Bit Better Book Club šŸŽ‰

Weeks 35 and 36: The Hard Thing About Hard Things šŸ˜“

Welcome to weeks 35 and 36!

Time to read:

The Hard Thing About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz

Ben Horowitz is known as the co-founder of Andreessen-Horowitz (known as a16z). In this book, he shares all the not-so-glamorous parts of running a business.

Thereā€™s a lot of information about how to start a busines. Thereā€™s also a lot of success stories from business owners who ā€œmade itā€. But the reality is that thereā€™s a lot of hard work in-between.

Running a business requires taking a lot of difficult decisions. Some of them will be unique to your company, others will be more generic. And for the latter ones, you can prepare by reading this book.

Just 22 pages (or 35 minutes for an audiobook) a day to finish it in 2 weeks :raised_hands:

Some of my notes from the book below:

  • The author mentions a moment where he decided he has to make a serious choice as he canā€™t follow all his projects, passions, and interests and still have family. After that realization he left his startup job to get something more stable. This choice, however, didnā€™t prevent him from founding a startup in the future. And one that would take him even farther from his family at times. I find this rather inconsistent.
  • Netscape came to be as a commercial approach to Mosaic (the first graphical Web browser). To this day, Mosaic Killer (Mozilla) is an important Web Browser and a proponent of the free Web.
  • One of authorā€™s companies, Loudcloud, was financed by SoftBank. I didnā€™t know SoftBank existed in the nineties. Nowadays, SoftBank looks to me like one of the most evil companies around.
  • Donā€™t get me wrong, thereā€™s a lot of great advice in the book. But itā€™s another example of ā€œwork 16h days to make it or youā€™re nothingā€.
  • The author mentions in tech you have to be great or you lose. Iā€™m not sure about it and I definitely believe outside of tech you can be just good and still be fine.
  • The story of keeping an executive with cancer on a payroll long enough so he can get health insurance was touching. However, it shows how broken the US health system is. If your literal life is a matter of your employerā€™s decision, is it very different from slavery?
  • Another comment on the cancer story, the author mentions that the company was fighting for survival so he had more empathy for a person with cancer fighting for survival. I found this analogy extremely insensitive. Your company may not survive and you are still free to take the most of life, maybe just lowering your leisure expectations. When you have cancer, not surviving means something entirely different.
  • There are a lot of excuses in this book. ā€œWe did something bad, but we had to do this to surviveā€. No you didnā€™t. Survival of your company might have been at stake, but not your survival, neither that of your employees (unless in the United States you die when you become unemployed).
  • This is yet another book focused mostly on public companies with huge teams. I havenā€™t yet found a good book talking about bootstrapped small to medium companies.
  • Thereā€™s a lot of war metaphores. Hiring a general, curshing the compatition, and so on. Why it is highly poetic, it is used to justify terrible beahvior. When youā€™re in war, all that matter is whether you win or lose, so you can do just about anything to achieve your goal. Well, I see it as excuses, but then again Iā€™ve never been a CEO of a publicly traded company.
  • Donā€™t get me wrong, the book contains a lot of great advice, the problem is most of it targets US-based publicly traded tech companies or tech companies with external funding.
  • I loved the suggestions for performing 1-on-1 management meetings!
  • I was surprised by the description of toxic employee behaviors, as I realized it matched my behavior at one job perfectly! Because I saw what was rotten in a company (or sepcifically, a project I was in) and not being able to do anything about it I turned very sour and complained a lot.
    One of the insights from the book was that you are not building company culture because it helps you when everything is going well. Company culture is there for when the things go wrong. When people work long hours and the competition seems to be crushing your company, great culture is what keeps people working for the company.

Just finished this. I liked the deep-dive into the struggles a CEO faces on a daily basis - although now Iā€™m a bit scared as well. I aspire to be a CEO someday but now Iā€™m thinking Iā€™d rather prefer a small team and remain bootstrapped. Letā€™s see how it goes!
Another good thing - it made me understand the reasons behind the processes at large companies.

Do you think you have the grit and guts to quickly make decisions even when your lacking information? From what I understood from the book, this is one of the most important features of a CEO.

I have a tendency to overthink and doubt my judgement, so Iā€™m not sure if a CEO is a role for me, based on this read.

I think it can be learned with experience. With time, you build your sense of intuition and start making decisions with less data. Even Iā€™m not there yet, but I can see a marked improvement in myself (comparing to my 2018 self).