people as possible with the outdoors so they can share the love we have internally at AllTrails and our community has for the outdoors. For many people, nature and the outdoors are a bit of a black box. If something is unknown, you don't necessarily know whether you should care about it.

The more people experience the outdoors, the more they care about nature. Hopefully, that leads to the outdoors, hiking, and outdoor exploration being just as awesome as it is today, a hundred years from now. In terms of technology, a hundred years is a long time, but I would expect and hope for a product like AllTrails to become like a park ranger in your pocket, your best friend who knows everything about the outdoors and can help you have a better experience and be more prepared for your adventures, even beyond what we think is possible today.

Kyriakos

Ivan, that's been a fascinating conversation.

Ivan

Yeah, thank you so much. Nice to meet you.

Previous
Next

All episodes

  • Head of Samsung Next: David Lee
  • HYROX CGO: Douglas Gremmen
  • CTO + Director of AI at Flo Health: Roman Bugaev + Vladislav Nedosekin
  • Glovo and Yellow.vc Co-Founder: Sacha Michaud
  • Thriva CTO: Tom Livesey
  • Huma CEO: Dan Vahdat
  • Virgin Active CTO: David Turner
  • Nucleus Genomics Founder: Kian Sadeghi
  • Strava Cofounder: Mark Gainey
  • Founder of Remote: Marcelo Lebre
  • Sequoia Partner: George Robson
  • Founder of Flo Health: Dmitry Gurski
  • Managing Partner at Chemistry: Ethan Kurzweil
  • AllTrails CPO: Ivan Selin
  • CEO of Nucleus: Kian Sadeghi
  • Product Engineering at Terra API - Stalk your users
  • Co-Founder of GoCardless & Nested - Matt Robinson
  • Co-Founder of Zoe - George Hadjigeorgiou
  • CEO and Co-Founder of Bioniq - Vadim Fedotov
  • Cycling Legend, Investor, and Podcaster - Lance Armstrong
  • Founder of Don’t Die - Bryan Johnson
  • CEO and Co-Founder of Veri - Anttoni Aniebonam
  • CEO and Founder of Prenuvo - Andrew Lacy
  • Chief Digital Product Officer of Les Mills - Amber Taylor
  • Vice President of Teamworks - Sean Harrington
  • John Anthony: Swim.com, WHOOP, Google Health, and Podium
  • CTO and Co-Founder of Function Health - Mike Nemke
  • CEO and Co-Founder of Osmind - Lucia Huang
  • Chief Marketing Officer at Oura: Doug Sweeny
  • CTO of Equinox Fitness Club: Eswar Veluri
  • Founder of MyZone - Dave Wright
  • CEO and Founder of Numan: Sokratis Papafloratos
  • Founder of Instalab - Adora Cheung
  • CEO and Co-Founder of OK Capsule - Dr. Andrew Brandeis
  • Founder of CORE and GreenTEG– Wulf Glatz
  • Co-Founder of KAGED - Kris Gethin
  • Founding Partner at NEXT VENTŪRES: Melanie Strong
  • Uli Schoberer — Inventing the first Cycling Power Meter
  • Founder of InsideTracker: Founding story and how to live longer
  • Co-founder of ZOE - George Hadjigeorgiou, on understanding how food affects your body
  • Co-Founder of O2X Human Performance: Phil McCullough
  • Founder and CEO of Supersapiens: Phil Southerland
  • CEO of Sword Health: Virgílio Bento
  • Niko Bonatsos: The Journey with General Catalyst
  • Ray Maker: The journey of DC Rainmaker
  • Co-founder and President of Levels: Josh Clemente
  • Founder and CEO of Hydrow:
  • Alistair Brownlee: The Journey of the most successful triathlete
  • How Rapha is Inspiring the World to Live Life by Bike: Daniel Blumire
  • From Building Startups in Silicon Valley to Creating a Viral YouTube Channel — John Coogan
  • Podcast with Ryan DeLuca, Founder of BodyBuilding.com and Black Box VR
  • Podcast with Anthony Vennare, Co-founder of Fitt Insider
  • Podcast with Eric Min, Co-founder of Zwift
  • Podcast with Robin Thurston, CEO of Outside
  • Podcast with Mark Gainey, Co-founder of Strava
  • CEO Moxy Monitor: Roger Schmitz
  • Genopets Co-Founder: Jay
  • Kalibra.ai CEO: Ivan Vatchkov
  • Co-founders of Breakaway: Jordan Kobert and Christian Vande Velde
  • Health Hero CEO: Anthony Diaz
  • CEO of Quin: Cyndi Williams
  • Founders of Ultrahuman: Vatsal Singhal, Mohit Kumar
  • CEO of Territory Foods: Ellis McCue
  • Footballer and Investor: Kieran Gibbs
  • Head of Samsung NEXT: David Lee
  • CEO of Eight Sleep: Matteo Franceschetti
  • Athlete: Lance Armstrong

Continue listening

  • Dmitry Gurski

    Founder of Flo Health: Dmitry Gurski

    Dmitry Gurski scaled Flo Health to 76 million users and $200 million in revenue, raising $230 million from General Atlantic.

    May 21, 2025

  • Ethan Kurzweil

    Managing Partner at Chemistry: Ethan Kurzweil

    Ethan Kurzweil, Managing Partner at Chemistry, discusses backing giants like Twitch and Twilio, and the unique openness of Silicon Valley.

    April 17, 2025

  • Kian Sadeghi

    CEO of Nucleus: Kian Sadeghi

    Kian Sadeghi shares how Nucleus made a splash with a viral moment at a Jake Paul fight, boosting their SEO and brand visibility.

    March 11, 2025

  • Vanessa Neeff

    Product Engineering at Terra API - Stalk your users

    In the latest podcast, our product engineer Vanessa breaks down how to get inside your users' heads to build products that people love.

    March 3, 2025