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    Every so often in my web ramblings, I come across an interesting tidbit.  While not meant to be an endorsement of Automattic, I find it interesting that a company with such a huge impact on the Internet has 113 employees total and is not constrained by geography.  While not quite the 12 person, $1 billion tech company I wrote about last year (and which Instagram was so gracious to prove), it is quite an impressive feat.

    Massive teams with extraneous resources not directly adding value to the products these companies create are going to be a thing of the past.  I could not honestly tell you what 75% of the employees at Oracle, Microsoft, Google, and the like are doing.  These are companies with teetering org charts filled with people that exist only to justify their own existence and make imaginary work for others.  The result is that the products produced over time are simply not that great.

    Forget about starting all lean startup then binge hiring to scale the company.  That is the slow boat to Bloatsville, management bureaucracy, product stagnation, and shitty HR employee manuals.  Size is simply puts a chokehold on innovation and stifles independent thought.  Start lean and stay lean and never hire for the sake of hiring even if the pull of snagging an “A player” infects your thinking* or your investors push you to hire in order to take the market advantage.

    * There are no A players, that is a bit of myth-busting I plan to drop this week.

     
  2. 2
    Some thoughts on pacing your life

    We live with contradictions. Which are okay for the most part, except when we’re not aware of them. It is a source of frustration when we pursue and believe incongruous thoughts at different times without realizing it. 

    For example, most people would like to be normal, but very few aspire to be average. You can’t be noticed and fit in at the same time. How about noticed and accepted? Fine line. 

    Other contradictions include our plans for success and how we live life. 

    We want to be successful as fast as feasible. We want to work smart rather than work hard toward success. 

    We want to flip a lottery switch and let the winnings pour out instead of choosing the sure and steady path. 

    When success doesn’t arrive fast enough, frustration strides in. The metric for happiness is on the outcome, not whether the path to get there is kosher. 

    We want to live forever and get there with shortcuts. 

    The fear of missing out, taking on all incoming opportunities, and being in the flow lead to impulsive behaviors. 

    Does living life to the fullest mean you have to be impulsive? Impulse is the opposite of discipline. This lack of discipline makes it easy to choose the impulsive path. On the first try and the subsequent times to make up for the previous impulses.

    Maybe we are too concerned with outcomes and byproducts to measure our progress. 

    The fear of looking back on a dull life outstrikes the fear of seeing ourselves at 80 and having nothing to show for it. 

    If we would rather live in the moment, because we might die tomorrow, then we can’t expect to look back when we are 80 and see a legacy built from discipline. We would have been too busy impulsively living in the moment to work toward anything. 

    Don’t be afraid to miss out on things. Assume you’re going to live past 80 and experience it at some point. Cut out the urgent and the immediate to spend time on the important. 

     
  3. 34
    Yep... it's true
    OctoMarioOctoLink
    OctoRiddlerOctoSkeletonI found OctoWaldo!
    Father of OctoTimeSteve 'OctoCat' JobsOctoDrunk!

    hasablog:

    GitHub stickers! Awesome gift :]

     
  4. 1

    skewed. (via Porca Miseria)

     
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    improvingintrovert:

    Shit Programmers Say

    Might not be what you expect, unless you program. 

    It’s too perfect.