First Principles

 
 

If you believe the world is going to end tomorrow, and your significant other doesn’t, you’re likely going to have very different opinions about what to have for dinner tonight.

You'll be inclined to go to an expensive restaurant and live it up. Maybe a great steak with some expensive wine. Why not? It's all going to end tomorrow. Your partner, on the other hand, may just want a quiet, normal night at home. Maybe order a pizza or have leftovers or make something with whatever is in the refrigerator. You may end up having a big argument about what to have for dinner tonight.

But that's not the thing you should be arguing about. You should be arguing about the first principle: whether or not the world is going to end!

This happens all the time inside of companies. Colleagues argue about the small, day-to-day issues on the ground and forget about first principles. This is perfectly understandable. When you're moving fast, you're going to run into one another on micro issues that you're not aligned on. The key is to recognize when this becomes a trend, and then pull your head up, get the right people on a call, and get aligned on the high-level first principle that’s causing the disagreement.

Here are some examples of first principles inside of a company:

We err on the side of being transparent with employees.

We should pay employees above market.

Profit margins will suffer for a while while we invest in new products.

Diversity, equality, and inclusion inside of our company is a high priority.

Employees should be able to make their own decisions on how to spend company dollars.

Often, getting alignment on first principles is easy. The hard part is pulling up and out of the day to day noise and recognizing and calling out the misalignment. It's important to create forums — meetings, Slack channels, or some kind of document — that allows people to easily surface the misalignment. Companies that do this well can avoid an enormous amount of friction and will move much faster and smoother as a result.

Management Lessons From Keith Rabois

 
 

Keith Rabois is a very successful operator and tech investor. A couple of weekends ago, I listened to this talk he gave at the First Round Summit back in 2013. He shared some great insights on management and leadership in here, so I jotted down some notes on the things that resonated with me the most:

1/ Optimize around hiring people that are "relentlessly resourceful". 

2/ When managing someone, ask yourself if you're "writing" or "editing" their work? If you're writing for them, you need to fix it or replace them. For a sales leader, are you closing their deals for them, or are you coaching and tweaking little things?

3/ Everything can't be perfect. One of the hardest things President Eisenhower found when he became president was that he had to sign letters that were below his writing standards. There's too much to do. Get comfortable with 80% perfect for most things. Seek out the things that are important and get those right.

4/ A huge piece of hiring someone that can scale is finding someone who knows what they know and what they don't know. Knowing the difference is so important. People that know what they don't know will avoid big mistakes. 

5/ Be transparent. Seek to be so transparent that everyone on your team would make the same decision that you're making because they're operating under the same context.

6/ Politics in a company is driven by different people having different information. Avoid widespread politics by giving everyone the same information.

7/ Hire thought diverse people but pay attention to important first principles (particularly when hiring leaders). e.g. if you want to build a closed software platform, hire people that support that approach. Otherwise, you'll spin and keep coming back to first principles. 

8/ Hire and promote people that see things you don't see. This is invaluable. And create an environment where they can freely tell you what you're missing.