Making Ideas Happen
Posted by Uni-ball on May 31, 2012 in Ideas | 0 comments
Co-founder and chief designer of Behance, Matias Corea was a recent keynote speaker at OFFF, delivering a message on Making Ideas Happen. In one part of his presentation, Matias addressed some of the most common excuses people make for not taking the steps to make things happen.
- It’s not the right moment. There’ll never be the right moment. It’s as simple as that.
- It’s not polished enough. It doesn’t matter. It’s far better to get something out the door, tell people about it, and use feedback to make it better.
- I’m worried about the competition. The competition doesn’t matter. There is always an opportunity to create something better than the competition, regardless of how superior they may seem in terms of resources.
- I have to pay the bills. Matias framed this along the lines of: “would you rather pay your sad bills with your sad time and sad money, or pay your happy bills with happy time and happy money?”
- I don’t want to fail. Turn failure from a negative to a positive: it’s beneficial to fail. In fact failing a lot of the time was a consistent theme from the talks at OFFF; a lot of great personal work comes out of failure.
- I don’t have time. When you’re in a bar drinking a beer, can you still feasibly complain about having a lack of time? Sounds facetious, but it’s true. I knew one guy who effectively gave up going out partying for a month and had one of the most productive and fun months of his career, creating a whole array of personal projects. Wake up an hour earlier; go to bed an hour later. You’ll always be able to find time to make something you want.
- Someone is already doing it. Matias used Google as an example here. When they started, there were 17 different search engines doing effectively the same thing (remember Alta Vista?). To reiterate an earlier point, there is always an opportunity to take and idea and make it better.
Oftentimes, we make up excuse after excuse not to take the step to execute our ideas. Are you guilty of making any of these excuses? How will you get yourself to stop and get started?
[credit: howells.ws] {image via flickr]