Itโs not an easy combo, being creative and successful. But thatโs just what the women who are in Sydney for the Make Nice Un-Conference are all aboutโand theyโre sharing their best #ladyboss life hacks ahead of the September 23 girl gang meet-up.
Anna Ross, Melbourne
Anna Ross is the founder of Kester Black, a vegan and eco-friendly manicure and skincare brand we canโt get enough of
โLeaving the desk is the best way for me to stay creative. I love going to a yoga class at the end of the day. It calms my body and allows my mind to take a break. The space is actually the most important part of being creative. Working too obsessively on a project can give you tunnel vision and itโs not until you step away you can see the bigger picture.โ
Ann Friedman, Los Angeles
A freelance journalist for the New York Times, Los Angeles Times and heaps more, Ann also co-hosts the insanely-popular podcast โCall Your Girlfriendโ
โWhen Iโm feeling stuck on one piece of work, I cheat on it with some very different work. So if I have a draft of an article due but the words just arenโt coming, Iโll set up interviews for another story. Or Iโll send a few invoices. Or Iโll do some planning for my podcast. Iโve realized that I work best when I have a lot of different types of work on my plate, which means I get to mix it up.โ
Jess Scully, Sydney
When sheโs not busy organising Vivid Ideas and doing her thing as a Sydney City councilor, Jess makes waves in the creative industries in her role as public art curator
โSend yourself to an industry gathering at least once a fortnight โ particularly early in your career. I know that sounds like a lot, and it can be hard to give up a night or weekend day, but connecting with my peers, seeing whatโs new, hearing what people are working on, and building relationships, has been my biggest advantage. Itโs the easiest way to get inspired, stay up to date, and to establish a network beyond your current workplace โ which is one of the best investments you can make in your career or business.โ
Stanislava Pnchuk (Miso), Melbourne
Stanislava Pinchuk (better known as Miso) is one of the worldโs most sought-after tattoo artists. Her client list says it all: Chanel, Tiffany & Co., Qantas, Converse, Thames & Hudsonโฆ
โI try to be really patient & generous with myself. If I can, I take a night off. I drink a little too much and I go dancing with my friends. In the morning I drink a black coffee, eat some eggs with a hangover and when I go back to my studio desk, nothing looks as bad as the day before.โ
Becky Simpson, Nashville
Becky Simpson is an independent designer, illustrator, author and founder of Chipper Things โ an art, paper and lifestyle product line.
โFigure out the one thing that *must* get done for the day, then carve out 2-3 hours (uninterrupted), and do it first thing. Itโs hard to let go of an ambitious to-do list, but this is a case where the โless is moreโ thing is totally true. Bonus tip: Iโve converted to focusing on no more than 3-4 projects (projects being, multi-step tasks) at a time. I havenโt looked back.โ
Leah Procko, Sydney
Design Director at Round, a branding design practice, Leahโs clients include Melbourne Spring Fashion Week, Melbourne Food and Wine Festival and TOM Organic.
โMy approach to being productive and creative seem to work in opposite ways. Productivity for me is all about structure and routine with a write-all-the-to-do-lists kind of vibe, whereas staying creative is all about change. The more I can change my surroundings, my routine and my source of inspiration, the better. Hot tip? Be an explorer โ whether itโs the world or learning a new skill โ continually adding to your toolkit of skills and knowledge will keep things interesting for you and your next creative project.โ
Lex Hirst, Sydney
A commissioning editor for Penguin Random House, Lex is also the arts programmer and festival director behind events like the National Young Writers Festival and โJunkee Take Onโ.
โMy number one and two tips for staying productive and creative cancel each other out, but I stand by them both because life is complicated.
Number one โ never let yourself procrastinate. Roll up your sleeves and jump in there right away, no matter how big or small the task. You can always edit it later and any project feels more achievable once youโve started.
Number two โ some of your best creative work and thinking can get done while youโre procrastinating doing something else. Once you recognise this and lean into it, you realise thereโs no such thing as wasted time. And thatโs a pretty good life hack.โ
Amy Nadaskay, Sydney
Founder and Director of Sydney design and branding consultancy firm Monogram, Amy has over 18 years of experience in creative production and has worked in Sydney, New York and San Francisco.
โBeing well rested means I can power through that massive list with energy, owning my day by marking my calendar with blocks of undisturbed time, delegating items that others can own and probably execute better than me!
My creative hacks: travel! Going back home to NYC to refuel is a must but also going to new places like Japan are a super re-chargeโฆ being around other creative types, especially from different sectorโฆ collaboration โ bouncing ideas off others and seeing how they can grow is magic. Finally: cards against humanity โ seriously! Mashing up unexpected thoughts and seeing the inner workings of how others think is super creative. Laughing helps, too!โ
Amrita Hepi
This professional dancer, choreographer, writer and activist takes her work off the stage and into the world
โHave a clear outline of what you want to do and commit to it (but know that things will shift a little and you have to go with that). Involve and tell others so you are held accountable. Have collaborators that hold you accountable. What is it that excites you about the project? The research/the material/working with othersโฆ hold on and go back to that.โ