At Faster Glass, we are fueled by our insatiable curiosity and our desire to propel others by sharing what we've learned. Our posts aim to channel the former to accomplish the latter.
Imagine running a growing company and competing fiercely with your biggest rival. An opportunity arises to buy a highly valuable piece of land. But there are two big obstacles: • First, the land straddles the border between Honduras and Guatemala, with two different people claiming ownership. • Second, your competitor is also desperate to buy it, deploying an army of lawyers to prove who really owns it. What would you do? That was the problem Samuel Zemurray faced as owner
Ed Roland, lead singer and songwriter for Collective Soul, recently shared two stories that reveal how working with constraints shaped his music career. And it turns out innovators in any field can learn from Ed’s approach. External Constraints For eight years in the 1980s, Roland worked as a sound engineer at a small studio, while constantly writing his own songs. But when it came to recording them, he faced an age-old problem: no money. Back then, studios relied on expens