Finding Your Rhythm
A traditional 9-5 is a box—a rigid structure that stifles productivity and creativity. It’s designed for the collective, but we all have our...
Read more of 'Finding Your Rhythm' blog postRead moreA traditional 9-5 is a box—a rigid structure that stifles productivity and creativity. It’s designed for the collective, but we all have our...
Read more of 'Finding Your Rhythm' blog postRead moreWe live in a world driven by algorithms. Each piece of content we consume is meticulously curated—designed to reinforce our biases and keep ...
Read more of 'Cultivating Taste in the Age of AI' blog postRead moreDeveloping taste starts with awareness: being mindful and noticing the elements you interact with, the experiences you're part of, and the e...
Read more of 'Develop Taste Through Awareness' blog postRead moreYou don’t have to give up your craft to grow your career. You don't have to stop doing the work to manage others. You can grow your craft an...
Read more of 'Craft & Career' blog postRead moreThere’s no shortcut to learning. In order to learn something, you have to actually do the thing. And frequently that means doing it for a lo...
Read more of 'The Feel' blog postRead moreAI is transforming the classic product trio: product manager, designer, engineer. The roles are blending as AI closes the skill gap for each...
Read more of 'The Age of Product Builders' blog postRead moreThe “Hill Chart” is one of my favorite ways to represent the progress of work. This concept originated from Jason Fried and the team at 37si...
Read more of 'The Hill Chart' blog postRead moreMy kids don’t understand boredom. Their time is filled with nonstop activities and screens. But boredom is valuable—it’s a skill to cultivat...
Read more of 'Boredom' blog postRead moreIn the days when landline phones were ubiquitous, the “busy signal” was a familiar occurrence—a quick beep indicating the person you were tr...
Read more of 'The Busy Signal' blog postRead moreSome of the most monumental discoveries were made by accident. Wilhelm Röntgen accidentally discovered X-rays in 1895. Alexander Fleming ac...
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