I've done creative sprints like these a couple times. And while they're fun, and while they're entertaining and creative and inspiring, they've left me kinda dry.
Why? Because I found them unsustainable, for commercial processes or otherwise. It felt like a big dose of clinical Mania. Again, this is only my own experience. I found that I could crank out the work, but without a framework (business model, group project, customers, etc...) I just ended up with a pile of semi-interesting work.
Now, if this whole thing were couched in a mentorship framework where you signed up for a specific skill and had some master in that skill to bother for 5-15 minutes a day. Or all the projects were of a single type like 24 hour comics or LudlumDare. Then I'd be more enthusiastic for it.
As it is now I'm pretty satisfied with what I crank out, creatively. I'm sure there's lots of people that aren't. And I am glad that people are doing this kind of thing. I wish creativity was as enshrined in culture as much as sports fanship is.
It's a shame it only allows official participation through Instagram, as the app requires my location (which I don't want to share) and there's no other way of signing up.
But if you already have an account, or if this is not a problem for you, then you should definitely give it a try :)
This looks really cool, but some of my things I'd like to do seem to generalized to break down into a 100x iteration. For instance, I want to "level up" my functional programming skills (about to take the next Coursera class on Reactive programming). I also have a huge interest in Bitcoin, and want to learn alot more about the overall ecosystem.
I would love to post some sort of 100 day list of goals, but I'm not sure how to fit it in with the section on #4
>Choose your action. What’s your verb? Here are a few to get you thinking: stand, speak, drive, study...
Why? Because I found them unsustainable, for commercial processes or otherwise. It felt like a big dose of clinical Mania. Again, this is only my own experience. I found that I could crank out the work, but without a framework (business model, group project, customers, etc...) I just ended up with a pile of semi-interesting work.
Now, if this whole thing were couched in a mentorship framework where you signed up for a specific skill and had some master in that skill to bother for 5-15 minutes a day. Or all the projects were of a single type like 24 hour comics or LudlumDare. Then I'd be more enthusiastic for it.
As it is now I'm pretty satisfied with what I crank out, creatively. I'm sure there's lots of people that aren't. And I am glad that people are doing this kind of thing. I wish creativity was as enshrined in culture as much as sports fanship is.