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No, it only reaffirms, if anything, that fast moving startups benefit from in-person relationship, guidance and communication with peers more than they would over Teams.



Not really. It doesn't tell us anything except the opinion of a partner. Has S23 resulted in more successful startups, happier founders, higher valuations than W19, S20, W20, S21, W21, S22, and W22? There's no elaboration.


Based on what data exactly? Gut feelings? What could be faster than communications across vast distances at the speed of light?


For some problems? 15 minutes with a whiteboard. There’s no good e-replacement.

For other problems? Sure, slack and zoom are perfectly adequate to preferable.


> For some problems? 15 minutes with a whiteboard. There’s no good e-replacement.

People say this, but FigJam or even Microsoft Whiteboard work fantastically for this if you've equipped your team with the right hardware. I often sit down with people and noodle through problems on an iPad (and for me at least the Pencil is required) with FigJam in a low-friction manner.


I have really tried many different tools since 2020 and none of those worked as well as an in-person whiteboard sessions with 3-4 colleagues.


I really disagree. Figjam is mildly ok, though I suppose if my company had been willing to give the team better tools it might have worked better? I still think there’s something irreplaceable about standing around the board in person to discuss/draw. Even the hovering pencil/cursor stuff just doesn’t work as well, IMO, as standing there and pointing at things/connections.

I’m certainly not going to make my team move to my city and rent an office for those meetings, but getting together a few times a year can allow for solving some tough/intractable problems much more easily/efficiently.


> Figjam is mildly ok, though I suppose if my company had been willing to give the team better tools it might have worked better?

I think FigJam is pretty bad with a mouse and keyboard, honestly. It wasn't until I started using it with an iPad that it made sense to me and it wasn't until I got other people doing it that it was actually any good at all. It also suffers if you have the sort of group that needs a facilitator for these kinds of processes--I had a PM who had formerly been at Figma and their process for trying to get people to use it at the new job hurt me physically.

(The funny thing is, while I do like FigJam I don't like Figma at all; I am an Illustrator man and will be until I blow away like dust in the wind.)

> I’m certainly not going to make my team move to my city and rent an office for those meetings, but getting together a few times a year can allow for solving some tough/intractable problems much more easily/efficiently.

I agree with this, FWIW, but not for the problem-solving aspect at a whiteboard. I use it for the sticky, annoying people-y problems where you do lose something over a teleconference connection when dealing with most people. (Some folks I've worked with, like me, have an on-camera background and can project effectively over teleconferences; most can't.)


We don’t have “whiteboard” type problems anymore, past a certain level of experience. Are you a junior?


Believe it or not, I may work on different problems and in different areas than you do.


Nonverbal and unstructured, unplanned communication don't really translate well to the digital world (yet)


So the secret to working effectively is passive aggressive nonverbal cues and interrupting people frequently who may be busy doing something else and weren’t expecting an impromptu meeting?

Has the physical world discovered how to replay past conversations where important decisions were made? Has it become socially acceptable to have long silences of 5-10 minutes while people formulate thoughtful replies in a conversation?


> Has the physical world discovered how to replay past conversations where important decisions were made?

Yes, they're called "minutes", memos or simply taking notes in meetings.

> Has it become socially acceptable to have long silences of 5-10 minutes while people formulate thoughtful replies in a conversation?

Yes, you can always say "let me think about that for a minute"


I’ve literally never seen a meeting grind to a halt like that. Instead, meetings are full of half-baked ideas, and I sometimes notice show-stoppers hours later when it’s quiet.


Maybe not in the middle of a meeting but Amazon commonly has the first half of a meeting (I've experienced as long as 20 mins) to read a document by the host altogether silently before starting. People commonly would add comments during this time.

At google, doc reading is done before the meeting along with comments/replies, but during a design review, the host will go through each comment and then open a live discussion if needed.

Both of these formats allow for productive meetings but it does require a culture to support it and people to write down their thoughts ahead of the meeting and share it around.


Let me introduce you to Slack and cell phone calls.


Let me introduce you to body language, tone, facial expressions and personal energy, which are simply not captured in slack or zoom or phone calls.


those don't convey nonverbal communication, and they are so unstructured that they interrupt too frequently

there's something positive about setting time on the calendar and then sitting down with someone (or a group of people) to talk about a specific subject that we've all prepared for. yes, you can do that with Zoom, but then you miss the ability to speak simultaneously and the body language / nonverbal.

not everything should be a meeting, but not everything should be IM / phone calls either. being able to mix and match is what makes in-person somewhat positive (even if I personally prefer a hybrid model)


I mean that's not my point, but the guy on Twitter, I was merely answering the previous poster who far fetched it.




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