Hustle Hard Interview Project: Daniel Ha

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To celebrate my 32nd birthday, I started the Hustle Hard Interview Project. Each month for the next year, I’ll be interviewing one Hustler who embodies a skill or a quality I admire. I hope to uncover some gems that bring me one step closer to being a fully-formed adult.

#5: FOCUS

I went to San Francisco to talk with Daniel Ha, co-founder of Disqus, the online discussion and commenting platform that I use on this blog. He ended up giving me ADVICE THAT WAS SO MONEY, it has profoundly re-shaped the way I approach my goals and impacted how I spend my time. No joke. This 26-year-old dude schooled me. And changed my life. He didn’t pay me to say that. Unless you count a bottle of water as payment. Then he totally paid me.

EJL: I started using Disqus shortly after I started blogging, so I can’t say that I was making an informed choice, but I’m relieved and happy I chose Disqus. Y’all have been amazingly responsive and helpful each time I had a question or an issue. It’s made me wonder Who are you people? 

DH: My longtime friend, Jason Yan, and I started Disqus our junior year in college. We came up with the name Disqus first, and then started to build a concept to service online communities. These communities were part of the original promise of the internet. We wanted to help shape what the future of internet conversation was going to look like.

EJL: Settle something for me. It’s pronounced “discuss,” right?

DH: Right. It doesn’t bother me when people mispronounce it. We’re probably the ones saying it wrong. But that doesn’t bother me either.

EJL: You and Jason dropped out of school to focus on Disqus. At 21, I can’t imagine that you were taken seriously by everyone. How did you not let that affect your hustle?

DH: I was around a lot of people who were like-minded. The “young and inexperienced” excuse didn’t work because a lot of folks were in the same place and still went on to do great things. I’ve held on to some advice that Alexis [Ohanian], one of the founders of Reddit, gave me early on. Even if other startups have better resources or smarter teams, the one thing I can control is how hard I work. I can just want it more. I shouldn’t let the fact that someone else worked harder be the reason I didn’t succeed.

EJL: Since 2007, you and your team have built up Disqus as a network that reaches over 700 million unique visitors and sees almost 5 billion pageviews each month. CNN, NPR, and The Atlantic are just a few of the company’s major clients. Talk about big things poppin’. How did Disqus grow so quickly?

DH: We took a scrappy hustler attitude with Disqus. Anything we didn’t have or we didn’t know, we just applied pure unadulterated hustle to it. We talked to people one at a time until we got something going. Everyone here has different personalities, but we all hold the same values. I don’t think about success as a beginning, middle, and end. It’s about pushing hard and pushing through.

EJL: How do you manage to stay so focused while responding to client needs and connecting with the people in your personal life.

DH: When I’m working, I make sure that I’m doing things of value. Adding worth instead of just feeling busy.

Sometimes, when you think you’re hustling, you’re spending a lot of time on tasks with depreciated return. I can spend 10-12 hours a day doing something, but at the end of it, do I know what I just did?

It’s important to identify what you really want to do. Don’t work off of a To Do List. Work instead off a Tactical Requirements List. If, at the end of the week, you don’t finish one or two main goals while you did 40 or 50 other things, then you weren’t really successful. Maybe you slowed someone else down. Maybe now, you have to find a different way to do your task.

You can spend the bulk of your time on trivial minutiae, but it’s really only a small handful of things that matter.

Whatever trajectory you’re on, you know it’s important when not doing those certain tasks forces the next week to be a completely different week. Always look at the big picture.

*Daniel’s last answer ranks among some of the best life and focus advice I’ve ever gotten. Since this interview, I have been mindful about just “keeping busy,” and making sure that my time is well-spent on the people and the goals I believe are important.

Wallflower Giveaway

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I was thrilled when Yury, one of the founders of Wallflower offered to send over a 5 FT TALL MAGENTA DAHLIA (valued at $135 each) for a giveaway. So when I opened the tube from Wallflower and found not just one but FOUR magenta dahlias, I was beyond stoked. I can’t wait to post pictures on Instagram (username: flourishinprogress) of the toast Yury also sent, which I plan to display in our dining room.

Four lucky winners will each receive ONE magenta dahlia.

TO ENTER: Leave a comment below with your best tips for productivity and ways you stay focused. Only comments left on THIS BLOG POST qualify for the giveaway. I’ll announce the winners next Monday.

Let’s be friends on the Flourish in Progress Facebook page and on Twitter (@ElizabethJLiu). You know, in case you feel like taking a break from all of that productivity.

 

Hustle Hard Interview Project: Vanessa Selbst

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To celebrate my 32nd birthday, I started the Hustle Hard Interview Project. Each month for the next year, I’ll be interviewing one Hustler who embodies a skill or a quality I admire. I hope to uncover some gems that bring me one step closer to being a fully-formed adult.

#4: FEARLESSNESS

I dare you to sit down to lunch with professional poker player, Vanessa Selbst, and then write about her without including the overused expression “one of the most fascinating people I have ever met.” I tried it myself, but the best variation I came up with was “one of the realest people I have ever met.” So you know what? Overused or not, I don’t care: Vanessa is one of the most fascinating people I have ever met.

I remind my 13-year-old daughter, Cal, to live fearlessly and to use her brain for good and not just for easy. To provide a strong voice for those who aren’t in a position to help themselves. And that being brave means living in a way that is honest and bold. Vanessa is the embodiment of these reminders.

At the age of 28, Vanessa is regarded as one of the best poker players in the world with nearly $5M in live tournament earnings (which doesn’t even include her online poker success). That alone is impressive, but add to that an undergraduate education from M.I.T. and Yale. Top it off with a law degree she earned from Yale in January 2012. The biggest accomplishment of my 20’s was making it through with all of my limbs intact and a mostly-functional liver.

EJL: It’s thrilling to know women who are unafraid to be themselves. Have you always been this fearless?

VS: Ever since I came out as a senior in high school, I realized people couldn’t make fun of me for who I was anymore because I owned it. If people didn’t like the fact that I was a lesbian, something wasn’t wrong with me, something was wrong with them. As an adult, I’m working on being even more honest with who I am. I’ve come a long way in becoming a person that I like more just by being able to admit my own faults. That’s made me more confident. How could I be comfortable being anyone else?

EJL: How has your family influenced your fearless attitude?

VS: I’m lucky enough to be surrounded by a family who is very supportive. It took me a while to break out of the “go to this school, get that job” treadmill. I was in the Fulbright Program, worked at McKinsey for a while, and then decided I wanted to pursue poker professionally. I don’t know that I could have done it without the support of my mom and my friends. My whole community has been really supportive.

EJL: You were already a successful poker player when you decided to go to law school. What made you decide to back to school?

VS: Even as an upper middle class white woman, I’ve been in situations where I’ve felt disempowered while trying to assert my rights. There are people who are harassed on a daily basis with no recourse. My law degree gives me the framework to address police misconduct and government abuse of authority, and to fight for racial justice and economic equality.

EJL: This makes me think of The Wire.

VS: As hyperrealistic as it is, when people watch The Wire, they still think they are just watching a show. I don’t know if they’re able to disconnect and ignore the references or get insight that the show is what it’s really like for some people.

EJL: I’m amazed that you were able to devote your time to two really big pursuits simultaneously. In 2010, you had the best year of your poker career, and because of your success in 2011, it was the second consecutive year you had over $1M in tournament winnings. I’m still working on patting my head and rubbing my stomach at the same time.

VS: I have a lot of things that I care about, and I couldn’t imagine being one-dimensional. I missed poker so much when I tried to take a break. I’m so lucky that I can do what I love.

EJL: It’s so lucky that you’re good at what you love.

VS: Social intuition helps a lot with poker. You get a sense of what other people are capable of, and I try to understand players to know their level of thought.

EJL: What’s the best advice you’ve ever been given, personal or professional?

VS: Always consider all your options. Think outside the box. Don’t be afraid to look stupid. I may have the award for looking stupid the most times on television, but I’m unafraid to make crazy plays. Put yourself in other people’s shoes. I used to be a lot more argumentative. Now, even when I disagree with people, I try to think about their motivations.

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What a year it’s been. Looking back, I realized that I let fear and feelings of inadequacy control what I did and how I did it. Every year, I choose a word or phrase as a theme. For 2013, it’s:

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What would be your word or phrase for the New Year?

Connect on the Flourish in Progress Facebook page, on Instagram (username: flourishinprogress), and on Twitter (@ElizabethJLiu) for (t)hug life thoughts, photos of Poor Life Decisions, and other random shit.

Last week’s giveaway winner: Dennis (you have the number 81 in your email). Please email me at elizabeth at flourishinprogress dot com.

image of Vanessa Selbst: Micol Cortese