Fantasy Sports Fantasy

About a week ago on a night when I couldn’t sleep I had an idea for a sort of fantasy sports app/mobile game and I thought I’d share it here just to see if anyone has any thoughts on it and because there’s really no point in keeping things like this secret…

The basic idea stems from trying to make something that makes watching a live sporting event (in person, on tv, online, whatever) more exciting. So, an app that lets you make a custom fantasy game based on whatever game(s) you’re watching with someone… As an easy example, let’s say football on a sunday: you pick a few games, make picks for a set number of players and/or maybe some prop bet type questions and then you can challenge a friend or a random person, or someone nearby like someone watching in the same bar as you, or just play by yourself against a leaderboard even. From there the app could even add in additional gameplay through alerts at the end of quarters, at halftime, etc.

Single day and single game fantasy has actually become a bit of a booming space on the web with sites like Fan Duel, Draft Street, Fantasy Factor, Draft Day, and others. These sites, though, are all primarily driven by the particularities of US law that make fantasy sports for money legal online, while sports betting and online poker, for example, are generally not allowed. They’re aimed at a different audience and go for the quick and easy money whereas my fantasy is more along the lines of a Draw Something or Words With Friends model. A focus on mobile because we don’t always carry a computer with us while watching the game, a focus on engagement with friends because people love to talk and argue about sports with friends (and even strangers!), people love making “bets” with friends and proving they know more than the other, and everyone is now so ADD they can’t just watch a game without checking twitter, emailing friends, posting status updates on facebook and even playing games like Angry Birds during the dreaded commercial breaks. Sporting events are more fun when the experience is shared, when you have more to root for and when you as the viewer can really win too and that’s what my fragment of an idea seeks to capitalize on.

I guess all there is to say other than that is now go build it…


I want this to be my cover letter…

I hate cover letters. Far too often mine are awful and boring and it’s really hard to fix that sometimes. Of course sometimes I try funny and casual, but not sure that’s always appropriate either. So instead I kind of just want to attach Christopher Steiner’s article, “Biz Dev Is A Clever Name For Dirty Work and just say that’s what I’m ready to do and want to do. Don’t worry that I still expect to be paid like a corporate lawyer or work in some fancy office or any bs like that…I want to get to work, get dirty, sell, grind, hustle, and do anything and everything needed to help you build your company.

Best regards,

Me


Uber – I Rate You 5 Stars

As I mentioned in my last post, I recently took my first couple Uber rides in D.C. and just wanted to touch on the experience briefly. Earlier today, Arpan Punyani posted about his recent experience of great customer experience resulting from a failed attempt to use Uber and in turn reminded me to post about how great the experience is when all goes to plan as well.

My first ride came at 2 a.m. in an unfamiliar city and when I needed to get back to my hotel to grab my bags before going to the train station for a 3 a.m. train. I was with locals who offered to try to find a number for a cab and call, but everyone was at best a little tipsy and it seemed like a perfect opportunity to show off and test out this cool little app. Within a minute I knew a car was on the way and in less than ten minutes I had a driver calling to make sure he was in the right place when I lingered inside with my friends a little too long. From there it only got easier as Yassir was a great guy and we discussed how Uber was helping his business, how it worked from his point of view, how the Valentine’s Day rose promo worked (spoiler: drivers were sent a message that they could pick up roses for free at a certain location to give out to Uber customers) and then before I knew it I was at my hotel, the bill was all paid without me having to do anything, Yassir rated me 5 stars on my first ride (a rating I enthusiastically gave him as well) and we even talked for another minute since the conversation was so great and he was so excited about Uber. A few minutes later my second ride to the train station was just as easy and just as smooth and while the driver was not quite as amazing , he was undoubtedly professional and polite.

Overall it was just exciting and a lot of fun. The novelty may wear off, but I suspect the level of service and ease of use will only improve over time because you can tell Uber is a company that cares about both its drivers and its passengers. There’s the Valentine’s Day promo I mentioned, Arpan’s experience, the email you get after your first ride from a community manager and that fun little rating system I mentioned as well. In both my experiences the drivers really seemed to enjoy the rating system in particular. They told me they gave me 5 stars and asked me to rate them (and hopefully give 5 stars!) as well. These ratings aren’t just a fun little end to the ride, but also clearly let Uber know if any of their drivers or customers are unhappy and to respond accordingly. Based on the type of customer service Arpan received, I’m sure responses to any poor ratings come quickly, and with a sincere desire to right any wrongs and learn from the experience. When it works well it’s really just a great app…simple UI, great UX (on the app and in real life), a little gamification element, and all backed up with awesome and personal customer service.

Just as a slight counterpoint though, I’m not as convinced of Uber’s value add in New York as I am in pretty much any other market. At least in Manhattan, there are just so many cars all over the place at all times that it’s much more rare that you’d think you need to order a car 10 minutes in advance and not just be able to find one in that time. Maybe more importantly, there’s really less incentive for drivers to join up since they rarely have to wait very long to find a new customer just by driving along a busy street. I’m sure it’ll work eventually, and I know Uber is pushing hard to make this work in NY but it’s gonna take some time to gain enough drivers and in turn be able to provide enough utility for riders so they don’t end up having to wait too long like Arpan would have if he stuck with Uber. That’s basically the story I got from another really great and intelligent NY livery cab driver I had just a few days before my rides in DC. The NY driver found me looking for a cab on the street during a rush hour drizzle (one of those times you might actually order a car 10 minutes out in NY), so no Uber this time. The immediate downside of not being an Uber ride is that I immediately had to ensure he was ok with me using a credit card since I had no cash at the time, but luckily this driver was unfazed…and surprisingly so if you’ve ever had this experience with a livery cab. Anyway, we talked about Uber and he basically said he tried it briefly, but found it just wasn’t worth it for him when he could find people so easily without it and that people in NY had been disappointed because it often took more than ten minutes for an Uber car to arrive in NY. When I arrived at my destination, to my surprise my driver pulled out an iPad equipped with Square and took the easiest credit card payment I’d ever had in a black car up to that point (with Uber beating it a couple days later by taking the credit card out of the equation entirely). In many ways this guy would be an ideal Uber driver: tech savvy, intelligent, polite and engaging…but even he wasn’t sold yet. So we’ll see what happens, but I definitely wish the NY team the best of luck and hope to see the service grow enough for me to take advantage on my next visit!


Back to Blogging…

It’s been a month since I last posted and this is hardly a legitimate post especially given the long time away, but I just wanted to say I haven’t completely forgotten about this blogging thing… I’ve actually been contemplating folding this space together with my currently rather pointless tumblr and creating one coherent personal presence/brand, but for now we persist with the quasi dual identity experiment.

No great excuses for the absence and nothing earth shattering to report, I’ve just been working on some new and old ideas, connecting with interesting people and seeking out exciting opportunities. My grandmother’s been my grandmother with her usual not terribly helpful advice, and my mother’s even chimed in with some similar gems… I traveled a bit, to New York and D.C. and derived some inspiration from people met on those trips that I plan and hope to talk about here soon, so here’s a preview of some blog posts/random thoughts I’ve had, usually in the middle of the night, and just haven’t (yet?) followed through on writing about.

- Uber, Square and other cool mobile payment solutions I’ve encountered recently. I took my first couple Uber rides in D.C. and thought it was a great experience. I also had great conversations about the service with one of the drivers there and another in NY who didn’t use Uber, but did take credit card payments with Square on his iPad.

- Sports Apps. Why are they so bad, where’s the innovation, and lots of other questions and thoughts. I know Dave Tisch and I aren’t the only people who think this space is ripe for disruption, but the progress has been slow…

- “Meetup” style networks. I continue to be interested in this space…

- Accelerators and mentorship. Not sure what I have to add here since so much has been said by so many great people, but it’s been on my mind a lot so stay tuned.

- Disruption in the legal space. An area that is at once so close and yet so far from my heart…

- Online strategies and innovative apps for the hospitality industry. Something I actually know something about! ;)

- Gamification of e-commerce. Been working on some ideas here and it might be time to share and discuss with others…

- Are there any classic games left to adapt into wildly successful apps? Scrabble, Boggle, Pictionary down, but there must still be some out there we can do and flip to Zynga? Are you with me? Seriously though, Draw Something and Words with Friends are my two favorite games, so no hate.

Until next time, hopefully in less than a month. As always though, reach out on twitter, by email or whatever your favorite method is and let’s have a conversation. This blogging game can be lonely…


Time to Connect With My Connections

I must admit, I’ve been guilty in the past of lamenting the strength and diversity of my personal network despite however many people LinkedIn might claim I’m connected to. Usually it’s something along the lines of, “Well I only know lawyers and bankers, not useful people in the startup world…” I’ve been looking at this more closely lately though, and it’s clearly not true. In fact, I’m guessing most people spend so much time worrying about meeting new people to network with that they sometimes forget the strength of the connections they already have. Some personal examples from my network of “only lawyers and bankers” in case I forget this again…

I went to a small high school in Montreal, but among my class of about 50 people were web show host, producer, reporter, social media expert and general internet celebrity, Shira Lazar, the Director of Marketing and Business Development at Beyond the Rack, a Digital PR consultant and strategist, a design and branding strategist, and other people with interesting careers and interests (artists, fashion designers, photographers, and, yes, lawyers, bankers and doctors). Beyond my class, but people I still know well there’s someone who works directly for/with Peter Thiel, an ITP grad, designer and one half of the team behind the amazingly succesful Kickstarter project Pen Type-A, and a star mobile developer. Speaking of mobile developers, I also know an iOS developer now living in San Francisco, and someone who runs a company in Toronto that creates mobile apps for other companies.

And what about those law school people and other lawyers? At least three good friends work day to day with startups and venture firms as corporate attorneys at firms in the Valley and firms specializing in startups in New York. One of those friends has a best friend who works at Brew PR, and her boyfriend is a current associate at TechStars NY. And while we’re talking about TechStars NY, I learned (post-leaving NY unfortunately) that one of my best friends and a former co-worker at my law firm has known Dave Tisch forever, certainly well enough to make an intro. Another friend from law school also left the firm life and is now a co-founder of a startup going through the Entrepreneurs Roundtable Accelerator.

As for family, my first cousin is the co-founder and EVP of a leading global strategic innovation, experience design, and customer insights firm. Among the employees of the firm are branding professionals, experience designers, and lots of other innovative and creative people. He’s also well-connected with people in the Toronto tech scene and can be a good mentor/adviser for me personally. I also recently found out that a more-distant cousin from Israel (but someone I could easily get connected with) started a startup accelerator in the Valley for Israeli founders. And another set of first cousins are very close family friends with the CPO of Shopify, and I’ve known him forever as well.

That’s just a sampling, and while I still don’t even think I have such a strong personal network the point is there are a lot of great people to connect and re-connect with. Sometimes we lose focus of how smart and interesting people we already know are in the search for new and better, but it’s definitely worth doing things the easier way for once and re-connecting with your existing connections… Now it’s time to get on that.


But first, are you experienced? Or have you ever been experienced?

The tag line of this blog says it’s about finding a job, so I wanted to talk a bit about one of the main things that always comes up when looking at job listings or during an interview: experience. I’m very picky with jobs I’d want and jobs I apply for, and to be honest in most cases where I do apply from a job listing I don’t necessarily meet the exact experience “requirements” set out in the listing. I don’t apply to these positions to be obnoxious and waste people’s time, but only if/when I actually believe I can do the job well and be an effective member of the company’s team, but if you’re using a search firm…yeah, I’m probably headed to the junk pile. And for the record it’s not always that I don’t have enough or the “right” experience, I’ve been told that I’m overqualified for more than one position I thought might have been a good fit.

If you look at my resume I’ve been a corporate lawyer and done business development for a restaurant consulting firm, among other things, but that’s just the basics so here’s some of what I’ve learned from my work experience that I think applies globally…

People

At its core, it’s always about the people. I’ve always been very good friends with co-workers, even if the job itself wasn’t to my liking and I think that’s important. Some of my best friends today are people I met at my former law firm. When I’ve been the one making hiring decisions, or just deciding what job to take, my first question is always whether I want to spend a lot of hours in close contact with these people. Sense of humor, thoughtfulness, intelligence, politeness, comraderie…these are all important to the success of any workplace.

On the bad side I’ve also had the experience of losing trust in a business partner to the point that I felt compelled to leave a company I had sacrificed a lot for. There’s no way to completely avoid what you call co-founder risk/issues in the startup world, but I can tell you that my experience is part of the reason I’m now so picky about who I work with and a big part of the reason I will always strive to be open and honest with everyone I work with.

And it’s not just about employees or co-founders, but also other companies or contractors you work with. If you’re doing BD you can’t think any deal is a good deal. The right partners mean everything and are the key to success.

Culture

Obviously this is related to having great people, but culture comes from the top down. There were tons of people I loved at my law firm, but the culture…not so much. And for a startup especially, it’s not just about having a cool loft with a foosball table, it’s about founders who set the right example. If the people at the top aren’t working hard, aren’t open to new opinions, don’t give feedback, don’t care about their employees lives (or even think of them as employees more than colleagues, partners, teammates, friends) and don’t hold themselves to the same standards as everyone else, then your culture suffers and your company probably isn’t somewhere I want to work.

I’ve had experiences with a business partner who wasn’t putting in the effort others were, and it led to a loss of respect across the company. I’ve worked at a big firm where the top people didn’t show any empathy or interest in the lives of the more junior employees and it hurt morale, lead people to quit and reduced efficiency and creativity. People expect to work hard, but if they have to work hard and aren’t respected for it or don’t respect people above them it just doesn’t work.

What you need is to strive for a meritocracy as Shopify’s Harley Finkelstein put it in a great post for Fast Company. And you need to help people understand your company, your vision and your journey like the guys from Warby Parker explained in a recent interview with TechCrunch. Follow the lead of Warby Parker and don’t just give new hires a 100 page manual and a branded t-shirt and send them to work, but give them training, show them what makes you unique, give them something fun and/or interesting that helps them understand your company better and feel like a part of your family from the start. You need to create an environment where dialogue is open, feedback is given regularly and not just in some formal annual review, outside interests are encouraged and where everyone feels a part of a team with the same goals in mind. If you allow people to live and learn and bring their personality and experiences to the workplace, you foster innovation, you learn from others and you end up with a better result than you could have imagined on your own. And yes some of this just sounds like corny new-age workplace hippie culture speak or whatever you want to call it, but the point is that in my experience (and that’s what this post is purportedly about) the old school approach of having junior people who work hard and never speak unless spoken to, where seniority rules and with a formal annual review that doesn’t really tell you anything just isn’t good enough, not even if you pay people enough that you think they should put up with it. It sucks for them and maybe more importantly, it’s shitty business for you too.

Work Experience

Obviously relevant past experience is helpful. When I helped open a new restaurant I wanted experienced servers for example. But we also focused on personality and the culture we wanted to create and hired one person with no experience because he was passionate and proved he wanted to learn. Within a week he was one of our best guys because he gave a shit. He was grateful for the chance, worked his ass off and made himself into a star. I like to think I can do the same at any job I might take. I’ve always been a quick learner, I’m smart, as I said I’ll only take a job if I feel like the people and culture are a good fit and if I’m passionate about helping the company achieve its goals. Experience can be great, and I think my experiences of working with C-level people at huge companies and banks, as well as with managing others in a small business and jumping in on everything from dishwashing, to social media management, menu planning, staff training, contracts, finances, etc. help me deal with any situation I find myself in, even if I might not have “2-4 years prior experience in a consumer facing technology company” or whatever other nonsense you dreamed up for your job listing. You need some people with that prior experience, but you also need people who are just plain smart, dedicated and who bring a different viewpoint that adds diversity and leads to innovative solutions.

So yeah, I don’t blame companies looking for a specific set of prior experiences but any place I’d want to work would I think also be open to going outside that comfort zone and finding someone with the mindset, interests, skills, passion, and yes, experiences, that can add significant value to their company. My work and life experiences have taught me the value of being open in that way and have lead me to seek out the experience of working with likeminded people and companies. And now I’m tired of writing experience so much, but hope that made some sense. Let me know…


Would Oprah be Oprah if She Started Today?

Last night Oprah posted the above tweet asking her followers to watch OWN, “especially if u have a Nielsen box.” The tweet has since been deleted without explanation (another mistake), but as expected it garnered plenty of criticism. I first saw the post when somebody I follow retweeted it and immediately knew Gary Vaynerchuk would be all over Oprah for her poor social media strategy once again, and as always Gary didn’t disappoint.

First Gary called out Oprah’s Nielsen box tweet…

Then he noted that the tweet and other replies were so “nuts” that it had to be hacked and continued to tweet about it over the course of the night. He even ended up getting a reply from Oprah’s assistant who confirmed it was actually Oprah herself tweeting from her iPad last night.

Now, love him or hate him, Gary obviously knows the social media game. And sure he can get a little “twitter cop” on others sometimes, but he’s hardly Darren Rovell on that count. So is he right and Oprah is just really bad at twitter? After all that preface, that’s what I wanted to take a quick look at…

My initial reaction to the Neilsen tweet was that it was dumb, misguided, awkward, etc. But what if the Neilsen box part was just a joke? Ok, then it would be pushing her product, but a little pushing is ok sometimes (and inevitable). The problem here is that Oprah’s carefully cultivated public persona is so entrenched that she can’t make a joke like this (if that was even the intention) and get away with it. I can, and do, attempt bad jokes that fall flat and it’s no big deal. But I don’t have a million followers and millions more who know me as TV Oprah…

What about the replies Gary called “nuts”? I looked at them and also thought some of them seemed weird and/or ridiculous coming from the Oprah we’re used to. Writing in text speak, feisty replies, weird humor, controversial opinions, etc. OMG Oprah, she’s just like us! So given that it was confirmed that these replies really were made by Oprah herself, what’s the lesson? On the one hand, she’s doing what Gary would tell her to and interacting directly with her fans. She deserves major props for that. At the same time, she’s not really of the social media generation and she seems a little lost. On top of that, she has a public persona built over a long career on television that may or may not be exactly who she is in real life, or at least not on every night in a hotel room in Georgia watching the Grammys and playing with her iPad. I’m hardly an expert, but if I were advising her I’d tell her to continue jumping in and managing her own account, replying to fans, sharing her opinions, etc., but to realize the world is watching and she needs to be on her game 24/7 if she does so. Not to say she should lose the authenticity, but someone like her can be authentic AND raise the level of discourse if she harnesses the power of twitter effectively and fine tunes her voice like we all know she can (and I’m not an Oprah fan or anything…).

More interesting to me is the question from the title of this post of whether Oprah would make it in today’s world if this sort of rough around the edges (or “nuts”) person we saw on twitter last night is her real persona and the Oprah we all know was just an elaborate artificial construction. The truth is probably somewhere in the middle, but there’s no doubt this less perfect Oprah would be on more prominent display in today’s world and that authenticity across social media platforms would be necessary to build a career even one hundredth the magnitude of what she’s achieved. So would she just be another mediocre snark blogger/tweeter?

I don’t think so. Maybe the written word just isn’t really Oprah’s A game. Maybe Oprah of today would focus on video blogging or podcasting and build from there. There’s a lesson here that I think Gary would agree with and it’s to know your strengths, choose the best medium to exploit those strengths and then develop a strong, authentic and consistent personal brand. Oprah’s brand equity is so strong that some stray tweets here and there won’t hurt too much, but it’s time for her to up the consistency and deliver her best at all times because we’re all watching to see what she’ll do next (or at least Gary will be and can tell the rest of us!)…

And no, I can’t really believe I just blogged about Oprah. Next time we’ll lok at Maury, Jerry Springer, Ricki Lake and Montel Williams. And stay tuned for a super special analysis of Judge Judy and The People’s Court coming in March. After all, I am a lawyer…


Why I’m Not at Startup Weekend

Image representing Startup Weekend as depicted...

I’ve mentioned before that I was planning to go to Montreal Startup Weekend, but it’s going on now and sadly I’m not there. I bought my ticket early, I spent sleepless nights thinking of ideas to pitch, I read all kinds of advice on how to get the most out of the weekend…I really wanted to go. So why didn’t I?

The main reason is that I’m sick. Apparently hanging out in hospitals and air travel catches up to you or something… I had been sick since Wednesday or Thursday and woke up Friday feeling much the same: congested, unable to breathe, headache, looking like death, etc. I had an a.m. meeting with Ian Jeffrey of the awesome Montreal startup accelerator FounderFuel at Notman House so I medicated and actually managed to feel kind of ok for a bit, but when I got home and the meds wore off I felt worse than ever and the next batch of meds weren’t much help. I tried and hoped to still make it and took a shower around 5 with hopes of feeling refreshed,but it just wasn’t to be.

I just couldn’t imagine going through something as intense as Startup Weekend feeling like this and going through a box of tissues an hour (word of advice: buy stock in Kleenex, Scotties, etc. Monday), let alone pitching an idea in front of 200 people with limited breathing capabilities. Working long hours with new people and going out and testing/validating hypotheses in this state would be near impossible. Maybe more importantly, Startup Weekend is largely about networking and I don’t think looking like death and getting people sick is the best first impression. On top of it all, I was pretty sure I’d have to leave for a couple hours on Saturday for personal reasons which also was far from ideal, especially if I ended up pitching and leading a team.

So, it sucks, but I’m not there… Despite a hectic week I did take the time to work on some pitches, create quick and dirty graphics and landing pages (I’ve now worked with both LaunchRock and Unbounce, both great products) and read all kinds of advice about Startup Weekends. Some might see all that as a loss, but I really don’t. Thinking through short pitches, elevator pitches by any other name, for some of my ideas certainly isn’t only valuable for Startup Weekend, nor is working on branding and landing pages and securing domains, twitter accounts, etc. Even the advice about Startup Weekends is valuable even if I never attend one (though I definitely still hope to do so ASAP): advice on how to work with strangers, create a minimum viable product and be as efficient as possible is clearly valuable in any context.

I have to go for now, but good luck to all who are at the event! From following along a bit on twitter it seems like there are some great ideas and great energy there as expected. And if anyone wants to pivot to some sort of app that helps people with sinus colds/flu let me know if I can help out with market testing (hopefully I won’t need to use the app for shortest ER wait that I see one team is working on though)…


Advice From Grandma, Part 2

I’m currently in Florida visiting my parents, my grandmother and fleeing the freezing cold of Montreal so I was expecting to have a robust second edition of Advice From Grandma to share, but unfortunately that hasn’t quite worked out… A couple days ago we were planning to go for dinner with my grandmother, but she tripped and fell outside the restaurant and is now in the hospital awaiting surgery for a broken hip. Thus advice has mostly been limited to “don’t trip and fall” and “stay away from hospitals.” Both good points, but not directly relevant to my career path… In any case, just wanted to share one of the reasons I’ve been quiet here.

That said, hanging out in the hospital brought to mind a few apps/platforms that seem like they would be useful in the medical/patient care space. I’m by no means an expert in this arena and I know some of these things exist, are in development, etc. but clearly there could be more widespread adoption. So, three for now:

1. A simple way to store basic medical history and regular medications and then share this with the hospital. Like an electronic and more robust medic-alert bracelet.

2. SMS or e-mail updates for authorized family or friends on patient status, surgery schedule changes, room number, contact info, visiting hours, etc.

3. Simple audio-visual aids for doctor presentations to patients and family so they can more easily understand their condition and the plan of action. More informed consent, more ease of mind, better outcomes… Jiffpad is a cool new example of a product in this realm.

I’m sure more will come up, but that’s all for now. Time to get back to thinking about ideas I actually know something about and spending time with family!


3 a.m. Ideas: These Are Their Stories…

Last Friday I posted about my thoughts often keeping me up late at night. Well, in the world of 3 a.m. ideas there are two separate, yet equally important groups. The good ideas that deserve to be saved in my phone and the mediocre ones that just make me tired the next day. These are their stories.

For today let’s go with a mediocre (at best!) one, because it’s more fun to make fun of myself…

Before you go on a date with someone you don’t know, or even someone you kind of do, you Google/facebook/twitter stalk them, right? So instead of going to sleep, I was thinking why not admit this upfront and have a dating site where people put themselves out there to be stalked and even gain exposure/dates from doing so. The general idea: Log in with twitter, share your tweets on your profile page, let users create a custom twitter stream of people they might be interested in (without formally following them on twitter directly, and also creating a list separate from your normal stream with ease), and then some typical dating site stuff. I think following someone on twitter can be a good way to get a feel for their interests and personality and have thought people I followed, but don’t know seemed cool and worth getting to know in real life in the past, so it’s not such a ridiculous thought at first glance.

The next day I realized there were some problems though. For one thing, there are tons of “twitter dating sites” out there already. Sure most of them have atrocious design and marketing, but still…not a novel concept. Also, people still don’t really like to completely give out their personal info right from the start on a dating site so these sites probably aren’t a great idea in general.

Maybe most importantly though, I don’t know anything about dating sites. Even though I’ve been single forever and really should use them, I haven’t really. Sure I browse them every once in awhile, but I’ve never actually been a customer. Well, except for that one month where I randomly paid for JDate and then proceeded to be out of town on business or stuck in the office for 95% of my nights and weekends. I did have one date planned then for the one day I was magically free, but the girl cancelled last minute-ish saying she was sick (note: she may or may not have been lying, I think she actually tried to reschedule if I remember right but I was likely busy/over it by then). But I digress; point is it would be just about the worst founder/market fit ever. If I wouldn’t use it, what business do I have building it?

Oh, and I may or may not have bought a cheap domain before I realized all this, proving once again that for a supposedly smart person I really am a fool sometimes. But hey, english words in a .com for under $10…why not?!


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