Read: The great junk transfer is coming. A look at the burden (and big business) of decluttering as Canadians inherit piles of their parents’ stuff
Last fall, Kevin Cameron stood in the doorway of his parents’ two-storey Saltbox home in the woods on the South Shore of Nova Scotia, the place he’d built with his dad when he was a teenager and woken up to during snowy family Christmases with his own kids.
The job of a Staff+ IC (individual contributor) leader is murky at best. Even when I spoke about this in [the first event dedicated to Staff+ folks], I felt compelled to explain that “it is a job that can be different things at different times”.
Read: Dual Track Agile: Level Up Enterprise Product Design with UX Part 3
Below is a diagram of the end-to-end product design process. The first article in this series covered customer insights and ideation, and the second article detailed “design thinking” and the discovery sprint.
Read: When Everything is Important But Nothing is Getting Done
The last company I worked for was a mid-stage startup with growing pains. What had started out as a nimble organization able to create impressive software now felt stuck.
Read: Who owns Einstein? The battle for the world’s most famous face
In July 2003, the physicist and Pulitzer-prize-nominated author Dr Tony Rothman received an email from his editor bearing unwelcome news. Rothman’s new book was weeks from publication.
Read: An Interview with Coda Founder (and Bundle Expert) Shishir Mehrotra
An interview with Coda founder Shishir Mehrotra about documents, go-to-market, and competing with Microsoft, plus bundling, Spotify, and Passport. Reading the Stratechery Update or listening to Stratechery Podcast episodes requires a Stratechery subscription.
Read: the diminishing returns of productivity culture
Xerox Ad, c. 1980 This is the midweek edition of Culture Study — the newsletter from Anne Helen Petersen, which you can read about here. If you like it and want more like it in your inbox, consider subscribing. In 2006, Karen Ho was an anthropology student at Princeton.
Read: Voluntary Woke?: Philanthropy, Civil Society & The Culture Wars
Voluntary Woke?: Philanthropy, Civil Society & The Culture WarsPhilliteracy5 hours ago·19 min readA recurring motif in current media and political debate is the idea that as a society we are engaged in a “culture war”.
Typeform announced today that it has raised $135 million in Series C funding. Techcrunch news here At Connect we are very proud to have been early believers in Typeform. We led Typeform’s Seed round in 2014 and fully participated in their following A and B rounds.
Read: I Review Hundreds Of Cover Letters–Here’s What I Instantly Reject
An experienced hiring manager explains what makes her eyes glaze over and what grabs her attention. 4 minute ReadI’ve read a lot of cover letters throughout my career. When I was a fellowship program manager, I reviewed them in consideration for more than 60 open positions each year.
Read: We need to stop striving for work-life balance. Here’s why
Work-life balance makes us set our sights too low, according to this sociologist. 3 minute ReadRecently, I received a question from a contact on LinkedIn. She asked me whether I thought work-life balance was dead.
Read: How Big Tech Runs Tech Projects and the Curious Absence of Scrum
Project management is a topic most people have strong opinions on, and I’m no exception. To answer the question of how different companies run engineering projects, I pulled in help from across the industry. In this issue we’ll cover:
Pessimists sound smart. Optimists make money. –Nat Friedman (quoted by Patrick) I’ve realized a new reason why pessimism sounds smart: optimism often requires believing in unknown, unspecified future breakthroughs—which seems fanciful and naive.