Product vision is 100% imagination and storytelling. It describes in rich detail what life in the future gets to be like for the customer when your product exists. No other format will communicate your product vision better than the humble storyboard.
Guess what: I still sweat a little every time I speak up in a group. This is because as an Asian American woman, I’ve never belonged in any room.
Dinner was an array of mismatched ceramic ware, flanked by the rice cooker in the corner. It was a permanent fixture in the dining room that we never used, because even twenty steps from the stovetop felt too far removed from the food.
As humans, we thrive on those words of congratulations and recognition, especially if we’re shy introverts who don’t regularly ask for it.
This is the second post in a two-part series titled “How to say you’re busy.”
This is the first post in a two-part series titled “How to say you’re busy.”
I taught myself every “How to write HTML” tutorial from Webmonkey and experimented ruthlessly on my little webpages hosted in Geocities’ Sunset Boulevard. AOL dial-up brought the world wide web to my sleepy suburban household and I was hooked.
They don’t have sharp edges and clearly defined silhouettes. They slip and slide between vocations, and inhabit the hidden crevices of all of them.
If you’re trying to start a writing habit, you have to try 750Words.com.
It astounds me that we have so many ways to communicate. Words, written and spoken. Body language. My favorite way to communicate is with food.
This is the third installment in a three-part post on leaving a career I loved, choosing to be unemployed for an arbitrary period of time, and indulging in a heck of a lot of tea and think-time.
This is the second installment in a three-part post on leaving a career I loved, choosing to be unemployed for an arbitrary period of time, and indulging in a heck of a lot of tea and think-time.
This is the first installment in a three-part post on leaving a career I loved, choosing to be unemployed for an arbitrary period of time, and indulging in a heck of a lot of tea and think-time.
I made a promise to myself that I wouldn’t publish any of these posts until I was sure I could keep the habit up: either a continuous streak of four months, or a series of eight polished posts that I was excited to publish.
The biggest part of loving your job is caring about what you do. Being present. It’s on you to stay interested enough to avoid zoning out on conference calls.