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The Visionary's Lens: Turning Everyday Frustrations into Software Gold

Visionary perspective
Keith VaughanNovember 9, 2024

What's the difference between a tourist and a visionary? About $100 million in potential value. On a recent trip to Vietnam, I met a real estate agent whose optimistic view transformed what tourists saw as depressing vacant lots into opportunities for grand city development.

A Tale of Two Perspectives

In Da Nang, where tourists lamented empty buildings and vacant lots as signs of underdevelopment, my real estate friend saw a canvas of possibility. Her mind was a repository of stories behind every empty lot, brimming with visions of architectural potential and how future city plans would transform each view. Every street lamp and sign we passed sparked ideas for cohesive urban design improvements. Her perspective transformed apparent emptiness into opportunities for innovation.

The Software Builder's Mindset

This visionary perspective isn't limited to real estate. Consider my software architect friend who sees opportunity in everyday friction. When restaurant mains arrive before starters, others get annoyed. He envisions an affordable Point of Sale system that could streamline service and enhance the restaurant owner's operations.

Great software builders possess this same transformative vision. Ancient software slowing down company operations? That's not just a frustration—it's a market gap waiting to be filled. Flight delays spark ideas about improving backend infrastructure. Clumsy delivery processes become blueprints for innovative software solutions.

The Art of Positive Adaptation

Stoicism teaches us to accept what is and find positive adaptations. Similarly, great software builders transform every flaw and annoyance into opportunities to improve the digital interfaces we interact with daily. Even seemingly smooth operations like the Apple Store contain incremental improvements waiting to be discovered.

Opportunities Everywhere

Think about the software touchpoints in your daily life: ordering pizza, applying for a car loan, buying a laptop. Each interaction holds potential for improvement. The question isn't whether these opportunities exist—it's whether we let them frustrate us or inspire us to build better solutions.

Cultivating the Visionary's Lens

The next time you encounter a frustrating process or system, pause. Instead of adding to the chorus of complaints, ask yourself: What could be built to solve this? How could this experience be transformed? This shift in perspective—from tourist to visionary—might just be worth its weight in gold.

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