Epiphanies

Why We Crave Joining Exclusive Groups

Why We Crave Joining Exclusive Groups

In school we were all “equal”. As pupils, part of mass education program, we had no formal way to organise ourselves into preference based groups. But we did it anyway. I can bet that cool kids formed a very tight band in your school, one where admission was invitation only. You may have been part of one but the majority was excluded from the cool kids club and chose to join geekier ones. 

The behaviour does not change after school. Unlike schools, workplaces have very deep formal hierarchies. But the tendency to group ourselves into affinity-driven informal groups remains. In any corporation there are unofficial crowds where decisions are being made. It’s what people mean when they complain that there is too much politics in a company or that decisions are not transparent enough. 

Read More

The Twilight of Humanity & the Rise of Home Deus

The Twilight of Humanity & the Rise of Home Deus

I have a tendency to avoid hyped books. Sapiens and its sequel, Homo Deus, were definitely part of this category, having been praised by presidents or thought leaders (whatever that means). But an article about the meditative practice of the author, who’s also a jewish gay historian, spiked my interest. So.... I finally read both of them.

Read More

Armchair Strategising, Marx and Entrepreneurship

Armchair Strategising, Marx and Entrepreneurship

Marx reminds me of something that I call “armchair strategising”: felling in love with my own thoughts and  starting to believe that my grand theory of the world is somehow an accurate representation of it. Rather than the distorted, myopic interpretation that it really is.  

Like Marx, there is a large group of workers who are very susceptible to be caught in this narrative fallacy. I am part of this group: Entrepreneurs, product managers, executives. Knowledge workers in general, people working with abstract concepts and shipping equally abstract outputs: plans, strategies, models etc. Like Marx the theories we put forward are not just a hedonistic compressions that we use to entertain ourselves during otherwise boring cocktail parties. Our beliefs are tools in our daily work. 

Read More

Coding is NOT it

Coding is NOT it

It’s quite fashionable for most of the tech elites to preach coding as a required skill for all kids. Tim Cook, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg … all seem to think that the solution to the economic problems faced by million of disenfranchised workers can be solved by turning more people into coders. Thus they are pushing for coding to become part of the common curriculum for to everyone going through the public educational system. However I think Tim Cook (like most of his peers) is short sighted and that his predecessor had much better grip on human value than him ...

Read More

Were you born a hero or are you training to become one?

Were you born a hero or are you training to become one?

Are heroes born or made? The answer is surely both and neither, but I think it’s useful to consider the dynamics here for a minute. We tend to save these questions for the late night drinking party when the wine bubbles up our silliest questions. Frivolous or not, the answers to questions like this can put a light on some of our subconscious biases and beliefs that shape our day-to-day activity. Let's take a incursion into this topic: from ancient Greek philosophers to our 2 favourite super-heroes. 

Read More

A non-alarmist perspective of the A.I.pocalypse - Part 2

A non-alarmist perspective of the A.I.pocalypse - Part 2

Let’s continue the series on why the A.I. takeover are overblown. This time I would like to talk about our static worldview and our over-reliance on prediction. Peter Thiel defines definite and indefinite optimists and pessimists in his book, “Zero to One”. He remarks that people who look at the future as slightly-altered continuation of today will tend to focus on conservation of status-quo sprinkled with interventions when some random event disturbs the emotional tranquility of the society ... 

Read More

On the philosophical importance of Science Fiction

On the philosophical importance of Science Fiction

Science Fiction can be seen as an exploration of existing or future problems we are confronting with. There are two types of SF novels that I like. The first kind, practiced by Frank Herbert or George Orwell for example, uses alien, fictional environments as scenes that exacerbate current social issues. Their books serve as fictional laboratories that blow all humans convention out of the water thus allowing them to take current philosophical trends to the extreme.  Herbert, for example, does this with religion and cult-building as Dune, his famous sand planet, offers him the perfect environment to isolate the issue for literary exploration ...

Read More

A non-alarmist view of the A.I.pocalypse - Part 1

A non-alarmist view of the A.I.pocalypse - Part 1

AI is without a doubt the trendiest economic scare of the day. Technology pundits love to put forward apocalyptic scenarios about the impending takeover of the robots overlords. But very few question these dire prophecies, which is quite mind-boggling, considering that the AI alarmists are making some fundamental-logic mistakes that I think it's important to discuss. The topic of this first chapter is a deep dive into the concept of value, and it's (rather) miss-use in the media. 

Read More

What is strategy, and why should you care?

What is strategy, and why should you care?

Strategy. The adjective you use to make everything sound like it was based on serious research. You know, unlike the rest of the stuff that you come up without working them neurons. Let's take "directions" for example. By itself is a rather void  and boring word. Put strategy before it ….. and boom …. You get "strategic directions". Such a more inquiry-free language. It works with a lot of words: goals, plans, objectives, initiatives, organization etc. Pretty much anything. It's magic. Just like bacon. Makes everything better. 

Read More

Why Setting Priorities is Hard

Why Setting Priorities is Hard

We all deal with priorities and goal setting in our personal or professional life. And I recently realized that if you have problems  in picking and sticking with a list of priorities you don't have a priorities or a goal-setting problem. Most probably you have a strategy problem. Strategy details how a team will use the power available to the them to exercise control over sets of circumstances to achieve certain objectives.  Once that is decided the priorities become pretty clear.

Read More

Forget the TODO list! There is a better way of becoming more productive

Forget the TODO list! There is a better way of becoming more productive

How good are you at task management? Not so good eh! Have you tried the latest iPhone app? Some people claim it to be two times better than the app you used last month.  How about keeping your task on a paper? I heard that Tim Ferris swears by that method. Still nothing? Listen, it may be the process … have you heard of GTD? It's based on this book by David Allen. Still no improvement?

That was my life since I started my quest to increase my productivity. I used pen and paper. Many, many apps. Nothing worked. Until now ...

Read More

What a Turkish Merchant taught Me about Sales and Marketing

In 2011, Adelina and I decided to have our first real vacation as a couple. We picked Turkey as our destination, and after 5 days in Istanbul we landed in Bodrum, on the shores of the Mediterranean sea. But unlike in Istanbul, where we were staying in an amazing hotel with a stunning view and we had an infinite variety of things to do, Bodrum seemed like a crowded place with nothing to do. There wasn't a beach and our hotel sucked. Ohhh .... and we were staying there for a full week.

Read More

3 Things I Came to Understand about Strategy

3 Things I Came to Understand about Strategy

How come we always make a strategy and then something else happens?  Would we better off without any strategy since nothing we do seems to work? What is a strategy after-all?  - All questions I was asking myself during sleepless nights or during discussions with my colleagues. I knew the difference between strategy and tactic but somehow this "strategy" concept was one that I didn't fully use. Clearly I didn’t understand it completely.

Read More