In most cases, when a terrible song like Maroon 5's "Daylight" gets stuck in your head, it usually doesn't turn out to be a good day.
This was not the case yesterday. It was a day that our new project was presented to the CTO to get some insight on the implications and time frames of the minor addition.
Turns out, the addition was accepted and added to the objective list without any hesitation. And, it doesnt seem to alter the scope of the other projects, which was our main concern.
After running our in-house management app for more than a month now, we are able to see the true strengths that we could really capitalize on. This means adding one more ingredient, which could really change things.
This reminds me of when we were an entertainment company 4 years ago. One of the events was the annual Ski Trip, which involved the gathering of 40 people on a bus and taking them to New York. On our final night, we would prepare a large pasta meal for the entire group. Forty people sitting around a table, listening to oldies music, and enjoying amazing pasta - there was nothing like. I still remember people talking about how amazing the dinner was.
Some years later, I spoke to the chef that made the pasta and the sauce for the trips. He mentioned that the pasta sauce made for the trip involved a certain procedure that took immense time and a few ingredient secrets - one of which was a certain type of pepper used to really set it off. He also mentioned the difficulty of cooking for 40 people because all of the time it takes in making sure the amounts are just right.
Whatever he used, it did something that took it from a good sauce to "a sauce worth forever mentioning". Whatever you call it... the x-factor, the final piece, or the perfect timing... businesses need it just as chefs do.
This is, of course, if you want to be mentioned years after the world gets a taste of it.


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