Ed Gomberg

Serialentrepreneursince17.Twopassports,sixcountries,everythinginonebag.

IspentadecadeknowingthingsIcouldn'tuse.NowIwriteaboutthatgapthespacebetweenhearingsomethingandactuallybeingabletodosomethingwithit.

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About

I started my first business at 17. Not a side project — an actual operating company. By 25 I was running two businesses across three countries, managing 125 people, and living out of a carry-on. Born in Russia, raised in England and the US, operated across Israel, the Philippines, Portugal. Two citizenships. Six countries. The kind of resume that sounds impressive at dinner parties and exhausting everywhere else.

Here's what nobody told me: you can build the systems, hire the team, read every book, attend every retreat — and still run everything from survival mode. I did. For a decade. The gap between knowing something and being able to use it is the most underserved problem I've encountered — in business, in health, in relationships, in all of it. I call it integration. Most people call it "why do I keep doing the thing I know I shouldn't do."

I'm in therapy right now — not past tense, currently. I'm closing my last company deliberately, not because it failed but because I'm choosing to. I manage a chronic gut condition with a strict elimination diet and a 6-compartment supplement tray. I replaced my human executive assistant with an AI system I built myself. None of this is polished. I share mid-process because that's where the real material lives — not after the victory lap, but during the part where you're still figuring it out.

I'm moving to San Francisco. Building in public. Writing about integration — the stuff that sits between the insight and the result. Teacher hat, not guru hat. If something here is useful to you, good. That's the whole point.

Projects

Welgo

US property management — short-term rentals across Arizona and Colorado. $24K/month in rent obligations, distributed team across three time zones. Closing it deliberately. Not a failure story. A completion story.

KamaRooms

108-room hotel turnaround in Tatarstan. Family business, acting CTO — 9.4 on Booking.com, 15 disconnected systems stitched together with spreadsheets and stubbornness.

Life OS

Replaced my executive assistant with an AI system built on Claude — email triage, morning briefings, weekly reviews, persistent memory. The bottleneck was never the tool. It was knowing myself well enough to tell the tool what matters.

The Ed Letter

Writing about integration — the gap between knowing something and being able to use it. Published on LinkedIn. Sharing what I'm building while I'm building it, not after.

Writing

I write to think. The process is messy — stream of consciousness first, then find the structure in it. I don't wait until I've mastered something to share it. Sharing is how I learn.

The project is called Show My Work. I publish what I'm building, mid-process, with the rough edges intact. Teacher hat, not guru hat — "here's what I found" beats "here's what you need to know."

Connect

Location
KazanSan Francisco