Bobby Goodlatte (@rsg) 's Twitter Profile
Bobby Goodlatte

@rsg

Product designer & startup investor. Early design @Facebook. Angel investor @Coinbase @Linear @Expo @XMTP_ & 100+ more. Working on something new 🌻🤫

ID: 2948211

calendar_today30-03-2007 08:05:27

26,26K Tweet

76,76K Followers

2,2K Following

Emilie Choi 🛡️ (@emiliemc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

After spending decades hiring and acquiring extremely smart people, I can confidently say compensation is not their number one consideration. Top talent wants three main things: - To work with other top talent. - To take on challenges, to learn and grow. - To be excited about

Michael Brooks Jr. (@michaelbrooksjr) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Working on software can be tedious and exhausting, but knowing that we're solving real problems and hearing early feedback like this makes it all worth it again and again. We're just getting started!

Bobby Goodlatte (@rsg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Incredibly motivating to hear feedback like this from our first wave of Sunflower Alpha testers ❤️ Lots more work ahead—but I think we're onto something here! 🌻

Startup Archive (@startuparchive_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Mark Zuckerberg on how to avoid bad hires when your startup is growing quickly As Mark explains, every fast-growing startup will repeatedly face the choice: “Do I hire the person who’s in front of me now because they seem good?” or “Do I hold out to get someone who’s even

Chrisman (@chrisman) 's Twitter Profile Photo

His daughter went 46% to 100% on one section of the Classical Learning Test (an SAT replacement). Crazy because we don't even target standardized tests. We just try to make kids smarter. The tests take care of themselves.

His daughter went 46% to 100% on one section of the Classical Learning Test (an SAT replacement). 

Crazy because we don't even target standardized tests. We just try to make kids smarter. The tests take care of themselves.
Bobby Goodlatte (@rsg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Seizing the means of production” and “to each according to their need, from each according to their ability” are philosophies that have never worked once, across modern history How many times does civilization need to run these experiments until we can all agree these are