If I could offer one piece of unsolicited advice: in whatever you do next, make it a point to understand a) how the business is doing and b) what your impact to the business will be.
Make it a point to gather numbers like e.g. revenue figures, growth rates, costs, usage metrics. It is true that us underlings aren't usually handed these numbers, but you might be surprised by how easy it is to get them once you start looking. And once you have those numbers, you can derive some good estimates around your own impact towards the business.
Having those numbers will help you understand your own impact. They will also help you avoid companies that, for a lack of a better word, are destined to fail.
(I'm a fan of your blog btw. I really liked the article on the Monty Hall problems!)
I should be able to try this the next few weeks (new gig). But again, I'll be working on a prototype where such projections have already been made, the plan have already been laid out, and I'll mostly have to follow orders with relatively little wiggle room (they also expect me to hit the ground running). My only expected impact there is whether the stuff gets done on time or not. And assuming it is, the main company will throw the prototype away and rewrite everything anyway (at least they're supposed to).
Make it a point to gather numbers like e.g. revenue figures, growth rates, costs, usage metrics. It is true that us underlings aren't usually handed these numbers, but you might be surprised by how easy it is to get them once you start looking. And once you have those numbers, you can derive some good estimates around your own impact towards the business.
Having those numbers will help you understand your own impact. They will also help you avoid companies that, for a lack of a better word, are destined to fail.
(I'm a fan of your blog btw. I really liked the article on the Monty Hall problems!)