We signed up for Blue Apron and Sun Basket. Time after time, the actual food provided by blue apron was inferior. Often close to rotten. This isn’t a complicated story( Blue Apron delivers food with instructions but the food isn’t very good.
Everything written about here is in relation to VC funded companies. For people building companies without outside investment, and who pay employees with money, none of this is true at all and in fact sounds nonsensical.
This seems like it would be the perfect foundation with which acquire twitter right? A twitter acquisition makes sense under Alphabet in a way it doesn't under Google, no?
Check out yoga studios nearby. Because it's class based, it's more directed and time sensitive than working out, and a lot of them also foster community, so it might be easier for you to strike up a few conversations than at a gym.
Give a few of them a try to find the one that's right for you.
Well there's two primary things:
1. It shows you ALL referrals that happened prior to a conversion. For example, if someone clicks on a retargeting ad, then a google ad, then our blog, then our docs, then a sign-up. I see that all together.
2. They have a conversion report that shows the weighted conversions, which allows me to see what impact each individual referrer has.
In all seriousness, Google analytics, and my inability to use it, was one of the most frustrating things I dealt with as the founder of a SaaS product.
Google analytics regularly makes me feel like an idiot, and my frustration level, even with better products like heap and kiss metrics, had gotten me to the point where I was ready to give up on analytics entirely.
By using tend I learned that I was literally tossing away thousands of dollars every month and it's clearly shown me where we get our customers.
It's hands down the best analytics tool I've ever used.
Yeah I do about 10 or 15 minutes with the headspace app. It's not a lot of time but it's quite nice and even that little bit of time is very impactful.
5:30am - 6:30am: wake up, coffee, meditate
6:30am - 7:30am: customer support from overnight
7:30am - 9:30am: breakast with family, kids to school
10:00am - 4:30pm: work, office, lunch
4:45pm - 5:30pm: beer with coworing space coworkers
6:00pm - 10:00pm: Dinner with Family with support sprinkled in throughout the night. Yoga class sometimes.
10:00pm - 5:30am: Sleep
(Of course in the real world there are lots of deviations from this, but this is the goal schedule.)
So is Apple Pay in essence another way to get a credit card processed against stripe? If you have an app that customers can store credit cards on, it's not clear to me what the additional benefit of apple pay is? Is it simply a better/faster way of getting the card information to stripe by way of thumb press as opposed to key entered?
I completely agree with you on this. I can't imagine continuing to use hipchat with this change in place.
This was pretty stunning at first, but after thinking about it my guess is simply organizations that use Jira are the kind of organizations that want/need to keep tabs on all employee communications.
Which hey, I get that for some companies they need that for one reason or another.
What it says to me more clearly than anything though, is that Hipchat's core customer isn't small teams any longer.
There's another option that people never seem to talk about. Treat people well, give them a good working environment, and give them a fair salary based on the fact that they don't have any equity.
Most engineers I know with stock options and a discounted salary would have been much better with a higher annual salary and no stock options at all.