Another Sure(r) Way to Invest No, this isn’t a post about how to get rich quick — if you’ve been a reader of the rest of this blog you’ll know I’m very much interested in exploring the mental models of great investors by unpacking how they make their investing decisions for long term compounding.
Failing Scaling As I continue to learn through work and from reading other companies that I follow, I recognize a trend that is pervasive even in the most high-tech of companies. Continue Reading →
(house)plants part six This summer I had the chance, for the first time, to grow my own vegetables in our garden. Continue Reading →
Being “Long Term” In almost every single personal finance and/or investment piece of advice somewhere in it is some form of a need to think “long term”. Continue Reading →
Yearn for Churn (if you’re this type of business) As SaaS, marketplace and subscription companies blossomed in the past decade, so has a cottage industry of bloggers, thought-leaders and advisors on providing support on how to reduce churn. Continue Reading →
Plants, part IV Okay, for the last time … in a while anyway … The other thing that I learned when being a houseplant parent is that there is a lot of information devoted to easy-to-care for houseplants. Continue Reading →
Opinion: On the Nature of Long-Term Holds In this week’s issue of Circle of Competence (#142) (highly recommended), one of the shared reads was a white-paper from the Yale School of Management, On the Nature of Long-Term Holds [of business investments]. Continue Reading →