- true that starting a business can be good
- true that working for someone else can be good
- nearly all premises across both sides of the arguments here are false
Every paycheck you get is evidence that you’re probably pretty good at your job.
Every paycheck you get is evidence that you probably beat out some other good people to get that job. And continue to do so.
Working for someone else is an excellent choice most of the time.
Starting a business and working for yourself is a pretty bad idea most of the time.
There’s no shame or missed opportunity in having a job.
@BrianEDean I can’t decide between “Hairbrush Hour” or “Bald Men In Black” as the correct name for this buddy cop movie so I will leave both of them right here for you
This is what happens when the wealthiest generation in American history raises children in hyper-insulated, low-adversity environments. The irony these folks never seem to grasp is that every single one of their luxury beliefs don’t track to reality and worse, usually diminish the least fortunate
I don’t understand why SaaS businesses often have such complex billing structures. People (and businesses) will pay you 30-50% more than you’re charging if billing is simple. Money is deferred pain. Complexity is present pain. Complexity will kill you way before price does.
@sflorimm Sure but reductionism is a language game that can be pointed wherever you want. Facebook is just 1) take user data 2) storage, rank 3) display across the graph. Purity tests have no winners