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Matthias Ott

Hello Again, World This, Still Not for Everyone The Shape of Friction WeissKlang L1 – Punching Above Its Weight Continvoucly Morged Value Webspace Invaders To Affinity and Beyond The Mystery of Storytelling Amateurs! Echoes of Connection Linear() Is Not (That) Linear View Transitions: The Smooth Parts Adding AVIF and WebP Support to My Craft CMS Site Challenge Acoustic Room Treatment and Building Sound Panels, Part 1: Planning Play On Overshoot The HTML Output Element Listening Closely Compressed Fluid Typography The Lifeblood of the Web What Could Go Wrong? That’s My Rank Making Space CSS :is() :where() the Magic Happens Visual Regression Testing for External URLs With Playwright Jane Goodall’s Famous Last Words European Tech Alternatives 🇪🇺 Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 24: NaN Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 23: Typotheque Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 22: 205TF Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 21: HvD Fonts Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 20: Frere-Jones Type Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 19: Fontwerk Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 18: Vectro Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 17: Studio René Bieder Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 16: R-Typography Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 15: David Jonathan Ross Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 14: Interval Type Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 13: Newglyph Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 12: Swiss Typefaces Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 11: Sharp Type Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 10: Colophon Foundry Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 9: Commercial Type Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 8: Letters from Sweden Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 7: Lineto Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 6: Ohno Type Company Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 5: Milieu Grotesque Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 4: TypeMates Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 3: Klim Type Foundry Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 2: Dinamo Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar – Day 1: Grilli Type The Independent Type Foundry Advent Calendar 2022 A Conversation With ChatGPT ChatGPT, please explain websites in the words of William Shakespeare Transient Frameworks Leaving Twitter Behind Converting Your Twitter Archive to Markdown The Wrong Question It Wasn’t Written Syndicating Posts from Your Personal Website to Twitter and Mastodon Suspension None of Your Business Doing Our Part Patch That Package Brain Dump Generating Accessibility Test Results for a Whole Website With Evaluatory The CSS Cascade, a Deep Dive Updates About Updates How to Delete Your Commit History in Git Unblocking Your Writing Blocks, Part 2: I’m Not an Expert nor a “Thought Leader” Connections No Wrong Notes Better Options Design Debt Finite and Infinite Games Don’t Assume, Validate. Necessity Is the Ultimate Teacher One Egg Go Deep There Is No Secret Code Balancing Risk Blue Eyes, Brown Eyes The Shortcut Boomerang My RSS Feed Collection of Personal Websites Frequency The Illusion of Control The Decisions Journey Write It Down Nownownow Into the Personal-Website-Verse Considering the Opposite What is it for? Unlimited Bowling. Never done. We Are Team Internet. We Need to Save #NetNeutrality. Progressive Search Data loss (also) by JavaScript Books I Will Definitely Maybe Read in 2017 Starting to Write Notes
Crazy Work
Matthias Ott · 2018-12-17 · via Matthias Ott

I have a confession to make. I’ve become utterly terrible at finishing books, especially non-fiction. I once even published a list of books I will definitely maybe read one day. The reasons why I don't finish them are manifold: For one, there is always some work to do that seems more important than to sit down and read a book. Then, I have a lovely family and I spend as much time as I can with them. And ultimately, there is the Interwebs demanding “screen time”. So I had not finished a book in months.

Last Friday, I did.

The book is the latest one by David Heinemeier Hansson and Jason Fried, the founders of Basecamp, and it’s called It Doesn’t Have to Be Crazy at Work. It is a collection of ideas and advice about how to establish and maintain a “calm” company culture, without the hassle and craziness that seems to have become the new normal in tech, design, and often also in business in general. Yet the book is not only aimed at founders or executives but also full of useful advice for everyone working anywhere, regardless of position or if they work at a company or are self-employed.

The main message is as true as it is often left unsaid: At many places, work has become this ugly, greedy beast that wants you to work for 60, 70, or even 80 hours a week and robs you of your time with family and friends, your sleep, and, ultimately, your health.

Sustained exhaustion is not a badge of honor, it’s a mark of stupidity

The answer, according to the authors, isn’t more hours, but “less bullshit”. Fewer meetings, less distractions, less unrealistic deadlines, less false promises, and more focus on the real important work.

Through my work as a freelance designer, I have seen quite a few companies and their different approaches to company culture and processes. David and Jason are definitely right: At many companies, unnecessary work, artificially created tasks, and – especially in open-plan offices – repeated distractions absorb most of the time there is to do your work. What you end up with is a cluttered day, where you don’t have the time to focus on a task for a few hours straight or to thoroughly think something through. Combine this with unrealistic deadlines like a website launch date set by a client upfront or rash overpromising by project managers without getting a second opinion from the people doing the work and you are right on track for a project full of stress and compromises. What a waste of energy.

It Doesn’t Have to Be Crazy at Work provides important, sane, and actionable advice on how to change all of this and I cannot recommend it more. I can’t wait to give many of the ideas a try.

A few days before I bought the book, I listened to a great conversation between Jeffrey Zeldman and Jason Fried on the Big Web Show that also covered the book, so I already had a pretty good idea about what to expect. Maybe that’s the reason why – in the spirit of the book and despite the busy last weeks of the year – I took the time to unwind a bit and read it calmly from start to finish. It already felt like a first step on the road to recovery.

~

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