I'll be joining a couple of friends at Epimedia. At this point there are four of us full time with a couple of contract programmers. We write software to control hardware.
I've alluded in my blog posts to the fact that
my job at Tektronix has been a dream position. The pay is good. The projects are interesting. The products I sell are best-in-class. I have flexibility in my schedule. I'm not micromanaged. My customers value our relationship. There is a lot to like about what I have been doing. Let me address why I'm leaving.
I've alluded in my blog posts to the fact that
my job at Tektronix has been a dream position. The pay is good. The projects are interesting. The products I sell are best-in-class. I have flexibility in my schedule. I'm not micromanaged. My customers value our relationship. There is a lot to like about what I have been doing. Let me address why I'm leaving.
I'm a vocal proponent of people
pursuing careers that will make them happy. I've worked with too
many people that are stuck in an okay job that they don't love
because it pays the bills. (I've heard this referred to as "the golden handcuffs.") I've vowed to never be in that position.
As Jim Collins said in his influential book Good to Great,
“Good is the enemy of great.”
The idea is that when we get to the point
that things are going good, we seldom keep progressing. We don't
want to risk ruining a good thing. This is exactly the situation
that I have been in with my job at Tektronix. It was good in every
way. There was nothing bad about it. But there was one
missing element that kept it from becoming great.
"There's a difference between the kind of problems that companies, institutions, and governments are able to solve and the ones that they need to solve... Most big organizations are good at solving clear but complicated problems. They're absolutely horrible at solving ambiguous problems--when you don't know what you don't know. Faced with ambiguity, their gears grind to a halt."Uncertainty is when you've defined the variable but don't know its value. Like when you roll a die and you don't know if it will be a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6. But ambiguity is when you're not even sure what the variables are. You don't know how many dice are even being rolled or how many sides they have or which dice actually count for anything."(Fast Company, This Is Generation Flux, by Robert Safian, January 9th, 2012.)
The thing that has largely been missing
in every job I've ever had is the ability to decide what the
variables are. In my job at Tektronix, I am free to solve any
problem I want, as long as the answer to the problem is selling more
oscilloscopes in New Mexico.
Please understand that this is not a
criticism of Tektronix. Tektronix is a respectable company that
focuses on making their customers successful by developing amazing
new technologies. (Tek's new mixed-domain oscilloscope is one of the most clever uses of existing technology I've ever seen, and the architecture of the new 33 GHz scope is art.) I've worked with brilliant people during my short tenure here, and I hope that I can maintain the connections that I have made.
I've written previously about how every
good opportunity has come from people that I knew, and this job
change is no different. As long as I have been in New Mexico, I have
been feeding business to a friend of mine, Dean Cyphery. When my
customers needed a programmer to automate the hardware that I sold, I
brought in Dean because I knew he would get the job done. From the
beginning he joked about hiring me. Just recently, he was finally in
the position to make an offer, and I was finally in the position
where I had developed enough professional confidence to make the
jump.
I am coming to Epimedia as a true
business development manager. Along with finding new contracts and
growing revenue, I will be helping make the strategic decisions about
what our company even does. We have valuable expertise and I am very
excited to find innovative approaches to solving complex problems.
More importantly, as was mentioned in the quote above, I look forward
to solving the ambiguous problems as well.
(In anticipation of questions from my
current Tektronix customers, I'd like to point out that I have made
arrangements with Tektronix to maintain the role as New Mexico
Account Manager at least through March while my successor is
identified.)
6 comments:
you are following your heart, much like my idol, the great napoleon dynamite. congrats on this big change. you're a great writer, luke! maybe when you're done solving the world's ambiguous problems you can write a book about it!
Thanks Jess! Napoleon D is a big inspiration for me. I'll write a book if you promise to read it. That takes a lot of the risk out of it.
Great read Luke! I appreciate you sharing your insight and wish you the best of luck in your new position.
You only live once!
Congratulations Luke! You are my Napolian Dynamite. :)
Hear, hear! I'm loving your message :)
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