Daniel Foth

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Daniel Foth

Daniel Foth

@FothDaniel_

Dad of 4. Semi-nomadic. April to Oct in Europe. Nov to Mar in Asia/Latam. Building IRL football communities backed by FC Barcelona at https://t.co/jB97qBOmmT

Tham gia Aralık 2021
2.9K Đang theo dõi419 Người theo dõi
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Jaynit
Jaynit@jaynitx·
Steve Jobs on why "that's how we've always done it" is the most dangerous phrase in business: "In most companies if you're new and you ask why is it done this way, the answer is because that's the way we do it here or because that's the way it's always been done" "That single shift is everything in my opinion because in that shift is a tremendous optimistic point of view about the people that work in a company. It says these people are very smart, they're not pawns, they're very smart, and if given the opportunity to change and improve they will improve the processes"
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Daniel Foth
Daniel Foth@FothDaniel_·
"Jensen Huang pays his top executives the exact same dollar amount. Same number for 55 people. He opens Excel, types one figure, and drags it down. Nvidia crossed $5 trillion on Friday."
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

Jensen Huang pays his top executives the exact same dollar amount. Same number for 55 people. He opens Excel, types one figure, and drags it down. Nvidia crossed $5 trillion on Friday. Performance reviews go unwritten. The standing one-on-one cadence that anchors most CEO calendars simply doesn't exist, and information flows to all 55 directs at once or not at all. The man running the world's most valuable company threw out the entire CEO operating manual. The conventional read is eccentricity. 55 directs blows past Dunbar. The identical pay surrenders talent retention as a lever, and zero scheduled 1:1s skips the most basic CEO ritual in the management playbook. A board reviewing this on paper would fire the CEO. What reads as three quirks is one architecture. Each rule removes a specific class of executive politics that traditional companies spend 40% of CEO time managing. Identical pay removes compensation negotiation as a variable. There's no "I should make more than Ajay" conversation, because the conversation has no surface area. Nvidia's most recent proxy shows Colette Kress, Ajay Puri, Debora Shoquist, and Timothy Teter all receiving the same $1.5M cash bonus this year. Identical to the dollar. Skipping one-on-ones removes information asymmetry across the entire executive layer. Every exec operates on identical intel, because Jensen never says anything to one of them that the other 54 don't also hear. Status games inside executive teams need private information to function. Jensen made every piece of information public. 55 directs forces a flat structure. A Fortune 500 with 5-7 directs per manager typically runs 9-10 layers deep. Nvidia runs roughly 3-4 layers from Jensen to a senior individual contributor. Information that takes a quarter to move at Microsoft moves in a single meeting at Nvidia. The deeper trade is what most people miss. The traditional CEO spends 30-40% of their week on executive management overhead: 1:1s, comp reviews, conflict mediation between directs, performance plans. Jensen runs the same headcount with effectively zero of that. His management system IS the engineering meeting. Every exec is a co-designer in real time. Management happens as a byproduct of the work. The Excel drag-down is the most surgical move in the system. Differentiated executive comp creates permanent political machinery. Every cycle, every exec compares their number to their peers, recalibrates relative status, and adjusts behavior accordingly. Jensen looked at that entire machinery and unplugged it. The whole architecture was designed for the moment money stops working. Once a senior Nvidia exec clears $50M+ in vested stock, comp differentiation stops functioning as a motivational lever. It becomes noise. Jensen built the system as if money was already off the table from day one. $5 trillion is the validation. The most heretical management architecture in the Fortune 500 sits on top of the most valuable company in the world. Nobody else will copy it. The system requires a CEO with no executive favorites.

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Bela Wiertz
Bela Wiertz@blwiertz·
This is Berlin, not SF! >1500 applications for our Big Berlin Hack - Thanks to everyone who joined!
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Rohan Paul
Rohan Paul@rohanpaul_ai·
Larry Ellison: “My standard advice to entrepreneurs is you can’t be successful as a small company doing the same thing everyone else is doing… If you’re an entrepreneur, you have to find errors in conventional wisdom.”
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My First Million
My First Million@myfirstmilpod·
"I'm a white dude named Chad who worked in private equity. Should I feel bad that I got into Stanford because people with access sent texts for me?" @chadjanis says no. He didn't get into McKinsey, but a mentor gave him Lazard access, and he crushed it. That led to Summit Partners, where he invested $1.5B of a $5B fund. Then people texted Stanford on his behalf and he got in. Why? He made their lives easier and earned their trust. People only send "the text" for people who won't make them look stupid. So if you don't have access, find people who do and work your ass off for them. And if you do have access, pay it forward to the next person who earns it. @thesamparr @ShaanVP
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Daniel Foth
Daniel Foth@FothDaniel_·
"I write no reviews for any of them. I give them constant reviews and they provide the same to me."
Big Brain Business@BigBrainBizness

Jensen Huang on how he keeps 55 executives motivated when they're already incredibly wealthy: His answer reveals an unconventional management philosophy that starts with the structure of his leadership team: "I'm surrounded by 55 people. My management team, my direct reports is 55 people. I write no reviews for any of them. I give them constant reviews and they provide the same to me." Even more surprising is how he handles compensation: "My compensation for them is the bottom right corner of Excel. I just drag it down. Literally, many of our executives are paid the same exactly to the dollar. I know it's weird. It works." Jensen also avoids the typical executive rituals that most CEOs rely on: "I don't do one-on-ones with any of them unless they need me. I never have meetings with them just alone. There's not one piece of information that I somehow secretly tell E-staff that I don't tell the rest of the company." He explains the thinking behind this radical transparency: "In that way our company was designed for agility, for information to flow as quickly as possible. For people to be empowered by what they are able to do, not what they know. That's the architecture of our company." But the real answer to keeping wealthy employees motivated comes down to one thing — his own behavior: "How do I celebrate success? How do I celebrate failure? How do I talk about setbacks? Every single thing, I'm looking for opportunities to instill every single day. What is important, what's not important, what's the definition of good? How do you think about a journey? How do you think about results? All of that all day long." The lesson is clear: when money no longer motivates, culture does. When your top people no longer need the paycheck, what they need is a leader worth following.

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Daniel Foth
Daniel Foth@FothDaniel_·
@cshapiro @collabfund love it ! " make it easy for myself to play football until late in life, meet people all over the world through it, and by doing so enable others to do the same, to spend more time outdoors, to do more sport, and to meet people/make friends"
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Motivaciones Fútbol
Motivaciones Fútbol@MotivacionesF·
LUIS ENRIQUE: “En mi época no existía eso del freestyle, nadie del equipo dominaba el balón como un juego. Había jugadores increíbles, claro: Ronaldo, Laudrup, Figo, Butragueño… tipos de otro nivel. Pero lo de jugar con el balón por pura diversión, de hacerlo hablar con los pies, no se estilaba. Era otro fútbol, más serio, más táctico, menos espectáculo. Hasta que llegó Ronaldinho. Él trajo algo que nunca habíamos visto: alegría con el balón, magia sin esfuerzo, una forma distinta de entender el juego.” “Recuerdo perfectamente cuando llegó al Barça. Antes de cada partido, en el vestuario, solíamos pasarnos la pelota entre varios, sin más. Pero cuando Ronaldinho empezó a hacer lo que hacía, todo cambió. Era como ver a un artista frente a su lienzo: el balón se le pegaba, lo acariciaba, lo dominaba como si tuviera vida propia. Y nosotros, que habíamos visto de todo en el fútbol, simplemente nos sentábamos a mirar. Nadie decía una palabra. Solo quedaba disfrutar del espectáculo antes del espectáculo.”
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Nina Varsavsky
Nina Varsavsky@ninavars·
Mañana es tu cumpleaños @martinvars . Y este año además celebramos 20 años juntos… tengo mucha suerte. Eres el mejor marido y un padre estupendo. Aunque siempre vas a mil, siempre sacas un rato para jugar al fútbol con los chicos o para charlar de ciencia con nuestra hija. Y conmigo siempre sabes cómo hacerme sentir mejor cuando estoy preocupada. Aprendo mucho de ti. Hemos pasado momentos muy bonitos y también momentos difíciles, no me puedo imaginar un compañero mejor para compartir la vida. Han pasado 20 años volando y solo pido que sigamos así, con salud y felices. Te quiero muchísimo. Feliz cumpleaños, mi amor.
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Daniel Foth
Daniel Foth@FothDaniel_·
“ Uphill is better than downhill."
Jaynit@jaynitx

A young man sees someone drive by in a Ferrari with a blonde. He thinks: that guy has everything. Jordan Peterson says look closer. "The woman in the car is a prostitute with a cocaine addiction. Her life is one catastrophe after another." "He's had to lie and cheat his way into this position. He's afraid everything's going to come crashing down on him." "And that's what you're jealous of." He spent 15 minutes explaining what we're actually built for: "We view ourselves as built for pleasure. For consumption. For safety. For egotistical self-aggrandizement and fame." "What are we actually built for? Maximal challenge." "We're built to walk uphill. When you reach the pinnacle, you want to stop and appreciate the vision. But the next thing you want is a higher hill in the distance." "It's from the uphill climb that we derive our value." This is why young men disappear into video games. "That's all acted out in the video game. The active warrior moving uphill with sword in hand. That's dynamic. That's exciting." "They have to act that out in their own life. Video games are not a substitute for life." Start where you are. Even if it's embarrassing. "Humility is starting where you are. If your life is a mess, you have to see that you're the person in that mess." "Your first attempt to fix it might not be something you're particularly proud of." "I saw this in my clinical practice. The first steps people had to take were pretty embarrassing. They'd think: really? That's all I can do?" "Hey, man. Uphill is better than downhill." Here's what most people don't understand about momentum: "You accrue success exponentially. You accrue defeat exponentially too." "Start going downhill, you go downhill faster and faster. Start going uphill, you go uphill faster and faster." "Even if you have to start painfully small, it doesn't matter." Everyone wants confidence. But self-esteem is a lie. "Self-esteem doesn't even exist. It's a pathological concept altogether." "You want confidence that's based in competence. Otherwise it's narcissistic." "How do you develop that? You watch yourself exceed your limits." "And then you think: there's something in me that can exceed my limits. That's your true self." You want a goal you can never fully attain. "Almost all the positive emotion we feel, especially the emotion that fills us with enthusiasm, is experienced in relationship to a goal." "You want a horizon of ever-expanding possibility." "People stake their soul on attaining an instrumental goal. Then they get there and think: now what?" "The answer can't be: I'm going to live in the lap of luxury and never have to do anything." "What do you want to be? A giant infant with a gold bottle? You never have to do anything but lay on your back and suck." "No. You want to be an active warrior moving uphill with your sword in hand." Now here's the dark part: "You need to contemplate your own malevolence. Because you're not only who you are. You're who you could be. For better or worse." "I think it's easier to understand who you could be if you were better once you deeply understand who you could be if you were worse." "You think: I'm way deeper on the negative end than I thought. Much more closely aligned with the forces of hell than I presumed." "That's easy to swallow factually. Not so easy to swallow emotionally. It's a bitter pill." "I don't think you can contemplate the good without contemplating the evil first. It doesn't have the depth." "Fear of God is the beginning of wisdom." Many of his clients are too agreeable. They let everyone else win. "They're resentful and don't know how to stand up for themselves. They're very compassionate by nature. If you're negotiating with them, they'll let you win." "That's not good. You need to win too." "You cannot negotiate unless you can say no. And it causes conflict to say no." The solution sounds counterintuitive. "You have to develop your inner monster a little bit. And that makes you a better person, not a worse person." "It's weird. But that's just how it is." On privilege and how to pay for it: "Some cards are privilege. Maybe you're born intelligent. Symmetrical. Healthy. Into a culture where it's easier not to be deprived. Maybe your parents are rich." "All of that is unearned." "The way you pay for your privilege is with your virtue." "You expiate and atone by doing your best to live the best possible life you can manage. To speak the truth. To treat people with respect. To put your house in order." On envy: "Don't be so sure your position in your room is so damn trivial. It might be your attitude towards it that's trivial." "If you're in dire circumstances, look at how much opportunity you have to make things better." "You don't even want it to be easy."

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The Footy Section
The Footy Section@FTBLsection·
Porto had not won the Champions League in 17 years. Mourinho won it with them. They have not won it since. Chelsea had not won the league in 50 years. Mourinho won it with them. Inter Milan had not won the Champions League in 45 years. Mourinho won it with them. They have not won it since. Real Madrid had not reached a Copa del Rey final in 22 years. Mourinho got them there and won it. Manchester United had not won a European trophy in 9 years. Mourinho won the Europa League with them. They have not won one since. Roma had never won a European trophy in their history. Mourinho won the Conference League with them. Five European finals. Five wins. The first manager in history to win all three European trophies, and the first to win a European trophy with four different clubs. The most underrated manager of our generation.
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Parker Worth ⚡️
Parker Worth ⚡️@parkerworth·
Everyone thinks the best places to live are: Zurich, Tokyo, and Dubai. They’re all wrong. One city stands head and shoulders above the rest. Here it is (and why it has the best quality of life):
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Jake Paul
Jake Paul@jakepaul·
My girl don’t do this shit for fun. We make content because our jets have fuel costs but I used to run that game and then purposefully retired from it because of weird shit like this. I don’t need to make clips and have whop clippers to run money behind to be famous. You just met someone who is a real person that doesn’t give a flying fuck about your stream. Play ball homie.
yoxic@yoxics

Jake Paul's girlfriend and Olympian, Jutta Leerdam got upset at Marlon and Sara Saffari for filming on the field while warming up for a creator soccer match 👀😳 “too much vlogging, put the cameras away and focus on the ball”

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Jacob Klug
Jacob Klug@Jacobsklug·
I'm in Barcelona for the month. Locked in. If you're around, have a private rooftop we can work at.
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