Author Archives: Devin Reams

About Devin Reams

My name is Devin Reams and I founded this site to provide a useful news and review resource for Colorado skiers and snowboarders (and mountain enthusiasts). I've been skiing since I was a little kid (we moved out here when I was five years old) and I plan to ski for years beyond that. Although cosnow is not my full-time job it is my full-time winter hobby. I've been an "Epic Local" passholder since 2006 (when it was called a "Colorado Pass" or "Five Mountain Pass"). My favorite resorts are Beaver Creek and Breckenridge.

Studying Follow-Up

I nearly forgot I had written about my secrets to exam success: Studying for Tests. If you initially doubted me, that’s fine, I would be hesitant too. Let me assure you I received very high A’s on both accounting tests the second time around. As mentioned, take the first test and set the pace for the rest of the semester… do yourself a favor and focus on all those other important things during your extra time. That’s what I do!

Bloggers Remorse Squared

I have this weird feeling about blogging. I’ll write about topics but then I take a look at my visitors… many are here for the wrong reasons. I get 10 kids every day asking for MSN invites, I have another 20 Googleing myspace error messages and finding me. The rest are all here to take my free FIRO-B test.

But, am I looking at the wrong statistics? Should I try to learn how my subscribers are utilizing my blog? Unfortunately I can’t really. Sure, I have 200 subscribers but how many people pass over my banter every morning? How many sit and thought ‘oh yeah, I feel that too’?

Comments seem like the currency of kings. If you garner discussion you’re a pretty good blogger. In my case I’ve accured 207 comments on 179 posts. A bunch of those comments, again, are people asking for MSN invites. But, a bunch of those posts are links to articles and funny videos.

So what? I don’t know. I feel no better having written that and looked at all these different variables than I did earlier.

Now I have bloggers remorse squared becuase I’ve accomplished absolutely nothing by writing this… but I’ll end up getting 100 referrals from Google to it in the next month.

QOTD

Quote of the Day:

It’s really scary to quit your job at an average company doing average work just because you know that if you stay, you’ll end up just like them.

Which is why it’s such a great opportunity.

Seth Godin, bestselling author, entrepreneur and agent of change via WorkHappy.

Note to self: Become more observant. Am I working at an average company?

Skype is Fun!

I haven’t been a big Skype user. Frankly, becuase nobody I typically socialize with has even heard of it. But, a select few have ‘converted’ and I’ve been playing with it more. Jeremy was the one I was primarily using it with but now I’ve got a reason to use it more: SkypeOut and SkypeIn.

Haha, I have a phone number… it took forever to find, too:

+1 (713) 89 DEVIN

I’ve hit an all-time low on the nerd scale… but I love it. It’s so simple and the minutes are pretty cheap ($10 got me 10 hours). I’m excited to try this stuff out some more. I’m actually ordering a bluetooth headset off eBay tonight. I’ll let you know how that goes.

In any case, if you’re a Skype user feel free to add me and if you’re looking to call and harass me, feel free to leave a voicemail! Every person who leaves a voicemail will get added to my soon-to-be links list. ;-)

PS: I think $12 for a new phone number isn’t bad. For those of us without a ‘Home’ number this is the perfect solution. Now I don’t have to worry about giving out my cell number. You too can be a dork!

[tags]skype, skypein, skypeout, voicemail[/tags]

Gaining Life Experience

I’m a firm believer that college is only half (if even that) of one’s education. For example, my new job has taught me more about (Access) databases in one day then I’ve learned all semester in class (no offense). Plus, I can tell you more about the telcom industry than you’d ever care to know. Welcome to day two.

In school you typically learn at an ‘average’ pace and classes try to cater to everyone. Hence the bell curve. Sure, classes can be challenging but when you make mistakes you merely get a few points off. In the business world you’re not always handed a textbook or a study guide.. you figure it out. Very, very quickly.

With that said, mistakes become costly. So, keep in mind, there are worse things in the world than getting a problem wrong on a test. In the grand scheme of things, that mistake was a very cheap learning experience.

This leads me to my next point: I’d say that ‘picking up stuff quickly’ is one of my most valuable traits. Not everything in life is technical and being 100% book smart is not something to strive for. No, I strongly subscribe to the ‘you dont have to be smart, you have to be clever’ philosophy. Unfortunately, if you can’t do that, if you can’t quickly absorb new skills and acquire new knowledge you need to compensate somewhere else.

My thought is that you start out with 100 points to assign to different characteristics. For me I’d say my breakdown is as follows:

  • 50 points go to ‘cleverness’ (picking stuff up quickly, understanding overall concepts, doing well on tests),
  • 20 for ‘leadership’ (management, ability to relate and understand different people),
  • 10 points to ‘helpfulness’ (willingness, capability, patience),
  • 10 points of ‘creativity’,
  • 5 points to ‘friendliness’ (outgoing, cheerful, funny, caring), and
  • 5 points of arrogance and egoism (being an ass, not listening to others)

I’d like to shuffle my points around a bit. In fact I’d love to reassign my arrogance points to friendliness… but if I did that I’d sacrifice a level of confidence. And if I lacked cleverness I’d probably need to be a bit more friendly and creative.

As time goes on, though, your point pool increases… hopefully. You don’t just resize the slices of pie, you end up working with a bigger pie! I’m constantly trying to add points to certain areas while learning how to avoid sacrifices in others. You don’t necessairly pick this up in college.. for many it eventually happens. But, take the student who spends more time practicing sports than in class, or the guy who can’t balance a girlfriend and studying. High school and college are good for teaching people how to shuffle points. This is great because you learn where you want to focus your enegergies: you find what few things you’re best at and passionate about.

But, as you grow, you want to better yourself in all your strongest areas. You want to take those few things you’re the best at and continue to improve them. This is Jim Collins’ hedgehog concept and I’ll be writing about my personal ‘hedgehog’ in the next week or so.

Interestingly, I’ve done most of my betterment outside of class… maybe that’s just me, though? How does your pie look? Are you simply shuffling the slices or are you striving to increase your overall size? Do you have a ton of little pieces? Are you focusing on the right areas?
[tags]improvement, education, ledership, clever, skills, experience[/tags]

QOTD

Quote of the Day:

…if the answer is, “I just don’t feel like it,” chances are I won’t feel like it later, either. So all things being equal, I’d rather finish them now. If not now, then when?

-Ramit Sethi on the importance of doing the “little things” now. I agree, life is about taking care of the details. Subscribe to Ramit’s newsletter at http://www.iwillteachyoutoberich.com