![]() ![]() If you haven’t already, you should read the original article Maker’s Schedule, Manager’s Schedule, by Paul Graham from whom this excellent observation is from. If you’re a manager, consider your makers when you schedule your next meeting. EQKIM is a young Korean media artist who works in his own visual language using various media such as photography, video, 3D, installation and molding after graduating from School of Media Arts at Seoul Institue of the Arts. ![]() If you’re a maker you may associate with the feeling that to get some real work done you feel you need to do it at the weekend, or in an evening after everyone’s gone home, when you’ll be free of interruptions. It’s great for meetings but comes at a cost for getting meaningful work done. Most modern offices operate on Manager Time. Even a single meeting in the middle of an afternoon can disrupt that long meaningful chunk into two that make it harder to tackle something big as you have to context switch and pick up where you left off. ![]() Long, uninterrupted chunks of time, not sliced and diced by meetings on the hour are ideal to make progress on hard problems and tackle something new. Virtual props (just like Snapchat) You can share your pictures to social media, email, and text messages on the spot. Even thinking when a meeting might be and remembering to go can distract from getting on with making. In Maker Time a day is an open book to get something hard and meaningful done. Another novel concept introduced by TimeMaker is the Multiple Viewpoints inbox which provides a. You don’t have to worry too much about what you’ll be doing next as your calendar will tell you. With TimeMaker’s novel concept in tracking electronic communication, each communication sent is automatically followed through to reported completion, freeing the originator’s attention from the task and ensuring timely production. Meeting someone is as easy as finding a free slot that coincides. In Manager Time a day is neatly sliced up into hourly chunks according to the calendar. ![]()
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