19 min listen
(Pt. 1 of 3) Your Side Project Has Greater Creative Potential Than You Think
(Pt. 1 of 3) Your Side Project Has Greater Creative Potential Than You Think
ratings:
Length:
13 minutes
Released:
Jan 18, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
This 3 part series of starting a side project is inspired by Lauren Hom's initiative of starting a side project in 2017. She has found massive success in her young career all from creating the type of work she wants to get to paid for with side projects. Her Side Projects: Your New Secret Weapon blog series along with a free mini email course are a great place for you to check out if you need some additional inspiration after this podcast series.
Would you believe me if I told you I have a friend who bought a Russian spacesuit on eBay and began photographing himself as just an everyday astronaut in public?
What if I told you this silly project is now becoming his full-time business pursuit?
The person I’m referring to is my local friend Tim Dodd and he is the creator of the Everyday Astronaut account on Instagram.
This was just a little experiment that exploded with creative potential.
I’ll get back to Tim later, but the point I’m trying to make is that you never know what side projects can turn into.
For example, Uber was a side project. The Tim Ferris Podcast was a side project. Perspective-Collective is an ongoing side project.
You get the picture.
This is the beginning of a 3 part series which covers the benefits to pursuing a side project in 2017:
Part 1: Start seeing your side project hobby as something with greater creative potential.
Part 2: Side projects allow you to attract the kind of work you want to get paid for.
Part 3: 3 ingredients for increasing exposure for your side project.
Let’s get started.
Indication of Future Creative Potential
I recently read a Medium article by Busy Building Things and it summed up perfectly how a side project should be perceived.
It states, “Side projects are much more than simply hobbies, they are indicators of what you are capable of building.”
My hobby used to be drawing which led me to creating the side project of Perspective-Collective in April of 2014. It started off with me just needing a name to house all the art I was cooking up.
The thought of calling this 'brand' Scotty Russell Graphics was sounding pretty douchey and I reluctantly went with Perspective-Collective (I wasn't a fan of this name at the time but I rolled with it).
What I didn’t realize is this new side project was providing me the platform to create whatever the hell I wanted. I had no idea it would grow like this.
Over 2.5 years, this side project has led me to:
blogging
public speaking
getting great interviews and features
getting great freelance
teaching workshops
starting my own Perspective Podcast
building relationships with creatives all over the world
During this span, I’ve been able to catch a glimpse of what I’m capable of building. I fully believe that I can turn this into my full-time dream job someday if I continue to push it.
It’s funny because it all starts with an idea but can rapidly change when you decide to act on it.
That little idea you’ve had swimming in your head could change your life.
Create Something Dope In Your Own Lane
My friend Chuck Means told me a phrase that he heard the other day that went along the lines of “Creating Something Dope In Your Own Lane.”
I’m a big advocate for pursuing your own creative path by doing work that resonates with you. If you’re creating work that you're enthusiastic about, then you are making dope work by your own standards.
No one else’s definition of “dope work” applies here.
Over time, if you consistently share this dope work, you’ll give others the opportunity to think it’s dope as well.
It’s easy to feel you have to follow the footsteps of other creatives. However, I encourage you to be inspired but stay in your lane because your creative DNA and story are unique.
Going back to Tim… I mean Everyday Astronaut. He matched his greatest strength / skillset (photography and space knowledge) with his greatest passion (outer space and dreams to become an astronaut) and started a little project that he thought was dope.
Note: I wrote a blog post se
Would you believe me if I told you I have a friend who bought a Russian spacesuit on eBay and began photographing himself as just an everyday astronaut in public?
What if I told you this silly project is now becoming his full-time business pursuit?
The person I’m referring to is my local friend Tim Dodd and he is the creator of the Everyday Astronaut account on Instagram.
This was just a little experiment that exploded with creative potential.
I’ll get back to Tim later, but the point I’m trying to make is that you never know what side projects can turn into.
For example, Uber was a side project. The Tim Ferris Podcast was a side project. Perspective-Collective is an ongoing side project.
You get the picture.
This is the beginning of a 3 part series which covers the benefits to pursuing a side project in 2017:
Part 1: Start seeing your side project hobby as something with greater creative potential.
Part 2: Side projects allow you to attract the kind of work you want to get paid for.
Part 3: 3 ingredients for increasing exposure for your side project.
Let’s get started.
Indication of Future Creative Potential
I recently read a Medium article by Busy Building Things and it summed up perfectly how a side project should be perceived.
It states, “Side projects are much more than simply hobbies, they are indicators of what you are capable of building.”
My hobby used to be drawing which led me to creating the side project of Perspective-Collective in April of 2014. It started off with me just needing a name to house all the art I was cooking up.
The thought of calling this 'brand' Scotty Russell Graphics was sounding pretty douchey and I reluctantly went with Perspective-Collective (I wasn't a fan of this name at the time but I rolled with it).
What I didn’t realize is this new side project was providing me the platform to create whatever the hell I wanted. I had no idea it would grow like this.
Over 2.5 years, this side project has led me to:
blogging
public speaking
getting great interviews and features
getting great freelance
teaching workshops
starting my own Perspective Podcast
building relationships with creatives all over the world
During this span, I’ve been able to catch a glimpse of what I’m capable of building. I fully believe that I can turn this into my full-time dream job someday if I continue to push it.
It’s funny because it all starts with an idea but can rapidly change when you decide to act on it.
That little idea you’ve had swimming in your head could change your life.
Create Something Dope In Your Own Lane
My friend Chuck Means told me a phrase that he heard the other day that went along the lines of “Creating Something Dope In Your Own Lane.”
I’m a big advocate for pursuing your own creative path by doing work that resonates with you. If you’re creating work that you're enthusiastic about, then you are making dope work by your own standards.
No one else’s definition of “dope work” applies here.
Over time, if you consistently share this dope work, you’ll give others the opportunity to think it’s dope as well.
It’s easy to feel you have to follow the footsteps of other creatives. However, I encourage you to be inspired but stay in your lane because your creative DNA and story are unique.
Going back to Tim… I mean Everyday Astronaut. He matched his greatest strength / skillset (photography and space knowledge) with his greatest passion (outer space and dreams to become an astronaut) and started a little project that he thought was dope.
Note: I wrote a blog post se
Released:
Jan 18, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Dealing With Creative Funks & Feeling Invisible: ## You Are Not Alone & You Are Not Invisible Do you ever get in creative funks where you lack the drive to create while feeling invisible to the world? There are those sinister inner voices that try to convince you that your work doesn’t matter and that you can’t make a difference. I’m pretty sure everyone goes through these phases whether they admit it or not. This episode is me admitting this to you in hopes you don’t feel alone in the times you feel invisible as a creative or life in general. There is light at the end of the tunnel as I’m learning that this is _part of the struggle_ of pursuing something that’s important to you. In due time, it will be important to others as well. It’s okay to feel this way at times, _it’s natural_. However, you are capable of pulling yourself out of this creative funk and pushing forward to the next phase on your creative path. I say this because I’m pushing through one by Side Hustler's Perspective with Coach Scotty Russell