Those things rarely make it into the story.
And yet, they’re the story.
Standing there, it occurred to me that what was being celebrated wasn’t just ten years of a company.
It was ten years of people continuing.
Continuing through change.
Continuing through doubt.
Continuing long enough to arrive at a moment like this.
We tend to celebrate outcomes.
But what often matters more… is what it took to get there.
It was a celebration.
A tenth anniversary, held in a craft whiskey distillery — warm light, conversation, and the easy rhythm of people who had come together to mark something that had lasted.
There was laughter.
Stories shared over hors d’oeuvres.
A sense of accomplishment that didn’t need to be announced.
I had a chance to speak with the founder, and later with several members of the team.
Nothing formal. Just conversation.
And yet, something about it stayed with me.
Ten years is a long time for a company.
Long enough to move past the early excitement.
Long enough to face uncertainty more than once.
Long enough to learn what works — and what doesn’t.
But we don’t always see that part.
We see the celebration.
We see the milestone.
We see the version that has endured.
What we don’t always see are the quieter moments that made it possible.
The decisions are made without certainty.
The stretches where progress wasn’t obvious.
The persistence required when things didn’t go as planned
Until next Wednesday,
Brad
Something noticed. Something understood.




















































































