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3
- #1
milkshakelake
Structural
- Jul 15, 2013
- 1,173
thread731-500307
I had a post about some life-changing stuff earlier. In a nutshell, I was overwhelmed with work and life balance. I promised I'd update but the thread was closed automatically, so here's what changed:
1. I gave up some power and let my employees take charge of things. They have made plenty of mistakes along the way, but almost everything was able to be fixed somehow and I rely on them more. A lot of mental pressure has been lifted. This has been a life saver.
2. I'm not hesitating to hire help for things when I need it (like for cleaning my house or fixing something). I might even get a personal assistant at some point. It might not work in terms of pure ROI, but might ease the pure flood of stuff to deal with (investments, work, insurance, registrations, etc). At the same time, I'm trying to strike a balance of not hiring and expanding too quickly.
3. I stopped trying to do tangential but heavy tasks like programming things myself. I'm just one person and can't do amazing things. I'll hire a programmer if I need to, based on ROI rather than trying to accomplish cool things.
4. I let go of a huge part of my ego, which wasn't easy. I'm still sure some of it is there. But I don't have to control every little thing because "I'm the only one who can do it properly."
5. I'm spending more time with my kid before he grows up and I lose that time forever.
Stuff I need to do:
I'm still more of an engineer than a businessperson. But I've been making the transition to doing less engineering and just letting others handle it. I see business decisions as the only path forward to really reduce my live load and "automate" things.
I had a post about some life-changing stuff earlier. In a nutshell, I was overwhelmed with work and life balance. I promised I'd update but the thread was closed automatically, so here's what changed:
1. I gave up some power and let my employees take charge of things. They have made plenty of mistakes along the way, but almost everything was able to be fixed somehow and I rely on them more. A lot of mental pressure has been lifted. This has been a life saver.
2. I'm not hesitating to hire help for things when I need it (like for cleaning my house or fixing something). I might even get a personal assistant at some point. It might not work in terms of pure ROI, but might ease the pure flood of stuff to deal with (investments, work, insurance, registrations, etc). At the same time, I'm trying to strike a balance of not hiring and expanding too quickly.
3. I stopped trying to do tangential but heavy tasks like programming things myself. I'm just one person and can't do amazing things. I'll hire a programmer if I need to, based on ROI rather than trying to accomplish cool things.
4. I let go of a huge part of my ego, which wasn't easy. I'm still sure some of it is there. But I don't have to control every little thing because "I'm the only one who can do it properly."
5. I'm spending more time with my kid before he grows up and I lose that time forever.
Stuff I need to do:
I'm still more of an engineer than a businessperson. But I've been making the transition to doing less engineering and just letting others handle it. I see business decisions as the only path forward to really reduce my live load and "automate" things.