Entries Tagged as 'life'

Designing your career to fit your life

Posted on: Sunday, February 5, 2012

designing your career to fit your life

Origami cranes

 

geek chic and businessI have the amazing honour and privilege to work for myself, in a job that I adore.
I have a passion for what I do, I am my own boss, and the work I do fits in and around me, my children, our family needs and is non-location specific.

One of the biggest learning curves I have been on recently is around honing how I work and how I plan my goals and career to keep check of whether it is what I really want. We spend a lot our our lives at the thing we call work, and it may as well be something we enjoy, right?

There are so many publications out blogs out there about getting the job you want, making sure you are on the right path, and how to work out what you really want. This is simply my personal guide of how I have managed to do what I love and how I make it work.

Let me begin by recapping what I currently do, and how I earn a living. In essence, I am a designer, writer and blogger, being the easiest way to sum it up.  I am the founder and Director of Cherry Sorbet Creative, a design, editorial and social media agency for the beauty and lifestyle sectors, I write, I design, I blog and I also sometimes teach.

My income streams currently come from: ❤ Copy writing and designing for Cherry Sorbet clients  ❤ Social Media management ❤ Workshops and masterclasses ❤ Blogging for clients and other sites ❤ Advertising and revenue from my blog Dexterous Diva (this one!) ❤ All these trickle into the company and I take a wage.

Now, my parameters that I have set myself for the way I want to work may be different from yours, but they are related to my specific personal circumstances, wants and needs.In summary they are:

Flexible working hours flexible working hours ☆ Being free from constant demands and distractions ☆ Being non-location and time specific ☆ Staying focused ☆ Keep learning


flexible working hours

I am a mum to the beautiful Mini Divas and, like most working mums, I want to be able to combine building my business, earning an income and being “me” with lots of time playing, baking, going to parks and being mummy. I am also a person with a chronic pain condition, endometriosis, which needs management and can affect my ability to function as well as usual on some days. Being a mum means you need to build in flexibility with work and a schedule, have a condition means the same, so the two together needs a whole new way of looking at things. Here is how I have dealt with those two factors:

 Mini me’s and co-workers: I have a wonderful team of key Cherry Sorbet people who I work with so that my clients can always have a point of contact and work can always get actioned whether I am at a toddler group, playing on the swings or taking an endo duvet day. Building a team of ‘mini me’s” takes trust and some management but it is a great way to run a cohort business to enable work to get done on time, clients to be happy, and me to be able to oversee stuff without letting clients down if one of the kids are unwell or I am needing some time off. Obviously the profit margin of the business isn’t as high as if I were doing everything myself, but it absolutely works, and means I am able to build a business more than firefighting. This also leaves me able to do flexible stuff like writing and blogging and business development.

Being honest and not apologising: Having children is wonderful and a privilege and not something I need to say sorry for. If I can’t make an event or meeting because one of them is unwell and needs me at home I don’t feel terrible and berate myself profusely. I do of course make sure no one is inconvenienced as much as I can and apologise for the change of plans but most people understand. It’s life. If they give me a hard time they aren’t people I wish t work with anyway….

Being honest with endo is also something I am open with. If there is a chance my treatment or pain may hold me back from doing something I will be open about it and people can then make the choice about working with me. If I can’t make something I make sure a mini me does, or I just re-assess if it matters.

 Not taking on too much and letting go: there are only so many hours in the day to work, play with children, keep a house, exercise, socialise and sleep. It can’t all be done to  perfection and it can’t all be done NOW, something I have had a natural resistance to accepting for most of my adult life. However, going easy on myself reaps rewards for me, my work, my family and all around me. It’s just nicer to be nice to yourself. Also, nothing gets done very well if I am frazzled.

Conventional office work means being near a phone and always at the desk during key hours, but the way technology is moving we don’t need to be restricted.  I have designed a workflow to ensure I am not always having to check things for fear or letting a client down. I set up filters for my emails to be filed intuitively, and when key people email I get an immediate alert on my phone so I can access the message and make sure things are being actioned either by me or my wonderful mini me’s. Have a peep at my working less workflow post if you fancy. My business number diverts to a voicemail which texts me the message if I have been unable to answer, and I set up auto responders to keep people informed of where I am, how they can reach me and who else to contact. At the moment of writing this I am on a plane to New York it is a working  day and I am not in the least bit concerned that my clients won’t be happy. That is so liberating.

I love to travel and want to be able to incorporate my work from wherever I happen to be.. I also work with international clients and don’t want to be sat eat my computer 24/7. I deal with this by not creating an expectation to have “an office”. I do have co working lounges I use in London and Cambridge for somewhere inspiring to work and places to meet clients. Having a fixed office is an extra overhead, it would mean my rates would have to be much higher, and I don’t want to be associated with any particular town or city. Cherry Sorbet has London, Cambridge and Brighton presences but it could also be Barcelona, Cornwall and Seattle. Working remotely also means that I don’t alienate business my not begin local to them…we can work with anyone, anywhere, anytime.

I encourage Skype calls often, as it is a way to have face to face the without losing out on productivity with travelling 3 hours of my day for a 1 hour meeting. I am working on limited time anyway being a mum, so to maximise what I do, using technology is  just brilliant.

Using cloud based systems like Gmail and the associated apps, Dropbox and, soon to be Adobe Creative Cloud, I can access my work emails, documents and files from anywhere. Whilst this system works for me to be out and about locally and on UK based trips, it also lends itself to be abroad for longer periods of time without business suffering. This is something I am thrilled about, as I love the idea of making mini breaks a change of scene to stay fresh and creative is important to my personality and aims from life.

 

With time begin a limited resource and my hyper creative brain constantly in the background I need to reign in my projects. I do this by setting up a simple spreadsheet (on Google docs, of course) and dividing my year into quarters. I then work out what I want to achieve in different sections of life, Cherry Sorbet, personal development, fitness, family time etc, and work backwards to each section to see what I need to do to get there. It’s a really, really simple trick that keeps me on track so when I start being tempted to go off and start a new project that sounds exciting I check in with my aims and see if it is relevant for right now, or whether it can wait while I do other things first. It leo ensures I feel like I am achieving, developing and moving forward. Simple planning really, but it is powerful.

For me, the fact that my career is a varied and portfolio one what encompasses blogging, writing and design means I need to be up to date with social media trends, consumer culture insights, the fashion and beauty industry and niche blogs. I make sure I do this as part of my ongoing information gathering, and I keep on top of news and updates by subscribing to news feeds, emails and magazines which I can easily access for whichever sector I need. I also make sure I am aware which skills I need to develop to make sure I can stay fresh, and booking myself on to e courses, reading books and getting out there to learn what I need to in this changing environment.

So, my tops tips for creating a career that fits my life..how can you make yours do the same for you? Let me know, we can all learn from our experiences!

designer writer blogger

 

A designer workflow for loving life and working less

Posted on: Sunday, November 27, 2011

Dex Diva soho

image credit: Miles O'Carroll/Papa Diva

One of my heroes of the seminal business workflow books is Tim Ferris, author of the infamous Four Hour working week.

When I first read his book 3 years ago the world was not as social media saturated as it is now – no Google+, Twitter was a mere babe in arms, and the blogosphere was a teenager as opposed to fully blown mid-life crisis material.

I loved the ‘design your life and outsource it’ concept on which Ferris has based his business model. Although the extent of the myriad outsourcing methods and the labyrinthine maze of methods are too far-fetched for my particular wants and needs, there is some food for thought there. I am similarly inspired by REWORK, the book by the guys behind 37 Signals, whose insights to running a global company with remote workers in the über connected age are just a pleasure to read, absorb and ignite a creative personal reaction. Read More >

Regret: a simple infogram

Posted on: Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Colourful wisdom in a black and white world.

 

 

Life, but not as you know it.

Posted on: Friday, September 2, 2011

Life...not as you know it

This little post is to share with you all how saddening, maddening, frustrating, painful and tiring it is living with endometriosis and it’s associated entourage of symptoms.

Every few weeks the pain gets so much that my body hits a wall of exhaustion and chronic fatigue sets it. I don’t just mean tiredness like you have after a big night out, or even the wall of foggy sleep deprivation I felt when the twins were still night feeding.  No, this is a tiredness that makes my very bones ache. My glands come up, I feel sick with tiredness, my pain reaches a whole new level of attacking every nerve, sinew and muscle. My head aches, my whole body feels battered. Shattered. Broken. Read More >

Being broken to be re-built

Posted on: Tuesday, August 30, 2011

I was explaining pregnancy to a lovely late 20′s lady this weekend, which, after a few glasses of champers turned into a long regaling horror story much to her wide-eyed terror.

I concluded that motherhood, and adjusting to it, is like military training. You are completely and utterly broken in every way – physically, mentally, emotionally, hormonally, sleeplessly – and from there you can rebuild in your new life as a mum. Read More >

Asking for help; a learning curve

Posted on: Thursday, August 25, 2011

Asking for help

 

One of the hardest lessons I have been learning over the last few years is that asking for help is ok.

In fact, it’s not only ok, it’s often necessary, a relief to the person being asked, and down right easier all round. Read More >

Back to balance – zest versus zero

Posted on: Saturday, July 23, 2011

Balance
So, Diva readers, here’s the thing.

By the very nature of my personality I do a lot of stuff in life. I am someone who goes and gets life, I have ideas, lots of them, sometimes far too many, and I love, LOVE being busy.

Take right now for example. Read More >

Things that change when you have kids and why they don’t matter

Posted on: Monday, July 18, 2011

Family
As you all know, I am the proud mumma to my Mini Divas, Eva and Mia.

Before I had the girls, in a previous life as a working, earning chick in London, my life could not be more different to how it is now. I was out most nights seeing friends, going to galleries, doing stuff. I would get cabin fever staying home for more than a night or two and I was rubbish at relaxing (as seen here). Read More >

City versus sticks

Posted on: Monday, July 4, 2011

City versus sticks

So, we moved house this weekend. Our new house is in a village, only 5 mins out of the market town we had been living in.

The thing is, I LOVE IT. I am really surprised. Read More >

Unstoppable

Posted on: Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Today was one of those days when pain has been really bad.

Endo came to bite today, but it was ok, I worked from home, (I can do that, being the boss,) and I am calm, relaxed and looking after myself.

When pondering all the things I can’t do with this condition I reminded myself that in the 15 years I have had it I have accomplished an awful lot.

I graduated – twice in fact, with a BA and MA.

I have travelled and seen new places.

I have had my heart broken…

but maybe broken a couple myself (who knows).

I have had a career, freelanced in a portfolio of amazing jobs including teaching, researching, writing, designing and started my own company.

 

I have run a 10k, a couple of 5k’s with my eye on a half marathon one day.I love to get out on my bike when I can.

I have raised money for Endo UK and raised awareness.

I have made some lifelong friends and always had the love and laughter of my family.

I have my own little family, my amazing partner and my beautiful miracle daughters.

I have learnt so much more about my health, nutrition and complementary treatments than I would have done were endometriosis not in my life.

I might get there slower some days, but it’s not going to stop me.

 

J

x

 

 

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