Friday, May 16, 2008

Work to Love, Wealth, and Words from Michael Scott

A few items of note. I recently read a couple excellent essays by Paul Graham, who is currently a partner in Y Combinator, among other impressive things on his CV.

In "How to Do What You Love," Graham talks about reconciling what we learn about the concept of "work" when we're children with what we learn as we get older. He talks about how it is difficult but ideal to find work that one truly loves doing (and what "loving work" really means) and two different paths that people follow to do so. It's insightful and humorous. "Always produce" is a great maxim to live by.

In "How to Make Wealth," Graham discusses why starting a business is the key to generating wealth. Several ideas in here to help one understand why startups have an extremely high upside (coupled of course with high risk and concurrent downside). I liked how he explains how startups are essentially time compression for the amount of work produced and how they are more efficient by several factors than large companies.

A couple excellent inspirational essays. I plan on reading more of Graham's stuff on his site.



A few words from Michael Scott in the penultimate episode of this season of The Office:
I look at somebody like Jim Halpert and I think, "That guy could do anything he wants to do." He could...do anything. And he chooses to work here, selling paper. Just like me.
Related, of course. Hits a bit close to home.

1 comments:

Foonyor said...

Paul Graham's essays are nearly all spot-on. Glad you discovered same.