• Posts

    Kevin Is Leaving Microsoft

    I’m so proud of my husband, he’s finally quit his job at Microsoft and is already looking for new opportunities from Beijing.  He’ll be back in the U.S. in late April and then the job search will become full blown.  I can’t relate to what it is like to leave a company after being there for 10 years, but I know from our many private conversations on the subject that the decision was a challenging and emotionally complex one, that is the result of much soul searching and deep thought.  Here’s the announcement letter Kevin sent to his colleagues and professional contacts:

    With a mix of excitement and a bit of sadness, I am writing to let you know this June I will be leaving Microsoft.  After 10 years with the company, I decided the time is right to start a new chapter if my life.  One of my favorite things in life is learning, and I’m excited to get back to the days of being a bit of a newbie where every day is a new adventure.

    My wife and I will be moving to the Bay Area over the summer as part of the process.  In fact, she’s a step ahead of me and has already started working at Twilio.

    As I set out, I will carry with me a lot of great memories.

    I still remember my first day as an intern back in 1996.  I wasn’t old enough to have a car yet, so my brother dropped me off early in the morning and I spent some time walking around campus since no one was there to meet me yet.  As we all know, the campus has changed a little bit since then.  I had four great summers working on the IDE in Visual Studio.

    Towards the end of my fourth internship, I fell in love with Program Management.  I remember walking into my mentor’s office in August of 1999, about to tell him I wanted to leave college early and come join Microsoft.  To say I was a bit scared would be an understatement, but I was sure of my ultimate direction.  Two months later, I started full time on the Developer Division Setup team.  It was a bit funny at the time, because my manager’s name was Kevin as well, and his manager was also Kevin.  At the end of my first product cycle, I remember going to shiproom and seeing what it takes to really pull it together.  Some of my fondest memories are racing around trying to get all the analysis just right for shiproom.  Anyone who says Microsoft doesn’t care about customers has never been inside to see those times and just how far we go to make the right call.

    In my last two years on the Setup team, I worked as a lead.  I still remember all the great people I got to hire and every promotion I made.  It’s been fantastic watching them take off in the company.

    Having had many successes as a technical, release and lead PM, I wanted to get experience in the feature PM realm.  First as a PM in the sustained engineering team working on a new patching engine and in the past two years as a PM in SharePoint.  I learned just how tough it is to design great things.  Customers turn out to be pretty bad designers; they want every possible bell, knob and whistle you offer but proceed to curse you when you give it to them!

    I am a firm believer that as humans our work is where we can reach the highest, whether it be writing a compiler, building a skyscraper or raising a child.  I hear a common sentiment from people that they wish they just had a moment to relax, retire or somehow get away from all the bump and grind of life.  While it sounds alluring from time to time, I wouldn’t trade that hard work for one second.  Life was meant for filling with value, not to be left empty.  So all that intensity we seem to attract like magnets here: bring it on!  It’s stressful and sometimes even overwhelming, but it’s oh so thrilling!

    Thinking back to that fateful day in August 1999, I knew I was taking a huge risk and my dreams were on the line.  Well… they all came true, sooner and more brilliantly than I thought possible.  I am glad I got to live them in the company of such spectacular people.  Now it’s time to go imagine some new ones.

    Kevin’s story at Microsoft is an inspiring one, and I am so excited to see what he does next.

  • Posts

    Twitter Tools I Can’t Live Without

    Let’s face it, I’m on Twitter a lot. Between @DanielleMORRILL, @RafetheDog, @Twilio, and @Seattle20 I’ve got my hands full. You might think, because I’m on Twitter constantly, that I use a ton of tools. I’ve tried a lot, but only a handful of truly useful things have stuck.

    Tweetdeck
    A desktop application for publishing, shortening links, tracking terms, and grouping Twitter follows based on various things; for example I have a “Seattle startups” group and a “brands to learn from” group. I still do a lot of my Twitter publishing directly from the website, even with Tweetdeck. The only downside that I’ve found so far is that it doesn’t, to my knowledge, allow you to manage multiple accounts – so I might be switching to Twhirl soon.

    Tweetlater
    Schedule tweets to go out at future dates/times. This is great if you suddenly have a deluge of things to share, but don’t want to drive your followers nuts.

    TwitterFeed

    Auto-create tweets from an RSS feed – like your own blog – so that you don’t have to remember to promote manually it every time you post.

    Twitteriffic
    An iPhone application for reading and following along with your Twitter account. A lot of people are recommending Tweetie, but I haven’t switched over yet.

  • Posts

    John Galt is Smiling

    TIA Daily tipped me off to a column by Caroline Baum at Bloomberg, which opens with the provocative sentence: “somewhere John Galt is smiling”.  Baum points out that the portion of Atlas Shrugged where the businessmen of the world walk away from their enterprises is still fiction — for now — and discusses the fact that government needs business, but business does not need government.  I couldn’t agree more.

  • Posts

    Video Fun in Beijing

    I spent the week with my husband and sister in Beijing to catch up, relax, and recharge. While here, we had plenty of downtime to have a couple of drinks and make some videos with Meg.

    Jaws Theme on Crystal Glasses

    We were surprised to discover that the wine glasses provided by Kevin’s fancy-schmancy expat apartment building were actually crystal, and proceeded to experiment with getting them to make different sounds.

    Building on My Ustream Adventures Meg Demonstrates Anti-Stripping

    Anti-stripping is the act of putting on as much clothing as you can (or in this case, as much as you brought with you) and then taking it off again. It’s actually pretty fun, and video editing makes it look even better.

    I’ve got video from being tourists, tons of pictures and more to share so hopefully I’ll get some of that uploaded, tagged, edited etc. tomorrow on my flight back to the U.S. I’ll also be recording my tech events rundown for Seattle 2.0 for next week, so stay tuned. I found a funny outtake from my first one, which has me trying to smile and enunciate a little better by loosening up. You’ll get the idea…

  • Posts

    Adventures in China

    I just uploaded all my photos so far from this trip.  Here are some favorites that really tell the story of what we’ve been up to.  The lovely lady with me is my little sister, Meg.  The handsome gentleman is my husband, Kevin.  We’re staying in China, in the Chaoyang District just inside the 3rd ring road.

    Meg Touches the Door to the Forbidden City, for Good Luck


    Wandering the Painted Halls of the Garden Outside of the Forbidden City


    Strange Tooth Statue, Outside of the Orthodontist Office


    Progress – View from Our Apartment

  • Posts

    On the Road Again

    I have that song stuck in my head…

    Anyway, I’m travelling for the rest of March so the easiest way for you to see me will probably be online.  Where am I going, you ask?  This week its San Francisco with Twilio, and then Friday I fly to Beijing to visit @MisterMorrill for 9 days, with my sister Meg along for the ride.  Then it’s back to San Francisco for another week with Twilio, and then home to Seattle at least through my birthday (April 17th) when Kevin is coming back to visit me.  Time flies!

    Yesterday I hung out with Evan and John at the Founder’s Fund headquarters (zomg the marina, so beautiful!) where we’ve been granted the use of some office space (thank you thank you) and we made some video footage with my HD camera!


    Daylight Savings [TeamTwilio] from Twilio on Vimeo.

    We’re headed to UC Berkeley today for a startup fair in the hopes of recruiting an intern or two, and I’ll have the camera in hand to capture our adventures.

  • Posts

    Goodbye Whrrl, Hello World

    Goodbye Whrrl and Pelago – thank you for all the memories, fun times, incredible product vision, introduction to Linux, mySQL, Mac everything, Jimmy John’s, call centers, and nerf guns as office supplies.  My time at Pelago, captured in pictures…

    Whrrl v2.0 Alpha Launch Party

    Pelago Christmas Party 2008 – Karaoke!

    Re-branding Whrrl – the Pinwheel

    Gnomedex 2008

    Gnomedex 2008 Opening Party – Maryam Scoble and Danielle Morrill (CC) Brian Solis, www.briansolis.com and bub.blicio.us.

    Moving into WAMU tower

    my first NERF gun

    Onward now, to my next adventure