You’re meant to do what you’re good at

In a similar vein to Cal Newport’s 99u talk [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIMu1PGbG-0], Brianna West makes the case that focusing on what you love is misguided. The problem at the heart of this issue? > People usually can’t differentiate what they really love and what they love the idea of. And this leads to: > Premeditating what we think we’d love to do without actually being in the thick of it is the beginning of the problem, and having too much ego to scrap it and start over is the end.…

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The definitive guide to customer success

I talk a lot about customer success here, and that will likely only increase over time. It’s what I focus on every day, after all. If you're new to the “field” or are curious of what it entails, this guide from Lincoln Murphy is a great place to start. It’s a longer piece of writing and covers his definition of customer success, several tangential thoughts about what it is and isn’t, then he gets to the practical. The end of the guide is broken into a list that covers “the role of customer succ…

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To-do lists are not the answer to getting things done

I’ve resisted the idea that tasks should be added to your calendar. Something of a purist in me rejects the idea, but it may be that I’m coming around. Shane Parrish makes the case for the practice. He starts with bravado: > SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE DON’T MAKE TO-DO LISTS. His solution: > The real value in life comes from saying no. To help you say no you need some friction. The solution to the to-do list problem is actually pretty simple. You have to make one change: schedule it. Anything you want…

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Finding your bliss station

Austin Kleon shares how he and wife try to cultivate a space and a time where one can get away from the world. > Kids, jobs, sleep, and a thousand other things will get in the way, but we have to find our own sacred space, our own sacred time. I give this a hearty, “Amen!” As one who values some daily time away from all the activity and people of my life, I appreciate the idea. And I can understand the need for both a space and time. Oddly enough, I appreciate both. During the workday, I appre…

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Getting value from wireframes

Dustin Senos shared how getting value from creating wireframes eluded him early in his career. Now, every bit of his work benefits from this practice. What changed? He started using paper. > I want to share a simple technique I now use to force myself to explore and validate multiple directions before I dive into visual design. For the rest of this article, a “wireframe” is a sketch on paper. Paper wireframes are quick to make and reinforce that ideas are cheap and safe to throw away. Paper, al…

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