Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.
Our guide book..
Published on April 22, 2006 By Draginol In Business

Over the past several months we've been hiring a lot of people.  So this weekend I decided to put together a little orientation power point that our HR people can eventually use to help introduce new people to the company.

One of the things I wanted to put in there (and did) was our overall philosophy. "The Stardock Way" if you will. I've posted about it before but I've modified it as I've learned more on business and life in general.

Here's the 10 rules we use to guide ourselves by:

  1. Nice Guys Finish First.
  2. Our customers are part of our team.
  3. Perfect is the enemy of good
  4. Win people over through kindness.
  5. Success is based on having lots of other people wanting you to succeed.
  6. Loyalty matters.
  7. Ideas are cheap.
  8. Do not create work for other people.
  9. Don’t sweat what “other people” are doing.
  10. Learn from your competitors

Nice Guys Finish First...

I mean that. People who are ruthless and mean and take no prisoners don't end up doing well in general. It's hard enough to succeed as-is, it's even harder if you end up with people against you.  The whole "Godfather" style strategies I sometimes see people forget ignore the fact that the lead character in that inherited his empire. If you're pulling yourself up by the bootstraps, you should be cultivating friends and the best way to do that is to be an honest, decent human being.

Our customers are part of our team

I like to make software where I get real-time feedback from the people who would buy it. All our betas allow customers to give feedback. We do not usually have "free" betas. We almost always require the person to pre-order because we want to hear from people who are interested in the game enough to be a customer.

Perfect is the enemy of good

This is really the most important rule in many respects. The # of people who fail because they don't know when to stop working on something is immense.  Even as I made my power point, I saw the temptation to start tweaking the order of the slides, the layout, and other things that would have added little to the presentation but increased the effort significantly.  What happens is that people who strive only for perfection either never finish or -- far more commonly -- never try because they know how much work something is.

Win people through kindness

This is a hard one for me personally. My instinct is to vigorously defend my positions. I can be pretty aggressive on-line.  But in general, it's far better to try to win people over by being a decent person than to beat them down with a superior argument or through force.

Success..

This is really a crucial one. To be successful, you really need other people to want you to be successful. The best way to do that is to set things up so that other people do well when you do well. Make every situation a win-win situation so that as you benefit, they benefit. And therefore they have a vested interest in you benefiting.

Loyalty Matters

Being loyal to people and companies usually pays off in the long run.  Not always, but it's come up often enough that I'm a big believer in being loyal which is my natural inclination anyway.

Ideas are cheap

One of my biggest pet peeves are people who think ideas are somehow hard to come up with. I regularly get submissions for product ideas, game ideas, etc. in which they just need our company to "build it".  "OH really? Thanks! Wow, all we have to do is take your 10 page idea and spend the next 2 years of our lives making it and you'll share any revenue 50/50?" 

Everyone has ideas. Many people have good ideas. Ideas are meaningless. It's the people who can make an idea into a reality that matter. That's where the value comes in.

Do not create work for others

I have to be careful about how I present this. Managers should always make sure that those who work with them (i.e. answer to them) have plenty of work.  That's not what I'm talking about.  What I am talking about are people who come up with ideas or commit someone else who doesn't answer to them to work.  In big companies, sales people are notorious for this kind of thing as they promise a customer features that they don't have to work on.

What we always frown on are people who come up with "ideas" and then try to aggressively get someone else to actually do the work to make it happen when those people don't work for them.

Another way of putting this is -- nothing is impossible for the person who doesn't have to do it.

Don't sweat what other people are doing

One of the quickest ways to kill any joy out of the workplace is to get a few people who worry about "fairness" in the workplace.  They poke and nose around to see if anyone else is getting some perk or getting anything more than they think they deserve. Those people are poison and I make it my business to try to look for that sort of thing where I work and eliminate it when found.

It doesn't hurt you if someone else's monitor is a little bigger. Or if someon else gets to work at home on Tuesdays. Or if someone else's PC is 10% faster than yours. Or if someone else has a nicer car.

If you're worried about fairness too much then you're doomed and should just get used to being a bitter person. Unless your management is clueless (of course, people who worry about fairness all the time always think management is blind) you can be pretty sure that they are making sure that there is a general equity going on.

We reward people who work hard and get more done. And we don't reward people who are doing the bear minimum. If John is coming in sometimes at 11am it may be because John was working until 3am the night before from home and that management is aware of it. If Sally is working home on Tuesday it may mean they are taking a slight salary hit for it or their job isn't affected by location as much or that they're not in any sort of crunch time.  There's a lot of reasons and as soon as you start sweating what other people are doing, you create an atmosphere where you have "rules" that make everyone have to abide by the lowest common denominator.

Learn from your competitors

I generally assume my competitors know more than I do.  I try to see what others are doing and see if I can learn something from them. Sometimes I don't but often I do.  Never assume that your competitors are stupid or don't know what they're doing. If they're successful, there's probably a good reason for it.


Comments (Page 2)
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on May 03, 2006
On "Do not create work for others", you missed one I've seen at other companies. Don't change an interface you are responsible for, without talking to the user's of your interface first. Nothing like someone saving themselves 10 minutes work by changing an interface, and then causing five other teams to lose 3 days each fixing their code to match the new interface. It's especially nice when "you" break the build, because your code dosen't compile, because it no longer matches an interface that was changed behind your back.
on May 03, 2006
On "Do not create work for others", you missed one I've seen at other companies. Don't change an interface you are responsible for, without talking to the user's of your interface first. Nothing like someone saving themselves 10 minutes work by changing an interface, and then causing five other teams to lose 3 days each fixing their code to match the new interface. It's especially nice when "you" break the build, because your code dosen't compile, because it no longer matches an interface that was changed behind your back.
on May 03, 2006
I wish that more people and companies would use a philosophy like yours - Integrity. I run my personal life that way, but the company I work for doesn't. I can tell you one thing, no matter what the people and/or company throws at me, I can still sleep at night!
on May 03, 2006
I think these are absolutely insightful ideas and as mentioned earlier in one of the replies, common-sense. I personally always feel at ease in being kind as well as professional in my dealings with others at work. However, there are always people around who are the last to embrace such ideas - and if they know you do, would be the first to take advantage of you. So, in these instances, what could we do to "protect" ourselves?
on May 04, 2006
Interesting success tips... usually they are quite different!

"To be successful, you really need other people to want you to be successful."

Hmm... I believe you need yourself to want to be successful, and ignore what others think. If you don't want to be successful, I doubt you'll be successful even if others want it. Like you said: "Don't sweat what other people are doing"

on May 04, 2006
Juuso, I am sure it is obvious one wants to be successful, but if it stands to reason that you have more chance at success if other people what you to be successful. I know m$ succeeded but there had to be partners that needed and wanted them to succeed!
on May 04, 2006
I believe in rule no 10 n that is a important rule of success!!
on May 04, 2006
Nice set of words you've got here.

I'm having trouble reconciling your writing with Stardock spamming me and ignoring my complaints about being spammed, however.

That doesn't inspire loyalty, doesn't make me part of your team, and according to you it sets you up to finish last.
on May 04, 2006
You might want to fix a typo in this. In the last paragraph of "Don't sweat what other people are doing", in its 2nd sentence, "bear" should be "bare".
on May 04, 2006
Loyalty is important, but it is definitely a two-way street. It doesn't matter how loyal you have been to a company, when it comes time for lay-offs, its strictly business.
on May 04, 2006
The original Don Corelone did not inherit his empire. He built it. Michael inherited it.
on May 04, 2006
Loyalty is a character trait also not common, and it is a feature of people, not a corporation.

First, if you feel those that manage the corporation do not have loyalty to it's people, then you can clearly see why it is a virtue to possess because of the lack of it and it's effect on you. It is then your choice to work for people like that or not.

Second, a corporation was built to make money. Not to give you a job. Your job is an incidental expense that would be removed if possible. Your value and perhaps loyalty can determine your incidental value. I say incidental, because things change. Management, market, funding, products, vendors, a million things that can change your incidental value. Never assume you can sit pretty.

Third, there is no law indicating that loyalty or integrity will get you anything other than a good nights sleep. It is a personal virtue, ewww nobody has those anymore, that you choose to apply to your character. With not the intention of personal benefit but a better environment, work place, relationships, and mental health.

Lastly, I believe this thread was based on the idea of spreading a better ideal. A grass roots approach to indicate backstabbers, greed, and self-fishness do not contribute toward healthy living, whether corporate or personal.

Or am I wrong?


on May 04, 2006
The Container Store has a similar set of six 'founding principles', of which one is quite close in spirit to the rest of yours: "Fill the other guy's basket (then success comes easy)". Essentially it says that success is much more easily achieved when you first help someone else succeed; in a culture of helping others succeed first, there is an intense co-operative spirit that lifts the whole team.
on May 05, 2006
Good thoughts, if established companies follow and make these 10 rules as a training program, the people are going benefit from this
on May 05, 2006
Good thoughts, if established companies follow and make these 10 rules as a training program, the people are going benefit from this
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