Year: 2020

  • The Swedish Fishmonger’s Formula

    The Swedish Fishmonger’s Formula

    We were walking around Stockholm on a cold and windy autumnal day, when we chanced upon a fishmonger’s near the harbour side, overlooking the water. I opened the door and it went ping and I walked in. I looked at all the fresh fish and artisan produce from the coastal regions of the Baltic, Atlantic…

  • The Best Sailors Navigate via the Stars – Writing Objectives

    The Best Sailors Navigate via the Stars – Writing Objectives

    Last year after a swimming race, a group of us were standing by the warm-down pool talking loudly about USRPT (ultra short race pace training) – the next big thing, maybe. A friend of mine – who is a competitor of mine but who also coached me for a short while – stubbornly insisted that…

  • WFH and the Misery or Mastery of One’s Work

    WFH and the Misery or Mastery of One’s Work

    Whilst re-reading the book, “How to make yourself miserable”, I realised that my current home office set up is much closer to the “perfect room for being miserable” than it is as a place to do high quality work. But, upon reflection, my open plan office wasn’t much better either. In fact, the open plan…

  • How Good Pricing Built Hamlet’s Castle

    How Good Pricing Built Hamlet’s Castle

    This is a short story about the history of value and pricing. Between the shores of modern day Denmark and Sweden, there is a slim body of water only a couple of miles wide. Hundreds of years ago, merchant ships sailed to and fro between the Baltic Sea and North sea, carrying their cargo to…

  • Agile and Sushi

    There’s a nice documentary about a sushi chef called Jiro who owns a Sushi joint in a metro station subway. It just so happens to have three Michelin stars which, by definition, means you would travel around the world just to go to the restaurant – it’s that good. At one point in the documentary…

  • An Exchange of Value

    Last night, I spent the evening looking around my grandmother’s house to see what I could keep for nostalgic reasons and (don’t tell anyone) but I was also rooting around to see if I could find some booty that has some value. In a week or so the whole lot is going to get chucked.…

  • A Lesson from the Gym

    A Lesson from the Gym

    In our gym we have a few good rowers. Being a swimmer, whenever I’m in the gym with them, we can’t help but swap stories about early morning training and best times but we also like to exchange important facts about things like bodyweight to strength ratios, potential one-rep max calculations, the nutritional benefits of…

  • Remote onboarding / Onboarding Retrospective

    Remote onboarding / Onboarding Retrospective

    This article is a combination of a retrospective that I created (the ‘feelrospective’!) based on Non-violent communication, and the subsequent insights about onboarding a new team member remotely (which I feel will become increasingly common). If you don’t know anything about Non-violent communication (NVC), this post will hopefully serve as a nice introduction and, ideally, inspire you…

  • A Lesson from Kung the Philosopher

    A Lesson from Kung the Philosopher

    Said Kung the Philosopher: You think that I have learnt a great deal, and kept the whole of it in my memory? Sse replied with respect: Of course, isn’t that so? It is not so. I have reduced it all to one principle. — Recently, I was tasked with giving a fifteen minute ‘lightning talk’…

  • Scrum master recruitment, lift offs and post-it machines

    Scrum master recruitment, lift offs and post-it machines

    This is a post about our experience of hiring and interviewing a new scrum master and the lessons learned. It’s also about how we attempted to integrate elements of agile into our recruitment and how I was influenced by a wonderful book that I was reading at the time: ‘Lift off’ by Diana Larsen and…