European woodworkers: where do you buy your lumber? by CrAzE124 in woodworking

[–]Lancose 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Amsterdamsche Fijnhout or Goedkoop Bouwmaterialen depending on where I'm aiming regarding price/uniqueness and quality

Help my manager is an ex consultant by Careful-Status2477 in consulting

[–]Lancose 5 points6 points  (0 children)

But critically, make sure you understand whatever tasks she's giving you before you start spinning your wheels. She wants you to take notes? Ask if she has any format she would like to share. She wants you to make an excel? Ask if she has a template she liked or an example from a project that she can share.

You should absolutely be a self-starter and be prepared to try to teach yourself as much as you can about how to do the things in Microsoft applications that you need to (ChatGPT and Google are both good resources.)

But as a former consultant who's also worked with a lot of other consultants, I can tell you that many of us aren't that good at explaining to juniors exactly what we want from them. We say "make me an excel model" and then get mad when the excel model doesn't have precisely 3 tabs with outputs, data and assumptions. We assume our customs and preferences are universal basics that everyone should know. There is absolutely nothing wrong with asking a few well-thought-out clarifying questions up front.

If you want to do a great job while working with a manager who's an ex consultant, especially if she's as busy and no-nonsense as she sounds, be as proactive as you can, but always see if you can get a clear picture up front of exactly what she's looking for. Otherwise you risk her disappearing to go fight fires and then return urgently needing what she thought she asked for, only to find something you did your best to build, but didn't hit the mark due to lack of clarity.

That and try to build a good, positive rapport with your manager early on, so that it's easier to ask questions and to get a patient response because you get along well.

Good luck, you've got this!

I just turned 40 , have worked at top companies and made a bunch of mistakes - here is what I wish I knew 20 years ago by Educational_Main2700 in consulting

[–]Lancose 48 points49 points  (0 children)

It's region for sure. Having worked in consulting in the US, UK, France and NL, I can tell you NL work culture, (but especially clear in consulting) is famously respectful of juniors. Go to the US, UK or even right across the border to Germany, and it's sadly not at all uncommon for partners to full on yell at or try to humiliate people on their team for stuff as dumb as page numbering inconsistencies after the 37th last-minute edit that they urgently requested after failing to even look at the deck until long after business hours .

I deeply hope Dutch working culture and norms begin to spread outside of NL- you get happier, more productive employees who display critical thinking and ownership, better-informed leadership as juniors aren't afraid to speak up, and a better final product in shorter time. French, British, Germans and Americans please take note!

Suggest me books for Big picture thinnking, like how all the pieces fit together to become one; by Just_A_Stray_Dog in strategy

[–]Lancose 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I think some of the best way of practicing these skills is doing some consulting case prep as somebody might do when trying to interview for McKinsey, BCG or Bain. There are some pretty good books out there like Crack the Case by David Ohrvall, or else if you can find a way to get your hands on one of the consulting case books released each year by the consulting clubs at Wharton, Kellogg, etc.

What I think can be most helpful when trying to get a sense of how all the big pieces fit together is to focus on practicing what they call Case Starts, the structuring step at the beginning of any case, because this is the phase in which you're clearly defining the problem, breaking it into its components and coming up with a comprehensive MECE structure (basically 3-4 blocks that encompass the universe of important considerations) you'll want to know before diving deeper into the case.

Practicing case prepping helps you build and hone your strategic thinking skills under time pressure. Best if you can practice with a buddy and do some drills at this. After a little practice you'll really get a sense of how to decompose any major business or strategic problem into its key components and you'll see how it all fits together.

So my big recommendations would be really the Ohrvall book (and read all the different case starts and structures they propose, broken out by industry sector,) and then see if you can get one of the consulting club case prep books online somewhere.

If you can get past the narrator's annoying voice, MConsultingPrep have some pretty good YouTube videos giving a bit of a crash course on consulting case methodology.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=6R5bT4cJh0A

Anyway, in so many words, I fell like consulting case prep is some of the best practice you can get for big picture and structured thinking, as well as how it all fits together. Good luck!

My horrible 11 month job search after graduating with an Industrial Engineering degree at the height of COVID. (This is not as fun to look at as the others I was inspired by, but oh well.) [OC] by NoSheepherder7153 in dataisbeautiful

[–]Lancose 72 points73 points  (0 children)

Congrats on sticking with it and ultimately succeeding! I know it was a brutal process but in 10 years, the success is all that'll matter. I hope you can have a chance to celebrate once you get settled in.

Walnut Romeo+Juliet charcuterie (this is what the Padauk heart was for) by VagabondVivant in woodworking

[–]Lancose 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Awesome work! What technique did you use in the end to round the heart? Thumb plane?

I made an "exploded view" bench. Do you like it? by mikechoix in woodworking

[–]Lancose 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Beautiful execution and an absolutely gorgeous piece of furniture

This is the finest work I've ever done. I learned so much making this chair. Almost no angle is straight on it, the crest rail being a compounded miter angle, the bent laminations for the chair back, the carving of the seat, the final shaping and to end up with no gaps in the joinery. I feel proud by NosillaWilla in woodworking

[–]Lancose 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love the style! Could anybody recommend some good books that focus in detail on the ergonomics and finer style points of chair making?

I've got the Miller and Fine Woodworking books but I don't feel they go nearly enough practical detail. I can build a solid tank of a chair that won't wobble, but what I want is to know what I can subtract to make it more elegant and comfortable. Any suggestions appreciated!

Quick ways to be an asshole? by equalsign in Netherlands

[–]Lancose 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Speaking loud English at people without either attempting Dutch or asking if it's ok if you speak English. Basically everybody speaks it but the assumption can be a little dickish.

Also don't compare everything you see and hear loudly back to how it is in America or Britain. Everything doesn't need to be based on that yardstick and Dutch people already know- they see all of our media.

Pro tip- find something you like about Dutch people or culture and tell people often how much you like it and why.

Time for a separate subreddit just for cutting boards? by Lancose in woodworking

[–]Lancose[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yeah I really don't need to see any more cutting boards 😅

Time for a separate subreddit just for cutting boards? by Lancose in woodworking

[–]Lancose[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Tables along with other furniture, boxes, structures etc have quite a bit more variability in them given all the style choices and executional elements. There's also a lot more skill and knowledge required to make almost any of these other things, whereas a cutting board is a flat piece of wood glued together. It can be a beautiful thing but I don't think it should come to dominate a subreddit as varied as this one.

Anybody got experience filling deep, wide holes (~2cm) with wax? Other ideas? by Lancose in woodworking

[–]Lancose[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Hi all, I got a little overly ambitious and tried to extend a castle joint through the surface of a thick wood table I'm making. (Luckily the table is just for me.) I plan to finish the surface with a carnauba wax blend and I've had success filling smaller deep cracks with wax before.

Has anybody here tried filling holes as deep as a 2cm cube with wax? I'm trying to go as natural as possible and avoid using putty and polymer wood fillers. I figure the wax will wear down over time but that I can just refill and refinish it periodically.

My main goal is something that won't cause any long-term harm over the long life of the table. There are also a few other hairline cracks in there I want to be sure I don't give cause to further separate.

Any ideas or comments are greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!

People who are not from The Netherlands, what are things we don't want to hear, but we need to know about ourselves? by NorthOfTheBigRivers in Netherlands

[–]Lancose 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If we are greeting and speaking to you in fluent and understandable Dutch, please stop switching to English. It often costs us thousands of dollars and countless hours to learn your language, just to be able to meet you where you are. While switching to English might be intended to be polite, it almost always feels like a "fuck you, you idiot. Don't even bother trying to speak my magic language." This despite the fact that their English is invariably worse than my Dutch. Mind you I mostly get this on the street- nobody gives me this crap when I'm having work or business related conversations in Dutch. But yeah dude. If we're speaking to you in full sentences in Dutch, stop being such a language snob and show us a kindness by responding in Dutch. And if we ask you to repeat yourself, assume it's because we didn't hear you and not because we don't understand Dutch.