Skip to content

Commit 27eddad

Browse files
committed
Update old posts to remove amazon links.
Update theme for fixed xml Signed-off-by: Shauna Gordon <[email protected]>
1 parent 3cec85e commit 27eddad

7 files changed

+35
-11
lines changed

content/posts/2010-05-16-review-why-work-sucks-and-how-to-fix-it.md

Lines changed: 19 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -6,5 +6,22 @@ tags: [review]
66
slug: review-why-work-sucks-and-how-to-fix-it
77
---
88

9-
<div class='post'>
10-
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001OMHV0K?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=graywolfweb-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=B001OMHV0K">Why Work Sucks and How to Fix It: No Schedules, No Meetings, No Joke--the Simple Change That Can Make Your Job Terrific</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=graywolfweb-20&amp;l=as2&amp;o=1&amp;a=B001OMHV0K" width="1" height="1" /></p><p>You anxiously look at your watch as the traffic creeps forward - 8:55am. There's no way you'll get to the office by 9, you still have 10 miles to go. When you finally do arrive at 9:15, you try to sneak to your desk unnoticed, but your boss is already there. "So nice of you to join us this morning," he greets you, a "do it again and you're fired" look on his face. You sit down at your desk, still a little too agitated to start work quite yet, so you read your favorite news site for ten minutes. Part of you resigns to this life, believing it's the way things are, and nothing will change, but another part of you feels that there must be a better way.</p><!-- more --><p>That second part is right. There is a better way.</p><p>Former Best Buy employees Cali Ressler and Jody Thompson (now owners of <a href="http://gorowe.com">CultureRx</a>) share their experience of transforming Best Buy's corporate culture from the traditional clock-watching to a Results-Only Work Environment, or ROWE, and how ROWE can work for other companies. The idea seems counterintuitive, at first, especially to those entrenched in traditional corporate culture and politics, but as Cali and Jody start breaking down the obstacles and overcoming objections, the idea starts to make sense. Give people control over their time, allow them to work when and where they're most productive, and grade them on their results, and instead of slacking and decreased productivity, they'll reward the company with increased performance, increased satisfaction, and lower voluntary turnover.</p><p>Why is it that the results seem counter to what managers fear? Because it's what everyone already does...just not at work. When we do our household work, we don't deal with politics, we don't "look like" we're doing something, we <em>are</em> doing things. We "grade" ourselves on whether the work gets done or not. The laundry either gets washed or put away, or it doesn't. The dishes make it into the dishwasher or they don't. We do all this stuff on the weekends or after work and don't really think about it, nor do we really get burnt out from doing the usual "home-life" stuff we need to do on a regular basis, and we can do this because we have control over our time, so we can use it as we see fit. This doesn't happen at work, because at work, we're not in control of our time. If we get done with our work without filling up our required 40 hours, then we either have to find more work to do, or we have to look busy. Going home and enjoying the rest of the day or week is out of the question.</p><p><em>Why Work Sucks</em> goes into detail about this problem, known as <a href="http://www.businessknowhow.com/manage/presenteeism.htm">presenteeism</a>, and how costly it is to companies. When an employee has a set amount of work and has to fill a 40-hour week with it, there's no incentive to work efficiently beyond keeping it from taking more than 40 hours (and even that upper limit is questionable). The book also addresses the underhanded comments, such as "nice of you to join us," which it calls "Sludge." It explains that while on the surface and on an individual basis, these comments seem harmless, but not only do they add up, they are also designed to keep us "in line" with the corporate culture of clock watching.</p><p>Think about it, how often have you or someone you know called in sick, just so you didn't have to explain to your boss about the accident on your primary route? Or how about making a "socially acceptable" excuse because you had a hard time sleeping the night before and didn't want to get out of bed? Or any other number of stories you've lined up to tell your boss or coworkers for whatever reason why you were late coming in or early to leave or didn't make it in at all? How often have you feared that you'd be looked down on even if your real reason <em>is</em> a "socially acceptable" reason for missing or shortening your day? How many times have you come into work sick, or felt guilty about staying home when sick? These are all a result of Sludge and the corporate clock-watching culture.</p><p>ROWE, however, asks "why does the clock matter so much? The work itself is what matters," and that's the basis for ROWE &mdash; it doesn't matter how, when, or where the work gets done, as long as it <em>gets done</em> (assuming, of course, the means are legal and the work is done before any applicable deadlines). Does it really matter if Sally chooses to do her work in a coffee shop from 5pm to 2am, or that Dave does his from 6am to 11am at home, then some more from 3pm to 6pm at the park? If the work is getting done and is up to standards, then the answer is simple, it <em>doesn't</em> matter.</p><p>One of the best parts about the ROWE concept is that it's not just theory, it's in practice in Fortune 500 and Fortune 100 companies, as well as others. ROWE is already working for these companies, and these success stories provide leverage for implementing the system in even more companies. Taking a more creative look at the concept, on an individual level, working in a ROWE is not unlike working as a freelancer, except that a ROWE employee has the stability of an established company.</p><p>In all, <em>Work Sucks</em> is a must-read for anyone who knows that there must be a better way, as well as those who feel that the way things are is good enough (in other words, everyone in any kind of corporate environment). Even if your company can't fully implement a true ROWE, it can probably make use of a lot of the advice it offers.</p></div>
9+
<a href="https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/302027/why-work-sucks-and-how-to-fix-it-by-cali-ressler-and-jody-thompson/">Why Work Sucks and How to Fix It: No Schedules, No Meetings, No Joke--the Simple Change That Can Make Your Job Terrific</a>
10+
11+
You anxiously look at your watch as the traffic creeps forward - 8:55am. There's no way you'll get to the office by 9, you still have 10 miles to go. When you finally do arrive at 9:15, you try to sneak to your desk unnoticed, but your boss is already there. "So nice of you to join us this morning," he greets you, a "do it again and you're fired" look on his face. You sit down at your desk, still a little too agitated to start work quite yet, so you read your favorite news site for ten minutes. Part of you resigns to this life, believing it's the way things are, and nothing will change, but another part of you feels that there must be a better way.
12+
13+
That second part is right. There is a better way.
14+
15+
Former Best Buy employees Cali Ressler and Jody Thompson (now owners of <a href="http://gorowe.com">CultureRx</a>) share their experience of transforming Best Buy's corporate culture from the traditional clock-watching to a Results-Only Work Environment, or ROWE, and how ROWE can work for other companies. The idea seems counterintuitive, at first, especially to those entrenched in traditional corporate culture and politics, but as Cali and Jody start breaking down the obstacles and overcoming objections, the idea starts to make sense. Give people control over their time, allow them to work when and where they're most productive, and grade them on their results, and instead of slacking and decreased productivity, they'll reward the company with increased performance, increased satisfaction, and lower voluntary turnover.
16+
17+
Why is it that the results seem counter to what managers fear? Because it's what everyone already does...just not at work. When we do our household work, we don't deal with politics, we don't "look like" we're doing something, we *are* doing things. We "grade" ourselves on whether the work gets done or not. The laundry either gets washed or put away, or it doesn't. The dishes make it into the dishwasher or they don't. We do all this stuff on the weekends or after work and don't really think about it, nor do we really get burnt out from doing the usual "home-life" stuff we need to do on a regular basis, and we can do this because we have control over our time, so we can use it as we see fit. This doesn't happen at work, because at work, we're not in control of our time. If we get done with our work without filling up our required 40 hours, then we either have to find more work to do, or we have to look busy. Going home and enjoying the rest of the day or week is out of the question.
18+
19+
*Why Work Sucks* goes into detail about this problem, known as <a href="http://www.businessknowhow.com/manage/presenteeism.htm">presenteeism</a>, and how costly it is to companies. When an employee has a set amount of work and has to fill a 40-hour week with it, there's no incentive to work efficiently beyond keeping it from taking more than 40 hours (and even that upper limit is questionable). The book also addresses the underhanded comments, such as "nice of you to join us," which it calls "Sludge." It explains that while on the surface and on an individual basis, these comments seem harmless, but not only do they add up, they are also designed to keep us "in line" with the corporate culture of clock watching.
20+
21+
Think about it, how often have you or someone you know called in sick, just so you didn't have to explain to your boss about the accident on your primary route? Or how about making a "socially acceptable" excuse because you had a hard time sleeping the night before and didn't want to get out of bed? Or any other number of stories you've lined up to tell your boss or coworkers for whatever reason why you were late coming in or early to leave or didn't make it in at all? How often have you feared that you'd be looked down on even if your real reason *is* a "socially acceptable" reason for missing or shortening your day? How many times have you come into work sick, or felt guilty about staying home when sick? These are all a result of Sludge and the corporate clock-watching culture.
22+
23+
ROWE, however, asks "why does the clock matter so much? The work itself is what matters," and that's the basis for ROWE &mdash; it doesn't matter how, when, or where the work gets done, as long as it *gets done* (assuming, of course, the means are legal and the work is done before any applicable deadlines). Does it really matter if Sally chooses to do her work in a coffee shop from 5pm to 2am, or that Dave does his from 6am to 11am at home, then some more from 3pm to 6pm at the park? If the work is getting done and is up to standards, then the answer is simple, it *doesn't* matter.
24+
25+
One of the best parts about the ROWE concept is that it's not just theory, it's in practice in Fortune 500 and Fortune 100 companies, as well as others. ROWE is already working for these companies, and these success stories provide leverage for implementing the system in even more companies. Taking a more creative look at the concept, on an individual level, working in a ROWE is not unlike working as a freelancer, except that a ROWE employee has the stability of an established company.
26+
27+
In all, *Work Sucks* is a must-read for anyone who knows that there must be a better way, as well as those who feel that the way things are is good enough (in other words, everyone in any kind of corporate environment). Even if your company can't fully implement a true ROWE, it can probably make use of a lot of the advice it offers.

content/posts/2010-06-21-review-handcrafted-css.md

Lines changed: 11 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -4,5 +4,14 @@ date: 2010-06-21
44
tags: [review, css]
55
---
66

7-
<div class='post'>
8-
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0321658531?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=graywolfweb-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=0321658531">Handcrafted CSS: More Bulletproof Web Design, Video Edition</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=graywolfweb-20&amp;l=as2&amp;o=1&amp;a=0321658531" width="1" height="1" /></p><p>While at one of my previous clients, a coworker ordered this book as a resource at the office. I was the first to read it and simply couldn't put it down. <em>Handcrafted CSS: More Bulletproof Web Design</em> highlights modern CSS techniques that help build robust, attractive, designs.</p><!-- more --><p>Unlike most technical books, which often provide too much tech and not enough explanation, or too much theory and not enough tech, this book provides a fantastic balance, and even uses a running case study that it builds and enhances as the reader progresses through the book. Not only are readers able to understand the concepts the book presents, but they also learn ways to put the new concepts into practice.</p><p>One of the important points the book emphasizes is <em>progressive enrichment</em>, or designing for the future. CSS3 is complete enough that some of its features can already be used in modern browsers, which already provides us with a way to create beautiful designs that don't require much, if any (let alone extensive) use of images or JavaScript -- nearly everything can be done entirely in CSS. The principles of progressive enrichment put forth in the book allow developers to write forward-thinking code, creating designs that will essentially self-improve as browsers implement more CSS capabilities.</p><p>Another unique aspect to the book is that not only can it be easily read cover-to-cover without being too dry and code-saturated, but it also serves very well as a desktop reference. The chapters and sections are organized in an easy-to-access manner and cover, in fair depth, specific features of CSS (as opposed to more broad subjects encompassing several features).</p><p>This book is a must-have for intermediate to advanced CSS coders, be they designers or developers, and even beginning coders that are serious in learning how to write robust, forward-thinking, and semantic code.</p></div>
7+
<a href="https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/handcrafted-css-more/9780321638281/">Handcrafted CSS: More Bulletproof Web Design, Video Edition</a>
8+
9+
While at one of my previous clients, a coworker ordered this book as a resource at the office. I was the first to read it and simply couldn't put it down. *Handcrafted CSS: More Bulletproof Web Design* highlights modern CSS techniques that help build robust, attractive, designs.
10+
11+
Unlike most technical books, which often provide too much tech and not enough explanation, or too much theory and not enough tech, this book provides a fantastic balance, and even uses a running case study that it builds and enhances as the reader progresses through the book. Not only are readers able to understand the concepts the book presents, but they also learn ways to put the new concepts into practice.
12+
13+
One of the important points the book emphasizes is *progressive enrichment*, or designing for the future. CSS3 is complete enough that some of its features can already be used in modern browsers, which already provides us with a way to create beautiful designs that don't require much, if any (let alone extensive) use of images or JavaScript -- nearly everything can be done entirely in CSS. The principles of progressive enrichment put forth in the book allow developers to write forward-thinking code, creating designs that will essentially self-improve as browsers implement more CSS capabilities.
14+
15+
Another unique aspect to the book is that not only can it be easily read cover-to-cover without being too dry and code-saturated, but it also serves very well as a desktop reference. The chapters and sections are organized in an easy-to-access manner and cover, in fair depth, specific features of CSS (as opposed to more broad subjects encompassing several features).
16+
17+
This book is a must-have for intermediate to advanced CSS coders, be they designers or developers, and even beginning coders that are serious in learning how to write robust, forward-thinking, and semantic code.

content/posts/2014-08-19-youre-not-alone.md

Lines changed: 0 additions & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -15,7 +15,6 @@ Greg is a developer evangelist (devangelist) for [Twilio](http://www.twilio.com/
1515
If you ever have the opportunity, attend this man’s talk. Even if you’ve seen the videos of it.
1616

1717
He’s the driving force behind this entry. Until now, I’ve kept my professional image away from my more personal parts. I’ve compartmentalized my identity, basically. Tech and business here, mental and physical health over there, homesteading over there (insert gestures to different directions here). But the truth is, my having Autism and Depression are part of what shapes me as a person and affects my professional life, whether I want them to or not. And just like I have started looking up to Greg as a role model for someone who has seen success with his ADHD and Bipolar out in the open, the others out there need more people to look up to, as well. We all need people to understand us and our differences, so that they can see us as strengths to be embraced, instead of liabilities to be feared. And, as Robin Williams’ death has shown so vividly, we need to be able to talk about these things openly and not be ashamed of them.
18-
<!-- more -->
1918

2019
## I Am Autistic
2120

content/posts/2014-10-15-dear-recruiters.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -16,7 +16,6 @@ Due to the high volume of contact requests I’ve received, I have decided to wr
1616
The Greater Columbus Area is home to a very large number of third party recruiting companies. This means **you have a lot of competition**. Competition should mean improved quality. Unfortunately, what I generally see is rather disappointing.
1717

1818
We tech folks are generally a merit-based people. We’ll respect you if we have reason to do so. You can earn that respect by demonstrating that you respect us and what we do (and no, saying that you do doesn’t cut it; show, don’t tell). Here are some ways to do that.
19-
<!-- more -->
2019

2120
## Have some fundamental understanding of the technology
2221

@@ -118,7 +117,7 @@ I may consider a position that allows it on a regular part time basis. *This doe
118117

119118
## Results-only work environment
120119

121-
If you don’t know what this is, [here’s some required reading for you](http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2006-12-10/smashing-the-clock), and when you’re done with that [pick up *Why Work Sucks And How To Fix It* and read it](http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1591842921/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1591842921&linkCode=as2&tag=graywolfweb-20&linkId=PBMFRAJ3BFUSYUQ6) . I’ll wait.
120+
If you don’t know what this is, [here’s some required reading for you](http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2006-12-10/smashing-the-clock), and when you’re done with that [pick up *Why Work Sucks And How To Fix It* and read it](https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/302027/why-work-sucks-and-how-to-fix-it-by-cali-ressler-and-jody-thompson/) . I’ll wait.
122121

123122
Done with your homework? Good, because this one’s come to be a deal-breaker for me.
124123

content/posts/2014-10-30-motivation.md

Lines changed: 0 additions & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -10,7 +10,6 @@ slug: motivation
1010
When in the throes of a depressive episode (or on the edge of an anxiety attack or any other such motivation killer), it can be hard to maintain motivation and productivity. This can be detrimental when other people rely on you, or when you have a job to hold down.
1111

1212
Over the years, I've found a number of things that have helped keep me motivated through low times, and have decided to share them. Unlike other articles giving advice on "cheering up," the items here may or may not actually lift your mood. That's not the point of them, and anyone who's dealt with depression will tell you that most of the time, things designed to "cheer you up" don't really work. If it does lift your mood, then that's a positive side effect, but as Winston Churchill put it, "when you're going through hell, keep going." These items are intended to do *that* -- help you keep going.
13-
<!-- more -->
1413

1514
## Eat...
1615

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)