Physics World 06月02日 21:10
Ask me anything: Tom Woodroof – ‘Curiosity, self-education and carefully-chosen guidance can get you surprisingly far’
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本文采访了Mutual Credit Services的联合创始人Tom Woodroof,探讨了他在创业过程中所运用的技能、遇到的挑战以及获得的感悟。他分享了如何运用跨学科知识,应对气候危机,以及创建“共享”经济的愿景。文章还揭示了创业的艰辛,以及如何通过好奇心、自学和精心指导来实现自我发展。Woodroof强调了开放心态、团队合作和对目标的坚持,为读者提供了宝贵的职业发展启示。

💡日常工作技能:Tom Woodroof的工作融合了复杂经济学、货币理论和经济人类学,需要运用分析和设计思维来构建新的技术平台、应用程序和服务。他花费大量时间思考这些理论如何相互作用,并将其应用于实际工作中。

🤔创业挑战:创业过程中面临着气候变化和潜在的社会崩溃等宏观挑战,以及初创企业普遍存在的失败风险。Woodroof还提到了长时间工作和高压力的工作状态。

🌟职业发展感悟:Woodroof希望在职业生涯开始时就知道,有很多机会可以从事原创、有意义和自主的工作。他强调了好奇心、自学和精心选择的指导的重要性,并指出进步往往来自于小的、累积的步骤,而不是少数突破。

🤝创业成功要素:他认为,与对所做的事情充满热情并希望参与进来的团队成员一起工作非常重要。此外,他强调了需要找到合适的人一起工作,并对非常规的道路保持开放态度。

What skills do you use every day in your job?

I co-founded Mutual Credit Services in 2020 to help small businesses thrive independently of the banking sector. As a financial technology start-up, we’re essentially trying to create a “commons” economy, where power lies in the hands of people, not big institutions, thereby making us more resilient to the climate crisis.

Those goals are probably as insanely ambitious as they sound, which is why my day-to-day work is a mix of complexity economics, monetary theory and economic anthropology. I spend a lot of time thinking hard about how these ideas fit together, before building new tech platforms, apps and services, which requires analytical and design thinking.

There are still many open questions about business, finance and economics that I’d like to do research on, and ultimately develop into new services. I’m constantly learning through trial projects and building a pipeline of ideas for future exploration.

Developing the business involves a lot of decision-making, project management and team-building. In fact, I’m spending more and more of my time on commercialization – working out how to bring new services to market, nurturing partnerships and talking to potential early adopters. It’s vital that I can explain novel financial ideas to small businesses in a way they can understand and have confidence in. So I’m always looking for simpler and more compelling ways to describe what we do.

What do you like best and least about your job?

What I like best is the variety and creativity. I’m a generalist by nature, and love using insights from a variety of disciplines. The practical application of these ideas to create a better economy feels profoundly meaningful, and something that I’d be unlikely to get in any other job. I also love the autonomy of running a business. With a small but hugely talented and enthusiastic team, we’ve so far managed to avoid the company becoming rigid and institutionalized. It’s great to work with people on our team and beyond who are excited by what we’re doing, and want to be involved.

The hardest thing is facing the omnicrisis of climate breakdown and likely societal collapse that makes this work necessary in the first place. As with all start-ups, the risk of failure is huge, no matter how good the ideas are, and it’s frustrating to spend so much time on tasks that just keep things afloat, rather than move the mission forward. I work long hours and the job can be stressful.

What do you know today, that you wish you knew when you were starting out in your career?

I spent a lot of time during my PhD at Liverpool worrying that I’d get trapped in one narrow field, or drift into one of the many default career options. I wish I’d known how many opportunities there are to do original, meaningful and self-directed work – especially if you’re open to unconventional paths, such as the one I’ve followed, and can find the right people to do it with.

It’s also easy to assume that certain skills or fields are out of reach, whereas I’ve found again and again that a mix of curiosity, self-education and carefully-chosen guidance can get you surprisingly far. Many things that once seemed intimidating now feel totally manageable. That said, I’ve also learned that everything takes at least three times longer than expected – especially when you’re building something new. Progress often looks like small compounding steps, rather than a handful of breakthroughs.

The post Ask me anything: Tom Woodroof – ‘Curiosity, self-education and carefully-chosen guidance can get you surprisingly far’ appeared first on Physics World.

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创业 技能 职业发展 经济学 团队合作
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