Tim Fischer (@tfischer) 's Twitter Profile
Tim Fischer

@tfischer

People-watcher extraordinaire!

ID: 17391544

calendar_today14-11-2008 17:30:00

285 Tweet

147 Followers

518 Following

Sahil Bloom (@sahilbloom) 's Twitter Profile Photo

High tolerance for uncertainty is a competitive advantage. It prevents you from settling. When we fear uncertainty, we settle to escape its grasp. Tolerate uncertainty for a bit longer. Never settle for less than you deserve.

Robleh (@robjama) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Twitter could absolutely crush LinkedIn if they wanted. So much opportunity here to build a professional network that people actually want to use!

Chris Herd (@chris_herd) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The media continues to get the rise of remote work wrong Every employee knows the stories by CEO's of big companies + landlords who own offices are false I've spoken to 2,000+ remote workers in the last 12 months A few predictions on what's going to happen [ a thread ] 💻🏠🌍

Blake Burge (@blakeaburge) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It's easy to be happy, driven, and motivated when things are going well. The true test? How you handle adversity. THREAD: 8 principles to guide you when the going gets tough.

Matthew Shallenberger (@mjshally) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This whole "the NYT ruined Wordle!" thing is a great case study in confirmation bias. It also gives us some insight into human nature that helps explain how conspiracy theories work.

Brian Bourque (@bbourque) 's Twitter Profile Photo

6 years ago I joined a 20-person startup. I wanted to quit after my first week, but didn't. Now our company is worth over $1B and has 200+ employees. Here's what I've learned about succeeding at a startup:

Melissa Perri (@lissijean) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ah airport layovers, time for a thread that keeps coming up. How do I convince my executives to change/ do things I’d like them to do as good #prodmgmt. Here’s my tips. 🧵 /1

Tim Fischer (@tfischer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I just realized that the tipping point for when you’ve “made it” is when you start using the “good” scotch tape without feeling too bad.