
Matt Golt
19K posts

Matt Golt
@mgolteez
Lover of people, fitness, and coffee. Wanna be runner and triathlete. GTM lead. "If at first you don't succeed, try, try, and try again."
Montreal Katılım Mart 2009
1.2K Takip Edilen874 Takipçiler
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hudsonavenue.substack.com/p/learning-fro…
Wrote an article about my past few months learning from some of the best in the endurance world by spending my nights and weekends combing through their websites, blogs, and manifestos.
A few more to come too.
*I think it's time I change my domain :)
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Matt Golt retweetledi


@jakecastilloooo Adore what you post, Jake. Can relate to a lot of what you share. Cheers.
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In college, I kept getting fired.
Then I read The Catcher in the Rye.
Holden Caulfield gets kicked out of every school he goes to.
Smart, but impossible to fit into the places people kept putting him.
I was 21.
I had just been fired from my third job in three years.
I read the whole book in one sitting.
It was the first time I realized maybe I was just in the wrong rooms.
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Matt Golt retweetledi

People talk about obsession but it's actually not a great quality, and is associated with poorer performance outcomes. What you want is someone who is interested in the pursuit of excellence, which is so much more heartfelt, deliberate, and expansive. amazon.com/Way-Excellence…
Codie Sanchez@Codie_Sanchez
Underrated signs of a high performer: • They hate small talk. • Are not okay with wasting your time. • Do what they say they’re going to do. • Do it with urgency. • Are obsessed, not just interested. What am I missing?
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if you've ever questioned your presence on x, i'd send you this screenshot.
but i agree with @bchesky it sounds easy to say "need a nice cabin within 2h drive" but that's super naive.
in marketplaces data mismatch have a price.
let me elaborate.
a user says: "i need a nice cabin within 2h drive"
okay.
- 2 hours from where? current location? home? by car or train?
- what does "nice" mean? luxury? cozy? cheap but charming?
- does cabin mean an actual wooden cabin in the woods or just a house in the countryside?
- when? this weekend? flexible dates? 2 adults? family? dog? budget? wifi? instant booking only?
as a human we compress intent. but it doesn't work for booking systems. it needs exact constraints.
chat makes the problem feel solved because the conversation feels natural.
but finding a place to book is not JUST a conversation.
the listings themselves are messy.
- one host says "cozy" and means small. another says "cozy" and means dark basement.
- photos make places look bigger.
- listings are incomplete.
- locations are hidden before you book.
- descriptions are written like marketing copy.
in natural way you could say "find me a quiet cabin with sunset views". then the question is - where is "quiet" and "sunset view" stored in database?
so the ai guesses from whatever metadata it can find. sometimes it works. often it doesn't.
and when wrong answer in chatgpt costs you nothing, on marketplaces mistakes cost money.
- wrong cancellation rules.
- pets actually not allowed.
- listing unavailable.
- distance wrong.
- hidden fees.
- bad check-in assumptions.
travel is a transaction and accuracy matters way more than just add an entry on my calendar.
travel is visual.
people scan photos, prices, maps, ratings, amenities all at once. even if its look complex ui etc.
but in chat ui it becomes just a queue: "here's option one." "here's option two." slower than a grid. way slower.
and ranking gets weird. if the ai picks 5 listings why those 5? best match? paid placement? hidden bias? safety call?
people still not ready to give up on personal control of the outcome. they want to be sure that they've done everything to find that exact place to stay.
speed matters too.
a good conversational booking needs intent parsing, availability checks, price lookup, policy fetch, ranking, maps, personalization. and many more.
nobody likes waiting 10 seconds, over and over, for "thinking…"
and this is just an exploration phase.
then we have "book it" part.
- which one?
- what dates?
- which card?
- who's traveling?
- did you accept house rules?
chat feels nice until you have to sign or pay. so chat probably doesn't replace forms. it just makes discovery better.
i'd bet on chat for intent to start with → filters for custom work and filtering → cards and maps for comparison → normal boring checkout.
you can just make a chat as ui when the moat is still the boring stuff - trust, clean inventory and control.

ben hylak@benhylak
so instead of saying “funky cabins within 2 hour drive” i will have to keep filling out your patient intake form
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@cavopol @danywander @bchesky Funny, recently read about both of these in two diffference books:
1) @marcrandolph That Will Never Work and 2) Chip War for the Intel story.
Thanks for sharing, Michael.
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@mgolteez @danywander @bchesky Intel: Memory chips (DRAM) -> microprocessors.
Japanese rivals commoditized their original core memory business, collapsing margins and market share; Intel exited it entirely to bet on CPUs despite internal resistance, as memory was becoming an existential dead end.
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@1HabRising I noticed this, nobody at the end wants, Arber.
Scared of him.
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@cavopol @danywander @bchesky What are some of the best examples of big public companies that eventually made a big bet on innovation versus appeasing shareholders (or, short term conversion growth)?
Because, something eventually has to give? And, I foresee, Brian, betting big on innovation.
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@danywander @bchesky that _is_ the innovators dilemma
when you have to preserve conversion rate on 100b in GMV, but your incumbents don't - they will inevitably counterposition you and you can't counterattack without sacrificing the business.
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@mikert89 @danywander Yes. But I told our team that we will disrupt ourselves before somebody else does
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@danywander @cavopol @bchesky What are some of the best companies that faced this dilemma and eventually made a big bet on innovation v. conversion?
Because, something eventually has to give, right?
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new experiment: ai labs in Toronto.
you bring one real problem from your work. we match you 1:1 with an expert. 3 hours later you walk out with it solved.
think genius bar meets university lab class.
we picked a Saturday because the people who need ai most have the least time to learn it. this is the version that actually fits in your life.
it's free, only 20 spots for May 9th.
fill out your pre-lab to apply - link in the next tweet

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1st round heavyweight tilt.
Alex@ivandemigoal
I can’t stress this enough, but this is not a first round matchup. Easily could’ve been a conference final man
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@awerhun This was the slogan in the original locker room - To you from failing hands we throw the torch. Be yours to hold it high. -
When they moved from the Forum to the Bell Centre, the ceremony was all about passing the torch.
It's from a poem from WWI if I'm not mistaken
Montréal, Québec 🇨🇦 English

say the thing!
it will help save Canada
buildcanada.com/memos/say-it
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@Alex_Garneauu Actually go here a bunch to jam with the owner, super nice guy, talks with everyone, and is really kind.
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@JacquesThibs Noted, I find the menu a little confusing tbh haha, so this helps.
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If you’re ever in Montreal, go to Iconoglace for some great ice cream. My favourite is Le Killer.
Be careful on warm days though, lineups can be more than a block long. 😅
Montréal@Montreal
We are SO back. 🍦
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Huge pet peeve of mine: folks hating on a founder or brand when things are going shitty or the tides are changing... those doing it are usually armchair warriors.
Anyways, wishing best to Figma and Dylan Fields + team.
Figma@figma
Us to our mentions
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