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Jason Fried
Growth-driven Ecommerce and Marketing leader.
Jason Fried, VP of Technology at Alpha Omega Agency
Jason Fried is currently serving as the Vice President of Technology at Alpha Omega Agency, where he has been a driving force behind their technological advancements and strategic growth initiatives since January 2023.1
Prior to his current role, Jason held several leadership positions in the technology and e-commerce industry, including:
- Director of Ecommerce at Pentair, where he drove growth and experience for a $30MM water filtration vertical on their owned e-commerce channel1
- VP of Engineering & Product - E-Commerce at Pattern, where he built the Product team from the ground up and partnered with growth to drive MoM CVR improvements and 4x ROAS1
- VP Engineering at Capsule, where he increased Engineering headcount from 3 to 20 and led Product improvements that drove a 10x throughput improvement in prescriptions1
- E-Commerce Advisor at Phlur, where he worked directly with the CEO to advise on e-commerce, marketing, and product1
Jason holds a Master of Arts in Teaching and Education, as well as a Bachelor of Science in Architecture.2 He has also completed a Machine Learning course on Coursera.1
In addition to his professional experience, Jason is known for his active presence on social media, particularly on X (formerly Twitter), where he shares insights and opinions on various topics related to technology and entrepreneurship.3
Highlights
AGAIN?
When we measure things, answers usually come as numbers. But there’s a different kind of measurement I have in mind most of the time.
It’s a simple, one-word question: Again?
You can go through rigorous employee performance reviews to try to decide if someone’s doing their job well, or you can simply ask “Knowing what we know now, would we hire this person again?”
You can load up the calendar with postmortems and data analysis sessions, or you can simply ask “Would we want to do that again?”
You can attempt to justify to yourself why something made sense on paper, or you can simply ask “Would I make that decision again?”
At this point, I quietly ask myself “Again?” all the time. When things go right, when things go wrong, when I’m not even sure which way they’ve gone, I’ll ask myself “Again?” The answer is obvious.
What’s great about this is that things that would objectively measure as “wrong” can be absolutely worth it when you ask the question “Again?” With again, you aren’t just measuring outcome, you’re also measuring experience. Experience contains outcome, and a whole lot more.
Maybe that was a flop commercially, but it was worth it broadly, so yes, I’d still do it all over again. Or, wow, that was a smashing success but it really beat me down... Would I do it again? “No” is perfectly valid, and correct, in that case.
Asking “Again?” is one of the simplest things you can do, and it’ll mine some of the richest answers you’ll find. It tells the whole truth in a way that numbers never do.
I dig the room, but the round Cynthia Sargent carpet is just incredible. Couldn't find a better picture of this particular carpet, but I'm in love with her work in general. https://t.co/qW3uR9GggF


