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Life Putty - Life Is What You Shape It

Life Putty - June 2009

One More Day

June 30th 2009 15:38
Go live can be quite an exciting time. There is much anticipation and hope that the product you've spent months developing will be a smashing success right out of the gate. Dreams of fat paychecks and a life of luxury float through your head, thousands of naked woman chanting your name... Or that could be the complete lack of sleep. It is hard to tell, what with the sleeplessness and all.

From a technologists point of view go-live for a software or web-app is nerve-racking. You know you did it right, all the code is pure and simple,glorious and beautiful not full of ugly hacks and potentially crushing bugs. But then again did you double check that bug 247 has been resolved? Did I get to that issue or that one? Is it just a hacked kludge? Having not slept in days you start to wonder which reality to accept. As the deadline approaches the paranoia mounts and you begin to panic of issues that in effect are irrelevant.


And then it happens, the launch, the highly anticipated moment when all of your sleepless nights and months of work culminate in that one perfect moment. The world collectively sighs as the huge and unbearable issue that has hung over their lives for years is finally solved by your brilliant and easy to use web-application. You are heralded as a genius, the media sells your story on every network and news outlet.

Of course this never happens. Go live, the servers are running, and the trickle of people start to find you. And it is always a trickle. Marketing lets people know you exist, at first. Over time it builds up awareness, and then acceptance, and finally trust. No matter what you do, it takes time. The amount of time and the levels of success depend on how well you sell and how good the product is.


So here I am a day before the launch of a new product, having done this literally hundreds of times. I am not stressed, but that doesn't stop everyone around me from freaking out over every little unforeseeable, potential issue. It makes me laugh, which would get me punched if I was in the same office as them. Turns out happiness and safety is working from home on go-live.
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The Success Ladder

June 22nd 2009 17:30
A career for most people involves working for a series of companies climbing a ladder of promotions. From intern to entry level, through management, to Director, VP or CEO. I personally chose not to climb that ladder, I built my own. It starts at the bottom rung but you've got to have the rails laid out to have a ladder that will eventually lead somewhere.

First off I need to explain a little something about myself. I have tons of ideas, always coming up with new ones, and they catch my full attention easily. My wife says I have the attention span of a bird, Ooh bright and shiny object! This is very true, and I am naturally not very organized, somewhat of a chaos in motion. BUT, I enforce structure on this chaos to keep a path clear through all the distractions and mess that would otherwise overwhelm me. What I have found is that by writing down ideas in a notebook as they occur, allows me to put them aside to look at when I have free time. I also now schedule my time very strictly. I even have things like practice the guitar on my schedule. Without this strict structure I would waste time watching TV or spend hours screwing around with ideas that are far from the most pressing concerns


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No Excuses

June 22nd 2009 16:26
A common theme I have noticed when talking to failed entrepreneurs is the excuse factory. What is the excuse factory? Well it is the part of our brains that tries to justify anything we do, usually in relationship to failures. I'm sure everyone reading this post at one time or another has justified some self failing, whether it is the inability to keep your News Years Resolutions or why a diet failed. What I have found is that the successful entrepreneurs make no excuses. If they fail they learn from the mistake and move on, but they always accept the full responsibility and never, ever put the blame on anything or anyone else.

I recently had an apprentice who failed to meet a very important goal by deadline. Sometimes these things happen, though successful entrepreneurs rarely let it occur, it is inevitable you will fail at some point to meet a goal. His response to missing the deadline told me if he would succeed at being the self reliant self employed person he is trying to become. His response when I asked him why the goal was not met; "I failed to back up my work, next time I will have it on at least one other drive." His Hard drive had failed. It happens, and he learned a valuable lesson from it. His response was good; he screwed up, should have had a back-up and is working on catching back up (no pun intended


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Planning for Success

June 13th 2009 20:49
The first part of any plan is defining your goal. In the first part of this series I talked about the definition of success. For each individual this will be unique. But before a plan can be devised you must take the time to determine what success for you is.

I have talked to many people on this subject. Most people have no idea what success means to them and definitely don't have any way of getting there mapped out. If pressured most would say something like "A million dollars in the bank" or a "5000 square foot house" or something else quite meaningless


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Defining Success in Life

June 12th 2009 23:39
What criteria is used to measure the success of an individual? I think this question has as many answers as there are people on the planet. For some it would be the amount of money they make, others might measure success by the companionship of others, and yet others might be motivated by the experiences of their life. For me success is not an end goal but a state of being. I want to be able to do what I want, when I want. If I want to travel to Europe and follow my favorite Soccer team around for a month, or go to Australia and spend 3 months seeing the country I want the means and freedom to do these things. For many people this seems to mean being rich, as in having mountains of money. I do not see it that way at all...

To reach a lifestyle goal you need income that is free of location. Amazingly this is fairly simple to accomplish. It also doesn't hurt to have passive income, that is to say, income that does not need your direct input to occur. This is considerably more difficult to accomplish, but there are many paths that lead to it. Another major part of reaching this type of lifestyle is a very low "base overhead" cost of living. If your basic living needs are inexpensive, then you obviously need less income to cover these needs than someone with a higher cost of living


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