Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • Hello everyone and welcome back to the Keep productive YouTube channel, it is francesco here

  • And today we're very lucky to be joined by Daniel Eckler now me and Daniel were just talking

  • I just get to know him

  • Camille from the notion team and he recommended that I definitely get in touch with them after asking her

  • some of the tools that I wanted to sort of get involved in the new Tube channel more tours more interesting setups and motion and

  • apparently

  • Daniels blows everyone away. So I'm excited to dive into this notion

  • Daniel please do introduce yourself and a bit about your work

  • Yeah

  • Founded in sold a few consumer technology companies have spent my career kind of at the intersection of

  • Technology and art and design and culture

  • So the first company I founded was a blog network for men's fashion and lifestyle

  • cruda, five million readers a year

  • Pictures of jackets and shoes and all sorts of stuff like that

  • We quickly learned that we had positioned it as a magazine, but no one wanted to read what we were writing

  • they just wanted to see the pictures and

  • We took that insight and said why don't we form a community that enables anyone to curate images and form community around that?

  • So essentially Pinterest before Pinterest just called pixie

  • Sold the previous company built up pixie to 35 million visitors a year did the whole DC circuit?

  • Eventually Pinterest did launch got enormous

  • Number two, so kind of automated pixie slow that off

  • Spent some time in the marketing industry and anomaly and BuzzFeed

  • Really just realizing that what I'm about to do most is

  • Just come up with ideas

  • Having run companies and focused on one idea for 10 years as

  • Opposed to in the marketing world you get to do five ideas a day

  • Was really really exciting transition for me and it's kind of informing the work that I'm doing today

  • So yeah kind of in a transition period right now thinking about what to do next and probably

  • Taking all the lessons

  • I've learned from the technology world and Mark world - how other people come up with cool

  • viral ideas to promote their businesses

  • fantastic and and Camille particularly

  • what like mentioned your creative brainstorming process and and I think that will obviously from all of the learnings from

  • those previous businesses be able to reflect in the notion a

  • question about notion

  • How did you?

  • Discover notion and why did you go about choosing it? Because I think sometimes there's a lot of modular apps out there

  • But which why did you decide to go with this one?

  • Sure

  • Designer developer named Corey Gibbons referred it to me

  • We share a lot of the same brain and interests and took his reference with a lot of weight

  • That said I still didn't try it for six months

  • Which I very much regret I'd encourage anyone today

  • If you're watching this and have not yet used notion to at least dive in and play around. Let's see if it's for you

  • It's the best - all I've ever used in my life. I'm obsessed with it

  • the primary reason that I use it is

  • Most of my work is kind of research and thinking and writing and organizing

  • And I've not found a tool that's even close to notion to allow me to do all those things

  • It's fast and minimal and simple and - as you mentioned modular allows me to kind of organize things and exactly the way I want

  • Yeah, it's just that I can't even imagine what life without it now

  • yeah, I'm the same like

  • You can't go back. Can you?

  • It's even harder

  • Well, I will pass over to you Daniel because you're gonna give us a little bit of a tour of your account

  • So let's jump in if you're if you're up for it

  • Lovely hopefully I've done there the right sharing settings. Oh, there we go. Well, it's great

  • So I spend I'm gonna put you up here I

  • Spend most of my day in these two windows

  • So the right window is kind of like my to-do-list, you know, that's the meetings. It's meeting with you

  • Meetings later today some things I want to do

  • As well as just like a scratch pad so, you know put some stuff that I want to take you through today

  • But throughout the day I'll just be typing random stuff in here

  • And always just using it. It's just a place to organize my thoughts and

  • Then on the other side, this is kind of a broader to-do list bigger projects

  • So actually you know what before we go there let's let's jump to maybe a pin another pin tab

  • So every morning I do

  • like a little morning routine thing and you'll notice here like this this this and this are all

  • different notion types that I use for different tasks

  • So half of my pin times are notion and to ask earlier, like why do you like it?

  • It's primarily for that reason if I could have all of my workflow be a notion. I'd be a very happy person

  • But yeah, so just every morning I kind of reflect and revisit kind of why I'm doing what I'm doing as I mentioned earlier like

  • Creating ideas and connected experience is really important to me helping other people do the same

  • And really pursuing like a person share with me this idea of idea foria

  • Just chasing ideas new ideas as opposed to you know, stuff like money and fame

  • I thought there's stuff in here, too

  • You know

  • Like I have my meditation and yoga just different stuff that I do throughout the day just keeps me grounded in the morning. I

  • Know hurry Asti on that vision area said you go about designing that in a separate application and then upload it as an image

  • Right. That's right. Yeah, if I could do it an ocean if there were some, you know simple image editing tools

  • That would be awesome and maybe one day there will be

  • Yeah, I guess just to see the workspaces so doing things you've seen that that's over here in

  • Progress I'll dig into a bit later. This is kind of like a flow for work that I'm doing right now. So

  • Maybe starting with strategy also use notion kind of as a wiki to just keep track of ideas and share those with other people

  • So the the company I'm working on right now is called space cadet

  • And the vision is to create other connected companies

  • and so

  • The problem that we're trying to solve is like innovations increasing and companies are having a hard time trying to keep up

  • And we believe that you know human progress is informed by

  • Experimentation and velocity the more experiments you do the faster. You do them the more likely you'll get a win

  • and you know

  • I won't go treated into this but just using this as a kind of an informative

  • reminder in the same way that the vision board reminds me personally what to focus on this helps remind

  • Me but also other people within the company

  • what we're doing in my

  • Testing and then that kind of leads into actual tasks coming out of that

  • So every quarter at the top here, I'll put like the three

  • big

  • Tasks so

  • You know continuing solve for exploration whether that's meditation or reading working on launching space-cadet and helping inspire ideas

  • and this just helps as an anchor to

  • Create new tasks and ensure they're lathering up to a broader vision and broader bigger goals

  • Every two weeks. I'll do like a little sprint to ensure that you know, I'm focused on the right stuff

  • Said I just look loads into like a process

  • Whereby, you know

  • I run through some things that have been happening in the past while and if they've been working and what I should focus on next

  • Those will turn into tasks that are here or I'll pull them from previous tasks

  • So you can see like there's a bunch of tasks here for example

  • lathering up to inspiring ideas

  • I'll do some work here as well. Alright, this this is more of a scratch pad these actually like I actually do work within these

  • So like I do in a weekly newsletter for creative technology, these are just a bunch of

  • You know things that I'm going to be posting in the near future just keeping notes and bookmarks in here

  • Or, you know a bigger project might be something like

  • We're trying to come up with something viral to launch and share the agency with the world

  • So we're coming up with an idea face two famous. Just a prototype. You can see in a moment my face will appear

  • And then over the course of a few different seconds

  • It'll take me three different celebrities all the way to looking like at least a Silverstone

  • So again

  • Using yeah using these just as actual work like doing actual work within these tasks

  • So, yeah, I guess when it comes, you know back to too focused on actual brainstorming part of those ideas

  • To actually come up with that idea. I think is the area that you'd probably like to focus on and more depth

  • So

  • Prior to to coming up with an idea like face two famous. I'll

  • Spend a bunch of time brainstorming

  • And so traditionally, you know, I'll create a new project. I

  • Have a template for those projects

  • And maybe I'll pop that over here and

  • Then this is quite extensive, but I'll go through it fast and then slow

  • Essentially this is just a series of prompts and resources to help me be creative and help me be strategic

  • So you can see it's quite long. There's a lot going on, but we'll go through it a bit more slowly

  • So I'll traditionally use this new project template in conjunction with work on the left so

  • this is almost like a

  • Process to focus on the different things that you see a lot there

  • So for example, well actually brought her to put it we use this thing called double diamond

  • Okay, which is

  • Just a framework for coming up with ideas

  • So that this stuff on the left is kind of like strategy the stuff on the right is creative

  • So if you you have you have a problem and you start by kind of diverging coming up lots of different ideas

  • exploring as much of it as you can doing a bunch of research and

  • then you kind of consolidate that research into different insights or opportunity areas and

  • Then you get you isolate like a few big opportunity areas and then use those as launching pads to be creative

  • So ID ate a bunch of ideas coming out of those respective

  • This is how might we use a standard thing a technology

  • Okay, we use this process and I'm loosely this takes you through that process so

  • You can see here. This is like the discovery phase and you work through what I've called bursts and

  • So maybe you start with breaking down the brief. So I have an example of that when we came up with

  • That face thing that I showed you earlier

  • The brief was oriented around something called synthetic media. So I don't know if your viewers are

  • Terribly familiar with all the deep fake stuff going on

  • Like face app turning you into an old person and that kind of stuff

  • I've been really excited by that so we thought you know how might we use personal inputs

  • To generate synthetic media that people want to share and use that

  • With that double diamond to really blow it out and come up with a bunch of stuff

  • So for example, one of those things is to break it down break down that brief and you can see

  • You know

  • We have the inputs. So

  • Sorry rather personal inputs is one of the things that we can break down what our different personal inputs that people can use

  • Voice text photo what's different media that they could generate?

  • something on Alexa photo

  • Where might they share or how can we encourage them to share? Maybe there's a celebrity ruth

  • often it'll go way deeper than this, but obviously it'd be too much of a mess to share and

  • So just wanted to give a quick look as to what you know

  • One of these things looks like when it gets broken out a little bit

  • But yeah, essentially I'll go through these different tool sets to do research to find inspiration

  • Often they'll have like a header but then different prompts within them or sometimes they'll actually have resources inside

  • Yeah, I feel like this is a

  • As organized as it might look it's actually also a bit of a mess. So I'm happy to keep

  • One of the questions I had that was

  • It's really interesting how you've sort of gone about making

  • Something that you already know about the Double Diamond process and sort of creating it into an area

  • So am I guessing that this flash area with the burst?

  • That's like static information and then you create a new

  • A new row in the table every time you do a part of the process

  • Inside of that doing things area, right

  • I'll use this process as a scratch pad to start, you know, I'll break it down over here, you know

  • Yeah, I started taking all sorts of notes and whatever I come up with

  • And I'll be able to round to it's not as you know

  • Oriented as it looks I'll bounce from one part to the other and however, my mind's working

  • It's more just the things on the Left act as a reminder to bounce to other things if I forgotten

  • Okay, that's really interesting

  • Yeah, and and and is it so the the first part the process is bursts, but then does it expand into more stuff?

  • Yeah, that's right. So after you've done the bursts and built out, you know this part of the process believe this open maybe

  • You know bursts is kind of this part of the process

  • through

  • Expanded it. Maybe then you look at all the what's come out of all the bursts refine those things into two more

  • Things that people can understand as opposed to messy notes that I'm just taking and

  • Then coming out of that

  • You're gonna start being creative so

  • That's what we call sparks so there's much more resource here

  • And what I what I've essentially done is

  • Pulled from other creative frameworks

  • to create verges on my own

  • So there's a very popular creative framework called scamper and you can see here substitute combine adapt

  • modified put other uses eliminate rearranged

  • so I've taken scamper and

  • Put it in these prompts, but also added some prompts to each thing

  • so maybe you could substitute a place or a person or an emotion and

  • Then this was both to educate myself and other people as to this framework, but also to serve as a reference tool. I've also

  • Put thumbnails that correspond to each of the respective

  • Prompts to show you an example of that

  • creativity or creative prompting use

  • so to make this more clear because obviously these thumbnails are a bit too small for people to see an

  • Example of substituting place. Is this project? Where a

  • person

  • Sorry an ad agency. Can we open it up?

  • So, this is a project whereby they put this tooth into a person's mouth so that they can open beter with their mouth

  • And that would be an example of substituting place. Right? Usually the place that happens is on a beer opener

  • But should be in your hand not your mouth it would be funny if it's in your mouth Oh

  • All of these prompts correspond to different different ways to be creative and that all of these images are

  • References for those respective things too to both educate people that are familiar and serve as a reminder

  • Go ahead, sorry

  • I was going to say this is really interesting because I think like

  • particularly myself, and I know a few other people they don't like

  • Formalize their process and make it like a wick experience like you have where each time you go and replicate something

  • You can go back to that original resource

  • So even with your sort of sprint planning with the two weeks

  • I really like the way that I think I'm going to definitely steal that concept of sort of having a full checklist or a full

  • Availability of it and then actually just replicating it because yeah, I like the way that you're using pins as well to sort of

  • You know work alongside to your notion already. It's pretty good

  • And to your point I think well, especially with the creative process

  • a

  • Lot of people don't want to make that process driven and kind of want to let their mind go a little bit crazy and see

  • What comes out of it? And I do that too. This this serves more as a reminder to do things that maybe I forgot

  • In my organic process or all bounced around to different parts of it depending on how I'm feeling

  • so maybe another example would be

  • This is sorted but rather

  • Open this is sorted by

  • Different types of creative problems that you might have. So if you have an advertising problem

  • These are all there's a website called deck of brilliance that has 52

  • Prompts to come up with advertising ideas, and I've essentially pulled that in here and made it a little bit more concise

  • So if I have an advertising problem, I just go through these 52 prompts and see which one might be most applicable

  • To resolve that creative problem

  • so I don't always use everything and sometimes I use nothing but

  • Broadly, it helps as a tool set to to be creative if you're feeling stuck. Here's another good one

  • Just a random

  • Idea to connect random inspiration. So there's a bunch of resources in here. One of which is a random word generator

  • So if I'm feeling stalking and often creative ideas come from places that are not traditional or linear

  • I'll force myself to take that brief

  • You know

  • something like this and

  • Make whatever random word Association comes up fit with this idea

  • and so that only come up with random ideas that you otherwise would

  • Okay, that's good. That's quite interesting. And how long would you say that it took you to set up this catalog? I

  • Mean it's not something I did in a sitting

  • It's you know certain parts of it have come over time

  • for example, I started with advertising thing and then later I added strategy and I

  • mean if I had to

  • quantify how

  • much time I actually spent all in I

  • Don't know a hundred hours is just a loose estimate

  • But about that time so saved, isn't it now that you've done it? Oh

  • For sure, I mean it you know

  • traditionally

  • In advertising, let's take as an example. Just one create a project that the conception part of it could take 40 hours

  • You know what I've done here is help myself

  • Make that take 10 hours instead of 40. So I'm saving 30

  • Each week that hundred gets made up real quickly. Yeah, definitely

  • Yeah, there's a bunch of other stuff here so

  • Yeah, let's see actually we'll move on maybe so

  • Another thing that happens within organizing and and elsewhere is

  • You're often routing something in what they call a big idea and that big idea can manifest itself in different channels

  • So let's take the tooth tooth that we looked at as an example

  • you know, that's a product but there's also PR and maybe there's an advertisement associated with it and maybe there's

  • some

  • Out-of-home thing where the guys sitting on sitting on a curb and showing and opening people's beer at a bar

  • it can it can live in a bunch of different places and

  • What this area does is help you once you have that big idea to?

  • Orient yourself as to which channels it should it should predominantly live in so, you know

  • Should it be an app should it be on a billboard?

  • Should it. Should there be a blimp that's associated with it

  • And then all of those that are sorted by, you know, just a drive awareness

  • Does it drive acquisition and there's a drive conversion just a drug retention?

  • so that if you have a particular problem that you're trying to solve you can sort and

  • Determine the channels that are best associated to blow out your idea and out of curiosity

  • Since you've been using this how how many sort of ideas and sort of projects. Have you been working on?

  • Sure, this this channel area is quite new and actually haven't used it yet at all

  • But this top area these two in particular

  • I've probably ran through

  • 30 40 50 bro more probably hundreds hundreds of projects

  • Using these tools

  • fantastic and

  • Yet continue talking it's free

  • Sir, yeah, the last area that's in here is kind of a reference tool

  • So these that I use this is essentially like a Pinterest

  • Bookmarking stuff that is inspiration for the creative process

  • very well sorted so for example like you're looking at right now is

  • The same creative project to come up with that face connector

  • These are all just emerging stunts a viral emerging technology ideas

  • So, you know

  • This is an AI painting that made a new Rembrandt using AI or this is an influencer is made with CGI

  • Or this is AI making seven million versions of Nutella

  • packaging

  • so tons and tons and tons of creative inspiration here so that when I get a project I can

  • Sort by whatever, I think the most applicable thing to do is

  • See, so this is done by media and channel, you know

  • There's websites and there's experiential and there's video and social and PR

  • so

  • Depending on the project I get a look at a different category and look for inspiration related to that to help spark new ideas

  • So it's like a like a you'll miss out your brain Bank of all of those ideas for when it comes to it

  • Yeah, that's really nice. Yeah, I quite liked its visual as well that you can

  • you can find everything you need there and

  • And going back to the sort of the doing things area that you sort of

  • manage

  • everyday

  • Is it I think I saw on that that you had

  • Evening routines and things like that. Do you actively used?

  • It for work and sort of your own life

  • Yeah, I use a notion for both. So this I mean so a good example is I just moved to New York. I

  • Have not yet memorized my phone number

  • But when people ask it's here, or like oh, thank you

  • I'm waiting on a shipment of books from Amazon or you know, here's places that maybe I want to travel to

  • More broadly. I keep some of my more personal stuff down here

  • So like people that I want to stay in touch with or general reference

  • But yeah, I use notion both for personal and for business extensively fantastic. Well,

  • Sorry it went a bit with it

  • Well, Daniel, I really appreciate you taking us through that sort of ideation process and all of those banks that you've created

  • Where can everyone find you after this? Cool?

  • Yeah, check out daniel Eckler calm. It's got links to everything i'm doing on the internet

  • Daniel underscore Eckler at twitter. I'm quite active on

  • If you're interested in the company, I'm working on how to get launched

  • But you can go to space cadet at NYC to learn a bit more about that

  • and yeah, if I can help at all I think one thing that you'd asked in the email is how might other people

  • create creative processes for themselves

  • I'm also happy to share

  • Access to this if anyone wants to duplicate it and use it for their own purposes

  • Or if anyone else has any questions about how they might set up a creative process

  • I'm happy to to talk to people about that as well

  • Yeah, definitely. I know all one I'll grab that link from you and we'll share it in the description

  • But I appreciate you taking the time out and it's given me a lot of hints for my own day-to-day use of motion

  • So thank you and I look forward to sharing this one

  • Thank you. Alright. Thanks, Daniel and talk soon. Yeah

Hello everyone and welcome back to the Keep productive YouTube channel, it is francesco here

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級 美國腔

Daniel Eckler如何使用Notion (How Daniel Eckler Uses Notion)

  • 163 2
    Amy.Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字