There’s music in me. This is what separates me from the others. It is something you don’t see. You feel it.
When I say music, I don’t mean sound. I mean rhythm, that internal pulse that drives how I move through work, people, and decisions. It’s timing, awareness, and flow.
Knowing when to push and when to hold back.
When to talk and when to listen.
When to change direction before everyone else even senses the shift.
That rhythm is what makes some people feel “ahead,” even when they’re not the loudest in the room.
It’s what separates those who build energy from those who just chase attention.
Can’t teach it! You develop it by being in the game long enough to hear the difference between noise and tone.
I spent 2 days in Sarajevo at LinkUp community gathering, invited by Jasmin Alić, even if I'm not in the community. He’s someone who builds connection through rhythm, not rules.
And I met a few more people who move the same way. Like Tijana Savović. Like harun omić, whom I have known from LinkedIn for years but met him offline for the first time last night.
I also saw it with Victoria Michaels. Almost crazy American energy, but it's there. You can't escape Victoria's energy. Boom, there she is.
But also with Nuri Bayindirlioglu. The music flows even if he spends most of the time recording and taking photos. Except when he stops to tell stories. The music is always there—calm, consistent, and effortless.
In some you feel it right away—open, expressive, tuned in.
And in some people, you can't hear music instantly.
You need to get closer to them, and then they might let you feel it.
Then it just kept expanding.
You only sense if you slow down, ask questions, and give them space to show what’s inside.
I met people from 19 countries here in Sarajevo. Let me mention a few of them.
Adrijana Vujadin (it turned out she has been following me here since 2023, damn), Alina Kovalchuk, Filip Perica, Nikola Jovic, Shelli K. Spence, Kristina Dimanovska, Angela Marie D'Antonio (damn, I can see the music in Angela instantly), Daniele Scuteri, Ubaid Ur Rehman, Mariana Dimitrova, Sarka Risch, André Porsch, Martina Kikic, Ratna Juita, Cristiano Sechi, Sabahudin Murtic, Virginia Vila, Edo Delalić, Ema Hasicevic, Ivona Namjesnik, and others, each one carrying their own frequency.
I also met Nikolett Jaksa again (always a pleasure) and Vladimir B. Petrovic (I owe you a few drinks), whom I met 2 years ago on LinkedIn.
Oh man, I saw Edin Mehic on the street and stopped him by saying, "You know who I am, right?" haha :)
That’s what I loved most! Different personalities, different tempos, but the same rhythm underneath it all.
A lot of honest conversations, no ego anywhere, and that’s rare in business because most people walk into a room trying to sound smart.
Here, everyone just wanted to listen, share, and connect. People with music inside them tuned to the same frequency, moving toward the same goal: to build something real.
Thankful for that.
When I say music, I don’t mean sound. I mean rhythm, that internal pulse that drives how I move through work, people, and decisions. It’s timing, awareness, and flow.
Knowing when to push and when to hold back.
When to talk and when to listen.
When to change direction before everyone else even senses the shift.
That rhythm is what makes some people feel “ahead,” even when they’re not the loudest in the room.
It’s what separates those who build energy from those who just chase attention.
Can’t teach it! You develop it by being in the game long enough to hear the difference between noise and tone.
I spent 2 days in Sarajevo at LinkUp community gathering, invited by Jasmin Alić, even if I'm not in the community. He’s someone who builds connection through rhythm, not rules.
And I met a few more people who move the same way. Like Tijana Savović. Like harun omić, whom I have known from LinkedIn for years but met him offline for the first time last night.
I also saw it with Victoria Michaels. Almost crazy American energy, but it's there. You can't escape Victoria's energy. Boom, there she is.
But also with Nuri Bayindirlioglu. The music flows even if he spends most of the time recording and taking photos. Except when he stops to tell stories. The music is always there—calm, consistent, and effortless.
In some you feel it right away—open, expressive, tuned in.
And in some people, you can't hear music instantly.
You need to get closer to them, and then they might let you feel it.
Then it just kept expanding.
You only sense if you slow down, ask questions, and give them space to show what’s inside.
I met people from 19 countries here in Sarajevo. Let me mention a few of them.
Adrijana Vujadin (it turned out she has been following me here since 2023, damn), Alina Kovalchuk, Filip Perica, Nikola Jovic, Shelli K. Spence, Kristina Dimanovska, Angela Marie D'Antonio (damn, I can see the music in Angela instantly), Daniele Scuteri, Ubaid Ur Rehman, Mariana Dimitrova, Sarka Risch, André Porsch, Martina Kikic, Ratna Juita, Cristiano Sechi, Sabahudin Murtic, Virginia Vila, Edo Delalić, Ema Hasicevic, Ivona Namjesnik, and others, each one carrying their own frequency.
I also met Nikolett Jaksa again (always a pleasure) and Vladimir B. Petrovic (I owe you a few drinks), whom I met 2 years ago on LinkedIn.
Oh man, I saw Edin Mehic on the street and stopped him by saying, "You know who I am, right?" haha :)
That’s what I loved most! Different personalities, different tempos, but the same rhythm underneath it all.
A lot of honest conversations, no ego anywhere, and that’s rare in business because most people walk into a room trying to sound smart.
Here, everyone just wanted to listen, share, and connect. People with music inside them tuned to the same frequency, moving toward the same goal: to build something real.
Thankful for that.