Compulsive Admin

Getting Things Done

You may not believe this, but I have a hard time dealing with Time Management.

I know what your thinking, “That can’t be true, Jason. You post so randomly and without warning, I assumed you had it all together.”

The reality is I’m a procrastinator and jump around from project to project throughout the day and sometimes throughout the hour.

I have an un-diagnosed case of adult ADD, live in a chaotic environment (working home with two kids), and get a weird enjoyment out of the feeling of urgency.

With posting on this blog three times a week and filming the “Learn to Animate Course,” I realize I need to come up with a better time management system.

Getting Things Done has been recommended to me by several entrepreneur friends.

This book is very popular among the internet marketing community.

This video was what made me decide I need to give the program a try:

It could be my love for this style of animation or that Monkey, but this video is incredible.

Beyond the visual elements, the video also makes logical sense. If I have problems paying attention, it stems from not having actionable steps (knowing what to do next), fear of forgetting another task I must complete, and a lack of consistently going over what I have done and what needs to get done.

My plan is to implement this strategy and update you on my progress of Getting Things Done.

Have you used this technique?
How do you get things done?

I would love to hear your stories.

Jason Love

Anxiety Symptoms And Treatment Tips

October 8th was National Depression Screening Day. It is well known that creatives tend to have higher chances of depression and social anxiety orders. For this reason, I want to talk about this taboo subject.

Is your anxiety overwhelming?

With stress and anxiety, I normally assume the symptoms I feel (tiredness, lack of focus, etc.) are related to being sick or lazy. It is hard to imagine how our minds affect our physical bodies.

Some symptoms of stress:

  • Low energy
  • Headaches
  • Upset stomach
    (including diarrhea, constipation, and nausea)
  • Aches, pains, and tense muscles
  • Chest pain and rapid heartbeat
  • Insomnia
  • Frequent colds and infections
  • more

You might want to see a medical professional if you feel symptoms over a period of several days.

In this article, you will be able to learn a variety of ways on how to treat anxiety. However, seeing a doctor is always your best option.

To help manage your anxiety, consider meeting with a therapist who specializes in cognitive behavioral therapy. This kind of therapy can help you attack specific fears or worries by identifying and changing distorted patterns in your thinking. By looking at the full picture of how your concerns affect you, you can hopefully decrease your overall anxiety when those thinking patterns are eliminated.

Learn calming techniques to get you through anxiety. It can be deep breathing, mental exercises or quiet music. Be aware of what works for you when you feel overwhelmed by anxiety so that you can address it in when you feel overwhelmed. This will help you get some much-needed control.

Try not to watch the news often. Many times, the news is filled with negative stories about occurrences in your town and around the world. When dealing with anxiety, you do not need to feed the anxiety any more negative issues to dwell on. Turn off the TV, pick up a lighthearted book to read instead.

Planning ahead is a great way to reduce stress on a daily basis. Instead of waiting until the last minute for projects at work or school, start in advance to eliminate any hassle when you face crunch time. This will help to put you in the best position to maintain a positive mindset.

Exercise is always a great way to reduce your anxiety. When you exercise, your brain releases specific endorphins. These endorphins promote a healthy and happy mind, which battles your anxiety wonderfully. Exercise in the morning to start your day is ideal. If you can find the time.

When you feel overly anxious, get outside. The exercise has many benefits for your whole body, and a good workout can clear your head and help improve your mood. Just being in a new environment has shown to help reset the mind in creativity and to reduce stress. Take a walk around the block if you need it.

Another tip to help control your anxiety is to try to find the things or people that make you laugh the most. This includes watching a comedy movie, reading a funny book, or telling jokes with friends. You will find your anxiety to be much more controlled when you feel more joyful.

Find people to be around. Make sure that you are not alone in your room for long periods of time. One of the best things that you can do is to go out with friends and share time with the people that you love. This helps you to reduce anxiety and inject fun into your day.

Try to minimize the amount of negative words that you use or negative comments that you are making. The more negative talk, the more negative thoughts and anxiety that can come creeping into your head, causing you unneeded health issues that will affect your life in some very bad ways.

If you are a big coffee or soda drinker you should do yourself a huge favor and limit your caffeine intake. I am doing this right now by putting a time limit on when I can have anything with caffeine or energy drinks.

Many people that suffer from anxiety do not realize the negative effects that these chemicals can have on their moods. Switching to decaf is a good idea, if you do not want to stop drinking coffee altogether.

By now, you should realize that severe anxiety problems need effective treatments. You shouldn’t ignore anxiety or try to solve it without help. There are effective treatments that you can use to help overcome anxiety.

Stay safe and stay healthy.

-Jason Love

An Easy Way to Improve your Phone Videocamera’s Audio

As you can hear from the video above the microphone makes a big difference. It cuts back on the wind and the waves in the background. It also makes my voice clearer.

I currently use the microphone daily while creation videos for the Learn to Animate Course.

I tried using my podcasting microphone with mixing during the editing process. That method became too much work. This microphone plugs right into my iPhone… Which is AWESOME!

It is a Stony-Edge mobile Condenser Lapel Microphone.

Here is a link for it on Amazon – http://amzn.to/1ONk1DF

How to Not Kill Your Husband While Working Together

Couple Fight!

 Advice on how to work with your husband when you share a home and office.

I should probably mention that my husband okayed the general topic of this article.  (In fact, I’m pretty sure it was his idea.)  At first I refused to consider this kind of theme for an article, seeing it as something that would inevitably devolve into a bicker-fest.

 “What do you mean I laugh like a demented donkey? Oh yeah?  … Your eyes are too close together!”

I made my husband promise that he would not read this.

I work with my husband in our basement office and sometimes quarters get a bit too close for comfort.  It’s fine when we’re working on our own things, but the moment it comes time to coordinate on a project, we knock heads.

The short list of ways my spouse annoys me at work:

1- He often over-explains things that I consider to be obvious.  Things I feel he should know that I know.  Like where the computer’s on/off switch is.

2- He constantly interrupts my progress to ask me if I’m making As I write this, he’s on the basement couch asking ‘how’s it going?  Are you done?  How far from being done are you?  Can you finish by one?  When you’re done can you make lunch for the kids?  Leah?  Leah?  I wuv oo. “  Dag-nabbit husband!  I’m trying to concentrate!

3- Looking over my shoulder. I cannot express how it annoys me when I’m mid-sentence and I realize that someone is reading my work over my shoulder.  I can feel him about to point out some inconsequential flaw that I hadn’t yet got the chance to revisit.

4- Constant reorganizing of the office supplies. For some reason this man feels it is absolutely vital to remove the power cords to everything from the boom box to the scanner.  If it is not immediately being used the cord is bundled up and spirited away to somewhere only he knows.  He will do this with other things too.  Like the rechargeable batteries or the dry erase markers.  Vanished!

How to offer constructive criticism to these problems.

1- The good news is that this is my husband.  When he over explains something to me, I can tell him.  I would probably never ever try to correct a regular co-worker.  The key is not to snap.  (Thus the necessity of plenty of bathroom breaks!)  Losing your cool isn’t conducive to productivity.  It’s nice instead to say something like “Honey, stop.  I don’t want to upset you, but you’re talking to me like I’m five again.”  He might roll his eyes and sigh, but he will actually make an effort to edit what comes out of his mouth.

2- I have tried explaining to my husband that it annoys me when he constantly halts my progress by checking on it. Stating that as his wife, I should be trusted to self-manage, and he can rest assured that if I have a question I will check in with him.  I think he gets it, but now I’m pretty sure he’s riling me up on purpose, just to break his day up.

3- Lucky me, I have nearly successfully broken him of the habit of over-the-shoulder-ing! When I notice him bending behind me, screen level, I stop and ask him if he really needs to be there.  A clue that he is irritating me and should find somewhere else to be.

4- I no longer do my own printing. If he thinks it is just so important to pack away the power cords, fine, so be it.  He has now made it his personal responsibility to drop whatever he’s working on to do my bidding.  I have also bought a secondary set of batteries and charger so that whenever I need them I don’t have to get furious at their absence because now I have my own!  In essence, I keep my own, smaller, stash of office supplies separate from his so I can be assured of having them when I want them.  It is nice to let my husband do his (inexplicable) thing while saving myself an angry, frustrated outburst.

Just in case this rather small list of annoyances doesn’t cover your own particular set, the best advice I can offer you is ‘breathe’.  When you feel like a tea kettle about to boil over, resist the temptation to emit ear-piercing whistles and take a break.  Excuse yourself to the bathroom, nobody ever asks you “what are you doing?” when you’re in the bathroom.  If they do, they deserve to be boiled over on.

Next thing you need to accept is…  all husbands are morons.  Yes, I love mine.  Yes, I’d never ever, ever, let him go; not even if Lee Pace comes bearing flowers and an engagement ring the size of my fist.  But I (and you as well) may need to accept that some irritations cannot be ‘fixed’ and may only be ‘negotiated’.

I’m sorry if this bums you out, so to make you feel better I’ve included a bonus list, the short list of the reasons why my husband is not allowed alone in the kitchen:

1- He melted my teapot.

2- He set fire to the toaster. Then called me in to marvel at the blaze, because apparently only I can properly douse a fire.

3- He exploded my glass lasagna pan by trying to reheat leftovers on the stovetop burners.

4- He also thought he could put hot pots and pans DIRECTLY ON THE PLASTIC COUNTERTOP.  Pot holders?  Trivets?  Those are for suckers.

A Nanowrimo collaboration!

November is nigh, and scores of creatives are gearing up for National Novel Writing Month, or ‘nanowrimo’ to the initiated.  Right now fingers are twitching, minds are rolling, ideas percolate with coffee.  Find the website at nanowrimo.org to get more information and to sign up.

This year my husband and I are signing on to do a collaborative project!  I don’t know if this will actually help me finish a complete first draft or if we are about to create a literary hell in our happy home.  I don’t know, but I don’t care, I’m just too excited!  And if it does blow up in our faces I can just lay the blame on him, it was his idea.

We have nothing concrete as of yet, but the general idea is that I will write a character, and he will write a character.  It’s an exciting idea!  But how do we implement it?  How can we write the same story when we’re writing, in essence, separately?

I suggested we write several random ideas and drop them in a box.  Several boxes actually, labeled maybe Characters, Settings, Situations, and Actions.  Fill each box with examples and then pick a random scrap of paper from each so that you might end up with a sentence that could look like this…

‘A Ninja Penguin, in Mazatlan, loses the incriminating photos, and enters a motocross competition.’

That would give us an interesting jumping off point, don’t you think?  And since we are planning on writing at least two characters we’ll probably draw a second character from the ‘charater’ box so the original sentence will now read…

‘A Ninja Penguin and a Coroner, in Mazatlan, lose the incriminating photos, and enter a motocross competition.’

We have already agreed that our book will take the form of journal entries.  If you’ve ever read the book ‘Dracula’ you’ll have a clearer picture of what we’re thinking about.  The entirety of the action documented by the characters, each narrating an individual piece and doing their part to forward the story.

The way we envision it, Jason will write the first portion and hand it off to me to read.  After which I get to work on the next part.  It’ll be a challenge for me to forward the story and keeping it interesting while at the same time finding a way to, ultimately, bring about a satisfying conclusion.

Such are our plans; we’re excited to share with you what we come up with!

Collaborative Writing

Sending Kickstarter Digital Rewards with Gumroad

Arrows to Video and Article

In this article, we’re showing how to use Gumroad to send Kickstarter digital rewards.

I am using Gumroad to send all the rewards for my Learn to Animate Course.

1- Login or Register into Gumroad.com.

This is a bit obvious, but it is the first step.

Login or Register for Gumroad

2- Select the “Products” in your menu bar.

Click on the Products in Menu

3- Select “Digital Products.”

First Product on Gumroad

4- Select “Product.”

Click "Products"

5- Add product name, price, and upload the file.

Enter Product Information & Upload

Note: The price should be what you plan to sell your product to the public.

6- Add a description and an image.

Add Gumroad Description and Image

You can use both the description and cover image you used for your Kickstarter campaign.

7- Add more files if needed & Click Save.

Add files and save.

8- Click Publish.

Click "Publish".

After clicking “publish,” your product will be available for anyone to buy on Gumroad.

9- Go to Options Page.

Go to "options" page.

10- Add Offer.

Add a Gumroad "offer" for you Kickstarter backers.

Click the “+” sign next to “Offers”.

Enter a name of the discount. I make sure it is clear which backers are supposed to get this discount. That is why I have “kickstarter$1” in the name.

I added “513” to make it unlikely people can guess the other discount codes. I use a string of random letters and numbers.

Click on “$” sign to change it to “%“. In the amount off, put in “100”. This will allow your backers to get the product for free since they already paid through Kickstarter.

Under “Quantity“, I put the number of people who supported that amount. This reduces the chances of someone getting the code and sharing with friends.

When done, save changes.

11- Copy Link

Click Share

12- Go to your Kickstarter project’s “backer report”.

Now that you have the offer copied, you need to go to send this to your backers. To do this go to Kickstarter.com, log-in, open the side menu of your project, and select “View backer report.”

Open your project's backer report.

13- Click the arrow next to “All Backers” and select the first reward amount.

Click arrow next to "All Rewards"

14- Click “Message ## Backers”.

This will allow you to message all the backers at that reward amount.

Select "Message Backers".

15- Write a message to your backers with Gumroad offer link.

Remember you have saved the offer link and you just need to paste it into your message.

Here is a modified version of my message for you to use as an example.

Great News!

We’re finishing up the videos and extended sections of the book. The videos & book are being distributed via Gumroad.

To start downloading your rewards, just go to
[offer discount link here]
Click “I want this.”
Add your email and you’re all set.

You will receive the new chapters and videos straight to your email inbox.

If you have any problems, you can email me directly at jason@complusivecreative.com

Happy Animating!
Jason Love

16- Send your message and repeat for next group of backers.

I hope you enjoyed this tutorial. I spent over 10 hours putting this tutorial together for you, and I know it will help you fast-track your distribution of Kickstarter digital rewards.

If it has helped you in any way, please do me a favor and let me know in the comments section below and also share this tutorial using the social media buttons at the bottom of this post. Thank you!!

Keep on being creative!

Kickstarter Marries its Mission

Kickstarter has taken a significant step in showing it is determined to continue their company with the values and mission it has had from beginning.

Kickstarter’s Mission Statement:
Our mission is to help bring creative projects to life.

To do this, Kickstarter had to kill part of itself off…. That is a dramatic way to put it, but it is true Kickstarter Inc no longer exists.

They have made a transition to a Public Benefit Corporation, making them a sort-of hybrid of a corporation and a non-profit.

What is a Public Benefit Corp?

A public-benefit corporation is a type of company that looks at accomplishing a greater good along with maximizing profit for shareholders. An incorporated company’s CEO (head person) can be fired if the shareholders feel they are not making the most profit possible. This is a scary idea for a company that is trying to put their values over greed.

Until recently, the idea of a for-profit company pursuing social good at the expense of shareholder value had no clear protection under U.S. corporate law, and certainly no mandate. Companies that believe there are more important goals than maximizing shareholder value have been at odds with the expectation that for-profit companies must exist ultimately for profit above all.

A Benefit Corporation allows companies to seek societal impact along with making money. Having a positive influence on a community is now a legal obligation of Kickstarter.

What this means for Kickstarter.com

Kickstarter’s transition to a Public Benefit Corporation doesn’t include any changes for us on the user end of the website. Instead, it means they will continue to help artists, inventors, and creatives fund projects for the world (or small communities) to enjoy.

From Kickstarter’s inception, we’ve focused on serving artists, creators, and audiences to help bring creative projects to life. Our new status as a Benefit Corporation hard-codes that mission at the deepest level possible to guide us, and future leaders of Kickstarter.

There is one change that Kickstarter has announced. Kickstarter proclaimed a commitment to donating 5% of their annual profits to arts education and organizations fighting inequality.

This promise is an extension of their values and commitment outlined in their Public Benefit Corporation.

Other notable Public Benefit Corp

Only .01% of all American businesses are Public Benefit Corporations. However, there are many you have heard of before.

These include:

Charter

If you would like to see Kickstarter’s values, goals, and commitments; that is all in their Public Benefit Corporation charter.

 

5 SUPER EASY ways to create more!

Compulsive Creatives are not known for being the most productive people in the world. We tend to get distracted, have hundreds of projects we want to work on, and often exhaust ourselves on whatever is in front of us.

Over the past ten years of running a variety creative businesses, these five things have helped me the most to stay on track.

1- Set Deadlines (but not too many)

A quick car trip metaphor….

When you are going someplace, you estimate arrival time. GPS automatically does this for us now, but it is still something we use.

This is for a couple reasons.

First, we want to be able to plan the trip better. Will we need to stop for food, will we get there before dark, or will we need to get a place to sleep?

The second is if we hit that time, and we are not at our destination, we know something went wrong. Either we took a wrong turn or we’re navigating to the wrong location.

These are the same reasons we need to set deadlines for our projects. If we have a timeframe for when we should be done, we can plan all the details of how to get there.

If we miss the deadline, it means something is wrong. It might be that we underestimated how long it would take, or we are putting way too much time on something that isn’t essential.

Having deadlines helps us stay on course, but it is also important not to have too many. If you want to get stressed out quickly, come up with ten deadlines. Missing one will throw off all of them; it becomes a nightmare overnight.

I like to limit myself to only one big project deadline at a time, but two or three can be manageable for certain personality types.

2- Time Boxing

Time boxing is a micro version of setting deadlines. It involves taking to-do’s for the day and giving those tasks specific times to be done.

For example, writing the blog post was time boxed for 9–10 am. Creating the graphic above was scheduled for 10–10:30 am.

The process is easy.

Step 1 – Figure out what needs to be done.

Step 2 – Calculate how long you think it will take.

Step 3 – Determine when would be the best time to do that task.

3- Consistency

I learned this from Stephen King’s On Writing.

According to his book, Stephen King writes every day. He doesn’t take off for holidays, and he only commits 3 to 4 hours in the morning.

Committing to a small amount of time consistently over months (then years) allows a habit to form, limits burnout, and helps reduce the dreaded creativity block.

4- Distraction Time

This is my newest tool for getting creative projects completed.

I schedule time on my calendar called “distraction time.” If I am working on a project, and an idea or another project enters my mind, I write it down and go back to what needs to get done. During my scheduled “distracted time,” I am allowed work on whatever I want.

This list can get crazy quickly, so I have to go through it daily and delete the things that I am no longer interested in doing.

If there is anything that I want to add to a future project I put it on a separate list called “Projects to Consider.”

5- Work with End in Mind

Picture in your head the outcome of your project.

Right now I am writing this post. So, I imagine it live on Medium, I can see you reading it, and I picture that this article helps you finish your projects. Your creation then becomes a big hit and a global phenomenon. The world is changed, but if I don’t finish this article none of this will happen.

I know, a very dramatic and a glamorized view of what I do, but this helps. When I get distracted, I think of you and my little contribution to your’s and other’s successes.

My impulse to check Facebook is ignored and watching “Blacklist” can wait, but this article can not… So, I continue to work and hit publish.