Tag: Life Lessons

  • nomadone in the mountains, escaping city madness

    I’m a true nature lover, which is strange considering the majority of my time is spent huddled in front of a screen and bashing away at a keyboard day and night. I suppose it’s what’s kept me appreciating what nature has to offer. The last few months have been really taxing on my mind and body to the point that I’ve hardly had any time or mindspace to focus on things like blogging and social networking or even some of the product development ideas I have floating around in the back of my mind.

    I needed a serious break from this daily grind to refresh myself and reconnect with the elements. Ok I must admit I did have some technology with me, but only so I could remember this memorable trip and show others some of the sights we enjoyed.

    I highly recommend getting away now and then to refocus and put things into perspective

  • Getting the most out of What We Do

    Last night I had a highly insightful chat on gtalk with @naeem who runs a number of successful online businesses and interest sites out of Johannesburg, South Africa. Naeem is someone I admire for being able to see a business opportunity around almost every corner, you can tell he’s been doing what he does for quite a while.

    He passed on a really great online business idea

    It was Something really simple and with potential to make some good dosh online, which got me thinking about the way I have been approaching my career. I’m not about to share his idea with the world to run off and make it irrelevant to me, but after coming across the following post written by Bud Caddell on whatconsumesme.com, I also re-thought whether just any good business idea would do for me.

    venn

    This Venn diagram gave me some serious food for thought in terms of how to go about sticking to what I do well, what I love doing and still making a decent living out of it. The post is entitled “How to be Happy in Business. Apart from being a really well designed piece of informaton design, the concepts really hit me hard and also made me think back to my business ideas convo with @naeem. Would it do to get into just any type of business just to make money?

    Budd lists the 3 problems highlighted by the diagram:

    • We can’t determine how to make enough money from the things we want to do, and do really well.
    • We’ve found things we want to do, and can be paid for, but we’re not the best game in town.
    • We’ve come across things people want us to do, that we do well (or at least better than the competition) that we really don’t want to do.

    I’m the type of person that generally comes up with business ideas connected to a direct need I have, and also most times relating to something which I’m really interested in, which helps me get my head fully inside the whole development process. Ok so I haven’t really succeeded with any of my crazy business ideas yet, LOL, nor have I even progressed to prototyping phase with some of the more serious ones, but this means that something disconnected to what I love doesn’t stand a snowball’s chance of even featuring. Then comes the problem of monetizing what I’m really truely passionate about.

    Me gots lots to think about regarding this diagram!

    On the same little stroll around the interwebs, I also found a really great way of identifying my own special business model, and applying my efforts in that direction. Gina Trapini, “software and self improvement junkie” wrote a piece on Freelance Switch where she says,

    “While I do plan to make money as a freelancer, my ultimate goal is to generate satisfaction.”

    (While money is a part of that, so is learning, service, and creativity, so we’ll just use the umbrella term “satisfaction.”)

    She shares her personal “business model” in plain & simple terms, What’s important to her is more than just paying the bills while doing what she specializes in.

    Personal Business Model of Gina Trapani

    This particular concept highlights the importance of consantly tracking your activities based on what’s most important to you. Of course knowing what’s most important is step 1, having a plan to engage more in those areas comes next. I found in the last 2 months, tracking my activities in detail has given me huge insight in where the problem areas are. I’ve started taking a few steps in a new direction and these 2 posts/diagrams has helped wrap my head around the way forward.

  • Every problem can be solved by following the right process

    Having & following a process is something I keep trying to enforce when I take on projects of all types & sizes. Following a process from start to finish gives us a way of planning our specific activities at any point along the course of a project and tailoring those activities to that specific aspect of the project. A process gives us a clear idea of what the next step is, and helps us assess what percentage of the project has been completed. Some processes can be as simple as: think – decide – do, or as involved as some design thinking processes used for more detailed projects. A nice design thinking process breakdown I found on wikipedia looks like this.

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  • Lessons I have learnt going from 0 – 1000 in 1 month

    I’m so excited about the progress of my humble little site and though in many people’s eyes my few achievements might seem minuscule, I’m over the moon at the results I have achieved in a very short space of time that I had to share it with you.

    First things first lets go to the numbers. Using the wp-stats plugin has been so much fun for me being able to see where all my visitors are coming from and what they’re up to when they visit my site. I went from a personal blog with not much direction and little idea of what I was trying to achieve to 1000 visitors in one month.

    Nomad-one WordPress visitor statistics September - October 2007

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