My Favorite Reads of 2024: From Musk to Munger

2024 was a good reading year. I tackled 23 books throughout the year. The journey was filled with big ideas, surprising gems, and more than a few times when I tried to sneak “just one more chapter”. Let’s dive into my favorites, the surprises, and a complete rundown of everything I read (because who doesn’t love a good book list?).

The Favorites: MVPs of 2024

Some books don’t just entertain—they leave a lasting mark. These three did exactly that:

1. Going Infinite by Michael Lewis
This dive into the crypto drama surrounding Sam Bankman-Fried was a wild ride. Michael Lewis has a knack for turning chaos into page-turning magic, and this one doesn’t disappoint. If you ever thought, “What’s the deal with FTX?”—this book has the answer, and then some.

2. Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson
Part biography, part “How does this guy sleep?” guide. Isaacson’s deep dive into Musk’s life showcases the genius, ambition, and chaos of one of the most polarizing figures of our time. Love him or hate him, Musk is undeniably fascinating.

3. The Obstacle is the Way by Ryan Holiday
Ryan Holiday’s stoic wisdom is timeless, and this book is the ultimate guide to turning life’s challenges into opportunities. It’s like a pep talk from Marcus Aurelius—without the toga.

The Surprise Favorites: Unexpected Delights

A couple of books snuck up on me and turned into absolute gems:

1. George Lucas: A Life by Brian Jay Jones
Who knew the man behind Star Wars had such an epic journey? This biography dives into Lucas’s creativity, perseverance, and ability to revolutionize Hollywood. It’s a must-read for dreamers and innovators.

2. Excellence Wins by Horst Schulze
Who knew customer service philosophy could be so riveting? Horst Schulze, a co-founder of The Ritz-Carlton, shares his take on leadership, excellence, and creating a standout business culture. Bonus: It’ll make you think twice about how you treat others.

By the Numbers

  • Total Books Read: 23
  • Genres Explored
    • Biography: 4 books
    • Self-Development: 6 books
    • Business: 7 books
    • Technology/AI: 2 books
    • Creativity: 2 books
    • Philosophy: 2 books

What I Learned

Reading 23 books this year was like taking a crash course in life, business, and creativity. Here are the biggest lessons that stuck with me:

Visionaries bet big and persevere relentlessly
(Elon Musk and George Lucas: A Life showed that audacity and persistence can rewrite entire industries—or galaxies.)

Obstacles are opportunities in disguise
(The Obstacle is the Way reinforced that challenges are where growth and innovation happen.)

Culture eats strategy for breakfast
(No Rules Rules proved that building a culture of trust and accountability can make or break a business.)

Excellence begins with obsession
(Excellence Wins taught me that paying attention to the tiniest details can elevate an experience from good to unforgettable.)

Creativity thrives on imperfection
(The Creative Act reminded me to embrace the messiness of the creative process—it’s where the magic happens.)

AI isn’t just the future; it’s now
(Superintelligence and Atlas of AI offered both inspiration and a reality check about the profound changes AI is bringing to our world.)

Every story is a chance to learn
Whether it’s about junk removal (Excellence Wins), space travel (Elon Musk), or stoic philosophy (Stillness is the Key), every book carries insights that reshape how we see the world.

This year’s reading reminded me that growth comes from curiosity, deliberate practice, and a willingness to step out of my comfort zone—on the page and beyond.

The Full 2024 Reading List

Here’s everything I read this year, complete with links so you can explore them for yourself:

  1. Going Infinite by Michael Lewis (November 2023)
  2. Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson (November 2023)
  3. The Obstacle is the Way by Ryan Holiday (December 2023)
  4. Ego is the Enemy by Ryan Holiday (January 2024)
  5. Stillness is the Key by Ryan Holiday (January 2024)
  6. Tao of Charlie Munger by David Clark (January 2024)
  7. The Goal by Eliyahu M. Goldratt (February 2024)
  8. Atlas of AI by Kate Crawford (February 2024)
  9. Read Write Own: Building the Next Era of the Internet by Chris Dixon (February 2024)
  10. The Creative Act by Rick Rubin (February 2024)
  11. Superintelligence by Nick Bostrom (March 2024)
  12. A Million Miles in a Thousand Years by Donald Miller (March 2024)
  13. George Lucas: A Life by Brian Jay Jones (April 2024)
  14. No Rules Rules by Reed Hastings and Erin Meyer (April 2024)
  15. BYOB: Build Your Own Business, Be Your Own Boss by by Brian Scudamore (May 2024)
  16. Disney’s Land: Walt Disney and the Invention of the Amusement Park That Changed the World by Richard Snow (May 2024)
  17. Amp It Up by Frank Slootman (May 2024)
  18. Insanely Simple by Ken Segall (May 2024)
  19. Atomic Habits by James Clear (Reread in June 2024)
  20. WTF?! (Willing to Fail): How Failure Can Be Your Key to Success by Brian Scudamore (June 2024)
  21. Excellence Wins by Horst Schulze (August 2024)
  22. Inspired by Marty Cagan (August 2024)
  23. Transformed: Moving to the Product Operating Model by Remi Adeleke (October 2024)

2024 was packed with lessons, laughs, and the occasional existential crisis courtesy of a few AI books. Here’s to 2025 being just as thrilling—and maybe finding a few more surprises along the way. What’s on your reading list? Let’s swap recommendations (and maybe coffee suggestions for those late-night chapters). 📚

Turning Around a GovTech Giant: My Six Years at Accela

I stood at the BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) platform pensively waiting for my train to arrive.  My brain was lost in thought thinking of whatever was happening that day at my venture backed San Francisco tech start up.  The overhead display announced that a train headed for Balboa Park was arriving.  The first train horn blows validating what the display was trying to tell us.  The train begins to roll by. 

<TU-TUK><TU-TUK> — <TU-TUK><TU-TUK> — <TU-TUK><TU-TUK>

We all began to gather on the markers where the train doors were supposed to open.  Everyone was lost in their headphones and we were all invisible to each other. The BART train began to pull up to the platform.  More horns blew to make sure folks step away from the oncoming train.  You could see in the distance some commuters running towards the platform because they didn’t want to wait the 20 or so minutes for the next one. 

I commuted on BART for 10+ years.  1.5 hours one way.  3 hours a day.  15 hours a week.  60 hours a month.  720 hours a year or a complete month a year.  Keep in mind that this was before COVID so working remotely wasn’t as in vogue.  I needed a break from this commute.  I’ll admit that the recruiter had my attention when he told me the job with Accela was 15 minutes from my home. 

There were lots of other reasons I took the CTO role at Accela close to 6 years ago. 

  • The CEO and existing executive team — the CEO and the other executives really impressed me.  It was a crew that I could really work with. 
  • The investment team — the partners at Berkshire Partners were amazing and didn’t let me down though the years. 
  • The opportunity to transform state and local government — I enjoy transforming overlooked markets.  I think that was because of too many years chasing the next sexy thing earlier in my career.  Accela at the time was still building installers for state and local government to run in their data centers.  The cloud was something still found in the sky. 
  • A big fat mess to clean up — I enjoy cleaning up messes.  Accela at the time was one of the biggest messes I had seen.  It was a 20+ year old GovTech company with a bunch of non-integrated acquired assets floating around. The joke during the first few months was I would discover new products no one knew about because a customer would call that it was down.  Customers hated us. The team was broken.  Technical debt was overflowing out of the doors.  Data centers were long overdue for hardware refreshing.  I used to joke that the architecture was a Polaroid photo from 1999.  I said to myself that if I make it out of this mess alive, I’ll be able to write the book about it. 

I took on the CTO role responsible for all technical aspects of the business — application engineering, quality engineering, cloud engineering, security, compliance and IT.  

  • Rebuilt technology organization, resourcing model, and software development lifecycle (SDLC).
  • Rearchitected on-premises software product to highly scalable, cost effective, 99.9% uptime, multi-tenant SaaS platform.
  • Migrated product out of data centers into public cloud (Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services).
  • Re-rationalized and defined path out of previously acquired companies and technical debt.
  • Stabilized the business to the point that we were able to acquire companies again. 
  • Rebuilt security & compliance program (SOC3, PCI, GDPR, CCPA, StateRamp)
  • Represented the company at industry events and with the media.

Fast forward 6 years, it was like a textbook execution on turning around a distressed technology company.  In September 2023, Francisco Partners co-invested in Accela.

After the deal much of the executive team turned over and a smaller executive team was left executing on the post-deal plans and waiting for a new CEO to join.  It was important to me to follow through on commitments made through the deal and I wanted to engage with the new CEO.  I’m proud of what we accomplished at Accela to get a new deal and proud of the all that we accomplished after the deal as we set the company towards the next chapter of growth.  I learned so much at Accela and  from everyone at the company. 

  • The importance of team. 
  • Focus is a super power. 
  • Optimism is fuel. 
  • Challenge the status quo and focus on first principle thinking.

What am I going to do next?  I’ll have a separate blog post on that one but I will say that I’m going to stay true to what I care about.

  1. Find good people.
  2. Take the road less traveled.
  3. Continue to build great products that delight customers.  
  4. Find a big, overlooked market.

Stay tuned for more details on that.  Thank you for reading.  Leave a comment or ping me if you want to engage.  I appreciate you. 

-rjm

Finding Perspective.

Both my parents worked throughout my childhood.  They were out of the house by 7am and usually didn’t come home until 10pm at night. I developed my work ethic by watching them.  My mom would get called to the emergency room at all hours of the day.  I spent a lot of time hanging out with the emergency room nurses waiting for my mom to take care of something.  I was basically raised by a woman I called “Lola” but she was not actually my grandmother but rather a nanny from the Philippines. My first language was Tagalog because that what “Lola” spoke.  She was 4′ 6″ tall but could probably wrestle battle an ox in her prime. I loved her dearly like I do my parents.

Now, here is a tightly held secret.  Ok, not really.  My nickname as a child was “Joel”.  My dad and I have the same first name so somewhere along the lines they started calling me “Joel”.  I have no idea where the name came from and neither do my parents.  Upon moving to California after college, I decided to just stick with my legal name “Renato” after a work colleague suggested it.  The east coast knows me as “Joel” and the west coast knows me as “Renato”.  At my wedding, half the attendees were there for “Renato & Sarah’s Wedding” and the other half was there for “Joel & Sarah’s Wedding”. To this day, I respond to both names!

Well, my Lola spoke very little English even as I grew up into my teens.  My friends would come over asking for me and my Lola would provide short answers and close the door.  For example,

  • “Joel School” — I was at school
  • “Joel Work” — I was working in my parents office
  • “Joel Gym” — I was working out
  • “Joel Eat” — I was out grabbing food
  • “Joel Girl” — I was out with my girlfriend at the time she didn’t like. 

Fast forward, I went with my friends to the Grateful Dead concerts at the Meadowlands in New Jersey.  A buddy of mine came to the door and my Lola responded “Joel Dead” and slammed the door.  Well, needless to say my buddy freaked out and this was before cell phones.  I’m sure I must have been dead to him for most of that day until I got back from the show. 

Alas, Joel is not actually dead but the story does remind us about the importance of perspectives.  Lola just wanted to provide information on where I was.  My buddy just wanted to know where I was.  Joel just wanted to listen to some jamming music.  Referring to myself in the 3rd person felt appropriate right there.

Gaining perspective is a crucial element in both life and business.  It allows us to see situations from different angles, leading to more informed and balanced decision making. Perspective isn’t something we’re born with; it’s developed over time through experiences, challenges, and by actively seeking to understand viewpoints that differ from our own. Whether it’s through travel, reading, or engaging in meaningful conversations with people from diverse backgrounds, each of these activities enriches our understanding of the world. In business, having a broad perspective can lead to innovative solutions and help navigate complex challenges with a clearer vision.

All that being said, having a strategic perspective is incredibly challenging because it requires the ability to step back from immediate concerns and view the broader landscape, often in a highly complex and rapidly changing environment. This means looking beyond day-to-day operations to consider long-term goals, potential risks, and emerging opportunities. However, the difficulty lies in balancing this long-term vision with the urgent demands of the present. We are often so focused on immediate tasks and short-term results that it becomes difficult to shift our mindset to a more strategic level. Additionally, the uncertainty of the future and the vast amount of information that must be processed and interpreted to make strategic decisions can be overwhelming. As a result, maintaining a strategic perspective requires discipline, focus, and the ability to anticipate and adapt to change—a skill set that is not easily mastered but is essential for sustained success.

Now, lets apply some perspective to my life in the form of a time line backwards and forward from 2024.  I started 29 years ago at my high school and moved forward 29 years into the future. This is what I came up with.

1995 (29 years ago)

Graduated from Fairfield College Preparatory School

1997 (27 years ago)

First coding job at Lockheed Martin LMS in Tarrytown, NY

1999 (25 years ago)

Graduated from the University of Richmond 

2003 (21 years ago)

Sarah and I get married in California

2006 (18 years ago)

Molly was born 

2010 (14 years ago)

Brooklyn was born 

2023 (1 year ago)

2028 (+4 years)

Brooklyn Graduates High School, Molly Graduates College

Raising Amazing Daughters. Proud Dad.

2032 (+8 years)

Brooklyn Graduates College

2033 (+9 years)

Sarah and Renato married 30 years

2039 (+15 years)

Average retirement age and social security eligibility

2043 (+19 years)

Sarah and Renato married 40 years 

2044 (+20 years)

Average life expectancy of Filipino male (67 years old)

2051 (+27 years)

Average life expectancy of American male (74.8 years old)

2053 (+29 years)

Sarah and Renato married 50 years

The timeline provides a unique perspective on my life.

  • Life is short and moves fast.
  • My wife Sarah is my most consistent passenger with me on this ride.
  • I have more years behind me than ahead of me.
  • Family and friends are things that hold the test of time.
  • Physical belongings fad away into the background. 

Perspective helps with finding joy because in the bigger picture, so many things we worry about are irrelevant and we have so many more things to be grateful for.  Don’t waste a minute. Live life to the fullest. Find your joy. Make a dent in the universe.

Thanks for reading.  I hope you enjoyed!

-rjm

And the Next Chapter Begins.

Quote — “Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”
– Ferris Bueller, Dr Richard Chambers. “

Nothing really prepares you for a child leaving home for college.  It’s an emotional experience for the entire family.  Regardless of the squabbles and petty irritations, family is family.  Invisible, deep bonds are created that are hard to explain until that person isn’t around anymore.  In the case of our kids, those bonds have been forming since they came home from the hospital and strengthened with every experience together. 

The internet gophers tell me that parents will spend 70-90% of their time with their kids before their kids turn 18.  That seems likes one of those internet facts that float around as true but its unclear what real data supports it.  Regardless, this feels very true for me. After I left for college, I never returned to the area my parents lived and came back infrequently only for holidays. 

I went the University of Richmond in Richmond, Virginia.  Richmond is about 410 miles from our then home in Connecticut.  The drive can take about 6 hours depending on traffic with the exception of one trip back to school one fateful Sunday after Thanksgiving where it took me 18 hours.  I thought it was a good idea to stop in Manhattan and Washington DC to drop off many sister and a buddy.  What a horrible drive. 

This past weekend we brought my older daughter to college in Boston, Massachusetts.  Or, 2341 miles from our home in Utah.  The two weeks before I left for college was chaos.  I was excited to go to college but sad to say goodbye to my friends and family.  Packing was the least of my concerns behind making sure to say goodbye to everyone that I could.  Molly and I had similar experiences as I was up until midnight helping her pack.  Four massive 50+ pound bags later, she was packed.  I’m sad to see Molly go but thrilled at this new chapter.  Her future is so bright and we couldn’t be more proud of her.   

What advice do I have for Molly as she heads to college?  

  • Find your joy and smile.  Life is short.  Enjoy it. 
  • Make a dent in the universe.  It’s waiting for you to make your mark. 
  • Take risks.   Don’t let overthinking or public perception stop you from taking a swing. 
  • Work hard.  There are no hacks around hard work.  
  • Avoid victimhood mentality. Work your way through problems.
  • Take care of yourself.  No one else is going to. 
  • Enjoy the moment.  It’s right in front of you. 
  • Trust the universe.  You’ll connect the dots when you’re old.  The ups and downs all add up in the end. 

We will miss you Molly.  Enjoy your time in college and make smart decisions!  As I write this on the plane ride back from Boston, my heart is heavy thinking that Molly’s bedroom will be empty when we get home. 

The family and I will be frequent fliers between Salt Lake City and Boston over the next few years.  If you see a slightly overweight middle aged Filipino man in an MIT Women’s Soccer hat on, its probably me.  Say hi!     

By the way, go MIT Women’s Soccer

Thanks for reading. 

-rjm

Change & Taking the Road Less Traveled.

Change is hard.  We all like the comfort of the familiar even when the familiar is not enjoyable.  That is how much work and energy change can take.  The gravity of life pulls toward stasis and inaction.  Thats why popular books like Atomic Habits say that small habits make a big difference over time.  Any action is better than inaction.  And ya know what is even harder?  Making change in a direction that that is “different”.  Taking the path less traveled.  Doing something that not everyone desires.  We are drawn to homogeneity.  Social media is the grand normalizer towards homogeneity.  We desire what is in our feed.  Embracing change and taking the path less traveled takes courage but the reward is growth, learning and insight. 

René Girard, a French historian, literary critic, and philosopher, is best known for his theory of mimetic desire. Girard posits that human desires are not innate but rather imitative; we desire objects because others desire them. This concept, known as mimetic desire, suggests that imitation is a fundamental aspect of human behavior, leading not only to competition and rivalry but also to conflict and violence. According to Girard, this cycle of imitation and rivalry can be observed in literature, history, and religion. His work has profound implications for understanding human behavior, social structures, and the mechanisms of violence. Girard’s theories challenge traditional views on desire and offer a unique lens through which to examine the dynamics of human relationships and societal conflicts. 

The theory of mimetic desire keeps us in our lanes.

When people ask me where I’m from I usually just tell them I’m from New York.  Its easy.  Everyone knows where New York is.  But in reality, I’ve spent most of my childhood in Connecticut.  Does anyone really know anything about Connecticut?  Fairfield County feels like another New York City borough and the rest of Connecticut  feels like an extension of Massachusetts with some insurance in Hartford and gambling near where they filmed Mystic Pizza.  My life journey started in Brooklyn, NY where I was born and then went through Queens, Manhattan, West Hartford Connecticut, Newtown Connecticut and then Ridgefield Connecticut.  I really enjoyed my childhood in Connecticut.  I’m pretty sure we were the only Asian family living in Ridgefield, Connecticut.  Us and another Asian family that owned the local Carvel Ice Cream store downtown.  We would go there for some soft serve and give each other the secret Asian handshake knowing there were not that many of us in this town.  Growing up I imagined myself moving back to Connecticut and settling into a classic New England home with my family and two Saint Bernard dogs.  Most of my childhood friends stayed in the tri-state area.  A recent trip back to Ridgefield brought back all of those thoughts and memories.  But, that was a fork in the road in life.  I never went back.  I opted for change on the road less traveled.  I moved to California and never looked back.  22 years in the Bay Area.  My reward — growth, learning, insight and entirely different path in life.

Fast forward 22 years, we were faced with another fork in the road.  Governor Gavin Newsom Issued the stay at home order on March 19, 2020.    That same week I watched a maintenance crews take town the basketball hoops to prevent folks from gathering in our local parks.  School and sports programs basically shut down and families huddled at home trying to figure out what would happen next.  My family and I made the hard decision to leave California for Park City, Utah that summer of 2020.  It was massive change and definitely the road less traveled.  We were living in a highly desirable Bay Area suburb for a mountain town where we knew no one and were not even Mormon.  We decided in June 2020 and were moved into our new home by August 2020.  I would say this was probably one of the best decisions we could have made at the time.  Park City, Utah has been tremendous for our family.  4 years in — we love it here.  We’ve grown and learned so much as a family and dodged some bullets along the way. 

If you are curious, here are some blog posts that document that ride —

In both the examples above, I should have just stayed in New York/Connecticut and we should have just stayed in California.  Change is good.  Find your own path.  Trust the universe. 

Survivorship bias would guide me to on providing the examples where the change I made worked out positively.  In reality, my life is filled with mistakes.  I could devote an entire blog post on just a mistakes I’ve made in life.  The most notable was when I quit my high paying technology job and decided to start location based, augmented reality game start up.  Oh yeah, our second child was born right around that time as well.  Did I mention I have the most supportive, loving and caring wife ever?  I wrote about that adventure in a previous blog post.  In summary, we raised some money, won several start up competitions, had a fun time but we were far too ahead of the curve.  It was a big fat failure and a crushing blow to my ego but looking back, I learned so much about that journey.  It was worth the change and risk but please don’t ask my wife. Haha. 

Peter Thiel, a prominent entrepreneur and venture capitalist, is best known for co-founding PayPal and Palantir Technologies, as well as being the first outside investor in Facebook. Thiel is also the author of “Zero to One,” a book that explores how to build successful startups and create innovative technologies. His influence extends across Silicon Valley, where he is regarded as a thought leader in technology and finance. One of his favorite interview questions, “Tell me something true that very few people agree with you on,” is designed to reveal a candidate’s ability to think independently and challenge conventional wisdom. This question tests not only originality and critical thinking but also the courage to hold and defend contrarian views, which Thiel believes is crucial for driving innovation and achieving groundbreaking success. This approach reflects Thiel’s own philosophy of seeking out and fostering unique ideas that have the potential to transform industries and society.

My answer to the question — Every company is a technology company with the proper leadership and mindset.  This isn’t limited to traditional Silicon Valley technology companies. Artificial intelligence pushes the assertion further with so many core business functions being disrupted.  I say this isn’t mainstream thinking because most companies still have business leaders running traditional IT functions and don’t think how they can make technology a strategic advantage. 

How would you answer Peter Thiel’s interview questions? 

Don’t be afraid to embrace change and find the road less traveled.  Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn’t but rest assured you’ll likely learn something new along the way and grow as a person.   

Thanks for reading.  Lots of stories.  Lots of reflection.  Find your change.  Take the road less traveled.  Growth, learning and insight will be your reward. 

-rjm

Artificial Intelligence & Me

In the vast realm of science fiction, few names shine as brightly as Isaac Asimov. As a young reader, I found myself captivated by the intricate universes he wove in novels like Foundation and I, Robot. These stories, where artificial intelligence and robotics played pivotal roles, ignited a spark in me that would later pave the path of my own career. Today, as I delve into the intricate tapestry of my journey with artificial intelligence, it’s impossible not to look back at those early days of wonder, where Asimov’s words provided not just entertainment, but inspiration for a future I had yet to envision.

It’s official, I have secured Renato.mascardo.ai.  This has moved up the value of my blog by 10x.  Kidding. Kinda. Artificial Intelligence has created both rational and irrational reactions.  One would argue AI has propped up the stock market when everything AI related has killed while everything else looks “eh”.  Seven of the top 10 largest companies in the United States by market cap have major AI value propositions.

My career has seen its waves of innovation.  I am so grateful for having been part of such a fruitful period for computer science.  It has been such a fun ride and it doesn’t seem to be letting up.

As one would expect, each wave builds upon the next and is a combination of previous achievements and learnings.  AI is a combination of data, copious amount of distributed compute, innovation in gpu chips and foundational data / data science / machine learning / deep learning practices.

So, here are a few common questions I’ve better getting recently about AI —

What is you perspective on Artificial Intelligence? 

Artificial Intelligence represents both an opportunity and existential risk for companies.  Similar to other technology waves, something very fundamental is shifting under existing companies.  This shift can create new markets and provide opportunities to wedge into existing markets.  We should see new interaction models and all new levels of efficiency with AI.  

This is where it’s critical to be in continuous first principle thinking.  Assumptions should be challenged. Experimentation should be the norm.  Action should be taken. 

What experience do you have with machine learning / deep learning / Artificial Intelligence? 

  • Mercury Interactive / HP Software (2004) — processed the millions / billions of production alerts to provide an elevated alerting or automate action. 
  • Abaca Technology (2007) — created a totally new AI approach for handling email SPAM.
  • DigitalGlobe (2010) — built one of the first and largest at the time GPU based supercomputers that was used to run advanced algorithms for higher level processing on digital satellite imagery.  These algorithms did things like cloud cover detection, change detection and image feature recognition.
  • Atari (2012) — built AI based real-time adjustment of gameplay based on individual progress through the game. 
  • Rosetta Stone (2014) — built AI based content creation platform.   
  • Recurly (2018) — built AI based Dunning management solution. 

What will the next 5-10 years of AI innovation bring us? 

Buckle up.  The pace of AI improvements is fierce and everyone wants to get there first.  Watch out for the hyperbole and emotions through the technology adoption life cycle but rest assured we’ll see the shift on the other side.  This feels like it’s going to go faster than we think.

Thank you for reading.  Please drop me a note if you have a comment.  I appreciate you. 

-rjm

Work after 25 years.

25 years ago this summer three buddies of mine made our way across Europe. We all graduated college and were doing the customary post-graduation Eurail European adventure. We started in Italy and worked counter clockwise across the European continent ending the trip in Spain. The stories are endless.

  • We drove too fast in a promotional Hertz rental car that was all yellow and covered in logos. 
  • We climbed the Swiss alps. 
  • We consumed so much beer in Munich that I somehow was able to sing Lithuanian folk songs through the streets at 3am.
  • We got wildly lost in the red light district of Amsterdam. 
  • We recreated scenes from the Sound of Music in Vienna. 
  • We drank sangria all night and ran with the bulls in Pamplona, Spain the next morning with no sleep. I’m pretty sure we slept on a street bench that night.  
  • And the stories go on and on. 

When it was all done, I loaded up a U-Haul with two buddies and we drove from Connecticut to the center of technology, Silicon Valley.  Silicon Valley was where I needed to be.  I had a Computer Science degree in hand and dreams to change the world.  Fast forward to today — I’ve been driving technology products and teams for 25 years now and have been fortunate to take all sorts of awesome products to market in many different scenarios — start ups, venture backed, public companies, private equity backed, consumer, enterprise, education, government, financial.  From no name brands to big brands, I just worked my ass off and continue to work my ass off.  I like it that much. 

25 years of hard work hard work requires some reflection. As I’ve said in previous blog posts, sometimes this reflection is for me as much it is for anyone else. My blog posts are like public journal entries. Below are some higher level questions that I was reflecting upon —  

What have I learned? 

Here are is a list of axioms I’ve picked up along the way in no particular order.

  • Play chess, not checkers.
  • First principle thinking is paramount.
  • Keep challenging your assumptions. 
  • Get your team as close to the customer as possible.
  • It’s all about the people and your teams.
  • Micromanagement only gets you so far.
  • Try to lead, not manage.
  • Be genuine. 
  • Be respectful. 
  • Work hard. 
  • Stay hungry.
  • Listen more.  Talk less. 
  • Setbacks are opportunities.
  • Ego kills.
  • Keep your standards high.  Don’t settle. 
  • Stop the whining.   
  • Have urgency but be patient. 
  • Smile and laugh more.

What adjustments have I had to make after 25 years of working?

Experience can be a blessing and a curse.  Yes, there exists 25 years of experience to draw from but that doesn’t mean I know everything.  Ego can get in the way of learning new things.  “I’ve done this enough, I know what I’m doing” becomes the new slogan.  Its important to not get caught in that mindset. The reality is “I don’t know everything, I’ve not seen all situations.” Keep an open mind.

Additionally, the more experience you have the more career optionality you have which makes it too easy to bail out of one situation and into another rather than doing something differently.  I have to apply first principles thinking to myself in these scenarios.  I don’t always have all the answers.  My assumptions that I’ve held for years likely have changed.  Feedback is good. 

What is my perspective on the next 15 years of work? 

I think I’d like to take this train 15 more years. 40 years of work feels like a nice round number.  I’m happy with the success/exits under my best but I enjoy work too much to retire. If I keep picking them right, there probably feels like two more big rides.  That seems reasonable.  Currently, the technology future excites. We are pushing into another huge technology wave with artificial intelligence (AI).  AI is every geeks dream. Frankenstein. Hal.  Rosie. Jarvis. Roy Batty. Wall-E. R2D2. C3PO  We’ve been day dreaming of a world with AI beings for years.  We are  going to see an another profound technology shift over the next 5-15+ years and its going to go faster than we think.

What would I be looking for if I were evaluating new opportunities?

My work motivators in my twenties are surely different than my motivators in my fourties. As a kid, I wanted to be featured in a TechCrunch blog post and bags of money. I wanted to prove to my parents that I could make it as a technologist and not a medical doctor. Time passes by and I am looking for different things. I am definitely less motivated by money.

Now, I care deeply about …

  • the people I work with.
  • the impact I can make.
  • the opportunity being big and bold.

What would you tell yourself from 1999? 

  • Keep building. 
  • Take more risks.  
  • Stop listening to other people.
  • Stop overthinking things.
  • Find the road less traveled.
  • Make time for your friends and family. 

I like to say “trust the universe”.  Things seem to work out. I’m grateful for my career path and all the wonderful people I’ve been able to work with along the way.  I’m not sure I would have done it any other way.  Here’s to another 15 years of building innovative products!  

Thank you for reading.  I appreciate you. 

-rjm

Raising Amazing Daughters. Proud Dad.

Happy belated Father’s Day 2024.

A few years back, my younger daughter Brooklyn came home from school and asked me what “thats what she said” jokes were.  She was probably 10 years old at the time.  I giggled on the inside and said “Never heard of ’em” trying to avoid the topic.  I guess some smarty pants at school had watched enough episodes of The Office without his/her parents supervision and these jokes became something of sideshow during class. 

Brooklyn was not satisfied with my response and then asked my wife Sarah what these jokes were all about — to which, Sarah asked me if I could explain.  Apparently, she didn’t know what those jokes were either.  Facepalm.  How do I get out of this predicament?       

I gave Sarah “big eyes” and politely changed the topic.  I went for the the nuclear weapon of child topic changes, “When should we go back to Disney World?”

<pause>

Brooklyn was not satisfied.  In protest, Brooklyn decided to say “thats what she said” after everything followed by “did that work?” hoping to discover its true meaning.  This proved very annoying and sometimes very funny.  I asked Brooklyn nicely who was the fine young boy/girl that was sharing such jokes at school so that I could thank his parents.  I promised I wouldn’t do anything with the information.  Brooklyn leaned in and said quietly whispered in my ear, “thats what she said”.

Nothing really prepares you for parenthood or to become a dad.  There are 100’s of parenting books out there trying to educate fearful parents on the perils ahead.  Some are aptly named —

Once you get into it, parenting feels natural but awkward at the same time.  Like going to Costco but forgetting to wear pants.  Mother nature dials in enough parenting in our DNA and then the rest parents just need to figure out.  I find it fascinating that the parenting formula feels different for every kid.  Two kids with the same parents, raised in the same households can be entirely different people when they grow up.  Two kids, raised in totally different socio economic households can be entirely different people when they grow up and not necessarily with the lives you might expect.  There is a randomness to the variables involved in the equation.  Thats probably why there are so many different parenting books with contradicting viewpoints.  

Sarah and I had a few pillars we always drove home with the kids –

  • Find your passion — Find the things that creates a fire in your belly every morning.  
  • Work hard — Enjoy the grind.  There are no life hacks around just getting the reps in.  
  • Have a growth mindset — Setbacks are growth.  
  • Trust the universe — The pieces come together when you look back but never looking forward. 

Molly and Brooklyn have big milestones this year.  Molly graduated from high school.  She will be attending MIT in the Fall and playing on the MIT Women’s Soccer team.  She hopes to study Chemical-Biological Engineering + Business. Brooklyn graduated from 8th grade and will be attending Park City High School.  She will be focused on academics, basketball (as a point guard) and soccer (as a goalie).  Same parents, same household, two very different kids.  Molly is like her mom.  Brooklyn is more like me.  Both are absolutely the two most amazing two girls a parent could ask for. 

I’m grateful for my two girls and having a partner like Sarah to share in the joys of parenthood.

Thank you for reading!  And good luck on your parenting journey!  That’s what she said.

-rjm

Ski Season 2023-24: Plenty of POW to go around

The 2023-24 Ski Season has come to an end.  There is only a two mountains left open in Utah as I write this blog post —

  • Sundance – April 7, 2024 closing
  • Powder Mountain – April 7, 2024 closing
  • Alta – April 21, 2024 closing
  • Deer Valley Resort – April 21, 2024 closing
  • Park City Mountain – April 22, 2024 closing
  • Snowbasin – April 28, 2024 closing
  • Brian Head — May 12, 2024 closing
  • Solitude — May 12, 2024 closing
  • Brighton – May 19, 2024
  • Snowbird — open weekends at least through Memorial Day 2024

The skis are put away.  The boots have gathered a little dust.  The winter tires are getting swapped out.  The heat cable have been turned off.  A few of the lawn chairs have come out of storage. The sprinklers will be opened in a few weeks.  I’ll start to warm up the mountain bikes soon after that. But, that didn’t stop mother nature from dropping a foot of fresh snow at our house the week of May 6th.

This past ski season was fantastic.  No complaints.  The snow came early and kept coming all season long.  It wasn’t the 2022-2023 season but I don’t think we will see a season like that for a while. Below are the season totals coming from my favorite weather app, OpenSnow — a solid season of snow.

  • My home -> 209″
  • Park City Mountain Resort -> 459″
  • Deer Valley -> 413″
  • Snowbird -> 607″
  • Alta -> 667″
  • Snowbasin -> 423″
  • Solitude -> 573″
  • Brighton -> 610″
  • Powder Mountain -> 368″

My ski buddy Brooklyn and I had most of our days at Park City Mountain Resort spending many days on the Canyons side.  It’s too convenient for us.  We live only 15-minutes from the base of Canyons.  The new thing this season was paid parking on the Park City side and that put a damper on my days on that side mostly because I’m a cheap person.  I don’t like paying for parking if I don’t need to. I usually ski with a PB&J in my backpack. 

Deer Valley came in second as I maxed out my IKON days there.  Deer Valley provides a truly specular ski experience.  I’m excited for their expansion in the upcoming years despite all the locals complaining.   

Public Service Announcement: Please don't complain to me on the chairlift. I say hello and more often than not folks want to vent to me about something.  

"Vail stinks. The Deer Valley expansion is dumb. Parking is a mess. Why are we stopped! Why are these lifts not open? The food is so expensive. I'm a local, they need to treat me differently. I was here before Vail was."

Enough. Enjoy where you are. Shut up for a second and just enjoy the outdoors. Skiing is a luxury, not a right. And no, skiing can't be like how it was 20 years ago. Time moves forward. Life is too short. Enjoy it or stop doing it.

Snowbird and Alta are two of my favorite mountains but I found myself there only a few times this season.  Travel there through the little cottonwood pass is a true commitment and less interesting when there are great options closer. 

Overall, I ended up with 30-40 ski days.  A respectable number given that I am not yet retired.  I was not as adventuresome this season as I wanted to be.  I didn’t make it to any resorts outside of Utah and didn’t make it to Powder Mountain, Snowbasin or Solitude.  I definitely didn’t do any backcountry, snowcat or heliskiing which I’ve alway wanted to do.  I’ve had less interest in the more extreme skiing as I’ve gotten older and definitely since my stroke two years ago.  So much of my enjoyment is about just being outside and enjoying that with others.      

My favorite thing about the end of ski season is the end of ski season sales!  I’ve never understood paying full price for any ski gear.  Just plan ahead and wait until the season ends.  My daily ski last season was my Faction Agent 3 (106 over foot).  Flat tail, lightweight, touring ski with a great shape. I liked it so much I got the Faction Agent 4 (114 over foot) at the end of last season for those power days.  It floats over powder with ease.  My end of this season purchase was the Faction Agent 1 (86 over foot).  I wanted a shorter, narrower ski for moguls and trees.  All the above have Look bindings which are my favorite.  I also upgraded my ski pants, gloves and socks with Stio gear.  My favorite outdoor clothing brand. 

Alas, rest assured the snow will be back. Meanwhile, let the Spring and Summer begin!  

Thank you for reading.  I appreciate you! 

-rjm

Being Your Most Authentic, Genuine Self.

As a kid, I loved playing with silicon breast implants. No joke. They were all over my parents office on display for patients to look at and play with.  This was before they shifted to salt water filled breast implants due to cancer risk.  I didn’t know the difference.  I didn’t even know what they were used for. Seriously. They were just super fun to play with.  Like stretchy stress balls but more fun.  I could juggle them.  Whip them around  the room like frisbees.  Or, just mush them around like a gelatinous putty.  By the way, I never claimed to have a normal childhood. And don’t worry, the ones I were flinging around the room were only for display purposes.

My mom was a Filipino, plastic surgeon living and working in the New York/Connecticut area.  She loved her non-authentic Gucci bags and other high end brands.  Even culturally Filipinos love their brand names.  My brother, sister and I grew up caring deeply about our public perception.  It wasn’t wrong.  It just was.  As I’ve grown older, I’ve come to appreciate the importance of being your genuine self, free from overt influence by social media or other external forces. 

Being your most authentic, genuine self is …

  • Being vulnerable.
  • Being humble.
  • Being honest.
  • Knowing who you are.
  • Being comfortable in your own skin.
  • Connecting what you say with how you act.
  • Finding your true confidence.
  • A representation of true leadership.
  • Being human. 

Social Media has ruined all of us.  I can’t tell what is real anymore. We are viewing the lives of others through a narrow and highly curated lens. We are seeing what most folks want us to see and then we are subconsciously comparing the entirety of our lives to that.

We all must find our most authentic, genuine self and be proud of it. Care less what others think of you. Be who you are and do the things that make you happy.

Thank you for reading.  I appreciate you. 

-rjm