Guy Reams (00:02.69)
This is day 11, the cock and the pearl. I love fables. When I was a young boy and someone told me a fable, I would hold it in my mind for weeks, pondering the meaning behind the story. Searching through the concepts and metaphors, I would try to figure out what was implied and what could be learned from it. I started to understand that these fables were a culmination of hundreds of years of oral history documented into a story that was easy to digest and full of meaning.
I like to refer to them in conversation as a way to convey a point I was trying to make and also seem kind of cool. So today I will refer to one of the stories contained in Aesop's Fables. Aesop's Fables are a collection of short moral stories. They are simple, timeless tales that use animals, objects, and nature to teach lessons about human behavior, wisdom, and ethics. They are attributed to Aesop, a storyteller believed to have lived in ancient Greece from 620 to
564 BCE. Though we do not know much about his life for certain, the stories that bear his name have been told and retold for more than 2500 years. One of the less popular fables is known as the cock and the pearl. The fable goes something like this. One morning, a cock, a rooster, was scratching through the dirt in the farmyard searching for food to feed himself and his hen.
As he dug, he uncovered a beautiful shining pearl, which was bright and flawless in the sunlight. The cock looked at it closely, turned it over to his beak and said, what a fine thing you are, but what good are you to me? I would rather have one grain of barley than all the pearls in the world. Then he tossed the pearl aside and went back to scratching for food. The obvious moral to the story is that the value is determined by the beholder, or perhaps,
that precious things are for those who can appreciate them. What I have always taken away from the story is that value depends on perspective and purpose. You might encounter something, an idea, an opportunity, or even a person that others see as priceless. If it does not serve your current mission or context, it will not seem valuable. Conversely, something humble or ordinary might be of immense worth to you because it meets a true need.
Guy Reams (02:25.452)
In my situation as a startup founder, I am often surrounded by complex technology, data and innovation. So this fable provides an interesting consideration. I need to be careful not to overlook a pearl because I am focused on grain. Sometimes the real treasure is not what feeds you immediately, but what could transform you later. This happened yesterday. A seemingly basic and silly request by a potential client I had largely ignored.
I quickly dismissed the concept, telling myself that I would stay focused on our current sprint and not get distracted. This is usually the right thing to do, as customizations in the early stage of product rollout can torpedo your attempts to produce meaningful software. This would be the rooster's wisdom. Knowing what you actually need right now is its own kind of intelligence. Not every pearl is meant to be yours.
Startups live in a world overflowing with shiny things such as investor offers, partnership opportunities, emerging tech, new tools and trends. It is easy to chase what everyone else calls valuable. The pearl that glitters in another company's hand. But like the rooster, a founder's real job is to know what is nutritionally valuable for the business. What feeds growth and not the ego? A pearl is beautiful, yes, but if your company needs food, not jewelry,
then discipline means walking past the glitter. The lesson here is that your ability to say no to pearls that do not feed your mission would be the founder's secret weapon. At first, the rooster seems foolish for throwing away a pearl. Look closer. He is pragmatic. He knows his context. He is hungry, not ornamental. In that moment, he is right to prefer food over treasure. That is the paradox.
Founders who appear to ignore great opportunities may actually be preserving focus and feeding survival, not fantasy. Later, when they are no longer hungry, they can then return to those pearls. Timing always determines value. Even great ideas are worthless if they come before the company is ready to use them. For a startup founder, the cock and the pearl is not about missing opportunity. It is about recognizing what matters now.
Guy Reams (04:43.438)
True leadership is knowing the difference between what glitters and what grows. The pearl might be priceless, but the grain keeps you alive long enough to find it again when you are