Things remain interesting around smashLAB. (Interesting is code for “really great and also really fucking hard”.) Lots of new lessons for us, including some that have taught us a little humility, which I’ll talk about in a future post. That being said, here are a few more random observations.
41. Looking or being?
I used to think that hiring meant growing, which meant “more money”; unfortunately, the two aren’t necessarily connected. We now only hire if there is no physical way to get the work done otherwise.
If I had it to do again, we wouldn’t even have an office. Most of the stuff that looks like “business” is unnecessary. In business you make money or you don’t. The way it looks is largely window dressing.
42. Let it be
We often try to make things wear too many hats. As a result, their purpose becomes confused.
Maybe you don’t need any more features, deeper layers, or options.
Perhaps the solution is to just let things be what they are.
43. Always ask if a choice is driven by emotion or what’s in your real best interest
Recently we made a decision to downsize our space. Initially I felt badly about leaving behind such a beautiful office.
I knew that keeping cash at hand was more important for the company’s health, but it took a while for my gut to catch up with my brain.
Reminder to self: Consider letting the brain drive a little more than gut.
44. Memory is short
When times are good, no one remembers them being bad.
When times are bad, no one imagines them being good again.
Smart people seem to profit from this “memory loss” issue.
45. Everything becomes wallpaper in time
The new is often shocking, off-putting, and even sometimes exhilarating. Once we’ve processed and classified this new thing though, we tend to move it aside and make room for the next disruption.
This is relevant in messaging and life. Want to be seen? You may have to do something unexpected and know that it only will be noticed for a brief while. Want to appreciate your life? Perhaps you have to “re-look” and try to see things as you once did.
46. Be honest
You know when it’s not quite right, it’s in a “gray zone”, or you’re cutting corners.
It’s sometimes inconvenient, but being honest at all times simply feels better.
47. Definitions
Design is clarity; marketing is a reason; sales is frequency.
48. Opportunity is easy to spot after the fact
We often reflect on life with statements like, “If I would have done [insert action here] then; I’d be a millionaire now.” Hindsight being what it is, such observations are easy to make and worth very little.
Oddly, it only takes is a little imagination to see opportunity, but we’re generally disinclined to do so. Consider the death of print media. Most see only darkness, but this shift is ripe with possibility.
Will news die just because the printed delivery device becomes obsolete? Who’ll next deliver the news? Given the low entry cost of online publishing tools, could you become the news?
49. Being lucky
Nirvana’s songs were fine, but hardly ground-breaking. The Rubik’s Cube was fine, but not really that exciting. Twitter works, but isn’t that wild of an idea. What all of these things share, however, is that they seemed to be just the right thing for a particular time. No one could have planned or predicted this.
Being the “right thing” at the “right time” isn’t altogether that likely. It requires luck. The funny part with luck though is that it’s a numbers game. Play a few hands and you might get a little. (You can’t win if you don’t play though.)
50. Waves
You can ignore waves, but that won’t stop them. Alternately, you can ride them and benefit from the force of something bigger than you.
Want more? You can read the other ones here:
– Random observations – Part 1
– Random observations – Part 2
– Random observations – Part 3
– Random observations – Part 4
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