Working And Freelancing

It’s no easy feat.

Working and freelancing at the same time, if not done and managed properly, can burn you out, deprive you of precious sleep, and mess you up really badly. But if done right, it’s an opportunity for accelerated and learning and exponential growth. In a nutshell, that’s what I’m trying to accomplish.

I’ve recently completed my degree and started working in a Digital Innovation Studio. I’ve been there for slightly more than a month and am really enjoying my work. While it is mentally exhausting, it’s also extremely interesting and fulfilling. No regrets whatsoever.

The thing is, right before school ended for me in May’13, I challenged myself by agreeing to take on a freelance design job that would have me putting in several hours every day on top of my full-time job up to the end of 2013. I really had no idea what I was getting myself into.

“Work is tiring, work is tough.”

I ended up going to work for 8 hours every day, coming home dead tired, having to work through the night till two to three in the morning to get my design work done for the freelance job. On top of that, I also had to factor in my twice weekly dance training sessions that more often than not, left me physically exhausted for the rest of the day, and pretty much zonked out the next day.

It was really tiring at first, but I’ve since gotten quite used to the current pace of things. I guess it’s really all about better time management, greater focus and increased productivity.

While there have been times where I found myself questioning why I even chose to take up such heavy workloads, working and freelancing at the same time does have its fair share of benefits.

I’ve learnt so much in the past two months, definitely more than what a normal job can offer. My full-time job has me learning more about design thinking frameworks, user experiences, product management and innovation on a daily basis. While my freelance job has me meddling with user experience and web design through the night. All this goes on with me constantly trying to manage my time better and increase my productivity.

One thing I’ve realized is that I’ve been making better use of empty pockets of time, that used to go to waste. You see, I used to laze about and not do anything if I had half an hour to spare. Not any more. Even if I don’t find myself doing something work related, I try to make a conscious effort to spend my time more productively.

I’ve also started using several productivity apps like Asana and Evernote. Asana helps me to keep track of every thing that I’ve got to be on top of. And Evernote helps me to collate and curate my thoughts within a single ecosystem that’s accessible on my iPhone and my Macbook Pro.

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The Two Most Important Days In Your Life

I stumbled upon a really beautiful quote today by Mark Twain. It goes like this:

“The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you find out why.”

– Mark Twain

I’m really looking forward to the day I find out why.

Taking The Back Seat

I was scheduled to head over to a client’s place earlier today for a meeting. It was arranged for a large group of ten or more people so I kind of had a rough idea of what things were going to be like. Large meetings were usually disorganized and I knew that there was no way everyone in the meeting was going to be engaged all at the same time. What I didn’t know though, was how much some people didn’t want to be engaged or involved.

It turned out that a total of 17 of us had to squeeze into a tiny meeting room that had a long meeting table and it was really interesting to observe how people went about choosing their seats.

The ones who turned out to be more attentive during the meeting were the ones chose seats that had them seated around the table, but there were the odd few who grabbed their chairs and planted themselves near the walls and corners of the room. The table had space for 14 people to be comfortably seated around, so that didn’t explain why 7 of them were seated away from the table.

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