{"id":2931,"date":"2015-03-13T20:30:46","date_gmt":"2015-03-13T20:30:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/demo-content.kaliumtheme.com\/freelancer\/?p=2931"},"modified":"2015-03-13T20:30:46","modified_gmt":"2015-03-13T20:30:46","slug":"best-tips-for-a-successful-magazine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/henningrobert.de\/best-tips-for-a-successful-magazine\/","title":{"rendered":"Best Tips for a Successful Magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"
Good ideas don’t require proper planning<\/strong> or schedule; nor do they benefit from exhaustingly long meetings and conversations with management. They emerge from experiments, from playing around with things that you care about, things to which you have an emotional attachment. And quite often they need a creative chaotic environment to flourish and grow.<\/a><\/p>\n However, the path from an idea to a tangible product is full of failures, and it’s those inevitable, sometimes devastating failures that make you stronger and keep you going, and eventually\u2014if you don’t give in easily\u2014drive you in the right direction, just to finally pave the boardwalk to something that might turn out to be changing and defining your future.<\/p>\n Of course we all should benefit from the knowledge of others\u2014people who trust themselves to actually follow through their weird, unrealistic, and sometimes stubborn, naive ideas. But we should be able to learn and grow from our own mistakes, too. If you are willing to experiment and tackle failures along the way, you have to be able to make your own mistakes. And that means making an effort to beat the odds\u2014no matter how doomed that shiny new idea might initially look.<\/p>\n