just thinking out loud, Uncategorized 0 comments on Welcome James to blogging!

Welcome James to blogging!

My good buddy James (one of the two (or three) James’ after which Luka’s middle name is derived) has started a blog:

365to30

Documenting the goals he has for this last year of his 3rd decade of life. Everyone should follow, and hold him to it. Some of the ones I think are wacky include:

  • #7… getting a tattoo? Come on man :-p
  • #16… where was my love when I had kids in diapers? What the heck’s going on there?

but most of them I love. I especially love:

  • #15… which made me tear up when I read it
  • #17 & #18… which I’m lumping together because if you can do them together, then you’re really killing it

Every year for a while now James and the family have come together to see the world. Portugal, UK, Grand Canyon, CA redwoods… and this year Sonoma International Raceway! He’s a great guy, and it’s going to be a good year to follow.

But seriously man, no tattoo.

Entrepreneurism, Uncategorized 0 comments on Applied learning

Applied learning

As I’m in the car a bit more than I was in the past, I’ve been getting back into the swing of listening to podcasts. One of my favorites is Startups for the rest of us.

I went to their conference in Las Vegas back in 2012, and I’ve worked my way through a fat chunk of their back log as well. I’ve shared it with a ton of folks, and all of a sudden one of the folks I shared it with is making a go of it.

I’m not going to say who or what yet, but I’m really quite excited to see what happens as he tries to bootstrap his way towards a SaaS business. The customer is already there. The LTV is already vetted. It’s really just about execution.

As soon as I can, I’m going to update how well it worked, but getting to apply the learning of all of the listening is going to be a fun experiment.

Good luck <name redacted>!

New Year Resolutions, Uncategorized 0 comments on Book(s) of the month

Book(s) of the month

Having finished two books in January, I’m feeling pretty good about my quest to read one book per month this year. For February, I’ve chosen two books (and I think it’s going to take me until March to finish). They are:

Kanban: Successful Evolutionary Change for Your Technology Business

and

Founders at Work

I’m really focusing on business books as both a form of inspiration, and hopefully as a way to bring some more efficiency to the team. We’re doing really well, and now I think we need to get to the next level.

Happy reading to me!

Life Updates, Uncategorized 0 comments on This week in review

This week in review

Holy shit, another week has passed. The big life event was, obviously, moving. It’s been awesome. Today we finally got people to pick up the last of the boxes, and the room just opened up. I’m going to let the photos do the talking, because honestly I’m too tired to do it 🙂

 

 

Home ownership, Uncategorized 0 comments on It’s all about firsts

It’s all about firsts

Everything so far this weekend has been a first.

First time homebuyer

First family dinner at the house

First night sleeping at the house

First shower at the house

and on and on the list goes. It’s really overwhelming, and it’s really exciting. It’s a very different kind of roller coaster than before, but a roller coaster nonetheless. I think the crazy bit is that at the end of the day it’s all mine. It’s just such an awesome feeling. These firsts are just milestones that make that more and more obvious… and fun to celebrate.

First rainy weekend spent watching the birds.

First time playing in the toy room.

First take out ordered (from a Thai place down the street. Delicious!)

I really love it. I hope this feeling never goes away 🙂

Home ownership, Uncategorized 0 comments on We’re in!

We’re in!

Today we moved into the house… finally 🙂

The day started whisking the kids off to school, and fitting in a call with <redacted> on my way over to the house (we are that big of a deal at TokBox).

I was getting to the house for the Sonic.net guy who was to show up at 10am. Let me do a quick interlude, and say that Sonic.net internet service is awesome. I’ll get back to that in a second.

The chores on the list included hanging two lights, and doing a final coat of paint in the toy room. The coat of paint was easy (and the Dixie Chicks Pandora station made it fun). The lights were a complete pain 🙁

For lunch, I had some awesome guests swing by, help out a little, and then go on their merry way. Their identification is protected to preserve their innocence.

Then the movers arrived.

When the movers show up it’s total chaos. Boxes; beds; cribs; couches. Everything is stashed somewhere, and then rebuilt. Micky and I were maniacs in the kitchen first, then the kids room, our room, and then the toy room.

By the time the kids came home, their corner of the world was in great shape, and we were officially moved in 🙂

20140210-225301.jpg

Becoming a PM, Uncategorized 0 comments on A month’s worth of small steps

A month’s worth of small steps

We had a really great demo day today.

It’s the beginning of celebrating lots of small steps. At the end of the road, I think we’ll all find it was a journey worth taking. And through it, we’ll have lots of stories to tell 🙂

The tradition of celebrating small success isn’t new at TokBox, but I do think it’s a bit forgotten. One of the first things that Yang did when he joined back in ’09 was bring in an agile methodology. We become three small teams, and we did a lot of really good work in our units. Each unit then showed off its work in a demo day. This is par for the course for an agile team, but something we’d never done before at TokBox. The genius of demo days is that a scrum master can make his team look great for even the smallest things because the whole point is to accomplish all of those little things that led to the train leaving the station and going into the world.

I remember that feeling very vividly of having an awesome demo, and sharing with pride the work we’d accomplished. We did bi-weekly releases, and so it was never a huge amount of work. It wasn’t a platform company, and so there wasn’t a big partner acquisition to celebrate. There was just our hard work to point to, and take pride in.

Small victories bundled together become big wins for the world to see. I can’t wait to share those too!

just thinking out loud, Uncategorized 0 comments on Mother/son bonding… via text

Mother/son bonding… via text

I got my mom a calendar of daily inspirational quotes (BTW, those daily calendars are a lie. They do one sheet for the weekend, and so you end up with less than 356 pieces of inspiration) for Christmas. We decided that we’d share the quotes, and talk about them.

Every day, given my mom is on the East Coast, I wake up to a quote. I spend a half a day thinking about it, and then I respond. Then we banter back and forth.

Sometimes it’s really lighthearted. Sometimes it’s deep. But every day I really look forward to it. It’s quickly become one of my favorite daily traditions. Some top ones so far (for either quote or because of the discussion) in my opinion have been:

  • Ability will never catch up with the demand for it (good quote to remember)
  • If I were to begin life again, I should want it as it was. I would only open my eyes a little more. (good conversation)
  • What I do today is important because I am exchanging a day of my life for it (good quote to remember)
  • Don’t cry because it’s over; smile because it happened (really great conversation)

And there’s actually a bunch more (and it’s only February).

 

just thinking out loud, Uncategorized 0 comments on The Olympics are almost here!

The Olympics are almost here!

I genuinely love the Olympics. Following on yesterday’s talk about what to be excellent at, I think the Olympics gives us all a chance to really rally around this elite set of folks who are genuinely excellent at these sports.

For some reason, and I don’t really know why, I find the Winter Olympics to be much better than their summer counterpart.

I used to know all of the athletes, and really root for folks. Now I just enjoy the various sports. I LOVE figure skating (men’s and women’s), and I find the biathlon to be amazing. The ski jump always scare the shit out of me. And the new sports are fun to watch, and tend to be really exciting.

When all is said and done, we get to watch one person get rewarded as the best in the world at something. Imagine that. Out of 7 billion… you are number 1.

Now that’s excellent.

just thinking out loud, Uncategorized 2 comments on What do I want to be excellent at

What do I want to be excellent at

We’ve got an amazing thread going on on amplifize focusing on a New Yorker article about the ill effects of working too much.

I’ve ended up on the other end of the debate (as seems to happen a lot lately) advocating for overwork when applied towards achieving a degree of excellence. In my mind the goal is to get to the now idolized 10,000 hours before the gal (or guy) next to you beats you there. My brother, in his newly elevated eloquence, came back and challenged me by saying that excellence should be achieved in pursuit of a life well lived. He started and ended by asking me what I wanted to be excellent at. Here is my response.

The number one thing I want to be excellent at is being a father. When I think about the amount of time I put into this, I’ve definitely passed into the zone of overwork. That probably sounds ridiculous since fatherhood is considered by many to be a 24-hour job, but that is in fact a lie. It takes all of 30 seconds to become a father biologically. After that, the choice, and depth, of fatherhood is completely on the individual. The level to which anyone can invest should have checks and balances. I don’t think I’ve found my checks or balances. It’s definitely hurt me in relationships with friends. It’s also definitely made it harder for me to justify networking events, after works drinks, and the like. The costs are real, but the benefits are real as well. Overworking as a father is a choice that I continue to make. The only real concern that I have is that I haven’t found a good over-recover cycle to balance it. This is a challenge I need to address.

After that (for me) is to leave behind a legacy of a product excellently built, and, at this point in my career, I can still selfishly hope for it to be products plural. To build excellent products requires diving not only into the problem space, but the mind of the end-user, the architecture of the right solution, and the journey of the product life cycle. People specialize immediately in their careers because specialization is often interchanged with expertise. I don’t think this is true. A corner of a component of a product is as unaware of the whole as my left ear. And yet when I put it together with my right ear, the whole of my head, and the rest of my parts, you get a full picture of the product that is me. I think building excellent products requires being able to dive deep into the left ear while understanding that it’s a person you’re building, and not a microphone. Experts tend to confuse the microphone for the ear when in fact one simply mimics another. There is an obsessive tendency to building excellent products that leads to overwork, and I think it can be detrimental to the overall experience and outcome. Finding the release parachute when it’s needed is a hard fought battle with oneself, and one that I know I often lose. Nonetheless, I don’t know how else to build excellent product but with both feet jumping straight in.

Finally, I want to be an excellent husband. This means being more patient, a better listener, quicker with my kindness, and slower with my smart ass nature. This one is the hardest for me because I actually don’t know what it looks like. There’s no one else to compare to for an excellent husband for Micky. The lack of a yard stick means that no one else can ever beat me, but that I can also never know if I’ve done it or not. That vagueness, that abstractness, makes it hard for me to know if I’ve entered overwork or not. You could argue the same is true for the kids, and you’d be correct, but I’ve felt much less loss at striving to be an excellent husband than I have at being an excellent father. Maybe loss is the measuring stick, and in not losing enough (or trading off enough), I haven’t gone far enough. That’s actually a great question to ask. In general though, I find the pursuit of being excellent for her makes me better not only at this task but the other two above as well. It’s an unintended benefit which I’ll gladly take.

I think if I pull off all three of those things, then I will have lived an excellent life. It will have been put to the test, and found sufficient. I think ultimately, it will be something that someone at sometime points to and says – I’d like for that to be me.

It’s a great conversation we’re having. I’m very lucky to be so challenged by such a great group.