
Adam Kazwell
10.8K posts

Adam Kazwell
@kaz
Product guy trying to make sense of AI by building with it + collecting evergreen insights for @productweets. Coffee, podcast or trail recs always welcome ✌️


Figma got crushed on this one :/ Anecdotally seeing more companies task design work to the product team already.







Created a handful of skills based on popular themes from @lennysan's newsletters. Available here: urban-hearth-dsmb.here.now



Today I'm releasing my entire newsletter archive (350+ posts) and all podcast transcripts (300+ episodes) as AI-friendly Markdown files. Plus an MCP server and GitHub repo. A few months ago I shared my podcast transcripts on a whim, and y'all built the most amazing things—an RPG game, a parenting wisdom site, infographics, a Twitter bot, and 50+ other projects. Let's see what happens when I give you even more data. Grab the data here: LennysData.com. Paid subscribers get all of the data (some 350 posts and 300 transcripts). Free subscribers get a subset. I don’t think anyone’s ever done anything like this before, and I’m excited to give you this excuse to play with that AI tool you've been meaning to try. Here’s my challenge to you: build something, and let me know about it. I’ll pick my favorite and give you a free 1-year subscription to the newsletter. Just post a link to your project in the comments here: lennysnewsletter.com/p/how-i-built-…. If you’ve already built something, slurp in this new data and submit it, too. I’ll pick a winner on April 15th. Check out today's newsletter post for inspiration on what you could to build: lennysnewsletter.com/p/how-i-built-… LFG.






Great men of history had little to no introspection. The personality that builds empires is not the same personality that sits around quietly questioning itself. @pmarca and I discuss what we both noticed but no one talks about: David: You don't have any levels of introspection? Marc: Yes, zero. As little as possible. David: Why? Marc: Move forward. Go! I found people who dwell in the past get stuck in the past. It's a real problem and it's a problem at work and it's a problem at home. David: So I've read 400 biographies of history’s greatest entrepreneurs and someone asked me what the most surprising thing I’ve learned from this was [and I answered] they have little or zero introspection. Sam Walton didn't wake up thinking about his internal self. He just woke up and was like: I like building Walmart. I'm going to keep building Walmart. I'm going to make more Walmarts. And he just kept doing it over and over again. Marc: If you go back 400 years ago it never would've occurred to anybody to be introspective. All of the modern conceptions around introspection and therapy, and all the things that kind of result from that are, a kind of a manufacture of the 1910s, 1920s. Great men of history didn't sit around doing this stuff. The individual runs and does all these things and builds things and builds empires and builds companies and builds technology. And then this kind of this kind of guilt based whammy kind of showed up from Europe. A lot of it from Vienna in 1910, 1920s, Freud and all that entire movement. And kind of turned all that inward and basically said, okay, now we need to basically second guess the individual. We need to criticize the individual. The individual needs to self criticize. The individual needs to feel guilt, needs to look backwards, needs to dwell in the past. It never resonated with me.


In 2005, Kevin Systrom created a photo-sharing website called Photobox It was a hit at his Stanford-fraternity but ultimately went nowhere. 5 years later he went on to create Instagram


best advice i ever got for leading creative teams: "it's a jazz band, not a sports team." instead of trying to "win", get curious: what new music will emerge from this unique group of people?


Just posted a photo http://instagr.am/p/tR/

I've never seen a perception -> reality gap as big as the tech crowd narrative that "ChatGPT is dead" 🤔 I pulled data across every AI product globally - what's actually happening? 👇

The angst I feel in current age is different from engineers'. At superhuman speed, I can now prototype, brainstorm, analyze docs, and BS things that need BSing. But it still takes the same time to *really* know something or *really* choose/stand behind something I am producing.



