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> Being aligned with teammates on what you're building is more important than building the right thing.

I would write this as:

Building the right thing wrong is more important than building the wrong thing right.

And I firmly believe that agreeing on _what_ you are builing is more important than _how_ you are building it. Mainly because it is easier to change the _how_ than it is to change the _what_.




> Building the right thing wrong is more important than building the wrong thing right.

I entirely agree with this, but don't think that's what the original point was getting at.

> And I firmly believe that agreeing on _what_ you are building is more important than _how_ you are building it. Mainly because it is easier to change the _how_ than it is to change the _what_.

This seems like it should be true. In practice, I've found that the _how_ is the part that gets embedded in the wet-ware of people/companies and is the hardest to change.

Given an application written in a language with some framework, some datastore, deployed to some cloud, it's actually exceedingly easy to make another that follows that pattern and does a completely different business function. Much more challenging would be to change those parts of an application and keep it doing the same thing.


I read it as:

"Build consensus before you start building any specific implementation".

... the idea being that it is better for a team to collaborate on a compromise solution than any given person pushing into their pet solution because they "know better".




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