One of the most important lessons I ever learned is that you don't get to have the same experience twice. Everything's a one-off. Chasing that first time is like trying to grasp a ghost.
One of the most important lessons I ever learned is that you don't get to have the same experience twice. Everything's a one-off. Chasing that first time is like trying to grasp a ghost.
But that only works for small companies.
But that only works if you have small teams.
But that only works if you don't have investors.
But that only works if you don't have to chase growth.
But that only works if you don't have a board.
Exactly.
We got over 1400 applications for our Web Product Designer role. Deadline just passed and we're going through applications now.
How do you stand out?
Here's one way: Found this gem of an inside joke on one of the applications. Spot it?
He may get an interview just for that.
The hardest part of business isn't starting, it's staying.
Starting is a rounding error. Staying is all the rest.
Starting is the most obvious. Staying is the most elusive.
Starting gets the glory. Staying can be gory.
Anyone can start, few can last.
Startup? Stayup!
A plan is just a guess you wrote down.
Itβs a great one.
My other favorite would be:
a.co/d/g29tSQ7
A passage from the Tao thatβs frequently worth revisiting.
Theyβve got a big team, lots of money, a strong brand, seemingly unlimited resources, panache, reputation, all that.
Theyβve also got a lot to lose.
You donβt have enough, which is why youβre dangerous. Youβre the underdog.
https://world.hey.com/jason/we-stand-with-the-underdogs-7d487d64