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I come from a fine arts background – studying and practicing in illustration and printmaking. The thing everyone tells an art student is that their degree is a waste and they will have zero job opportunities after school, so I decided early on that I would find ways to make my talents in drawing and design a way of life. Started out designing clothing brands with my friends, to making concert posters, to eventually working in marketing and brand for Atlassian, where I had the opportunity to work with really smart people and tell some inspiring stories.
Tability. It’s a focus and accoun'tability' tool for businesses looking to align on business goals and OKRs, stay focused, and measure impact in a more meaningful way.
I met my co-founder, Sten, when we both worked at Atlassian. There we saw first-hand the power of product management software like Jira and Asana to accomplish day-to-day tasks and drive productivity in a company, but also saw how it fell short when it came to high-level objectives and alignment in a company. We didn’t know what shape or form it was going to take but started talking to people and found that this was a problem that really resonated with them.
I love that we’re scrappy and willing to do the work fast. We care deeply about the problem, not the solution, and we’re driven to provide a great product and experience.
I’d either be working as a creative director somewhere or trying to open my own art and design book store.
Weekly active users.
We see sign-ups from organizations of all sizes. There’s a clear shift of OKRs being a thing for the C-Suite and tech giants like Google to being adopted by startups or even smaller internal product teams within a bigger org.
The normalizing of individual streaming services like Twitch during the past year. It’s bringing people together when we can’t be – and with many people transitioning fully to Remote Work, I’m excited to see how this will influence the new way of being connected with your remote co-workers (async meetings in Loom, collaborative editing, and open channels in Slack and Discord come to mind).
Not so much a specific technology that worries me, but just seeing the way we use everyday tech and how we’re developing as humans to rely on that tech. Relying on Maps to get around the town you live in, relying on Google to fact check everything anyone says, relying on Twitter to tell us how to feel and when to be outraged, etc. I try to be more mindful these days and try to memorize more things without tech help.
To win Startup of the Year 🤪
In all honesty, I hadn’t heard about Hackernoon before being nominated. Once I saw the platform, the community here, and our fellow Aussie startups also being nominated, it made sense to contribute and be part of this community as well.
Stay true to yourself, and you’ll be successful.
I’ve been working remotely on my own for a few years already when the pandemic happened, so the switch to being full-remote and being a real self-starter wasn’t anything new for me. As we started to grow out our team though, the challenge wasn’t so much about working together, but more about building a healthy company culture.
Vote for Tability as the startup of the year, Sydney.