The joy

The joy

My first job in 2001 was to sell Disney-themed backpacks over summer break at the mall.

I manned a booth and answered parents' questions. I was bad at it. The backpacks were expensive and I felt for parents being guilt-tripped by their kids.

At the end of the summer, the store roughly broke even on my salary.

***

My resume is all glowing accomplishments.

And yet... when I look back, less than 10% of my time resulted in lasting impact at a scale that still matters. Perhaps it's the nature of things. For a venture capitalist, 1-2 successful investments pay for all of the rest. Perhaps I'm holding too high of a bar. Perhaps we hope success lasts longer than it actually does.

***

The work I'm most proud of is about the economics of digital content.

I analyzed why some videos are posted for free on YouTube, while others are screened in expensive movie theaters. It was a huge amount of work.

I looked at the theory.

Analyzed the data.

Developed a model.

And...

... literally no one cared. Zero impact.

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Yet to this day I have a surge of pride when I think about that work because it maximized my talents. I realized myself.

***

The corporate world rewards a certain type of productivity with recognition and promotions. Certainly these are important. Resume bullets aren't simply a vanity metric. They say "I was here and I performed and it mattered."

But almost nothing is guaranteed. Success isn't a formula. Wake up at 5am; drink a green juice; meditate; cold shower; recite intentions. We can do these things for years and still miss out.

We choose. And sometimes our choice is a number that's just one digit off from the winning lottery ticket. And there we are: holding a crumpled piece of paper that's worth almost a million dollars and yet it's worth nothing.

The only thing that is guaranteed is that time will pass.

Life is like a side-scroller. You don't always have to sprint, but it also never stops.

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***

And this I believe.

At some point we're all called to account for how we've spent our time.

When that happens, I won't call up my resume bullets to justify my choices.

It will be the pleasure of being helpful and dependable; of being kind; of laughing as part of a team.

"See?" I'd say, "I showed up and it mattered."

It will be the analysis of the economics of digital content where I went the extra mile purely for the personal satisfaction of really nailing it.

It will be the joy of striving together, no matter the outcome.

Fahim Faysal

Sr. Executive, Business Development, Crown Machinery Co. Ltd.

2 年

Such a beautiful and meaningful article. Thanks for taking the time to write it!

Melissa Luu-Van

Product Management | Sustainability MS Candidate @ Columbia | Meta & Stanford Alum

2 年

Have thought about similar things a lot recently and have come to similar conclusions (it's mostly about how I showed up and treated other people above all else). Nice note!

Sara Eshelman

Partner at Spero Ventures

2 年

So well said Rafi Nulman!

回复
Osman M. Khan

Founder & Coach ?? Moonshot Admissions | Coaching students & brands how to aim for the moon | My story: EXPULSION ? REDEMPTION ? ADMISSION

2 年

Appreciate your reflection Rafi. In my faith, we are accountable for how we used our time. That plays into our impact… our legacy. Reminds me of this quote, “Time well spent leads to life well lived.” — Martin Uzochukwu Ugwu

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