It’s amazing what people can do when they don’t know they can’t.

In the beginning you don’t know all the reasons it won’t work.

As the years pass you’ll marvel at what you though was possible – the risks you took.

And still you’ll see other beginners taking on windmills. Some windmills will batter the riders. Some riders will topple their windmills.


Reminiscing with a senior developer that I used to manage we talked about a project we worked on together that had major flaws. I told him, “Don’t worry. That’s what has made you senior. Now you really do know better.”

Failure can teach you good judgment. At best it will teach you which fears are realistic – which gambles pay off.

A junior developer often makes up for inexperience with occassionally wreckless enthusiasm. But senior developers often earn their keep by what they choose not to do.

A senior developer (hopefully) knows the difference between ambitious and unrealistic.

They need to be able to look at a project and say, “Yes, we can do that with these critical changes.” And each part of that sentence is important.

“Yes, we can do that” – don’t let your experience lead to cyncism where every project is doomed to fail and any who think they can achieve something are Polyanna.

“… with these critical changes” – filter out all of the good or simply true ideas to bring forward the indispensible ones. Conserve your ammo.

If you aren’t careful failure might instead turn you into a member of the “no way” choir. If you aren’t careful you might believe that only saying why a project might fail is actually adding value. It’s not. Not really.


I’ve watched junior developers deliver so much more than their senior teammates that it was embarrassing. Perhaps those senior developers overcompensated for failure.

I’ve seen junior developers merrily build weeks of work on a platform that was genuinely incapable of supporting success. Perhaps those junior developers needed more help from a senior developer.

Still, it’s amazing what people can do when they don’t know they can’t.

The truth embedded in Wiley Coyote’s gravity defying double take is that often it is our own perception of doom that causes our doom.

Get Into Internships

Hand shake.

[I Love It] One of my favorite parts of being a manager (and I didn’t anticipate this) is recruiting interns on university campuses. Being part of offering a great opportunity to students right when they need it is very rewarding. [Good For Students] A good internship helps a student make a transition from a mostly… Continue reading Get Into Internships

Recommend: Effective Communicator and Interviewer Conference

Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, Jan 2016.

Waking up in my own bed again after two days in Palo Alto for the Manager Tools training on DISC (Effective Communications Conference — ECC) and interviewing (Effective Interviewer Conference — EIC). Bottom Line: I recommend them, both. The Experience The setting was intimate. There were 11 attendees the first day and seven the second.… Continue reading Recommend: Effective Communicator and Interviewer Conference

Curiosity Installs the Root Kit

I’ve been reading Future Crimes and it is… sobering.  It details all sorts of documented cybercrime and makes some predictions on what kind of crimes we can expect to see more of.

I was perfectly primed to actually read the recent KnowBe4 newsletter when it popped into my inbox. It recaps how Comcast users were targeted with a double whammy that root-kitted their machines and stole their credit cards.

Where does it all start for the mark? Clicking on an interesting add. Read their newsletter for details.

Happy Holidays! 😉

Happy Back-to-the-Future Day!

We made it! Check out the countdown: october212015.com I hope you’re rockin’ two ties today, just like me! Just kidding. I totally took those ties off. Unless… if you’re wearing two ties right now then, I guess… I am, too.  

Sometimes we give equal weight to outcomes and risks that sound similar but in reality don’t deserve equal treatment.

Swimming will get you wet. So will walking in the rain. But I keep my phone in my pocket when I walk in the rain.

Hear the other side well enough to fairly weigh their point. Same sounding words can signify dramatically different things.

Sorry I’ve been away.  I’ve been spending a lot of time on University Campuses in Utah and Idaho recruiting Web Development interns.  Also presented twice at an internal conference last week and took a Fall Break with my kids to try and reset.

Just wrapping up a day of interviewing at Utah Valley University.

ManagerJS shall return!

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