two things: a 5-min read

two things: a 5-min read

This article does two things:

  • Me - to share what *I think* is useful on a variety of topics from my personal experience (you might not agree with many of them).
  • You - to take what works for you (and let me know what doesn't).

Two things. 5 minutes. No fluff - let's go.

STARTUP

Do two things: build and sell.

No alt text provided for this image

To build something that people will pay for requires (1) someone to build (2) someone to get people to pay for it. There is not much else to the formula. Investor pitches, performance feedback, even culture, are redundant at this stage. It is very easy to start worrying about the wrong thing, or to think the team has critical 'gaps' to be filled aside from a builder and a seller (which can be one person).

Things become difficult also when the team hits a limbo halfway to product-market fit. There is a tendency to over-engineer the stresses away: we have had to shelve many legacy products due to this mistake. When in doubt, talk to customers. Only build for what customer has made obvious to be sellable - lead with selling, build to catch up.

Tips to make things even faster: build with no-code platforms helps make things 10x easier (we used Bubble and Figma). Sell to a small group of FoF (friends of friends) that you can repeatedly come back for feedback instead of cold contacts.

SCALEUP

Do two things: process and communication.

No alt text provided for this image

Scaling and growth are different. When you grow, you hire more. When you scale, you want to constantly think about ways to not hire. Start by automating everything: Zapier all your emails, build Wikis (Notion is excellent for this) and turn tasks into cards (Clickup is great). Outsource everything that is not your core value offering. Any middle-level managers is a death zone. Save on $$$ and time by turning people into processes as much as you can.

Your communication needs to scale as the organisation does too. In fact, this should be the only thing the founder does at a scaleup. Communication is not just providing updates: stand-ups/town-halls don't cut the chase. The true challenge is figuring out everyone's motivation (and whether it has changed, for what reason). This must be approached intentionally - ideally with processes built around it. A good culture makes it easier.

Also, people seldom talk about founders' mental health when scaling. It's horrible. Make it a priority to carve up space for yourself EVERY DAY. When making decisions, do whatever it takes to preserve your mental health for the next 5 years. Things always get better.

CORPORATE

Do two things: routines and growth.

No alt text provided for this image

Routines is half the battle working in a corporate. Start with going to bed early (when possible), then gym, morning jogs, diets. You need to excel in how you FEEL about yourself. You need to take control. Train your bowel habits, set up a workspace for taking Zoom calls, understand your stress triggers then work through them one by one. The more connected you are with your routines, the more grounded you will be. This brings joy and relaxation irrespective of whether you are working or not.

You also need to carefully distinguish between things that are comfortable/predictable, or stressful/challenging. Stay with predictable tasks, switch when they become comfortable. Ask for support early for things that are stressful, but try to own things that you consider challenging. Personal growth is key - selectively experience and savour stress that relates to meaningful opportunities where you are going beyond your comfort zone. Do not engage with frustrations and thoughts otherwise: the type of anxieties and regrets about existing processes, teammates, mistakes in submitted work. Always move UPWARDS past your imperfections to grow - your intuition will tell you what's next.

Time's up.

Yes - I am only 22. I am not there yet. Maybe the two things will change. Maybe (very likely) you know better about many of those things.

Comment. PM me. I am working on a few exciting things (and articles like this). I would love to connect with you.

#twothings


Gagan K.

Building software businesses | xMcKinsey

4 年

Great read!

Andrew Dibden

Managing Associate at Sidley Austin LLP

4 年

Schooled - not only on the substance, but on how to write. Fantastic post!

Rabii Malik

CEO at Remo (YC S24) | AI-enabled KYB

4 年

Straight to the point - I love it!

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Brent Liang的更多文章

  • Why you should listen to Donda.

    Why you should listen to Donda.

    You weren't expecting to see an article about Donda on LinkedIn but here you are. 10 reasons why listening to DONDA…

    16 条评论
  • At last a life: surviving anxiety

    At last a life: surviving anxiety

    Full disclosure: 'At Last a Life' is a great book by Paul David and you can download a free PDF version here. Also…

    14 条评论
  • Let's do podcasts differently in 2021.

    Let's do podcasts differently in 2021.

    30 DAYS AGO, I TOOK ON ONE OF MOST EXCITING PROJECTS IN THE WORLD. At 6:20am, I woke up to a #HIRING ad from the…

    22 条评论
  • 9 Places, 9 Learnings, 365 Days

    9 Places, 9 Learnings, 365 Days

    We had all the momentum; we were riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave..

    19 条评论
  • INJURY RESERVE x PAPRIKA: Story-Telling Without Boundaries

    INJURY RESERVE x PAPRIKA: Story-Telling Without Boundaries

    Ritchie with a T, Stepa J. Groggs, Parker Corey and Satoshi Kon.

    1 条评论
  • 论陀翁《地下室手记》中当个好人有多难

    论陀翁《地下室手记》中当个好人有多难

    第一幅画,献给二零一五年的秋天。当时的世界,还没有现在这么乱。 第一次接触陀思妥耶夫斯基是籍于一位名为木盒的朋友。在他家趴着赶课题报告的时候,他扔了本破破烂烂的薄书到床上来。 “你看看这个。”…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了