
The Calculus of IT
An exploration into the intricacies of creating, leading, and surviving IT in a corporation. Every week, Mike and I discuss new ways of thinking about the problems that impact IT Leaders. Additionally, we will explore today's technological advances and keep it in a fun, easy-listening format while having a few cocktails with friends. Stay current on all Calculus of IT happenings by visiting our website: www.thecoit.us. To watch the podcast recordings, visit our YouTube page at https://www.youtube.com/@thecalculusofit.
The Calculus of IT
Calculus of IT - Season 2 Episode 7 - Part 1 - Establishing Boundaries and Principles for Autonomy
In this episode Mike and I continue on the path of IT Leadership and Autonomy with a focus on establishing clear boundaries and principles for how IT Leaders conduct the delicate balance of decision-making. This episode explores how to balance autonomy, risk, innovation, and productivity while maintaining meaningful principles that survive real-world challenges. Learn about the essential qualities of effective boundaries, including the importance of unambiguous criteria, actionable guidelines, and evolving standards. The hosts share practical experiences and frameworks for creating principles that work in the trenches, not just in PowerPoint decks. Plus, catch the latest IT leadership job updates in the Boston area. This episode is Part 1 and next week we will be on location at Trillium in the Seaport for an episode on Security but then back on April 2nd with Part 2 of this episode. Stay tuned!
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Nate McBride: [00:00:00] That was loud.
Mike Crispin: Oh my God. Gotta love it. Gotta love it.
Nate McBride: I was catching up on email, uh, when I got back from
vacation and. I get these digests from a couple different, um,
technology sources related to AI and I have to tell you that there's
absolutely no freaking way to keep track anymore of either the engine
updates, the engines themselves, or, um, all the new, uh, gadgets,
gizmos, and bolt ons that are now available.
I don't know if you read that 404 article on AISlop. Yeah, I've been
reading a lot of 404 media
Mike Crispin: stuff this week.
Nate McBride: Yeah, that one article on AISlop was pretty insane how,
um, about 80 percent of what's now being posted on social media
platforms is [00:01:00] purely generated by AI. There's no humans
anymore.
Mike Crispin: Yep. No, I did read that article.
I know what you're talking about now.
Nate McBride: I mean, that's That's pretty insane. And Meta, Meta is
actively sort of, um, Broadcasting that, that's just, that's what they
want to happen. They want the platform to be, to be dynamic. But, I
mean
Mike Crispin: Isn't there, isn't there, there was an article also
about how people are using like Uh, the Google Flash, uh, image, like
the lowest image, the fastest image, AI editors, they're able to take
watermarks right off of all of the pictures now.
Yeah,
Nate McBride: yeah, definitely, yeah.
Mike Crispin: Um, I'm, I, you know, I'm honestly, I think along the
lines of some of what you're saying, I'm, I'm losing track and almost
a little bit of interest. It's like a tidal wave. And it just, I'm
waiting to see what the wave washes away or what's left behind, if
anything.
Nate McBride: Well, I, I justMike Crispin: pay.
focused.
Nate McBride: It is. I don't, I don't really beat computer world
anymore [00:02:00] because they just can't get their opinion straight.
But there was an article that I just could, the headline caught me
about the glut of options now. Um, and so, you know, uh, contextually
speaking, I, I gave a, um, hour long pizza and learn today at my
company, which was actually really well attended on notebook LM.
Oh, nice. Yep. So we officially announced it as our third platform for
approved for use. Um, I think what's, what's going to follow is going
to be, um, deep research, uh, will be next. And, um,
Mike Crispin: on which, uh, which platform are you doing deep
research?
Nate McBride: Gemini.
Mike Crispin: Oh, Gemini. Good, good. Yeah, not it's kind of that,
Nate McBride: there, there, there, there's a lot of, there's a lot of
people right now that are trying to compare, um, open AI's deep
research versus Gemini's deep research.
And depending on who you read, you know, there's. People that are
obviously pro Google camp and pro OpenAI camp, [00:03:00] but, uh, the
fact that, the fact that it natively works directly with NotebookLM is
why we would endorse it. But I still need to do some more research
because it's, it's hard to find, um, information about how deep
research works.
It's actually quite, quite vague out there. But anyway.
Mike Crispin: It's very interesting. It is. That's one of the things I
have messed around a little bit with. But I think it's hard to keep up
with all these little, the tiny Small language models that have
emerged this one like 10 every day, almost one one every hour.
It feels like it's like, I can't even keep up with any of this stuff.
It's like so many newsletters and other stuff going through trying to
look at and just rolling my eyes. Like, how can anyone keep the
onslaught of all this stuff that's
Nate McBride: so? So Google also released learn about, um, in
production, what, two months ago and learn about it.
Yeah. So there's like this trifecta approach now that's being heavily,
um, blogged about, which is [00:04:00] the notebook LM learn about in
deep research trifecta. Whereas if you're able to use all three in a
workflow format, you're actually able to do research some X percent
faster. And I'm like, I'm not sure I buy that.Yeah. So there's like this trifecta approach now that's being heavily,
um, blogged about, which is [00:04:00] the notebook LM learn about in
deep research trifecta. Whereas if you're able to use all three in a
workflow format, you're actually able to do research some X percent
faster. And I'm like, I'm not sure I buy that.
And I'm not even sure that the order that they're recommending and
most of these blogs are recommending is working, but certainly there's
something to it, right, where, where you can, you can increase your
capabilities as an individual to do vast amounts of research in a
short period of time by using three tools at once, as opposed to a
single tool, but those tools must work in harmony.
You can't like, okay, I'm going to use. I'm going to use Clawed, and
then I'm going to use OpenAI, and then I'm going to use NotebookLM,
because you're just moving shit from place to place, and, and
corrupting it all, all in the way. Anyway. The benefit
Mike Crispin: would be to have an agent that just uses all three, and
you just have it go do it for you, and come back in 15 minutes with
all your answers.
Against, across all of them, whichever ones that you choose. Yeah. Uh,
it seems like that's [00:05:00] That's sort of how the deep research,
at least to my understanding, works, is it's kind of crawling a number
of, it's combining an LLM with a crawler. And it's putting that
information together and bringing it back to you.
And all along the way, it kind of shows you what its thought process
is, depending on, you know, which model you're using. And in a weird
way, that gives you a, somewhat of a pseudo audit trail, if you want
to call it that. It gives you at least its process it's trying to go
through, but who knows what it's worth.
It's really
Nate McBride: It was, it was good. It was good for the company to be
exposed today to some new, new terminology. I mean, I don't often talk
about explicit versus implicit LLMs and in my general training, you
know, a lot of this stuff is sort of buried, uh, and not implied. So
it was good to get through that.
And I think a lot of people have now significant interest in using NLM
going forward. But anyway, this isn't the. Generative AI bullshit
[00:06:00] session podcast. It's the Calculus of IT podcast.
Mike Crispin: Still good stuff. It's still good stuff. I know we can,
I just, I'm overwashed and here I am talking about it. So,
Nate McBride: no, no, it's a, it's difficult to even find people that
can talk about it today because everyone seems to be going in a
direction.Um, Oh, I, I don't know. I guess I'll just say one more thing, which
is, and then I'll shut up about AI, but did you, did you see that
video I posted on the Slack board about, um, the, uh, black hat? That,
that guy who talked about the X fill functionality for co pilot, how
anybody can X fill out a co pilot. Um, and there's a whole discord
board devoted to X filling out a co pilot.
No, I didn't see that. I didn't see that. Oh man. It's a great chance
to jump through
Mike Crispin: it.
Nate McBride: It's a great video. It's this wonderful presenter at
black hat. Uh, 24, um, was talking about. Literally how there's people
that are spending every [00:07:00] single day dissecting the co pilot
language to figure out what all the secret words are to exfil from any
corporation's co pilot environment.
It's funny, he did some live demos that are pretty Holy shit, like
Okay, I'm not using co pilot anytime soon. Um, God bless you if you
are, good luck with that. So
Mike Crispin: I don't know, two weeks ago now, just, I just don't feel
like it's even in the same league. I mean, it's not even close. It
hasn't really progressed, but it doesn't feel, maybe it has, but it
doesn't feel like it's progressed much since we were talking about it
a year ago.
Nate McBride: Yeah, it's pretty crazy. Like a year ago, we were able
to say, look, here's the four models. Now it's like,
Mike Crispin: yeah. And part of it is, you know, I, I was, I think I
was saying, imagine where we'll be a year from now. And I don't know,
I don't think it's moved as fast as I thought it was going to move
some [00:08:00] of this stuff.
And to your point, it was probably in a lot of ways, really overhyped.
So I, you know, we're over a year from December, right? And so, I
mean, we're still chatting with the chat bot. We've got, uh, these
agents that are going through, we've got better models, get cheaper
models. So that's, that's better. Uh, but no, no other mind blowing
things.
And I, maybe that was, that was definitely probably false on my part
to think there'd be something a little more sexy.
Nate McBride: That you want, you want, you want to get right, go right
ahead and skip to subdermal implants. I know you. Hey, yeah, thatMike Crispin: was it. I just said, I want to put a sticker on my, my
head and, and see, see my dreams.
You know, that's what I want.
Nate McBride: Okay. Well, uh. Why don't, let's instead of stealing
dreams, let's live the dream and do episode seven of our podcast. How
about that for a segue, huh? Uh, are we
Mike Crispin: giving away free Humane Pins this week?
Nate McBride: Yes, free [00:09:00] Humane Pins to everyone.
Mike Crispin: You see they're gone, they're like long gone.
Like a month ago they, I guess they shut down completely. The one, the
pin, remember you got the, what was it, what was it called? The red,
red box, what was that thing called? The little AI box you
Nate McBride: ordered, the uh, The Rabbit R1, Michael. Rabbit
Mike Crispin: R1, that's right. Yes, and then at the same time that
humane pin thing you could talk to and it would, it would broadcast on
your hands.
Remember that? Yeah.
Nate McBride: Yeah, I remember that. I also remember you buying a BR
headset from Apple that I still I, I used it this week! Yeah, you say
this, but I, I, it's, I call bullshit. It's
Mike Crispin: right, it's sitting right here next to me.
Nate McBride: Okay, next time you use it, I want live video proof that
you're using it, and we're gonna
Mike Crispin: I just went to 2.
4. 2, uh, Vision OS 4, 2. 4. 2, which, uh I don't know what it does,
but it's new. It's a new version that just came out.
Nate McBride: There's absolutely no way to dispute that what you just
said is true or not. [00:10:00] So, we want a live video, okay?
Mike Crispin: I'll use it during this podcast.
Nate McBride: Fine. So, welcome to the Calculus of IT podcast, uh,
episode 7 of season 2.
Uh, the greatest podcast on the internet, as everybody knows. Um, Mike
said Mike's at home in his, um, in the basement of his mansion. I'm in
the bar, I'm in the barn on my estate. And, um, why are we here? Oh,
that's right. We're here to do a podcast. Um, so I was in Belize last
week. Uh, just chilling, which is to say drinking, drinking my ass
off.Uh, the greatest podcast on the internet, as everybody knows. Um, Mike
said Mike's at home in his, um, in the basement of his mansion. I'm in
the bar, I'm in the barn on my estate. And, um, why are we here? Oh,
that's right. We're here to do a podcast. Um, so I was in Belize last
week. Uh, just chilling, which is to say drinking, drinking my ass
off.
They have these drinks called rude boys and penny, penny rippers. Um,
and you just kind of go back and forth between them. And it's a
magical combination.
Mike Crispin: When did you start in the morning? What time did you get
going?
Nate McBride: Well, I was, it was, it was an all inclusive place that
we stayed at, so [00:11:00] literally I'd go to breakfast and then I'd
come back and I'd go grab my book and my coffee and sit down on my
little, my little beach chair and the guy would come over 9 30 and be
like, can you, would you like a drink, sir?
And I'd be like, of course it's 9 30. Uh, I'll take a panty ripper and
a rude boy. And.
Mike Crispin: Now, do you have to, those have to stay cold or are they
any temperature?
Nate McBride: They don't last long enough to stay, to get warm.
Mike Crispin: So they're coming, they're coming all out on ice.
Nate McBride: They're
Mike Crispin: smooth. You drink them. Yeah.
Nate McBride: Uh, perfect. A rude boy is a combination of ginseng,
taurine, um, some other, uh, ancient Chinese herbal remedies and hard
spirits.
And on the label, it literally says.
Mike Crispin: That's
Nate McBride: good. They don't say what kind, it's just alcohol.
Mike Crispin: Just, you know it's alcohol. It's just alcohol.
Nate McBride: Well, I think honestly, let's cut to the fucking
[00:12:00] chase, right? Don't tell me it's like, uh Uh, Tito's or
whatever, just say the, uh, the bottle, just call it alcohol, and then
put a percent at the bottom, just a white label, black lettering,
alcohol.There
Mike Crispin: you go.
Nate McBride: You would, you, dude, honestly, you would sell a
bajillion dollars of it. You know that company that made the liquid
death water?
Mike Crispin: Oh, I don't.
Nate McBride: I don't. You can buy cans of the stuff called liquid
death. I'm not kidding, you can google it. I believe you, I believe
you. And so liquid death is just water.
But they canned water, and they call it liquid death and they put this
like, kickass viking logo thing on it and grim reapers and stuff all
over it. People buy that shit like you wouldn't believe but it's just
water, it's water from the tap. Oh my god. Liquid death, you look it
up.
Mike Crispin: Murder your thirst.
Murder your thirst, that's right. This [00:13:00] is the stuff, I love
it.
Nate McBride: Uh, so, we should just create a drink called alcohol.
And, we're not the person to think of this, I'm sure, but Rest in
Mike Crispin: peach.
Sweet reaper. Severed lime.
Yeah, that's worth the price. So this is great. This's some. Great.
Now look at the merch. We gotta get
Nate McBride: on board. So while I was away in Belize contemplating
autonomy and our, our searching for, for everlasting autonomy, uh,
Ringo Star had a birthday and all I have to say is listen to the
lyrics on Sergeant Pepper after three rude boys.
And you'll understand the conspiracy that's at play here. Wow. Um.
Mike Crispin: You've got to see the Liquid Death homepage and the ad
they use at the top. It's beautiful. [00:14:00] Alright, I'll bring it
up. LiquidDeath. com and then um, My husband loves this water. Hold
on, let's see. Go to the ad third from the left. So keep going to the
right till you see.
Hold on. They have all different flavors now. I know. I know. I gotta
get some of this stuff. You sold me.Hold on. They have all different flavors now. I know. I know. I gotta
get some of this stuff. You sold me.
Nate McBride: Pegs for pregs. My husband loves this water. You won't
believe it's not soda. See, they, they figured out that people are
just stupid. And they're making It's
Mike Crispin: branding, man. It works.
Nate McBride: It's branding. It's cause they're making like a killing
on this.
I'm telling you, alcohol. I'm gonna look into it. We're gonna, we're
gonna just sell alcohol. Hey, we have to just figure out a percentage.
Like what's the percentage of people would buy 8%?
Mike Crispin: Well, all you have to do is, is, is, is use the name Al
like Albert and [00:15:00] somehow, you know, play up, uh, Cohal.
Nate McBride: So Al and then Cahal, K A H A L,
Mike Crispin: yeah, Cahal or Cahal,
Nate McBride: Cahal, yeah, Al.
So Al Cahal. And I think, so Root Boys are 7%. I think 7 percent is
the way to go. And then you can have,
Mike Crispin: you
Nate McBride: can have, and basically you buy your alcohol by the
color of the of the bottle. So if it's purple, it's purple flavored
alcohol. Yeah. Green, green is green flavored.
Mike Crispin: Well it's, it's really a place. So it's Al Company.
Al Co Hall. It's a hall where I don't have
Nate McBride: to cut all this out of the zoom because we have to
patent this shit
Mike Crispin: This is great. I mean we should do this right now. Okay,
shut this thing off Let's go. Let's talk build a business plan on this
right now
Nate McBride: Go buy a vat of grain alcohol and then just [00:16:00]
condense it down to 7 percent I don't know how science works, but I'm
just using fancy words there.
But um aged aged water Aged,Mike Crispin: mulled water, mulled. I love it. Malted up. All right.
Malted water. Just take it, man. Just take it.
Nate McBride: Just take it. Don't ask questions. Just take it and
drink it.
Mike Crispin: Just take it and drink it. That's how it's going.
Nate McBride: We could go to all the big biotech conferences and IT
conferences and just have a booth.
Absolutely. People are like, what's your sort of technology digital
transformation approach? We're like, I'll We're the Alco company and
we sell
Mike Crispin: alcohol,
such a dad joke. It's worse than a
Nate McBride: joke. It's a great joke. Oh, let me tell you the worst
dad joke. So we were in the, in, in Belize and, um, it [00:17:00] was
myself, my wife, uh, my son and his girlfriend. And you know, one of
the things that you hope to see when you're in Belize or manatees,
right? Sometimes it's, they're hard, they're hard to spot.
And so by like the third day, everyone's kind of bumming, you know, we
haven't seen any manatees yet. So just, I was standing there on my t
shirt and I said, Hey, look, it's a man in a tee.
Good one. That was great. You can use that. Also, people were like,
how was your trip? I'm like, it was unbelievable. Did you say how
Mike Crispin: was drip? Was it drip?
Nate McBride: How was the trip? It was unbelievable.
Mike Crispin: Unbelievable. That's great. No, that's a good one. I
like that.
Nate McBride: You can use that one too. Alright, I'm writing these
down.
Yeah, I can see you writing them down. My next, uh, Put your Apple
headset on and why don't you write them into your screen or something.
This is Mike, this is Mike Crispin. I'm Nate McBride, and each
[00:18:00] week, as you've already been able to realize, we bring you
a sweet, sweet IT leadership donut laced with knowledge, guidance,
paradoxes, and just a hint of strict nine.
We just open the knowledge nozzle and just let it waft your way in a
giant gush. All you have to do is breathe it in. Breathe it in.
Breathe it in. Feels good. So if you missed it last week, we released
two of our jorts in one week. Boom. You're welcome. And we hope you
enjoyed them as much as we did in making them.We just open the knowledge nozzle and just let it waft your way in a
giant gush. All you have to do is breathe it in. Breathe it in.
Breathe it in. Feels good. So if you missed it last week, we released
two of our jorts in one week. Boom. You're welcome. And we hope you
enjoyed them as much as we did in making them.
Plus we released, uh, an article. Uh, so busy, busy times over there
on the sub stack. And I wasn't even here. I was in another country.
How about that? Magic of digital twins. Exactly. And robots. So, by
the way, um, there was an ad, I forget, oh no, I don't forget, I
remember now which company it was, but there was an ad at Logan
Airport for, um, a company that's very big.[00:19:00]
And they had a, they had like a, one of those billboard banners there
on the wall that said, digital transformation for AI. Wow. And I
wanted to ask you, what does that company, what is that company
selling?
They're not even saying the company's name, but they're a big company
that's just a bunch of, you know, like, terrible people. Is it
MuleSoft? No. No. Uh, Workato or, uh You can't, I'm not gonna get you
to tell you the company's name. Oh. I don't want to give them any
credit on this podcast. I'm just asking you When you hear the words,
when you hear a company promising to digitally transform you using AI,
Mike Crispin: yeah.
Nate McBride: What are they selling?
Mike Crispin: Services.
Nate McBride: Services. That's what I figured.
Mike Crispin: Yeah. It doesn't matter what kind of services,
[00:20:00] but they're AI services. Data governance, data integration,
data integrity, machine learning, integration and automation services.
Absolutely. Get the A team on the phone, you know. Reach out to the C
Levels, get everyone plugged in.
Nate McBride: Yep, the C Suite. Spin a great yarn.
Mike Crispin: Then have the IT team jump in and start talking to them.
And they get excited. And then we spend all this money and you get
completely different products. And, um, you know, a bunch of calls.
Cross functional meetings. Meeting minutes. Blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah.
Transformed. Transform it. Give me everything you got. Oh wait, we
have a template. We have a template for that meeting. Uh, that we can
send around to everyone. It's a template and every week it's Oh,
sorry. I can't make the meeting. I've [00:21:00] got something else
going on. We can't transform this week. We're gonna have to move it
out a couple weeks.Transformed. Transform it. Give me everything you got. Oh wait, we
have a template. We have a template for that meeting. Uh, that we can
send around to everyone. It's a template and every week it's Oh,
sorry. I can't make the meeting. I've [00:21:00] got something else
going on. We can't transform this week. We're gonna have to move it
out a couple weeks.
I'm sorry about that. Oh, the project lead left the company. So we're
gonna bring in a new personal transfer. Actually, why don't we? Can
you forward all the presentation minutes over to the new person that
this company that we're paying for to to, you know, Okay. Go through
it all again. Oh, yeah, yeah. Oh, that's, that's what it is.
Digital transformation. What is one product you could buy that, um,
Yammer? We need dashboards. Dashboards. Reality is, uh, It's, it's,
it's not a company service that can be provided. It's not a
technology. It's a, it's a huge cross functional organic business
movement and cultural shift. It's not a product on a billboard at an
airport.
Nate McBride: So, well, so next week [00:22:00] We are next week, by
the way, we have a special, so Mike and I are going to be at the Octa
event at Trillium and we're going to have a special segment of the
show next week, which is I'm going to read, um, people's, uh, LinkedIn
profile blurbs. Uh, just randomly selected without telling you their
names.
I'm going to tell you their title and then their blurbs, and we're
going to go through my favorite top ten over the last two weeks.
Mike Crispin: I have to update mine from my title to some neat, like,
tagline. I haven't done that yet, and I need to do that.
Nate McBride: Just make sure that when you do yours in your blurb, you
put Digital AI Transformer.
Architect.
Mike Crispin: I was thinking of just doing, uh, Michael Crispin. I'm
ready to believe you
Nate McBride: that's good digital custodian, uh, [00:23:00]
Mike Crispin: you know, ready to listen like the Ghostbusters to
believe you that's, I
Nate McBride: got the joke, Mike, you don't, if you have to explain
the joke,
Mike Crispin: I thought it was like a dad joke thing where you have to
kind of like push it through afterwards
Nate McBride: to push it through. I got it. The audience will get it.They can Google it.
Mike Crispin: It's going to take it.
Nate McBride: All right. Well, speaking of taking it, we do have a
sponsor this week. Oh,
Mike Crispin: separate incidents.
Nate McBride: Yes. Uh, this week we're sponsored by rope. Really?
Mike Crispin: That was a giant rope that was on your pizza. That
picture of your pizza you sent.
Nate McBride: Yes. Well, Rope has got many uses. Rope has got many
uses. It comes in many forms.[00:24:00]
We're not going to get asked to do their, their, um, ad promo again.
I'm sure the people at Rope are not going to be happy about this. But,
uh,
Mike Crispin: okay. Well. Hey, hey, look, I mean, it's a, it's a great
sell point, whether it's on top of your filet or on top of your pizza.
Where, where you go, you know, rope can make it a better time. It can
make it a better experience for everyone.
Nate McBride: It can, it can. Rope is [00:25:00] flexible. It, uh,
spreads well. It does. It does. Um, and it's, you know, it's got a lot
of purposes. It's got a lot of utility. I like the utility.
Mike Crispin: It's a very agile product.
Nate McBride: It's an agile product.
So, um, well, what can we say? I mean, we love Rope.
Mike Crispin: Yeah, I mean, this is a great sell. I think we're laying
out very clearly. We have a good marketing message here. A clear use
case. We're very clear on this one.
Nate McBride: If you, if you're looking for some rope, um, there's
lots of places you can go to find it, but all right.
Rope, you know, thanks rope
Mike Crispin: people. This is the word that this is great. We fully
endorse it.
Nate McBride: Fully endorse the rope. So great job rope. Keep going.Mike Crispin: Great, great sponsor. I'm glad.
Nate McBride: Well, there's a lot of, there was a lot of back and
forth. A lot of, um, up and [00:26:00] down, back and forth.
Mike Crispin: It was great, really great as a sponsor that they came
out for us and they really helped us out.
Nate McBride: We negotiated, um, just a good spread.
Mike Crispin: Yeah. Good for them to, to, to do what they did. Oh, we,
we got a really serious podcast tonight. And we're really, we're
really churning through this, uh, core subject material.
Nate McBride: We are, we are. I mean, well, you know, we had to,
there's a lot of things we got to do to keep the show running and keep
us in business.
And again, good people at Rope are paying good money to give us the
Rope, uh, spiel for this show. They even sent us
Mike Crispin: those photographs, which is nice. Yeah, they sent us the
photographs. The marketing, uh, sorry, the marketing materials.
Nate McBride: The marketing materials, yes. I wish we could show them
on the podcast. They were, they were quite compelling.
Um, just, just so much rope. No question about that. Tons of rope. Um,
so if you missed our, our last full episode from three weeks ago, the
hell is wrong with [00:27:00] you? Um, but seriously. You've had three
weeks to listen to it. What's your fucking problem? Um, that was
episode, that was episode six and that's your, that's that, you know
what that is, that's your loss of autonomy.
It's taking control of you, like you didn't have the time to listen to
our episode, you got to get control over your autonomy, you got to
figure out what is holding you back from being you, and then listen to
episode six, and also episodes one through five, and then also season
one, um, just in order. You
Mike Crispin: know, you need a podcast prioritization committee to
help you decide.
Nate McBride: Yes. God, get that shit together, then come back and
listen to this episode after you've gotten it all prioritized with
your committee.
Mike Crispin: And then it has to be good criteria, so Nate and I will
try and lay out the appropriate criteria, measurement, and metrics.
That's aMike Crispin: And then it has to be good criteria, so Nate and I will
try and lay out the appropriate criteria, measurement, and metrics.
That's a
Nate McBride: good point. Literally, everyone [00:28:00] else can
wait.
We, we, we've proven it. The data shows it. Everyone can just wait
because, and you tell them like, you're going to have to wait because
I have this other, I'm priority, prioritizing the podcast. So episode
six was like, awesome. We hiked up our trousers, trousers, we hiked up
our, our jorts and went waiting through the I might have had a few too
many, um, something before I wrote this.
What did
Mike Crispin: you drink tonight? What have you been drinking?
Nate McBride: I'm just drinking Woodford Reserve right now. No, I
wrote this, I wrote this like two weeks ago. Oh. But I, I, I
potentially had some stuff while I was, while I was writing it. But
here's what I wrote. We hiked up our trousers and went wading through
the cow patty pasture of creating technology diversity without chaos.
But then it makes sense and I said, and then man, we just laid right
into it, which we did. Plus we have special guests with Kevin coming
back. It's always great to have special guests and special guests
whose names are Kevin. [00:29:00] So we hit like, we hit like the
trifecta basically. A special guest, a special guest named Kevin and
Kevin came back.
So, boom, nailed it. I'm not sure, I'm not sure this show is going to
be as great because we don't have a Kevin. But Mike and or I can play
the role of Kevin or a Kevin tonight to make up
Mike Crispin: for it. We'll try to make up for Kevin not being able to
join us.
Nate McBride: And, and when we had episode six, we, the point of that
episode was trying to put some sense into how to maintain or achieve
technical diversity.
Yeah. So, so basically how to keep your world in a place where you can
make decisions, uh, on the fly to flex and be agile about your
environment, um, and maintaining autonomy while you do it. So we left
a lot on the table, but I think we hit all the high points. Um, I
think, I think it's, I think it's sometimes it's not a bad thing to
leave stuff on the table, [00:30:00] leave some rope on the table, uh,
so everyone can go imagine and self practice on their own about the
things that you talked about.
Um, it's either that or we go back to four hour episodes, which I
don't think anybody wants us to do. Yeah,Um, it's either that or we go back to four hour episodes, which I
don't think anybody wants us to do. Yeah,
Mike Crispin: no, we can, we can, we can stay to the 40 minute
episode. I think, I
Nate McBride: think the way tonight is trending. We might have a bit
of a long one, but it's okay.
Mike Crispin: Yeah.
Nate McBride: Why not? We have, we, we have a great sponsor.
So that brings us to this week, um, which is like, we're kind of,
we're continuing to move the ball down field. I was going to say the
road, but that doesn't make any sense. Um, We're establishing clear
boundaries and principles around autonomy. So we've moved away from
diversity without chaos. Uh, now we're getting to sort of your
leadership element, which is establishing the clear boundaries and
principles, um, about the decisions you make in order to maintain
autonomy, risk, innovation, and productivity.
[00:31:00] So basically having a path. staying on that path, even if
there are overwhelming zero choices or one choices along that path. So
if you remember zero choices are choices that were, you're just
accepting the status quo, um, and not making any sort of autonomy
decisions on your own, which sometimes you have to do.
Um, And other times you make a one decision, which is when you're
going to sort of deviate from the herd and go ahead and do something
that's best of breed for you and your situation. So, this whole theme
of establishing clear boundaries and principles is so big that I had
the precognition, I had the sense of foreboding to break this into two
episodes.
So we'll do one tonight, then we'll come back in two weeks and do the
second part. Next week, we're like I said, we're going to do a fun
event at Trillium. If you're going to be in the Boston area, come to
Trillium and be on the podcast. Okta is buying all free beer. We don't
have to pay for a single thing other [00:32:00] than maybe parking,
which you can expense your company.
So come down to Trillium. Get loaded and be on the podcast. Don't get
loaded. I mean, get loaded on, on liquid death. Um, so before we get
to that though, the jobs update is back and it looks like some people
got hired in the last two weeks and so the list is a little shorter,
but we have some new entries, so that's always good.
So listen up. If you are out there looking for a job and I know
exactly who you are and well, some of you anyway, um, listen closely.
So akibia, and I don't know, but I think there's somebody on this
podcast who's not me. There's not Kevin who worked at Akibia, but
they're hiring a VP of IT. Mike, would you know anything about that?So listen up. If you are out there looking for a job and I know
exactly who you are and well, some of you anyway, um, listen closely.
So akibia, and I don't know, but I think there's somebody on this
podcast who's not me. There's not Kevin who worked at Akibia, but
they're hiring a VP of IT. Mike, would you know anything about that?
Mike Crispin: I don't know anything about that, but I think it's great
that they're, uh, they're hiring a head of IT. Cool stack. They get a
good set of technologies in there. Who built [00:33:00] that stack?
Who's that guy? Anonymous. Anonymous. Is it a non a hacking group?
Anonymous? No, no, it's, is that, is that
Nate McBride: group still around? Is anon still around, by the way,
Mike Crispin: is Oh, they are, but I think, well, that's the thing.
I don't think they technically, there, there are assimilation of many
different groups, aren't they? Or different people and they're
probably under one handle. I'm not sure it's, there's any way to
validate that they're still around or that they're real. Let's start
up Q,
Nate McBride: let's start up Q anon again. Let's start up a new
chapter.
Mike Crispin: Not QAnon, Anonymous. I thought you said Anonymous.
They're
Nate McBride: two different things. Anonymous, oh, I know.
Mike Crispin: Anonymous is the group of hackers, and QAnon is the uh,
the uh, what the what, the conspiracy group there that was on. Oh
yeah,
Nate McBride: let's not do QAnon. Let's do Anonymous. Let's do an
anonymous group, anonymous Boston chapter, and everyone has to
[00:34:00] wear, um, uh, a mask at our meetings.
Mike Crispin: There's, there's a good, there's a good team, good
platform at, uh, at Akibia. So, uh, hopefully someone jumps on that.
Nate McBride: So Mike's giving the plug for Akibia. If you're looking
to be a VP of IT at Akibia and adopt Mike's stack that he built while
he was there, um, just reach out to Mike directly. Call him, call his
house or just stop by his house.
He'd love to talk to you about it.
Mike Crispin: Hey, yeah, sure. Beers, I just want some beer or coffee
or, uh, green tea.
Nate McBride: Just go to dogequest. com, look up Mike's Tesla address,
and then go to his house. ThatMike Crispin: is just fantastic, man. Yeah. I tried to see if I was on
there, but luckily I'm not.
Nate McBride: Yeah. So J& J, that's just to say Johnson and
Johnson, is looking for a head of technology discovery.
You have to read the JD because [00:35:00] it's kind of ambiguous. I'm
not really sure what it means, but it has technology in it, so it's
probably pretty cool. Um, if you like wearing suits to work every day,
Fidelity is hiring a VP of Gen AI, which I'm going to go out on a limb
and say will be the easiest job in the world.
Literally walk in day one, be like, boom, Claude, uh, I'll be, uh, on
the golf course.
Mike Crispin: Wow. Why don't you apply, Nate? You should, you should
go to Fidelity. I can't imagine you at Fidelity.
Nate McBride: Why don't, why don't I just go ahead and try to recruit
myself to be a Marine? They'd kick me out after day one.
Mike Crispin: I don't know, man.
I think you'd fit right in.
Nate McBride: Like, why are you all wearing suits? It'd be like in the
movie Big. Okay, you're fired.
Mike Crispin: Tom Hanks comes in and the CEO's like, Hmm, they get a
little bit different approach.
Nate McBride: I don't think Fidelity's looking for like a rebellious
iconoclast to come on and join their AI team.
Because I would just go in there and probably not get [00:36:00] Past
day one, but still on the hunt after all these weeks
Mike Crispin: episode, if
Nate McBride: I brought my podcast live from day one at Fidelity, look
at everybody. Here's me stealing all the snacks from the lunchroom in
my, in my suitcase. I
Mike Crispin: think there's a, the videos. The, uh, life at Google and
they're wherever I can run, if it's Google or what they go in in the
morning and they're having, they're at the gym at the, at the, at the,
the office and then they go and they have a big breakfast and then
they work for an hour and then they go have a coffee and they go, it's
working and it's, I go read a book at three o'clock.It just goes on. Small,
Nate McBride: small bites, Mike, small bites. You can't, you can't
just do all the work all the time.
Mike Crispin: I think that video is like 10 years old now, but it was,
I remember seeing that and be like, well, I'm going to go work at
Google. Sounds awesome.
Nate McBride: Well, I don't know why. So there's a couple other
companies.
So [00:37:00] Maverick tech partners is looking for a CTO, uh, to join
their top gun team. Oops. Uh, the Brian group is looking for a CIO.
Boom. I just, I'm just dropping the dad's fire tonight. I'm on Fuego,
Bronson search group is secretly looking to place a global head of it
destination, unknown scientific systems. And I have no idea what they
do could buy the title of their company is looking for a director of
it, but this is the best one manscaped.
Yes. Is looking for a VP of IT, look at manscaped. com
Mike Crispin: The best thing, in the script, Nate has all the letters
capitalized. Manscaped. It's, it's all capitalized. Because,
Nate McBride: how can you not capitalize, there's a company called
Manscaped! And they want a head of, a VP of IT. Fucking apply!
Everybody who listens to this show should apply for that role.
Just [00:38:00] get the door for
Mike Crispin: And that's key for your LinkedIn profile. I mean,
that's, that's beautiful.
Nate McBride: So where, where'd you work a lot? Where was your last
job? Uh, manscaped. Yeah. Um, what'd you do there?
Mike Crispin: Digital transformation.
Nate McBride: Well, one of my, one of my key projects is working on a
device that had autonomous agents built into it for shaving your
privates.
Mike Crispin: We've been working on getting as close to the product as
possible. That's the goal of our it firm is to move closer to the
product.
Nate McBride: Yes. We don't just sell the product. We use the product.Mike Crispin: We're product managers now.
Nate McBride: Would you like to see my chest? Um, so MANSCAPED, all
caps, is looking for a VP of IT. I love it. Cartwheel is looking for a
head of IT. Um, now Some of the companies that are [00:39:00] still on
the hunt, X4 Pharma still has not found a VP of IT or they haven't
taken LinkedIn, whichever one is happening.
Ironwood still looking for a VP of IT. Formlabs five weeks later,
still looking for a CIO. MIT still looking for a CIO. Um, now this is
interesting. Scholar Rock. And we know, uh, the head of it there,
scholar rock is looking for a director of the it project management
offices, but Boston medical center kind of right down the road is
looking for a senior director of the it project management office.
They're gonna have to duke it out over the title director versus
senior director, uh, time for the Thunderdome Harvard business
publishing is looking for a senior director of business systems. So
all the systems.
Mike Crispin: Verve
Nate McBride: Therapeutics is still looking for a director of IT,
G& A business partner, and SOX compliance lead.
And I think that their number one problem is, and I'm just gonna, I'm
gonna [00:40:00] spitball this, is the title is like 17 words long. So
you got to kind of like just slap that up, shrink it, director IT. You
Mike Crispin: may want that G& A business partner to be the SOX
compliance lead.
Nate McBride: Anyway, responsibilities. So that's the job update for
this week.
Hope good luck to everybody applying again. I've already submitted my
resume and um, private picture portfolio to manscaped. So good luck to
all of you competing against me for that role.
Mike Crispin: I take back the fidelity comment. I think manscaped is
the only way to go.
Nate McBride: That's the only way to go. Every just pull all of your
resumes back and just apply to manscaped.
And if you, if you do become the manscaped, you have to come on the
podcast because we want the, we want the T we want to understand. I
want to know the secrets because you know that they got, they got a
whole section of their, their box drive or a SharePoint or whatever.
That's like secret confidential [00:41:00] methods.And if you, if you do become the manscaped, you have to come on the
podcast because we want the, we want the T we want to understand. I
want to know the secrets because you know that they got, they got a
whole section of their, their box drive or a SharePoint or whatever.
That's like secret confidential [00:41:00] methods.
Right. And they're like, okay, Mike, today you've been here for a
week. We're going to give you access. We're going to change your life
right now. We're going to give you access to the diagram.
Mike Crispin: Probably just bring the shaving kits in and put a label
on the side.
So, it's like a, yeah.
This, this, this man, this manscaped, um, I think, isn't their model
that they sell the, they sell the, the razor refills? It's not, it's,
their business isn't as much on the, on the, On the actual device.
It's more in the subscription model, I think is not that I would know
her.
Nate McBride: So this is from the leadership page manscaped.
And by the way, they use all caps. Manscaped is [00:42:00] they do.
Manscaped is helmed by a well groomed and gifted bunch of created
professionals with decades of experience in their respective fields.
Mike Crispin: Ooh, and they sell like spray and like all this cream
and everything.
Nate McBride: And look at that leadership page. Everyone's wearing
black.
But they have, and they're, but they have, um, most like mouse over
gifts.
Mike Crispin: Yeah. I'm on there right now.
Nate McBride: Actually, it's their entire company's page. It's not
even their leadership page. It's like
Mike Crispin: their websites.
Nate McBride: It's good. I like it. So
Mike Crispin: it might have, uh, you know, they may not have to change
much. They just go in and kind of,
Nate McBride: by the way, we have to get managed as a sponsor because
they have the peak hygiene plan for 19 a month.
Wow. The peak hygiene plan, which comes with like, so they have foot
duster, crop preserver, crop mop, crop reviver, [00:43:00] and beard
conditioner. Oh my God. All right.Mike Crispin: I'm looking at the section around growing tools.
Nate McBride: Yeah. Growing tools.
Mike Crispin: The lawnmower, the lawnmower, the lawnmower, and the
crop shaver.
Nate McBride: I feel like, I feel like I just learned something all
new just tonight. Amazing. This site is incredible. The body buffer,
they have the shears 3. 0. What happened to the shears 2? Oh, there's
a shears 2. 0 right there.
Mike Crispin: I wonder what the, when you go up, like how they improve
these things from new versions. Well, so faster,
Nate McBride: but think about it, right?
So you have three options. You have the lawnmower 3. 0 plus the
lawnmower 4. 0 pro or the lawnmower 5. 0 ultra. Which one are you
going to buy? You're not buying the 3. 0 plus. Everyone's buying the
5. 0 Ultra.
Mike Crispin: Buying the Ultra. Exactly. No, I agree. [00:44:00]
Nate McBride: They're not. But the, uh, the crop preservers anti
chafing ball dealer but the crop reviver.
Is ball toner and refresher.
Mike Crispin: Love this stuff. This is great. These products are
fantastic.
Nate McBride: Crop mop is ball butt and body wet wipes.
Mike Crispin: Wow. Yeah, we're almost at the hour. We're going to have
to close it up soon.
Nate McBride: What happened to their previous EPIT?
Mike Crispin: That's what I want to know. It's like we're I
love Manscaped. This is great. I feel like they're already a sponsor.
Like, it's fantastic. We can just pretend almost. Even if
Nate McBride: they're not a sponsor, we're gonna just They're now,
they're now one of our sponsors. They don't even know it.
Mike Crispin: I'm looking at the apparel right now. We've got t
shirts. Oh, this is fantastic.And look at 20
Nate McBride: vacation days, 40 hours paid sick leave, nine paid
[00:45:00] holidays, 401k match, employee discounts. I bet. And so t
shirts are great. They need a, they need a project program management
office, remote finance, senior manager, FP& A and a VP of
technology. Let's read the job description.
Mike Crispin: Yeah, 300,
Nate McBride: 000 a
Mike Crispin: year.
Jump in, man. Let's go. And I bet there's a great, like, uh, employee
discount as well. I mean, just
Nate McBride: Hell yeah, dude. Wow. And, and for the record, it's
remote. Work from home, work from home. Well, you got to, you got to
just do all the things to yourself. And they're like, they're
multinational South Africa, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, Australia.
Oh my God. All right. So global opportunity, global ops, baby. So come
on our Slack board and we're all going to talk about the man scape job
opportunity. And we're going to try and make sure everyone gets this
job because we all want the discounts [00:46:00] for like the friends
and family.
Give everyone a
Mike Crispin: chance.
Nate McBride: So if you go to any of the places where our podcast is,
just give us five stars. I'm not even going to, you know what to do.
Just literally find the highest possible rating on all the things and
just give it to us. We already are the best podcast on the internet.
That's proven. So you're just basically helping to keep us in the top.
Um, that's what we like. We don't want, yeah, we don't want to slip
down the rankings behind like some of these other podcasts, quite
honestly. Getting me higher than where we're at. It's all AI crap
anyway. This is real people. Um, if you want to buy us a beer,
obviously it's always welcome. If you want to buy us some alcohol,
just any alcohol, you can go on the buy us a beer link and just give
us money.
Um, a good portion of our proceeds after we buy the beer goes to
Wikimedia. Um, cause they're awesome. So [00:47:00] tonight's topic,
47 minutes later, um, establishing clear boundaries and principles for
your decision making as an it leader, not a small task, but any
measure. Um,Um, a good portion of our proceeds after we buy the beer goes to
Wikimedia. Um, cause they're awesome. So [00:47:00] tonight's topic,
47 minutes later, um, establishing clear boundaries and principles for
your decision making as an it leader, not a small task, but any
measure. Um,
Mike Crispin: we're going to be taking it so seriously. No,
Nate McBride: we're now I'm trying to put my serious face on now.
Mike Crispin: This is, this is when we get really serious.
Nate McBride: We're now really, this is the thing that just got real
up in here. So, and not just any boundaries, Mike. But one is to help
you balance those four pillars you've been talking about.
Oh, that's right. The four pillars. Autonomy, risk, innovation, and
productivity. So let me ask, let me ask you a question, Mike. Have you
ever been in a situation where you had a clear principle of how
something should be done, but when push came to shove, you had to
throw it out of the window because of pressure?
Sure. [00:48:00]
Mike Crispin: Yeah, I can't think of, uh, one like it right off the
top of my head, but I think, uh, I, I can think of, I can think of one
that was a, Related to cyber security, um, and it was luckily
something we're able to remediate and work around, but we had a need
to have a massive amount of thumb drives available for a certain, uh,
certain exercise.
And, uh, we had to do an enormous amount of work to secure them so
that they could be used because there was an urgent. business request.
So we had to put them, we had to put them in place and immediately
research a way to secure them. But it was against the principle
basically, we're not going to allow these thumb drives and we were
very good about it up to that point.
Yeah. You know, a certain business event occurs and you need to do it,
and I remember [00:49:00] thinking about it afterwards, thinking about
was it, was it worth the, uh, was it worth the pain, and it probably
was, so I mean, but there was no real fallout afterwards and no real
risk that we, we observed from doing it, but sure other priorities
fell or we didn't get things done as quickly in some other areas as we
wanted to, but, um, we moved through it pretty quick, and, uh, Yeah.
All hands on deck type moment, but it wasn't something it did seem
like such an obvious thing to the the team that requested Oh, we'll
just get thumb drives. But for us it was a pretty huge lift to do it
in a way that was safe
Nate McBride: Well, I mean it's happened obviously to both of us a lot
myself as well These little Pyrrhic victories, we might, we might win,
but in fact, we actually lose way more than we won if we try to sort
of hold to our principles.Nate McBride: Well, I mean it's happened obviously to both of us a lot
myself as well These little Pyrrhic victories, we might, we might win,
but in fact, we actually lose way more than we won if we try to sort
of hold to our principles.
And this is kind of, it's kind of a trap that we fall into when we
have these grand [00:50:00] principles, like, um, we only use open
standards or we'll maintain data sovereignty at all costs. And then of
course, reality knocks on the door and suddenly we're violating our,
our principles, um, that we claimed to hold dear.
I mean, uh, Yeah, there's quite a few of them. So I know that, you
know, and I think, well, I wouldn't put you in the category, but I'm,
I'm sort of all like death before Microsoft in my heart and in
principle, but in practice. Sometimes I've had to lay down and take it
because sometimes that's just the reality of walking to a company and
I'm like, okay, I think it'd be a really good idea right now for us in
this growth stage to not be on Microsoft anymore.
And then you just get the people who are like, they're themselves are
in the NFW sort of absolutely not death before you take Microsoft away
from me position. And. To win would not be a victory. So [00:51:00]
today we're going to talk about that, how to establish boundaries and
principles that actually can survive contact, um, with the enemy, the
enemy being not people, but reality.
So we're going to teach you, Mike and I are going to teach you how to
take it. But just the right amount, not too much. Just the right
amount to balance it all out. So, what makes a good boundary? Um,
let's talk about that. So, not all principles and boundaries are
created equal. Some are very, very flexible.
They're done more because it's a good practice. Others are done
because you've had terrible experiences in the past, uh, with a
particular thing. And there's variations of those, but, um, I think
there's a couple different, um, Central qualities for a good boundary.
So they need to be unambiguous, right? So, um, if the principle is we
prioritize security, that means nothing.
[00:52:00] So big, big effing deal. Security over what? How much
security? Under what circumstances? Yada, yada, yada. Without clarity,
that principle is useless. So think about it this way, if five
different people on your team would give five different
interpretations of what your boundary means, it's not a boundary,
basically.
So instead of We prioritize security. Try something more like, uh, all
applications handling PII must complete our privacy impact assessment
and receive CISO approval before production deployment. You know, it's
very flowery and wordy and all that bullshit, but it is not
unambiguous. That is very, very not unambiguous.Um, so that's number one. Don't, don't be unambiguous. And your
principle two, your principle should be actionable. So, um, a boundary
or principle like we will never compromise on quality. Looks awesome
on your IT mission statement. [00:53:00] Sounds great in a company all
hands meeting. But again, what does it actually mean?
It's kind of meaningless. Like how do you even measure that? We'll
never compromise on quality. Well that, there's two measurements in
that statement already. So how do you know when you're about to cross
that line? Etc. So instead of we will never compromise, you would do
something like Um, all production code must have X percent test
coverage, have zero critical issues and undergo peer review.
And it seems like there's a theme developing here, right? Like you
take these little tiny pithy statements that keep showing up in IT
strategy plans and decks and whatever. And you actually have to, you
have to actually answer the, answer the question of what does it
actually mean? And so the third one was.
Your principal needs to acknowledge trade offs. So, and here the
example and this, you know, all these are just recent [00:54:00] for
me is we always choose the most secure option. Which is meaningless
because you can't always choose the most secure option. Sometimes it
doesn't work that way. So you have to sometimes choose the second most
secure option.
Because, which could be theoretically the most secure option for you,
but those two don't necessarily align. So, you want to make sure that
if you have, you have trade off capability, so instead of like the
most secure option, it's more going to be along the lines of, again,
it's like semantics, but um, we're going to always seek to make the
company as secure as we can, uh, by choosing whichever option best
aligns with whatever it is that we intend to do.
That's a little bit of a broader context and gives sort of some more
of that color you need. Um, uh, the next one was things need to be
context sensitive. So different [00:55:00] systems have different
requirements, obviously. So, um, for example, like, uh, I think you
might still do this. I definitely do this. I prioritize systems on a
scale of one to four.
Mike Crispin: Mm
Nate McBride: hmm. Where if it's a tier one system, it won't matter at
all if it goes down. No one will be affected. Tier four, it goes down.
We're all fucked. Um, these are context sensitive. There's definitions
around the system. They apply these metadata and these phenotypes to
them. It makes perfect sense. And it goes back to our evolution and
data mapping concept in episode 6.And then lastly, uh, any boundary or principle you have needs to be
able to evolve.
So, I don't, I mean, there's, I'm sure there's others. Like, those are
the ones I thought about for. Principles and boundaries, but I don't
know if you had any thoughts about that or any others that come to
mind for you.
Mike Crispin: I, I, I think in [00:56:00] terms of, um, talk about
systems being able to be integrated. Or open to some extent is a one
of one of the principles is not necessarily driving tight internal
application integration and taking a people use the best to breed,
which, like you said, I think you can't drill down on that.
You got to label what that actually means. What I mean is a product
that does its intended use really well and plays well with others and
does it in a way that it can be integrated that it has a P. I. S. That
they don't charge you for through the. Through the sky with low rate
limits and all these other things.
So an open is an open architecture you can build so that you can
prepare for any changes that happen within the company. Yeah. Um, so I
would just say kind of an open model is important. Um, but [00:57:00]
I guess from. I guess from a cybersecurity perspective, it's always
top of mind and we mentioned kind of the, you can't have it be too
secure and you can't have the best user experience because that
ultimately leads to, hey, if it's user experience, you're not focused
on security, but you know, I think it's now more and more you can have
both, uh, the most secure solution probably isn't really Enterprise
ready anyway.
It's, you know, 100 percent encrypted at risk. You're running at, uh,
operational risk unless you've got the, the best internal staff in the
world. If you're using a secure solution, um, the most secure solution
is not to put it on the internet. Uh, but that's the balance of, in
terms of what's online and user experience is so, so good now that you
can really make that one of your, your principles with security and
privacy.
And I think in fairness to the executive teams that you work with or
for, that's still the [00:58:00] buzzword or the concern or the risk
that they're going to come to you with the most. Um, and the other
being kind of the future state of the automated business. You know,
how can we operationalize a business better or how can we transform
the business?
We leverage AI as another buzz, you know, buzz, buzz piece that, you
know, is important. But security still seems to be the thing that from
peers and from, from, uh, management and all the companies I've been,
I've always been first and foremost, um, so in, and to the point where
some companies assume it's there if you don't focus on it.We leverage AI as another buzz, you know, buzz, buzz piece that, you
know, is important. But security still seems to be the thing that from
peers and from, from, uh, management and all the companies I've been,
I've always been first and foremost, um, so in, and to the point where
some companies assume it's there if you don't focus on it.
So it's. It's important to, to make sure it's not just we prioritize
security, it's, uh, you can have that as your, as your kind of tagline
on the slide, but you want to have a overall sort of mission or
principle that is spelled out in your [00:59:00] sort of dictionary,
um, for your group, your service catalog or whatnot.
That is very clear what that means. And I think, um, middle road. I
keep using that term, but everything is sort of a compromise on, on
your principles. It's weaving the road between your principles and,
and sometimes what actually needs to get done. And that's where I
think the, you know, point four around, um, around, uh, context is,
uh, important.
I, I think sometimes IT organizations lose sight of the business
context and they're focused kind of very inwardly on some very
important things they need to achieve. Right. And those could be
because of the principles they hold as a group, but also because
there's a lot of internal I. T.
Responsibilities or cyber security or data governance or just overall
I. T. Governance responsibilities or [01:00:00] regulated
responsibilities that they need to do, and they lose sight of the
business context in which things need to be prioritized or finished or
done well. So, um, That's why I think your point around context is
another good one and needs to be kind of lined is needs to be one of
your principles that you are context aware or business aware.
Um, and that's a good, that's a good, sure. Go ahead. And I was just
going to say in terms of the security, the security element of one
other thing I just said, but security is just the security element of
the, of anything that's public facing is often. is often, um,
overlooked because a lot of public facing, like, websites or, um,
third party survey tools, or, you know, this type of things that, you
know, go out the doors, assume that they are safe, [01:01:00] um, are
becoming one of the main areas of attack.
At a lot of companies, because they are largely overlooked. And they
end up getting crowdsourced to attack other companies. So it's, it's,
and that's another type of context. That's market awareness and
industry context and awareness, which is, is important too.
Nate McBride: Uh, I agree with everything you said. And I would say
that you, you mentioned security a few times and the reason we have
these four sort of key pillars of this whole discussion is because you
have, there is a, there's a giant risk element to all of this, which
is, um, you're going to go ahead and try to have principles and yes,
you can have a walled fortress, but then you're basically sacrificing
The other three key parts of autonomy, you're sacrificing autonomy
itself, innovation and productivity.that you, you mentioned security a few times and the reason we have
these four sort of key pillars of this whole discussion is because you
have, there is a, there's a giant risk element to all of this, which
is, um, you're going to go ahead and try to have principles and yes,
you can have a walled fortress, but then you're basically sacrificing
The other three key parts of autonomy, you're sacrificing autonomy
itself, innovation and productivity.
So you have to do it. You have to have a balance. You have to be
willing to relent [01:02:00] on the security side, um, striving to do
your best, but not at such a price that, um, you're, you're only
standing around one principle. That's, that's not really going to
work. And, and the last one about the evolution, I mean, that one to
me resonates the most.
Every single year you should probably reassess or at some regular time
reassess your principles. Okay, where do I stand? Where did I stand
last year? Where do I stand today? How much, how much have I changed
and grown? It is okay to change your mind. It is okay. Um, you have to
ask for permission from, from your boss, of course.
No, I'm just kidding. Um, you don't ask for permission, that's
autonomy. Yeah, that's autonomy.
Mike Crispin: Yeah, I was
Nate McBride: gonna say. Don't ask for permission.
Mike Crispin: I think if you're able to articulate and show that you
can change, and that, you know, especially if you dodged a bullet, so
to speak, people respect that. And it's, I think it's sometimes when
you hold You [01:03:00] hold on to something because you're afraid to
be wrong or afraid of how it might look that creates more downward or
tailwinds that, uh, or headwinds, I should say, to your future state
than other, some other things you can do.
So being able to change or kind of change course and be able to
explain why it's important that you are changing course or your team
is changing courses. It's important. You can't, don't just stick to
something because you're afraid to be, be wrong. I think that's one
thing that kind of spells all of these things in terms of your, your
ability and your, your drive to make inroads and be successful is
trust and building up the, through your principles that, A, you can
stick to your principles, but you're willing to change if need be.
And that you're always straightforward, because the one and the zero
is a risk reward. And is, is, you can balance those things, just kind
of, [01:04:00] how, how every, how everything works out in the end is
you're either taking a risk to get that reward, or you are, or you
are, you are putting a lot to reduce the risk, and hoping that you get
some sort of reward by avoiding something bad, which is often ignored,
because if something bad doesn't happen, it's like, well, You did your
job.
Good job. So I think that's why we think a lot of times of, you know,
we're taking more risk by not looking at risk. Um, and then somehow it
will be some trendsetter will, will, uh, will, will, will make this
big reward this, uh, that, you know, that that's coming down the pike
by enabling the business, giving some competitive advantage.Good job. So I think that's why we think a lot of times of, you know,
we're taking more risk by not looking at risk. Um, and then somehow it
will be some trendsetter will, will, uh, will, will, will make this
big reward this, uh, that, you know, that that's coming down the pike
by enabling the business, giving some competitive advantage.
So the thing I would say about that being transparent is so important.
Nate McBride: Again, there's no question at all that, um, coming at
any decision from a risk [01:05:00] perspective is valuable, in my
opinion, anyway. But, if you only come at things from a risk
perspective, you are sacrificing autonomy to do that.
Mike Crispin: And you won't innovate.
You won't try anything if you're only looking at the risk. Exactly.
The risk of failure, it might be a bit more to try something that's
unconventional or different or isn't proven by six of your other IT
friends, you know?
Nate McBride: Well, so I, I,
Mike Crispin: no more risk, right?
Nate McBride: I scratched out some notes regarding the four pillars
and um, And how we might sort of achieve this balance.
And so I'll go to the risk one. And so risk, um, a couple of
questions, right? So what types of risks are acceptable versus
unacceptable? Now, this is a principle. I think if I think about to me
and to my [01:06:00] company. What risks are acceptable versus
unacceptable? There will be alignment in some places and misalignment
in other places.
So I have to find all the places where there's alignment. And perhaps
I have to find a couple too where there's not alignment and then gain
alignment or else just simply don't gain alignment and, and move in
that direction anyway, because I feel it's the best thing to do. But
you have to know what's acceptable risk versus unacceptable and it's
different in every single situation.
But there are some, I think, basic common thresholds you can have that
would do that. That's one. Another one is at what risk threshold do
you have sign off? From executives. So we're resurrecting our I. T.
steering committee at, um, Exilio because we have, we've grown back,
uh, and we have a need again. And there is a line on the I.
T. steering committee charter. There's six criteria that can bring
your project to the I. T. steering committee. And one of those is
change in risk profile. [01:07:00] Now it sounds ambiguous, but it's
accompanied by a scorecard. And if so, so if your project that you're
bringing forward. from zero to two, it doesn't qualify for the ITSC.Now it could trigger one of the other things, but that trigger alone,
but if it's three to four, it triggers the ITSC. And if it's five or
six, it most definitely triggers the ITSC plus your executive sponsor,
which means you cannot put in that thing without an executive sponsor
behind you to do that. Now that's arbitrary.
I just, the scale of one to six, basically. But, um, That's something
too as to what threshold do I want another pair of eyes on this risk
I'm doing and then lastly What risks should always be mitigated
regardless of cost so and this goes back to my ITSC question But
there's a slide in that deck again in our in our charter, which
[01:08:00] states that if a project is is going to be a four or five
or six.
It needs to come with a risk mitigation plan for any risks that it
introduces. Sure. Now, these are principled by me because I think that
they're essential to understand we might still approve the project,
the project might still that the enterprise application might still
get installed and start being used, but at least there's awareness.
So I haven't stifled productivity. I haven't stifled innovation, but
I've brought awareness to the risk. Yes. And, and hopefully. A
mitigation strategy for it.
Mike Crispin: Transparency and visibility is hugely important with any
new system or risk that the organization is going to take on in terms
of the amount of work it's going to take, the [01:09:00] implications
from a regulatory or quality perspective. Um, business continuity,
productivity, and all the, all the words, right? So the visibility is
huge just for that piece alone.
We've had some instances where, you know, we've had like one or two
new projects and they were very small. Investments, but they needed
more visibility. And, you know, I think, um, you've got to have that,
you mentioned sort of a threshold scoring, and even if it is sort of
arbitrary or just gets you started, you know, that you're, you're able
to rank it or choice rank it based on maybe a few in your group.
Um, it, it helps a lot to gain that visibility. The big, the, if
you're starting from scratch and you're, you're, you're talking, Nate,
you've had this in place before you're re resurrecting it's. It's
keeping the content flowing and having a, [01:10:00] not just a strong
charter, but sort of a agenda that is enticing to the people that are
on the steering committee.
Nate McBride: Well, I mean, I've had it steering committee frameworks.
Now, I've worked with them going all the way back to 2005. And I can
tell you, if I was to go grab every single charter from every single
evolution, I mean, even going, let's go back to 2019. So when I was at
Orchard, the IT steering committee had four criteria, okay?Nate McBride: Well, I mean, I've had it steering committee frameworks.
Now, I've worked with them going all the way back to 2005. And I can
tell you, if I was to go grab every single charter from every single
evolution, I mean, even going, let's go back to 2019. So when I was at
Orchard, the IT steering committee had four criteria, okay?
And when we did our risk assessment, it was on a scale of one to four.
Um, And I've evolved since then, like I, not every single year, if I
changed my model, but I've gone through a couple of iterations since
2019, where now I'm looking at it and saying, I need more criteria. I
need, I need a broader definition and I've learned that.
Sure. I, I, but I haven't been so principled that I'm not going to
[01:11:00] change from my four tier model. I've gone, come a long way
since then. Um. You know, it's just, and, and, and you mentioned
productivity. And so I had some, some notes about productivity as
well, which were, um, and try to, so let me ask this one first.
Like, how would you, how would you quantify the minimum acceptable
user experience? If someone said to you, I want to do this thing and
you were to ask them back, well, does it exceed the minimum acceptable
user experience level? Very, very difficult.
Mike Crispin: What, what I like it to be, um, fewer clicks.
Nate McBride: If you were clerks, you
Mike Crispin: were,
Nate McBride: is that always the metrics?
Because I use that one, too. But
Mike Crispin: I want to say it's a metric. I think that for me, um.
Like the better user experience, it sort of models are the ones where
people have maybe [01:12:00] fewer buttons and fewer clicks. So simple
user. There's a user interface is very focused, intended use fewer
buttons. Uh, less text, fewer clicks across the board.
And that's a big struggle. It's almost going backwards when you're
talking about best breed because the more you integrate systems, the
more you have more clicks. And that's
Nate McBride: Let's suppose that, uh, again, I'm just, I'm just being
slightly rhetorical here, but I am interested in your point on this,
which is, I'm postulating that a productivity boundary does have a
user experience threshold.
There's a minimum, there's a maximum. Yeah. Um, and you should all
Always strive for the maximum, but what's the minimum and how do you
even define that? And if the minimum is 17 ways to log in before you
get to the thing. Obviously, that's that's just sandbagging a minimum,
right? Like it's an obvious minimum.Sure, but When I think about productivity, I too, I'm thinking
[01:13:00] about clicks to do a thing. I'm also thinking about
nowadays anyway, like how much automation is in the process. Yeah. So
from your user experience, do you have to click the whole way through?
Or can you have some of these things automatically done based on
catalytic events?
Mike Crispin: Yes. That's what I was generalizing, but that's no, no,
Nate McBride: so, so, well, when I think about my, again, using a
broad timeline, my minimum user, acceptable user experience from 20
years ago has evolved way beyond then back then it was like, here's a
laptop, you're lucky it works, that's your user experience versus now
the lengths we go to, to provide a minimum acceptable user experience
are pretty extraordinary.
Mike Crispin: Yes, yes. I mean. I think it's it's more it's more
subconscious to users, but having a consistent. Look and feel, color
scheme, um, [01:14:00] like, I mean, I, I struggle with having, again,
the best of breed solutions, they work great, they integrate well, but
you need some way to tie them all together so that people are like,
are you sure I can log into this third solution you've got in place
for me so I can enter something into a database?
And then I got to go over here and do this, and it's like, well, these
are the best to breed applications. It's like, well, they, they take a
lot of, are you sure it's okay if I use this? I don't recognize this
thing that just popped up. It's like, that's not a good user
experience. So you've got fewer clicks and having, um, I think we, I,
we got, you know, both you and I, to some extent being, I think coming
from like this.
Um, very much, uh, Mac centric UI experience kind of mindset. I think
we can both share, is that you go into enterprise software and that
stuff is very hard to, to find. And I'm not saying that, um, like a
Mac is easy for people to use because it isn't. But if you're used to
the, the [01:15:00] cohesiveness of, of, of a consistent UI across
multiple business tasks, that's where people, that's why people like
Microsoft.
I mean, as much as we don't like them is that they stay in one
environment. The menus look the same. The shortcuts are the same. They
click a button. They're already logged into all six of the services.
Yeah, clicks. And that's where I do think the, um, Zapier's and we're
going to the technology are very, very quickly, you know, having a
strong front end, whether it's a slack or some other workflow engine
or something in front of all this much better user experience for
people.
Oh, for sure. And that's where your automation comes in. You know, do
you have the ability to automate? Do you have the APIs? Do you have
the skills in house to do that? Can you document it so that it can be
reproduced with other, another team down the line, like all those
things. And it's composable architecture that is just in the
[01:16:00] background.Oh, for sure. And that's where your automation comes in. You know, do
you have the ability to automate? Do you have the APIs? Do you have
the skills in house to do that? Can you document it so that it can be
reproduced with other, another team down the line, like all those
things. And it's composable architecture that is just in the
[01:16:00] background.
And that's what we do. We create this great product for people that
they can get their work done on. And all that other stuff inside the
box should be relatively disappeared for them. That's hard to do. It
is hard to do.
Nate McBride: And well, so which brings up the other question about
productivity around, um, change management.
And, and transition planning. So, um, this idea, and I've been trying
to think about this for years, like what constitutes the need for a
change management plan? So, you know, when I'm working with clients,
uh, on the consulting side, a lot of times, these are very big
projects. And so it's easy to say, well, this is so big, we're going
to need to change management plan.
But when I'm like. When I'm thinking about my company and I say, well,
it's like 15 users. I'm thinking way too small in scope every time, of
course, because any change affects the whole company. Uh, it may
[01:17:00] not be the change you make, but the person who's changed,
they, all their behaviors change. And then it happens downstream from
a direct impact change.
Um, there should be like a, any change that impacts more than X people
users.
Mike Crispin: Yeah,
Nate McBride: would trigger a plan because that's definitely going to
have a productivity impact that you could have a scale where this
change might, it might impact productivity or this one won't impact
productivity, but then when you have the ones that are like, this will
sure as shit impact productivity, those trigger that change control,
which means productivity does goes uninterrupted.
Mike Crispin: Yeah, that, that intel brings out, uh, training plans
and communications and, uh, sort of a decision tree model that people
can see, um, which is, isn't, is important to have in place.
[01:18:00] And, you know, I go, I, with change management and, you
know, this is definitely something that I definitely struggle with
from time to time, is you've got It's never a good time to make a
change.
So the more deliberate you can be and try and front load the
communications and give people sort of unlimited access to ask
questions is hugely important. But I think it's Quite simply
impossible to do change, perfect change, change management perfectly
because there's too many, um, different ways of learning different
priorities within your, in your organization.So the more deliberate you can be and try and front load the
communications and give people sort of unlimited access to ask
questions is hugely important. But I think it's Quite simply
impossible to do change, perfect change, change management perfectly
because there's too many, um, different ways of learning different
priorities within your, in your organization.
So if you can be good at it, that is fantastic, but don't expect that.
You're never going to hit any bumps or that you're never going to get
anyone angry or that you're never going to get. I mean, I think some
people think, Oh, I've changed management. Like if I do it right and I
plan it out and all this stuff is, [01:19:00] yeah, no.
Yeah. It's just not what works. You can have a 25 person company and
still have someone who's angry and you can have a 5, 000 person
company where you have 200 people are angry and never hear from. So
it's not going to be perfect, but. And that's where I think you've got
to balance your approach and determine how much you want to have a
plan, you want to communicate it, and you want to put it out there so
it's accessible, um.
But the important thing is that you have the real stakeholders behind,
behind you. The people who have the most to gain, and the most to
lose. Uh, if it doesn't go well. And you need to be, have those
partners. Because, no one, not everyone's gonna be happy. And, the
plan is mostly For your team and those stakeholders and the training
that you spray across the businesses for the rest of the crew who, who
hopefully will, you know, know that it's a priority that they need to
learn this.
And if they don't in the first [01:20:00] round, they will in the
second round, once they start using the tool, it just takes patience
and, and, and, um, it also takes, you know, the ability to partner and
be to have some thick skin from time to time.
Nate McBride: I think that, um, On the topic of change management and
it's, this is the same, the same holds true for many of the topics is
the first maybe one, two or three times that you do a change
management rollout or you, you actively do change management for a
rollout, I should say.
Um, you have to make sure that whatever plan you don't have to, but
my, my experience has been that if I'm consistent with how I do change
management, then a future change management rollouts become quite much
easier because now people understand, understand the channels and the
approach and it's not foreign to them.
So they're [01:21:00] like, Oh, Nate just sent out an email. We're
going or slack. We're all going to change management on this thing.
And the last time he did this, we went through a, B and C steps. We're
going to do that again. And then again and again and again,so, um, so just keeping an eye on the clock here. I think what we'll
do is let's talk a little bit more and then we'll, um, we'll pause
for, for this week. But the last thing I wanted to cover tonight was,
um, uh, what's the best way to put this? So, so boundaries that are
actually Useful by I. T. So
Mike Crispin: and it to the team internally, you mean like and
Nate McBride: to the team internally.
So we start with the high level principle. Like the what or the why,
so let's go back to the early example. We must maintain data
sovereignty to protect customer privacy, blah, blah, blah. Well,
[01:22:00] we can't just stop there because that's where most
organizations I think fail. They create lofty vision statements.
And if you. Are a person who currently subscribes to a large analyst
firm, um, under a particular executive, um, program. You have been
given decks that have these very, very flowery, high level statements,
but they, and then they sound awesome. They look awesome, but they
actually have zero guidance within them.
So yeah, you, your, your principal, your, your, your principal
statement should have a clear conditions. So unambiguous, clear
conditions, uh, specific thresholds. And going back to the point about
change management numbers or measuring, uh, uh, user effectiveness and
experience. So you should have specific thresholds.
I'm talking about SLAs, I'm talking about thresholds. [01:23:00] You
should have required approvals to get a thing done. Who approves these
things that fall under these criteria? And lastly, compensating
controls. So Instead of saying we maintain data sovereignty, you would
say something like, um, like all customer PII must remain within this
particular AWS cloud environment, unless the following, and then you
would list out all the things like, um, the business benefit exceeds
some value or.
There's legal legal compliance have signed off on the approach in
writing or the solution passes a third party security assessment. Like
these are all Criteria that you use for that boundary all of a sudden
the game changes when you do this so another example I had written
down which is one of my favorites is We prioritize open standards
because I used to say this [01:24:00] I Used to be like all mister.
I have a very open stack People be like, well, what the fuck does that
mean? It was like, I'm an, I just opened to a stack. I'm not, I don't
have a closed stack. Well, that's meaningless. Actually these days
I've come to learn over my, over my experience. So now this, the way I
approach it is. All new systems that we put in must have the
capability to utilize open standards for all the data interfaces,
which is essentially another way of saying, if I'm going to put this
in here, it needs to be able to talk to the rest of my environment,
Slack box, you name it.I have a very open stack People be like, well, what the fuck does that
mean? It was like, I'm an, I just opened to a stack. I'm not, I don't
have a closed stack. Well, that's meaningless. Actually these days
I've come to learn over my, over my experience. So now this, the way I
approach it is. All new systems that we put in must have the
capability to utilize open standards for all the data interfaces,
which is essentially another way of saying, if I'm going to put this
in here, it needs to be able to talk to the rest of my environment,
Slack box, you name it.
It can't not talk freely. And I don't, even if it, if it can talk, but
it requires like 15 hoops and hurdles to get it to talk F that that's
not clear communication. That's not an open standard. Um, And so by
approaching it from that perspective, I've changed, I've taken my same
[01:25:00] message. Which is I'm a big believer in having a flexible
open stack and I've changed it to say I will take whatever's best as
long as it's able to communicate with everybody else.
And again, semantics, but it's actually a very big shift in my opinion
anyway. Um, and I've introduced thresholds into that statement. I've
introduced requirements into that statement. Um, I've put a lot into
that one idea. As opposed to saying, yeah, no, no, no. I prioritize
open standards.
Mike Crispin: It's very important for your own team to know what you
mean by open standards.
Even if it's, you use the term like the all hands, it's great for your
all hands slides. Yeah. Um, or you want people to ask the question and
you can, you can talk about what exactly it means. Um, but for your
own team, like having that completely defined, so they know what you
[01:26:00] mean and where, where you're going, uh, and also ask, you
know, sort of for their input, like, does this make sense?
Like, you know, we obviously open standards are good and having, uh,
the APIs and document, you know, API and data formats, you know, um,
explicitly laid out, but make sure Not so much get their opinion,
like, should we change it, but do you understand what that means and
how it affects how we, how we work?
Because if this is a boundary, you know, when we're having a
discussion with, uh, you know, a business partner or with, uh, a, uh,
a stakeholder that's within a different function as a project, we need
to keep these things in mind and you need to know what they actually
mean so we can back each other up on these things.
Right. And it's that's why it's more like the more actionable
statement is that your team realizes and it becomes sort of a
principle that's internal to your group, whereas I think outside the
organization, if you've [01:27:00] got the organization, if you've got
people who are, uh, you know, we talked about the business
technologist groups.
You know, uh, often on the podcast that are really understand the need
for data governance and interfaces and those type of things, then they
need to know too. But my level, I think your shorter mission
statement, it doesn't commit you to the specifics at a wider audience
where it creates maybe more confusion.You know, uh, often on the podcast that are really understand the need
for data governance and interfaces and those type of things, then they
need to know too. But my level, I think your shorter mission
statement, it doesn't commit you to the specifics at a wider audience
where it creates maybe more confusion.
So it's, I like to have kind of two statements. It's kind of like the
high level tagline, if you will. Um, and then sort of the. The more,
uh, descript mission statement that goes on the inside cover of the
book. What goes on the cover of the book is the, is the splash
statement. You know, it's a nice, uh, short, buzzy thing.
And then when you open the side of the, first the cover and look on
the back of the cover of the book is the, is what's the What's that?
Naughty words. Naughty words. You [01:28:00] have to buy the book to
see inside. Exactly. Well, that's the marketing term, right? It's
like, hey, just get, get, I gotta get you inside so we can be in the
office having a discussion of what this means, or in a meeting, what
does it mean so we can have the time to explain it and go through it.
And have it in your um, you know, your set of principles. Your
enterprise architecture principles your IT principles or whatnot. That
they're all there, they're all there and your team and, uh, your, your
close partners within the different functions know what you're trying
to achieve. And that, and that we can't cross those boundaries.
Like, we're not gonna, we're not gonna, yeah, we can change over time,
but we, we thought these through. We're not creating boundaries we
came up with yesterday. These are the boundaries that we've worked
through. We've thought through the risk and the consequence and the
rewards, operationalizing and making a safer environment and
everything else that comes with the why you do these things.
[01:29:00] So, um, you know, a lot of this is about company growth
too. Um, but, like you're saying, it may seem like semantics, but what
it really is, is describing in a language that your team and the
people who are going to be hands on keyboard. Need to understand and
as well as the decision makers that these are what the principles of
the group or the team are in your strategy Yeah And there are plenty
of thresholds, you know, you got to run up against but I think it's
trying to keep it simple Oh,
Nate McBride: so back to two points, one on the thresholds part.
Um, again, uh, my experience over the years has been the thresholds do
need to change and they change almost on a company by company basis,
but even more than that, they can charge on, they can change on a year
over year basis too. When I had, so Exilio, we've had now two
iterations of the it steering committee, the initial iteration
[01:30:00] and the brand newest iteration, totally different charters.
Uh, there's still some, there's still some elements that carry over,
but I've had to modify the charter because the company's, um, approach
towards technology has changed dramatically enough that the original
charter, um, was too strict. So, so there's a con, again, constant
reassessment of thresholds, too, uh, which Does take work, but you
can't just go year to year to year using the exact same formulas I
mean they change probably quarterly.Uh, there's still some, there's still some elements that carry over,
but I've had to modify the charter because the company's, um, approach
towards technology has changed dramatically enough that the original
charter, um, was too strict. So, so there's a con, again, constant
reassessment of thresholds, too, uh, which Does take work, but you
can't just go year to year to year using the exact same formulas I
mean they change probably quarterly.
Um, that was one point second was It's very easy to make a template to
do this I do it in Lucidchart and I have a nice little tiny mock up
that I do but for any System there's basically six things that I want
to know Um, number one, the principle, which is the what and the why.
Why are we doing this?
Like why, why is this choice being made? And this could be done in a
[01:31:00] PowerPoint deck too. I just like Lucidchart. But then
define the default position. Like, so what's happening today? What's
the sort of current situation as it is? And what would be the default
situation with this new change? Um, identify any exception criteria.
So like, what might, when might we have to deviate? So we're proposing
this particular principle, or this particular standard, or this
particular change. What are the scenarios that we might have to pivot
from that? And let's understand those and get those out front now. Um,
we get all the required approvals out front.
You know, and again, it depends on the threshold, right? It could just
be me, or it could be a whole bunch of people. A business owner, etc.
You have your compensating controls. Your, or your mitigation plan.
And then lastly, um, your review triggers and the review triggers. So,
uh, for the last four companies, this has been, uh, this has not
changed.
So this part I have [01:32:00] kept, which is if you get approved for
a process and actually learn this from Cubist, if you get approved for
a thing, a principal processor change, you have to come back on your
anniversary. Of that original approval and tell us how it's going. How
has your principle evolved? How has your change improved the business?
And if you come back a year later and say, actually, it hasn't, or
actually it's, it's, I did the wrong thing, or actually it's freaking
awesome. And here's all the ways I want to continue to improve it. No
matter what you have, you're accountable to come back and. Whether,
and so that's an annual review trigger.
You can have review triggers that are. Every time that we add 50 more
employees to the company, we're going to do a review. Every time that
we do a budget cycle, we're going to do a review, like whatever that,
whatever the triggers are going to be, [01:33:00] you're going to have
these established review triggers. in place.
So those would be, and that's a, it's a very simple template. You can
probably, a lot of people probably have more things in there than
that, but that's what I use today. Um, anywho, so, so we'll pause
there. I don't know if you have any last, last words, but, um, and
then we're going to continue in two weeks from, from this point.So those would be, and that's a, it's a very simple template. You can
probably, a lot of people probably have more things in there than
that, but that's what I use today. Um, anywho, so, so we'll pause
there. I don't know if you have any last, last words, but, um, and
then we're going to continue in two weeks from, from this point.
points,
Mike Crispin: but that I think this is all very important to be
talking about and to be having. You know, in terms of the talking
through the four pillars and how this applies to our autonomy as
leaders.
Nate McBride: Yeah.
Mike Crispin: Uh, it, it's continues, it continues into so many, every
day you're kind of thinking through the, what the next day is we're
going to bring or the [01:34:00] next year and how, you know, whether
it's, uh, what, what other, uh, things are going to come into view
that are going to affect your strategy and change your next steps.
Uh, and not always thinking a hundred percent about that. the decision
up front. And I need to think more about the, uh, the long term
effects of the decisions. Sometimes it's like, you, you're going to
put something in place and you need to really think through or try and
predict best where you're going to end up from a risk perspective or a
productivity perspective.
Sometimes you, I think you were talking about being in a hard place
sometimes and having to move quickly. Um, I've found, I think myself
in the last year being in a smaller company that trying to move
faster, like. Yeah. Trying to take advantage of being in a small place
before it gets too, too big and too wildly.
So, it, it's caused me to act faster than I normally would. Um, so I,
I think that's when I start thinking about, oh, [01:35:00] am I
thinking about my, uh, enough? Am I thinking enough about the risk and
the, and, you know, what boundaries I've put in place, uh, for my own
team? You know, I need to think, continuously think about that.
So I think even going through this tonight is, uh, is helpful for me.
Nate McBride: Yeah, it's something that I you can't think about
enough. I think in my in my like when you have time to Think about how
your boundaries and principles that you've established today are
either negatively affecting you because trust me that they are And how
they're positively affecting you and what changes you can make to
evolve yourself I think when we get to Episode eight in two weeks.
So we'll be talking about things like the zero choice decisions. So
you'll have to make decisions no matter what that are the zero choice
decisions. Um, we'll talk about some of the options you have for how
to sort of navigate those. And, um, we're going to [01:36:00] get into
a couple other things. Ultimately, this is a big fricking topic, but
the idea of having a principle, no matter what.So we'll be talking about things like the zero choice decisions. So
you'll have to make decisions no matter what that are the zero choice
decisions. Um, we'll talk about some of the options you have for how
to sort of navigate those. And, um, we're going to [01:36:00] get into
a couple other things. Ultimately, this is a big fricking topic, but
the idea of having a principle, no matter what.
It's, it's critical to being successful. It leader. I mean, it's in
the book. Uh, I wrote about, um, on Substack last week, what does good
look like? Uh, and we tackled this problem. Um, you have to have a
position.
Mike Crispin: Yes.
Nate McBride: And, I mean, forget principles and, and balances and all
the other things. I mean, just the position.
I, and you have to answer the question, I believe that blank. And have
the ability to justify it and stand by it for better or for worse. But
also be able to be flexible in case you need to change it. When you do
have to change it. Um, so. Yeah, good stuff. So next week we're on,
we're on location at Trillium in the [01:37:00] seaport of Boston.
So if you're in the seaport, come by Trillium, uh, join the podcast.
I'm sure we'll, we'll be talking about all kinds of things, security
related. We're going to continue this conversation that's from tonight
and two weeks. Um, in the meantime, again, if you listen to the show,
give us all the stars, um, on your platform.
If you don't, it's kind of not cool. Um, it's really cool to give us
all the things we have to describe. We have a link to our merch store
in the descriptions of our shows, along with our bias, a beer portal.
Yeah. Donate to Wikimedia and also the ACLU, um, speak up, if you have
a voice, don't be a dick, uh, don't be a dick to the hardworking IT
folks in your department, in your company, um, they're, they are
working hard, uh, even the ones that are dicks, um, they're still
trying to [01:38:00] get it done every day, be cool and then we'll get
paid back in spades, uh, be nice to animals, have your pets spayed or
neutered, and be nice to old people, um, And I want to thank our
sponsor rope for once again, giving us just a nice big, um, supportive
dose of rope to get through this, this episode, uh,
Mike Crispin: gotta love a rope.
Nate McBride: Um, Mike and I are starting a new company called Alco Al
company hall. Uh, look for, look for that on your nearest liquor store
shelves and, um, visit manscaped. com, uh, slash pages slash careers
for their latest VP of it role.
Mike Crispin: Sounds great.
Nate McBride: Did I get everything?Mike Crispin: Yeah, you got it all. I think you got it all and then
some.
Nate McBride: Wow. That's pretty good. I nailed that. I'll just split
hog. [01:39:00] That's pretty good closing. Right there. Well done.
All right. So next week you're going to bring the equipment for
recording or what are we going to do?
Mike Crispin: Yeah. Yeah. I should, uh, I think we'll do is we'll just
do it and probably do it through an iPad or something like that.
Nate McBride: Okay.
Mike Crispin: Maybe,
Nate McBride: maybe, maybe we should bring a couple options to make
sure that it works.
Mike Crispin: Yeah, well, I have the four different mics. We'll see
how it works.
Nate McBride: Okay, Mike's gonna bring four mics.
Mike Crispin: Well, the clip on mics that we used before. Clip on
Nate McBride: mics. Yeah, I have a pair. You have more than, you have
four of those yourself?
Mike Crispin: I have two. I have two that are wired. Okay, you have
Nate McBride: two and I have two. Okay. No, no, we should, we should
just do the wired Apple headsets with the thing. Those, those work
well too.
Mike Crispin: The AirPods? Hey, I, I, I did that too. Yeah, we can do
that.
Nate McBride: should work. All right, everybody. All right, Mike. Good
night. Great to see you.
See you next week. Good to see you. seaport.
Mike Crispin: Yeah. See you at Trillium, man.
Nate McBride: Be good, dude. Later.
Mike Crispin: [01:40:00] Thank you.