Empathy vs Accountability

Mental health and toxic work cultures are the buzz words we hear all around us- and often for good reason. For far too long, bosses sat above it all, demanding, stealing and squeezing their people. Leaders in today’s world must do better. If you don’t already know this- know this.

Werk smorter, not harder.

When Adam told us he was making us each write a blog post, I panicked. What was I going to write about? Who would care about what I had to say? Then I realized there's an easy way to get others to help give me content: a Q&A, baby. Let the people tell me what to write. Werk smorter, not harder. 😉

What do I do when I'm not doing the things I should be doing? I make. Literally anything.

Remember being a little young, adult-ish thing trying to figure out what your passions were? I remember getting so frustrated in HS because I couldn't figure out what I was good enough at, that would make a real impact in this world. I’d daydream in class picturing myself in different career paths. Mrs. Chaney makes me laugh. Mostly because I’d probably just want to play games with the kids instead of teaching them how to read and stuff. I can't do blood so that crosses out the medical field (vet too). A professional scuba diver still sounds great minus the whole being underwater with sharks thing.

Judge a can by its cover.

We all are familiar with the phrase "don't judge a book by its cover", which is true for people, but not for cans. When I was 10 I had three things I loved: baseball, Batman, and cans. Why cans? I was fascinated by the art and weird flavors that came in those of  cans, which made me start a small collection. From The Shasta Colas, A&W Root beer to Coke cans from around the world, I picked up everything I could get my hands on. As any 10-year-old with limited funds, I kept my collection small and mighty. Soon enough I moved on to other things.

What's your story?

That question is intimidating, right? Especially when you are meeting someone for the first time and want to make a good impression. How does one even go about telling "their story"? Where do you start? Is it when you were a toddler first discovering yourself? Do you go into all the heartbreak and obstacles you’ve faced through life to get where you are today? If you’re like me, these questions arise when someone approaches you and says, “So tell me about yourself. What's your story?”  

You hear that, Sales? I'm not afraid anymore!

Sales is overcoming fear. Sales is saying to the world, we built something that is so valuable, I believe you should give me your money for it. In many cases, large sums of it. Sales is freaking scary, because it means you’re on the hook to deliver on your promise. We don’t just hide from sales because we’re scared of rejection, we hide because we’re scared we have not brought value to the world. Worse, we confuse that value with our own value, and that can send you to a dark place in a hurry.

Unpopular opinion: Your worth is what someone will pay you

I was at a party, and LinkedIn came up in conversation. It’s more than likely I brought it up. I told the person I was talking with about how much I enjoy sharing on it and that I regularly share my philosophy on how employees should be treated better. She smiled knowingly and said something like, “I bet people eat that up.” She’s right. They do. 

My favorite camera is the one in my pocket

Let’s settle the debate on what the best camera is – because it’s not the newest Sony A7R or Canon 5D. I believe the best camera is the one that is probably nestled in your hand right now: a smartphone. I recently upgraded from an iPhone SE to an iPhone 13 and the difference in camera capabilities is ridiculous, and that’s why I feel compelled to write this.

Fail so good

Before I started working at 5+8, I rarely tried my best at things because I feared failing. The thought of getting a bad review or a negative remark on anything that I did caused me to shy away from giving my all at whatever I was trying to do. In my mind, anything that I said, thought, or did that wasn’t “good” was an automatic failure. I’m sure some of you reading this can relate…