Entries Tagged as 'Productivity'

August 23rd, 2007

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How Long Does Productivity Last?

As I was doing my daily reads, I was pointed to an article about working the 9-to-5 job. The gist of the article is that in our profession, and others, working a 9-5 is a thing of the past. And reading throughout the whole article, I couldn’t agree more.

It’s a challenge being productive for 8+ hours in the workday. I’ve come to realize, that I have peak times when I am at my best and most focused. One of those times is very early in the morning, before everyone is awake, and it’s really quiet. Another one of those times is very late at night, with the opposite scenario of the morning.

In the case of the modern information worker, nearly all tasks involve creative or strategic thinking. The way someone answers an email or interprets a piece of information can differ drastically depending on his or her energy level. Nobody does their best work 5:30 in the afternoon after they’ve been sucking down coffee all day to stay awake.

That’s not to say that I can’t get work done during the day, because I can, however, it’s not when I’m at my best. Especially when having to sit in a cube. In an ideal world, I think I would wake up early, crank out the important work until I feel drained, and handle all of the other miscellaneous duties (email, paperwork, etc.) for the rest of the day.

I’m pretty sure that I could get more creative work done in the first few hours of the day, than being forced to crank out something within 8-hours. This approach would be similar to 37signals’ 4-hours upfront strategy. After those few hours, come up for a recharge and evaluate what has been done.

So to the readers, do you find it hard to crank out 8 solid hours of work each day? And if not, what times of the day do you perform at your best?

Tags: Productivity

July 11th, 2007

5 Comments

5 Things Learned Starting a Business

So it’s been about 6 months since I started Tridea with some colleagues, and things have been going great. Since starting Tridea, in addition to having a full time job, things have been quite challenging, and I’ve learned a ton. I’ve done freelance in the past, but not to this extent of actually running a business. It requires a lot of attention and dedication.

Of course there is much more to learn, but here are a few key lessons that I’ve learned thus far.

Time Management

This has been very important to me. Having to work a full time job during the day leaves a very limited amount of time to run a business, so I’ve had to be very efficient with how I spent my time. Working all day, only to come home for more meetings and design work to do can wear on you pretty quickly. You want personal time to relax as well, so in order to balance that time, weekends become a big factor with managing time.

Every person has their own way of managing time, but what I’ve done for the Tridea would be to crank out a few days of solid hard work, little breaks, and get a good chunk of work done. Then I relax for a couple days. This isn’t a sure-fire plan, but it has worked for me. I can’t work all day, then all night for 5 days straight only to have a short weekend to relax, I like to spread my work out a bit more, because working on the weekends doesn’t bother me.

Focus

I can’t lie, sometimes it is extremely hard to stay focused on my work after coming home from an 8-9 hour work day. Somehow I manage to do it easier than other days. To help me focus, I ignore phone calls, non-business emails, turn on music, and just go at it. Once I start paying attention to non-business stuff while trying to work, that is when I lose focus. I’ve also learned not to force creativity. Sometimes you have it, sometimes you don’t, so in the times that you don’t, just let your mind rest. It works wonders.

Choosing Clients

Since we’re in a position where we don’t exactly need every single project for the money, we’re able to pick and choose our clients. It’s awesome. When we meet with [potential] clients, we make sure that we have a good vibe going. If we don’t have a good feeling about it, we turn it down, no matter what the price tag is. A bad client experience is not worth the money. As Cameron Moll says:

I’ve turned down a fair share of projects based solely on the fact that something didn’t feel right at the outset. Fact of the matter is you’ll inevitably be faced with unknown variables in any decision, no matter how well you do your homework.

Communication

This is easily the most important, and the one thing that seems the most overlooked. Our first client was the hardest simply because of communication issues. There were just too many people involved in the project that didn’t need to be. My advice on communication, establish one point-of-contact. Dealing with that one person will help keep projects within the scope, and things will go much more smoothly. You don’t want to be taking direction from 5 different people. It’s not productive, and very frustrating.

In addition to what I mentioned above, keep the client in the loop throughout the whole project. It’s normally not a good thing if the client has to come find you. They should be apart of the whole design and development process. If you have an idea, let them know. It shows that you care about your client. Don’t just communicate with them at the beginning and end of a project.

Contracts are golden

We made the mistake of not having a contract on our first project, which we thought was going to be a quick and easy project. We were wrong. The timeline dragged further than it was supposed, and the project got out of scope. If we would have had a contract, it would have helped tremendously. From now on, no matter how big or small the project is, a contract is required. Outline everything that is entailed for the project within the contract. If the client wants something not in the contract, charge more and redraft the contract. It will save you lots of time and headaches.

As I said, we still have a whole lot to learn about running a business. We will face many more challenges down the road, but the first 6 months have been great, and I’ve obviously learned some useful lessons thus far. I hope to write more after another 6 months.

March 1st, 2007

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Photoshop as an Online App

So doing the normal browsing today, and came across a very interesting article about Adobe’s plans to bring Photoshop to the web. At first thought, it seems interesting, but I wonder how big of an impact this will have on it’s current desktop application. Keep reading →

Tags: Productivity, Web

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