Trying to find the line between why and why not

Things I like to read

Added on by Frank Lee.

These are some people who I enjoy reading for professional growth. In no particular order:

Product Management: 

John Cutler

Shreyas Doshi

  • Summary: PM leader at stripe, ex google/yahoo who puts all of his content in tweetstorm lists. A little hard to get all the information organized, but provides some of the clearest organizing concepts about the PM role. 

Ryan Singer

  • Summary: Writes very abstractly in esoteric terms, which makes it sometimes hard to understand. His content, like the software he makes, is quite opinionated. Helps to keep that perspective when reading his stuff.

  • Book - https://basecamp.com/shapeup 

  • Website - https://www.feltpresence.com

Marty Cagan

  • Summary: Some call him a product management guru. His writings are geared toward cultivating a very specific kind of product manager ideal. The concepts are useful regardless of how applicable they are to a given role or set of responsibilities. 

  • Website: https://svpg.com/articles/ 

Tech, Strategy, Finance

Ben Thompson

  • Summary - Writes about technology, strategy, and media. A lot of his content is about large tech companies and aggregation theory. I’ve followed him for years and is the only paid subscription I have right now. He was one of the first of unique-breed of paid tech newsletters.

  • Website - https://stratechery.com 

  • Twitter - https://twitter.com/benthompson 

Brian Hobart

  • Summary: Finance and Technology. I try to read his free weekly content but haven’t tried his paid content yet. If I weren’t already paying for stratechery, this is the newsletter I’d most likely pay for because it’s the most uniquely deep and broad. 

  • Substack: https://diff.substack.com 

Finance:

Matt Levine

Software and People

Ruth Malan

Nick Tune

Business

Michael Porter

General Thinking

Shane Parish

  • Summary: Has re-discovered mental models from Charlie Munger and made a brand out of it.

  • Blog: https://fs.blog/blog/ 

Josh Kaufman