#general

42 posts.

New year, new site

Homepage hero and navigation of the rebuilt site

After five years, I finally rebuilt my personal site. I consolidated everything into one place and focused less on positioning, more on carving my personal space in the web (like the old dayz).

The site now has four areas, each with a clear purpose. That removes one of my biggest blockers: deciding where something belongs.

Journal for personal thoughts.

Homelab for tinkering and home infrastructure.

DevOps to document the work I actually do. I’ve grown a lot in this role, and this is a place to make that growth visible.

Agapay Systems as a small bet for the coming year, and a place to build full-stack systems in the open.

The goal is to make it easier to write, and easier to keep writing.

Derisking

/ Life /

We made a big and risky decision this year. There was an opportunity cost if we don’t act and it could not be delayed further. This decision meant that our 6-months emergency fund was spent, and I’m in-debt for the next two years (if our income and spending remains the same).

As the sole provider, it keeps me up at night. It forced me to re-assess our situation.

That is spilt milk under the bridge. I have no regrets with the decision, that purchase was wise for our fast growing kids.

What I want to focus on now is how to move ahead. How can I reduce the risk?

Expanding my luck surface area

Luck is a big factor on where I am now. I can’t control luck, but I can increase my chances of getting lucky by planting seeds, growing my weak ties, expanding my luck surface area.

Prioritize working on things I can show

Given the choices of things to work on, lean on tasks I can use as portfolio or demonstrate my technical depth.

Document the work I do publicly

I have not been very good at writing and documenting things I do at work. I assume it’s too niche, too AWS, too WordPress.

It does not matter. Work ends when it’s documented, not when the PR is merged.

Rebuild my full-stack web dev portfolio

When I shifted into cloud engineering, I stopped building web apps anymore. I’m not a senior-level cloud engineer, but I’m also no longer the web developer I used to be.

I forgot I enjoy doing it until recently when I had an opportunity to work on a small feature that required a UI. I had so much fun. I also forgot I don’t need to wait for opportunities at work to build apps, to solve actual problems. There are a lot of problems where a little bit of software can make a difference.

I’ll find and make more opportunities to do more of software development, which also gives me another path if cloud engineering does not ultimately work out.

Value-based Giving

/ Life , General /

Later in my freelance career, I learned the term value-based pricing. It’s a pricing strategy where the price of my service is set based on the value it provides.

This shifted on how I look at things. I started looking at how businesses generate revenue and focus where I could help increase it or reduce costs, then I anchor my rate based off that. It worked well for me. I gravitated to companies where my skills truly added value, which made my work more enjoyable. Hindi lang basta pera.

Thinking this way has become second-nature.

Now, I try to apply it in reverse: value-based giving.

For instance, if I needed a medicine now, I’d book Grab Pabili to have someone buy it for me and bring it to my house. The time and energy I save are worth more than the total cost of the service. It makes it easy to give extra.

Another way I apply it is when I have to hire for help. I don’t haggle. I hire people to get to the same goal, I want to reach it where everyone feels they are paid fairly. Then add extra upon completion.

There are multitude ways to do this. But it all comes down to recognizing value and showing gratitude by giving back (sometimes more than what’s expected).

Do one thing everyday

Inside my head


I have too many ongoing projects. It perfectly reflects the state of my mind. Everything is in my head, without structure.

No project management, no direction, no goal or pressure to finish. 

What’s happening is I start a new project. I get stuck or I get to a point that I have to make a decision but for some reason can’t. I let it simmer in my head. Then I start a new project. 

The worst part is that my office has become an ever-growing pile of unfinished projects.

Possible solution

One solution I’ve come up with is to pre-decide in advance what I should do each day and then consistently follow through. I call this approach “Project DOTED,” which stands for “Do One Thing Everyday.”

Criteria

To help with the decisions on what to do, these are the guidelines:

  • Focus on things that would reduce clutter in my office
  • Small enough that it can fit in my family and work life.
  • Notable enough that it chip-off towards a completion of a project
  • Lastly, avoid new projects. Purchase freeze until things are manageable again.

Let’s see what happens

https://www.jericoaragon.com/doted

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