Give context, not tasks. Create slack for exploration. Eliminate the task management queue. Hire for adaptability and broad skill sets. Hire functional leaders with growth mindsets. Hold data scientists accountable for real business impact.
O'ReillyFocus on distribution over features, find your attention capture unfair advantage. Embrace disagreeable thinking. Look for unconventional methods to change the game in your favor instead of generic growth hacks. Spend time to understand your industry's system and status quo then brainstorm like a super villain to change the dynamics. Grab people's attention by turning bugs into features, upgrading your buyers, bait & switch, arbitrage, aggregation, reframe, normalizing taboos.
Alistair CrollModern software never forget. Forgetting enables different user experiences. Most SaaS apps likely serve as dumping grounds for outdated, forgotten files. One can start fading out old documents that are rarely maintained or refreshed. Forgetting means making a deliberate design decision to discard data at a later time. A notebook filled with notes and random scribbles becomes worn and ends up in a bin. Adding new data to software is easy, scheduling it for automatic deletion is a bit harder. I don't want to accidentally navigate to old and unused dashboards in the midst of an incident. If it’s not actively sorted and saved within six months, it's moved to a trash and eventually deleted. Even though the entities we create are sticking around forever, the information contained within them ages badly.
Armin RonacherSuccess is measured by outcome, not output. Iterative prompt refinement is the new way to solve problems. Using AI to autocomplete code in a limited scope is incremental at best. Solving complex software problems requires more than just typing code. Metrics for success are time saved, problem-solving capability, code quality, and learning.
Ado Kukic