|
|
|
|
|
by Frondo
3927 days ago
|
|
That's great! How do you actually know you're making the world a better place for others, when all you talk about and think about is work? See, what gets me about that attitude is, that kind of closed-off attitude is what I took into my first few startups. It's a tunnel-vision kinda thing, where I was pushing my ideas out into the world, but not engaging as a person with people (who, I assure you, are not all so focused on work). It never worked well, because people all want a lot of different things, and rarely does that all just line up with what I want. But talking to people about their interests, listening and engaging with them on the human level? There's gold there, both in the friendships and the business that comes out of it. |
|
>How do you actually know you're making the world a better place for others, when all you talk about and think about is work?
Because the work I do is general enough that it doesn't apply specifically to me or my culture. If I were to summarize, I would say my work is "to ensure by any means that the best possible decisions are made by as many people as possible in every situation in which I'm involved." Right now, there's a major technological aspect to that, since the capability of machines to advance human decision-making and communication is ripe for some real improvement. (Specifically in machine ethics.) These are things I will work on regardless of whether or not I am employed to do them. I only try to communicate it clearly enough and be successful enough at it that I can survive to do it with minimal obstruction.
So even though people want a lot of different things, they all want to be more capable at getting them, and that's what I am driving toward.