(It’s track season, so you can expect a sprinkle more motorcycle-inspired marketing posts.)
I bought a Yamaha R7 knowing it would lose.
Not lose everything. Lose the straight. Put it next to a liter bike and the second the road opens up, the liter bike becomes a dot. I knew that at the dealership. The R7 looks like it was carved by someone who loved you, it handles corners like it’s reading your mind, and it was priced like a bike a normal person could actually own. So I bought the corners and the feel and the way it looks parked outside the bar. I did not buy the straightaway. The straightaway was never on the table.
That was an honest trade. I knew which game I was playing.
The trouble starts when you forget.
A lot of us spend our best hours on the part of the work that photographs well. The deck. The dashboard. The workflow diagram with the nice rounded corners. The visual system that makes you feel like a serious person.
…And almost no hours on the thing that actually feeds all of it: the data underneath, the structure, the unglamorous layer that decides whether any of the pretty stuff is even true.
I did this to myself a few weeks ago.
I built a gorgeous display for the beer offerings at the bar. Clean, alive, the kind of thing you want glowing above the taps. I loved it. Then I went to actually wire it up and found out I couldn’t get the API connection I had designed the whole thing around. The data stream I assumed would be waiting for me simply wasn’t there. The beautiful surface was sitting on nothing.
So I went down into the basement to lay the plumbing by hand.
And the strange part, the part I didn’t see coming: the basement turned out to be the most interesting room in this metaphorical house. Building the workarounds meant putting my hands directly into the raw material, and once they were in there, I found room I never would have found from upstairs. Places to add my own flare. Small decisions about how a pour gets described, what gets emphasized, where a little personality could live inside the system instead of just sitting on top of it. I automated what deserved to be automated. But I built character into the layer nobody sees, and that character now leaks upward into the part everybody does.
The surface has a ceiling. You can only polish a thing so far. The basement is where the surprises were hiding the whole time.
Alas. There’s something more powerful here… It’s that surface and substance are not good and evil.
They are two clocks running at two speeds.
The surface runs on the showroom clock. It wins the glance, the first impression, the screenshot, the “oh, that’s nice.” That clock is real. I am a marketer. Story is not decoration to me, it is the product. People buy the R7 because of how it looks, and there is nothing shameful in that.
But the substance runs on the season clock. It wins the long race, the second visit, the thing that is still standing in March. You cannot fake the season clock with showroom work. No amount of fairing closes the gap on the straight. Displacement does that. What is actually under the tank does that.
The mistake is not loving the surface. The mistake is losing track of which clock is keeping score this quarter, and spending all your hours on the one that isn’t.
The show is a game that never ends. The structure underneath is how you finally win one.
Stay Positive & See You In The Substance
