imtimmc's profile picture. Currently, find my next career move. 

When I'm not at work I lift weights and play the piano.

Tim McGrath

@imtimmc

Currently, find my next career move. When I'm not at work I lift weights and play the piano.

Tim McGrath reposted

I'm looking to hire some ppl to help take Slow Growth to the moon 🚀. If you're a writer, graphic designer, community manager, video editor or WordPress Developer you can learn more about the roles & apply here: slowgrowth.com/hiring/ (Please share!)


This is so cool! Congrats :D

Ten years ago, I said “One day” Yesterday, I said “Day One”

the_jan_man's tweet image. Ten years ago, I said “One day”

Yesterday, I said “Day One”
the_jan_man's tweet image. Ten years ago, I said “One day”

Yesterday, I said “Day One”


Tim McGrath reposted

Ten years ago, I said “One day” Yesterday, I said “Day One”

the_jan_man's tweet image. Ten years ago, I said “One day”

Yesterday, I said “Day One”
the_jan_man's tweet image. Ten years ago, I said “One day”

Yesterday, I said “Day One”

Always great to hear stories like this! Glad to see you looking out for people who often don't have a voice.

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I would love to listen. Here’s hoping you start soon.

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Small caveats of course, but spot on as always Jason.

If your company requires you to work nights and weekends, your company is broken. This is a managerial problem, not your problem. This is a process problem, not a personal problem. This is an ownership problem, not an individual problem.



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Man, this is deep Marques. I've wondered the same thing too.

When I die I wish could sort through all the stats for for life on Earth. What song did I hear the most times? How many times did my heart beat? How many lives did I save? Did I ever break any works records without knowing? I want to know it all.



Tim McGrath reposted

Daily use items that are worth spending more on than the average person: -shower head -garbage can -bath towels -office chair We rarely view basic items as investments, but the things we use everyday can provide a little joy with every use if they are well made. What else?


Great thread Chris! Also, a reminder that you can't have a bad client if you don't take them on in the first place.

We love to hate bad clients. They’re aggressive, pushy, cheap, and make empty promises of exposure and future work—also know as “Clients from hell”. What are the red flags or early warning signs? What have you experienced? Let’s identify the signals so we can all avoid them.



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