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My 2016 Year in Review

2016 was a weird year. Politics and celebrity deaths aside, it was a bumpy year for me as well. Things were well at home, but at work, I went through some transitions that stretched me very thin and stressed me out for much of the year. A lot of this year was about learning what I want out of a career — something I thought I had figured out already, but turns out I have much to learn. Time to look at the year in review to see how it all went.

Me in Helsinki

The biggest overall themes for me year were: Product at Code School, travel, books & comics, minimalism, and self-reflection. That sounds a bit broad, but the idea is really just taking a look at what makes me happy and healthy and working on that.

So What’s This All About?

I’ve been doing this post every year. It’s a good way for me to reflect on where I thought I wanted to go a year ago and make sure I’m heading to the right place. There are a few past years for comparison: 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011 and 2010.

What’s been notable this past year?

What Went Well?

What Didn’t Go As Well?

Self Reflection

This year had some life-changing moments to it. With the Code School group, we spent a week chatting in the Human Element Workshop. If you could imagine a week-long, 8+ hour a day of deep therapy session, that’s what this was. I doubt there was a day when I wasn’t in tears. This led to a few realizations:

Much of this year at Code School was making changes to support these three ideas – and not all of it was a smooth road. A number of amazing and talented people (some of which I hired) left Code School this past year. I had some of the hardest months of my career as I stretched myself too thin trying to take on new responsibilities while not passing off my old ones. I’ve always loved branching out to new areas in jobs when I see a need, but this year I started to equally realize the need to balance that with asking for help. I think things are in a better place now.

Product at Code School

One of the big themes of the year was learning about and transitioning Code School into a Product focused company rather than an engineering-focused company. The simple description of this is changing from how we decide on what to work on from “whatever our developers and designers want” to “what our users and data direct us to”.

Chances are what the devs were recommending already had some basis in what users were asking for — but was it the most important thing we could be working on? Being able to answer this question with a yes, based on data has been a larger undertaking than I expected, but a rewarding one.

Changing the way I think to this point of view was a humbling change. It takes a lot of research, and the ability to admit when you don’t know (if you’re wrong). I feel like I’m open to change, but I know I have a ways to go toward getting better in this field.

For this change, I stepped down as Course Director / Content Engineering Director and stepped into the role of Product Director at Code School. That ended up being short-lived, and I switched over to Product Manager for how Code School delivers content (courses, projects, video, etc). The definition of a product manager might help make sense of this:

A product manager communicates product vision from the highest levels of executive leadership to development and implementation teams. The product manager is often called the product “CEO.” The product manager investigates, selects, and drives the development of products for an organization, performing the activities of product management.

The big change here for me was transitioning from programming, leading a team and helping people’s careers to researching, planning, executing and forecasting the future. With my top two StengthsFinder strengths being Strategic and Futuristic, this has been a fulfilling choice so far.

Travel

Only one of our trips this year was international (compared to 3 in 2015), making travel a lot less stressful. Most of our trips were more relaxed — with the exception of the ~30,000 steps we took on our first day in NYC.

That’s still 6 trips by plane in 12 months, which is plenty for me. I think we’ll be doing fewer overall trips, but perhaps more elaborate stays in 2017.

Cologne
Cologne, Germany
Tallinn
Tallinn, Estonia
Tallinn
Tallinn, Estonia City
Helsinki
Helsinki, Finland

Events and Entertainment

We did a lot of things here in Orlando (and abroad). From music performances to theater, movies and interactive performances. These are some of the most memorable from the year.

Books

Of the ~75 books (mostly audio) that I read this year, here are a few of my favorites. The main topics for books this year were Science Fiction/Fantasy, Product Management/Business, Biographies, Comics and Stoicism/Minimalism. This was the first year I really started to get into comics as well, which has been very enriching so far. I’m on the lookout for new recommendations, so if you have any tips, I’m all ears!

On a side note, I read 15 books by women authors this year! A few years ago, I noticed at the end of the year that I’d only read 1 book by a female author, which seemed an extreme underrepresentation. I’m happy to see that improving.

Amazing Meals

Everywhere we go we look for the best, most memorable food possible. Compared to past years, this one was above and beyond.

Vendome in Germany
Hare at Vendome in Germany.

Goals from 2016 in Review

So, how’d I do for my 2016 goals that I set out?

Narrow down possessions to fit in half of a closet

Complete and release a new project

Release the D3.js course @ Code School

Exercise for at least 3x week for 10 minutes

Hangout more with friends

Track todos better

Eat better and drink less

Goals from 2017

What am I wanting to focus on in 2017? I do want to keep some of the themes from last year that worked well and see about leveraging those.

1) Set Monthly Themes and Weekly Goals

This is an idea I read about, that I started trying in December and want to continue. The idea is that I’d set a monthly theme (for example Home Maintenance) and then when setting what I’ll work on for a given week I could take that theme into account. I’m hoping this will help keep me focused on some of the things I’ve put off doing and focusing on things that I know are a high priority for me.

What I’m excited to try about this is that it’s not setting a year’s worth of goals but instead taking it week to week and month to month. For example, in the first week of January, my goals are to get a quote for some work on the house from at least 2 contractors, hit the gym 3 times, limit drinking to 2 nights — and then setting goals for the next week next Sunday. This is effectively just planning the most important things for my next week in advance every week. The hope is to stop putting things off and do them. Rather than setting a goal of doing that for 52 weeks, I’m going to try taking it week to week and see how things go.

2) Launch a Side Project That Brings in Income

I’ve launched a bunch of projects “for fun” over the years. These have all been with the idea that whether it’s a hit or not it was a fulfilling learning experience to just create something. I’m going to challenge myself to think about the creative process differently and try to create something with the intent of getting some income from it in 2017.

This doesn’t need to be a significant amount — even a few bucks is fine. I’m hoping to learn more about creating something with market fit. I think the journey into Product this past year has shifted some of my focus from “Can I build this?” to “Should I build this?”, and I want to dig more into that.

3) Create a Better Work/Life Balance with Boundaries

I have a nasty habit of letting things for work take up all available time. I’ll think of something that needs doing and just do it. This is (sometimes) good for Code School, but instead of something I should be doing — like chores around the house — I end up hacking on CS. To help with this, I got a separate computer for Code School and for personal use. Part of this will be changing how I think about what I can accomplish at work and being OK with a scoped-down version that limits it to only working hours.

My hope is that this one impacts a number of other things in my life. Having more time to tackle personal projects, more time for people, more time for games, more time for whatever the year opens up to!

4) Be Mindful of False Productivity

There are a number of things I do that “feel” productive but really aren’t. This includes most time online, social media and even some planning, tracking and organization. There comes a point when the next step is action, and anything else is delayed. I want to do a better job recognizing those moments and pushing for action. One step towards this is limiting social media access only on mobile devices since I know I won’t linger on those as long as when browsing on a computer.

The Next Year

2017 should be an exciting year. Marilyn and I are getting married in February! Afterward, we’re traveling to Japan for almost two weeks. I’ll be continuing to build awesome things at Code School. There are a bunch of books I’m looking forward to reading. I have some ideas on the side project that involve a tech stack that I haven’t worked with in many years (WordPress). Other than that, the year is open to whatever happens!

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I'm , a full-stack product developer in Salt Lake City, UT. I love enlivening experiences, visualizing data, and making playful websites.

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