What’s in a Name?
People's names matter, and it's worth taking the time to get them right.
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People's names matter, and it's worth taking the time to get them right.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Declaring calendar bankruptcy every now and then is a good thing.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Buying our first house was a dream come true, but it quickly turned into a costly lesson about ignoring problems. What we thought was an insurmountable expense turned out to be a simple solution, teaching me the importance of recognizing and challenging limiting beliefs.
Posted by Will Sansbury
When my son gamed our potty-training system to maximize cartoons, I realized something: measuring the wrong thing drives the wrong behavior. The same is true in software development—if we focus solely on output, we risk missing the outcomes that truly matter.
Posted by Will Sansbury
While most people settle for the first workable solution, designers dig deeper, exploring a multitude of ideas and embracing risk. This is their superpower.
Posted by Will Sansbury
The tension between designers, developers, and product managers often feels like a struggle for dominance—but what if that tension is the key to building great products?
Posted by Will Sansbury
People's names matter, and it's worth taking the time to get them right.
Early in my career, I worked with a great guy for five years. As I was leaving the company for another opportunity, he told me I had been saying his name wrong. For FIVE YEARS! He laughed about it, but I was mortified.
That’s when I started deliberately asking how to pronounce names that aren’t familiar to me. Many times, people will say something like “just get close and I’ll respond.” That breaks my heart. Names matter. So while it may be awkward, I make an effort to learn correct pronunciations when I meet someone, and I invite them to correct me if I ever get it wrong.
And I keep a section in my Notes app full of recordings of correct pronunciations of the names I stumble with.
I’m sure I still mess up people’s names a lot, but I hope that when I stumble, my awkward, visible effort communicates the respect and care that my Southern accent fails to.
My oldest recently moved out on her own, and my youngest will start high school next year. I’m right on schedule for a midlife crisis. I haven’t purchased a sports car, and I love...
From 9 Trends That Will Shape Work in 2025 and Beyond by Emily Rose McRae, Peter Aykens, Kaelyn Lowmaster and Jonah Shepp on Harvard Business Review (HBR): In 2025, most...