Flirting With Models

musings on numerical computing and financial modeling

Tag: lessons from my father

Lessons from my Father: Use Emotion to Your Advantage

Humans are emotional creatures.  Sometimes our emotion can be positive, like a passion that drives us to succeed.  Sometimes our emotions can be negative, like greed blinding us. As a leader, controlling your emotions is important.  A recent quote I heard was, “only use emotion in business when it is to your advantage.”   It [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Listen to Everyone, Listen to NO one

In 1991, Dell, ZEOS and Gateway were rocketing in success.  Computer superstores were popping up everywhere.  The digital age was in full force and it was becoming clear that every person would soon own a personal computer.  To buy an IBM, Compaq, HP and Apple, however, you still needed to have a face-to-face experience.  There [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Plans are Useless, Planning is Invaluable

Around 1980, my father was still in the start-up stages of MicroAmerica, working hard to pull in manufacturers that he could distribute.  He managed to get Epson printers on the line, and within a year, the company went from $150k/year in revenue to over $1m/month. After such a tremendous year, Epson invited him, along with [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Vision is NOT Seeing Around Corners

One evening, my father and mother sat down to watch a movie.  Or so my mother thought.  My father, on the other hand, decided that he needed an impromptu board meeting.  He organized a call and had the meeting that night. At the time, they were in the middle of a secondary offering.  When the [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Follow the Dollars

The lean startup movement has a dramatic focus on a quantitative pivoting strategy: measure everything and adjust your business to capitalize on what the data is telling you. But this idea is nothing new. In 1991, my father was the CEO of PCs Compleat.  They were running out of money and nobody was buying the [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Work Smarter, Not Harder

I touched upon this concept in a post a while ago (The Suffering Startup), but I think it deserves its own post. There is a belief that hard work brings success.  It isn’t entirely wrong, but often gets misconstrued into the concept that just blindly pouring time into a task will make it a success. [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Looks Can Be Everything

My father was looking to hire a new employee for his business Microamerica.  The interview was scheduled for really early in the morning, so my father was the only one in the office.  This also meant that my father’s car was the only one in the parking lot; or, at least, that is what Mr. [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Do Whatever It Takes

My father was supposed to have a business meeting at an airport; I think it was with an investor.  The opportunity to meet was short: only the length of the layover, so there wasn’t much time to spare. While this was pre 9/11, airport security was still tight enough to prevent my dad from just [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Trust Your Gut

After selling MicroAmerica, my father took a year off before being approached to become the CEO of a fast growing company, Edsun Labs.  Edsun was a fabless semi conductor and was producing cutting-edge chips. There were three fundamental problems however, the my father only learned after talking to manufacturing, sales, and clients: The chip couldn’t [...]

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Lessons from my Father: Surround Yourself with Smart(er) People

Although I do not suppose that either of us knows anything really beautiful and good, I am better off than he is, for he knows nothing, and thinks that he knows; I neither know nor think that I know. Socrates My father was a very successful CEO in his day, and while he will never [...]

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