Call meJeffrey

Nude once again

I’ve made the hardest decision of my life today. I have resigned my position as chief creative officer at skinnyCorp/Threadless.

As you may imagine, this was not an easy decision. What makes Threadless special is its ability to turn every single person – from our vendors to our employees – into part of a giant family dressed in ink-slathered cotton. The collective dedication and creativity of the Threadless family, as well as our beloved community, is awe inspiring.

The pride I have for Threadless is unmeasurable.

Of course, none of this has been possible without Jake. He has always had the vision and ability to wade through my onslaught of ideas and cherry-pick the ones that we both knew were best for the community and for Threadless as a whole. The decision to leave was no different. After many long discussions with Jake and our CEO Tom, we’re all on the same page that this is the right direction to take.

If I had to pick the one thing I’ll miss the most, it will be working with Jake, Tom and the rest of the executive team as Threadless continues to grow more and more awesome.

So, whats next for me?

First, I am taking some time off. In the seven years of building Threadless, the longest vacation I ever took was about 2 weeks, and that was last month. I’m looking forward to spending real quality time with my family and friends, without meetings, deadlines or other work related things getting in the way.

Next, I am going to rededicate myself to things I love. Who knows, maybe I will start skating again. (Probably not, but we can all dream). I heard a rumor that people actually travel for pleasure. I may give that a go as well.

Lastly, I will start getting involved in a few projects that are just too exciting to keep secret, but too early to talk about. I hate to do it, but you will just have to stay tuned to hear about all the awesomeness to come.

The past seven years have been amazing. While I will no longer be involved in the day-to-day grind of the company I helped create, I will remain close to Threadless not only as an owner and advisor, but through my many friends there. And of course, I will continue to be an active part of the most awesome community, ever.

Thank you Threadless; I cant wait to show you what’s next.

Aug 19 2009
40 comments

Balancing interest and excitement

This past Friday wrapped up my first “class” of TechStars as a mentor. I wrote a post at the beginning of the summer about what I thought was in it for me as a mentor. I was seeking inspiration. I got much more. Looking back, I almost feel naive wondering if I’d find inspiration. How could you not be inspired by ten teams of highly motivated, extraordinarily talented people busting their asses for 3 months focusing on ideas they believe in?

As a mentor, I worked mostly with Vanilla, Take Comics, Next Big Sound and a bit with Everlater.

As the summer progressed and I spent more time with the teams, there were two feelings that I tried to constantly be aware of: interest and excitement. As a mentor, I found it useful to think of my interaction with the teams the same way I’d think about test-driving a car. Interest is what gets you behind the wheel; excitement is what gets you to floor it. It was the latter that I knew I had to keep in check, which is something I’ve never really had to do at Threadless.

For me, excitement is what brings on the onslaught of brainstorming – new idea after new idea after new idea. I’m lucky to have a partner who is equally good at disseminating the good from the not-so-good as I am with filling a sheet with different paths to take.

Being a mentor is another story. If I want to spend all of my own time coming up with new ideas, tangents of those ideas, and tangents of those tangents, then so be it. However, I learned early on that when spending time with another company who is looking to you for either specific advice, or some guided brainstorming – a wild ride of new ideas is hardly constructive.

Going back to the car analogy, think about which feeling is more likely to instigate losing control and wrapping yourself around a telephone pole. This summer I better learned to harness and control my excitement. I know that it may sound strange, but it’s true. In learning to do that, I can now see how unbridled excitement can actually derail focus. I found that keeping my excitement in check allowed me to better give the teams what they often needed – which was for me to keep my mouth shut and simply be present as they answered their own questions simply by asking them out loud.

There’s nothing wrong with being excited. However, excitement is energy, and what you do with that energy is often times more important that the fact that it exists. Just because a car can go fast doesn’t mean it always should, right?

I walk away from the 2009 class of TechStars having learned a lot about being an entrepreneur. In a lot of ways, I’ve learned more in these past three months than I’ve learned in the past seven years at Threadless. After all, it’s a lot easier to take in the minutiae of the journey while riding shotgun than it is being behind the wheel.

Aug 10 2009
6 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.
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