Podcast appearances and mentions of oki doki

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Best podcasts about oki doki

Latest podcast episodes about oki doki

El Mañanero de La Mega
David no tiene ni idea de "Oki Doki" pero está al día con La Casa De Los Famosos

El Mañanero de La Mega

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 17:08


Beats per minut
Dance glamour

Beats per minut

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2025 61:14


Dissabte ballarem, i ho farem sense perdre la compostura. La millor manera d'estrenar l'any es fer-ho amb estil i hem preparat una festa amb molt de glamour a la pista de ball. Prepareu-vos per una cocktail party al dancefloor amb electr

Echados Viendo Tele
¡Oki-Doki! Fallout, una serie que cumple todas sus misiones

Echados Viendo Tele

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2024 15:08


Qué bueno es encontrarse con una serie de aventuras en donde nunca decaiga el nivel, en que cada episodio te atrapa y que el carisma de sus personajes hace que la historia se mantenga firme y concisa. Eso es Fallout.De eso hablamos en este episodio, una serie de Prime Video que nos dejó completamente satisfechos porque no tiene ninguna falla.---Echados Viendo Tele es un programa para expresar, de forma personal, espontánea y concienzuda, opiniones de películas o series.Te invitamos a descubrir más en: www.echadosviendotele.com PatrocinioTe recomendamos que visités las redes sociales de Sublishop Nicaragua, tienda de ropa y artículos con sublimación y diseños originales. Enlace a la tienda: https://www.instagram.com/sublishop_nicaragua/Seguinos en redes socialesFacebook: https://bit.ly/2G8n2kaInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/echadosviendotvTwitter: https://bit.ly/2LfvrGJY escuchá este capítulo también enSpotify: https://spoti.fi/2OYJ9MXApple Podcast http://bit.ly/evt1rafYouTube: http://bit.ly/youtevtGoogle Podcast: http://bit.ly/goopod1Copyright de MúsicaInspiring Advertising by Rafael KruxLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/5515-inspiring-advertising-License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseJoseph McDade: https://josephmcdade.com/music Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

LMP DJ Mixes
LMP Mixes 0502 : 2024 NYE Party Mix Mashups

LMP DJ Mixes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2023


Mix Name: DJ Noel – Dembow Pa La Calle Part 1 Website: https://www.iamlmp.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamlmp/ DJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dvjcarter/ Download our DJ Music App Daily Mixes: https://linktr.ee/iamlmp ——— 1. Myke Towers vs Bad Bunny – LA FALDA 2024 NYE Intro 2. Nicky Jam & Feid – La 69 vs Normal (Segway Mashup Remix) 3. Daddy Yankee X Randy – Salgo Pa La Calle Gasolina (Mashup) 4. Tego?Calderon – Pa Que Retozen Vs Metele-Sazon (Mashup) 5. Myke Towers – LALA (DVJ Carter Edit) 6. Ryan Castro x Cris Mj – Jordan x Una Noche En Medellín (Mashup) 7. Karol G – Sejodioto x Oye Mi Canto (Mashup) 8. Feid x Ozuna – El Cielo X Se Preparó (Ximoxacm Mashup) 9. Bad Bunny – MOSCOW MULE x Entre La Playa Ella & Yo (NYE Mashup) 10. Fuego, Manuel Turizo, Duki – Una Vaina Loca Remix (Dancehall ReDrum) 11. Los Yakis X Sean Paul – Mamita Molona Get Busy (Salsaton Mashup) 12. Feid, Zion & Lennox – Remix Exclusivo Vs Yo Voy (Mashup) 13. Daddy Yankee x Nicky Jam – Muevelo (2023 Moombahton ReWork) 14. Nicky Jam x Anuel AA – Whine Up (Tropical Moombah Edit) 15. Kenny Man x Tayl G Ft. Lary Over – Ni Gucci Ni Prada x Tirate Un Paso (Dancehall ReDrum) 16. Boza – Hecha Pa Mi (Extended Mix) 17. Eddy Lover Ft Akim – Te Gusta Hacerla (DVJ Carter Edit) 18. Sech Ft. Jhay Cortez x Alexis & Fido – 911 x Una En Un Millón (Gold Mashup) 19. Zion Y Lennox Ft Anuel AA – Para Siempre (Remix) 20. Piso 21 – Sinceramente (Break In 2023 Remix) 21. Bad Bunny – UN PREVIEW (DJ Feeling Break In Remix) 22. Bad Bunny & Feid – PERRO NEGRO (DJ Carlo Kou Break Edit) 23. La Factoria & Eddy Lover – Perdoname (2023 Percapella Remix) 24. Farruko Ft. La Factoria & Eddy Lover – Perdoname (Carbon Fiber Remix) 25. Gente De Zona X Tito El Bambino – La Gozadera A Que No Te Atreves (Mashup) 26. Big Yamo x Natya x Calle 13 – Tocarte Toa (2023 Remix) 27. Quevedo – Columbia (Hype Intro Remix) 28. KAROL G – OKI DOKI (2023 Intro Break Edit) 29. Lola Índigo x Quevedo x Charly Black – El Tonto X Gyal You A Party Animal (Mashup) 30. Feid x Sean Paul – Niña Bonita (Saul Hype Intro) 31. Farina x Sean Paul – EL VIBE (Main) 32. Burna Boy – Last Last (2023 ReWork Edit) 33. Burna Boy – Tested, Approved & Trusted (Dancehall Remix) 34. Rauw Alejandro, Enrique Iglesia x Bad Bunny – Nostalgico Vs El Baño (Mashup Special) 35. Hector & Tito – Felina (Clasico 2023 ReWork) 36. Anuel AA x Quevedo – Mas Rica Que Ayer x Punto G (DVJ Carter Edit & Gold Mashup) 37. Quevedo x Yandar & Yostin – Punto G x Te Pintaron Pajaritos (Segway Mashup) 38. Bad Bunny Ft Chencho Corleone – Me Porto Bonito (Remix) 39. Dua Lipa, J Balvin – One Day (Jefake x Daspo x DVJ Carter Edit) 40. Ottomix X Calle 13 – Atrevete Raggasex (Gold Mashup Edit) 41. Spyro ft Tiwa Savage – Who is your Guy (Official Extended Remix) 42. Omah Lay – Reason (Extended Mix) 43. CKay ft. Blaqbonez – HALLELUJAH (Extended Mix) 44. Omah Lay & Ozuna vs Anti Social – Soso (Cesar Castilla Mashup) 45. Teejay & DJ MAC – Drift (Extended ReDrum) 46. Shaggy x KES – Mood (Extended Mix) 47. Ayra Starr, Machel Montano – Carnival Rush (Madness Muv X Dsm League Remix) 48. Burna Boy & Byron Messia – Talibans II (Extended Remix) 49. Tyla – Water (Afro Beats Remix) 50. KES – Tack Back (Madness Muv, Marcus Williams, Secret Society Remix) 51. Marzville – Good Wine (Madness Muv Edit)

The Twin Cities Collective Podcast with Jenna Redfield
Marie Poulin's Guide to Mastering Notion for Life & Business

The Twin Cities Collective Podcast with Jenna Redfield

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2023 46:11


I'm so excited for this week's episode with special guest  @MariePoulin  Marie teaches business owners to level up their digital systems, workflow, and knowledge management processes using Notion. She's the co-founder of Oki Doki http://weareokidoki.com and creator of Notion Mastery https://notionmastery.com, an online program and community that helps creators, entrepreneurs and small teams tame their work + life chaos by building life and business management systems with Notion. Diagnosed with ADHD at age 37, Marie is especially passionate about helping folks customize their workflows and workspaces to meet their unique needs and preferences. She believes that Notion is especially powerful for neurodivergent folks who have long struggled to adhere to traditional or rigid project management processes, and may need a little extra customization and flexibility. When she's not tinkering in Notion or doing live trainings, you can find her in the garden, working out, or cooking up some delicious vegetarian tacos. 0:02 Introduction to Marie Poulin and how she discovered Notion. 04:54 How she came to have a system that works for her brain. 06:26 The importance of compassionate productivity for those with ADHD. 11:15 What do you use it for on a daily basis? 15:36 How she's taught her team how to use the platform. 20:04 What are some of the apps that you use to run your business? 23:31 What's not there yet in the app. 26:46 How do you position yourself in the notion world and differentiating yourself? 33:12 Why you have to build your own brand as a name. 36:44 How different channels can express a different side of you. 41:48 Take on one use case at a time. Download Notion! https://notion.grsm.io/jenna-redfield Notion Foundations Online Course (with ADHD Life Tracker Notion Template included) https://notionfoundations.com Get My Notion Templates Content Calendar Template, ADHD Life Tracker, Business Tracker https://jennaredfield.com/notion-templates Join my Notion FB Groups! Marketing & Notion https://www.facebook.com/groups/marketingandnotion ADHD & Notion https://www.facebook.com/groups/adhdandnotion Shop my Amazon Storefront https://www.amazon.com/shop/twincitiescollective?ref=cm_sw_em_r_inf_own_twincitiescollective_dp_8RWpsBczfStVY Sign up for my best & favorite resources & Notion templates here •Notion Templates •Apps that work with Notion •Other Notion Resources •Favorite Notion Videos •Facebook Groups https://jennaredfield.com/notion-resources Listen to the Optimization Podcast https://podcast.jennaredfield.com LINKS

Escuadrón Pokémon
EP124 - Oki Doki, Hunky dory

Escuadrón Pokémon

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2023 68:15


El pasado 27 de Febrero fue un nuevo Pokémon day, y The Pokémon Company nos trajo noticias con su Pokémon Presents. Jona y Seba repasan lo que nos mostraron y nos cuentan qué cosas les gustaron y qué no tanto.

kultur / info
Oki Doki Gaming Club

kultur / info

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2023 2:26


Oki Doki Gaming Club: Ein Lesekreis für Videospiele. Ab 14. Januar 2023, jeden zweiten Samstag im Monat um 19 Uhr auf Radio X.

The Productivityist Podcast
Marie Poulin talks about Notion

The Productivityist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2023 50:11


Marie Poulin is the creator of Notion Mastery and co-founder of Oki Doki. Diagnosed with ADHD, she believes that Notion is especially powerful for neurodivergent folks who have long struggled to adhere to traditional or rigid project management processes, and may need a little extra customization and flexibility. Because of this, she is passionate about helping others customize their workflows and workspaces to meet their unique needs and preferences. In this episode, Marie suggests how to use Notion to its best potential. We discuss the idea of journaling, the importance of systems, tracking your habits, and so much more. I can't believe it took me this long to get Marie to be on the show and it was a delightful conversation with a fellow Canadian!Links Worth Exploring Connect with Marie: Website | Twitter  Visit the Notion Mastery website Listen to Why You Need Atomic Habits with James Clear Related Conversation: Tiago Forte talks about Building a Second Brain Related Blog Post: Taking Journaling to Another Level Thanks to all of the sponsors of this episode. You can find all of the sponsors you heard me mention on this episode on our Podcast Sponsors page.Want to support the podcast? Beyond checking out our sponsors, you can subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts. Click on any of the links below to make that happen.Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | StitcherYou can also click on this link to paste the podcast feed into your podcast app of choice.Thanks again for listening to A Productive Conversation. See you later.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Productivityist Podcast
Marie Poulin talks about Notion

The Productivityist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2023 55:10


Marie Poulin is the creator of Notion Mastery and co-founder of Oki Doki. Diagnosed with ADHD, she believes that Notion is especially powerful for neurodivergent folks who have long struggled to adhere to traditional or rigid project management processes, and may need a little extra customization and flexibility. Because of this, she is passionate about helping others customize their workflows and workspaces to meet their unique needs and preferences.  In this episode, Marie suggests how to use Notion to its best potential. We discuss the idea of journaling, the importance of systems, tracking your habits, and so much more. I can't believe it took me this long to get Marie to be on the show and it was a delightful conversation with a fellow Canadian! Links Worth Exploring Connect with Marie: Website | Twitter  Visit the Notion Mastery website Listen to Why You Need Atomic Habits with James Clear Related Conversation: Tiago Forte talks about Building a Second Brain Related Blog Post: Taking Journaling to Another Level Thanks to all of the sponsors of this episode. You can find all of the sponsors you heard me mention on this episode on our Podcast Sponsors page. Want to support the podcast? Beyond checking out our sponsors, you can subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts. Click on any of the links below to make that happen. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Stitcher You can also click on this link to paste the podcast feed into your podcast app of choice. Thanks again for listening to A Productive Conversation. See you later.

Into Our Own Hands
Ep 11 PROCESSING WILD CLAY: How we relate to clay with Andrew Sartorius

Into Our Own Hands

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 81:36


What clay are you from?  Process the wild clay you harvested alongside us in Episode 2 with Andrew Sartorius at the Oki Doki studio.  Turn a bucket of land chunks into a beautiful, silky, moldable clay.  Exploring different relationships to clay bodies.  Andrew shares what it takes to live and work as a full-time artist and the legacy of making passed down from his parents.    This is Part 2 of a three-part making exercise over the season of the show – harvesting wild clay, processing wild clay (Part 2) and firing your wild clay in an open pit (Season finale and Part 3). About Andrew: Andrew Sartorius is the program manager at the Oki Doki studio and a full time wood fire potter living in Germantown NY with his fiancé and fellow ceramic artist Tanya Lee Hamm, and his pup named June. https://www.andrewsartoriusceramics.com/ https://www.theokidokistudio.com/ Connect with Andrew on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/asartoriusceramics/ Music credit: "Song We Came To Sing" by Living Roots livingrootsmusic.com

Screaming in the Cloud
Working Smarter with Oki Doki and Marie Poulin

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 39:09


Full Description / Show Notes Marie talks about Oki Doki's primary product, Notion Mastery (2:38) Corey and Marie talk ADHD diagnosis and how it has impacted their lives and work (4:26) Marie and Corey discuss techniques they've developed for coping with ADHD (11:22) Corey and Marie talk about workarounds for people with ADHD who want to adopt something like Notion (16:13)  Marie discusses the importance of being excited about the tools you're employing (18:54) Corey and Marie talk about finding tools that work for you (26:43) Marie and Corey discuss the unique challenge of teaching skills versus dumping knowledge (30:35) About Marie PoulinMarie teaches business owners to level up their digital systems, workflow, and knowledge management processes using Notion.She's the co-founder of Oki Doki and creator of Notion Mastery, an online program and community that helps creators, entrepreneurs and small teams tame their work + life chaos by building life and business management systems with Notion.Diagnosed with ADHD at age 37, Marie is especially passionate about helping folks customize their workflows and workspaces to meet their unique needs and preferences.She believes that Notion is especially powerful for neurodivergent folks who have long struggled to adhere to traditional or rigid project management processes, and may need a little extra customization and flexibility.When she's not tinkering in Notion or doing live trainings, you can find her in the garden, playing video games, or cooking up some delicious vegetarian tacos.Links Referenced: Oki Doki: https://weareokidoki.com/ Personal website: https://mariepoulin.com Notion Mastery: https://notionmastery.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/mariepoulin TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by Honeycomb. When production is running slow, it's hard to know where problems originate. Is it your application code, users, or the underlying systems? I've got five bucks on DNS, personally. Why scroll through endless dashboards while dealing with alert floods, going from tool to tool to tool that you employ, guessing at which puzzle pieces matter? Context switching and tool sprawl are slowly killing both your team and your business. You should care more about one of those than the other; which one is up to you. Drop the separate pillars and enter a world of getting one unified understanding of the one thing driving your business: production. With Honeycomb, you guess less and know more. Try it for free at honeycomb.io/screaminginthecloud. Observability: it's more than just hipster monitoring.Corey: DoorDash had a problem. As their cloud-native environment scaled and developers delivered new features, their monitoring system kept breaking down. In an organization where data is used to make better decisions about technology and about the business, losing observability means the entire company loses their competitive edge. With Chronosphere, DoorDash is no longer losing visibility into their applications suite. The key? Chronosphere is an open-source compatible, scalable, and reliable observability solution that gives the observability lead at DoorDash business, confidence, and peace of mind. Read the full success story at snark.cloud/chronosphere. that's snark.cloud slash C-H-R-O-N-O-S-P-H-E-R-E.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. Today I'm joined by Marie Poulin, the CEO of Oki Doki. Marie, thank you for joining me.Marie: Thank you for having me. I'm excited.Corey: So, let's start at the very beginning. What does Oki Doki do? And for folks listening that is O-K-I D-O-K-I, so you might want to have to think about that if you're doing the Google approach of, “What is this thing?”Marie: Well, at the moment, the majority of our products and services are surrounded by helping people learn how to use Notion to manage their life and business. So, it's only a pivot that we took in the last couple of years, and so our signature program is a course called Notion Mastery. So, there's four full-time employees now and that's what we do. We design live trainings, we have a forum, we have a curriculum. It's all products and services related to Notion.Corey: That is an interesting pivot that you can wind up going through. Please tell me I'm not the first person to make the observation that you called it Oki Doki and you've turned yourself around.Marie: [laugh]. You are the first, Corey? [laugh].Corey: Oh, good. I am broken like that, so that's kind of awesome. So, you've been more or less doing—I don't know the best way to frame this, so my apologies if I'm getting it wrong—but the idea of well, what are you selling? Knowledge. You're selling an understanding of how to improve things, you're selling a better outcome.And it's easy to look at that and say, “Oh, you're selling education.” No, you're selling understanding. Education is the way that you get there because at least at the moment, you can't just jack gigabytes of data directly into people's head without going to prison for it. Or raising a whole boatload of VC money.Marie: [laugh]. I mean, you can also say you're kind of selling an outcome, right? You're selling this future version of who someone wants to be. And so, we talk a lot about—you know, on our sales page, we get a lot of compliments on our sales page, but just speaking to the scattered mind, you know, feeling like a shitshow, feeling like you don't really have all your data in one place. You know, it's learning how to improve your workflow at work but also in life as well.And so, a lot of our language speaks to the sort of future version of yourself. Like, stop feeling scattered, stop feeling stretched thin. Let's actually get it so that you turn things into a well-oiled machine. So, you could say we're selling a dream. [laugh].Corey: This is an interesting direction to take this conversation in because I don't normally talk about this. But why not; we'll give it a shot. It's been sufficiently long since the last time. Last year—you've been very public about this—you were diagnosed with ADHD. I periodically talk about the fact that I was diagnosed with it myself—back when it was called ADD—when I was five years old.So, growing up I always knew that there was something neurodivergent about me. And the lesson I took away from this, as someone growing up with a lot of the limitations—yes, there are advantages but at the time, all I saw were limitations—about, “Well, what is ADHD?” It's like, oh, okay. They sat down and explained it to me. And it's not what they said, but it was, “See, this is the medical reason why you suck.”And that was not the most constructive way of framing it. In adulthood, talking to other people who have been diagnosed with this, especially later in life. There's a—it's a spectrum disorder. It winds up impacting an awful lot of people differently, but the universal experience that I hear is, wait, you mean there's a reason that I am the way that I am? It's not that I'm lazy. It's not that I'm shitty at things. It's not that I'm—Marie: Yeah.Corey: —careless. And that is one of those things that just is transformative. I didn't realize at the time how fortunate I was to be diagnosed that early on because trying to try to figure out why am I getting fired all the time? Why do I get bored doing the same thing too many days in a row, so I start causing problems for other people? What is going on with this? Why do I have this incredible opposition to anything that remotely resembles authority, et cetera, et cetera?Not all of this might be ADHD traits, but here I am. And my only solution after, you know, deciding that I didn't really want to set a world record for number of times getting fired was, well, I guess I'll start my own company because that at least to get fired, it's going to take some work. You figured this out while you were already self-employed.Marie: Yes.Corey: What was that like?Marie: What was it like to find out that I finally had an answer or reason for, maybe, past behaviors? [laugh].Corey: Right. Because it's the simultaneous, “Oh, my God, there's a reason that I am like I am,” and then followed immediately by, “I still am the way that I am. Huh. Okay.” It feels like it helps things, but it also doesn't help things. But it does, and it comes back around. What was your experience with it?Marie: Yeah, it started because I was doing research to understand my sister better because she had been diagnosed with ADHD for a couple years. It made so much sense once I kind of understood and started researching a little bit more about it. And then, of course, doing my deep-dive research. I'm hearing all these traits that I'm like, “Oh. Wait, that does really sound like me.” The not being able to wake—Corey: What do you [mean 00:07:01]—Marie: —up in the morning—Corey: ADHD trait? Everyone does that. Wait.Marie: [laugh]. Yeah. When you said that enough times, you're like, “Oh, wait. Maybe this is not normal.” Or you don't really know what is—what is normal anyway, right? So, in doing that research, trying to connect with her, trying to understand her experience better, I just started learning about more and more of these traits.I also knew a shit ton of people in our course, had mentioned that they had ADHD in their intake form, and I was like, what is it about people that ADHD that are actually drawn to my YouTube videos or my way of explaining things? And I started to learn a little bit more; it's quite common for folks with ADHD to be drawn to one another, probably because of our communication styles, even the sort of mild interrupting, or kind of the way we banter together. There's different styles of communicating that I think often folks with ADHD are maybe drawn to one another or have an easier time understanding one another. So, listening to some of these symptoms, I was like, “Wait a second.” Because my sister and I are so different in the way our symptoms present.I thought, “Well, that's what ADHD looks like.” It's pure unbridled chaos and unfiltered. And I just had this idea of what it looked like because she was one of the few examples that I had. Meanwhile, I'm skipping grades, I'm in the gifted program, I'm off, you know, doing my own thing. It looked very different.I thought, “Oh, people with ADHD don't thrive in university,” or whatnot. So, I had a lot of assumptions that I had to unpack. And I think the one, sort of, I don't know, symptom that kind of twinged something in my brain was extreme difficulty getting up in the morning and even sort of waking up your brain in the morning. This has been a problem with jobs, it's been a problem was school, getting to school on time, getting to work on time. Similar to you, it has caused job loss, it has caused tension with partners. They don't understand, like, why can't you get out of bed and seize the day?And I just thought, “There's something weird going on there with my body.” But I can be, you know, wide awake at 7 p.m. and I'm, like, ready to go. And I can hyperfocus for days on end. So, just noticing some of these symptoms and kind of unpacking it a bit, I thought, “Okay, there's something to go a little deeper in here.”Corey: I have trouble getting up, but I'm almost never late. That one does not hit me in quite the same way. In fact—Marie: Well—Corey: —my first consulting clients, and I'd been building—I was independent for two weeks at that point, and I was in an in-person meeting in San Francisco and one day, I showed up 20 minutes late, and he just stared at me. “You're never late. What's the deal here?” And it's like, “Yeah, I had trouble getting up this morning.” That was a lie.I was able to tell him about three or four months later, that morning, I found out I was going to be a father. And that was an—you know, it turns out that I was going to be okay being late, but it was so early, you didn't want to tell anyone, yet. But it was—yeah, it's one of those things where that was more important than—Marie: Absolutely.Corey: —doing the work thing. But I still remember, yeah, I feel like I'm always about to be late but apparently my reputation is, I never am, so okay. I'll take it. That is a—again, it is a spectrum disorder. I also—Marie: Absolutely.Corey: —further there want to call out for viewers, listeners, et cetera, a couple of things. One, this is not mental health advice. If any of the stories we're telling resonate, talk to a qualified mental health professional. Secondly, I want to be clear as well here, Marie, that you and I both have significant advantages when it comes to dealing with these things. We both run our own companies, we can effectively restructure the way that we work in ways that are more accommodating for what we do.It turns out that in my employment days, that was never really a solution where, “Yeah, I decided I'm not going to wind up doing the on-call checklist every day. It doesn't resonate with me.”Marie: “Just not feeling like it.”Corey: “It's doing the same thing too many days in a row. And yeah, I'm not going to check the backups, either. What do you mean ‘I'm fired?'” yeah, it turns out, you're not able to—you're empowered to make those kinds of sweeping changes in the same way.Marie: Exactly.Corey: So, this is not advice for people. This is simply a pair of experience reports, the way I view it.Marie: Absolutely. I sort of feel like self-employment wasn't necessarily a choice, in a way. It just felt like that's the only way I'm going to be able to operate in this world. I need some more sense of control and say in how I structure my days, how I structure my work, being able to switch things up, being able to pivot quickly. I knew that I was going to need more control over that. So yeah, pretty unemployable over here. [laugh].Corey: So, once you wound up with the diagnosis, what happened next? What changes did you make that wound up resonating for you, things that were actionable? And, yeah, you've been very public about it as well. I want to highlight that. I'm not, for the most part.And part of that is because I internalized growing up that it was somehow a shameful thing that we don't talk about. And the other part of it, too, on some level, was I didn't want to turn it into a part of my brand identity, where, “Oh, yeah, Corey is very hard to describe.” So, people thrash around and look for labels to slap on me. ‘Shitposter' seems to have stuck rather well. Because as soon as people feel that they have a label for something, it becomes easier to classify and then dismiss it.It's aspects of my personality. It's who I am. I don't think of it as a disorder so much as it is part and parcel of who and what I am. And it turns out that being me is not—yet—a medically recognized diagnosis. So, I'm cautious to avoid the labeling aspect of it.But you have very publicly not, if not going for the label, you at least embraced it as an aspect of who you are, and you've been very vocal about your experiences and telling people how you have overcome aspects of this. It's admirable. I wish I did more of it, honestly.Marie: I think it's kind of essential, I think, in the nature of what we're teaching. Like, when we're teaching people to become more organized and we know that executive dysfunction is one of the signs or, you know, issues with ADHD, to me it sort of recontextualized why I became so freakin' obsessed with systems and organization: because I never felt organized. I always felt the sense of what is the stuff come so easy to other people? Why is it taking me so much longer? Why am I spending nights, evenings, taking courses about systems like I'm trying to understand how to give my life structure?And so, in a way, the way I have become organized was trial by fire, just teaching myself, learning, you know, getting coaches. Like, I literally had a systems coach to teach myself how to get my business organized. So, I had kind of obsessed over it, like a hyperfocus. And so, realizing that other people are struggling with this and there's a reason that people with ADHD are coming to the course seeking that sense of control. And so, learning that I had it, I was like, oh, this actually [laugh] does explain, in a way, my obsession with this or my curiosity about this, of, like, why does this come easy to some other people? Why do some people need to study this and learn this? Like, what is it about that?And so, I sort of felt like it would be doing a disservice if I didn't kind of name it and talk about it and say, well, this actually colors a lot of my opinions. This actually influences the way I approach organization or even productivity, not from a timing perspective, but from an energy management perspective. I didn't realize that was something that I'm doing. I'm not managing time, we're managing Marie's energy. And even my team is learning how to do that, too.So, I was like, “Oh, that actually makes a ton of sense.” And it also makes sense why some people won't resonate with this energy management thing or might think I'm going way too far down a rabbit hole on something and they're like, “Why can't people just do what they say?” Like, you don't understand, some of us need to trick ourselves into being productive. And this is how I've learned to do that. So, it was just kind of a funny recontextualizing or uncovering, oh, our brains operate very differently. And even within ADHD, people's brains operate differently, so how do we get people moving toward progress, but knowing that we kind of need different ways of doing that. So, it's just been kind of an interesting process.Corey: There's a fairly common experience report from folks who have ADHD that when they're kids, their memory is generally very good with a number of expressions of it, so we form our self-image in a lot of those times. And then for the rest of our lives, we tell ourselves the same lie, regardless of how many times it has proven to be a lie. And that lie is, “I don't need to write this down. I'll remember it.”Marie: Oh yes.Corey: “No, Corey, you will not remember it. You need to write it down. I promise.” And, for example, right now—I finally gave in and technology leapt ahead to the point where my entire life is run by Google Calendar—specifically three or four of them—that all route through Fantastical—which is the app I use—but it winds up grabbing my attention at the right time. It tells me what I need to do, when, and how, and it's wonderful.Because if it's not on my calendar, it does not happen.Marie: Yes.Corey: Like, I will forget our anniversary, my kids' birthdays, to pick my children up from school. We are talking about, if it is not on my calendar, it does not happen. That is the one system that has been forced on me that worked. Then we—let's talk about Notion for a minute because I looked at it briefly a few years ago, and it is one in the long, long, long list of tools or approaches or systems that I have played with and then discarded to act as basically an auxiliary brain pack. I used Evernote for a while and that sort of worked because I just would do different notes all the time and I'd wind up with 3000 of those things, and then the app gets bloaty and I move on to something else.For the last five years or so I've been using Drafts, a Mac slash iOS app, that only does text, which makes image management and attaching things kind of hard, but okay. And that's great, and now I have 5000 of those in my [back 00:16:25] folder, not categorized or organized anyway, so I focus instead on well, search for terms and hope I use the term I thought I did at the time. And so, every time I've tried to use something like Notion, it's yeah, this requires a way of thinking that I know I will get excited about if I look at it, and in a month, I'll be right back to where I am now. So, there's only so many times you go on the same ride before you know how it ends. How do y—like, that feels like a very common experience. How did you fix it?Marie: I think at the core though, you kind of have to be excited about the tool that you're using. And so, I don't think—Notion is not going to be an exciting fun tool for everyone. Some people are going to be like, “I don't want to frickin' build my productivity system. Are you kidding me? Like, just give me something that works out of the box.” Absolutely.But I think there's something about the visual components of Notion. Like, I am a designer; I went to design school. I think I'm—it's almost like something doesn't click until I see it in the way that I need to see it. And that's something I've learned about my brain is just, sometimes the same information can be presented to me, but if it's not in a visual way, or whether it's not spaced in the right way, my brain just kind of ignores it or it gets overwhelmed by it. And so, for me that visual aspect actually helps me learn.I'm priming my brain, I'm making my goals front and center. The fact that I can design it the way I need my brain to see it is part of its appeal to me. But I also recognize that's not something everyone gets excited about. They're not drawn to it. I'm all for using the tool that works the way that your brain is going to work.I get excited about making databases. I get excited about building glossaries of information to help me learn things. Like, for me, that's part of my learning and part of my process and it's just kind of what I'm used to, but I fully acknowledge, like, that stuff does not get everybody excited.[midroll 00:18:03]Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friend EnterpriseDB. EnterpriseDB has been powering enterprise applications with PostgreSQL for 15 years. And now EnterpriseDB has you covered wherever you deploy PostgreSQL on-premises, private cloud, and they just announced a fully-managed service on AWS and Azure called BigAnimal, all one word. Don't leave managing your database to your cloud vendor because they're too busy launching another half-dozen managed databases to focus on any one of them that they didn't build themselves. Instead, work with the experts over at EnterpriseDB. They can save you time and money, they can even help you migrate legacy applications—including Oracle—to the cloud. To learn more, try BigAnimal for free. Go to biganimal.com/snark, and tell them Corey sent you.Corey: There's something very key you're talking about here, which is the idea of having to be excited about what it is that you do. I look at the things that I do professionally, and if I didn't deeply enjoy them, they would not get done, and I would have pivoted long ago to something else. People wonder why—Marie: Absolutely.Corey: —I make fun of so many things in the tech ecosystem. The honest answer is because if I just tell the dry, boring version of it, I will get bored because it's a fairly boring field. Whereas instead, okay, someone releases a new thing. Great. How do I keep it interesting for me? How do I find a way to tell that story?How do I find a way to, in turn, build that into something that, in turn, I can start dragging in different directions and opening up to new ways of talking without going too far? It's always a razor's edge, it's always a bit of a mind puzzle, and it's always different. I love that. That's why I do it. It's not for the audience so much as it is for myself. Because if I'm not engaged, no one else is going to care what I have to say.Marie: Absolutely. And I think that's a huge part of ADHD as well which is that interest-based nervous system, right? It's like we have to [laugh] trick ourselves into finding the excitement in it or whatever that looks like for each of us. But just if I'm not motivated, if I'm not excited about it—writing email newsletters doesn't get me excited; I'm like, “Okay, do I need to hire someone to do this?” Or how can I find a way to do it, whether it's—if making a video is more fun or easy, great.How can I, you know, make content do double-duty in that way? So yeah, I'm always trying to find ways to incentivize myself to do the things that need to get done, even though they may not be the most exciting. But step one is actually run a business that is based on something that you love doing. Which not everyone, maybe, has the privilege to do, but I think everything about the way I've designed my business model and the services that we offer is, don't offer services you don't really want to offer. Don't make products that you don't want to maintain, you're not excited about. So, it's definitely a core part of kind of how we design our whole business model.Corey: For me, a big part of it has always been just trying to make sure that I'm doing the things that engage me. And this is where that whole idea of being in a very privileged position enters into it. Take this podcast slash video right now, as a terrific example. I'm having this conversation, I have an entire system when I wind up sending a link to someone, it fires off Calendly, that hides webhooks and gets a whole bunch of other things set up. I show up, we have a conversation before the show to figure out just this is the general ebb and flow of the show. Here's the generalized topics we want to talk about. Let's dive in.And we finish the recording session. Great, I wind up closing the window and that's the last time I generally think about it. Because everything else has been automated. If anything other than me having this conversation with you does not need to be me, I there is no differentiated value in me being the person that does the audio engineering. It turns out, I can pay people who are world's better than I am at that, who actually enjoy it as opposed to viewing it as unnecessary chore, and I can do things that I find more appealing, like shitposting about a $1.108 trillion—Marie: Exactly.Corey: Company. It comes down to find the thing, the differentiation point, and find ways to make sure you don't have to do the other parts of it. But that is not a path that's available to everyone in every context. And again, I'm talking about this in a professional sense. I still have to do a whole bunch of stuff as I go through the course of my life that is not differentiated, but I can't very well hire someone to get me dressed in the morning. Well, I can but I feel like that becomes a little bit out of the scope of the lived human experience most of the [crosstalk 00:22:29].Marie: [laugh]. Absolutely. I feel like that's one thing I sort of regret not doing earlier is hiring someone to work with. So, the very first hire that I made was my chief of operations, and oh my gosh, the things that she took on that I used to do that I'm like, how on earth did I do that before? Because now that you do that, and you do it way faster, I just got to wonder, like, how the heck did I ever convince myself to do those activities?I don't want to do touch spreadsheets, I don't want to [laugh] deal with that stuff. I don't want to, you know, email reminders, or whatever it is. There's so many activities that she handles that I just… I would be happy to never touch again. And so, I sort of wish I had explored that earlier, but I was in that lone wolf, like, I got this. I'm going to run my own business solo forever.And, you know, I just sort of thought it's difficult to work with me or because of the way that I work, I don't know how to delegate. Like, it's all in your head. I just didn't really know how to do that. So, that process, I think, takes a while. That first hire when you're going from solo person to okay, now we're two; how do we work together? Okay, who else can we hire? What other activities can I get other people to do? So, that's been a process, for sure.Corey: Mike Julian, my business partner who you know, is a very process-driven person. He is very organized. His love language is Microsoft Excel, as I frequently tease him with. And one of the—not the only factor by a landslide, but one of the big early factors of what would—okay, I know what I'd do. What would Mike do here?Part of it is the never-ending litany of mail I get from the state around things like taxes, business registration, the rest. And normally my response when I get those, is I look at it, and it's like, “Welp, I'm going to fucking prison. That's the end of it. The end.” Because it's not that I don't have the money to pay my taxes, I assure you. What, I don't have it—because I—financial planning is kind of part and parcel of how we think about cloud economics.But no, it's the fact that I'm not going to sit there, fill out the form, put a stamp on it—or God forbid, fax it somewhere—and the rest. It's not the paying of the taxes that bothers me it is the paperwork and the process and the heavy lift associated with getting the executive function necessary to do it. So, it never gets done and deadlines slide by. And Mike was good at that for a time, and then he took the more reasonable approach about this of, “Huh. Seems to me like a lot of this stuff is not differentiated value that I need to be doing either.”So, we have a CFO who handles a lot of that stuff now and other operational folks. And it turns out that yeah, wow, there's a lot—I can—the quality of what I put out is a lot better because I get to focus on things instead of having to deal with the ebb and flow minutia of running payroll myself every week.Marie: Oh, yeah. All of that is very relatable. And this is why I can't do paper in the office. I think this is why I just moved my entire brain online. It's like if there's paper, stamps, anything related to having to go [laugh] to a post office to mail something. I think I still have the stack of thank you cards from our wedding from, you know, five years ago. So, yeah. [laugh].Corey: That you haven't sent out yet. Of course.Marie: Yes, exactly.Corey: Exact same—sorry, people 13—11 years ago, whenever it was.Marie: I'm so sorry.Corey: Yeah, one of these years. Yeah, and see, that's exactly how I treat things like Drafts or Notion, if I were to use it, or something else is great, it's still going to be the digital equivalent of a giant pile of paper. The thing is that computers can search through the contents of that paper a hell of a lot faster than I can, even with my own, at times, uncanny reading speed. There's some value to that. So, understanding how the systems work and having them bend to accommodate you, rather than trying to fool yourself in half to work within the confines of an existing system, that seems to be the direction that you're taking Notion in, specifically in the context of it is not prescriptive.And, on some level, that's kind of the problem I have with it. Whenever I try the getting started for us, it's, “Great, you can build your own system.” It's like, “Isn't that your job? What am I missing here?” Because the scariest thing I ever see when it's time for you to write a blog post or whatnot is an empty editor. It's, where do I get started? Where's the rest?I even built a template that I wind up sometimes using text expander to autofill, that gets me started. And it's just get—once I get started, it's great. It's hard to get me started; it's hard to get me to stop, in case no one has been aware of that. But it's been understanding how I work and how that integrates with it. I'm curious, given that you do talk to people who are trying to build these systems for a living for themselves? How common is my perspective on this? Am I out there completely, this unique, beautiful Snowflake? Is it yeah, that's basically everyone? Or somewhere in between?Marie: Oh, I definitely don't think you're alone with that. And again, I often will dissuade people from taking on Notion. I'm like, “Oh, if you're just looking for a note-taker, or you're just looking for something else,” or, “Your tools are already working for you, great. Keep using them.” So, I think it's quite common. I don't think Notion is the right tool for everyone.I think it's great for very visual people like myself, people that it matters how you are seeing your information, and how much information you're seeing, and you want more control over that, that's great. For me, I like the integration. I know that as soon as I'm bouncing around to different tools, like, I just already feel kind of scattered, so I was like, how can I pull everything that I need into these, sort of, singular dashboards. So, my approach is very dashboard-focused. Okay, Marie is going into content mode, it's time to write a blog. Go to the content hub. On the content hub is your list of most recent ideas, your templates for how to write a blog post. There's resources for creating video. It's already there for me; I'm not having to start from scratch like you said.But again, it took time to build that up for myself. So, I think you're not alone, and I think some people get excited about that building process; other people get irritated by it, and I don't think there's a right or wrong answer. It's just how do our brains work? Know thyself. And, yeah, I've sort of—I think also in a way, something that's a little different, maybe, about the way that I use Notion is I think of it as a personal development tool.It is a tool for making me better in different ways. It's for exploring my interests, it's for feeding my curiosity, it's for looking at change over time. I track my feelings every day. I've been journaling for 1300 days in a row, which is probably the only thing I've done consistently in my life [laugh] in the last couple of years. But now I can look and I can see trends over time in a really beautiful and visual way. And I just, to me, it's like a curiosity tool, to see, like, where am I going? Where have I been? What do I want more of?Corey: I need to look into this a bit more because my idea of a well-designed user interface is—I'm very opinionated on this—but it comes down to the idea of where do you use nouns versus verbs in command-line arguments to things you're running in the terminal. Because I was a grumpy Unix sysadmin for the first part of my career—because there's no other kind of Unix sysadmin—and going down that path was great. Okay, everything I'm interacting with is basically a text file piped together to do different things. And it took a while for me to realize, you know, maybe—just spitballing here—there's a better way to convey information than a wall of text, sometimes. Blasphemy.And no, no, it turns out that just because it's hard using the tools I'm used to doesn't mean that's the best way to convey information. And even now, these days, I'm spending more time getting the color theme and the font choices and typeface choices of what I'm doing in the terminal to represent something that's a bit more aesthetically pleasing. Does it actually account for anything? I don't know, but it feels better and there's almost a Feng Shui element of it. Similar to work in a—Marie: Yes.Corey: Clean office versus a messy one.Marie: A hundred percent. I think that's kind of how I think of an approach. I am much more likely to get the things done. If, when I come in and I open Notion, it's like, “Here's what's on today, Marie.” And it's like speaking nicely to me, there's little positive messages, there's beautiful imagery.It just makes me feel good when I'm starting my day. And knowing that how I feel is going to very much influence what I'm likely to accomplish in the day, again, I'm constantly tricking myself into getting [laugh] more excited and amped up about what's on the schedule for the day. So, I really liked that about it. It feels beautiful to me.Corey: I'm going to have to take another look at it at some point. I think that there's a lot of interesting directions to go into on this. I also have the privilege of having known you for a little while, back when you were more or less just getting started. One of the things that you said at the time that absolutely resonated with me was the idea of, wait, you mean build a business around teaching people how to use Notion? Like an info product or a training approach?And a lot of your concerns are the ones that I've harbored for a while, too, which is the idea of there's a proliferation of info products in technical and other spaces, and an awful lot of them—without naming any names or talking in any particular direction—are not the highest quality. People are building these courses while learning the thing themselves. And when they tell stories about it, it's all about, “And this is how I'm making money quickly.” I don't find that admirable; I don't necessarily want to learn how to do a thing from someone who does not have themselves at least a decent understanding themselves of what they're working on so they can address questions that go a bit off into the weeds. And so mu—again, knowing how to do a thing and knowing how to teach a thing are orthogonal concepts. And very often a lot of these info products are being created by people who don't really know how to do either, as best I can tell.Marie: Yes. So, I think you've nailed a point to that, knowing a thing deeply and then knowing how to teach that thing really well are two totally different skills. And I definitely bumped up against that myself. I'm like, I know, Notion inside and out. Like, you know, name something, I can make it, I can optimize it, I can, you know, build a system out of thin air really fast, no problem. I'm a problem solver that way.But to teach someone else how to do that requires very different skills. And I knew [laugh] as I was starting to teach people stuff, I'm like, “You could do this. You could do that.” And I'm like kind of bouncing around and I'm all over the place because I'm so excited about the possibilities. But wait a second.Beginners that are just learning how to use Notion don't need to know every frickin' possible way that you could use it. So, knowing that instructional design, curriculum design is a whole other skill, and I care about student results, it's like, this is a gap that I have, and I want to be an excellent teacher. It matters to me. I actually do want to become a better teacher. I want to have higher quality YouTube videos, I want to make sure that I'm not losing people along the way.I don't just care about making a shit ton of money with an info product; I care about peoples' experience and kind of having that, I don't know, that prestige element. Like, that's something that does matter in terms of producing quality products. So, I hired experts to help me do that because again, it's a not necessarily a strength of mine. So, I think I hired three different people in the course of six months to various consultants and people who understand learning design and that sort of thing. And I think that's something a lot of info product creators. They think of it as just packaging a blog and selling it, right?It's different. When you're teaching a course, for example, your formatting matters, how you display information matters, how you design activities matters. What separates a course from a passive income product or blog, right? We need to think about those things, and I think a lot of people are just like, what's the quickest, you know, buck that I can make on these products and just kind of turn them out. And I don't think every course creator has maybe done the extra legwork to really understand what makes students actually follow through and complete a course. It's hard. It's really hard.Corey: And these are also very different products. There's what you are teaching, which is here's how to contextualize these things and how to build a system around it. There's another offering out there that would be something that would also be very compelling from my perspective where, cool, I appreciate the understanding and the deep systems design approach that goes into this. Can I just give you a brain dump of all the problems that I have with this? You go away and build a system that accounts for all of that.And again, it's the outcome that I care about. There's this belief that oh we want consultants to build by the hour and work hard. No. I don't care. If you listen to this, nod and do the great customer service thing, the Zoom call, and just like, “Okay, that's template number three with three one-line changes. Done. Now, we're going to sit on it for a week so it looks hard.”Which we've all got that as consultants in the early days. And then you turn that around because it's the outcome that I really care about. But that's a different business, that is a different revenue model, that is different—Marie: Yes.Corey: That is not nearly so much a one-to-many, like an info product. That is a one-to-one or one-to-few.Marie: And I did that for the whole first year that the course was being developed and was out there. I was simultaneously consulting with people one-on-one all the time, with teams, with individuals. So, I'm learning about what are all those common challenges that keep popping up over and over again? What are the unique challenges? What are the common ones?And in my experience, what I bumped up against is people think they want to just pay someone to solve that, but then when you give someone a very fleshed out, organized system that they didn't participate in the building, it's a lot harder to get somebody to use it, to plug into a ready-made system. So, in our experience, there's a sort of back and forth. It has to happen in tandem; we do it over time. And you know, in my partner's case, Ben does consulting with companies as well, so he'll meet with them on a weekly basis and working with the different members of the team. So, there is some element of we built you a thing. Let's have you use it, notice where there's gaps, friction, whatever, because it's not a one-and-done process.It's not like, “You gave me all the info. We're good to go.” It's not until people are using it that you're like, “Oh, okay, that's close, but I'm finding myself doing this, or avoiding this, or clicking around too much.” And so, to me, it's a really organic process. But that's not something that I'm as keen to do. And maybe it's because I did it for, like, two years and kind of burnt out on it. I'm like, “I'm done. Like, I'd rather teach folks to do it themselves.” But so a partner does the consulting; I'm doing more of the teaching.Corey: That's what happened to an awful lot of our consulting work here at The Duckbill Group where it was exciting and fun for me for years, and at some point it turned into, I am interested in teaching how to do this a little bit more and systematizing it because I'm starting to get bored with aspects of it. And I was thinking, “Well, do I build a course?” It's, “Well, no. As it turns out that if you have the right starting point, I can hire people who I can teach how to do AWS bill analysis if they have the right starting point.” And it turns out that a lot of those people—read as all of them—are going to be way better at doing the systemic deep-dive across the board, rather than just finding the things that they find personally interesting and significant, and then, “Well, there you go. I did a consulting engagement.” And the output is basically three bullet points scrawled on the back of an envelope.Yeah, turns out that that's not quite the level of professionalism clients expect. Great, so our product is better, we're getting better insight into it, and I get to scratch my itch of teaching people how to do things internally without becoming a critical path blocker.Marie: Yeah, absolutely.Corey: I mean, I have shitposting to get back to. Come on.Marie: Yeah exactly. [laugh]. The important things. Love it.Corey: I really want to thank you for taking so much time to speak with me about all of these things. If people want to learn more—Marie: Absolutely.Corey: —where's the best place to find you?Marie: Yeah, you can find me at mariepoulin.com is where my personal blog, or weareokidoki.com, or notionmastery.com. You can also catch me on Twitter.Corey: And we will put links to—Marie: That's where I am most active. Yeah.Corey: Oh, of course. And all the links wind up going into the [show notes 00:37:42], as always. Thank you so much for your time. I appreciate it.Marie: Thanks for having me, Corey. It was awesome.Corey: Marie Poulin, CEO of Oki Doki. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice—and if it's on the YouTubes smash the like and subscribe buttons—whereas if you've hated this podcast episode, great, same thing, five-star review on whatever platform, smash the two buttons, but also leave an insulting comment and then turn that comment into an info product that you wind up selling to a whole bunch of people primarily to boost your own Twitter threads about how successful you are as a creator.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

Into Our Own Hands
Ep 2 HARVESTING WILD CLAY: How to ground yourself to the earth with Andrew Sartorius

Into Our Own Hands

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2022 47:10


Learn about how to harvest wild clay wherever you are – in the country, city or suburbs. Understand how wild clay ties us to the past of the place we harvest from – both of the earth, the industry and the humans who lived there. How Wild Clay can help us have more grace for our own “organic material” and how to work with ourselves. This is Part 1 of a three-part making exercise over the season of the show – harvesting wild clay, processing wild clay (Part 2) and firing your wild clay (Season finale and Part 3). About Andrew: Andrew Sartorius is the program manager at the Oki Doki studio and a full time wood fire potter living in Germantown NY with his fiancé and fellow ceramic artist Tanya Lee Hamm, and his pup named June. https://www.andrewsartoriusceramics.com/ https://www.theokidokistudio.com/ Connect with Andrew on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/asartoriusceramics/ Music credit: "Song We Came To Sing" by Living Roots livingrootsmusic.com

Kudo's Radio -クドラジ-
Amazonでポイント8倍!だけど…。新たにJCBカード新規入会キャンペーンも!

Kudo's Radio -クドラジ-

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 25:39


本日2月16日から、JCB ORIGINAL SERIESの「Amazonのお買い物でOki Dokiポイント8倍キャンペーン」が始まりました! ただ現状私は、どのイヤホンを買うべきか、本当にいま必要なものなのか、といったことでめちゃくちゃ悩んでいますw また、JCBカードの新規入会キャンペーンが新たに2月から行われているみたいなので、そちらもぜひチェックしてみてください! --- ⭐️Related Websites⭐️ JCB ORIGINAL SERIES Amazon祭!JCBオリジナルシリーズ新規入会キャンペーン --- ⭐️クドラジへのお便りはこちらから!⭐️ ⭐️Send in a letter message from "HERE" !⭐️ --- ⭐️Please Follow !⭐️ Amazon Music Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Spotify standfm Twitter Facebook Instagram --- ⭐️Amazon Music Unlimited⭐️ 7500万曲がHD・ULTRA HD音質で聴き放題に! Dolby Atmos・360 Reality Audioによる空間オーディオ体験も! 無料体験に登録してクドラジと推しのアーティストを応援しよう! --- ⭐️U-NEXT⭐️ アニメ・マンガはもちろん、映画・ドラマ・音楽ライブ・ラノベも楽しめる! しかも見放題作品数No.1!(GEM Partners調べ) そして何より、❤️ムフフ❤️なコンテンツも見放題で楽しめる!w --- ⭐️愛用機材など⭐️ ・iPhone8 64GB(スマホ) ・HP-Spectre-x360(PC) ・REALFORCE PFU Limited Edition PZ-R2TLSA-US4-BK(キーボード) ・Logicool MX Master 3(マウス) ・SHURE MV7(マイク) ・SENNHEISER HD 598SE(ヘッドホン) ・SONY WH-1000XM2(ASMR視聴用ヘッドホン) ・ZOOM PodTrak P4(オーディオインターフェース) ・Adobe Audition(音声編集ソフト) --- ※上記製品リンクURLはAmazonアソシエイトのリンクを使用しています。 ※Amazon Musicインフルエンサーとして上記リンクURLにより収入を得ています。 ※Cover Art is created by "Dream by WOMBO".

Kudo's Radio -クドラジ-
衝動買いを抑えた!2月16日からAmazonで8倍ポイントアップキャンペーン!

Kudo's Radio -クドラジ-

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2022 21:27


昨夜の配信後に衝動買いしそうになっていたKudoでしたが、なんとかその衝動を抑えることができました! 「JCB ORIGINAL SERIES」で、2月16日にAmazonの8倍ポイントアップキャンペーンが始まるからです。 この情報を知らなかったら普通に買っちゃってましたw 皆さんも衝動買いには気をつけてください! --- 【Related Websites】 JCBが運営するポイントサイト「Oki Doki ランド」 JCB ORIGINAL SERIES --- 【Related Episodes (Amazon Music)】 【お騒がせおじさん】注文した"Galaxy S20"を結局キャンセルしました! --- クドラジへのお便りはこちらから! Send in a letter message from "HERE" ! --- 【Please Follow !】 Amazon Music Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Spotify standfm Website Twitter Facebook --- 【Amazon Music Unlimited】 7500万曲がHD・ULTRA HD音質で聴き放題に! Dolby Atmos・360 Reality Audioによる空間オーディオ体験も! 無料体験に登録してクドラジと推しのアーティストを応援しよう! --- 【U-NEXT】 アニメ・マンガはもちろん、映画・ドラマ・音楽ライブ・ラノベも楽しめる! しかも見放題作品数No.1!(GEM Partners調べ) そして何より、♡ムフフ♡なコンテンツも見放題で楽しめる!w --- 【愛用機材など】 ・iPhone8 64GB(スマホ) ・HP-Spectre-x360(PC) ・REALFORCE PFU Limited Edition PZ-R2TLSA-US4-BK(キーボード) ・Logicool MX Master 3(マウス) ・SHURE MV7(マイク) ・SENNHEISER HD 598SE(ヘッドホン) ・SONY WH-1000XM2(ASMR視聴用ヘッドホン) ・ZOOM PodTrak P4(オーディオインターフェース) ・Adobe Audition(音声編集ソフト) --- ※上記製品リンクURLはAmazonアソシエイトのリンクを使用しています。 ※Amazon Musicインフルエンサーとして上記リンクURLにより収入を得ています。

Vertigo - La 1ere
Les cartes Pokémon font lʹobjet dʹintenses spéculations

Vertigo - La 1ere

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 6:18


Créé en 1996 par lʹéditeur de jeux vidéo Nintendo, lʹunivers des Pokémons fait à nouveau lʹobjet dʹun bel engouement (ou dʹune hystérie débridée, cʹest selon), via les cartes à jouer que les spéculateurs sʹarrachent. Le Youtubeur Logan Paul fait par exemple des millions de vues en ligne en ouvrant des sachets de carte devant les caméras. Il est notamment lʹheureux propriétaire dʹune carte Dracaufeu qui vaudrait la bagatelle dʹun million de dollars. Chroniqueur pour lʹémission Oki Doki sur Couleur 3 et pour esport.ch, Julio Mestre rappelle à quelles conditions une carte Pokémon peut prendre de la valeur. Par Antoine Droux.

Mind Meld With Josh Gonsalves
#32: Marie Poulin — Master your Life and Business

Mind Meld With Josh Gonsalves

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2021 111:19


Josh is joined by Marie Poulin to talk about the online education business, digital systems, mindset training & self-development, and how Marie decided to go from a generalist designer to finding her niche and going all-in with Notion. We also get into building up self-confidence and creating content online. One of Marie's biggest growth channels is her YouTube channel, but it took her YEARS to build up the courage to start posting consistently, and it clearly paid off. Marie offers lots of great advice here for anyone aspiring to putting themselves out there on YouTube, or social media in general. About Marie Poulin Marie helps business owners level up their digital systems, workflow, and product ecosystems, so they can spend more time on what matters. She previously co-founded Oki Doki with her husband, where they help folks create, launch, and market online courses and training programs. Marie has quickly become the go-to expert in Notion, the wildly popular organization and productivity tool, and is the host of Notion Office Hours and creator of Notion Mastery, where she teaches you how to master your life and business workflows using Notion. Sign up for Marie's Notion Mastery Course: http://bit.ly/mindmeld-notion-mastery Connect with Marie Poulin https://www.mariepoulin.com https://twitter.com/mariepoulin https://instagram.com/mariepoulin https://www.youtube.com/c/mariepoulin ******** For full show notes and links discussed in the episode, go to https://bit.ly/mindmeld-pod ******** If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes https://apple.co/2Y86xww It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. Subscribe to Mind Meld on your favourite podcast app: **** https://bit.ly/mindmeld-pod Stalk Josh on the Internet: Twitter: (https://twitter.com/joshgonsalves_) Instagram: (https://instagram.com/joshgonsalves_) Facebook: (https://facebook.com/gonsalvesmedia) LinkedIn: (https://linkedin.com/in/joshgonsalves94) YouTube: (https://youtube.com/joshgonsalves) Thanks for coming this far! if you're reading this, it is no accident. The universe brought you to this corner of the internet for a reason, and you're on the right track. I already know that you're an amazing person and I can't wait to connect with you! — Josh

Landing Radio
Entrevista en Exclusiva con Jorge Pérez el popular "Tomillo" de la serie colombiana Oki Doki.

Landing Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2020 36:28


El Rollin con nuestros panelistas en la cabina virtual de Landing Radio en entrevista en exclusiva con Jorge Pérez el popular "Tomillo" de la serie Oki Doki en la década de los 90s. Con Jhonatan Zapata desde New York, Javier Noreña desde Villavicencio, Mauricio Sánchez con el Master desde la ciudad de Cali y las impertinencias de Frank Camacho “El Macho”. Landing Radio Aterrizando tus sentidos.

It's Been Awhile Podcast
Episode 40 - Yogi Oki Doki and E-I E-I Yoga

It's Been Awhile Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2020 61:01


Xavier, Ian and Dave stretch out with some barnyard yoga with a VHS from 1996. E-I E-I Yoga and it's instructor Yogi Oki Doki went viral in about 2009 when a edited clip show was posted by Everything Is Terrible (who I read was shut down last year and said so in the video but later found out I was mistaken). While this website does post important videos, the comment section was relentless towards Yogi Oki Doki. We tracked down a copy of the VHS and watched it almost in it's entirety to see if it is as strange as the edited video makes it out to be. Get an inside scoop on the drama and tranquility of the E-I E-I Yoga Farm. Thank you for watching. Original Clip that gave a creepy depiction: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQz0CmYQG9E Yoga Dork's 1st Article: http://yogadork.com/2009/07/30/ok-everybody-make-fun-of-the-hippie-dippy-e-i-e-i-yoga-farmer-video/ Yoga Dork's 2nd Article: http://yogadork.com/2009/08/05/who-is-the-eiei-yoga-farmer-meet-max-thomas-aka-yogi-oki-doki/ Max's Old Website: http://www.livingyogaofthedesert.org/ Max's New Website: http://www.highdeserteden.com/ Robin's Website: http://www.robinmaxwell.com/ Check out Anchor.fm for audio versions of our podcast on 13 major platforms: https://anchor.fm/itsbeenawhilepodcast Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7nttbdlKOY1060TIrBDDBF Or Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/its-been-awhile-podcast/id1492875822 And even Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xMWVhMTcxMC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== Our Instagram isn't popping, but it can be with your help: https://www.instagram.com/itsbeenawhilepodcast/ Intro/Outro Music by Heedseeker: https://www.instagram.com/heedseeker/?hl=en Art Design by Quinn Koeneman https://www.instagram.com/aint_no_rest_for_the_quinn_kid/ Logo Font by: Gabriel deVue Soundboard Software: https://www.jinglepalette.com/ Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/itsbeenawhilepodcast/support

Okidoki
Introducing our new friend, artist Brittany E. Lampe

Okidoki

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2020 39:51


In this episode Emma and Jon were given the opportunity to interview an artist who lives and creates in Okinawa. Her name is Brittany E. Lampe. Brittany has contagious passion and exceptional skill! Listen in as Emma and Jon introduce the Oki Doki family to their new friend Brittany and her creative work!  Brittany E. Lampe Art on Facebook

SOLENOÏDE, émission de 'musiques imaginogènes' diffusée sur 30 radios dans le monde
Solénoïde - Grande Boucle Radiovisuelle 34 - 30.12.2019

SOLENOÏDE, émission de 'musiques imaginogènes' diffusée sur 30 radios dans le monde

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2019 56:00


Solénoïde (30.12.2019) - Traversez en diagonal un panorama musical hexagonal ! Cette semaine marque le retour de notre Grande Boucle Radiovisuelle, dont nous abordons la 34e étape. Comme à son habitude, cette émission met en avant le bouillonnement créatif de la scène musicale française. Une thématique du Solénoïde qui s'annonce des plus bariolées et qui devrait une nouvelle fois enthousiasmer quant à la qualité de la création made in France !

Okidoki
Wakanatsu Park & Zazou's Bakery

Okidoki

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2019 33:41


Our global Oki Doki family just grew a little bigger, we gained new listeners in three of the states we had on our list. Thank you for your help! In this episode Emma and Jon introduce a new (review from season 1) word of the day, they share some adventures, to include the discovery of a new park, a great bakery on Gate Two Street, and one of Emma's new favorite places - a fabric store. Thanks for listening.  Wakanatsu Park Zazou's Bakery Emma's Fabric Store Shuri Castle

park bakery oki doki
What Works | Small Business Podcast
EP 234: Choosing Not To Scale With Oki Doki Co-Founder Marie Poulin

What Works | Small Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2019 36:27


Today, my guest is Marie Poulin—our first 3 time guest here on the pod! Marie is not someone to miss the important questions. Her and her husband Ben are building Oki Doki with the life and work they want to lead top of mind. That choice has brought them face to face with some scrutiny from people with a scale-or-die mindset. Marie recently wrote a lengthy article about her choice not to scale—or, not to scale in any conventional way—so, of course, I wanted to bring her on the show while we're covering scale to talk about it! Marie and I chat about the hybrid business model Oki Doki has developed, the cocktail party conversation that shook her up, how she approaches finding a equilibrium with her energy, and how her focus on profitability has paid off. The post EP 234: Choosing Not To Scale With Oki Doki Co-Founder Marie Poulin appeared first on What Works.

Freelance Freedom
9. {Interview} SaaS, Scaling and Working with Your Life Partner with Marie Poulin and Ben Borowski

Freelance Freedom

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2019 63:13


I am so happy to introduce two good friends of mine. Marie Poulin, and Ben Borowski.Marie and Ben are co-founders of Oki Doki, as well as life partners.About Ben:Ben is a product designer and software developer with a fine arts background. After many years in agency-land, he started his own shop in 2010, and, after immigrating to Canada in 2014, founded Oki Doki with Marie. In his spare time he collects vinyl, pets shibas, and is a volunteer firefighter.About Marie:Marie helps small business owners bring their digital product & service ideas to life. She is a product and service strategist, and a master digital strategist. As if that isn’t enough, she’s an amazing designer and developer, as well and a permaculture enthusiast in her spare time.1:15: -- Current life situation and how Marie and Ben became life partners and business partners3:45 -- Finding out who has dominant skills in each area, and how to decide who takes the lead on what projects4:25 -- What were Ben and Marie doing before they joined forces.7:45 -- Check out Ben's journey on his immigration to Canada, taxes and all that's involved when moving a business across borders11:10 -- What it's like diving into the build not only of a digital product (SaaS), but structuring a full business with your partner at the same time.14:00 -- Why they choose to sell software as a subscription model, and how they came to solve the issue of the complexity of online courses.15:45 -- Here we dive in to the value that they provide as a boutique operation, supplying a premium customer experience, and scaling the unscalable.31:00 -- How a low cost of entry can lead into lifetime clients spending tens of thousands of dollars for further custom strategy and web experiences. 40:00 -- Creating more impactful work, scaling your happiness, flexibility, freedom and building a business on your terms44:00 -- How communication is when you work and live together. What routines and rituals do Marie and Ben abide by to keep on track, and how to handle disputes both inside and outside of the relationship47:00 -- Carrying over organizational techniques from the business into personal life, and vice versa. Work/life integration48:45 -- Routines, entrepreneurship, and setting up your daily routines.51:10 -- Startup and shutdown rituals54:55 -- Thinking about starting a business or project with a partner? Here's Marie's and Ben's tips for a successful relationship both inside and outside of the company.Where you can find them online:Marie:https://mariepoulin.com/https://twitter.com/mariepoulinhttps://www.instagram.com/mariepoulin/Ben:https://www.typeoneerror.com/https://twitter.com/typeoneerrorResources Mentioned:https://www.notion.so/http://tanyageisler.com/ (Imposter Complex Coach)https://jamesclear.com/atomic-habitshttp://www.calnewport.com/books/deep-work/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Bright & Early
Marie Poulin & Ben Borowski: Finding a Business Model that Works for You

Bright & Early

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2019 51:25


I'm joined by Marie and Ben of Oki Doki. We chat about the pros and cons of Services and SaaS, the lessons they've learned building each kind of business model, and how to know which one might be right for you.

The Design Business Show
The Design Business Show 044: Designing Digital Ecosystems for Savvy Entrepreneurs with Marie Poulin

The Design Business Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2019 51:02


Marie Poulin is the co-founder of Oki Doki, a creative collaboration uniting Marie's strategy & design background with Ben, Marie's partner, and his design & programming background to form one kick-ass digital creative agency. They create purposeful, unique, and results-focused digital experiences that integrate your brand across all touch-points. Where Marie sees the big-picture possibilities, Ben handles the implementation details. They understand the digital landscape, and have helped launch hundreds of websites, products, online courses, web applications, games, and online experiences. They've seen behind the scenes of countless launches, and know what works (and what to avoid). They don't believe in formulas; they tailor solutions to our clients' business and lifestyle needs, so your products are built with growth, longevity, and sustainability in mind. Here's what we cover during episode 044: Why she chose design as her field and how it helped her start her career Her first job at a design studio, her role at the job and how the studio owner's mentorship helped her grow as a designer How she was able to shift from working full-time to working part-time in order to start her freelance design business The insider scoop on how her business works, and how she and her partner collaborate to get things done The type of clients she works with and the amazing business roadmap she creates for her clients The unknowns she helps fill for her clients when creating their websites How she started to work with clients with a course or productized service Why she and her partner decided to create a platform for courses Why it's not always true that a course will make you multiple six figures Why offering strategic roadmaps has helped her and what that looks like A behind-the-scenes look at how she helped one client sell courses, plan the strategy, and doing design work How designers can use their other skills to add value to their offerings Why paying attention and doing research is a good thing for designers What her business looks like today Tips for designers who want to grow their business Info on her mastermind that helps people create courses What she shares on each social media network Links mentioned: Marie's website   Like what you heard? Click here to subscribe + leave a review on iTunes. Click here to join the free community!  Let's connect on Instagram!

Comunidad Xbox Podcast
CX PODCAST: Especial 200 programas

Comunidad Xbox Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2019 125:57


200 citas con vosotros, los verdaderos culpables de que hayamos llegado hasta aquí. Sumando especiales, Gazpachos, Podcast Retro... ya son 200 las veces que hemos podido compartir con vosotros nuestra pasión por los videojuegos a medida que se cimentaba una verdadera amistad entre nosotros. Este es un podcast de agradecimiento, un MIX enorme de grandes momentos y de momentos lamentables, que son todavía mejores. Esperamos que os guste, no nos faltéis nunca. Oki Doki

Comunidad Xbox Podcast
CX PODCAST: Especial 200 programas

Comunidad Xbox Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2019 125:57


200 citas con vosotros, los verdaderos culpables de que hayamos llegado hasta aquí. Sumando especiales, Gazpachos, Podcast Retro... ya son 200 las veces que hemos podido compartir con vosotros nuestra pasión por los videojuegos a medida que se cimentaba una verdadera amistad entre nosotros. Este es un podcast de agradecimiento, un MIX enorme de grandes momentos y de momentos lamentables, que son todavía mejores. Esperamos que os guste, no nos faltéis nunca. Oki Doki

What Works | Small Business Podcast
EP 131: Optimizing What Works For Your Small Business With Oki Doki Co-Founder Marie Poulin

What Works | Small Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2018 48:49


Marie Poulin, co-founder of digital agency Oki Doki, talks about product evolution, hybrid product/service delivery, and how she is optimizing her business based on what works. The post EP 131: Optimizing What Works For Your Small Business With Oki Doki Co-Founder Marie Poulin appeared first on What Works.

Reanimetor Pod
Oki-Doki - E:29

Reanimetor Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2018 53:03


Other, Others’, Hes’ and Shes’ welcome to episode 29 of the Reanimetor Pod. This week on the show the gang get into an argument Narakku, Yata finishes Ultimate Girls. We talk some Violet Evergarden. Then we go on a booze-cruise with Taka on this weeks roll and review. All that and more on the pod this week. If you like what you hear please head on over to reanimetorpod.com and to get in touch with the gang; why not shoot us a d-mail at reanimetorpod@gmail.com

Startups For the Rest of Us
Episode 379 | There and Back Again, a Founders Tale of Services to Product to Services

Startups For the Rest of Us

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2018


In this episode of Startups For The Rest Of Us, Mike interviews Marie Poulin, chief designer and digital strategist at Oki Doki, about her journey from consulting to products and services.       

TRUtalk Podcast: Community | Twitch | Gaming | Movies | Music
TRUTalk Episode 011 - I am NOT Oki Doki

TRUtalk Podcast: Community | Twitch | Gaming | Movies | Music

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2018 156:33


Hello TRUfam, and welcome to TRUtalk! This week we take a look back at 2017 and some of our favorite games, as well as a special discussion around doki doki literature clubIf you have a podcast topic you would like us to discuss on the show, email us at trutalk@trugaming.com or go to our website trugaming.com and social media links to contact us.Remember to subscribe to our channels for episodes via YouTube, Twitch, iTunes, Spreaker, or SoundCloud. We’ll be back in 2 weeks(actually one) with more TRUtalk. Make sure you guys check out the discord at https://discord.gg/trugaming, and tell all your friends(Unless you’re like me and don’t have any) about the podcast.

TRUtalk Podcast: Community | Twitch | Gaming | Movies | Music
TRUTalk Episode 011 - I am NOT Oki Doki

TRUtalk Podcast: Community | Twitch | Gaming | Movies | Music

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2018 156:33


Hello TRUfam, and welcome to TRUtalk! This week we take a look back at 2017 and some of our favorite games, as well as a special discussion around doki doki literature clubIf you have a podcast topic you would like us to discuss on the show, email us at trutalk@trugaming.com or go to our website trugaming.com and social media links to contact us.Remember to subscribe to our channels for episodes via YouTube, Twitch, iTunes, Spreaker, or SoundCloud. We’ll be back in 2 weeks(actually one) with more TRUtalk. Make sure you guys check out the discord at https://discord.gg/trugaming, and tell all your friends(Unless you’re like me and don’t have any) about the podcast.

The Free Cheese
The Free Cheese Episode 224: Oki Doki

The Free Cheese

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2017 192:21


This week on The Free Cheese, lean on me when you're not strong. We have a big episode this week. As the end of the year approaches, we have all been catching up on a lot of games. Along the way, Ben finishes Stories Untold, Marc gets not too specific about his horrific encounter with a visual novel, Joe hears voices in his head (in more ways than one), and Matt plays soccer with cars in the palms of his hands. We discuss the recent fun surrounding Electronic Arts, along with some surprise updates to Super Bomberman R, Mario movies, and other upcoming video game movies starring Dwayne Johnson.

The Copy and Design Brew
CDB 045: Being Vulnerable with Marie Poulin of Oki Doki

The Copy and Design Brew

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2017 50:01


houSe miX
oki doki ;) My last mix of this month 105 Bpm to 140

houSe miX

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2017 104:39


oki doki ;) My last mix of this month 105 Bpm to 140 by alfreD oRtega roSa

bpm oki doki
What Works | Small Business Podcast
Episode 73 – Discovering a Need And Filling–Twice–with Digital Strategy School & Doki Creator Marie Poulin

What Works | Small Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2017


In this episode, Tara speaks with Marie Poulin. Marie is a designer and digital strategist. She’s also the creator of Digital Strategy School and the co-founder of Oki Doki, the software company behind Doki a unique learning management system for interactive course creators. Marie and Tara talk about the difference between digital strategy and web […] The post Episode 73 – Discovering a Need And Filling–Twice–with Digital Strategy School & Doki Creator Marie Poulin appeared first on What Works.

Movement Makers Podcast with Nikki Groom
02: Marie Poulin: Strategic Generosity & Tackling The Imposter Complex

Movement Makers Podcast with Nikki Groom

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2017 53:37


Marie Poulin is a designer, digital strategist, and educator who helps purpose-driven entrepreneurs bring their ideas to life in the digital space. With a background in both small agency experience and 7+ years of self-employment, she founded Digital Strategy School, an online mentorship program that helps designers become more strategic business owners. She also co-founded Oki Doki with her partner Ben, where they help entrepreneurs productize their services through the creation of branded online courses, programs, and mentorship experiences. Marie is also a friend of mine who has taken incredible strides to combat negative thinking from her childhood that threatened to obliterate her success. You’ll appreciate her candor in this interview, as I did.

Camp Tech Podcast with Avery Swartz
003: Producing Online Courses with Marie Poulin

Camp Tech Podcast with Avery Swartz

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2016 23:55


On today’s episode we discuss the production of online courses with Marie Poulin. Marie is a former designer who became a digital strategist and co-founded the course-building site, Oki Doki. As an experienced guide, Marie walks us through the stages of online course production.   In discussing the production of online courses, we cover all the important steps one must take to be a successful instructor. Marie drives home the importance of market research (i.e. is your course topic in demand) and also the steps to building a product that fully engages your customers. Marie and Avery also discuss the pros and cons of hosting with user-friendly, customizable sites or going it alone. After this episode, listeners will be ready to set forth and create interactive, in-demand, and unique courses with confidence.  Episode Highlights:  Check your motives: Are they altruistic or simply about the money?  How to build a product customers need  Market research steps  Focusing on your strengths as an instructor (are you best with audio, video, or written content?)  Levels of course interactivity  Where to build and host your course  Beta testing  Promoting your course  If you would like to work with Marie Poulin, you may contact her at MariePoulin.com or go straight to her company’s website, OkiDoki.   Resources:  18 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Build an Online Course by Breanne Dyck  OkiDoki  Udemy  Skillshare  Creative Live  Wish List  Member Press  Memberium  Course Cats  Thinkific  Teachable  Teachery  Pathwright  Kajabi 

The Busy Creator Podcast with Prescott Perez-Fox
Programmer & Developer Ben Borowski explores the creative side of software and shares his recent personal projects – The Busy Creator Podcast 62

The Busy Creator Podcast with Prescott Perez-Fox

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2015 46:17


Ben Borowski (@TypeOneError) is a software developer and programmer based in Vancouver, BC, Canada. In past years, Ben run a small studio doing web development for top agencies, but has recently made a move to create his own project, and is working on that full-time. Ben is one half of Oki Doki, along with Designer & Digital Strategist Marie Poulin. Together, the duo are hard at work on Doki, a web platform to build and run online courses and communities. In this conversation, Ben discusses the creative side of programming, the definition of a “coder”, and the challenges of putting aside client projects for the endeavor of building your own app. Catch up with Ben on his site, Type One Error, or check out Doki.io.   Show Notes & Links Marie Poulin was a guest on The Busy Creator Podcast last year Ben defines himself broadly as a web developer, but more specifically as a programmer in Ruby, and other disciplines TWiT – This Week in Tech Ben doesn't subscribe to the idea that “Coders aren't necessarily programmers”  If Statements, For Loops – essentials in programming Mark-up is code “I've met many computer science guys … who are completely stumped by CSS.” —Ben Borowski  Tweet This “If you're building a website and you write HTML tags, you're a coder.” —Ben Borowski  Tweet This Markdown, the coding format for Reddit comments Dustin Hartzler, WordPress Engineer and host Your Website Engineer Podcast Podcast Movement Conference “Programing is more technical … but making software is creative.” —Ben Borowski  Tweet This Product Designer, as the term applies to web design, can incorporate development/programming Open-Source, a place for inspiration Ben consults and develops cross-platform games, and other projects Doki, currently in development as a consulting platform and will be a public product soon Previous guests on The Busy Creator Podcast have discussed online teaching, such as Karen Marston, Steve Dotto Javascript framework Ember.js (similar to Ruby-on-Rails for the front end of the website) Prescott attended Drexel University, a school set up on the quarter system. Alpha testers You can't have nine people make a baby in one month. —productivity adage  Tweet This Unit Tests or Feature Tests are useful for programmers when merging code and error-correcting Material Design, from Google — hard to describe because it's almost like a framework … for design Facebook asks developers to work on the main product in their first week Gone in 60 Seconds, writing on the walls in detergent and using a blacklight Type One Error Oki Doki  Ben Borowski on Twitter  Ben Borowski on Facebook Tools HTML to Markdown converter Markdown to HTML converter WordPress Jetpack, the official suite of plugins for WordPress Infusionsoft MailChimp Google Analytics WishList for WordPress Platform-as-a-server Amazon web services Heroku EngineYard 9Folds Sit or Stand adjustable GeekDesk MacBook Pro SublimeText GitTower, a GUI application for managing Git projects  iTerm, Terminal replacement for Mac Homebrew, a Ruby Framework Vagrant, custom virtual machines on your system Teamwork.com EcoStatic Slickynotes Techniques Write your WordPress entries in Markdown — it's fast and simple Examine where you can reduce lines of code, load time, etc. Launch first, and then go back and optimise More team members always help the progress of a programming project Give your team the building blocks, for design or programming alike Develop a naming and organization system — any system — for your team to follow Require new [programming] employees to push live code to the site on day one; this teaches them the entire process Head to a coffee shop or co-working space 2-3 days/week even if you prefer to work from home Keep a clean image of your system after a fresh reinstall If you can, go full-time toward developing a product rather than try to cram it in “after hours” Habits Jog or Rock-Climb Take breaks to walk (or wrestle with) the dog Do some exercise in the morning, even stretching Drink and eat in the morning (write it down if necessary) Try Audible.com Free for 30-Days Visit BusyCreatorBook.com for your free trial Get The Healthy Programmer by Joe Kutner as a free audiobook Get The Episode Download The Busy Creator Podcast, episode 62 (MP3, 46:17, 22.5 MB) Download The Busy Creator Podcast, episode 62 (OGG, 46:17, 39.8 MB)   Subscribe to Get New Episodes Subscribe to The Busy Creator Podcast on iTunes