đ Hello! I'm Nate Kadlac, and this is #66 of Plan Your Next. Itâs a newsletter that connects design, creativity, and how you prepare for your next thing. Weâre now 382 strong, so if youâre new here, welcome!
Whatâs new this week?
One thing I realized about the 14 students who are currently enrolled in Approachable Design is how unique everyoneâs visual boards are. You just donât see this amount of personality expressed because weâre limited by the tools. Many No-Code tools dumb down our personality, leaving us to choose a HEX value to allow our âbrand to be front and center.â Thereâs a gap here I am trying to fill eventually, but much of the work needs to start with defining your visual taste.
I was recently featured in Transparent Tuesdayâs, a newsletter by Charlie Bleecker who writes under a pseudonym. Catch a video of our conversation here. (8 min)
My most popular tweet this weekâand letâs be real, I donât have manyâon how to create your own design system by designing from the inside-out.
Good morning from Los Angeles!
âYou canât connect the dots looking forward, you can only connect them looking backwards.â âSteve Jobs
If you extend both hands out at your sides, you can see your fingertips in your peripheral vision around 170 degrees. This field of view is the foundation for the rule of thirds used in photography.
Try it, itâs fun!
When you do this exercise, itâs revealing how wide our field of view actually is.
Yet if youâre staring down at your laptop or looking at your feet when you walk, the world can feel small incredibly small.
Now do this every day, and opening up your hands and testing the limits of your optical view feels like work.
But, as youâve experienced, there are times when the world smacks you in the face and forces you to perk up.
This has happened to me 5-6 times over the past 20 years, and each time itâs led me down an unexpected path that provided some interesting opportunity. Not monetarily in all cases, but a new perspective.
My last full week
One of these opportunities came up recently for me, and I decided to jump. As I get closer to the last week in my full-time role, Iâve had a number of conversations with friends, entrepreneurs, and colleagues.
Iâm often asked what Iâll do next. If theyâre a reader of this newsletter, Iâll even get a little wink. Very cute.
Theyâll ask the inevitable question, and Iâll candidly say Iâm not planning on heading to another full-time role in the traditional sense. After that convo, the look I got reminded me not to say, âin the traditional sense.â
Theyâll ask how Iâll make an income, and I donât have a great answer for this.
I donât say this to #humblebrag, but I do think Iâve been self-aware about how chasing the short-term dollar affects my own long-term plan.
And chasing the short-term dollar without a job is just freelancing without a fancy title.
This tweet by Paul Millerd encompasses my own feelings about what freelancing means.
Hell, I used to glorify this work myself. But letâs be honest, freelance is a job with a much shittier boss. Myself.
My answer to this question is that I wonât be searching for another job right away. Hopefully never, but Iâll never say never.
In the meantime, I initially intend to spread out the options based on whatâs interesting, with a mix of reality sprinkled in. It might look something like this:
* 25% freelance
* 25% inputs (reading, learning, conversations, and communities)
* 50% leveraged outputs (writing, building products, podcasting, and collaborations)
The alternative is a life that continues to ignore the 170-degree optical view thatâs freely available to us.
âĄď¸ Inspiration for next week
đ I had no idea that the BBC handbooks were so intensely creative.
đ¨ Iâm waiting for this font to be used in something special. Just look at that âA.â
đ Josh Spector on how to grow your next newsletter.
đ See you next Sunday
If youâve forgotten who I am, hereâs a little bit about me. As always, my calendar is open to chat about your crazy ideas or if youâre creatively stuck.
Have a great week,
Twitter:Â @kadlacWeb:Â kadlac.comWorkshop:Â approachabledesign.co