Not Boring by Packy McCormick - The Best is Still Yet to Come
Welcome to the 1,705 newly Not Boring people who have joined us since last Monday! Join 92,635 smart, curious folks by subscribing here: 🎧 To get this essay straight in your ears: listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts (shortly) Today’s Not Boring is brought to you by… Secureframe If your company’s New Year’s Resolution involves closing more enterprise sales, you need to figure out security compliance ASAP. Every large company requires that their vendors are SOC 2 or ISO 27001 compliant. The problem is, getting compliant can take months of time and engineering resources. It’s a pain, and puts startups at a disadvantage. But it doesn’t have to be. Secureframe allows companies to get SOC 2 and ISO 27001 compliant within weeks, rather than months. Its software monitors 40+ services, including AWS, GCP, and Azure, and continuously collects audit evidence, runs security awareness training, manages vendors, monitors infrastructure, and more, all automatically. Plus, the Secureframe compliance team can answer any questions you have. Secureframe customers save an average of 50% on their audit costs and hundreds of hours of their time. You’ll need to do this eventually, get ahead by scheduling a free demo now! Hi friends 👋, Happy Monday! This is the last Not Boring newsletter of 2021. I was thinking about continuing to write through the holidays, or at least stretching out and grabbing one more week, making one final push to get to 100k subscribers before year end. But as I went back and forth, Puja gave me some sage advice: “Just fucking call it, dude.” 2021 has been the most unbelievable year of my life. Dev turned into a real human. Puja and I moved back to Brooklyn. There are more than three times as many of you here as there were this time last year. I launched a venture fund and have backed over 100 companies that are building the future. I went deep, deep down the web3 rabbit hole, tried to buy the Constitution with friends, and joined a16z crypto as an advisor. I’ve made so many smart, curious internet friends. If you had told me on New Year’s Day 2021 that this would be what the year would hold, I wouldn’t have believed you. Thank you to all of you for giving me a little bit of your time, attention, trust, and thoughts in 2021. I know you’re pulled in a million different directions and that there are infinite exciting things for you to explore. It means a lot that you take the time to read, listen to, share, and engage with Not Boring. I don’t want it to end. But it’s also been the most exhausting year of my life. Between writing, investing, tweeting, and dadding, I’ve pretty much been on 24/7 since the beginning of January. I’ve written, and fully believe, that things will only continue to get crazier and faster from here. That applies globally and locally. If 2022 is going to be a wilder ride than 2021 has been, I need to get some rest. I need to recharge, reflect, read, and take a beat to plan out the year ahead. If the past year’s pace is indicative of what the future holds, pausing is going to be a crucially important skill. So it’s time to call it. Justttttt one last quick piece before we do. Let’s get to it. The Best is Still Yet to Come🎶 It’s the most funniest time of the yearrrrr 🎶 It’s that time of year when people like me fire up their laptops, open a blank Google doc, look back on everything that’s happened over the past year, and boldly extrapolate into the next. We mainly use the opportunity to pump our bags, financial or otherwise. “You know that thing that I care about / write about / invested in?” we ask. “Well, that thing is going to be even bigger and more important next year.” And we’re almost always wrong. Or at least, we’re not right enough and definitely not right precisely. Imagine confidently typing up predictions for 2020 at the end of 2019. Best case, they looked good for about two months. “We write annual prediction emails and God laughs.” I didn’t even land within an order of magnitude of my predictions for myself when I set goals in Per My Last E-mail #23 on January 1, 2020: “Get to 1,000 subscribers and build a community.” By the end of 2020, though, I had the benefit of knowing that COVID was a thing, and of spending nearly an entire year just writing, investing, and talking to smart people. Surely, my 2021 predictions were spot-on, right? Ehhhh… In The Best is Yet to Come last December, I highlighted three themes that made me bullish on the year ahead in tech:
I’m as optimistic as they come. I literally started that piece by writing: “I’ve always been an optimist. It’s how I’m wired. My brain has a very hard time visualizing the downsides, and a very easy time visualizing the upsides.” And still, somehow, I wasn’t optimistic enough. I missed web3. In 2021, crypto, NFTs, DAOs, and DeFi hyperturbosupercharged each of the themes that I thought were going to shape 2021. A year later, those crypto-less predictions seem quaint.
All to say, if I missed the biggest game changer of 2021 in my predictions last December, you shouldn’t take any of my 2022 predictions this December very seriously. So I won’t make any, other than this: If you thought that 2021 was wild, 2022 will make it look normal. Over the past year, everything in our corner of the world got bigger, faster.
The list goes on. As Josh Wolfe points out, the gap between SCI-FI and SCI-FACT keeps shrinking. This is just the beginning. 2021’s accomplishments will become 2022’s primitives, the lego blocks with which entrepreneurs build bigger and more impactful products. “Discoveries become inventions become building blocks become inventions become building blocks, ad infinitum.” That’s the nature of Composability. It’s also in composability’s nature to be unpredictable. It’s impossible to predict exactly what people are going to create with the primitives – software, hardware, and ideas – at their disposal. The distributed hive mind of millions of entrepreneurs will dream things up that no one person could. But it’s easy to predict that they’ll build increasingly useful and valuable things, solve previously unsolvable problems, and dream up solutions we didn’t even know we needed. All to say, there’s reason to be optimistic. I’ve spent the last year plus at Not Boring trying to lay out the rational case for optimism, for why, regardless of short-term volatility, things will continue to trend up from here. Optimism has been the financially dominant strategy for at least the past two decades, and I want us to sound smart, too: Now, “be more optimistic” isn’t particularly actionable advice on which to end the year. Being optimistic shouldn’t just mean sitting passively by and waiting for good things to happen. But how do you orient and act in a world that’s moving and evolving so quickly? I’ve written about Worldbuilders a lot here – people who predict something non-obvious about the way the world is moving, create a seemingly small wedge into a much larger opportunity, timestamp their vision, and then execute patiently but aggressively to make it a reality. The worldbuilders we’ve covered are people like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and the founders of unicorn startups, but I think the same thing works for regular people like us. Formulate a decade-long view of where everything is heading, where you want it to head, and what role you’re best-suited to play in making that happen. This past year was a blast. People jumped from project to project, from mint to mint, from DAO to DAO. It was a year during which experimentation was the purpose. It was a lot of fun. But, at least for me, it also meant that there was less time to think longer-term and to get more deeply involved in a few projects working towards things that will take more than a few weeks to play out. As things move faster and faster, it’s more and more important to hit pause, evaluate, and plan. Personally, I’m going to read a lot, write thoughts not meant for public consumption, put some systems in place, and try to anchor myself to a longer-term vision of where the world is heading and how I can best contribute. That will be a loose guide. When the madness starts back up in January, I’ll try to act like a Bayesian, tethered to my priors but updating my understanding and approach as I receive new information. That’s why I’m not making any annual predictions: a year is both too short and too long a time frame for me to have conviction. So I’m not setting anything in stone, but I think that having a longer-term view will help me pick and choose among the myriad paths that spring up every day. I’ll probably say “yes” to fewer things next year, but go in more deeply on those yeses. Each of your approaches will be totally different. Many of you are probably already working towards that thing you want to come true in a decade; maybe you need a little more experimentation to keep yourself fresh. Others know that you’re not doing what you want to be doing; it’s probably time to evaluate, adjust, and start taking steps towards changing that. Some, like me, are doing too many things and might benefit from a more stable north star. Whatever you do, approach all of the novelty out there with an open mind. You can be skeptical, of course, but be curiously skeptical. Don’t default to cynicism, and don’t dismiss new things out of hand. New things will seem weird at first, and then those weird things will seem normal, and other, newer things will seem weird, and on and on. At some point – it might be March 2022, December 2029, or April 2069 – everything that we’ve created and experienced in 2021 will seem quaint and antiquated. If we’re lucky, today’s most out-there ideas and technologies will be tiny building blocks in much larger structures. Of course there will be failures along the way. If there aren’t, we’re not dreaming big enough. You can choose to point to each stumble and yell, “I told you so!” or you can choose to zoom out, applaud the experimentation, and chip in where you can to make the next one better. You know which one I’m choosing. I have no idea what the next year will bring, but I know that on a long enough time horizon, we’re going to keep pushing out the Pareto Funtier, fix the planet, and make life better for as many of the eight billion of us as possible. That’s what humans do. The best is still yet to come. How did you like this week’s Not Boring? Your feedback helps me make this great. Loved | Great | Good | Meh | Bad Thanks for reading and for making this the most fun year of my life, and see you in 2022, Packy If you liked this post from Not Boring by Packy McCormick, why not share it? |
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