@shashanksahayy 1. Think about my strengths, long term goals & mission
2. Identify development areas
3. Invest in learning and thought exchange (books, blogs, communities, courses)
4. Get mentorship
5. Make these goals known at work along with things that important
6. Apply and Repeat
"Most people" do what "Most people" do.
This is a huge mistake. In the US:
* 50% of marriages end in divorce or separation
* 60%+ of the pop. is obese or overweight
* 70% of people have less than $1k in savings
What "most people" are doing isn't working
If people think of you as only a “design leader," "eng leader" or “data leader” who only works on “design," "eng" or “data” problems, rather than company or product problems, it will be hard for them to follow you if they don't consider themselves part of your discipline.
(5/9)
On #ValentinesDay, & EVERYDAY, don’t forget to give some love to your city, & everyone you share it with. We can all use it these days. HT @aurbanist for the passionate reminder from friend & #Toronto ex-chief planner Paul Bedford
Today, share one thing you LOVE about your city.
🚨🚨An idea has no value until it’s built right 🚨🚨
Here’s a super duper basic checklist:
☑️ Solves real people problems, with a deep understanding of their hopes, needs and aspirations
☑️ is MVPed right (Functional, Usable, Emotional)
☑️ is Validated
@RahulBhosale__ Auroville – Amazing community of creators, peaceful vibes, great pizzerias, & beach.
Khajuraho – This city will surprise you! Great food, affordable stay & quaint.
Mussoorie –Great views & food, affordable hostels & co-working spaces.
Udaipur – Accessible tourism and spicy food.
@allisongrayce If it harms the user, it fails.
If it harms the business, it fails.
If it harms the community, it fails.
Good design must do no harm to any of the three, which is why good design is hard.