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Startup CEOs: Screw Your Strengths

12 pointsby AndyParkinsonover 11 years ago

4 comments

amplificationover 11 years ago
I like the point being made here: building a product is hard. But once you&#x27;ve built it, you have a new mountain to climb: building a business.<p>In our startup culture, &quot;building the business&quot; is usually delegated to a new CEO, brought in from the outside. I don&#x27;t think it has to be that way. Managing a business is hard, but it&#x27;s just a new challenge. Founders don&#x27;t have to give their business to someone else to manage.
phreanixover 11 years ago
It&#x27;s funny, I see so many crash courses offered on how to code, hack your way to a startup, etc., yet not a lot directed at actual startup owners&#x2F;CEO&#x27;s on exactly this: Now that you have a startup, what now?
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technotonyover 11 years ago
I&#x27;m not sure I agree with this entirely, yes you have to learn some new skills but it&#x27;s still important to focus on your strengths - just learn to delegate the other things. Steve Jobs is a great example of this in practice, by all accounts not so good at management but he made damn good products!
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petervandijckover 11 years ago
&quot;If you’re a great programmer and you love programming, do you really need to actively try focus on being a better programmer? Not really.&quot;<p>-&gt; Yes, I think you do. B.B. King practiced blues scales every day of his life.