Call meJeffrey

Seven things you probably already know about me

Here it is. It was only a matter of time. The “Seven Things” meme. For a while I thought that I had dodged it completely, seeing how it’s been cycling through my friends and acquaintances for some time now. To be honest, I was a little worried about getting tagged. I felt that finding seven things that most people don’t know about me to write about would be difficult; specifically because I’m an open book about everything in my life – plus I have the tendency to be a story-teller (read: I talk a lot). I’ve decided to not worry about what people may or may not know, and just go with what has helped define who I am in one way or another. I was tagged for this by my co-worker, Dylan Richard, an uber-talented engineer working in our Chicago office. Dylan is an amazing dude. If you don’t know him, you should be jealous of those who do.

On with the show…

1. On two different occasions, School District 21 in Buffalo Grove, Illinois ripped off my architectural designs.
Occasion one: I’m not sure why, but growing up, I had always wanted to be an architect. It probably started with my obsessions with Legos and Lincoln Logs and grew from there. As a kid, it was not uncommon for me to draw pictures of building, real and imaginary. When I was in 5th or 6th grade, my elementary school announced that they were going to be putting an addition onto the school to expand the library on the second floor as well as the space directly underneath it.

While the details are a bit hazy 18 years later, for some reason they asked all the students to draw pictures of what they thought the addition would look like when it was finished. Most kids broke out markers and crayons. I broke out a mechanical pencil and a scale. (Side note: if you called an architectural scale by the wrong name, my high school drafting teacher used to say, “THIS is a scale – I’M the ruler.”) I worked on this drawing for a while – long enough for my family to become familiar with it – and then I turned it in. Over the summer the addition was built, and to our surprise (especially my mom’s) the addition looked exactly like what I had drawn. Coincidence? I think not!

Occasion two: The summer before my senior year, I moved from my Dad’s house back to my Mom’s house and switched high schools back to the school district that I went through elementary and middle school. I was well on my way in my architectural studies, having twice completed the “Atelier” program at the University of Illinois in Champagne/Urbana, and taken a ton of classes for hand drafting, CAD, model building, etc. Because I had moved so far ahead, my aforementioned drafting teacher let me come up with my own projects to work on in class.

One of these projects was the redesign of the football field’s press-box that sat atop of the bleachers. The concept didn’t come out of thin air, all of the students knew the old, rickety press-box would be replaced come spring of 1997. After a few weeks I completed my project and turned it in. They started work on the pressbox in the spring, and by the end of the school year what sat high above the bleachers was my drawing incarnate. When I approached my drafting teacher about it, he got pissed at me for asking. It was an odd, yet curious reaction. Granted, he was an odd, yet curious dude.

2. A teacher from my middle school hit me with a car.
On a summer day between 7th and 8th grade I was riding my bike on a residential street with a bunch of my friends. A car approached us from behind and started honking. We waived it around, but it slowly got closer and closer to us. When it was close enough for us to see the driver’s face, we realized it was a teacher at our middle school named Mr. Sailor, a guy who had a reputation for being a crotchety old bastard. Think Dick Cheney teaching 8th grade science.

I’m pretty sure he thought he was being funny by creeping up on us – accelerating towards us, slowing down, honking, repeat. I was unluckily towards the back of the group, and during one of Mr. Sailor’s hilarious accelerations, I got freaked out, reflexively hit the brake on my bike, and he crashed into me. Keep in mind this all happened at pretty low speeds, but I was a 13-year old on a bike and he was in a car. He stopped his car after his bumper hit my back tire hard enough to throw me off balance and I crashed. As I lay on the ground, tangled in my bike, he gets out of his car and says “that’s what happens when you ride in the middle of the road,” and then drives away.

I had one of those “I need to go home RIGHT NOW” panic moments and hopped back on my bike and rode home as fast as I could through people’s yards, too scared to ride in the street. When I got home I realized that my leg and hands were bleeding and my neck hurt really bad. My mom was at work, so a friend called 911, then my mom. An ambulance came to my house along with a police officer. I was treated for my minor scrapes and told the police officer what happened, and he went to find Mr. Sailor. I’m not clear on the exact details, but I do know the police couldn’t find him for 3 days. I also know that the school knew that this happened and didn’t fire him. My neck injury was bad enough that I had to spend part of the summer in a soft neck-brace.

While I didn’t have him as a teacher (the school made sure of that) I did have to see Mr. Sailor every day for an entire school year in the hallways. Awkward.

3. I have the words “drug free” tattooed on the back of my legs.
I was straightedge pretty much all through high school, and throughout my exhausting three semesters of college. I got my first straightedge tattoo when I was 15. It says “SXE” on my right hip, and it’s done with the skill level of someone who would tattoo a 15-year old. A few months later, I upped the ante with “XXX” tattooed on my left hip – same “artist”. When I was 17, I got “X Straightedge X” tattooed across the upper part of my left arm (which is thankfully now covered with something much nicer). All of these tattoos told the world that I was committed to being drug and alcohol free, and were all strategically placed so that my parents couldn’t see them while I was wearing regular clothes.

When I went away to college, I started getting heavily tattooed on my arms by Aaron Coleman in Phoenix. As anyone with a lot of work done can tell you: each one leads to the next. Mix that with being 18 years old and you potentially have a recipe for disaster. I don’t recall the exact day it happened, but I imagine I was sitting in my dorm room, listening to Earth Crisis “Gomorrah’s Season Ends” and came up with the brilliant idea of getting the word “drug” tattooed down my left leg, and “free” tattooed down my right. Hilariously, this was before I got into graphic design, so I opened Microsoft Publisher on my computer and designed the tattoo in the toughest looking font the system had to offer. I then printed it out as large as my 8-1/2″ x 11″ ink-jet could handle in a format that I’ve since learned is called “left justified.”

Pro-tip: When your tattoo artist laughs at you when you bring him or her a tattoo idea, maybe think it through for a few moments more.

The best part of this story is that the tattoos gained me the nickname “rug ree” because when I wore shorts, as you tend to do when you’re in college in Arizona, the “d” and the “f” would get covered. Awesome.

4. I’ve DJ’d at clubs and raves all over the country.
There was a point in my life where I really strived to be the next Sashweedvanoakendyk. At the end of the 1990s and into the early 2000s, I lived in an a giant apartment with my closest friends, two of whom taught me how to DJ, and the other who would dance like he really meant it whenever you were behind the decks. We were a solid crew. We also lived right above another apartment full of DJs, so suffice to say – noise wasn’t an issue at all. Living with two fairly established DJs did get me introduced to promoters and afforded me the opportunity to play out very, very early on in my “career.” This gave me the confidence to stand up in front of a lot of people and play records (yes, records – not CDs) for hours.

The most people I played in front of was probably a little over a thousand in San Diego at a huge multi-stage outdoor party called “The Movement” on the UCSD campus. Being much more established than me, my roommate played the main stage to easily double that number. I played raves and clubs all over the midwest as well. I never did get to play anywhere east of Chicago, but I would have loved to play at one of those East-coast 3-day mega-raves.

My relationship as a DJ with promoters helped when I started getting into graphic design. Being a designer and a DJ really gives you a ton of leverage to do both. I literally began my career as a graphic designer designing huge rave flyers, and one of the smartest things I ever did early on was tell promoters “if you let me DJ at your party, I’ll do your flyer for free.” This lead to me getting paid for both. One of those promoters, who at the time was a very close friend, left Chicago and moved to DC to go work for a dance music station called “The Move” on XM (channel 80). I not only briefly had a DJ residency on that channel, but I got to design the station’s identity. XM80 was dropped from the lineup in the Sirius/XM merger, so you can no longer see my logo on XM radios. I quit playing raves as my design career started to take off, and eventually stopped DJing altogether because…

5. I have no colon.
In 2001, a few weeks after 9/11, I got the stomach flu – and I got it good. After 4 weeks of dry heaving for seemingly no reason, passing considerable amounts of blood every time I visited the little boys room, and losing a ton of weight, I got the bright idea of seeing a doctor. I can’t imagine how I must have looked when I entered my internist’s office. Incredibly skinny, incredibly pale and incredibly weak. She sent me into the hospital for some emergency tests (her office is in the hospital), and within 2 hours I was admitted. After a night’s worth of testing, I was informed that I didn’t have the world’s worst case of the stomach flu – I had ulcerative colitis. I left the hospital just shy of 4 weeks later.

On a mixture of medicines and incredibly strong painkillers, I spent the next 4 years literally at war with my immune system. There were short periods of time where everything would be seemingly normal, and I could try to resume some semblance of a normal life. Going out with friends, going to parties, being social. Without fail, the bottom would drop out and I’d have to return to my life as a hermit, high as a kite on hyrdocodone, making sure to be no more than a few steps away from a bathroom at all times. Between 2001-2005 I was hospitalized almost 15 times, sometimes for malnutrition, sometimes because I was losing so much blood that I’d need transfusions. The 14th floor of the Feinberg Pavillion at Northwestern Memorial Hospital became like a second home.

The only upside to this situation is that I amassed an incredibly impressive DVD collection, and the only thing I could do that brought me any amount of satisfaction was work. Both are still going strong.

In late 2004, I started a new infused drug called Remicade, which was one of the first drugs to treat the disease, and not just the symptoms. For a few months I had my life back completely. It was awesome. When my UC flared again, it did so with a vengeance. To say that I was fed up with being sick, would have been the understatement of the millennium. I literally hit my rock bottom, and I made the decision that I knew was an option, but never thought it would be something I’d elect to do. I decided to have my colon removed.

I went to meet with the surgeon, and we set a date for the first of 2 surgeries. The first surgery would be the total colectomy and creation of a J-pouch. The 2nd surgery would be 8-12 weeks later, depending on how I was healing, to “take down” the temporary colostomy I had to have while I was healing inside. My first surgery was April 5, 2005 and my second surgery was June 10th, 2005.

This was easily the best decision I’ve ever made. While having frankenguts isn’t the most normal thing, it’s normal enough for me, and it’s better than being dead. It also gave me unique opportunity to send my friends and family new, clean colostomy bags filled with candy as a thank you for being supportive (almost no one thought that was funny except me). Plus I can say that I have no colon – how many people do you know that can say that?

6. My cat’s name is Murder.
There isn’t really a great story behind this one. I just thought it would be an awesome name for a cat.

7. I can’t watch Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” video. Ever.
It’s funny how memories screw with your perception of time. I just looked at wikipedia to see when Thriller came out and it said 1983. This means I would have been 4, so I’m now realizing that my memory of my dad somehow getting a copy of The Making Of Thriller documentary had to have happend a good two years later. Either way, here’s the story…

For whatever reason, my parents thought it would be a good idea to sit the whole family down to watch the Making of Thriller documentary together. To give them the benefit of the doubt, they probably hadn’t seen it before, knew we all loved Michael Jackson, and didn’t realize they were about to scar their child for life. The “making of” part was innocuous enough, but once they started putting makeup on Michael, I started to get scared. I made it to the actual video, and that’s when shit went bananas. I can’t say for sure what happened, but I do remember trying to leave the room, and to be fair to my parents, I’ll just say that I remember being told to come back and sit with the family. I don’t remember who said it or why, exactly. All I know is that the part when Michael sees the moon, hunches over and turns back to the girl and says “GO AWAY!” with those yellow eyes and teeth, I about crapped my pants.

In all seriousness, I’m getting cold sweats typing this. It’s so messed up.

By the time the video made it to the zombie dance, I was more scared than I’ve ever been in my whole life, even to this day. I went to bed that night and insisted on leaving the door open and all of the lights on. My mom always put on the radio for me at night to help me fall asleep, and that night was no different. Unfortunately, to add injury to injury, right about the same time that this happened, one of the most popular songs on the radio was Maxwell’s “Somebody’s Watching Me”. It’s a creepy enough song for a 5-year old with the music alone, but Michael Jackson sang the hook!

For what seemed like months, I slept with the lights on, refused to close the door when I went to the bathroom, couldn’t bathe without someone in the room, or be in any part of the house that wasn’t drenched in light. I was also terrified to go near windows at night.

Still to this day I can’t watch the video. I can barely hear the song. A couple years ago I decided that I was being irrational and resolved to take my fear head on. I loaded up the video on YouTube (during the day) and started watching it. I hit the “GO AWAY!” part and literally had a panic attack. I’m almost 30 years old, and if I’m flipping through the channels and land on VH1 “I Love the 80′s” and happen to catch a tiny glimpse of that video, I sleep with the lights on and shower with the curtain open. It’s so bad that I get anxious watching the parts of Edward Scissorhands that include Vincent Price. The oddest part is that I absolutely LOVE horror movies. I can watch them by myself at night and then go directly to bed – no problem. I even helped start a horror movie club! At some point I should probably see a therapist about all of this.

So, that’s all folks! Meme complete. However, this is where I break the rules. I’m not going to pass this on to anyone, because everyone I know who I would tag has either done it, or has been tagged to do it and has chosen not to. I’m in the middle of writing a couple different posts, and wanted something to write in the meantime, so I chose to take this on. If anyone WANTS to do this, email me at jeffrey [at] skinnycorp [dot] com, and I’ll tag you, but I don’t want to force it upon anyone.

Jan 31 2009
7 comments

7 sins of success

This week, our company‘s entire management team met up in our Boulder office for a series of monster planning sessions. The internal mantra for 2009, as coined by our brilliant operations guy Charles, is brutal prioritization and maniacal focus.

This is the first year that we’ve had such a robust and experienced executive team (in the past 12 months we’ve hired a new CEO, CMO, VP of creative and brought on an operations consultant), so 2009 is looking to have way more planned-purpose and focus. As the last few days have rolled by in our planning meetings, I’ve been thinking about all the missteps I’ve taken over the last couple of years, business-wise. The more I thought about projects, ideas and tasks that, according to our new mantra, are off-focus, the more I saw parallels to the 7 deadly sins.

I’d like to share with you my mistakes with the hope that you can learn from them as I have.

Gluttony
Spreading yourself too thin

I’ve made no bones about the fact that I love to work. As I’ve mentioned before, when it comes to work, I’m a hustler. The downside to this level of ambition is that it’s not complicated to overload yourself. I’ve learned that ambition minus realism often equals failure.

It’s intensely important to remember that the more you take on, the less energy you have for each task. If you leave yourself no time to unwind, your effectiveness will decrease, regardless of how ambitious you are. I used to take on a ton of freelance work on top of my normal workload. At a certain point I realized that I was selling the time that was essential to my success. My solution was to stop charging for freelance work. If a project wasn’t worth doing for free than it wasn’t worth doing. No one can afford my down-time.

Greed
Sacrificing your core business by spending too much time on non-core ideas

I’m the type of person with an infinite amount of ideas and a tendency to forget that I have a finite amount of resources (ie. time, energy, etc). It’s important to realize that not all ideas are worth pursuing.

I find it’s ideal to have a trusted network of people to help you vet your ideas and choose which ones are keepers and assess how a new project will affect your current ones. Having a million things going on at a time is rarely a good thing.

Sloth
Not reaching 100% completion, 100% of the time

Sloth is a tricky “business sin”, because it’s rarely a huge problem otherwise you’d never be an entrepreneur to begin with. Where it can become mostly problematic is when it keeps you from seeing a project through to the end. For me, laziness tends to be inversely proportionate to excitement and I certainly have fallen prey to the 80/20 problem (when you complete 80% of the work in 20% of the time, thus creating a half-life of productivity for the remaining 80% of the time as the excitement of the project fades).

I’ve learned that slow and steady is a great way to maintain excitement and spread out your energy equally from start to finish.

Lust
Getting lured away from what you need to do by what you want to do

Even when you work for yourself, there are tasks that aren’t exactly the cat’s pajamas. The easy thing to do is bust through these tasks to get to the stuff you want to do, but I find it’s better to learn to appreciate each task as an important element of each project. When I have to cut up hundreds of graphics, I lust after starting the next page to design. I’ve learned to find satisfaction in the monotony in order to better appreciate what I like best.

Have you ever eaten a whole meal without drinking anything, just to make yourself as thirsty as possible? You should try it sometime. That first sip makes it all worthwhile.

Pride
Forgetting that everything can always be made better

Becoming successful can easily be the worst thing for staying successful. Success has this extra-special way of super gluing on the “I’m so awesome” blinders and fooling you into thinking that you’re the smartest person alive. My friend Micah likes to call it when you start “drinking your own cool-aide.”

Being proud of what you’ve accomplished is fine, but leave the heavy-lifting to your parents. You should see my Mom’s copy of INC with Jake and I on the cover. It looks like it’s been through a war. That’s what’s great about parents. They can be convinced you’re the smartest person alive and it will rarely have a negative effect on your work (though I tend to find it incredibly embarrassing).

In my career I’ve learned that when you stop listening, you stop learning; and when you stop learning you’re done (whether you realize it or not). Luckily, my mildly egomaniacal days were in the very beginning of my career and only served to make my co-workers hate me, and ultimately didn’t jeopardize my goals. I was fortunate to have learned the err of my ways early. Sadly, I’ve seen pride murder promise more than a few times.

Wrath
Getting discouraged if things don’t turn out they way you plan

I’m a planner. It’s not uncommon to find notebooks filled with lists all over my desk at work and strewn about my office at home. I find total satisfaction in the written structure of project building. Because list-making is a passion for me (thanks Mom!), in the past it became easy to lose sight of what I was really doing: creating a best-case-scenario plan for an idea.

I don’t know about you, but for me, a best-case-scenario rears its head on rare occasion. In being aware of the fact that I’m not the smartest person alive, I also realize that my plans are not infallible. In other words: you can come up with a really good plan to execute a really bad idea. Don’t be discouraged by this. Wrath is energy, and like all energy it can be used to good or evil. I like to think about the ratio of windshield to rear-view mirror and use that idea to focus my energy on what’s next.

Envy
What’s right for others may not be right for you

Cool, new, inspiring ideas happens every day. Add that to the infinite availability of information, and what you end up with is a whole lot of people being envious of a whole lot of things. In a technology business, there will always exist a balance of what concepts and applications are pushing towards “bleeding edge” (highly modern yet not highly adopted) and what is your own status quo is.

Increasingly smarter ideas are being pushed around the web every day, which can easily lead to many days full of face-palming for not being the-one-to-think-of-it-first. I’ve found that envy is the number one suspect in causing you to lose focus.

Think of your focus as the width and stability of a tightrope as you’re walking along being bombarded with new ideas and concepts. The less you focus on the current mechanics your own projects, the easier it will be knocked off the tightrope when trying to pay attention to everything else that’s going on. Don’t get me wrong – there’s nothing wrong with being aware of everything else that’s going on. Just stay true to your original plans; see them through; and understand that more-often-than-not, these new and exciting concepts are rarely vetted for use beyond their original purpose, thus having the extreme ability to only add layers of complexity to what you already do.

Remember the immortal advice of Winona Ryder as “Dinky” from the movie Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael: “It’s good to want things.” It works for me.

Jan 22 2009
17 comments

Work smarter and harder

In the early 2000′s, I worked as a senior print designer at a small street-level marketing company. I had a creative director whose catch-phrase was always “work smarter, not harder.” This made a lot of sense to me at the time because I hated my job. Like most people who hate their jobs, the trick is to spend as little time as possible to complete your tasks. “Work smarter, not harder” is the type of advice you get from someone who knows what hardships lay ahead. Someone who knows how to play “the game”. Someone who also hates their job.

I hated hating my job. Being simultaneously satisfied and dissatisfied with each task is a stressful way to go through each day. When I was laid off in May of 2002 thanks to post-9/11 frozen marketing budgets, I vowed to never again hate doing what I love doing. Instead of getting my resume together in hopes of trading an unsatisfying 40-hours-per-week for a crappy paycheck, I resolved to be happy. Working makes me happy. Working hard makes me happy. And you know what? Whoever thinks that smart and hard are opposites is an idiot.

The other day I got the newest issue of INC in the mail. On the cover was a familiar face – Markus Frind. Markus is the founder of Plenty Of Fish, the largest free online dating site in the US. I met him a few years ago when we spoke at the same conference at Stanford. At the time he had over 5 million registered users and was the sole developer, which is still the case only now his user base has grown and he’s hired a couple customer service people. I remember feeling a little put off by Markus’ blase attitude about work when he spoke. In fact, I got the feeling that he had a distinctly detached attitude about his success. After reading the INC article I know not much has changed.

The INC cover boasts that “Markus works one hour a day and makes $10 million a year.” This statement follows a trend that has been making me uneasy for a good long while now. It appears that it’s no longer noteworthy to simply be successful – you have to achieve it with as little effort as possible. Why is hard work no longer news? From the four-day workweek to the four-hour workweek, there recently exists the idea that it’s possible to achieve just as much (if not more) while cutting back on time spent actually working.

My confusion with these concepts is two-fold: (1) if you love what you’re doing, why would you want to do it less? (2) If you don’t love what you’re doing, why not do something else? I can’t speak for anyone else, but I’m not the type of person who is out with friends having a great time and thinks “wow, what I need is to do this less. Much, much less.”

Admittedly, I’m not well versed in some of the examples I’ve given. Tim Ferriss’ book (The Four-Hour Workweek) may truly be a work of genius, but I’ll never know. As long as it’s about working as little as possible and delegating everything downward, I’ll continue to have zero interest. I have gone through his website a little, and I actually talked to him on the phone last year. (On a total side note, I made a point of keeping him on the phone for as long as possible and successfully burned a little over 1/8 of his workweek.) What became very clear to me is that there are two distinct types of entrepreneurs: hustlers and lifestylers.

Lifestylers work as a means to an end. These are the type of people who leave their phone in their hotel room when they go down to the pool. These are the people who don’t check their email at 3am when they get up to use the bathroom. I’m going to assume that Tim Ferriss is a lifestyler. His website has images of people getting massaged, going skiing, slow dancing and flexing biceps. The cover of his book is a silhouette of a hammock between two palm trees. “Escape 9-5, live anwhere, and join the new rich.” Sounds pretty dull. Plus, nouveau riche isn’t a label I’d want to tag myself with.

Me? I’m a hustler (aww, yeah!). I escape 9-5 by working 8 to 8. I work weekends. When I’m not working, I’m thinking about work. Sound bad? Maybe we have different ideas of what work is. Work has no negative connotations to me. It’s equally rewarding as it is inspiring; equally exciting as it is relaxing. I always have my eye on the prize: making things better all the time for our company, for our community and for our customers. It’s not that I have no life, hustlers are expert life-multitaskers. They recognize that ideas or opportunities can arise at any time, and they’re always prepared. Ever seen Gary Vaynerchuk speak or watch WLTV? Hustler. Ever notice how Marc Ecko always has 100 things going on at a time? Hustler. Hustlers work smarter and harder.

The problem I’m finding with the glorification of “look how little they do and how much they’ve made” is this new-wave-work-ethic sets unrealistic expectations to up-and-comers. Being an entrepreneur isn’t easy. Being a successful entrepreneur is even less easy. If it was, everyone would be doing it. Building a business takes time, strength, struggle, persistence and patience. The key ingredient to all of this is fun. Work is fun. Don’t think so? Do something else. None of this is conducive to “less”.

Ultimately, my point isn’t to try to convince that between hustlers and lifestylers, one is better than the other. You have to be yourself, and you may be more comfortable being one or the other – or neither. It just doesn’t make sense to me that someone can find something they love to do, and then consciously choose to do it less.

Jan 15 2009
68 comments

The high cost of sponsorship

For those who know me, or even know just a little bit about me, know that I’m a community guy. I love connecting people, and I love seeing people get together, bring passion to the table, share ideas. With few exceptions, many like-minded people assembled into a group is always a good idea.

Yesterday, I learned about the Chicks Who Click conference here in Boulder. There isn’t much of a description of the event on their site, but from what I gather it’s a way to get the women in the industry together. It’s a great idea. However, I’m pretty shocked as to who their sponsor is: Walmart.

To save myself from spending all day typing a long-winded rant about Walmart, I’ll keep it simple: fuck Walmart.

Walmart is up there with the most socially irresponsible companies on the planet. Besides using sweatshop labor to produce their goods, they refuse to let their employees join a union, knowingly facilitate safety hazards for their shoppers once they leave the store, and in general are also responsible for the failures of many small businesses when the giant price-slashing smiley face decides to come to town.

Needless to say, I’m pretty disappointed that a group of people from Boulder would be OK with accepting sponsorship from Walmart, regardless of how they nicely they try to present themselves to everyone else. It’s incredibly disappointing to see how many Walmarts there are in the surrounding areas to Boulder, but it’s comforting to see that there isn’t one in the city limits. Chicago was the same way, and that made me really happy. What we don’t need is people starting to feel like Walmart is on “our side”, and turning a blind-eye to what a detriment they are to the world.

While I recommend that everyone see this, I’d be happy to buy this DVD for any of the organizers of Chicks Who Click so they can see for themselves what I’m talking about: Walmart: The High Cost of Low Price.

Jan 09 2009
4 comments
  • Some call me a tattooed metal-head with a mind for innovation, an eye for design and nose for tomfoolery. I call myself a tireless design enthusiast, a lover of community and food, a maker of things. As for you, just call me Jeffrey.
  • Stay in Touch

    • via Email
    • via DailyBooth
    • via Facebook
    • via Twitter
    • via Flickr
    • via Formspring
    • via Dopplr
    • via Last.fm
    • via LinkedIn
  • See me Around

    • Culture Unleashed – "Scaling Culture Panel"
      Sep 10 2010
    • Tahoe Tech Talk 2010
      Sep 30 2010

    View all events

  • Guilty by Association

    • Graphicly
      www.graphic.ly
    • Mission Bicycle Co.
      www.missionbicycle.com
    • SimpleGeo
      www.simplegeo.com
    • Threadless
      www.threadless.com
  • Most recent Tweet

    • Welcome to your dirty 30s, @rsarver! 2 days ago
    • More updates...

    Follow me on Twitter

  • Recent blog Posts

    • How Not To: Give advice about scoring design jobs
      07/18/10 – 12 comments
    • Getting home
      07/06/10 – 7 comments
    • Jack of all trades, master of none
      06/22/10 – 5 comments
    • The folly of youth vs. insight from experience
      02/05/10 – 4 comments
    • My Ten Favorite Albums of 2009
      12/16/09 – 2 comments
  • Powered by Lijit


  • More to Read

    Friends

    • AJ Vaynerchuk
    • Brad Feld
    • Burton Rast
    • Chuck Anderson
    • Craig Shimala
    • Dave Pfluger
    • David Cohen
    • Dustin Henderlong
    • Dustin Hostetler (UPSO)
    • Emptees
    • Gary Vaynerchuk
    • Grayarea
    • Harper Reed
    • Jake Nickell
    • Josh Spear
    • Matt Galligan
    • Micah Baldwin
    • Michael Galpert
    • Nicholas Scimeca
    • Ross Zietz

    General interestingness

    • Behance
    • Better Living Through Design
    • Club Mumble
    • Coudal Partners
    • Design*Sponge
    • Desire to Inspire
    • Faesthetic
    • Geekologie
    • Layer Tennis
    • Portable Content
    • Signal vs. Noise
    • TechStars
    • The Brilliance
    • Vitamin
    • YayHooray!
A Gentlemanx27s Gentleman download movie Assault on Precinct 13 download movie Arctic Tale download movie Dimples download movie Episode list for"Coupling" download movie For the Birds download movie Assault on Precinct 13 download movie Arctic Tale download movie Dimples download movie Episode list for"Coupling" download movie For the Birds download movie buy cialis online with paypal

Archives

  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • February 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • May 2006