A letter from Boris: The project momentum

A letter from Boris: The project momentum

The goal of a company is to make money. You start a project to achieve a goal. A task is done when it is done.

Yet, it seems that companies and projects have a mind of their own and want to exist and grow just for the sake of existing and growing. Every manager wants more people on their team. It makes them feel important and relevant, even though every manager knows that adding more people tends to slow progress rather than speed it up.

This happens in larger companies and, at a smaller scale, in your own life. Have you ever realised that you’re not cleaning up but giving yourself a false sense of accomplishment just by moving stuff around? Maybe you’ve alphabetised books on your bookshelf or ordered your glasses from small to large? You’re doing something, and it feels good, but if you’re honest with yourself, you know you’re just keeping yourself busy and not achieving anything.

Another aspect here is the bias you bring to every project. If you need to decide whether your hallway needs a paint job, it isn't easy to make an unbiased decision if you’re the one who will need to do the painting. On the other hand, if you’re getting paid to do the painting, that will undoubtedly influence you as well. Ideally, you get an unbiased third party to analyse and act accordingly.

This is why running a company and your personal life is so difficult. Projects want to run themselves, companies exist with their own will to live and grow, and everybody is biased and preoccupied. There’s no free will and no objectivity.

So, how do we proceed? Make small steps every moment of the day without giving up or getting distracted. Focus on the result, and accept that every opinion is biased. It's not easy, and that’s okay.


What else we’re writing about

🇺🇦 What’s your work from home situation like these days? For Ukrainian tech professionals who are still living in the country, it is not only email notifications popping up on their laptop screens, but also incoming missile alerts. Linnea Ahlgren has caught up with several to paint a picture of how Ukraine’s tech sector is fuelling the fight for freedom.

🪐 Space has become a crowded place. Astronomers estimate that over 10,000 active satellites were in orbit last month — four times as many as just five years ago. Responding to this dynamic, European spacetech startups have proposed an array of solutions to the growing threat of collisions.

🩸 In a UK first, drones have successfully delivered blood packs, flying beyond the visual line of sight, where the pilot can no longer see them as they travel. The flights were part of a joint trial between the NHS and healthcare logistics startup Apian. Its aim was to test the viability of blood samples following drone transport.

🇪🇺 Meta’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Spotify’s CEO Daniek Ek have taken aim at European lawmakers for enforcing “stifling” and “inconsistent” regulation that hampers the growth of tech companies. “Instead of clear rules that inform and guide how companies do business across the continent, our industry faces overlapping regulations and inconsistent guidance on how to comply with them,” wrote the pair in an op-ed Wednesday.

⛵️ UK startup Drift is navigating new territory with an autonomous yacht that isn’t just hydrogen-powered, but hydrogen-producing. The company is developing a vehicle capable of making green hydrogen at sea. It could offer a quicker, more efficient way to produce and transport the fuel, especially in remote regions.


Booking.com, Estée Lauder, Vinted, and much more

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