| I love this speech every time that I read it. There are a ton of examples of cargo cult thinking in the startup ecosystem. I wrote a post about this a few years back: https://www.codingvc.com/p/startup-cargo-cults-what-they-are... A few examples that come to mind: * because lots of famous VCs made contrarian bets, new VCs try to be contrarian (even when a consensus point of view is clearly correct). * almost every startup I know is looking for 10x engineers, even though most startups don't need 10x engineers. We've just all been conditioned to believe that 10x engineers are required to build a great company. * generalizing the 10x example, young startups copy the traits of FAANG companies or famously successful startups, even if those traits are harmful for early stage companies. Feynman: "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself—and you are the easiest person to fool." Also, here's a text version of the OP that's easier to read on mobile: https://calteches.library.caltech.edu/51/2/CargoCult.htm |
There was a time when companies like Google were looking for very talented CS people because they actually needed people with broad skills because in the case of G they were building a search engine and there's almost no area of computer science that isn't involved in such a project. They actually needed people with strong CS skills.
Twenty years later we have positions where hires are selected for their ability to reverse a red-black tree on a whiteboard, where the position will mostly be about gluing together CRUD apps with YAML.