Most things don’t fail because people lack talent, effort, or good intentions. They fail because we rush past the quiet work. The thinking work. The work that feels slow, inconvenient, and hard to explain on a slide. I have learned this the long way. By building things that looked right, … [Read more...]
Archives for January 2026
When the Numbers Feel Loud, Trust the Quiet Work
Manu Sharma:How does today feel? Best Finance Team Ever:Full. Tight. Everything feels like it needed to be done yesterday. Manu Sharma:That sounds familiar. When work piles up like that, the room starts to shrink. Even breathing feels scheduled. Best Finance Team Ever:It is not just the … [Read more...]
Relevance Is the Only Personalization That Matters
Most outreach fails before the second sentence, not because it is rude or lazy, but because it is irrelevant. We have trained ourselves to believe that replies are earned through flattery, surface level personalization, or proving we looked someone up. A comment about a recent LinkedIn post. A … [Read more...]
My 2026 Resolve: Doubling Down on Rigor Even More
There is a quiet lie many of us carry into the new year. That growth comes from motion. From adding more. From saying yes faster than we can say no. I have learned the opposite the hard way. The most meaningful progress in my life has come during periods when I chose structure deliberately and … [Read more...]
Let’s Quit Brain Fog
Lately, I’ve noticed something unsettling in myself. I can go through an entire day informed, busy, and connected, and still feel like I haven’t really thought. I’ve consumed plenty, reacted enough, and spoken when needed, yet something essential feels untouched. It’s not the usual kind of … [Read more...]
The House You Live In Is the One You’re Quietly Building
Most of the damage we do to our lives does not come from bad intentions. It comes from moments when we tell ourselves, just this once doesn’t matter. I came across a simple story on LinkedIn earlier today. The kind that you read quickly, then slow down, then reread because something in it … [Read more...]
I Use AI in My Writing. Here’s the Part Everyone Misses.
Somewhere around the 600th post, the question stopped being curious and started becoming pointed. Do you use AI for your writing? Sometimes it was asked gently. Sometimes it came wrapped in a raised eyebrow. Occasionally, it felt like a test. As if admitting to it would somehow disqualify the … [Read more...]
When Care Becomes Competence
Leadership used to reward certainty. The sharper the answer, the cleaner the slide, the faster the decision, the more credible the leader. Somewhere along the way, we started confusing speed with wisdom and confidence with understanding. That model worked when problems were tidy, when variables … [Read more...]
AI. One Person. One Laptop. And the Truth We’re Skipping Over
Every few days, a sentence shows up on one of my feeds that feels less like an idea and more like a dare. “One person. One laptop. One billion-dollar company.” I’ve also heard versions of it in podcasts, panels, green rooms, and late-night conversations with people who have built real things … [Read more...]








