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1 points·by supersync·hace 4 años·0 comments

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supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
What’s sobering is even a prescient leader like Butterfield was snowed despite that clear evidence.

I tell everyone founder - acquisition is the death of everything you worked for. Acquisitions teams are sales teams with 0 follow on accountability, structure, or goals. They are quite literally there to tell you what you want to hear & get you to believe it’s true. With maybe the exception of Microsoft, it’s not.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
https://twitter.com/yoheinakajima

Is my goto
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
Great story! I’m curious what use cases are common for the integration?
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
I think your example is actually a counter example.

This is also how most people, regardless of age, learn.

The key is - did you have to warn your son again?

I subscribe to natural consequence parenting within guardrails. People learn from experience reliably, the key is to allow manageable consequences.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
Fascinating. We’re seeing the same thing. Seeing a few companies opt for Coda as a way to convert some sheets to processes. Here’s what we’ve done with it: https://supsync.com/squared-away/
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
It’s time to approach your search differently

Learn to build a network inside the companies you want to work for

Start with Sarah Johnston’s advice: https://briefcasecoach.com/

Having worked in HR - you are trapped in the ATS system black hole. Never apply for a job cold. Always have an employee refer you in. You will 3x your chances (from 2% to 6%) with that one decision.

Employment isn’t by companies, it’s by teams.

Get your LinkedIn & Twitter game going.

I’ve been where you are. I made $50k more a year by making the decision to hire a career coach.

You’ve got a lot to offer. Giver yourself a real chance.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
Richard - thank you for sharing your journey with us.

Your work and achievements are an inspiration, even now.

Sometimes progress really is one person at a time. You & your team changed the lives of millions.

My own social startup failed. It is so hard to watch your dream, all that you are, die.

All I can pass on is that your journey is not done & taking good care of yourself is how you’ll be able to take it.

My sincere wish is that you allow your karma balance to settle.

You deserve to enjoy life, to do work you find meaningful, and to be remembered for your contributions.

You overcame incredible odds time & again. If anyone has proven investment in second chances make a difference, you have.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
I’m not sure your 2nd point is that controversial. Many clear examples of companies manufacturing scarcity in order to create profits - light bulbs being an easy example.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
KYC is the reason we have an archaic banking system while the rest of the world leap frogs us.

Tough to solve when petrodollars are still the reserve currency globally.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
A very good example of how easy it is to assume incompetence when you don’t understand the constraints.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
It’s more of a Disney/Pixar situation

Slack is the wedge the Salesforce product team is using to reinvent itself.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
This is fantastic. I’d love to chat with you about it. Super powerful to have intel on the tech stack. Might be a bigger opp for you in RevOps. I’m on Twitter @briansowards or your can find email in bio.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
A semi-interesting read on a topic I often think about.

I’ll boil it down to “new systems generate new social systems, that become imitations of themselves, that then cannibalizes the initial system.”

The insight I see here is we need new social technology.

The “hands on” founder is back with Gen Z, along with verticalized ambitions. There were easy wins building on the institutional tech stack we've inherited, but today you are more likely to conform or fail if you launch a transformational innovation on that stack.

Instead, I see founders going to the source of each institution to create change. Cul de Sac in AZ going after that.

In the same way, we’re designing a vertical reinvention of the org as a guild. There’s institutions we’re build on for sure, but the security comes more from community than the enforcement of agreements by traditional institutions.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
Cost centers: anything that improves your experience as an employee.

It’s smart to move out of it, but the fact that you have to in order to progress is a clear indicator why companies will perpetually undervalue talent - even in competitive markets.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
This is a very fair concern. First off, most of this funding will go to a building. The rest will go mostly to an endowment.

The concentration of mega-gifts at the top has very perverse impacts.

Harvard built a $100M building a few years ago that is used by a total of 100 people a year.

Philanthropy combines prestige, PR, and “legacy” in a way that massively overvalued those three vs. any kind of measurable impact.

The alternative you are suggesting is badly, badly needed in the non-profit world.

But the “brand” game has won vs the execution game, esp. in higher Ed.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
You landed on the surprising root cause:

“Doesn’t add business value”

But do you know how the business makes money (the actual processes)? Can anyone tell you how to add value in concrete terms?

Because in over a decade of consulting on technical leadership, Agile, lean and DevOps, the most consistent issue I’ve seen is that those questions are unanswerable for almost anyone in almost any company.

In the absence of a clear path to value creation, everyone optimizes locally for “best practices” because…

the root problem is almost all decisions have to be explained to people who know next to nothing about your area & you need to still sound rational.

The local maximum for that usually is “this is how _____ does it & it’s the new trend now.”
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
Well said.

The glaring piece missing from this analysis is the psychology of the young men themselves.

Raising two young men myself, I’m blown away by how powerful cultivating intrinsic motivation is. My eldest just went from constant gaming/sleeping/hiding in his room to working a full-time job, launching a side hustle, and enrolling in classes.

Yes, my modeling & encouragement mattered. But the fulcrum was him accepting that living up to other people’s expectation in high school had left him tired, depressed, and lost.

The author has clearly identified that young man lack a goal worthy of their efforts.

He’s just completely ignored intrinsic motivation and the power of cultivating it.

I don’t think that’s an accident. I think our entire approach to young men as a society ignores the fundamental power of their interests.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
Thanks for sharing. A book “The Psychology of Money” talks about this. How people handle money (successful or not) is very different depending on whether or not they experienced inflation as a child.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
The contribution of engineers to capital creation massively exceeds 20% over the past 30 years. Relative pay increase is such a scam.

Having seen it up close, the even greater issue for society is this program & how it’s used has created an engineering culture of order takers.

That’s the least valuable configuration of engineering teams.
supersync
·hace 4 años·discuss
Here’s the sad reality

Admin controls the money

They spend 99% of it on tools they use for their own jobs

The 1% is whatever fad they are supposed to buy into in order to maintain a semblance of legitimacy (“student success” for example)

If you want to make money in education

Get your state legislators to pass a law that requires schools to comply with a new regulation that makes your solution relevant

That’s how the big edtech companies got to $1B+, with only one exception: 2U