Jeremy Gordon

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Jeremy Gordon

Jeremy Gordon

@JeremySF

Civil and human rights stan. ME/EE dilettante. Programmer. Serial entrprnr. Frmr HS ⚽️🏀 coach. Frmr VP Eng@Twitter. SNES to PS3 dev.

San Francisco Katılım Şubat 2009
2K Takip Edilen5.1K Takipçiler
Jeremy Gordon retweetledi
KiCad PCB
KiCad PCB@kicad_pcb·
#KiCon North America 2025 is proud to have @Circuitlyapp as a sponsor! Join us on May 30 at UC San Diego for their talk: “Circuitly’s Design and Architecture: An inside look at a KiCad-compatible, git and web browser-based EDA tool.”
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
@msuster Absolutely horrific, but I'm glad to hear you are safe.
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Mark Suster
Mark Suster@msuster·
It would seem that our whole town is gone. Every grocery store, school, church, synagogue, so many houses. No news on our place but not optimistic. So many good people devastated. We’re safe. We have a place to stay for 2 weeks and will reassess.
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
Stay hot kid. 💪
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
Finding his swing again up at CSM. 💪
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
Loving every minute of this dude back on the mound. ⚾️💪❤️
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*tess
*tess@ptr·
@JeremySF Jeremy! Same! I hope you're well. You seem happily free from management these days. :)
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*tess
*tess@ptr·
You can be the smartest person in the room, and if you're a subpar listener you will be a terrible PM. Conversely, if you're amazing at listening – and *remembering* – you're likely to have a strong product career. Here's why, and what to do. First, a story from Slack's early days: I joined Slack when it was ~250 people. We were growing insanely quickly and struggling in all the ways hypergrowth companies struggle: feature requests, infrastructure scalability challenges, client performance, bugs, you name it – not to mention our own aggressive internal roadmap. We knew *what* we needed to achieve. It was the prospect of *doing* so much that was overwhelming. It all seemed critical. Stewart knew this more than anyone, and was doing everything he could to motivate folks to work hard, tighten scope, and ship quickly without compromising quality. Somehow, though, projects still often got stuck near the finish line: details weren't right, an error state wasn't thought through, some bits didn't feel right in internal testing. Whatever the reason, too often work was getting turned around in launch reviews. It was a vicious cycle: caught between pressure to ship and pressure to meet Slack's notoriously high quality bar, PMs came into review meetings fearful of rejection, and met with feedback they would often struggle to *listen* – grasping at rationale for design decisions and tradeoffs in order to survive. Here's where problems multiply: when you defend a decision in an exec meeting, the main signal you send is, "I'm not listening." Picture the job of the CEO. On either side of the product review meeting, they might be interviewing a leadership candidate, reviewing a deal for office space, doing a press interview, or talking to a prospective investor. There is a crazy amount of context switching (and stress!). When a PM shows up defensive in a review, it puts busy leaders into a panic. They can seem angry, but they're actually fearful: they worry you won't register and address their concerns. And they need to context switch and do something else, and a week (or more!) will pass before their next chance to talk to you. Acknowledge and accept! Here's the trick: when you're met with criticism or feedback, instead of explaining why, just say "got it." Then, ask questions. This doesn't mean taking blame or accepting bad feedback. What you are doing is establishing a crucial baseline: "I hear what you are saying." Clarify. We all feel defensive when we receive feedback in high pressure situations. Channel your defensive energy toward questions that will clarify things for you and your team, and improve your alignment with the stakeholder. Things like: * "Last time, you mentioned the importance of X. Does that still rank for you? Did we over-focus on it?" * "When we did X, our concern was Y. Should we be worried about that?" (And if so, "Is there a better way to mitigate it?") * "We've been really pushing to ship by X, we considered Y but the team thinks it is going to be expensive – is it worth slipping the date if necessary to get it in?" (This one can be a particular 💎, sometimes stakeholders just want to hear it's on your radar and you won't forget, and aren't going to block your launch if they know you are listening!) Open a line of communication. Great PMs flag projects when they experience the first of signs of these speedbumps, and do whatever they can to increase the communication cadence. When I was at Slack, if I got a signal that Stewart cared about specific details of a project, or if it started to feel like the scope he wanted wasn't going to fit into the timeline we'd promised, I would start sending him notes and questions directly. My goal was never to force him to make decisions, but just to keep him informed, give him a chance to weigh in, and send a clear signal: we are doing our best, we hear you, and if you want to weigh in, we're eager for your thoughts. Bonus: ✏️ Write things down. This one is so simple I almost left it out, but it's super, suuuper important. The best way to send an unambiguous message that you are listening is to write down feedback. Bring a notebook, do it on paper. No one expects you to hold 30 minutes of feedback in your head. In fact, when you try to do that, they think they are going to have to tell you again. Write it down! You'd be amazed how rarely people do this! Final thought: Yes, you need to be smart to be a PM. But I have seen more PMs struggle, burn out, and lose out on promotions and chances to work on exciting projects due to *lack of trust* than lack of intelligence. Software is a team sport. Show that you listen and care and you are way ahead of the pack.
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Jeremy Gordon retweetledi
Emil Persson
Emil Persson@_Humus_·
In the actual Sponza.
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Adverb Ventures
Adverb Ventures@Adverbvc·
Hi there from the team at Adverb Ventures! Who? adverb.vc We are a new early-stage venture capital fund co-founded by @jess and @aunder. 👋👋 And we are live, backing extraordinary founders building enduring, breakout companies out of our $75M debut fund. 🧵
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Jeremy Gordon retweetledi
Chris Albon
Chris Albon@chrisalbon·
How many tweets could you possibly read, Michael? 600?
Chris Albon tweet media
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
I do love me some sketchy setups. 🤌
Jeremy Gordon tweet media
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
Lololololol Twitter rate limiting. What a clown show.
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
RIP my shop made slitting saw arbor. Next one will make the threaded shaft be about 3x the diameter. Dunno what I was thinking there but the cutting forces twisted the narrow shaft apart.
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Freya Holmér
Freya Holmér@FreyaHolmer·
and so when some tech bro slides into my replies going "adapt or die" then I actually hate you I legitimately hate how careless you are, how unempathetic you are, how little you care for creativity, or people who are clearly unhappy about this
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Danny DeVito
Danny DeVito@DannyDeVito·
Supreme Court my ass
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
Of course I immediately snapped my only 4mm two flute end mill so it’s been slow going babying a four flute through this deep slot. Chip clearing is killing me. In hindsight, I should have started with a horizontal setup and a 2mm slitting saw then chased it with an end mill 🤷‍♂️
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon@JeremySF·
Eight years ago he saw his first college baseball game and got on the field to run the bases post game. Now he’s pitching and playing OF on the same field, getting a taste of college baseball at the Stanford Baseball All Star high school summer camp. Time is flying!
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derek guy
derek guy@dieworkwear·
took my son through san francisco during pride week and am appalled by what we saw. dark suits worn without ties, suit jackets worn with jeans, low-rise slim-fit chinos, dress sneakers, oxford shoes in casual outfits, polos with "business backpacks," a preponderance of tan shoes
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