Blog

IT Masters

I have a masters degree from Bahcesehir University in Istanbul. Since my undergraduate degree was in Economics, I wanted to go as technical as possible here. Hence, I have studied the following subjects:

  • Introduction to Programming
  • Introduction to Java Programming Language
  • Advanced Java Programming Language
  • Computer System Architecture
  • Fundamentals Of Computer Networks
  • Relational Databases and SQL
  • Database Programming with PL\SQL
  • Web Programming with ASP.NET using C#
  • Design Patterns
  • Developing Web Applications Using PHP – MySQL
  • IT Project Management

As my graduation project, I coded a forms application that checks a bank’s new customers against a blacklist and returns the results to be evaluated manually.

Economics Undergraduate

I have studied economics at Yildiz Technical University in Istanbul. During my four years there, learned about the fascinating history of economics from Malthus’s grave prediction about the increasing population ending the world as we know it (Spoiler: It didn’t) to Adam Smith’s “Invisible hand” to Marx’s proletariat revolution.

It wasn’t all about history; I learned about modern economic theories, law, statistics and econometrics, and some sociology. Although I have never worked in economics or finance, I am still very interested in social sciences.

Blue Ocean Strategy at INSEAD

While working on different go-to-market strategies at Peg b for Whizmo, we stumbled upon the Blue Ocean Strategy. Our CEO decided that it is better to learn it from its creators, so I was among the team that was sent to Singapore for the Blue Ocean Strategy course thought at INSEAD.

In summary, the Blue Ocean Strategy aims to teach ways of creating blue oceans: Uncontested markets where competition is rendered irrelevant, rather than getting into price wars in the red oceans.

Social Psychology

I’m generally fascinated by psychology; how we decide, why we act the way we do, and how other people’s behaviours affect us. So, when I see this introductory course by Wesleyan University is being offered on Coursera, I decided to go for it.

Some takeaways from the course

Confirmation bias: We look for, read and recall information that supports our views and beliefs.

Self-fulfilling prophecy: A prediction or belief affects people’s behaviour, thus helping the prediction become a reality.

Attribution theory and fundamental attribution error: How people assign reasons to actions and why they tend to attribute things to personality-based behaviour rather than external factors.

Cognitive dissonance: People want to be psychologically consistent about their beliefs, decisions and actions. So, when there’s inconsistency, they try to find ways (e.g. justifying their actions, ignoring facts, etc.)

“Foot in the door” technique: Rather than asking for something big directly, asking for a small favour first from someone increases the chance of subject’s compliance for the bigger favour.

Reciprocity: People tend to return the favour. This tendency can be used as a sales technique where a potential buyer is given something small for free, which increases their chances of buying something.

Reciprocal concession and “Door in the face” technique: Instead of asking for a favour directly, asking for an outrageous favour that is certainly to be rejected first, increases the chances of actual favour’s acceptance.

Milgram experiment and obedience to authority: Why people follow orders and how far they can go at following orders? (Also a great book from Hannah Arendt: Eichmann in Jerusalem and also “Banality of Evil“)

Abilene paradox and decision making in groups: How groups make decisions and the phenomenon of choosing an option while no one in the group actually favours it.

Bystander effect: Chances of an individual helping someone in need diminishes when there are other people around.

Hook Framework

My previous employer, CEO of Peg b Tech, had read about the Hook Framework and wanted to get some consultancy from its creator, Nir Eyal. In order to understand the framework before contacting him, I completed his short course on LinkedIn, also read his book “Hooked

The Hook Framework is certainly an interesting tool that offers great potential for creating habit-forming digital products. I consider myself genuinely lucky to meet with Mr Eyal and have conversations about our product, potential market and how we can achieve our goals by implementing his framework.

Building Digital Products

I have finished a short online class thought by Product School on creating and managing digital products. The course was surprisingly practical and had subjects like breaking monopolies, prioritization and, key biases and ways to avoid them.

Some of My Favourite Articles

Product strategy means saying no!

What if customers want it? NO!

But it will only take a couple of days to implement? NO!

Frank Sinatra has a cold

In 1965 Esquire sends Gay Talese to LA for an interview with Frank Sinatra. However, Sinatra was under the weather and not in the mood. Talese writes a Sinatra profile, which defined a new genre, without properly talking to Sinatra.

Gaming the lottery as a retirement plan

A convenience store owner notices a flaw in the local lottery design and decides to game it.

Developers should abandon Agile

An interesting argument against Agile’s poorly conceived versions from a developer’s perspective.

How USSD is revolutionizing Africa

Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) is an old GSM service that works with queries like *#XYZ#; mostly abandoned after smartphones, but not in Africa.

The weird science of naming products

How do companies decide on the names of their products?

The duke in his domain

A great New Yorker interview with legendary Marlon Brando from 1957 by another legend, Truman Capote

Mafia is after NY bagels

How New York’s Bagel Union fought — and beat — a mafia takeover