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While the Iron is Hot
So by juggling lots of things, or spinning multiple plates in the air, I can shift from one to the other with high energy levels, and not long one fall.
That's one reason, the other could well be financial streams, and not wanting to miss out on opportunities.
So I run Audiocourses.com, with a team of staff helping me out, I'm busy upgrading thephonecam.com with humpa, to remove adult, I operate malebits.com and various other sites and blogs. I lecture in UK Universities, I podcast, I run an island in SecondLife, I'm helping to organise PodcampUK, I play guitar, I run.. .. dayum!
hmmm I need to think about this, perhaps too many plates, but I always make time for the family.
Bottom line is that I love having a rich life that is full of uncertainly and the kind of experiences that the clock-punchers of the world can only imagine. I think us creatives are hard-wired to need stimulation... which is why we are drawn to the tools provided by the internet. (Gotta run... three meetings this morning, including a meditation session with a visiting Tibetan monk - don't worry, I will be recording it.) Fun stuff.
"because most of the time paying un(web) clients have no idea what they want from a website and getting information from the client can take a long time to gather"
Simple.
I will add this also, that creative types are open to a mass of new information with "beta" websites like twitter which highlight great ideas and usage of new ways of working. This sparks the creative gene and in turn makes you wanna get "involved"
We're also kind of spastic. :)
I find that I need to put difficult projects down when I get stuck and do something else so when I come back, I can discern the issues better. I can't really do more than one significant project at the same time. It takes me a day sometimes, to make a context switch and get fully back into another problem space.
You know who you are people. :)
For me, it's more than just "keeping busy". My business partner and I were just joking yesterday, that between the two of us, it seems as if we know just about everybody in our city. Or at least we know someone who knows someone. We are well connected because we have worked on so much stuff. It's critical to be involved in order to build your network. And now that we are doing our many projects for a living, it's even more important to have a lot on the go.
So there!
I sometimes get too many ideas in my head. Often, I need to 'make room' by initiating an idea for 'real' (be in tangible or virtual - like code)
Though all the ideas can be maddening, I also get HUGE amounts of energy from having them and especially implementing - even if it's just to make a start. Not all ideas make it to a screen though, which is why I need cloning or funding.
Who knows, a few of them just might might some money.
Most ideas I have had have always led to better things, be it a greater knowledge and understanding of something, or a new job.
I'm a self-made 'citizen geek/programmer' - self-taught on the web and trial and error. I left college studying Manufacturing Systems Engineering ( I wanted to design robots) and failed on Computing (in Turbo Pascal)
Opportunity ROCKS! - used to be my motto. And indeed it did. And thankfully still does.
Always having a new idea based around a new technology will make you 'Future-Proof'. ;)
a.) cool projects
b.) cool men
c.) another round
The thrill of coming up with ideas, and thinking about the possibilities is better than the process of implementing something.
So when I'm working on making a project a reality - often largely by myself - and feeling frustrated by the slog of doing it by myself, I'll find myself freshening up my mind by sitting on the toilet or in the bath or on the stoop with a coffee and a fag and falling in love with more ideas. Then I might tentatively embark on advancing some of them - or I might suddenly work obsessively on advancing and exploring an idea that I feel particularly excited about.
So at any one time, I've got a lot of things knocking around my head.
And that's just my OWN ideas, let alone the things I see other people doing and want to get involved in - or otherwise boring work projects that I try to think up cool ways of enlivening (and thus make needlessly complicated).
I'm addicted to the high of falling in love with ideas, and with the thrill of interacting with other people to make them a reality.
And I guess it gets a little lonely when you're working away on something by yourself and more projects means more social contact.
But ah the luxury we have in our ability to share this! Think about how much easier it is to feed and grow those brain sparks, not to mention exist in a world where we may not be the norm, than it was when Leonardo was struggling with his need to invent, create, express himself in multiple ways.
the second reason is simple - it is so much fun to do tons of projects in parallel, see what works and what not, and try to stay ahead of the curve.
-Jeff
http://blog.zemote.com
Another great by-product is the unintended ways multiple projects augment each other. Was just listening to a biography about Einstein on NPR, did you catch yesterday's Fresh Air? If he wasn't in that patent office, reviewing applications for clock synchronization, looking out the window at the trains coming and going, might he not have formulated his theory on space/time relativity? Juxtaposed context breeds brilliance. And lack of sleep. And crazy cat lady behavior. Just remember to bathe once and a while and apply deodorant.
ie: The skills learned from one ALWAYS benefits or inspires the next.
Good value! :)
I like to freelance as a way to see what everyone is thinking about doing and to pay the bills. I also podcast on wine-tasting travel, I make short films, I write lyrics, and I make jewelry.
NEW QUESTION for those of you coming back to read the comments:
If you had fewer projects (not just one, but fewer), would you do them better?
What's the ideal mix?
All my energy, aside from my day job, marriage, beer drinking and occasional sleep go toward writing, shooting, acting, editing, etc the next week's show. I don't have anything left for something else. Maybe I should quit that day job...
. . . but who snitched about my crazy cat lady behavior?
When your plate is full, you are forced to manage your time better than when it's empty. Sometimes we need this sense of pressure, sometimes the ne new thing tips the whole balance in chaos.
I manage by only doing the things I love now- it makes it easy to give up the little stuff. I have a few things I need to get rid of ASAP, as they are non-value add to me on any level, and as soon as I can extricate myself from them, I will. But I did make commitments to some things a long time ago, before Podcamps came to rule my heart and mind.
If I had fewer projects, would I manage them better? Probably. The thing I miss most is the just hanging out doing nothing time; that has gotten rare and can leave me feeling a bit frantic. But I know it's also my fault for being compulsive about some things. Sometimes, managing things and projects better is more about friendsourcing and delegating than it is about control- what can you give to someone else and not make yourself crazy about at the same time?
I've long thought the women's lib promise that "You can have it all" was a lie of sorts- You may be able to have it all, but realistically, you can't have it all at the same time. This means looking at things on a time scale; what can you do now, and what must you put off to a slightly longer time frame?
I just have to be careful when I volunteer myself for something to know what it entails, and also be willing to outsource when I need to and without guilt.
What was I saying?
a) We are multi-faceted people not content to only focus on one facet of ourselves;
b) We are tinkerers, explorers, hackers (in the original positive sense of the world) who are interested in how we can change and use things;
c) We are learning huge amounts of (info? knowledge?) by our varied activities.
d) We have come to understand that creative insight can often come in the most unusual and odd ways... and very often NOT when you are focused on the problem at hand. I like what Chris MacDonald wrote: "Juxtaposed context breeds brilliance". We understand that what we learn in one area may assist in another. Synthesizing disparate pieces of knowledge unlocks doors. We understand the beauty and power of synergy.
e) We realize that in this crazy chaotic business climate, it's not enough to have a Plan A and Plan B- you also need Plans C, D and E.
f) We are social people (many, perhaps most, extroverts) interested in the lives and stories of other people.
g) We are having fun.
In answer to your "new question", yes, you can generally do fewer projects better... the right mix (i.e. how many) will vary for each person based on his/her capacity for handling chaos.
That way, all the rest will be a walk in the park ;)
For me, I think it is a deep-rooted fear that I do not exist unless I'm creating and producing and that once I'm gone, I will not be remembered unless I leave some footprints behind. I'm also incredibly passionate about taking the seed of an idea and then making something tangible out of it, sharing it with others, watching/feeling its impact. I just have so many ideas so my life is a jungle. Throw a baby in the mix, and you've got total madness.
The hardest part of doing multiple things? Not knowing what to tell people I do. I finally narrowed it down to Writer/Consultant but the list can go on and on. Usually have to tailor my "job title" to my audience.
Now, If I get fed up working on X, I can bop over to project Y and be productive there until I can face X again.
More projects also gives me the opportunity to work with a larger variety of people, and I enjoy that (mostly)!
I had a powerful realisation just 2 days ago that one of the reasons I procrastinate and do everything at the last minute is because then I don't have to see whether I'm as good as I'd like to think I am at stuff. I can just say, "Oh, I was in a rush, and I had lots of other things on my mind, so this was the best I could do under the circumstances. But if I'd had the time... I could have made something AMAZING."
But I'll never have the time to test to see whether I'm as good as I think I am because I'll just keep taking on new projects and ideas and writing long comments like this instead of taking that time. Asshole.
What percentage of all your projects or distractions fail? How many are successful? How do you measure both?
PRACTICAL
- My bill-paying job in mainstream media is currently
going through tremendous upheaval.
- The economics of being "just" a network news cameraman
don't look good in the long run.
INSPIRATIONAL
- My introduction to social media, internet TV and participatory
communities has opened my eyes to real business
opportunity.
- Managing all of these roles is at once overwhelming and truly
energizing.
It's often difficult to focus well on all of these things at the same time. In fact, I feel like I'm cheating my family of my mental prescense of late. But a tremendous inspiration to me, is all of the people in this space and the simple idea of staying focused on where I see myslef and all of us down the road. We are the new "micro media moguls". I think all of our collective hard work will pay off.
I like the bit above about the customers never knowing what they want, soooo true :)
We have had a Twitter site running for over ten years. I finally stopped auto-refresh. Sure, there's no SMS, no one had cells in those days :)
It could also be a matter of financial necessity if you're trying to make a living at it.
-Jon
But...
For me I like to compare the opportunities in this arena to a kid playing in a sandbox. There are so many toys, you can't just stick with one. Twittering, Flickring, MySpacing, Blogging, Optimizing, Searching, Podcasting, Squidooing, Tagging, Mashuping, Webmastering, etc. These are some of our sandbox toys that allow us to create the most simple or ellaborate castles and we want them all. I think I've been on the Internet too long today :)
No seriously, chances are you develop a little something here, here then realize with a little tweak you could plug it into that over there - and as IT turns out - over there is very seldom more than a gesture away.
'Why not stick with one?' - as many reasons as there are projects, maybe more - but every project also has its mundane boring and frustrating bits. Sometimes being able to step away and come back to it from a different perspective and mindset is is usefull.
Then again maybe we're just suckers for punishment ;-)