Years ago, when my wife and I were engaged and preparing for marriage, we did this assessment to identify our growth areas.
(You know, one that tells you what you’re going to argue about.)
Well, one of the biggies was “change.”
I was off-the-charts loving change, while my future wife was all about stability. Let’s just say I am glad we learned that early on...
Funny enough, what drove my wife crazy is actually what makes me most suited to lead Logic Speak into the next era of tech.
Change is happening all the time, especially in tech, but this rapid pace is exactly why businesses rely on us.
It’s probably why your clients and your team rely on you.
This next era is going to force us all to embrace change like we never have before.
However, if, like my wife, it frustrates you—that’s OK.
Just know you are going to have to find someone who embraces change and stays ahead of every tech change for years to come.
Lucky for me, this is my job.
In terms of our domain and the technologies our clients use and the industries that we serve, it has to be our job.
If you are in tech, guess what? It’s your job, too.
It's your job to stay one, two, three steps ahead in terms of things that might be beneficial to your client’s business.
It’s your job to make them more profitable, more efficient, more productive or just happier, better people.
It’s your job to help them go home on time, see their kids' soccer games, those kinds of things.
This is why I am obsessed with identifying technologies and strategies that can make our clients more profitable, efficient, productive and, yes, happier.
This is why we navigate the ever-changing tech landscape.
This is why we communicate in plain language, avoid jargon and ensure our clients understand not just what’s happening on the tech front of their business, but how it benefits them.
Buckle up, people.
The pace of change has just been warming up the last couple of decades.
It’s Go Time.
(Good thing I love it. Good thing you probably do, too.)
Let me have it: Am I crazy for loving change? Is my wife more relatable here? Do you like change?
Ps. Shout out to my wife Jennifer for supporting me and the Logic Speak team through all of our change!