1257 lines
70 KiB
Plaintext
1257 lines
70 KiB
Plaintext
[1] Ryan Norbauer [2] [mail_icon]
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a personal newsletter
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Los Angeles, California
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• [3]Home
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• [4]About
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• [5]Reading List
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• [6]Archive
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• [7]Subscribe
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Keyboard Academy 2025-03-24
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The Outsider Option: Why I Sold Half my Company to Tiny
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by [8]Ryan Norbauer
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MY DESIGN WORK
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I create escapist [9]luxury computer keyboards at Norbauer & Co.
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Fairmont Empress Hotel in Victoria, BC near Tiny HQFairmont Empress Hotel in
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Victoria, BC near Tiny HQ
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I had the most curious sensation when I was working the other night: I was kind
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of happy.
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You know, not just in the I find this work satisfying kind of way, but in the
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and I don’t also want to walk out a window kind of way. This latter is, in my
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professional life at least, something of a novel experience.
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It is often said that founding a business is like “staring into the abyss and
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eating glass.” I concur with this analysis.
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But I would go one further. As someone with a chronic serial entrepreneurship
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problem, I can vouch that the life of a founder is actually also often quite
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painfully lonely—a feeling that somehow, paradoxically, gets worse the more
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employees and clients one has.
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'Twas ever thus, I used to think, and ever would be. It all just seemed like
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part of the entrepreneurial bargain, the cost of creative freedom. It’s a price
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I myself have been willing to pay at times, but at other times not so much.
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Just over a year ago, in fact, I very nearly shuttered my latest business,
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Norbauer & Co. (We make very fancy [10]luxury computer keyboards—yes, that is a
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thing; I’ll explain.) It wasn’t that we had any actual problems. Quite the
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contrary. We were enjoying a commercial success far exceeding anything I had
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ever hoped for or intended. It was just that this success required so very
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frequently dining on glass, as I bounced from one annoying-but-important
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logistical challenge to another.
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But let’s advance one year forward, to just last week. I found myself at the
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end of a long day grappling with a hard operational problem for the company
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(which indeed I did not shutter). It’s the sort of manufacturing setback that
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would previously have sent me down a vortex of despair, as I felt the latest
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shards shattering between my teeth. Yet in that moment the other night as I was
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wrapping up my work I caught myself smiling like an idiot, oddly untroubled.
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(Sometimes we get these rare glimmers of insight in life, when we briefly
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stumble off the hedonic treadmill. The perspective zooms outward, and we
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perceive that our past selves would be astonished and delighted by our
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situation in the present. It’s a beautiful thing.)
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I now have at my disposal an executive team of a caliber and competence I would
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never previously have thought within my grasp, leaving me never facing a
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problem alone. We have, moreover, just launched a product of enormous ambition
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and complexity that has been a lifelong creative dream of mine. Until these
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facts suddenly occurred to me at once the other night, they had somehow crept
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up on me over the past year without my quite noticing.
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I very intentionally capitalized and bootstrapped Norbauer & Co. in such a way
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as to never need outside investors, and at no point (now or in the past) have
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we ever been in want of cash. Indeed, I have spent my entire entrepreneurial
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life resisting investor-oriented management. So, as I now find myself more
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tranquil and satisfied than I have ever been in all my working life, I’m
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reluctant to admit what made it all possible.
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I sold nearly half of my company to a publicly-traded investment fund run by a
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Canadian billionaire.
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History of a Great Deal, and a Great Deal of History
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This is the story of my accidental luxury brand and our eventual deal with the
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very unusual investment firm [11]Tiny.
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I tell it in detail here not only for keyboard enthusiasts who may care about
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the past and future of Norbauer & Co. (or fans of Tiny who may wish to peer
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behind the curtain of one of their deals) but for any entrepreneur who
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struggles with the desire to bring a singular creative vision into the
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world—and who worries, quite rightly, about the perils of working with
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investors to make it happen.
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Tiny counts in its portfolio well-known cool-kid brands like [12]Aeropress,
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[13]Letterboxd, [14]Dribbble, [15]Serato, and more than a hundred others—many
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of them design-centric businesses that, like mine, are deeply rooted in
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communities of passionate nerd enthusiasm. They also own quite a few creative
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agencies (such as [16]Metalab and [17]Frosty), which do tasteful projects for
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luxury and luxury-adjacent brands such as Prada, Apple, Burberry, Calvin Klein,
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and many others. This all makes Tiny an improbably good spiritual fit for my
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company, but my reasons for the deal actually ran far deeper.
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Many founders, especially those in the VC sphere, tend to view outside
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investment as a path to an “exit” payday, allowing them to cash out and ride
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off into a tropical sunset. Tiny has, to be sure, facilitated numerous
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embarkations of this type. But in my case, the short-term financial aspects of
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the sale were, for both sides, actually something of an afterthought. Far from
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exiting anything, I continue to serve as CEO of Norbauer & Co., and, as
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majority voting shareholder, I retain absolute control—creative and
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otherwise—over the business.
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Even though we closed the deal a year ago, I intentionally waited until now to
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write about it publicly, because I wanted to proceed from actual experience
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rather than the blind fact-free optimism of an early-day press release. The
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result, happily, turns out to be something of a love letter to a very unusual
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investment fund and the singular philosophy (and integrity) of the people
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behind it.
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A Keyboard Snowball
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The Heavy-9 in titanium, a popular one of our aftermarket keyboard housings,
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which sells for $3800 (not including the keyboard that goes inside).The Heavy-9
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in titanium, a popular one of our aftermarket keyboard housings, which sells
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for $3800 (not including the keyboard that goes inside).
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In an article published a few weeks ago, [18]Hodinkee (a magazine quite
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influential in the luxury world) described Norbauer & Co. as the brand
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“defining the world of high-end analog keyboards,” which is very kind, and
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perhaps even true in a way, but is mainly just amusing to me given how much I
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dragged my feet in letting it even become a business in the first place—to say
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nothing of an industry-defining one.
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Norbauer & Co. is in fact an entirely adventitious business and the unintended
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byproduct of an aborted attempt on my part at retirement. In 2010, having sold
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the last of three tech companies I had founded, I resolved to take a little
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breather from crippling stress and life-destroying workaholism to throw myself
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instead into frivolous, low-stakes creative pursuits. The effects were so
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salutary that I quickly swore off ever starting a company ever again. But among
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those fun creative projects was one that would end up quickly undoing my
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resolve: figuring out how to make my own retro keyboards.
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On obscure forums like [19]GeekHack, I began organizing group buys for my
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designs among fellow hobbyist enthusiasts. These offerings were originally
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intended just as a way to help offset the cost of making a few units for
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myself. From my very first such sale almost a decade ago I kept swearing that
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it would also be the last, intent on keeping my resolution never to get sucked
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into running another business and letting the stress ruin my life again. And
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yet I found myself nudged along at every turn (albeit gently and kindly) by an
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eager crowd with whom my work seemed to be resonating. One offering led to
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another. And things just sort of snowballed from there.
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The Norbauer brand has since managed to accumulate a base of thoughtful and
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loyal clients all around the world (from South Korea to the UAE, South Africa
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to Mongolia), and I’ve somehow never quite been able to keep up with demand.
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Most of our offerings sell out within hours—sometimes minutes—of being posted.
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(Communities of collectors have even set up bots to track our inventory and
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broadcast availability to private channels on Discord.) For waitlist items, we
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have clients who preorder and patiently wait for models with production lead
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times sometimes exceeding a year—including bespoke orders running into the tens
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of thousands of dollars.
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At some point or another, with millions of dollars of keyboards sold—and
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without my quite meaning or realizing—it had turned into a real business.
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Retro-techno-futurism, and a Rationally Irrational Trade
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The Heavy Grail in Veracity Steel (mirror polished), one of our most
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sought-after offerings. Price $2000.The Heavy Grail in Veracity Steel (mirror
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polished), one of our most sought-after offerings. Price $2000.
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While I have been obsessed with keyboards my whole life, I chose a
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serendipitous moment (around 2014) to become interested in actually making
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them. Here is subscribership of the MechanicalKeyboards subreddit over the past
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decade:
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MechanicalKeyboards subreddit subscribers over time (via subredditstats.com)
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MechanicalKeyboards subreddit subscribers over time (via subredditstats.com)
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Plenty of other enthusiast-led keyboard brands sprang up at the beginning of
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this upward curve along with Norbauer. But the vast majority, including some of
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the most prominent and prestigious ones, have since either spectacularly
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imploded or faded into the internet mists.
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If any one thing has allowed us to enjoy a relative longevity, I believe it’s
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that our products are fundamentally sentimental—and thus slightly irrational.
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When other makers seemed to be climbing over each other to be the Lexus of
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keyboards (converging on a single technical paradigm and competing on
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checklists of “premium” features), I was far off in one isolated corner, making
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weird Ferraris.
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The thing with a Ferrari—as, like, a car—is that it really isn’t the most
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logical purchase. They’re loud, difficult to maintain, and not particularly
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comfortable. I’m happy to report that our keyboards don’t have those
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shortcomings, but my point is that the unique (and obviously very potent) thing
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a Ferrari offers is to be an object with a soul—the product of a very specific
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worldview and set of values. This makes it non-comparable and thus somewhat
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resistant to direct competition. (Despite, for example, a vibrant market of
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counterfeit Norbauer keyboards coming out of China—some of which even brazenly
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copy our packaging—clients still eagerly prefer to pay a multiple to get the
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genuine articles from us.)
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What is it, then, that gives Norbauer products their particular soul? It comes
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from a profound emotional attachment to the spirit of 20th century
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techno-optimism. Part of this is our retrofuturist design language, which
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explicitly evokes midcentury and 80s modernism. Another is the deep and clacky/
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thocky sound profile, which is intentionally redolent of keyboards from the 80s
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and 90s. But above all is a headlong dive into the sort of breathless
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over-the-top optimism that characterized that earlier era of computing—when
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everyone seemed to believe that personal computers and the Internet were going
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to break down international barriers and make for a wiser and more peaceful
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world. A time when we all believed in The Future, with a capital F.
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Computers were held to be objects of enormous promise back then—rarer and more
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valuable devices than they now are—so manufacturers were willing to invest far
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more into hardware that was both durable and satisfying to use. Norbauer & Co.
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simply pretends that the trend never stopped—taking finishes, materials, and
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engineering to extremes to build objects that feel at once worthy and symbolic
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of those hopes.
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But by the mid-2010s when I started making keyboards, the hopes that had been a
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part of cyber-culture in its early days (decentralization, anonymity, lack of
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concern with social status or authority, peaceful mutual understanding across
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cultures, free speech) were already fading away. The charmingly anarchic early
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Internet was being supplanted by various walled social-media gardens controlled
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by a few megacorporations, with ill effects that are by now all too
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familiar—and are largely the opposite of all those things we had hoped.
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I think it’s not a coincidence, then, that the upsurge of cultural interest in
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vintage-style keyboards happened right around this time. For those of us who
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came of age during the golden era of personal computing (or those who wish they
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did), vintage-style mechanical keyboards are a small act of defiance—a way to
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physically reconnect with a time when technology seemed to offer a tomorrow
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that would always be better than today.
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An image that captures our brand pretty nicely.An image that captures our brand
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pretty nicely.
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At some point I realized that this meant I was essentially building a luxury
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brand: one whose value proposition is emotional valence, technical
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perfectionism, artistic design, and artisanal knowhow rather than serving any
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obvious practical necessity. (Contrary to popular conception, I believe that a
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true luxury brand isn’t about monetizing social status but rather enabling
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low-volume manufacturing of weird and creatively interesting goods.)
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I admire many examples in this space—Leica, Teenage Engineering, Hermès—that
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flagrantly disregard economies of scale, mass appeal, and micro-efficiencies in
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favor of a quirky creative vision, sold to a tasteful and passionate few who
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are simply very excited about and believe in what the creators are doing.
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I knew that if I were going to continue operating a consumer electronics
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company, this would be the only kind that I would find interesting to build.
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The Withering Gaze of Uncle Scrooge
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The growing Norbauer & Co. Los Angeles team in 2021The growing Norbauer & Co.
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Los Angeles team in 2021
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By 2021 we had opened a [20]workshop in Downtown Los Angeles and I had hired a
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small team. We had just launched our most popular product, the Heavy Grail
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(shown in the video below), and our revenue was on an insane parabolic
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year-over-year upward trajectory.
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This was all quite gratifying in a way, but the feelings of avoidant stress
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from my early entrepreneurial days started to come back. I just wanted to focus
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on giving our clients what they wanted, doing it well, and making functional
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art that facilitated a bit of happy escapism. But with increasing success came
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a whole host of unwelcome burdens and concerns that I was disinclined to manage
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optimally. Shards of glass again.
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I keep a statue of Scrooge McDuck next to my desk as a reminder that making
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money is something a person running a business should endeavor to do. (Milton
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Friedman and Jack Donaghy action figures were unavailable.) It is a general
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entrepreneurial failing of mine that profit is not always foremost in my mind,
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but this has been more true for me in this “fun little retirement project” than
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with any other preceding venture.
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My museMy muse
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Having so many people throwing money at us made it easy to do what I was
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naturally inclined to do anyway: to focus on the product and client experience
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above all else, while avoiding hard decisions about capital allocation. (More
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money, more Parkinson’s Law problems.)
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Part of the premise and competitive advantage of a luxury brand like ours is
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being willing to spend way more money on quality and subjective artistic
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matters than a rational manager would seemingly ever do. But, critically, these
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expenditures should be focused only on things that affect the client
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experience. Through my general avoidance of the subject, our profligacy was
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often directed, utterly un-strategically, by random chaos instead.
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By the end of 2023, to cite one example, I had unwittingly flushed a quarter of
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a million dollars down the toilet in a self-imposed boondoggle project to
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rework our e-commerce infrastructure. It was a frog-boiling situation; the
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development team kept assuring me something shippable was just around the
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corner—probably actually believing this themselves—until I eventually paid some
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close attention, dug into the details, and realized (years in) that no such
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thing was forthcoming and had simply to kill the project.
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Around the same time, I had a suspicion that our warehouse and client support
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operations had become wildly inefficient, so I decided to take a look at what
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it was costing us (in labor alone) to ship an order. I discovered that we had
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gone from $8 per order in 2019 to $104 per order in 2023, an order of magnitude
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jump in costs with no appreciable improvement in the client experience.
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[image-7]
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These were just two rare examples where I diverted my attention briefly away
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from what felt like my most important responsibilities (design, engineering,
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and brand), and I immediately stumbled into raging cash incinerators. There was
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reason to believe that others were lurking around every corner. This was
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manifestly unsustainable, and I knew it would eventually start threatening our
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ability to allocate capital to important things that actually did matter to our
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clients.
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There are a million little trivial but non-optional tasks in running a physical
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goods business: complicated bookkeeping, logistics coordination, inventory
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tracking and valuation, customs clearances, regulatory compliance, endless tax
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filings, insurance, payroll processing, accounts payable, etc. Attending to
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tasks like these tends to drain my will and energy, leaving me with very little
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enthusiasm for more optional (but no less essential) management tasks like the
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ones where I discovered us pointlessly hemorrhaging cash.
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Spending more time being strategic about management seemed urgent. But I got
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into this business because I liked making fancy keyboards and connecting with
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our clients. Diverting my attention even further from those goals seemed
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horrible to me. This is why, on the day I made those charts and realized all
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this, I very nearly decided to fold up shop.
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The Seneca Moonshot
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[image]the Seneca
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If it were just a question of going on selling my existing product lines and
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optimizing the business for short-term profitability, I definitely would have
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put the company in the garbage right then. What we were making up to that point
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were essentially “aftermarket upgrades” for keyboard internals made by other
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companies. Although the community was still clamoring for those products and
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there was unquestionably money still to be made, I simply felt like I had
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solved all the interesting design problems in that domain. But I had something
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else in my back pocket.
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I’ve often said that Norbauer products are more than just backward-looking
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nostalgia. They’re actually meant to feel like they come from an alternate
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universe that split off from our own in something like the 1980s—an imaginary
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timeline where technological evolution continued in parallel to ours but where
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both the sensual quality of computing hardware and its broader social effects
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just kept getting better and better (rather than, say, what actually happened).
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This is why my long-term goal has always been not just to recreate
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vintage-feeling keyboards, but rather to make new keyboards in a
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retrofuturistic design language that are actually better than any that exist in
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our real universe, now or in the past.
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And so in the preceding years I had been quietly working on a crazy (and crazy
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expensive) multi-year moonshot project to develop our own in-house
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ready-to-type keyboard—something that a client who wants the best typing
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instrument obtainable in the world could acquire from us, plug in, and
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immediately enjoy. Every component would be custom, right down to the screws. I
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called this project [21]the Seneca, and by the time I was thinking seriously of
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shuttering Norbauer & Co., it was actually very near completion.
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This put me at a crisis: I didn’t want to go on running the business any
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longer, but I also didn’t want to give up on the creative vision either; I had
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become sentimentally attached to the idea of seeing the Seneca out into the
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world.
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This is where a normal entrepreneur would look to outside partners or
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investment. But I was so profoundly allergic to this prospect that I remained
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blind to it, probably for far longer than I should have. Then again, for a
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founder like me—whose priorities are creativity and the client experience—I
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think the hesitation was quite warranted.
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Effing the Ineffable (MBAs Ruin Everything)
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There is a natural tension between the pecuniary concerns of the investor and
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the creative urges of the builder-entrepreneur, and I am certainly
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temperamentally much more aligned with the latter. But my complaint about
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investors is not that they’re somehow too obsessed with making money; it’s
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that—in the long term at least—they’re just generally so bad at it. (And this
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coming from a guy who has to keep a Ducktales figurine by his desk as a
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reminder to think about profit occasionally.)
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The Swapping of Cerebrum for Spreadsheet
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Because the core premise of investing is “sit at computer, make number go up,”
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it seeks above all else things that can be easily measured and thus optimized.
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The folly generally takes one of three forms:
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• Venture Capital. For VC firms, the target is meteoric growth, typically in
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things like size of user base (profit unimportant) in order to hype the
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share value for the next round of speculators. This can and often does doom
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innovative companies that would have been great profitable businesses at
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smaller scales.
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• Private Equity. Here it’s the value of underlying assets to be carved up
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for leverage and/or quick sale to the highest bidder, even if the source of
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the company’s value generation is itself obliterated in the process.
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• Public markets. Here the focus is typically juicing quarterly accounting
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numbers and massaging narratives for modest ticker jumps at the next
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earnings call.
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There seem to be no good options.
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The startup trajectory is typically as follows: a company starts out doing
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something good, which catches on and becomes profitable. A core community of
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enthusiastic and happy customers grows up around the brand. Success attracts
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investment and a concomitant push to scale. Loath to rise from their computers,
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the investors seek numbers that can be upwardly coaxed on the screen, and their
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armies of MBAs are deployed to find them. Things that are easy to measure and
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control like costs and revenue growth get over-optimized, focusing on easy
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paper-based wins 📈 over the gestalt of the business and its reputation. Quality
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degrades, and customer loyalty with it. The brand undertakes a slow march
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toward mediocrity and eventual death, its pricing power ebbing away, all while
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the MBA managers and consultants (and often the investors themselves) have long
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since gotten their payouts and moved on.
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This is an unseen homogenizing force in the world of commerce, draining every
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last wisp of human dignity and aesthetic joy from some of the world’s greatest
|
||
brands and institutions—eventually, and ironically, also destroying their
|
||
economic value in the process. And it leads to the opposite of the very reason
|
||
I ever wanted to start companies to begin with, which is to make the world look
|
||
a little less boring.
|
||
|
||
MBAs are why we can’t have nice things.
|
||
|
||
Sure, I may be slow to undertake performance analysis and optimization when
|
||
running a business, but I’d far rather have that problem than these.
|
||
|
||
Oops
|
||
|
||
…many managers attempt to reach their targets simply by cutting costs. This
|
||
can be fatal. Any fool can cut costs anywhere at any time. For one shining
|
||
moment it will look as if he or she is a genius at increasing the bottom
|
||
line. Then the moment will pass … and quality will collapse.
|
||
|
||
—Felix Dennis, [22]How to Get Rich
|
||
|
||
Although excessive cost-cutting is among the most common, it’s just one example
|
||
of the investor-driven impulse to focus on metrics— and how this can
|
||
insidiously erode the foundations of a business over time.
|
||
|
||
“When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure,” as
|
||
Goodhart’s Law states, although that formulation actually puts it a little too
|
||
modestly. I prefer the [23]Strong Version of Goodhart’s Law, as expressed by
|
||
machine learning researcher Jascha Sohl-Dickstein: “as you over-optimize, the
|
||
goal you care about won't just stop improving, but will instead grow much worse
|
||
than if you had done nothing at all.”
|
||
|
||
This applies across many domains of human endeavor (standardized testing making
|
||
students dumber being the most obvious one) but let’s consider a few examples
|
||
from the world of business.
|
||
|
||
• Facebook seeks to improve the world by fostering human connection, choosing
|
||
engagement with the platform as the proxy metric to guide its algorithms;
|
||
the result is that people’s “social” feeds fill up with attention-grabbing
|
||
viral content and virtually no posts from actual humans or friends.
|
||
• An e-commerce brand seeks to increase cashflow and chooses average order
|
||
value (AOV) as its proxy metric; managers make offerings like free shipping
|
||
at certain order total thresholds, causing customers to order things they
|
||
don’t really want, leading to decreased customer satisfaction and increased
|
||
returns (with a net negative effect on cashflow relative to baseline).
|
||
• A streaming service seeks to optimize customer enjoyment and chooses time
|
||
spent watching video as its proxy metric; the result is that managers focus
|
||
resources on building auto-play, infinite scroll, and low-value ambient
|
||
content that spikes the numbers while actually just pissing customers off.
|
||
|
||
I could go on. Jerry Muller’s [24]The Tyranny of Metrics is an entire volume
|
||
dedicated to this phenomenon, as is much of Nassim Taleb’s brilliant [25]
|
||
Incerto series, a nearly 2,000-page screed against what he rightly calls naïve
|
||
rationalism and the frequent backfiring of over-reliance on quantitative models
|
||
and targets.
|
||
|
||
The Hard-nosed Economics of Emotional Attachment
|
||
|
||
So, yeah, metric optimization is dumb. But it is even more often the case that
|
||
the most important things can’t even be measured at all.
|
||
|
||
Despite much quantitative window-dressing to the contrary, business is actually
|
||
an inherently social and thus profoundly subjective, psychological, and
|
||
qualitative phenomenon. The real earning potential of a company emerges not
|
||
primarily from its book assets but its brand and reputation, for it is only by
|
||
that reputation that it is able favorably to undertake the transactions that
|
||
make those assets worth anything. The goods and services of an untrustworthy
|
||
(or, worse, hated) transaction partner will trade at a significant discount to
|
||
what they would be from a favored one. As Danny Meyer (founder of Shake Shack)
|
||
is often quoted, “business, like life, is all about how you make people feel.
|
||
It’s that simple, and it’s that hard.”
|
||
|
||
Social and emotional matters are thus of paramount importance in business, yet
|
||
they cannot meaningfully be quantified, and, as we’ve seen, attempting to use
|
||
proxy metrics to optimize them can easily have the opposite of the intended
|
||
effect. Customer enjoyment and loyalty are slippery things. A company must
|
||
always be obsessively imagining and empathizing with the totality of the
|
||
customer experience, which is a matter of great nuance and subtlety, hard to
|
||
characterize and dynamically changing across time and multiple dimensions of
|
||
interaction. A constant attention to this kind of empathy must be embedded deep
|
||
in a company’s culture—and no amount of net-promoter-score surveys will do the
|
||
trick.
|
||
|
||
The Founder’s No (Protecting the Extraneous Essential)
|
||
|
||
We only want to make great products and when you don’t focus only on making
|
||
money and have reached a certain level, everything becomes about quality.
|
||
Right now, there is a certain cultural fascination with fast growth, IPOs
|
||
and so on, but I want to go slow, really slow and think long-term. It takes
|
||
time to do good things. You see, this cultural phenomenon of speed and
|
||
growth at all costs is displayed in every startup, they all look the same….
|
||
|
||
—Jesper Kouthoofd, founder of [26]Teenage Engineering
|
||
|
||
Measuring things isn’t always inherently bad; trying to optimize naïve proxy
|
||
metrics almost always is. Cost-cutting is often inherently good; doing it in a
|
||
way that degrades the customer experience (the ultimate generating function of
|
||
profit) is almost always bad. The incentives to stray into short-sightedness
|
||
are many. Somebody has to be empowered to say no.
|
||
|
||
Founders typically have a deep intuitive sense of the ineffable factors that
|
||
make people love their brand, along with a well-honed sense of the company’s
|
||
core value proposition and competitive advantage—the things that led it to
|
||
flourish in the first place, which they by nature tend to foster and protect.
|
||
|
||
Founder-led operations often keep an edge ... because when there’s someone
|
||
at the top who actually gives a damn about cars, watches, bags, software,
|
||
or whatever the hell the company makes, it shows up in a million value
|
||
judgments that can’t be quantified neatly on a spreadsheet.
|
||
|
||
—[27]David Heinemeier Hansson (dhh) of 37signals
|
||
|
||
Indeed, the finest case studies in holding the line against the depredations of
|
||
MBAification typically involve the stubborn will of a founder. To build a
|
||
company for the very long term requires an enormous amount of discipline,
|
||
vision, and patience—and some large measure of real control. Among the greats
|
||
in this pantheon: Walt Disney, Steve Jobs, Yvon Chouinard (Patagonia), George
|
||
Lucas, James Dyson, and the Dumas family (Hermès). While more than half of
|
||
those enforced control against investors through private ownership, the others
|
||
took great pains to insulate their companies from the pressures of Wall Street
|
||
myopia. All of them were at one time or another dismissed with eye-rolling
|
||
contempt by managerial-minded executives in their industries. Yet they built
|
||
some of history’s greatest companies, which were not only creatively and
|
||
culturally successful but also financially so.
|
||
|
||
Steve Jobs insisted that even hidden internal faces of Apple products be
|
||
beautiful. One of Jobs’ heroes, Walt Disney, pursued a kind of otherworldly
|
||
perfection at Disneyland to such an extent that I’m hard pressed to pick which
|
||
examples to mention here. Perhaps the midcentury science fiction author (and
|
||
friend of Walt) Ray Bradbury put it best. Describing a totally unnecessary
|
||
fanciful architectural flourish added to the castle at Disneyland some time
|
||
after it was built: “It cost $100,000 to build a spire you didn't need. The
|
||
secret of Disney is doing things you don't need—and doing them well—and then
|
||
you realize you needed them all along.” My favorite example is the Sisyphean
|
||
[28]polishing of every brass drinking fountain in Disneyland every single
|
||
night. These things are hard to justify on paper, but Walt correctly [29]
|
||
observed: “people can feel perfection.”
|
||
|
||
Brass fountains at Disneyland. One afternoon on the left, next morning on the
|
||
right.Brass fountains at Disneyland. One afternoon on the left, next morning on
|
||
the right.
|
||
|
||
Cost control is important in any business, but it is the job of the founder to
|
||
understand and protect the extraneous essential. Creating a feeling of
|
||
perfection in the eyes of your clients is a vastly under-appreciated moat.
|
||
|
||
This is why I believe, especially in the early decades of a company’s
|
||
existence, founders must seek always to keep their brands free from the
|
||
excessive influence of investors and their short-sighted MBA emissaries. One
|
||
should work only with investors who think for the very long term—and plan to
|
||
hold the company for just as long. Such investors are much more likely to defer
|
||
to the brand-protective vision of a founder, because they’ll have more to lose
|
||
by destroying what made the business successful merely for short-term wins.
|
||
This requires some large measure of control, if you can manage it, but just as
|
||
importantly an even greater degree of personal trust in the values and
|
||
judgement of the investor.
|
||
|
||
The trouble for me at my crisis point with Norbauer & Co. was that not only was
|
||
I not aware of any such investors but that, as far as I knew, the things I
|
||
needed and cared about just seemed antithetical to the very premise of
|
||
investing itself.
|
||
|
||
On one of those dark days in 2023 when I was wallowing in despair, ready to
|
||
walk away from Norbauer & Co, I pointed all of this out to my husband Alan, who
|
||
said something along the lines of “Wait a minute. Wasn’t Andrew Wilkinson one
|
||
of your all-time favorite human beings? And didn’t I read recently that he runs
|
||
some kind of investment thing now?”
|
||
|
||
Palm Pilot
|
||
|
||
Way back in 2007, I was in Chicago for [30]the SEED conference, an event hosted
|
||
by my longtime tech and business idols, David Heinemeier Hanson and Jason Fried
|
||
of 37signals (another duo of unconventional founders who managed to maintain
|
||
control over a very profitable long-term company).
|
||
|
||
I was stepping off the L train after the conference, returning to my hotel
|
||
several miles away in a city where I knew no one, so I was startled to hear my
|
||
name. I turned to find a lanky kid, whom I remember looking like an unlikely
|
||
hybrid of awkward geek and hipster aesthete. He had recognized my name from the
|
||
conference badge still dangling from my neck (Tiny’s empire, incidentally, now
|
||
includes [31]a conference badge company) and asked if I was the Ryan Norbauer
|
||
who at the time wrote a [32]guest column for 43folders—a now mostly forgotten
|
||
website about productivity that was widely read in those days of a much smaller
|
||
and nerdier Internet. I reported that, regrettably, I was indeed the personage
|
||
in question. After a brief friendly chat, we swapped email addresses and went
|
||
on our way. That skinny kid was Andrew Wilkinson (who would go on to co-found
|
||
Tiny), and over the following weeks and years, we struck up a long
|
||
correspondence. I still fondly remember his beguiling habit of vicious
|
||
self-deprecation—and of calling businesspeople who took themselves too
|
||
seriously “wieners.”
|
||
|
||
We were two insecure, upstart kids in our twenties, running two non-competing
|
||
Web 2.0 agency businesses. Mine was doing back-end development, just as his was
|
||
doing front-end—the now-famous Metalab that, among many other impressive
|
||
projects, was pivotal in the design of Slack. (The full history of Metalab is
|
||
excellently detailed in Andrew’s memoir, [33]Never Enough: From Barista to
|
||
Billionaire). This led to an obvious and easy bond—and a lot of commiseration.
|
||
|
||
Hipster Andrew from back in our agency days.Hipster Andrew from back in our
|
||
agency days.
|
||
|
||
Being fellow 37signals acolytes also made us feel like members of a furtive
|
||
club of contrarian outsiders, a new guard of folks in the tech world who were
|
||
questioning the orthodoxies of Silicon Valley, venture capital investing, and
|
||
“enterprise software” with a kind of [34]scorched-earth sarcastic rationalism.
|
||
Andrew and I both have always been deeply skeptical of consensus narratives
|
||
about how one is supposed to live a happy and successful life (a trait I find
|
||
common among serial entrepreneurs). This line from Andrew’s memoir is one I
|
||
could very easily have written about myself:
|
||
|
||
To this day, if anyone tells me what to do—no matter how reasonable—I will
|
||
dig my heels in and resist, flashing back to being a kid.
|
||
|
||
In our teens, we had also both turned to computers and entrepreneurship as ways
|
||
of answering and escaping uncomfortable aspects of our youth. We had come of
|
||
age at that brief time when being part of internet culture made one feel
|
||
special and weird—like humanity was on the cusp of something wonderful, and we
|
||
were early to the party—in a way that I think shaped both our young identities.
|
||
(That same spirit of the early web that is still a central feature of my own
|
||
aesthetic life all these years later.) Another quote from his memoir:
|
||
|
||
My [tech] obsession was so severe that my unfortunate nickname in school
|
||
was “Palm Pilot” because I walked around taking notes on a little
|
||
black-and-white PalmPilot personal organizer, an early precursor to the
|
||
iPhone. As you can imagine, the girls at school found this irresistible.
|
||
|
||
Not only did I excitedly carry one of these very same devices around at my own
|
||
school but occasionally complemented it with a chirping Star Trek combadge on
|
||
my shirt. We were clearly both cut from the same ridiculous cloth.
|
||
|
||
Knowing someone who shared so many of my values, goals, and neuroses simply
|
||
made me feel less alone during a very stressful period of company-building, and
|
||
our conversations became a kind of animating force for me in those days of
|
||
drudgery and stress. Andrew was, as Alan would remind me nearly twenty years
|
||
later, one of my favorite humans.
|
||
|
||
Mini-Buffett
|
||
|
||
Although I spoke with Andrew less often as the years passed, I was peripherally
|
||
aware that he had become a professional investor, which—not knowing any of the
|
||
details—is a fact I would of course normally have been disposed to meet with
|
||
mild scorn. But knowing Andrew, I figured he must have found some charmingly
|
||
idiosyncratic and benign take on it; I just never troubled to find out what it
|
||
was.
|
||
|
||
It was only after my husband’s suggestion about reaching out to Tiny that I
|
||
looked seriously into what Andrew had been doing with his fund these past
|
||
years.
|
||
|
||
The first encouraging sign was the company’s unpretentious name. As Andrew
|
||
explains:
|
||
|
||
We felt that all these private equity and investment firms had ridiculous,
|
||
self-important (or borderline evil-sounding) names like BlackRock,
|
||
Greywolf, and Maverick. We liked Tiny because it felt down to earth and
|
||
friendly and, frankly, kind of ironic and funny.
|
||
|
||
Trying to learn as much as I could about how they operated, I started listening
|
||
to [35]Andrew’s many popular interviews on the My First Million podcast and
|
||
elsewhere, where it became clear that he had indeed found his way into a
|
||
characteristically nerdy and, to my mind, surprisingly inoffensive way of
|
||
thinking about investing.
|
||
|
||
I was particularly pleased to observe that deep thinking, rationality, and
|
||
reading all seemed to be explicitly baked into Tiny’s culture. Andrew,
|
||
incidentally, has my all-time favorite [36]Tweet on business or investing:
|
||
|
||
[DraggedImage-8]
|
||
|
||
The many books I heard him mention in interviews sent me down a long reading
|
||
journey that introduced me to the mental framework behind his particular weird
|
||
corner of the investing world, which I found in itself to be a rewarding
|
||
brainiac adventure. There was the douchey-sounding but actually quite excellent
|
||
[37]How to Get Rich by Felix Dennis (in which the affluent author undertakes to
|
||
convince his reader that pursuing the goal mentioned in the title is a bad
|
||
idea). There was [38]Invention: A Life of Learning Through Failure, by James
|
||
Dyson (of cyclonic vacuum fame), a magnificent portrait of a founder who
|
||
doggedly pursued a quixotic creative vision in a way that no naively rational
|
||
manager or investor would ever abide. There was [39]The Outsiders: Eight
|
||
Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success, a
|
||
masterpiece on business strategy and capital allocation, showing how managing
|
||
companies in certain unorthodox ways actually leads to better results for
|
||
shareholders. But surely the most instructive of these was [40]The Snowball:
|
||
Warren Buffett and the Business of Life, an incredibly dense and exhaustive
|
||
biography of the man who inspired Andrew’s second professional life as an
|
||
investor.
|
||
|
||
Tiny is often called “the Berkshire Hathaway of the Internet” due to their
|
||
modeling their philosophy on that of Buffett and his business partner the late
|
||
Charlie Munger. So earnest is their admiration that they run a little side
|
||
business selling a $2,598 set of [41]bronze busts of the duo. (Not quite as
|
||
cool as Mr. McDuck, but not bad.)
|
||
|
||
Munger and Buffett busts from Berkshire NerdsMunger and Buffett busts from
|
||
Berkshire Nerds
|
||
|
||
The Berkshire approach focuses on acquiring profitable entities with a strong
|
||
brand moat and loyal customer base, keeping out of the way of what originally
|
||
made the company successful, supporting operations with ethical and experienced
|
||
executives, and holding the purchased shares indefinitely. (Insanely, but
|
||
tellingly, this is somehow considered a eccentric and contrarian take in the
|
||
world of institutional investing—and an approach that, despite its prominent
|
||
success, has rarely been copied.) Andrew and his co-founder at Tiny, Chris
|
||
Sparling, have extended Buffett’s model to the world of technology and
|
||
design—areas that they know well but in which Berkshire has historically been
|
||
reluctant to operate. (It is outside their “circle of competence,” as Munger
|
||
would have put it.)
|
||
|
||
Two really important and relevant recurring themes of The Snowball are
|
||
Buffett’s very long time horizon when it comes to investing (“buy and hold
|
||
forever”) and the paramount importance of reputation in business. Note that
|
||
these are both explicit counterpoints to the things that I said I dislike most
|
||
about the typical investor mentality (namely, short-termism and an indifference
|
||
to brand erosion).
|
||
|
||
As Buffett famously once said in a briefing to employees, “Lose money for the
|
||
firm, and I will be understanding. Lose a shred of reputation for the firm, and
|
||
I will be ruthless.” There are countless other examples in his biography of an
|
||
obsession with reputation. He stresses that, even when misbehavior in any one
|
||
transaction could be financially advantageous, it is not worth the potentially
|
||
catastrophic damage to one’s brand—personal or otherwise.
|
||
|
||
This has often accrued to very real business benefits for Berkshire. Buffett
|
||
drafts up very short and simple (1-2 page) offer letters to potential
|
||
acquisitions, predicated on good faith rather than legal constraints.
|
||
Berkshire’s goal is, by cultivating a reputation for fair-dealing, integrity,
|
||
and zero bullshit, to be a preferred buyer and thus to avoid getting into
|
||
bidding wars. Founders proactively want to sell to Berkshire, because they want
|
||
to see their good names endure and their companies flourish over the long haul,
|
||
and they can trust Buffett to keep his promise to do just that.
|
||
|
||
My Tim Cook
|
||
|
||
In my study of both the Berkshire and Tiny approaches (to which, I must
|
||
confess, I dedicated some months of reading and rumination) there was one other
|
||
critical idea I encountered. Buffett rarely gets too deep into the operational
|
||
weeds of the companies in which he invests. He buys firms that he believes have
|
||
strong market positions and then stays largely out of the way, collecting
|
||
dividends while waiting patiently for the next good opportunity to come along.
|
||
“Lethargy bordering on sloth remains the cornerstone of our investment style,”
|
||
as he wrote in a shareholder letter.
|
||
|
||
As a first order of business on an acquisition where the founders wish to
|
||
change or diminish their role, Tiny seeks to bring in an executive. This was a
|
||
lesson Andrew learned by chance before he even became aware of Buffett’s
|
||
philosophy. He asked his old friend Mark to look after Metalab while he was
|
||
away on vacation and discovered, upon his return, that things were actually
|
||
operating more smoothly than when he was micro-managing the company before his
|
||
departure. It’s a lesson I wish I had been forced to learn much earlier in my
|
||
own entrepreneurial career, and it’s frankly one I still have trouble
|
||
internalizing to this day.
|
||
|
||
In hindsight, it made all the sense in the world to do this, but at the
|
||
time it was an anomalous thought that I almost felt guilty about. It’s a
|
||
decision that many entrepreneurs fear making. I was embracing what I came
|
||
to call Lazy Leadership: the idea that a CEO’s job is not to do all the
|
||
work, but more importantly to design the machine and systems.
|
||
|
||
In all the stories of visionary founders I’ve read over the years, there was a
|
||
subtle theme present for every one whom I admire: each had a trusted executive
|
||
who handled the financial and operational side of things while the founder
|
||
focused on the equally essential matters of brand and customer experience. Walt
|
||
Disney had his brother Roy, who fronted for him with banks, struck legal deals,
|
||
and made sure all of his little brother’s grand dreams were actually
|
||
financially feasible. Gene Roddenberry notoriously had his rapacious attorney
|
||
Leonard Maizlish strike the business deal with the studio that gave him
|
||
ironclad creative control over Star Trek: The Next Generation (the only way a
|
||
wonderfully crazy show like that could ever have been made) along with an
|
||
usually strong financial stake in any resulting revenues. I once heard an
|
||
interview with billionaire luxury shoe designer Christian Louboutin about how
|
||
he rarely looks at financial statements and trusts his business partners to
|
||
handle everything other than the creative work; he just thinks about shoes all
|
||
day. George Lucas had a similar arrangement at Lucasfilm. Dyson has a CEO
|
||
running things in Singapore so he can tinker around with wacky R&D projects in
|
||
England. And, of course, Steve Jobs had Tim Cook.
|
||
|
||
I heard Andrew tell many stories of companies either that he had run or that
|
||
Tiny had acquired where the founder was essentially holding the company back by
|
||
not delegating to a trusted executive. Tiny’s strategy, immediately on buying a
|
||
business (if not before), is typically to find someone who has run a similar
|
||
company but at approximately double the size of the current business—the idea
|
||
being that they’ll know from direct experience how to take the business to the
|
||
next level. For example, when they bought Aeropress (and the founder wanted to
|
||
step out of the picture), Tiny hired the former President of SodaStream to run
|
||
it. That CEO massively grew the business in a few short years, leaving Andrew
|
||
able to luxuriate in the results idly from afar. Something similar happened
|
||
with Dribbble, where its founders had grown a huge base of happy users but
|
||
weren't sure where to take the business next on their own. Under Tiny’s new
|
||
CEO, the community saw explosive growth, while still allowing the founders to
|
||
hang around and keep doing the bits they enjoyed.
|
||
|
||
I started to get excited imagining what it might look like for me to be off in
|
||
my keyboard playground all day like Dyson or Louboutin—focusing only on making
|
||
amazing product and building the brand. I would have been quite happy to get
|
||
out of the way so that someone who actually knew what they were doing could
|
||
keep an eye out for those cash incinerators, tax filings, bank nonsense, and
|
||
all the little logistical minutiae that gobbled up my creative energy (and, for
|
||
that matter, my will to carry on in the business at all).
|
||
|
||
I can’t stress enough how transformative this simple shift in thinking was to
|
||
me. While I had often sought, here and there, to outsource simple tasks as
|
||
cheaply as possible in the past (such as hiring a warehouse crew to put things
|
||
in boxes), the thought had never occurred to me to find someone actually to run
|
||
my company for me. I think I had also somehow implicitly felt a (stupidly)
|
||
moralizing obligation to do all those things myself in order to be a worthy
|
||
founder. But, of course, there is no virtue in soldiering on through something
|
||
at which your skills are only middling at best, especially when you could be
|
||
focusing instead on areas where you actually have some unique value to add.
|
||
|
||
Here is how Andrew puts it in his book:
|
||
|
||
…there is always somebody else who loves the job you hate. You might find
|
||
accounting boring, for example, but I promise you there is somebody whose
|
||
idea of a great night is eight hours of pivot tables in Excel. You might
|
||
find coding to be the most laborious and painstaking job on Earth; someone
|
||
out there can’t believe you’re going to pay them to write code. And you
|
||
might hate running a company, which was someone’s dream job.
|
||
|
||
It’s basically the idea of comparative advantage from economics: a non-zero-sum
|
||
game where all parties win by contributing what they do best. Presumably there
|
||
was a spreadsheet jockey out there who needed someone like me to create the
|
||
artistic product that generated numbers to populate his or her pivot tables. I
|
||
realized I needed my Tim Cook.
|
||
|
||
And so I decided to approach my old buddy Palm Pilot to see if he might have
|
||
any interest in partnering up with the world’s nerdiest luxury business to make
|
||
exactly that happen.
|
||
|
||
Money that I didn’t need
|
||
|
||
The business world has many people playing zero sum games and a few playing
|
||
positive sum games searching for each other in the crowd. —Naval Ravikant
|
||
|
||
Getting an offer from Tiny was, oddly, much easier than getting a quote from
|
||
many manufacturers I’ve worked with. I simply gave them a little writeup on the
|
||
history of my business (way shorter, in fact, than the one you’re currently
|
||
reading) along with a login to our Shopify so they could check some basic
|
||
financials. Tiny only ends up investing in far less than 1% of the
|
||
opportunities that come across their desk, but apparently the analysts whom
|
||
Andrew put on the task of evaluating Norbauer were compelled by what they
|
||
found.
|
||
|
||
The offer was extremely short and simple, in classic Berkshire style. They
|
||
would make an investment into the business that would leave me fully
|
||
financially de-risked (even if the company went to zero), and they would bring
|
||
in a talented executive to function as a kind of COO. (At some point we just
|
||
took to calling this role “Norbauer’s Tim Cook.”) In exchange, they would get a
|
||
49% minority share in the business and a commensurate portion of any future
|
||
profits.
|
||
|
||
Incidentally, if it were merely a matter of a share in future profits, I would
|
||
readily have taken less than 51%, but I felt that retaining control was
|
||
important to assure the keyboard community that I wasn’t ceding the business to
|
||
the money people. This also gave me the power to ensure that no cost
|
||
efficiencies would ever get in the way of the client experience: my Founder’s
|
||
No.
|
||
|
||
Our shared long-term strategic vision was to launch the ready-to-type line I
|
||
had been building for years, starting first with the Seneca, and in doing this,
|
||
to give us a shot at building a great luxury brand that could endure for
|
||
decades.
|
||
|
||
I knew it was a good idea to accept the offer when, on sharing the details with
|
||
all my friends in the VC world, every single one of them told me I shouldn’t
|
||
take it. Many suggested that I should get competing offers from private equity
|
||
firms (not something I would ever in a million years consider). But some did
|
||
raise one reasonable objection. The funny thing is that Norbauer has always
|
||
been actually perfectly well capitalized. So, as they pointed out, I could
|
||
actually in theory just have figured out how to hire an executive entirely on
|
||
my own using cash in the bank.
|
||
|
||
But that sounded really hard, and I frankly just didn’t know how to do it. I’ve
|
||
historically been awful at hiring and extracting the best performance out of
|
||
employees—and especially letting people go when it’s obvious that things aren’t
|
||
working out. (I’m simply too polite—another area where I could do to be a bit
|
||
more like my desk-side mentor.) This failing of mine is costly and problematic
|
||
enough when it’s a low-paying menial job, but with something as high-stakes as
|
||
a well-paid executive there just seemed like so many things that could have
|
||
gone wrong, and I didn’t trust myself to get it right on the first try. Tiny,
|
||
by contrast, does this kind of strategic hiring all day long; it's their
|
||
superpower, and their secret sauce.
|
||
|
||
Anti-goals
|
||
|
||
I likely could have negotiated for more money than Tiny offered, but I didn’t
|
||
really care. I figured if these guys know what they’re doing, the company will
|
||
do well and we’ll probably make some money eventually together. I was looking
|
||
for long-term incentive alignment with smart people rather than a quick payday,
|
||
and my goals were primarily subjective and psychological.
|
||
|
||
Andrew, borrowing from Munger, stresses the importance of anti-goals in
|
||
business. Taleb calls this the via negativa: the fact that it’s often easier to
|
||
arrive at what you want by eliminating bad things rather than adding new
|
||
theoretically good ones. I’m a big via negativa kind of guy.
|
||
|
||
Here was my anti-goals list for a potential Tiny deal:
|
||
|
||
• Ever touching a spreadsheet The main thing I needed was someone to do the
|
||
important business analysis for me, attending to the low-hanging fruit but
|
||
without optimizing the client experience into the ground.
|
||
• Drowning in “little tasks” While productivity and hard work have (to a
|
||
fault) never been scarce commodities for me, I’m really only effective when
|
||
I can serially hyper-focus on things. The only things I’m any good for
|
||
require me to go off into the wilderness, as it were, for weeks at a time
|
||
so I can think clearly and deeply on problems. I needed to get the endless
|
||
little administrative to-dos off my desk so I could actually effectively do
|
||
that.
|
||
• Feeling alone This last is perhaps the most important. I was just sick of
|
||
not having anyone to validate or sanity-check my strategic choices and
|
||
plans—to encourage me in the things I was doing right, and to help me
|
||
realize when I was putting my attention on the wrong things. As a solo
|
||
entrepreneur I’ve always been prone to anxious freak-outs when little
|
||
hiccups arise in a business, because I know if I’m not taking them
|
||
seriously there is nobody else to do so. I had increasingly come to realize
|
||
that facing problems like this entirely on my own simply feels bad. Maybe
|
||
it’s a kind of weakness and I should be embarrassed, but in any case I had
|
||
at least reached the level of maturity to acknowledge that, at this point
|
||
in my life, I wanted something else.
|
||
|
||
Optionality
|
||
|
||
In addition to anti-goals, another really important thing for me is
|
||
optionality. I reached out to Andrew to clarify some edge-case scenarios before
|
||
agreeing to the deal, and he gave me the following (astonishing) assurances:
|
||
|
||
• If the business failed, no big deal. It happens, he said; we share the risk
|
||
and just suck it up together and move on if so, no hard feelings.
|
||
• I could walk away whenever I wanted. I really am a contrarian bitch; it’s
|
||
deep in my veins. I basically find it impossible to do something if I have
|
||
to do it, and even if I can whack up the ginger under those circumstances
|
||
the work becomes slow and painful. (At the very least, I have to be tricked
|
||
into believing it was my idea.) Andrew told me early on that I wouldn’t be
|
||
shackled to the business, and if I ever wanted to walk away they would just
|
||
find someone to replace me. That’s not going to happen, but only because I
|
||
know it could if I wanted it to.
|
||
• The big red FUCK OFF button on my desk Knowing how I bristle at being
|
||
constrained, Andrew volunteered another point of optionality. He recounted
|
||
the story of another company in which Tiny had made a majority
|
||
(controlling) investment. The founder had stayed on running the business
|
||
and Tiny occasionally made managerial recommendations. That founder
|
||
eventually got annoyed, telling Tiny to fuck off and stop telling him what
|
||
to do. And they actually did as instructed, trusting that he knew his
|
||
company better than anyone. The founder sold the company for some healthy
|
||
multiple just a few years later, creating a huge payday for Tiny. Andrew
|
||
said he considered this a fantastic outcome and wouldn’t have done anything
|
||
different. He offered this as an example that I could tell his team to get
|
||
out of my hair at any time as well.
|
||
|
||
Yes
|
||
|
||
As we were nearing finalizing things, the Partner at Tiny who was putting the
|
||
deal together reached out to me to make one last clarifying point. He said he
|
||
just wanted to check in with me to make sure I didn’t have revenue growth
|
||
expectations that were too high for the first few years.
|
||
|
||
Yes, you read that right; this was a potential investor who was checking with
|
||
me, a creative founder, that I wasn’t going to expect them to MBA the shit out
|
||
of my company right off the bat, because if so they weren’t sure they could
|
||
deliver.
|
||
|
||
I happily signed on the dotted line.
|
||
|
||
Caleb and Year Zero
|
||
|
||
Do not seek a replica of yourself to delegate to, or to promote. Watch out
|
||
for this, it is a common error with people setting out to build a company.
|
||
You have strengths and you have weaknesses in your own character. It makes
|
||
no sense to increase those strengths your organization already possesses
|
||
and not address the weaknesses.
|
||
—Felix Dennis, [42]How to Get Rich
|
||
|
||
The executive whom Tiny proposed to be my Tim Cook was Caleb Bernabe, who is
|
||
now our Executive in Residence (a position he shares among a few portfolio
|
||
companies that don’t yet require a full-time executive). He acts essentially as
|
||
our COO, but his job description is basically doing all the things that I
|
||
hate—a skillset at which he inexplicably but admirably excels.
|
||
|
||
Like me (and Andrew), Caleb is a fellow refugee from both startups and
|
||
university education, a founder who sold his company and ended up where he is
|
||
now through a series of accidents during a listless period of existential
|
||
crisis—essentially as a solution to boredom.
|
||
|
||
When it comes to being a hipster aesthete, though, Caleb puts even Andrew to
|
||
shame. He’s into 90s hip hop, vintage Porsches, and Leica cameras (film only,
|
||
of course). Purely for fun, he runs a fashionable [43]natural wine bar in
|
||
Victoria, BC.
|
||
|
||
Tourist Wine Bar (exterior)Tourist Wine Bar (exterior)Tourist Wine Bar
|
||
(interior)Tourist Wine Bar (interior)
|
||
|
||
But my favorite fact about him is that, when he came to Utah to offer moral
|
||
support at a conference talk I gave, he showed up in a streetwear hoodie and
|
||
newly bleached-blond hair, looking like he had just rolled out of a Santa
|
||
Monica skate park. Yet I knew that the very next day he was on his way to New
|
||
York to negotiate on Tiny’s behalf in a high-stakes bidding war against one of
|
||
the richest men on earth and an army of slick-haired suit-wearing MBA
|
||
consultants. (He showed up in the hoodie.)
|
||
|
||
He’s exactly the sort of person I’d expect Andrew to pick as an analytical and
|
||
operational wizard.
|
||
|
||
Caleb personally co-invested in Norbauer & Co. as part of the Tiny deal,
|
||
following the general ethos of maximum skin-in-the-game incentive alignment. He
|
||
makes sure the lights stay on, projects stay on track, bills get paid, papers
|
||
filed, and that I never have to monitor things like cashflow or other
|
||
accounting details. Whenever financial modeling is required, he dives into
|
||
those pivot tables with abandon but otherwise just leaves me alone to make the
|
||
keyboards nice—with some welcome cheerleading from the sidelines when required.
|
||
|
||
Caleb is without question one of the smartest and most competent people I’ve
|
||
ever had the pleasure to work with. There is approximately zero chance I would
|
||
ever have hired so well if I had opted to go it alone.
|
||
|
||
It’s part of a broader trend I’ve noted: everyone at Tiny is just so
|
||
ridiculously smart, competent, and rational. One presumes that such people
|
||
exist in the world, but I’ve rarely had occasion to interact with them in my
|
||
professional life. It’s all the rarer to find so many all in one place, and
|
||
seemingly happy no less. (I vividly remember my first video call with Aman, the
|
||
Partner assigned to evaluate a potential deal with Norbauer. I saw a bunch of
|
||
insanely obscure books on his shelf that I thought nobody on earth had ever
|
||
read other than me, so we spent half the call excitedly geeking out about that,
|
||
rather than troubling too much about any details of the deal.)
|
||
|
||
The best part of my collaboration with Caleb in this past year is that we are
|
||
so consistently on the same page about strategy, cost/quality tradeoffs, and
|
||
vision for the brand. Of course, I was very careful when weighing the deal (and
|
||
Caleb as an executive) to ensure that this would be the case. But he quickly
|
||
put me at ease on that front. To also demonstrate my point about the articulate
|
||
intelligence of the people at Tiny, I might as well quote at length from his
|
||
pitch email to me:
|
||
|
||
As a frequent participant in hobbies and interests centred around extreme
|
||
devotion to detail and artistry, I resonate with your approach to building.
|
||
What’s even more striking to me, however, is your philosophy around luxury
|
||
and brand. My existential issue with fashion, cars, even art and dining to
|
||
some extent, is the misplaced idea of status that many casual participants
|
||
(conspicuous consumers) attach to items and experiences. I often lament the
|
||
mass adoption of status symbols, and search intently for those with a
|
||
legitimate devotion to craft. You called this approach an antidote to late
|
||
stage capitalism, as opposed to a result of it. I love that.
|
||
I’ve long wondered what would result if I were able to apply my ability and
|
||
passion for building businesses towards an opportunity that exists more in
|
||
this realm, rather than that of spreadsheets and sales optimizations (as
|
||
much as I genuinely love those things, too). Usually, I end up thinking
|
||
that this seems like too big of an ask for the universe, having my cake and
|
||
eating it too. I feel genuinely, however, that working with Norbauer may be
|
||
an opportunity to do just that.
|
||
|
||
What more need I say.
|
||
|
||
I can also report that Tiny as a whole has been ridiculously respectful of my
|
||
role as founder and guardian of the brand. Well into the partnership, I asked
|
||
Aman for his perspective on a video script I was working on, and here is the
|
||
beautiful message he wrote me:
|
||
|
||
I want to be careful about giving too much of my take. Norbauer is an
|
||
extension of you. And I’d be careful of questioning your instinct too much
|
||
especially when it comes to the less tangible things about the business. It
|
||
could compromise authenticity. Ideally, people listening hear your voice.
|
||
|
||
Caleb also once pointed out that various folks at the fund have been very
|
||
interested in and curious about Norbauer since the acquisition—enthusiastically
|
||
following along with the more subjective accomplishments we’ve been
|
||
accumulating in the past year—but nobody at the head office has ever quizzed
|
||
him on how many keyboards we’ve sold yet. Everyone remains far more interested
|
||
in the long-term prospects for the brand and just diligently doing what we need
|
||
to make it happen.
|
||
|
||
Psychological effects
|
||
|
||
While my motive for seeking a deal with Tiny was fundamentally psychological
|
||
(i.e., wanting to walk out the window a little less), there have been a number
|
||
of other unexpected—but very welcome—changes in my emotional relationship to
|
||
the business.
|
||
|
||
It turns out that completely financially de-risking for a founder is pretty
|
||
transformative. Even though I had always been fully prepared to lose every
|
||
dollar I had put into the business, I think some part of me always worried that
|
||
if things went to zero and I couldn’t return our personal capital I’d be
|
||
letting my family down, which probably made me overly cautious. Now that I’m
|
||
playing with the house’s money, as it were, I have a kind of emotional distance
|
||
that makes it easier to reason dispassionately about risks.
|
||
|
||
In fact, I would say that the emotional voltage around decision-making in
|
||
general is much lower for me. When you’re a sole founder who is making all
|
||
executive decisions, each one carries a massive emotional weight. It’s not just
|
||
a question of the financial consequences, but for me at least it has often been
|
||
intimately bound up with a sense of self-worth and identity. If anything goes
|
||
wrong, there is nobody else to blame but me. Something about stepping back and
|
||
becoming a partner with others in the business helps me think about the company
|
||
more like an investor (the good kind), thinking about the business at a
|
||
slightly higher level of abstraction. Together, we all just try to do our best
|
||
and approach things rationally.
|
||
|
||
Interestingly, I’ve also noticed an increased cadence and cost-consciousness
|
||
has coalesced in my daily engagement with the business. There is something
|
||
about having other people whom I like and respect who have a reason to care
|
||
that helps me feel motivated to pay attention to those things that actually
|
||
serve the business. Before, when it was just me, I had nobody to harm other
|
||
than myself—which somehow made it much easier for me to indolently inflict that
|
||
harm.
|
||
|
||
Since the deal, the business has already been more profitable than it ever has.
|
||
Or so I’m told. (Louboutin-style, I usually don’t even look at the financial
|
||
reports Caleb sends.)
|
||
|
||
Production on the Seneca proceeded beautifully, as I had hoped, through 2024.
|
||
And we sold out our private “Edition Zero” offering almost instantly. We were
|
||
awarded two patents for head-turning advancements in keyboard tech, with others
|
||
in the pipeline. I have my Tim Cook, and my anti-goals have been kept far at
|
||
bay.
|
||
|
||
Things in Year 0 have played out exactly as Andrew puts it in his book:
|
||
|
||
I realized that [Tiny] appealed to founders who didn’t relish the idea of
|
||
selling their beloved company to some private equity firm run by people who
|
||
viewed their business as a spreadsheet and would chop it up for parts then
|
||
flip it to the highest bidder. Founders like us. We could come in, give the
|
||
founders a huge payday, and do our best to solve all of their problems.
|
||
Problems we’d learned to solve the hard way. It didn’t mean they had to
|
||
leave, either. We could offer deals where the founders stayed on and kept
|
||
running the business, taking some chips off the table. Or, if a founder
|
||
wanted, they could just advise the business and leave the day-to-day to us.
|
||
|
||
Year 1, and Straight on to the Retrofuture
|
||
|
||
Now it’s 2025 and I’m moving into my second year with Tiny’s help.
|
||
|
||
We just brought on a new member of our executive team to head up Client
|
||
Experience, Taeha Kim, who is also now an incentive-aligned investor in the
|
||
business. Taeha has long been the leading tastemaker and influencer in our
|
||
industry and, as part of our deal, [44]his half-million-subscriber YouTube
|
||
channel came to Norbauer & Co. with him. There is probably no single person on
|
||
this planet better poised to do this critical job for us, and I’m certain that
|
||
this deal would never have happened without Tiny’s involvement (I would simply
|
||
not have had the ambition or risk tolerance even to explore it.)
|
||
|
||
The Seneca is now a real thing in the physical world, and it has been [45]
|
||
generating enormous [46]buzz, both within the keyboard world and beyond, as we
|
||
moved towards our more public [47]First Edition launch this week.
|
||
|
||
The product and brand are stronger than ever. I have an amazing crew to dream
|
||
alongside me. We’re doing cool shit together and having a great time.
|
||
|
||
And not once have I even had to turn the key to open up the little protective
|
||
acrylic cover over the big red FUCK OFF button on my desk. But it has brought
|
||
me great comfort to know it was always there.
|
||
|
||
I used to think that building something great required carrying all the
|
||
significant burdens on my own. That the price of creative freedom was solitude.
|
||
And that those shards of glass were just a necessary part of the meal.
|
||
|
||
At least with respect to one rather exceptional investment firm, I was wrong.
|
||
|
||
I just had to find investors who think for the long term—and who respect the
|
||
art of business at least as much as the business of business. People who could
|
||
run the spreadsheets for me, but also see beyond them. And find them I did.
|
||
|
||
For the first time in my life as a founder, I’m not staring alone into an
|
||
abyss.
|
||
|
||
I’m looking into The Future.
|
||
|
||
And I’m smiling like an idiot.
|
||
|
||
Get my future dispatches delivered directly to your inbox.
|
||
|
||
[48][ ] SUBSCRIBE [three-dots]
|
||
Now check your email and confirm your subscription.
|
||
|
||
Further reading
|
||
|
||
[50]
|
||
Keyboard Academy
|
||
|
||
The Outsider Option: Why I Sold Half my Company to Tiny
|
||
|
||
[51]
|
||
The Berm
|
||
|
||
Death and Underachievement: A Guide to Happiness in Work
|
||
|
||
[52]
|
||
The Berm
|
||
|
||
A Forgotten Future
|
||
|
||
© 2010-2025 Ryan Norbauer
|
||
[53]Visit my luxury keyboard design studio.
|
||
|
||
References:
|
||
|
||
[1] https://ryan.norbauer.com/
|
||
[2] https://ryan.norbauer.com/journal/the-outsider-option-why-i-sold-half-my-company-to-tiny/#/portal
|
||
[3] https://ryan.norbauer.com/
|
||
[4] https://ryan.norbauer.com/biography/
|
||
[5] https://ryan.norbauer.com/reading-list/
|
||
[6] https://ryan.norbauer.com/journal/
|
||
[7] https://ryan.norbauer.com/journal/the-outsider-option-why-i-sold-half-my-company-to-tiny/#/portal
|
||
[8] https://ryan.norbauer.com/biography
|
||
[9] https://norbauer.co/
|
||
[10] https://www.norbauer.co/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[11] https://www.tiny.com/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[12] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AeroPress?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[13] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letterboxd?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[14] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dribbble?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[15] https://serato.com/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[16] https://www.metalab.com/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[17] https://frosty.inc/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[18] https://www.hodinkee.com/magazine?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
|
||
[19] https://geekhack.org/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[20] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tDDBU8kkJZw&t=69s&ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[21] https://www.norbauer.co/pages/the-seneca?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[22] https://amzn.to/3CpskYQ?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[23] https://sohl-dickstein.github.io/2022/11/06/strong-Goodhart.html?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[24] https://amzn.to/4g32Gag?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[25] https://amzn.to/40lJC1a?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[26] https://teenage.engineering/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[27] https://world.hey.com/dhh/beans-and-vibes-in-even-measure-8eff819c?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[28] https://youtu.be/wG1BrdzirnU?si=oDYY_1cyZVsbdf4O&t=106&ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[29] https://www.forbes.com/sites/disneyinstitute/2020/02/04/what-do-tiki-birds-have-in-common-with-customer-experience-learn-why-intentionality-matters/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[30] https://signalvnoise.com/posts/610-announcing-the-seed-conference-featuring-jim-coudal-jason-fried-and-carlos-segura?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[31] https://www.conferencebadge.com/?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[32] https://ryan.norbauer.com/journal/death-and-underachievement-a-guide-to-happiness-in-work/
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[35] https://www.youtube.com/@MyFirstMillionPod/search?query=andrew+wilkinson&ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[36] https://x.com/awilkinson/status/1646990916408995840?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[42] https://amzn.to/3CpskYQ?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[44] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u11-pBP9GA0&ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[45] https://daringfireball.net/linked/2025/03/20/the-seneca?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[46] https://www.theverge.com/keyboards/633344/norbauer-seneca-3600-keyboard-peek?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[47] https://www.norbauer.co/products/the-seneca?ref=ryan.norbauer.com
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[50] https://ryan.norbauer.com/journal/the-outsider-option-why-i-sold-half-my-company-to-tiny/
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[51] https://ryan.norbauer.com/journal/death-and-underachievement-a-guide-to-happiness-in-work/
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[52] https://ryan.norbauer.com/journal/a-forgotten-future/
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[53] https://norbauer.co/
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