Friday, 5 July 2024

Claude.AI - Story 4 of 4 - Theme, when to walk away, cultural fit challenges

 Experiments with claude.ai (I stopped using chatGPT)

Prompt:

Sometimes it is okay to experiment with new experiences long enough to realise the experience is not worth the reward you originally imagined, and that’s perfectly okay

Let’s expand by another LinkedIn post on cultural fit. I want to challenge the notion of employees being a culture fit for the company or team. Turn it upside down. I posit that it’s more important for people to focus on the company or team being a cultural fit for them instead, not the other way around...

Claude Generated Content

"Let's Talk About Cultural Fit... But Not in the Way You Think

For years, we've heard about the importance of being a 'cultural fit' for a company or team. Countless interviews have ended with the dreaded phrase, 'great skills, but not quite the right fit.' But what if we've been looking at this all wrong?

It's time to flip the script: Instead of asking if you're a cultural fit for a company, start asking if the company is a cultural fit for YOU.

Here's why this matters:

  1. Values Alignment: Your personal values are the compass that guides your decisions and actions. A company that aligns with these values will naturally bring out your best work and highest levels of engagement.
  2. Work-Life Integration: The company's culture directly impacts how you balance work and personal life. Does their approach complement or conflict with your ideal lifestyle?
  3. Growth Trajectory: A culture that nurtures your aspirations and supports your growth path is crucial for long-term satisfaction and success.
  4. Mental Health and Wellbeing: Company culture significantly affects your stress levels, job satisfaction, and overall wellbeing. Prioritize environments that support your mental health.
  5. Authenticity: In a culture that truly fits you, you can bring your whole self to work without the need to conform or suppress parts of your identity.
  6. Long-term Success: When you're in an environment that aligns with your values and working style, you're more likely to excel, innovate, and contribute meaningfully.
  7. Empowerment: By focusing on whether a company fits you, you reclaim agency in your career decisions rather than trying to mold yourself to fit external expectations.

This shift in perspective isn't about being picky or difficult. It's about recognizing your worth and the unique value you bring to the table. It's about building a career that's sustainable, fulfilling, and aligned with who you are.

So, the next time you're in an interview, remember: You're not just being interviewed, you're also the interviewer. Ask probing questions about the company's values, decision-making processes, and how they support employee wellbeing and growth.

Don't just seek a job that tolerates you. Seek an environment that celebrates you.

What do you think? Have you ever turned down an opportunity because the company wasn't the right cultural fit for you? How did that decision impact your career? Let's start a conversation about redefining cultural fit in the workplace."

Midjourney Generated Art (just copied the whole story into midjourney)

Claude.AI - Story 3 of 4 - Theme, when to walk away

 Experiments with claude.ai (I stopped using chatGPT)

Prompt:

Sometimes it is okay to experiment with new experiences long enough to realise the experience is not worth the reward you originally imagined, and that’s perfectly okay

Help me write a LinkedIn post in the form of a narrative that concludes to the above quotes. The story should reflect upholding one’s principles and values but respecting a growth mindset, leading to the willingness to know when to call the experience as done. Create a similar style story to the second one, but this time from the perspective of this time realizing the company culture was not a fit, that he’d seen the same movie played out many times, that leadership wasn’t inspiring or worth following, long hours unsustainable and incompatible with his phase of life and remaining there would be detrimental to career and overall health and wellbeing.

Claude Generated Content

"After 25 years in IT, from coding in cubicles to steering global digital transformations, I thought I'd developed a sixth sense for organizational dynamics. But even seasoned executives can be caught off guard.

When a promising tech unicorn headhunted me for a C-suite role, the opportunity seemed golden. Their pitch was compelling: disruptive technology, rapid growth, and a chance to shape the future of an entire industry. The compensation package was hard to refuse, and the allure of one last big challenge before retirement was strong.

The honeymoon phase was brief. Within months, I found myself in an all-too-familiar scenario - one I'd witnessed and navigated countless times before, but never expected to experience again at this stage of my career.

The 'move fast and break things' mentality, once exciting, now felt reckless. The leadership team, while talented, lacked the wisdom to balance innovation with sustainability. Eighty-hour work weeks were worn as badges of honor, with little regard for work-life balance or employee wellbeing.

I saw the signs: burnout creeping in, family dinners missed, and a gnawing feeling that this culture was fundamentally at odds with my values and life stage. The technology was cutting-edge, but the human cost was too high.

Then it hit me: Sometimes it's okay to experiment with new experiences long enough to realize the experience is not worth the reward you originally imagined, and that's perfectly okay.

This wasn't about admitting defeat or being unable to 'keep up.' It was about recognizing that my years of experience gave me the perspective to see where this path led - and the wisdom to choose a different one.

I realized that staying would not only be detrimental to my health and relationships but could potentially tarnish the career I'd built so carefully. The skills that made me valuable weren't being utilized in a culture that prioritized speed over strategy and hype over sustainable growth.

So, I made the difficult decision to step away. It wasn't easy explaining to peers or family why I was leaving such a 'prestigious' role so soon. But I knew that preserving my integrity, wellbeing, and the lessons from my years of experience was far more valuable than any stock options or title.

This experience reinforced a crucial lesson: true leadership isn't just about driving results, it's about fostering environments where people and businesses can thrive long-term. It's about having the courage to say 'no' to opportunities that don't align with your values, no matter how shiny they appear.

To my fellow executives: have you ever found yourself in a role that looked perfect on paper but felt wrong in practice? How did you navigate that disconnect? Let's discuss the importance of cultural fit and personal alignment in our career decisions, especially as we reach the peaks of our professional journeys."

Midjourney Generated Art (just copied the whole story into midjourney)



Claude.AI - Story 2 of 4 - Theme, when to walk away

Experiments with claude.ai (I stopped using chatGPT)

Prompt:

Sometimes it is okay to experiment with new experiences long enough to realise the experience is not worth the reward you originally imagined, and that’s perfectly okay

Help me write a LinkedIn post in the form of a narrative that concludes to the above quotes. The story should reflect upholding one’s principles and values but respecting a growth mindset, leading to the willingness to know when to call the experience as done. Create a similar style story to the first one, but this time from the perspective of an experienced IT executive with 25 years experience, tried out a new domain, career switch, and comes to the same realization as per the opening quotes provided.

Claude Generated Content

"After 25 years in IT, leading teams through the dot-com boom, the cloud revolution, and the AI explosion, I thought I'd seen it all. I had built a career I was proud of, climbing from junior developer to CIO of a Fortune 500 company. But as I approached my 50th birthday, a familiar itch returned - the desire for a new challenge.

When a former colleague approached me about joining a cutting-edge biotech startup as their COO, I was intrigued. The opportunity to apply my tech expertise to revolutionize healthcare seemed like the perfect next chapter. Despite the raised eyebrows from my peers and the concerned looks from my family, I took the leap.

The first few months were exhilarating. The pace was breakneck, the problems complex, and the potential impact enormous. I threw myself into learning about gene editing, drug trials, and FDA regulations with the same fervor I once had for coding.

But as time went on, something felt off. The ethical dilemmas in biotech were far more complex than anything I'd faced in IT. The stakes were literally life and death. The pressure to deliver results to impatient investors clashed with the methodical pace required for sound science.

I found myself in endless meetings, drowning in unfamiliar jargon, and feeling increasingly out of my depth. The confidence I'd built over decades in tech was eroding rapidly.

Then it hit me: Sometimes it's okay to experiment with new experiences long enough to realize the experience is not worth the reward you originally imagined, and that's perfectly okay.

This wasn't about admitting defeat. It was about having the wisdom to recognize when a path isn't right, despite its initial allure. My years of experience hadn't made me immune to missteps, but they had given me the self-awareness to course-correct.

I left the biotech world with a newfound respect for the field and its challenges. More importantly, I gained a deeper appreciation for the expertise I'd cultivated in IT. I returned to tech with fresh eyes, excited to apply my broadened perspective to familiar problems.

This detour wasn't a setback - it was a valuable lesson in humility, adaptability, and the importance of aligning one's work with one's core strengths and values.

To my fellow seasoned professionals: have you ever taken a career risk that didn't pan out as expected? How did it shape your subsequent choices? Let's share our stories of reinvention and resilience."

Midjourney Generated Art (just copied the whole story into midjourney)


 

Claude.AI - Story 1 of 4 - Theme, when to walk away

Experiments with claude.ai (I stopped using chatGPT)

Prompt:

Sometimes it is okay to experiment with new experiences long enough to realise the experience is not worth the reward you originally imagined, and that’s perfectly okay

Help me write a LinkedIn post in the form of a narrative that concludes to the above quotes. The story should reflect upholding one’s principles and values but respecting a growth mindset, leading to the willingness to know when to call the experience as done.

Claude Generated Content

"When I joined the startup world, I was starry-eyed and full of ambition. The allure of potential unicorn status, late-night coding sessions fueled by energy drinks, and the promise of disrupting entire industries had me hooked.

For months, I poured my heart and soul into our product. I sacrificed weekends, relationships, and even my health. The adrenaline rush was intoxicating, and I felt like I was on the cusp of something truly revolutionary.

But as time went on, a nagging feeling grew in the pit of my stomach. The corners we were cutting to meet impossible deadlines didn't sit well with my ethics. The work-life balance I once valued seemed like a distant memory. And the product we were building? It started to feel less like a world-changer and more like just another app.

I struggled with this realization. Wasn't I supposed to be all in? Isn't this what success in tech looks like?

Then it hit me: Sometimes it's okay to experiment with new experiences long enough to realize the experience is not worth the reward you originally imagined, and that's perfectly okay.

This epiphany wasn't a failure – it was growth. I had upheld my principles, respected my personal values, and learned invaluable lessons about what truly matters to me in my career.

I left the startup with gratitude for the experience and clarity about my path forward. Now, I'm building a career that aligns with both my ambitions and my values, knowing when to dive in and when to step back.

Have you ever had a similar realization in your professional journey? I'd love to hear your stories of growth and self-discovery."

Midjourney Generated Art (just copied the whole story into midjourney) 



Wednesday, 3 July 2024

Playing with Claude - Simple Animation from 1995 project

So I wanted to test Claude out to see how it would generate a rudimentary animation that took me back to my high school days. In 1995, I coded a project in Pascal, a Trigonometry Tutor app that would teach students trig, and provide a set of exam questions. The app included drawing triangles and graphs. I imagined the opening page to consist of two humanoid figures appearing at either ends of the screen, walking towards each other, meeting, then turning around to unveil a scroll banner with the text "Trig Tutor". There would be 8-bit music accompanying the animation. At the time, I settled on static images hopping across the screen, now real walking animation. I wanted to check what AI coder could do today. Here's what it produced! "Jincosoft" is cheesy, I know. Back then, Microsoft Bill Gates was my hero, so I thought one day I'll a company called Jincosoft! Click here for source code