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site iconSeth GodinModify

Coordinator of The Carbon Almanac. Founder of Akimbo, home of the altMBA. Author of THE PRACTICE and THIS IS MARKETING.
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Delegate everything

2025-11-06 18:03:00

Each task brings three options. But first, let’s be clear what we mean by “delegate.”

If I can hire someone to do a task so well that my customer can’t tell, I can choose to delegate this work.

The Uber driver is probably capable of changing the oil in the car, but if the passenger can’t tell, doing it herself is a choice, not a requirement. Same goes for the restaurant that buys pre-minced garlic, or the executive who has her team do much of the work…

If it can be delegated, doing so is a choice and an opportunity.

So, the three options:

Delegate everything. Find people or AI systems to do every delegatable task, reserving for yourself only the work that can’t be delegated.

Delegate some things. Hire yourself to do some of the delegatable tasks. Perhaps it’s to build up insight or skill or reputation that will help you serve people in the future. Or perhaps you are hiring yourself as a way to hide from other, more difficult tasks, or because it’s fun.

(And it might be because you don’t want to support some of the encroaching systems that offer outsourcing–our work and our dollars are also a vote about the future we’re building).

Delegate no things. Do the work with your own two hands, because the craft and the doing are giving you joy and satisfaction.

It’s a choice. Now, more than ever, it’s a choice because access to freelancers and AI lowers the cost and increases the quality of the work we delegate.

The opportunity is to use leveraged delegation to create opportunities that cannot possibly be delegated. To make our craft more particular, more human and more distinctive.

The alternative is to race to the bottom. That’s no fun.

Landlords and tenants

2025-11-05 18:03:00

Landlords collect rent, tenants pay it. Landlords own an asset that increases in value over time. Tenants have the freedom to move on.

If you’re building a business, it pays to own an asset. Your labor doesn’t scale well, and success can be exhausting.

It’s better to be Google than it is to be hoping for traffic from Google. And it’s better to own trust and attention than it is to have to borrow or lease it.

What do you own?

Do you own shelf space? A proprietary technology or machine? A significant reputation? A well-trafficked place online or off?

Is it possible to re-arrange your day to produce just a little more ownership each day?

If we’re busy paying rent, it’s often difficult to find the focus and resources to build an asset, and so the cycle persists.

If you’re not sure where you stand, you’re probably a tenant.

“But I didn’t know”

2025-11-04 17:11:00

The second time you install vacuum tubes into a handmade 2A3 stereo amplifier, you’ll know that two of the four pins are slightly larger than the other two. And you’ll know that the tubes go in pretty easily, you don’t have to force them.

You may know these things because the first time you did it, you pushed really hard and wrecked the tube.

Experience has easily measured value. If it’s important, don’t hire a rookie.

“I’ve got your back”

2025-11-03 18:03:00

This is not a promise to be made lightly.

It’s not, “I’ve got your back until it becomes difficult or inconvenient for me.”

It puts us on the hook, without exception.

This is a powerful promise, a commitment that can change the life of both parties. Don’t do it lightly, but do it. It’s worth it.

Living in ghost cities

2025-11-02 18:05:00

Cities used to die slowly. Ancient Rome, Babylon, Memphis (in Egypt) and others took generations to fade from their peaks. The reasons were easy to see:

  • Shifts in trade routes
  • Loss of political capital status
  • Slow environmental changes (silting harbors, soil exhaustion)
  • Incremental population drift

Now, we can see it happening in a single generation. Rust Belt cities, projects in China, mining towns–they come and they go. The reasons are a bit different:

  • Economic specialization
  • Mobility
  • Speed of technological change
  • Capital flight

But I’m not writing about cities here. It’s a useful metaphor for software, online networks and the tools we use to do our jobs and live our digital lives.

Your ability to find a new game for your Amiga, or join a chat with your AOL buddies is mostly gone. I have no idea if it’s possible to log into myspace or second life, and my blog is no longer visible at Typepad. A relentless cycle of creative destruction, fueled by VC churn, technological advances and the network effect means that networks and software are growing faster than ever (an online network can become bigger than many countries in just a few weeks). But as these networks grow, they suck the energy out of the ones that came before.

Most of us, most of the time, are living in a ghost city.

Of course, as in almost all discussions, this is multiplied by a thousand when we add AI to the mix.

There are problems to consider and, perhaps, opportunities for contribution here.

DUMBER: In general, the arc of tools and networks that seek critical mass is to be simpler, easier to get started with and deskilled. The good news is that this gives more people a chance to participate. The bad news is that deskilling the user moves the power to the network creator. In a paint by numbers world, Picasso doesn’t often show up.

WASTE: Those old files, hard-won skills and valuable human networks from the old software stack are difficult and expensive to replace or reproduce. We’ve done almost nothing to increase adversarial interoperability and provide ownership and interchange for network users… because it’s not in the interest of the old network to make it easy for people to leave with their data, and the members of the new networks don’t care–until they become members of old networks.

AMNESIA: Not only do we lose access to our data and our social graph, we lose particular skills and the ability to pass them on to others. The new architects don’t know what we did, and since we’re often starting over, we reproduce past mistakes.

DECREASING VASTNESS: I got my first email address 50 years ago. During that lifetime online, there’s always been room for doubling. The speed of human connection, the size of the network, the bandwidth–it felt infinite, doubling every few years. But we’ve hit our last doubling. We can’t spend twice as much time online. We can’t double the number of people using the networks. We won’t notice if our bandwidth doubles…

Just as the westward expansion of Europeans in North America eventually hit the Pacific Ocean, sooner or later we have to settle in and make where we are better, not relentlessly head west.

The system is far more powerful than any individual. When a network or a software stack gains critical mass, there’s not a lot an isolated person can do about it. But just as LEED and and local building codes pushed architecture in a certain direction, organized individuals can create more digital resilience. Email’s persistence is a miracle, but that’s partly because standards bodies kept its API open and thriving.

We’re not stuck in traffic, we are traffic.

Software isn’t just a nerd in a basement writing code. It’s a craft. The UX and UI, the design of the data stack, the culture of the organization that builds and supports it–this is the architecture of our time. Except it’s not Frank Lloyd Wright building a few houses in Buffalo, it’s contagious.

The other kind of magic

2025-11-01 17:03:00

We wait and hope for the first kind, the magic that arrives just when we need it. This is the magic of inspiration, or of good fortune. The magic of opportunties offered and connections made.

There never seems to be enough of this sort of magic.

The other kind, though, is surprisingly abundant. This is the magic of being able to turn on lights for others. It happens when we cause connection or open doors. It’s the magic that comes from creation, and it’s based on abundance.