Story time.
I got an email last week that someone from our Marketing department needed to meet to put together a public statement about part of our system that I work on.
Since I compulsively over-prepare, I drafted a statement to explain the technical details to non-technical readers in clear, simple language. Ran it by my boss and we refined it a bit. Then sent it to Marketing.
This morning, Marketing wrote back and said, "This is great. No need to meet."
Now, I'm just so proud that I avoided a lengthy meeting. I went and told a coworker/friend of mine, and he said, "No, you avoided a social interaction. I bet you're most proud of that, Rex!"
He's probably right.
I got an email last week that someone from our Marketing department needed to meet to put together a public statement about part of our system that I work on.
Since I compulsively over-prepare, I drafted a statement to explain the technical details to non-technical readers in clear, simple language. Ran it by my boss and we refined it a bit. Then sent it to Marketing.
This morning, Marketing wrote back and said, "This is great. No need to meet."
Now, I'm just so proud that I avoided a lengthy meeting. I went and told a coworker/friend of mine, and he said, "No, you avoided a social interaction. I bet you're most proud of that, Rex!"
He's probably right.