I'm on a plane from Newark to Seattle. It's late at night, and the first hour was spent on the ground waiting for low CIGS (low ceilings of clouds & rain) to clear. So, while I still have another 4.5 hours in front of me, I'm just grateful to be in the air.
The last week was a whirlwind – although that's nothing new. For the last 4 years, the acceleration brought about by my job feels as though it has no end. I'll find myself getting 6 hours of sleep a night (sometimes less), answering 150 emails a day and barely noticing that I'm in a different city every other week. It's a good thing. It feels almost comfortable. Or, maybe, more accurately, it feels good to be uncomfortable – to be challenged.
The whirlwind started on Sunday, when Mystery Guest dropped me off at the airport. I have a consistent pattern when it comes to business travel. I'm almost always making presentations, and since I despise presenting material I've already used before, I force myself to make new slides, new “decks” (apparently this is what important business people like me call Powerpoint files) for every speech. It's probably not the most practical thing, but I like to think that I'm not just presenting for the audience, I'm doing it for myself, too. If I get bored with my material, how can I be excited to share it with them?
I board the plane early and read until we're in the air and “approved” to use laptops. The book is pretty awful, although I don't know that yet. I'm still in the honeymoon phase of it, when the writer was putting forth a real effort. But, at 20 minutes into the flight, I grab my Dell and start turning the outlines I've emailed to Karen into presentations. I can't grab screenshots from the web, which are an essential, but I can figure out what I need on each slide, and that will save me a lot of time later on. I also have my collection of vector illustrations in Flash, including Googlebot, Yahoo! monster and crudely traced representations of people to combine with arrows and thought bubbles. These I can do on the plane.
In 1997, when I started working on the web professionally (sort of), I fell in love with Flash – the animation, the sound, the unbridled, free-of-tables formatting made me a fan. For almost 4 years, I worked in Flash – building ever more complex animations and designs. Then, one day, I read Don't Make Me Think, Steve Krug's masterpiece on web usability. I haven't built a Flash website since, and the world is probably better off for it. My artistic ability suffers from a lack of... let's say talent.
But Flash has served me well – the palette tools and my familiarity with the layers and systems for creating basic designs means that I can now use it as a Photoshop substitute, never having had the patience to learn that program.
Later in the week, as I'm giving my hour-long session on the Essentials of Social Media Marketing, I'll marvel at how I raced through 113 slides in 50 minutes. The Guy Kawasaki, 10-20-30 philosophy just doesn't work for me. Luckily, the audience seems to like it, too. Karen hasn't sent me my feedback scores yet, but based on the in-person chats I've had with attendees, it went pretty well. I guessed right that Danny's new SMX Social conference would draw a savvy crowd, so even though my job was to present an introduction to the material, I raced through it, tried to present it in an entertaining way, and, hopefully, educated the stragglers of the group while I was at it.
After the session is over, I get to watch my co-worker Rebecca give her presentation on Linkbait. When I started speaking at search marketing conferences, I was 25 years old, and one of the youngest people in attendance, nevermind on stage. Rebecca's in a similar spot, although the crowd at SMX, both on and off the podium has plenty of early-twenties professionals. I think it's her sarcasm and her fearlessness to reference off-color and pop culture influences that helps her connect with the crowd. She's young, but she's capable, and she's got a few years of experience and a number of noteworthy success stories under her belt. I wish she could be more confident sometimes, but once she settles into the role, she performs well, and I think I'm the only one who notices that her voice is just a little bit off. Besides which, at her age, I was still designing websites in Flash for clients who paid $1,000 for a month of work.
Personally, I feel like I've always been too young. At five years old, I felt a little too young to travel across the country by myself on a plane (ironically enough, taking the same route I'm taking now). At 12, I skipped a grade in school and felt too young to be with the older kids. The next year, I'd repeat the grade at a new school to help make up for it. At 18, I lived in Prague for 4 months during my freshman year at UW. I was lonely and confused and awkward, but at least I picked up some Czech and developed a lifelong love for Pilsner Urquell (which thankfully found its way to US supermarket shelves just a couple years later). At 25, standing in front of an audience of 300+ in San Jose, I felt pretty good about my presentation on search algorithms until the first person from the audience came up after the session and asked how old I was.
Rebecca's wrapped up and I'm at lunch with Michael Gray. I love the way he talks – his cadence and thick Long Island accent are a prefect match for the content of his rants against Google's latest policy. I hate to run, but I have to meet with a client all afternoon. Thus, it's onto the 1 train to Chambers street, where, with the help of a brusque policeman, I find the 7 World Trade Center building, get a badge from security, and ride elevator bank D up some 3 dozen stories. I'm meeting with the publishers of Inc & FastCompany to talk about something new they've got cooking up, but when I arrive, all I can do is stare at the view.
Far below, cranes and bulldozers are clearing earth, moving steel and preparing the ground for the site of what will be the tallest building in New York. Far off in the distance, my friend Kate points out the Tapanzee bridge. She tells me that as they tear down the floors of the adjacent, asbestos-afflicted building, the view becomes ever more magnificent. There's undoubtedly sadness here, but there's also the promise of something new, something incredible, something that can serve as a symbol of renewal and triumph over adversity. I think someone far wiser than me once said that America is both cursed and blessed by its short memory. I can't think of a more appropriate symbol of that sentiment that what I'm looking at now.
Three hours later, I'm stepping off the 1 train and hiking back to the hotel. After a couple hours on email, I'll join some friends for dinner, where we'll bump into Garret Camp, the founder of StumbleUpon. Together, we're amicably kidnapped and carted in a cheap limousine (they're about the same price as a cab when you have this many people) to midtown, where we smoke cigars in a bar that almost throws us out for being underdressed (I'm in a suitcoat and jeans).
It's after midnight when I get back to the hotel, and outside I meet up with Guillaume – my great friend from Montreal. I can tell he's upset that we haven't seen much of each other this trip (and probably won't since he's going back to Quebec the next day). Guilt is a constant at events like this – and I'm more sensitive to it than most. After all, it was only a couple years ago that I dined by myself most nights at a conference, hung out alone in the bars and hoped that someone I'd recognize would come along and chat. When I'd make a friend, I'd feel that same pang of envy when I'd see them coming back from a late night on the town with a crowd of compatriots. Luckily, Guillaume's surrounded by people, so I feel a bit better when I beg forgiveness and ride the elevator up to my room.
Sleep is a constant problem for me. Unlike Danny Sullivan, I can't stay out until 3am, then arrive bright eyed and bushy tailed the next morning at 8. My sleep requirements have always been high, and without 7 hours, I start to look and feel like some sort of SEO zombie, cursed to optimize SERPs and feed on brains. I'm constantly waging a battle against the blog – where I know that if I don't produce something new and something worth reading every night, I'll lose readers.
It's a fact. Looking at our visit and subscription stats, you can see the pattern clear as day. If, on a given Monday-Friday morning, nothing new has come out on SEOmoz, our feed subscribers go down some fractional amount, our daily visit numbers drop 15-25% and we have fewer signups for accounts and fewer premium membership signups. Conversely, when I put something truly excellent on the blog, the positive results are equally visible. Visits are up, links are up, premium signups are up and all is right in the world.
But, the toll is heavy. Most nights I'm home in Seattle, I start formulating the blog post I want to write on my walk home from work. It usually takes me about 20 minutes to traverse the 1.1 miles from my apartment to the office – a saving grace, since I almost never go to the gym or use the elliptical machine I bought last December. From 6-10:30pm, I play husband (even though technically I won't become one until next summer). Mystery Guest works out, or does laundry or watches TV (when she's had a really tough day) and I cook. I'm by no means a gourmet, but I'm competent about 70% of the time, and I push myself to try new things, work with good ingredients and generally get better at preparing food. By 11pm, though, it's back to the computer and onto the blog (once I wrap up another 40 emails). If I'm lucky I'll spit out something in an hour, and can go to sleep by 12:30am. If I'm stumped, or take on an overly ambitious post, I'll be up until 2am or later.
This happens tonight in New York. I've just finished the post on the Visuals of the Search Results, but it's 2am and I have to be up at 7:30 tomorrow. Morning comes and sure enough, my eyes are dry & red – probably exacerbated by the cigar I had last night. There's no time to waste, but time gets wasted anyway as I discover my room's iron is out of order and have to call down for a new one so I can get my shirt done in time to leave. I wanted to take the subway, but am forced by tardiness to hail a cab. I'm meeting with the NY Jets organization on 57th street to talk about their search strategy. Thankfully, the meeting is great, mostly due to the incredibly friendly and receptive people I'm meeting. After the meeting ends, I whiz back to the conference, just in time to grab a hot dog from a street vendor and make it my talk on Micro Communities.
I'm on the panel with Liana Evans, and in the past, we've had our differences. However, a week before the show and after a rather painful blog post, we shared a few emails and a phone call. Talking to Liana, I realize that she's got some very valid points, and that I owe her a serious apology. She's more gracious than I could hope for, and by the time we see each other in New York, we break out in smiles and hugs. As much as I love the Internet as a medium, there's no doubt that the lack of human contact can make for bad situations sometimes. It's something I'll have to work on – especially since I'm terrible at not taking things personally.
Micro Communities is a hit. From all the notes I can see the audience taking, I know that there's a lot of new information. Liana follows up my broad overview with a specific example of how she used social media marketing to micro communities and achieved great success for a client in a very competitive industry. It's the perfect counterpoint, and the audience is overrun with questions, so much so that Danny has to cut us off with a half dozen hands in the air. After the session ends, Liana and I field individual questions for the full 15 minutes. I'm thrilled when I can refer a gentlemen seeking services to Liana's company – KeyRelevance – which has been on our Recommended List since its inception.
I want to stay and see the other panels, especially the advice from Jon Hochman on Wikipedia, but I've got a prior commitment. I walk down to SoHo – about 20 blocks and buy some presents to bring home to Mystery Guest. After so many trips to New York, I'm a seasoned veteran, and after three short stops, I catch the subway up to the meat-packing district and walk back to the conference, where I'm just in time to hear the last session of the day wrap up.
I spend some time chatting with Andy Greenberg from Forbes, whose demeanor is the complete opposite of every other NY reporter I've ever met. He's a pleasure to talk to – warm, engaging, utterly fascinated by social media & SEO and genuinely curious. He mentions that an article on using Digg to reach Google is almost certainly part of his agenda for the week and sure enough, 2 days later, there it is.
I don't know that I've ever handled public relations and press relations properly. Every time I talk to someone in PR, they always ask about our agency and are shocked to hear that we've never engaged one. In deeper conversations, I've heard tell that PR folks can help turn a short piece into a long piece (with a photo), turn a piece of advice into a sure mention in a story and even pitch the mainstream media to help attract coverage. It's something I need to look into, as press is something we'll need if we want to reach our goals for expansion. We've been lucky so far, but it would probably be hypocritical to think that we can manage PR ourselves as well as we could with a talented agency or even a consultant. After all, what is SEO if not public relations for the web?
With the conference over, I hop in a cab with my luggage and head for Museum Mile. In rush hour traffic, it's a 50 minute trip and I arrive at 92nd and 5th at 6:40, 10 minutes late for the lecture I'm attending with my grandparents. Luckily, it turns out to be the best part of the day, and maybe my favorite part of the trip. Camille Pissarro's great-grandson is speaking about the famous impressionist painter and his relationship with a contemporary and peer, Paul Cezanne.
I love this. I grew up in Seattle, but would spend at least 2-3 weeks every year in New Jersey with my grandparents, and we'd frequently drive into the city to visit museums and attend plays. My family was never wealthy, but two seniors and a student (especially with my grandmother's NYTimes subscriber's card discount) was a perfect way to spend an inexpensive day in New York. Museums are great equalizers – school kids from Harlem and jewelry-clad Upper East Siders co-mingle brazenly, appreciating beauty in their own personal ways. There were certainly ages where I didn't appreciate it, but even just out of high school, I can recall loving museums, galleries and exhibitions wherever I traveled. Seattle's own dismal fine arts scene only heightened the experience.
Pissarro was born to Sephardic Jews on the Caribbean island of St. Thomas (where I believe SEOmoz's own Jane Copland still holds several swimming titles) and emigrated to France at a young age, but retained his Danish citizenship (as St. Thomas was a colony of Denmark). Our lecturer regales us with a passionate, and clearly personal, examination of how the artist's life influenced his art and its shocking break from the standards of the age. An hour and a half flies by, and I find myself wishing he had more slides to show and more stories to tell. As we leave, my grandfather, SEOmoz's Si Fishkin, fills me in on the details of the Dreyfus case (which Pissarro's great grandson mentioned but did not elaborate on), an infamous tale of antisemitism and corruption late in the artist's life.
The next night, we'll see Henry VI in a playhouse at Drew University in NJ, and despite the 3 hours of patricide, fratricide and homicide, love every minute.
Thus ends a week in New York. I'm only 100 emails behind and I don't have to blog tonight. Next week I've got 3 phone calls, a couple lunch meetings and a video-over-Skype interview. We've got 2 clients who need site review reports, a new contract to get out to the Jets and 3 presentations to build for SMX Stockholm. That, and we're hiring 3 new positions. To quote Rick Moranis; “No, no, no. Light speed is too slow.”
For so many reasons, I think this is the best thing you've ever written. Thanks for sharing, Rand.
I agree, it is one of the most revealing posts into the mind of Rand. It was honest and almost poetic.The real SEO experts are the ones who realize the business is less about cracking algorithms and more about people. The beauty of the internet is it is not limited to a series of ones and zeros like a desktop application. It is made up of real people and reflects the subtle nuances of real human beings.Thanks Rand for this great addition!
It's really remarkable. There's a reason you're one of not only the top minds in the industry, but one of the top people, too, and this post encompasases all of it.
You're far too kind, Matt (you too Danny & David and everyone else). I a thrilled that you liked the post. I was more than a bit worried that it would be seen as "off-topic" and not providing any specific "SEO" advice.
Maybe I'll try to do some more of this in the future.
Rand - now you must go as rick moranis for halloween. I can see it now: I am the Gate Keeper, I am the Keyword Master...
By far rick moranis's best movie, and one of the top 25 80's movies
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GttxgJ9zvXM
A day-in-the-life-of writing (or "week" in this case) is never off-topic, especially from the perspective of an search marketer in the ever changing search-scape. :)
That really was a brilliant post. My initial thought was "How the hell did this guy find the time to write this?" A bit of marvel - the way I used to marvel about Stephen King seemingly cranking out a 1,500 page book every week - with QUALITY no less.
I'm a NY'er, so I laughed about the under-dressed comment.
I travel the world, so I related to the not realizing what city you're in comment. I remember waking up one morning thinking I was in Tokyo and when I stepped out on my veranda I was staring at the Forbidden City (from the Grand Hotel Beijing). I thought - "How the hell did that get there?" - and then I laughed at how funny I thought I was.
Seriously though - I'm new to the full-time internet marketing / SEO/SEM thing and I love it - can't get enough. The pace is frighteningly fast and the content to learn - amazingly abundant. It was refreshing to see - based on reading about a week of Rand, that perhaps my activities are somewhat consistent with a guy that's kicking ass - and that's encouraging.
Thanks Rand - for a generous post.
I have to agree here too. It is nice to hear about the human side of your job and in many ways just open yourself up to the community and be "real" (not that you wern't before). A nice read on the Monday morning, thanks Rand.
I was stunned to see this post, Rand. I feel the same as Matt. This post stands out, to me, as the best I've seen from you. It's the first time I could clearly feel your heart and connect to you as a real person, rather than the other roles you're obligated to take on for SEOMoz.
Epic.
A blog entry that reads like a Bildungsroman.
Work, play. Child, adult. Challenges and growth.
It's no wonder that some SEOmoz readers can 'connect' with Rand without ever meeting him in person (like me, at least up until SES SJ).
That is quite a lifestyle, Rand. I don't know how you cope with the lack of sleep (even though I know Danny et al. manage on less). I am a sleep-junkie and become effectively useless without 7-8 hours (obviously, I can go a few days, but very quickly it catches up with me).
I'll echo what was said above though - I love this kind of post - behind the scenes is interesting.
Another thing I find interesting is that you wrote the post on a plane - I often write on the tube and find the lack of connectivity results in a completely different style of writing. Much more introspective and thoughtful - probably because you can't browse while writing it!
I remember saying to Rebecca when I first met up with her in London about how much I wanted to run a business like yours (but that I didn't fancy your travelling lifestyle). That's still true - I love the sound of a lot of what you do, but I am happiest only travelling occasionally. I like being at home.
On a personal level, I also found the description of your home life interesting as I typically get home and start cooking as well :) - I like mundane cooking and cooking for dinner parties. I read somewhere that young people running their own businesses were atypically likely to seek stability in their home lives - perhaps as a reaction to the unpredictability in their professional lives. Interesting.
Thanks for sharing.
I butt heads with Rand fairly regularly (someone has to pick up where Inman left off), but I really do admire him. It amazes me how he's able to juggle the demands of working, traveling, speaking, maintaining a healthy relationship with Geraldine, and being available to his employees. He's a good role model, and it's kind of funny but his praise means more to me than anyone else's in this industry.
I can relate to the need-to-sleep thing. Heck, it's 3 a.m. here and I'm still not done... and will be up again at about 8 a.m. or so.
I dunno how Danny Sullivan does the "bed at 3, up at 7" thing. Maybe there are identical-twin Danny Sullivans and they do a 12-hour shift each?
There are a few Danny-bots, one is based on the west coast, one is east coast, while the real one lives in England. True story, I read it on Sphinn.
Nicely done. I recognized a hint of Ayn Rand's Fountain Head in there. It's amazing what happens to us (permanently online people) when we're cut off by 30,000 feet of insulation. This temporary disconnection reminds us that reflection is possible. Maybe your next challenge is to achieve balance? I'm sure mystery guest would appreciate that.
P.S. Great presentation(s) btw. I really liked the circular, community, network, graphic thing you showed during the mirco communities. What can I say...I like pictures.
SEM Poetry...so lovely in it's introspect...
Great stuff Rand
After spending a couple years revamping an offline marketing department, its amazing what you have built in a few years. I can remember when seomoz was a cool looking new site with a couple of tools. Did you think you'd be drafting contracts for the NY Jets?
This business is in warp speed, especially with the requirements most have to their blog. Great stuff as always.
I can relate to pilsner urquell, one of finest made.
Rand, this is quite honestly the most powerful post I've seen from you.
Having met you the first time at SMX last week, this play by play recap was special for me. I'm sure I was just another face in the crowd, but I was also in the same boat as you describe here...
"After all, it was only a couple years ago that I dined by myself most nights at a conference, hung out alone in the bars and hoped that someone I'd recognize would come along and chat."
Admittedly, Matt McGee, Li Evans, Kim Berg and others certainly helped me to enjoy myself -- all opening themselves up for me on day one of the conference.
I was hanging out front of Affinia when you came back from the cigar bar and we chatted things up briefly with Chris, Cameron, Avi and others. While they were trying to find a place to head out to, my live blogging of SMX forced me to my room to rest as it did you.
All of that is irrelevant of course. The point I'm trying to make here is that as a complete rookie to the entire atmosphere, you were as genuine to meet in person as you are when you write here on the blog.
Matt McGee and I shared many great conversations last week. The most memorable though was about you while we grabbed some authentic pizza Wednesday night before the drive home.
Keep up the great work, and to use a cliche appropriately -- keep it real.
I enjoyed reading your week in review Rand. Sounds like a crazy week man. Sorry to hear about the airport delays, I hate that. So, how did the presentations go for you and Rebecca? Bet you also got some good interviews to post later on. Well, can't wait for this weeks lineup of posts, get some sleep so you can serve up some good non-SEO zombie posts!
What an exciting life. Crazy, sure but exciting. You are doing something you love, able to interact with people that you respect and enjoy, and able to lead others (Rebecca) to similiar successes.
I'm one of the few that can live for months on end with only 6 hours of sleep, can go for a few days with only 4 hours, and about once every couple of months can survive without any sleep for 36 hours or so. It's weird. I chalk it up to having a girlfriend in high school that wasn't allowed to date (strict Mormon family) so I'd sneak her out of her house at midnight and not get her back home until 4am--yes, we behaved. ;-) It came in handy though in college and when I had that crazy idea to start LyricVault--which hasn't been touched in over a year now. :(
I hear ya on the being too young thing too. I started watching my little sister from 3pm to 6pm everynight when I was in 2nd grade. Helped to support my parents by the time I was 15 years old. Got married at 20 years old.
I really enjoy your blog. The illustrations are what I live for though. Googlebot kicks serious ass. Link juice flow illustrations I laughed out loud (literally). Even if it is exhausting, keep up the great work because there are people that are appreciating it; I am one of them.
David Payne
Matt's right...sometimes when you lose the structure and just go freestyle, you make real art...you certainly did that here.
That's a very busy life. Why do you do all this, Rand?
Have you ever stopped for a few minutes and just analyzed the internal, invisible drives that make you do all this?
Isn't the internet all about freedom?
Or is this some American mentality that I cannot grasp as a European? Meaning, you are never good enough and you have to keep trying and competing with everyone.
Because he loves it. He has to.
It's what makes him great.
Fair question, but tough to answer in the blog comments. Maybe I'll try to tackle this one in a future post.
Whew! I'm tired just reading that. :)
To hell with the signal, it's the noise I love! I love you man, .....er did I say that out loud?
Fantastic post, Rand.
Yep, when my parents and I lived in the Virgin Islands (St. Croix, specifically) I represented the US Virgin Islands at the Caribbean Island swimming championships and broke the Caribbean 200m breststroke recrod. I don't know if I'll ever return to that place - it's not quite the paradise your tourist brochures would have you think :) My mother might say otherwise, but I believe that living there was an interesting and important experience. The Wild West may be a myth, but living in the Caribbean is comparable.
Have you been reading Emerson or Thoreau recently? This was very transcendental. Something I would like to see more of in this industry for sure.
This was pure. You weren't weighing in your opinion, defending a position, or sharing your vast knowledge and experience. Instead, it felt that you were truly sincere in your observations and feelings and were truly presenting this in a first person point-of-view without any bias.
Thank you for taking the leap and sharing with the community!
Rand - think you're busy now? Wait until you have kids! Take the amount of free time you've got, now halve it. Now halve it again. And divide by 8. That's the approximate amount of time you'll get to yourself every day starting the minute they're born. Seriously! Enjoyed the diary entry - traditional blogging at it's finest.
So accurate its scary!
Of course, you probably scared off any chances from seeing any Jr. Mozzers running around that office anytime soon. ;)
Oh I hope not! Having a child was the best thing I've ever done in my life. Providing for your child is what makes all the hours of hard work worthwhile, IMO.
:D
Yes, true. The time spent is absolutely worth it!
I have two kids, a 5 y/o boy and a 5 month old daughter. I love whenever my son says "watch me Dad" and shows me the latest trick he learned, whether it be on his bike, skateboard, or X-box. And my daughter just started crawling on Monday. She's so proud of herself, and she wins me over every time with her big gummy grin!
When you have kids, time becomes a commodity! Mostly because you want more time with your kids! :)
What a great post, definitely a pick me up on a lousy Monday morning! Next time you're in town you'll have to come to a Jets game.
It's nice to hear a little bit about what's really going on when you're off presenting amazing material at these conferences.
And you are an amazing cook Rand.
It's too bad that posts like that will likely disappear when next year at this time (I hear), high speed internet at 30,000 feet is a normal and common feature of airlines.
Hey rand do you get Wi-Fi on the plane? Now a days we need to be always connected, when we get a comment to our forum or blog or an email to our company we need to reply right away, or we lose a sale.
Is is a direct sale or indirect as with Google or Blogger, the reply needs to be right there and right now, or things may turn negative really quickly and be sphined out of proportion very quickly and the cost of fixing it will be unberable.
We are at the lightning speed of communication. I have 100 mb Fiber optic connection and I am armed to respond, and when I am out on the road I Wi-Fi it, but some may need a mobile data card to be on top!
This is awesome. I've always wondered what a day in the life of Rand looks like - and wow. Oldie but goodie!
Excellent reading. Did not realize that Pissarro was born on a Caribbean island. Your post shares a much lighter side that is satisfying..
When I emailed you a few days ago I didn't realize just how busy you were. Of course, I assumed you were busy, but man I underestimated the demands put on you.
Congrats man for keeping it all together! Do you ever feel like you need a little Rand time - just to veg out and relax?
By the way, thanks for responding to my emails so quickly even amongst the world of organized chaos that you live in.
I used to blog like this, and I think I could take an educated guess at it's endearing dual purpose, but eventually it caused an unexpected result: people that I hadn't contacted face-to-face (or even over the phone) in quite a while would read my journal and be content with the update or talk to me in reference to my life in print, skipping the over that shared life--personal phone calls, actually spending time with somone--that was missed. Eventually it left me feeling a little alienated about engaging via proxy. I don't know, has anyone else experienced this?
Glad to see you were able to see so many friend. It's amazing how much a few minutes can end up meaning.
There are 2 or 3 paragraphs in there which could be prologue to a novel. Very nicely done.
Thanks for sharing this information.
It's excellent posts like this one that makes me read every posts on the SEOmoz website. So far, I have never been disappointed!
I read the Forbes article before you had time to post this. I'm going to start trading GOOG stock options and others, so since you're not really too busy could you post insider info a bit faster?!? j/k Thanks for the tireless content development.
Awesome post. I really enjoyed the glimpse into your life. If you are using Flash for simple 2D vector drawing, you might want to check out Fireworks. It has an extremely similar interface but might be even quicker and snapper. You'll feel right at home.
This was a great post that I thoroughly enjoyed reading.
I agree with Matt. One of the best things about you Rand is that you 'take things personally.' I know how you feel, because that's the way I am too. But you know, your ability to share is what makes you so great at what you do. Look at any successful high-profile person and you'll see someone who knows how to share--experiences, thoughts and feelings. It's what makes you approachable, and that's what makes people feel comfortable doing business with you. Go Rand!
Excellent post Rand.
Question for you - how long did that post take to write?
wow, really nice article...enjoyed reading it from the beggining to the end...thats some hell of a week :D
take a rest Rand, you deserved it ;)
Fine prose, Rand. An intriguing and entertaining read. Well done.
Rand,
YoU are a machine !!!!
You never stop,
Great post !
I very much enjoyed your post. I think that the best bloggers combine their personal life with their professional, and inject those into their writing. Although the post was quite lengthy :), I don't think I have enjoyed reading a blog in quite some time as much as I enjoyed that.
You should recap all of your many conferences & travels in story mode like that. :)
I've been a bit busy of late and have fallen a bit behind on some of your posts, but you guys put out content truly worth taking the time to read.
thanks for that.
I found your blog through cre8asiteforums. (They thanked you for listing them in your top 5 sites.) Subsequently, this was the first full post I read and I am glad for it. Enjoyable insight into the day and life of the blogger :) Prompted me to subscribe.
Thanks for the lengthy write up.
Good luck for the uber light speed week ahead.
Sascha
Once I heard Bill Gates saying of all things he is most interested in (for the purpose of getting things done) is having one extra hour in the day (25 hour day). That is a good thought.
Quality post especially while stuck in an aluminum tube.
Thanks for the insight and sharing. I too have to admit that I truly enjoyed this little tour.
We get so caught up in algo's, rankings, optimization... all the technical stuff, that it becomes easy to forget that working in this industry also requires a unique way of processing and managing it all-- juggling reading blogs and other sites, constant self-education, with our own writing and the actual work that comes with it-- and then juggling whatever time is left for...... oh yeah, life.
So it is always great to get a glimpes into how others in the field juggle and manage everything. Though I can't remember the last time I got 7 hours of sleep!
Great Post!!! I enjoyed how you were open to connecting with us in a non-seo way. Put his post in the top 10. While not directly related to any one SEO topic I actually picked up a couple ideas which I need to research after my post here.
Cheers!
Good read Rand. Right from the gut.
Thank you
Always good to have a light cheerful post sometimes. I enjoyed it.
I really, really appreciated that anyone had the time and patience to read this book put in HTML.
Congratulations everyone but me!
PS: If it was printed maybe I would have read it.
Very enjoyable read - thanks for sharing a slice of your daily life with us.