Co-founder of Brainhub, Matt describes himself as a “serial entrepreneur”. Throughout his career, Matt has developed several startups in Germany, wearing many hats- from a marketer to an IT Engineer and customer support specialist. As a host of the Better Tech Leadership podcast, Matt talks about growing successful businesses and the challenges of being a startup founder and investor.
Edward Kruger is the Director of Engineering at Neo Financial, where he leads high-performing teams in delivering innovative fintech solutions. With a Master’s in Software Engineering, Edward has a proven track record of driving complex projects that enhance banking platforms for millions of Canadians. His leadership is rooted in fostering collaboration and empowering teams, enabling them to excel in fast-paced environments. Passionate about innovation, Edward is committed to pushing the boundaries of technology and delivering impactful results that align with strategic business goals.
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My name is Matt, and I will be talking to Edward Kruger about strategic thinking, leadership development, and learning resources.
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Yeah, Edward, I'm really happy to have you here today.
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And as many listeners know, I don't like the intros and the pitches.
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And I just want to go directly to the question and talk about the meaty, gritty details.
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Let's go.
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The work of engineering leaders.
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Yeah.
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So, Eduard, because you have really interesting background, you coming from South Africa, you
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are pretty experienced and pretty well known tech entrepreneur and director.
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And you moved to Canada and you transitioned in a scene there.
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And, like, could you tell me the story and to the listeners, because this is not the typical kind of, you know.
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Yeah. Transition. Yeah. So from a very young age, I kind of knew that I wanted to be in software.
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You know, I think I started, you know, very young at six years old, you know, creating my first computer program.
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And I got this opportunity as a young engineer.
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You know, I was working very hard, and I was this, you know, tech lead, you know, associate,
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you know, for a big consultancy firm.
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And from that, we started building a lot of systems and software, and we got a little bit renowned for experience.
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And then the organization, which was owned by a company in Australia, decided that they are
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going to retrench this department.
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Theyre going to downsize us. They dont need software.
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Theyre more traditionally engineering consultancy.
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You know, maybe they just need to pivot into a new direction.
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So we came up with this idea of us really taking up that department and starting it as, you know, an incubated startup.
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Like, we'll take everybody, don't pay us a retrenchment package.
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But what you should do is give us three years worth of your contract. Right.
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And that way, you know, we could use, everybody could still keep on, you know, with the job function.
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But we are also getting this opportunity, you know, to be young entrepreneurs and kind of like
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get into the meat of things, as you say.
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And so from my perspective, we started this little software consultancy company, and we just grew. We tackled bigger projects.
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Our benefits were a lot better.
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The cost was easier to manage because you don't have to pay for this massive overhead of the firm.
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And I think we did something crazy, like 25 projects across the entire Africa.
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We did hundreds of projects around the entire world because we were so small and so fast, a
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different way of thinking about our business.
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And so at a very early age, I started building more and bigger and getting more profile, more
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renowned, so to speak, in bigger projects from this and started smaller businesses and associations with it.
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And so we ended up with this organization being something that we found to be very unique, doing
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a digital transformation of the old traditional systems, so to speak.
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And so I kind of got.
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I was a very young CTO at that stage, and I was voted, you know, South Africa's top, you know,
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100 ctos for two years running.
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You know, I was in that top hundred list, and that was great.
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It just was an amazing feeling.
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And so I started doing this thing where I branched out and built multiple startups. And then Covid came. Right.
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You know, now you're overextending yourself.
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You know, you feel great, you're invincible.
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And then with the pandemic, we started just, you know, having to scale down.
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And I remembered I lost something crazy, like 32 million overnight.
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It was just a massive amount for me as a young entrepreneur.
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And we walked out of there, and luckily we could get all of the employees five months of severance,
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and we could forewarn them.
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And we had a position where we could really manage it.
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But after that, you almost did it.
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I was so close, so happy with what we have, but it's just not enough.
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And so I decided from that perspective, I just need to find a way to curb my curiosity.
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I need to know if in a different market, in a different environment, would I be able to do it again?
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And so I was part of this international CTO community, the seven ctos.
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And I met someone over there that was transitioning to a post IPo unicorn.
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And so we had this conversation, and I said to him, his name was also called Matt, by the way.
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And so we were like, hey, Matt, do you think this could be a collaboration? He's like, absolutely.
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We need to check it out.
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And so I did, and I joined him on his mission here in Canada.
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And from this perspective, now I'm just chasing the dragon, so to speak.
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You know, I want to get onto the next challenge, and the next challenge, you know, and that's been my transition.
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It's been a fascinating one.
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Wow, it's quite a story. Quite a story here.
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And when you look like the key differences between the building the tech companies and South
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Africa building the digital product and approach of people building and engineering engineers
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building there, if you compare it to Canada, like, how is it different? What differences there are?
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Yeah, it's actually a massive difference.
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There's differences in the technology, the engineers and the leadership roles.
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And I think it really stems from not only the economical environment, but also the culture and
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the labor law, to be honest.
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So in South Africa, we've got a lot of frameworks like c, hash and.net, comma and Java, and
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they seem to dominate the market.
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Our talent acquisition leans more heavily on formal education.
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There is a growing trend towards informal learning, but there still seems to be a bigger barrier to entry.
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And so financial institutions traditionally hire the most engineers, you know, and financial
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systems tends to have more legacy, more mainframe, and they still shape a lot of those development processes.
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So leadership structures seem to be a little bit more formalized.
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The startup community is extremely small.
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It mostly relies on bootstrapping businesses.
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There's not a lot of funding that exists, and there's few people that actually make successful software as a service.
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You know, kind of like organizations in Canada.
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It's a completely different story.
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You know, the entrepreneurial market drives all of the software development.
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You know, access to funding and opportunities really accelerate growth a lot.
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You know, startup seems to differentiate on being first to market.
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You know, engineers, engineers are a lot more enticed by profit sharing, you know, entitles,
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you know, and the leadership structure really depends on the size of the business.
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You know, a small organization seems to rely on informal or flat structures.
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Large organizations seems to have more rigid approaches.
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And so I found that south african engineers spent time on complex systems and being a little
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bit more diligent where the canadian engineers are extremely fast, but they struggle with those
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intricacies of nuances of compiled code and more algorithmic design, you know, design thinking
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and, you know, those kind of elements.
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And both have their place and both completely excel.
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You know, it's just physically the economics that set them apart.
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Now, the fascinating part of this is really the labor market, because in South Africa it's really
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hard to fire an employee, you know, even for misconduct.
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You have to set up an environment where they get three warnings.
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You have to prove, you know, that you've provided them with everything that they need to correct,
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you know, you need to show that they had training, you know, to able to, you know, function in their job.
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And so as such, you spend more time on like acquiring.
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Who do you, who do you hire?
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You know, what does that person look like?
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What are they going to bring?
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Are they going to be the right fit from day one?
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Because you're walking a different, you know, your path with this individual, you know, and
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so the leadership tends to be a little bit more structured and the leaders tend to be generalist.
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You know, they can't just look at the people management side.
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They need to look at the business.
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They transition their role more than just managing the people side, but also the business unit,
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it's become kind of like a career path, a very formal career path.
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If you want to get into leadership, there's specific milestones that you want to hit.
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And actually, most organizations tend to give this leadership training as a benefit in the organization.
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They're very proud to advertise that as part of their growth and their growth strategies, you
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know, but, yeah, it's really fascinating.
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It's not just people management, it's this business units.
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And in Canada, it's a little bit different. Right.
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You know, we found that engineers seem to start very early on, you know, in people management roles.
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Engineering team leads or managers seems to require as little as five years of experience, you
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know, and, you know, the canadian context, shaped by these experiences and cultures and immigration
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policies, emphasizes people management over business management.
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And so it's very much this from a generalistic perspective, more specialization, so to speak.
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And I found that to be very.
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Interesting, really interesting approach and analysis that you gave.
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So it reminds me, like, when I look at, let's say, the company in Canada, right?
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You have the young guys, general is they don't have, like, a super technical background.
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Maybe they haven't solved, like, some algorithmic problems.
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So, I mean, like, they are not so. Not so deep here.
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So they are maybe more of integrators, right, of the solutions, or R and D, which is outside. Right.
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They outsource, maybe, but they have, like, different reasons for it because, like, I assume
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in South Africa, you outsource because you cannot find the people. Right?
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Yeah, that's. Yeah, that's definitely an interesting problem. Like, absolutely.
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That's why we do it. We.
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We outsource or buy off the shelf more than anything else because we need someone else, you
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know, to take care of the maintenance and the cost.
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You know, the cost when you're buying something is.
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Is known, you know, the variable cost of building it, you know, and being able to rely on it
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specifically for business, that's never done, you know, done any of this is really hard.
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There's too much variability associated with it.
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And so, yeah, there's definitely a different reliance on what an engineer means and why you
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would want to have one in your apartment.
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Recently when we talked, we tackled, really interesting topic, because now we are in, or like
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last year, it's like a huge recession in a big tech.
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So, like, a lot of people experience that. It's really tough.
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There is a lot of layoffs, and you have some experiences here.
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I mean, you were inside the organization during the big layoffs, and you were involved in that.
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So maybe could you tell about the experience and what you learned from that?
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Yeah, that was a hard week for all of us.
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You know, it was a big, you know, layoff or workforce reduction.
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And one thing that I really want to just, you know, make sure that everybody understands is
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that it's extremely, you know, personal.
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You know, regardless of the position that you have within the organization, you know, from the
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economic standpoint, the burden really falls on the C suite, on the executives, you know, to
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kind of like put aside a lot of their emotions.
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And I can tell you that it's not easy.
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Everybody is people, you struggle with doing it, but you have to find a way to navigate this.
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Uncertainties and the weight of those decisions do tend to linger for a while.
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But our story was we went into a hypergrowth phase.
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We really realized that during the COVID pandemic time, our business absolutely searched.
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And then post pandemic we realized that our customer acquisition wasn't really keeping up with
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the pace with our projections.
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So finally we were starting to head into the red and we knew we had a signal saying that in
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a couple of months we're going to be in trouble.
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And so the senior management was read in.
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It almost felt like a secret ceremony.
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We were read in, we were gave the financials, we were given the numbers, and then we were told
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we need to find viability here and we need to embark on this cost cutting mission.
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We've got a couple of months left.
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We really left no stone unturned.
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Every cost, every subscription, even our monolithic structure.
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At the time, everything was scrutinized.
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We considered splitting our services into kind of like microservices to reduce spending. Unnecessary features were axed.
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Everyone was focused on customer acquiring projects rather than these traditional R and D things.
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And despite our efforts it became clear that our survival required either one or two things.
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Either we need to price ourselves out of market, but raising the cost, or we need to cut on our personnel.
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And so the truth is when you look at the data and you realize that there's only a handful of
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customers that's using your product, it's really difficult to justify a team of 4500 engineers
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to kind of build it.
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It just doesn't make a lot of sense.
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So we started to misread Covid signal of hypergrowth and we didn't plan for the post, you know, pandemic downturn.
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We were in this hype. The success blinded us.
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We failed to challenge our next strategic move.
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And so navigating through these decisions were never easy.
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But it was really essential for organization.
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And I remember the experience.
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It really did come to a shock as the employee.
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And I think that's where we failed.
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And it's never a good thing when, you know, kind of like these conversations, these hard conversations are shocks, right?
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We spent weeks turning over all the stones, making the fast decisions, but we never gave the employees a heads up.
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And it's such a difficult topic to navigate because you have an obligation to shareholders,
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and so you don't want information to get out there that might affect the shareholders in a negative way beforehand.
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We chose to keep it secret up until the last moment.
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And so nonetheless, it was a horrible experience.
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A couple of managers we kind of read in a week before, and the employees were kind of notified
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in a town hall setting where everybody comes together in one big meeting and there was really
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no time for them to allow them to kind of process the emotions or the news that they were getting in this town hall.
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If I would do it differently today, I would want to find a way to inform the employees a lot
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earlier, start looking at the signals a lot earlier.
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I think we took too long to start reacting to the news.
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You don't want to get caught off guard here.
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Once you see the signal, you want to inform people about those metrics and goals.
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Because I do believe when people collaborate, their curiosity and their creativity can come
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together and they can help know to solve some of these problems.
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I think we left them into the dog a little bit too long.
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What I really want to do, and something that's worked extremely well for us and something that
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I've learned from my time in South Africa is that as you kind of like, inch closer to that deadline,
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something that you could do, giving your employees a heads up is to kind of put together a voluntary retrenchment package.
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Say, like, hey, we five months out.
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If you sign up for this package right now, we're going to extend your benefits.
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You know, we're going to extend your pay with a couple of extra, you know, weeks or extra months.
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And you kind of get people to self select out, which is great because maybe those are not the
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people that you kind of want to keep, you know, you know, they might be in for the paycheck
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more than the culture itself, you know?
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And so you kind of get a lot of like, you know, some of those, you know, exits.
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And you also don't have people leaving the organization in a very negative way.
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You know, they're not angry.
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They're not going to LinkedIn and writing horrible things, you know, you need to find a way to do that.
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And then if you're still in the red, you know, after that event, now, that's kind of like where
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you can start looking at low performance, you know, across the board.
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And across the board means that you start, you know, where the paycheck hits the hardest, which means your executive suite.
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Do you need as many managers?
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Do you need as many, you know, directors?
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And it's really those kind of like, decisions that you would really benefit you a lot more than
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axing your workforce because that's potential lost, right.
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You can't remake that potential.
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After you've got it, you are going to slow down significantly.
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And so starting from the top down is also a great approach towards making sure that you hit your targets.
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But stuff that I think we did really great and that we really wanted to keep on.
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And if I do it again, I would really keep on in some of these things.
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Is creating an alumni site for your old employees to make sure that if your position changes,
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I'm going to reach out to you.
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I want you to know that there's a position if you want to apply for it.
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You don't have to redo culture.
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You can just come in and interview for the position itself.
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So we make that transition a lot easier.
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You also need to kind of like, think about your pr campaign.
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What message are you going to send out there?
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Because you've got shareholders, you've got stakeholders, you've got all of these different
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people that are invested in this story.
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So you really make sure that you want to land that plane. That's really important.
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And so you need to make sure that your management team sets up your individuals with references, LinkedIn recommendations.
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Your job as a director or senior management here is to ensure that your employees feel supported during this transition.
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It is going to be hard for them.
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Extend your healthcare benefits with a couple of extra weeks.
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Make sure that you inform the employees that's on vacation and parental leave.
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You don't want someone that's just had a baby and they come back and they're like, I don't have
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a job anymore and I don't know what's going on.
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You want to make sure that you keep those conversations going. Ultimately, it's really simple.
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When new people, when you survive this and in a couple of months or maybe a year when you are
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growing again, you want future employees to look at this situation and say, wow, this company
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did an amazing job here.
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I feel safe in knowing that they did the right thing.
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And I do want to keep on working here, you know, you don't want your, you know, your glassdoor
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rating to go from five, you know, to two because you mishandled, you know, this situation.
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And so, yeah, I would definitely, I've learned a couple of things from this for sure.
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Thank you for that. They're really insightful and I think actionable tips.
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I hope that nobody will need to use it, but still. Yeah, thanks for that.
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No, it's a pleasure. It's a pleasure.
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And recently during our talk, we were talking about that we are already a bit older.
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I mean, generational change is coming, right?
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We have the engineers with Gen Z.
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They have completely different approach, completely different priorities.
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And this is challenging for the leaders to deal with the engineers, their career expectations,
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their challenges that they're having.
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And I'm wondering, what do you find the most challenging in leading those young engineers?
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Yeah, I get the privilege of doing a lot of one on ones, and I think over my career, I've probably done thousands of them.
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For me, a one on one and kind of like a coaching session is deeply personal.
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I get to spend time with an individual.
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And I remember when I was a young engineer and, you know, you know, you old when you start.
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When I was young, you know, that's how, you know, you're very old.
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You know, your story start like that.
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And I remember, you know, from, from my perspective, you know, when I was doing coaching, it
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was an absolute privilege, you know, getting time with senior, you know, trying to learn from them.
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You know, I, you know, the time was very valuable.
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You know, there was this thing, you know, associated with it.
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And so I had to always show up, you know, prepared.
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What I find, you know, most of young engineers, you know, today when I do one on ones is that they're not prepared.
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They don't really take responsibility for the growth.
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They kind of seem to wait for instruction a little bit before they jump.
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You know, they don't jump in and try and swim.
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They don't come to you with problems.
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You know, everything is always fine.
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When you ask them about their code, they shy and they don't really want to show it to you as
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much or they think you and manager.
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And so what would, you know, in any case about these technical things?
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And so they kind of feel a little bit lost, right.
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It feels like it's a checklist for them.
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They just want the feedback, check it off.
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Then they're going to go into the big boss battle.
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They're going to win and they're going to walk out with a promotion.
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You know, that's kind of like what they require from me.
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You know, I've even seen, you know, young engineers a year after we've given them promotions,
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still doing the same job function, you know, of the previous role, you know, intermediate, still
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acting, you know, the way that junior should, you know, or working on the same kind of, like, level of complexity.
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And so I don't think they are stretching as much. They're not challenging themselves.
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They're not showing up with this thing about, like, what's the delta between me and the next
23:34 - 23:36
level and what do I need to do?
23:36 - 23:43
What I would want from these one on ones is these engineers coming to me and saying, like, ed,
23:44 - 23:47
I think I suck at these elements.
23:47 - 23:52
I don't know what to do about it or I don't have the tools to deal with it.
23:52 - 23:53
Could you coach me the tools?
23:53 - 24:00
You know, that's a way more valuable information than me trying to find a way to tell this person,
24:00 - 24:07
like, hey, have you looked at your recent kind of, like, contributions?
24:07 - 24:12
And do you find that to be as valuable as someone potentially in the next position?
24:12 - 24:17
Because doing that kind of like, self awareness, that self check is really hard for them, you
24:17 - 24:22
know, it's not something that they grow up, you know, with as much as maybe we did.
24:23 - 24:30
And so I think really, as our, as we are leaders, you know, we need to guide this next generation.
24:30 - 24:35
We need to make sure that we do this in a safe space where we can push them, you know, safely
24:35 - 24:40
in a manner, you know, for them to kind of, like, get into these, you know, reflective states,
24:40 - 24:45
into these coaching, you know, ready environments, you know, for them to be hungry, you know,
24:45 - 24:49
to grab onto feedback, for them to be able to action it in such a way where they, you know,
24:49 - 24:53
they could see the benefit and, you know, and you can interact with it.
24:53 - 24:58
And I, and I really think, like, you know, there might be, you know, four or five things that
24:58 - 24:59
they could really do that would be great.
24:59 - 25:03
You know, they could, we could encourage them to be lifelong learners.
25:03 - 25:05
You know, that we could drive a lot more of their curiosity.
25:05 - 25:08
You know, it's not just about your job function.
25:08 - 25:09
What did you do outside of this?
25:09 - 25:10
What does it look like?
25:11 - 25:12
Why did you choose to do it?
25:12 - 25:13
Why are you excited about it?
25:13 - 25:18
You know, drive that and encourage that, you know, kind of like behavior that's going to be really important.
25:19 - 25:24
Self reflection and goal setting for them is going to be vital, you know, for them to sit down
25:24 - 25:26
and say, like, how did I perform today?
25:26 - 25:28
You know, was this good? Was it bad?
25:28 - 25:33
Do I know what good looks like? Do I know? What badly? What's my goal? Where am I going?
25:34 - 25:39
You know, for them to being able to do that delta, you know, and to drive it, that means that
25:39 - 25:45
their growth is now coming from themselves and not from you pushing as an external manager saying,
25:45 - 25:47
yes, a checklist of things to complete.
25:47 - 25:49
It's now a self driven thing.
25:49 - 25:53
And from a lifelong learner perspective, they're really going to accelerate.
25:54 - 26:00
They're really going to be great if they keep on with that potential.
26:00 - 26:08
The one thing that I found the most difficult to teach them is to embrace the discomfort and to stretch. Right.
26:08 - 26:14
You know, you grow when you go into the unknown, you know, you don't grow when everything is,
26:14 - 26:17
you know it very well, you know, and you can do this with your eyes closed, you know, and you
26:17 - 26:20
don't even have to look at the keyboard, you know, that's not growth.
26:20 - 26:22
That just seems like something you're really good at.
26:23 - 26:28
And so pushing them into embracing the discomfort, you know, is, is really interesting because
26:28 - 26:34
they do have a lot a big sense of imposter syndrome, you know, and you have to, you know, give
26:34 - 26:38
them the tools to kind of like, push them through that environment, you know, and I found that
26:38 - 26:40
to be an extremely difficult thing.
26:40 - 26:43
You know, they need to find feedback and mentors.
26:43 - 26:45
That doesn't mean that they just rely on the one on ones.
26:46 - 26:51
They need to go see, like, hey, that person that's a senior developer, that person that's a principal.
26:51 - 26:53
Oh, my, you know, I idolize that person.
26:53 - 26:58
You know, I think that the way that they approach their work function is wonderful because if
26:58 - 27:02
they have that examples, they know, you know, they could start to calculate, you know, that
27:02 - 27:05
distance between them, you know, and that environment.
27:05 - 27:09
And that's something that they really need to get comfortable in is walk up, meet someone new
27:10 - 27:15
in your organization, shake their hands and ask them, could I buy you a coffee, you know, or
27:15 - 27:18
set up a meeting, you know, a virtual wine.
27:18 - 27:21
And could we just talk a little bit about, you know, our craft?
27:21 - 27:25
The more we talk about it, the better we'll get, you know, the better understandings with the
27:25 - 27:30
more perspectives we allow in, the bigger our diversity and creativity gets.
27:30 - 27:34
And that's something that I really need to get comfortable with.
27:34 - 27:42
And I think lastly, effective communication, empathy and conflict resolution is probably the
27:42 - 27:45
number one thing on the list here.
27:46 - 27:53
They need to really feel comfortable having those conversations, know, understand the viewpoints
27:53 - 27:57
of different cultures, you know, different people with different backgrounds.
27:57 - 28:03
Some people come from university, some people, you know, come from, you know, a bootcamp you
28:03 - 28:05
know, everybody doesn't understand you.
28:05 - 28:10
You need to find ways to communicate with them, but also look at, you know, what they are bringing
28:10 - 28:15
to the party, you know, and how you can interact with them, you know, and then find those ways
28:15 - 28:21
where you could really be confident, you know, in saying, like, I believe that this is the best
28:21 - 28:27
way without it generating conflict, you know, in a way where you can have that radical candor,
28:27 - 28:33
you know, without punching down, is vitally important, and it's something that is missing, you know, from.
28:34 - 28:39
From the growth that I think, you know, we could really, as leaders, like, get them comfortable
28:39 - 28:41
with, you know, get them to explore some of these skills.
28:41 - 28:43
I think those are the five things that I.
28:43 - 28:51
I've seen happen a lot that we could really help build up in these new and future leaders.
28:53 - 29:01
Does the reflection thing remind me one case from my personal life, and I'm just wondering,
29:02 - 29:04
why does it work at work?
29:04 - 29:07
So I started to learn tennis one year ago, right?
29:07 - 29:12
And I have a coach for the tennis and hitting the ball with the forehand, right.
29:12 - 29:13
And the guy stopped me and said.
29:13 - 29:17
And he's saying, like, hey, what do you think was good?
29:17 - 29:19
What do you think was bad? What you could improve?
29:19 - 29:20
Right, right.
29:20 - 29:25
He's giving me some advices before, but he's not telling me, like, what I exactly should do, right.
29:26 - 29:27
But what I feel, what I think.
29:27 - 29:33
And this is, like, so powerful because you focus on correcting your own mistakes 100%.
29:33 - 29:39
And I'm just wondering how you could transpose it and how you can do it the same at work, because
29:39 - 29:42
in the sport, you see it, like, really clearly and easily.
29:42 - 29:46
But as a work, as an engineer, I have a feeling that this is not so tangible.
29:46 - 29:52
No, it's not. What I found works is, you know, making sure you ask powerful questions, you know,
29:52 - 29:57
not leading questions, but powerful questions, you know, why do you think this was great?
29:57 - 30:01
What do you think about this behavior, you know, is extraordinary.
30:01 - 30:05
Do you think that this is just part of your job function and what you're supposed to be doing,
30:05 - 30:09
or have you really acquired new skill?
30:09 - 30:15
Why do you think what you choose that kind of questions, needing them to explain themselves
30:16 - 30:20
and find the questions that they need to ask for that self reflection?
30:21 - 30:28
I found one technique that's really interesting, and it was one that we used in South Africa,
30:28 - 30:34
and we modified a little bit because I think it was in very.
30:34 - 30:38
In many ways, it was a very cruel way to do the self reflection.
30:38 - 30:46
But we used to ask this question, you know, how much time did you spend building x? Right.
30:46 - 30:49
And a person would say, like 100 hours, right?
30:49 - 30:54
And you would ask them, have you considered the cost of, you know, what you are building?
30:55 - 31:00
Have you considered, you know, let's say you get paid $100 an hour, you know, and you spend
31:00 - 31:05
100 hours, you know, have you considered that someone would need to pay for this feature, you
31:05 - 31:10
know, for us to get a return on investment year, you know, we would need to accumulate, you
31:10 - 31:19
know, a set amount of dollars and then ask the question, you know, would you pay for it if you were the customer? Right.
31:20 - 31:24
And it's very interesting how that, you know, the answer is like, no, I wouldn't pay for this.
31:24 - 31:28
And we're like, okay, well, why did we build it then?
31:28 - 31:31
You know, like, why are we, you know, going through this exercise?
31:31 - 31:38
And so something that I found it's very powerful with the younger engineers is telling them
31:38 - 31:41
to add a value to this session.
31:42 - 31:48
Be willing to put $100 down for this one on one for this coaching session.
31:50 - 31:52
And do you now show up prepared?
31:52 - 31:54
Because if you don't, I'm going to take you $100.
31:56 - 32:00
Does it change the way you think about the feedback and what I'm telling you, just because you
32:00 - 32:05
pay for it, and it's very interesting that it does. It does.
32:05 - 32:10
It suddenly becomes more real because it's not just a meeting that I have every two weeks with
32:10 - 32:16
my manager, but it's now a session that's supposed to drive a lot of my growth and having people
32:16 - 32:22
understand there is a cost associated with it this time. There's value, there's input.
32:22 - 32:28
And if you find what matters to you, if you could create that association, the self reflection
32:28 - 32:30
seems to be a little bit faster.
32:32 - 32:36
I think that's great. I love the example that you mentioned.
32:36 - 32:37
I don't think it's cruel.
32:37 - 32:42
I think it's great because it involves people in the business aspect.
32:43 - 32:45
Like, we are building the things to make the business.
32:46 - 32:50
So you need to take care of costs of what you are building.
32:52 - 32:55
This is. This is a good approach, I think.
32:57 - 33:02
Yes, I hope so. It's been working for me, you know, so far, and it's all about powerful questions.
33:03 - 33:07
And I think that is, you know, you need to spark some of that reflection, you know?
33:07 - 33:13
And, you know, sometimes, you know, when you are cruel, it is so that you can be kind. You know, it's.
33:13 - 33:16
It's not with intent, you know, to make. To downgrade people.
33:16 - 33:18
And I think, like, that's the caveat.
33:18 - 33:23
The thing that you just need to be careful of here is that you are not saying that the person
33:23 - 33:30
is bad, although you're saying that, hey, the work might not be of quality, and we need to create
33:30 - 33:34
that distance between the individual and the work.
33:34 - 33:40
So if you could put it in a way where you really extract those two concepts from one another,
33:41 - 33:44
you'll definitely find that it's successful.
33:46 - 33:51
You work in one of the biggest Nio banks in America.
33:51 - 33:59
And recently when we talked, you mentioned the structure of the company and the structure of the team stuff. This is not.
33:59 - 34:04
I got typical approach, and I'm wondering if you could elaborate on that.
34:04 - 34:13
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So we believe very heavily in ownership. We have a mission.
34:14 - 34:21
We don't want to change the way the Canadians interact with banking in 20 years.
34:21 - 34:23
We want to do it next year.
34:23 - 34:24
We want to do it today.
34:24 - 34:27
And so when you ask yourself that question, you're like, how do you do it?
34:28 - 34:29
You need to be able to go fast.
34:29 - 34:31
So you need a lot of autonomy.
34:31 - 34:33
You need a lot of decision making power.
34:34 - 34:41
You need a lot of get rid of the red type, get rid of the bullshit, so to speak.
34:41 - 34:46
And so the way you kind of do it is by over promoting ownership, really.
34:46 - 34:49
Like, that's the key value of our organization, is ownership.
34:49 - 35:00
And you could see it's being reflected heavily in the way that we talk about our stock options or compensation package.
35:00 - 35:03
We want people to get a big amount of equity.
35:03 - 35:07
It needs to matter to them, you know, from day one.
35:07 - 35:13
And so we built a structure where, you know, ownership is effectively your key to success.
35:14 - 35:22
And the title is kind of like, more just an indication of, like, where you spend your focus. Right?
35:23 - 35:25
So nothing is off limits in this organization.
35:25 - 35:32
You know, for example, you know, today, you know, as a director, you know, I've got a very specific
35:32 - 35:33
business unit that I look at.
35:33 - 35:34
You know, that's my title.
35:34 - 35:37
I'm a director of a very specific business unit. I.
35:37 - 35:43
But in the organization, I'm busy with compliance documentation.
35:43 - 35:47
I'm running security to a degree.
35:47 - 35:49
I'm helping and interacting with that.
35:49 - 35:55
I'm sitting with developers to help them solve problems in specific structures.
35:56 - 36:02
I'm also managing and reporting some strategic things up to my boss.
36:03 - 36:08
And so from that perspective, it's really about how much time do you have?
36:08 - 36:14
How much value can you add, and can you take ownership of this thing and drive it to completion?
36:14 - 36:23
So our structures are completely flat, and I found it to be extremely empowering. The traditional.
36:24 - 36:31
You need to have a CTO and a VP and directors and managers, and all of those elements seem to
36:31 - 36:36
fall away and to the wayside when you are like, we are building this and we need to get this done.
36:36 - 36:40
And if you show up, what responsibility are you going to take?
36:40 - 36:46
And so we really started building a culture where that's more important than anything else.
36:46 - 36:49
And the results has been remarkable, to be honest.
36:51 - 37:00
And regarding the 2024, your current role, I'm wondering what are the biggest challenges and
37:00 - 37:03
the pain points that you are having regarding engineering or product delivery?
37:03 - 37:07
Oh, yeah, fascinating question here. Great question. Yeah.
37:07 - 37:13
So I think like, you know, what we've learned is we are growing.
37:13 - 37:14
We are growing at a rapid pace.
37:14 - 37:19
Like I mentioned, we don't want to do this, you know, in a couple of years, we want to do this tomorrow.
37:19 - 37:25
And so we are moving, you know, more micro, we are building more microservices as a product
37:25 - 37:27
becomes more and more popular.
37:28 - 37:36
Now, if you remember, a lot of the traditional teaching will tell you, oh, you need two people per microservice.
37:36 - 37:39
It needs to be small, but two people will microservice.
37:39 - 37:43
Well, if you have a thousand microservices, that means you need 2000 people.
37:43 - 37:48
That doesn't sound like a feasible solution for this answer at all.
37:48 - 37:55
And so we can't rely on rapid expansion to kind of get the job done. I've learned that lesson.
37:55 - 38:01
You don't want to get into hyper growth because you get a market signal and then only to be
38:01 - 38:05
hit by layoffs or problems down the line.
38:05 - 38:10
And so what we need to do is we really need to focus on talent density.
38:10 - 38:14
How do we build and extract the most of our employees?
38:14 - 38:20
How do we get a, you know, someone, you know, out of university, you know, but really make them
38:20 - 38:26
an exceptional engineer, you know, in three years, you know, because we don't have the traditional
38:26 - 38:32
eight year journey or ten year journey, you know, that most people, you know, have the benefit of.
38:33 - 38:39
And so I think we need to rethink a lot of our frameworks, our policies, you know, you know,
38:39 - 38:41
could we reduce cognitive load?
38:43 - 38:46
Could we introduce standard operating procedures?
38:46 - 38:50
Do we know where we're spending 80% of our time in?
38:51 - 38:55
Do our services follow common patterns? That's easy, that's repeatable.
38:57 - 39:01
Are they all contained business logic that's easily changeable?
39:01 - 39:05
These are the type of questions and the problems that we are going to deal with at scale.
39:06 - 39:12
We need to really ensure a very smooth process that minimizes the risk of outages, tech debt
39:12 - 39:15
and production incident, because that just takes away from your time to develop.
39:16 - 39:22
And so we need to find a way to go fast without adding as much risk into the system.
39:23 - 39:25
And I think it's really going to be an interesting year.
39:28 - 39:36
I'm just wondering, all of us, we have some kind of strengths, and I kind of, like, feel what are your strengths?
39:36 - 39:39
But maybe you could tell me more about it.
39:39 - 39:41
Like, to what do you attribute your success?
39:41 - 39:44
Why do you think you are in the place where you are today?
39:44 - 39:46
Oh, that's a great question.
39:47 - 39:49
I have to tell you this story.
39:50 - 39:55
My dad, in the early nineties, he got an old Commodore 64, very old.
39:55 - 40:03
For those that are very new to this podcast, that's a computer that I had, I think, two megabytes of RAm.
40:03 - 40:05
It was really ridiculously small.
40:06 - 40:10
And he asked someone to install some games on advice.
40:11 - 40:18
And back then, the games, they were all on this menu. Press one for games.
40:18 - 40:20
Press two for your word functionality.
40:21 - 40:23
It was a very old DoS system.
40:23 - 40:29
And I remember I was six years old at the time, and this machine was absolutely fascinating,
40:29 - 40:35
but it came with, like, this rule, you know, like, you could spend time on it supervised, but
40:35 - 40:37
if you ever break this computer, that would be the end of you.
40:38 - 40:44
Like, you're done, you know, having something like this in our house was just absolutely amazing.
40:45 - 40:48
And so what did we do? We broke it, right.
40:48 - 40:52
You know, well, kind of, you know, we did it by accident.
40:52 - 40:57
We pressed one of the menu buttons, you know, and I think I pressed number nine, and number
40:57 - 41:02
nine was exit to DOS, you know, and the only thing that sits on this little computer is this
41:02 - 41:07
thing that says doS, you know, DOS 3.1, I believe, you know, at that stage.
41:07 - 41:15
And I had no idea, no matter what I did, resetting the computer, turning it on and off again,
41:15 - 41:18
you know, it just went back to this kind of, like, DOS stream.
41:18 - 41:20
And so I remember the sheer panic.
41:20 - 41:23
Like, I know, I was thinking, oh, this is the day I'm gonna die.
41:24 - 41:25
You know, this is where it is.
41:25 - 41:31
So I asked my mom to take me to the only source of knowledge that existed back then, which was
41:31 - 41:34
the library, you know, and I rewalk.
41:35 - 41:37
I remember walking in and asking my mom, could you.
41:37 - 41:39
Could you just stand somewhere else?
41:39 - 41:42
I need to go find some books, you know, please don't grab my style.
41:42 - 41:46
You know, my mom just smiled and, you know, she went off.
41:46 - 41:51
And so I secretly went to the librarian and I asked her, you know, do you have any books about dos?
41:52 - 41:55
And she took me to this computer section, and I'm like, which one?
41:55 - 41:56
Which ones are the best ones?
41:56 - 42:01
You know, and she looks at me, she's like, normally these are reserved for, like, college and
42:01 - 42:05
university graduates, you know, what do you want to do with it?
42:05 - 42:09
And I'm like, no matter how many can I take home, you know? And she's like, six.
42:09 - 42:14
I'm like, I'll take six, you know, and I just grabbed a couple of these books, and I got back
42:14 - 42:17
home, and I couldn't understand any of it, right?
42:17 - 42:22
But what I did realize, one book, I think it was like the third one, you know, one book had
42:22 - 42:29
words that were bold, you know, was like, had, like, some bold lettering on it.
42:29 - 42:34
And I remember if I typed the bold word into the computer, something happens, you know, and
42:34 - 42:35
I was like, oh, oh.
42:35 - 42:39
You know, I got back into this menu system, and now I was on top of the world.
42:40 - 42:43
I could get out of it, and I could get back into it.
42:43 - 42:45
So I'm not breaking it.
42:45 - 42:47
What else can I do with this computer?
42:47 - 42:56
And I remembered I got information about how to access batch scripts and write my own little
42:56 - 42:59
programs of things that I could do.
43:00 - 43:03
And I started writing my first computer program when I was six years old.
43:03 - 43:10
I got into qbasic, and I remember I wrote an address book, and if you type in my friend's name,
43:10 - 43:14
it will tell you his telephone number, because we didn't have cell phones back then.
43:14 - 43:17
Telephone number and his address, right.
43:17 - 43:24
And so a lot of that journey has been, you know, what made me who I am today.
43:24 - 43:27
The same thing happened at university.
43:27 - 43:31
I knew I wanted to go into computers and software development.
43:32 - 43:39
And so at my second year of university, my dad moved, you know, my mom and dad moved to a province,
43:39 - 43:46
and my sister, you know, she had, you know, she had, like, a university grant, and, you know,
43:46 - 43:53
from this grant, she was going to study, and so she's going to lose this grand if they move.
43:53 - 43:59
And so I decided, like, hey, I can stop working right now, you know, and I can get into the
43:59 - 44:02
market, and she can just use the money that we would use for my education.
44:02 - 44:04
You know, that's, that's a great thing that we could do.
44:05 - 44:11
And so I joined the workforce a little bit earlier than expected, and I finished my education in 2015.
44:11 - 44:20
I finished my master's degree in 2015 with a specialization in software development because
44:20 - 44:27
of, like, I wanted to complete it, but I also wanted to not stop someone else from having this opportunity.
44:27 - 44:33
I felt I had enough to make kind of, like, a lot of this work.
44:33 - 44:39
And so I think my passion and tenacity has been the biggest driver throughout my career.
44:40 - 44:41
I faced so many challenges.
44:42 - 44:43
They were big and small.
44:43 - 44:46
A lot of them was, today I'm going to die challenges.
44:47 - 44:50
But I always found myself working through the problem.
44:51 - 44:54
Maybe I'm a little bit stubborn I don't know.
44:55 - 45:01
I don't want to accept my fate, but I found with just a lot of hard work and determination you
45:01 - 45:04
could overcome almost all obstacles.
45:04 - 45:14
You know, my dad used to tell me when we remove ourselves from the equation, in those moments we are remembered.
45:15 - 45:17
And I think a lot of that has been stuck ing with me.
45:17 - 45:23
You know, don't do things because it will win you prestige, you know, or some sort of award,
45:23 - 45:26
you know, do them because they matter.
45:26 - 45:27
You know, put in the work.
45:28 - 45:30
And that's what I've been doing.
45:30 - 45:31
I've been putting in the work.
45:32 - 45:37
Fascinating story, as my must say. Like really fascinating. Like,
45:40 - 45:45
I think, like now, today for young people, it's really hard to focus because there is so much
45:45 - 45:52
the focus and like, I mean, ten years ago, 15 years ago, 20 years ago, maybe it was different,
45:52 - 45:59
but you can focus on one thing and go all in and now there is.
45:59 - 46:02
So this is a good and bad thing, right?
46:02 - 46:05
At the same time, you can be whoever you want.
46:05 - 46:10
You have the best lessons online from the best possible professors.
46:10 - 46:18
But there are so much tempting to jump from one thing to another and to go like, ole and ask you that.
46:18 - 46:21
That's so true. That's really true. Yeah.
46:21 - 46:26
I found that, you know, the younger generation, they do get distracted a lot. Right.
46:26 - 46:31
I remembered there was one book about design patterns, you know, and that was the only book,
46:31 - 46:33
you know, that you had to read.
46:33 - 46:37
And it was in c, in c, you know, it was, it was really.
46:37 - 46:39
But you had to understand that.
46:39 - 46:44
And so your prerequisite in getting this knowledge was, know, getting into, you know, this very,
46:45 - 46:47
you know, old compiled, you know, language.
46:47 - 46:54
And so you start to build, you know, your knowledge over time. It wasn't instant gratification.
46:54 - 46:56
You can't just google it and find the answer.
46:56 - 46:59
You know, you had to really go through the journey.
47:00 - 47:07
I found from a lot of, like, my setbacks, a lot of, you know, times where I wasn't the smartest
47:07 - 47:15
person in the room, you know, where I failed effectively at a task is when I went back and I
47:15 - 47:17
said, like, how did I, what am I missing?
47:17 - 47:19
What knowledge don't I have?
47:19 - 47:24
And I spent a lot of time, like, starting to accumulate those, you know, blind spots, you know,
47:24 - 47:26
and working on those blind spots.
47:26 - 47:31
And it's just been a fascinating journey where I'm still, I'm still learning today, you know,
47:32 - 47:35
about all of these things because I'm putting in the work. Yeah.
47:36 - 47:40
And the last question that I have, it's about your.
47:40 - 47:45
That the books or the resources congress is something that have been really influential on yourself.
47:46 - 47:50
Despite, of course, this book about dos that you took from the library, right?
47:51 - 48:02
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. I'm actually, you know, very much inclined to be a classical learner. You know, I don't.
48:02 - 48:09
I think the, you know, the modern books are great, but in a way, they just really rehashing,
48:09 - 48:14
you know, a lot of information that's been available for us, you know, you know, throughout generations.
48:14 - 48:18
I must say, the one that I found the most interesting and the most valuable, specifically being
48:18 - 48:22
an entrepreneur, is the art of war by Sun Tzu.
48:22 - 48:26
You know, I don't know if you've ever read, you know, that I have one. Yeah.
48:26 - 48:31
The book of five Rings, you know, is also brilliant, but, you know, the art of War, for me has
48:31 - 48:35
been something that has been absolutely fascinating.
48:35 - 48:42
You know, I think my biggest challenge, you know, in growing as an individual is my compassion
48:42 - 48:47
and caring was really something that stifled a lot of my business growth.
48:47 - 48:52
You know, I had a bunch of business partners that got me into trouble, you know, situations
48:52 - 49:01
I trusted a lot, you know, into employees or, you know, even people, you know, peers that I
49:01 - 49:05
worked with, you know, I trusted, you know, them too fast.
49:05 - 49:07
I didn't verify a lot of the information.
49:07 - 49:13
And I think what I've learned, you know, from, you know, the art of war was really about like,
49:13 - 49:19
whoa, you know, there's different approaches, you know, and just because people are nice doesn't
49:19 - 49:23
mean, you know, you should entrust them with all of your information or with everything that
49:23 - 49:25
you are doing, you know, and putting it together.
49:26 - 49:31
And so I found a lot of, like, positioning yourself from a strategic perspective, specifically
49:31 - 49:36
when you play a role in the boardroom, has been an absolutely fascinating journey, you know,
49:37 - 49:39
and so that's been a great one. I love that book.
49:39 - 49:41
I also really enjoy your podcast.
49:41 - 49:46
You know, I've been a listener from way before we, you know, got together, you know, and, like,
49:46 - 49:53
I, like you mentioned, you know, I love the fact that you get into the meat of it, you know, no bullshit.
49:53 - 49:59
And what's wonderful about your podcast is really this ability for you to bring in so many diverse
49:59 - 50:05
opinions and thinking into the room where we can have a conversation about it.
50:05 - 50:06
And I learn a lot from.
50:06 - 50:13
I learn a lot from different people's way of thinking and the way that they've been doing their
50:13 - 50:15
solutions and they've been putting up their experience.
50:16 - 50:20
And so that's been, you know, absolutely a wonderful, you know, journey for me.
50:20 - 50:26
There's some few others like, you know, Etienne de Brain, as he's part of the seven CTO community.
50:26 - 50:33
He does a lot of, like, great, wonderful, you know, work with ctos and kind of getting them together in a room.
50:34 - 50:39
You know, he has a podcast as well, you know, where he speaks a little bit about, like, you
50:39 - 50:42
know, what's the market trends and what's going on there.
50:42 - 50:44
I found that to be extremely helpful.
50:44 - 50:49
Also, if you are a young CTO, he has a program that's called the CTO levels.
50:49 - 50:52
That's just absolutely fantastic for you to understand.
50:52 - 50:54
What level am I operating at?
50:54 - 50:56
What's the next challenges that I need to face?
50:56 - 51:01
It provides a growth framework for yourself. That's just a wonderful.
51:01 - 51:06
If you're a young leader and you feel lost, because that's what you do, you feel lost.
51:06 - 51:09
A lot of hard on top.
51:09 - 51:14
You know, you don't have a lot of, like, meaningful content, you know, to guide you.
51:14 - 51:18
You know, finding resources like that has been extremely helpful.
51:18 - 51:21
Lately, I've been reading a book called the five Strategic.
51:21 - 51:23
Your next five strategic moves.
51:23 - 51:25
I don't know if you've ever read that one.
51:25 - 51:26
No.
51:27 - 51:32
Yeah. Absolutely brilliant book. You know, it's really about.
51:33 - 51:37
It's done by Patrick Bear David.
51:37 - 51:41
And it's really about mastering the art of business strategy.
51:42 - 51:46
Wonderful, wonderful composition put together.
51:46 - 51:50
But it's really about that drive and tenacity and making sure that you're not just thinking
51:51 - 51:54
about the position you are in now, but thinking those five moves ahead.
51:54 - 51:57
I found that to be an extremely helpful book.
51:57 - 52:01
The hard thing about hard things is, really great book.
52:01 - 52:06
You know, I think it's been referenced a couple of times on this podcast as well, you know, so, um.
52:07 - 52:14
Yeah, there's just so much content out there, you know. Um, I hope that.
52:14 - 52:18
Thanks very much, Ed. It's a lot. It's a lot. Yeah. I mean, like, the.
52:18 - 52:21
The whole conversation, I really appreciate it.
52:21 - 52:24
I think it's, like, really packed with meat.
52:24 - 52:26
Like a really meaty outspear. So the.
52:26 - 52:32
This is always that I'm looking for during the conversation, and I think this one, it's really
52:32 - 52:35
packed in the knowledge, like, really actionable knowledge.
52:35 - 52:36
So thank you for that today.
52:36 - 52:41
Yeah, no, absolutely. I'm happy to help, and let's do this again sometime. It would be great.
52:42 - 52:51
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