Thứ Sáu, 24 tháng 8, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Aug 24 2018

- Hey, everyone, today we have Ayman Al-Abdullah,

who is the president of AppSumo,

which I've been using for years and years.

We talked about processes earlier, so we got process, goals,

and now I wanna talk about culture too,

and I think there's a big story

around the culture of AppSumo.

I mean, you guys, there's tacos, there's a sumo,

all this kind of stuff.

So what do you guys do from a cultural perspective?

What are some stories you can share

that are you know, pretty amazing?

- Yeah so I mean, for us like we're only at

nine employees right now.

Culture, I think all too often like CEO's are thinking

about like what is the culture of the business?

How can we improve culture?

I know we'll have happy hours and we're gonna do trips,

and we're gonna do all these things.

And they think like by saying those things

that that's going to impose culture.

Ultimate culture is just simply who you hire, right?

And so for us when we're going through the hiring process,

we are looking for people that are like us.

We want people that are super humble, that work hard,

that are super smart, that simply have

a results-oriented attitude, that are very team-oriented.

They don't have, that's not my job, in their vocabulary.

That don't believe in a nine to five work set.

They don't mind coming in at 10, 11 but then also

don't mind working, 10, 11 at night, right?

And so the very first thing, from a culture perspective

is hiring the right people.

If you try ta, you know, shoehorn a square peg

into a circle hole, and they're just not gonna

be a good fit for the team.

And so, before we hire anybody, we make sure we go

to lunch with them, we make sure to bring them in for a day.

Some of them are working two, three weeks with us

before we finally pull the trigger.

That's number one.

Number two is,

also acting like the culture, right?

So like, we got a text last night, 10 o'clock at night,

like "Hey is the site down?"

Two or three people immediately jumped on Slack,

double checked everything, everything was fine,

the site was running a little slow

and we got it back and ramped up.

So just constantly working towards that culture.

And the last thing is like, recognizing

that everybody has a goal and being able to work together

towards that goal, I think is super important

for that team embodiment.

- Got it, makes sense.

How about in terms of team activities, what do you guys,

you've mentioned you know, outings and things like that,

what do you guys do?

- So just two, three months ago, we did a half-yearly trip,

we do two trips a year, to Seattle.

It is a great time for us to just sort of kick back.

- [Eric] Why Seattle?

- So it's the middle of Austin and it's 100 degrees.

It's a great time to get to Seattle, for those

that don't know, Seattle is like the best kept secret

in America in the summer, right?

It's like 70 degrees and sunny for 100 days straight.

There's like sailboats everywhere.

We went out there and we ended up renting two Airbnbs,

one in the woods, we spent a couple days there

just hiking and doing some bonfires, enjoying ourself.

And then we did another three days in the actual city,

where we went out and just partied together.

And you know when you're spending that much time together,

that's really when you get to know someone.

You can be working, and it's like all about work,

but once you get out of the office and you're having

more personal conversations, you're able to bring

that unity back into the office.

So we'll make sure to do another one in December.

- Got it, so I think these team outings

are really important.

What typically goes into itinerary, you know what kind

of budget goes into these kinds of things?

I mean can you shed any insight into those?

- So, you know we're lucky enough, that the business

is doing pretty successful,

and so we're able to like afford something

that's a little bit more fun,

where we are able to fly out of town,

and do all these things.

But even for like someone who's like budget bootstrapped,

it's like hey, let's just spend a weekend at an Airbnb,

maybe like an hour away from town.

You know, we're gonna cook the meals in house,

we're gonna spend some time maybe just game-planning

the rest of the year.

I think I'm a big fan of T3s and B3s, which is your

top three things that happened in the last year,

and the bottom three things that happened in the last year.

So we do T3s and B3s where we analyze,

hey like, what's working really well?

And perfect example, like for us,

like lifetime software deals have been selling very well

in AppSumo, so we just decided to double down on that.

And that has resulted in a huge increase in revenue.

- Good to know.

- And then some bottom three things

that just simply weren't working, we decided

to cut off the plate.

We spent a little bit of time there, we spent a little bit

of time interviewing each other, right.

Asking more personal questions, like asking about

how they grew up?

Where did they go to school?

Asking them about their parents.

Like being able to learn, just becoming friends right?

And then obviously, scheduling a lot of time

for just fun activities.

We did hikes, we went out to some clubs, we went out

to some nice dinners.

So just being able to do things together, where you can have

that shared collective experience, I think is super critical

to building that culture.

- AppSumo is the thing that funded Sumo,

so you have two businesses now, do you guys hang out

with each other when you guys do these off-sites?

Is it together, or...?

- Yeah so the actual businesses themselves,

we don't do the actual events together anymore.

But we do happy hours together all the time,

we do events together all the time.

They're coming out to SumoCon to help out, so there is like

you know, the businesses are operating independently,

but there's also a lot of shared resources.

- Got it.

And you guys haven't raised any money,

neither company has right?

- Correct yeah, fully bootstrapped.

- So what's your take on that?

- So you know, I do think that raising money

has it's time and place.

I think the problem when you raise money,

is that you end up changing the trajectory,

or changing the actual goal.

And you're thinking about, when is the next time we need

to raise money, versus for us, like we needed

to hit profitability on day one, otherwise we couldn't

pay people's salary.

And so I think the focus for a bootstrapped company

is always on the customer, whereas like the focus

for an investment-backed company, at least in the beginning,

is on the investor as the customer,

'cause they're the only one really giving you money.

And so I think the second you can make that transition

back to the customer is really when the business

is gonna start benefiting.

- Right and you're building something real.

Right? - Yep, exactly

exactly. - Got it, cool.

So from a personal perspective for you,

what are your daily habits?

What are the things that make you kinda, who you are?

- So I'm like, hugest geek when it comes to that.

I'm constantly analyzing, I'm measuring everything,

and just trying to figure out what's the best way

for me to be a better asset to this company,

and a better asset to myself.

So, couple things that have worked really well for me is,

having a really just good management system

for my email, my inbox, my Slack.

Knowing what tasks need to come on plate.

I've got like a huge to do list,

it actually has over three thousand items on it,

and then Sunday night, I completely ignore that list.

Usually that list is like, hey make sure

to cancel this monthly recurring charge,

and like make sure to unsubscribe from this newsletter.

It's all these small things that don't have an impact

on the business.

So Sunday night, I go on full airplane mode

and I just have a Moleskin and I just write down,

what the three things that I need to nail down this month,

that is gonna help us reach our goal

for the end of the year?

And so, when I wake up Monday morning, I'm looking

at my three things and I'm making sure

that that's getting blocked off in my calendar.

Because the problem is, if you don't do that, you end up

just answering the latest email,

responding to the latest Slack message, getting sucked

into a couple meetings.

But if you know you need to do these three things this week,

and they're usually pretty big things.

Then you make sure that you're pushing back meeting invites,

you're pushing back on things that just aren't a priority,

because those aren't things that are gonna help

move the business forward.

That's, to me, one of the most critical things.

The other thing that I make sure to do is,

we're constantly looking at and analyzing

what is the highest ROI items that the business can do

to move forward.

So every three months, every quarter, we do a stack ranking,

where we list out all of the ideas for the business,

we measure them by impact and how long it's going to take.

And we just create an ROI score.

And so the highest ROI items get pushed to the top,

and we assign those individual items

to people across the team.

And so at our Monday meeting we can simply discuss,

hey are we moving forward on those projects.

We were just talking about Daniel, like our Facebook reviews

was taking a hit, we were like around 4.1,

we'd had zero Google reviews, and so Danny in charge

of our customer success, that was his initiative

for the quarter and he ended up ramping up our reviews

significantly, both on Google and on Facebook.

And now anyone that sees our deals, they're like,

"This looks too good to be true," and they Google us,

they can see, 50 plus five star reviews on Google,

they're like, "Okay, this is legitimate."

- Got it, you talked about the Monday morning meetings,

what do you guys do in those meetings?

- So the Monday morning meeting is a great time

for us to do three things.

Number one, it's an update on the goal, right?

How are we tracking, both on the monthly goal

as well as the yearly goal.

The second thing is just tracking

everybody's individual goal, everyone provides an update

on how are they moving forward on their individual goal,

whether that's Facebook ads,

whether that's the deals closed, whether that's the

average revenue per deal, average revenue per email.

Then the final thing that we end up doing is,

we talk about our weekend, it's a great time

for us to just catch up like,

hey are there any highlights from the weekend?

We crack jokes for the first five minutes, it just sorta

sets the mood for the team, and then we're able to game-plan

what are we gonna do for the rest of the week.

- I love that because, okay you have your metrics in there,

the other part is, you show that you actually care

about each other and not a lot of companies do that.

I mean when you hear about,

the kind of Silicon Valley stand-up

that you typically hear about,

is just one thing that you're struggling with,

one big thing you're working on,

and then that's basically it right?

So I think it's really important to get human aspect

in there, where you're actually hanging out with each other,

you're asking personal questions, things like that,

because you are working with humans at the end of the day.

And you don't want to go to work with people

that you don't like right?

So, the other thing I want to ask,

so you have your daily habits, how do you get better?

What do you do?

- Every morning, I make sure that I'm reading,

I have a daily morning ritual where I'm making coffee,

reading for 30 minutes to an hour, making sure I'm hitting

in box zero, so that way my mental head is clear.

And then just game-planning for the individual day.

And then the other thing that I love to do,

is I try to schedule

at least two or three conferences a week.

I think like, when you look back on the last

four or five years, the real difference

in your trajectory was really like,

the books you're reading and the people that you're meeting.

And sometimes when you're going to these conferences,

which is one we're throwing this weekend, SumoCon,

which is why you're here, right?

It gives you an opportunity to meet like-minded people,

these are the people that you're going

to be shooting ideas with, that you're going to be adding

on Facebook, that you are going to be potentially hiring

in the future, potentially starting a business together with

in the future.

And so when you're able to share those ideas, you yourself,

will continue to get better.

- Okay, so you sign up for two to three

conferences per week?

- Per month, sorry.

- Per month, okay. - I mean, sorry, per year.

- Per year, oh okay, got it got it got it.

Okay cool, so what's the best conference

you've ever been to in your life?

- I'm part of an online entrepreneur group called

Dynamite Circle.

- [Eric] Never hear of it.

- [Ayman] So it's actually thrown by Dan and Ian

from Tropical MBA.

- [Eric] Okay, yeah.

- And in 2013, they threw one, while I was living

in Munich, Germany in Berlin, Germany.

And so I was just randomly following them on Twitter,

I tweeted at them, I didn't even know

what the Dynamite Circle was at the time, and I just asked

"Hey, can I come to the event?"

They were like, "Well, it's sold out, it's typically

"only for members only," and I'm like

"Members, members of what?"

I just kept pinging them, bothering them, and then all

of a sudden they were like, "Hey we actually have one

extra spot available if you want to come up this weekend."

Bought the ticket, went up, and it was amazing,

I ended up meeting like a ton

of really awesome entrepreneurs.

But the best part about it was it was a small event,

it was only 150 people.

Which we're trying to recreate with SumoCon,

keeping it really small.

And it gave a lot of chance encounters to run

into the same people, over the weekend and create a lot

of life-long friends.

Some of them I'm still friends with to this day,

some of them are actually now working at AppSumo.

- Key takeaway, it's not what you know,

it's who you know, right.

Is there anything else you'd like to add?

- Yeah you know, I think for those that are just going

on the entrepreneur journey, I think it's a great way,

to just make the world a better place.

In your own little world.

I think the key takeaway for them is just,

constantly analyzing, over the last year, two years,

what has been your top three wins, the top three things

that have helped you move forward closer to your goal.

And just go do more of that, entrepreneurship is

not that difficult, it's not that hard to uncover,

we don't need to complicate it, if you simply just analyze

what's worked really well, don't read the latest blog posts,

just look at what's worked well for yourself,

and just go do more of that.

- Makes total sense, so there's a book I recommend,

it's from Peter Drucker, it's really short,

it's called Managing Oneself and it basically tells you

how to audit yourself all the time,

and all these other things.

So I actually have a final question for Ayman.

What's one book you'd recommend to everyone?

- You know, right now I'm actually reading this one,

the Mastering the Rockefeller Habits, it's actually a

really really good one,

so that's one I'm really enjoying right now.

- Cool, well Ayman, thanks so much for joining us.

- Eric, appreciate it.

- Yep.

(uplifting music)

For more infomation >> How YOU Can Build a Ride or Die Team: AppSumo Exclusive Edition | EP 5.2 - Duration: 12:35.

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I GOT HURT Building a PRIMITIVE KITCHEN in the Forest - Duration: 59:53.

For more infomation >> I GOT HURT Building a PRIMITIVE KITCHEN in the Forest - Duration: 59:53.

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How to Make a Skittles or M&M's Candy Machine from LEGO - Duration: 10:57.

Hello everyone its ED here and welcome back to the channel

Today, I've made a remake of my old Lego Candy Machine V27

If you're a longtime fan of the channel you might remember this machine.

It is seven years old and It was my first ultimate machine to hit YouTube.

I highly advise you don't watch the seven year old video

'and dat cost thwee kruones'

But in all fairness I still think it's it's a good machine and

that's also the reason why I'm remaking it

and also on a side note. It doesn't use any Mindstorms or electronics. It's all mechanical

aAaAand

It also uses Danish Crowns (currency).

This machine has two options

Skittles or M&Ms

Two prices - 2 Crowns or 5 Crowns with two 1 crown coins in change.

This also means that the machine has a shifting coin rejection

The main lever is locked without money

To get candy you first choose your option and put in the displayed coin - push and pull the main lever

And you have your skittles with two 1-crown coins and change

Now let's have some M&M's - these costs 2 crowns

so you take a 2 crown coin and put it in - push and pull

And, you have your M&M's

If you want to know how this works, please stick around for the mechanism

The original version 27 machine had some flaws which I've corrected

On the old machine there was a loophole where you could essentially get infinite candy. I fixed that by implementing an extra piece on the main lever

And then adding two holes on the reloading towers which locks in the option once the main lever is pushed in

This is where you get the money back using this key

This is the mechanism. When you shift the option lever it changes to hopper for the candy dispenser

It also determines if there's going to be dispensed change or not.

Without money the grey bar blocks the main lever

You have to insert the right amount of money to make it lift up depending on what coin rejection is underneath it

This is the coin rejection. It also changes when the option lever is shifted

So, yeah, thanks for watching and I hope you liked this cool machine :)

For more infomation >> How to Make a Skittles or M&M's Candy Machine from LEGO - Duration: 10:57.

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Building a Tradition: The Bruceville-Eddy Eagles - Duration: 3:29.

For more infomation >> Building a Tradition: The Bruceville-Eddy Eagles - Duration: 3:29.

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How to build a people picker in PowerApps with Azure AD - Duration: 8:17.

Hey, how's it going? This is Todd Baginski. I'm a Microsoft MVP and the

Partner and CTO at Canviz.

In this video what I'm going to dive into is how we created a people

picker so that you can select other folks in your

Azure Active Directory (AAD) from your PowerApp. I think the easiest way to get started with

this one is just to take you on a little tour the app up to the point where I used to people picker and

I'll show you how we built it so I'm going to start the PowerApp here.

And, when I start this PowerApp if you seen it before you know, what's going on here. If

you haven't, you can watch my demo overview video of this particular

application and my demo overview video I show the mobile form factor of this

(or the phone form factor). But this is the tablet form factor. So

when I come in the first thing it's going to do is show me the different appointments

my calendar that I may need to set and out of office for. So I'll set one for

upcoming ice hockey tournament and this is where I said how long it's going to

take but I'm not going to focus on these pages right now or the type

or which email access I'll have but I really want to show you is here:

the people picker. So you can see it pre populated

the name of the user who is marked

as my manager in my Azure Active Directory.

And that's Tim, so you can see his name there. But we also have other capabilities here

we can search for anybody by just starting the type their name. So, for example,

if I take my name, Todd, here we have all the different

Todds that are in our Azure Active Directory. I can then select

one and move on to my next page or I can look for somebody else, for

example, if we have a couple alex's and the company so then I can select

one there so as you can see that's really quick.

So, let me show you now how we actually dig into the code

here and implement this capability of people picker from Azure Active Directory.

First thing I'm going to do is close

the player and check it out in edit mode to show you here.

So, I'm on the create contact info screen you can locate this

is well if you download the app and place and into your

environment and this is really how it works. What we have here

is a gallery control you can see I've highlighted it right here and this

is actually what implements that people picker that we saw in that drop down right there.

You'll notice in my "items" property here the first thing I do

is I see is text input to underscore one.

Which it's text value if it's not blank then I'm going to

proceed so that's this text box right here.

Notice it has a value of "ContactUser" assigned to it. Once we pick

a user we're going to set them equal to this variable and that's going to show their name there.

So, after we see if that's not blank, then what we're going to do is going to

say is contact user equal to what was in there. If they are equal

there's no sense in going to do a search for

that user. We know someone's already typed their name and picked it.

However, if he's taken something different than what's

already set is the contact user variable now we're going to go off the

"Office 365 Users" connector and call the search user

method. Then we're going to pass in the search term.

Which is the actual text we saw

before in TextInput2_1.

That's all there is to it. The next thing that you'll notice

about this is that because this is a gallery,

and, this is my "Items" collection means that every time I

type in something new there - that call to office three sixty five user's search user is

going to execute and that's why we're going to see the items collection

update as gallery update. So if I back it up here in design mode content and type in

"t" and now it's pulling up all kinds of different people who start with

"t". Add the "o" to it. Now we're down to just

Todds and "Todd b-a-g". Now we're down to just my

accounts in the Azure Active Directory.

So, again, here you can see if I pull it down again at the top.

Really the piece

that is executing a search is the office three sixty five users

that search user whatever I typed in there.

Now if we take a closer look at the gallery we can see that as a custom data source

defined and that is because we programmaticly created

the items collection, we've pick the title layout swirling displaying

one column that's the user's name here and then within that.

Office three sixty five users when we make that "search user" call

gives us all these different things that we can pull from about that user. In this case

we've chosen "display name" and that's why that appears there. If I chose something else

like "job title," then I could go search on just users and just put all

their job titles in here or something like that. That's what I choose to do.

That's a real quick way that you can implement this functionality.

One other thing that I'd like to show you about how we actually set

the variable equal to the name of the one you select and people

picker

is over here.

Now this is a rectangle and if you watch my video

on the transparent rectangles you can see how we use this. We lay the transparent

rectangle over top of all the controls inside here - the separator as

well as the text value the displays our names.

Then when user clicks on this transparent rectangle, this is where we

go and set the variable's contact user.

This item display name is what we set it equal to. This item is

the currently selected item in the gallery so we're going to display

its display name and set that equal to contact user variable.

Now we have the contact user email so that's again the selected item,

their mail property gets you there contact user email. so that means

when I go play the app and I select the user,

I just clicked on that transparent rectangle and it set those properties. So now

that those properties, or I should say variables, are set I can come

back in here and take a look at all the different properties and the app and I can

see, lo and behold, there I am, the contact user. So those values are

then set and you can use them in subsequent pages

as the application unfolds. So that's a real quick way to make people

picker with the Office 365

User Search capability.

So now maybe wondering, "well how did I get the ability to call

that connector called Office 365 Users right here?" Well it's

really easy to add. All I need to do is go to view,

Pick data sources, and you'll see had it added

here but I can just pick "Add data source"

and it's going to be in your list.

Office 365 Users right there. If you don't see it in your list, go up to New

connection" and look for Office 365 Users and authenticate to it and now

that collector will be available for use in your PowerApps too.

I hope this PowerApp and the video helps you out. See you next time.

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