Making something new takes patience. But it also takes faith. Faith that everything will work out in the end.
During the development of most any product, there are always times when things aren’t quite right. Times when you feel like you may be going backwards a bit. Times where it’s almost there, but you can’t yet figure out why it isn’t. Times when you hate the thing today that you loved yesterday. Times when what you had in your head isn’t quite what you’re seeing in front of you. Yet. That’s when you need to have faith.
There are designs that are close, but not there yet. There are obvious conflicts that will need to be resolved. There are lingering things that confound you, confuse you, or upset you, but you know that eventually they’ll work themselves out. Eventually you’ll find the right way to do something you’ve been struggling with.
It’s hard to live with something that isn’t quite right yet – especially when it’s your job to get it right. It’s important to know when to say “it’s fine for now, but it won’t be fine for later.” Because moving forward is critical to getting somewhere. And, eventually, you’ll figure it all out. It’ll all work out in the end.
This is what I’ve always believed, and have always tried to practice. A dedicated faith in the eventual resolution of a problem, the eventual execution of a concept, and the eventual realization of the right design. Even when something’s poking out you don’t like, or something isn’t aligning quite right, or the words aren’t as elegant as you’d hoped, or something just isn’t easy enough yet, you need to have confidence it’ll all come together eventually.
Remember that what you’re making is in a perpetual state of almost right up until the end.
In the meantime, you just press on and keep making things, trying things, and getting closer and closer to the time when you can tie the loose ends into a perfect bow and present it to the world. What fun it is!
Jamis Buck
on 18 Sep 14I love this, especially right now. It’s taken me a long time to wrap my mind around this idea, but interestingly, writing has helped me see it more clearly. Everything works out, not because “magic” happens, but because you keep working on it, and you gain new perspectives by standing in different places (so to speak). What seemed impossible from one vantage, suddenly yields its secrets when viewed from another angle. Everything works out, because persistent effort despite resistance pays dividends over time.
But I’m rambling. Thanks for the excellent article, Jason! I needed this insight.
BillP
on 18 Sep 14Nice post Jason!
Reminded me of my favorite Steve Jobs quote (from the Stanford Commencement Speech)...
“Of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when I was in college, but it was very, very clear looking backwards 10 years later. Again, you can’t connect the dots looking forward. You can only connect them looking backwards, so you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future.
You have to trust in something—your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever—because believing that the dots will connect down the road will give you the confidence to follow your heart, even when it leads you off the well-worn path, and that will make all the difference.”
Ashnika
on 18 Sep 14Finally I don’t feel alone. I’ve always lived by this and to hear it from someone as influential as you that it will eventually workout just have faith is reassuring.
Chris
on 18 Sep 14Fantastic. And your need for faith doesn’t end when you present something to the world. It’s still going to be in a perpetual state of almost there! Be honest, forthright, and open with your customers and they will have faith in you.
Calvin Liu
on 18 Sep 14So good to hear this. A struggle everyday to live with product aspects that I don’t think are good enough. But I have faith we will solve them.
Mauricio
on 18 Sep 14Hey Jason – Very refreshing post and great timing. Our entire product team had a heated debate last night about working on what’s next Vs. let’s fix all the shit that isn’t working. We have data to support both paths, but not unlimited resources. But that’s a conversation that will never end as long as the team has faith. Thx again!
Brent
on 18 Sep 14Thank you. Needed this.
Ishan
on 19 Sep 14Very very well said and that too at so perfect time ! Have been going through precisely the same thing for quite some time. Everything moves from (one state of) perfection to (another state of) perfection !
Sam
on 19 Sep 14Thanks Jason.
Cameron
on 19 Sep 14Such a timely post. Absolutely needed this also. Thank you
Devan
on 19 Sep 14When the student is ready, the teacher will appear…
Such a timely post. I am currently struggling with a project I am working on, and needed this reminder that it is not all going to perfect now, but will be close later. It’s a throwback to the old story about Michelangelo when asked about how he carved such beautiful statues from a block of marble. His answer was reputedly: “I just chip away all the stone that doesn’t look like a statue…”
Shlomi
on 21 Sep 14Thanks for another great post Jason.
RSS reader guy
on 21 Sep 14Your RSS for this blog stopped working in August and is showing Hamburger post as the latest. Please fix!
doodles of gratitude
on 21 Sep 14as an artist, getting things just perfect is an ongoing battle. i have learned to just do it and things will evetually turn out fine. thanks
Brian Whipple
on 22 Sep 14One of my former bosses used to say “innovation is messy” and then he would just smile in acceptance. That attitude is something I will keep with me.
Christoffer Carlsson
on 23 Sep 14I needed to be reminded of this! Thank you, Jason.
Steven Kim
on 24 Sep 14Great words of encouragement… made my day. Thanks!
Mohamed Abd El-Salam
on 24 Sep 14Very well said Jason, your post hit a perfect timing for me. Thanks.
Eduardo Mora
on 24 Sep 14Great!
Shimeka
on 25 Sep 14Thank you!
This discussion is closed.