A Simple Way to Constantly Grow as a Designer

Want to consistently improve your design skills? Well, you’re in luck, because there’s a simple way to constantly grow as a designer.

Seems too good to be true? Well, it’s not a magic pill or anything. There’s no shortcut or hidden trick to getting better – ask anyone in design or any other field, creative or otherwise. But there is a simple way. It’s not easy (nothing worth doing usually is), but it is simple. And that is: do one design thing each day that’s outside your comfort zone.

reading-web-design-book

Whether it’s a technique you’ve been learning but haven’t applied yet, or a color or font choice you’re itching to try, or a new arrangement of elements – just implement one of these new things each day. By doing so on a consistent basis, you’ll slowly but steadily grow as a designer and improve your skills.

Small and Consistent Changes Is the Key to Growing

design-books

Big sweeping changes almost never yield growth. It’s too big of a change to sustain.

Just look to New Years resolutions, or trying to go from flab to buff in a short time period, or learning and applying a dramatically different design style or technique right away. The changes are too sudden and drastic for you to be able to keep doing them, so you tend to rightfully give up, like most people.

But if instead you apply small and consistent changes, you’ll be able to grow without too much effort. And with time, you’ll see that drastic change – improved skills, better design style, more adventurous ideas. Except getting there was much more manageable, since you implemented bite-sized changes that were very do-able on a consistent basis.

Create a Habit

create-a-habit

Like brushing your teeth, what you’re doing here is forming a habit for design growth. Just how you don’t even think about brushing your teeth each day, the one new design thing you try each day will become habitual to where you’re not even noticing it.

Habits are what’s easiest to keep up and are essential to design growth. If you were a messy person and one day decided to become clean by completely cleaning your apartment, you wouldn’t be able to keep doing that. It’s too big of an effort to do such a massive cleaning each time. But if you did one new cleaning thing each day–take out the trash more frequently, wipe the counter after each use, dust and vacuum sooner–then you’d be able to keep those small tasks up on a consistent basis.

After a while, they become habits, and it’d be weird to not do them – sort of like not brushing your teeth makes you psychologically feel dirty in the mouth. A cleaning habit has been formed, and you’re now a clean person.

It’s exactly the same for your design work. Don’t kid yourself into thinking you can just make some sweeping change by becoming this type of designer or suddenly implementing this technique or something. Instead, form a habit by doing one small design thing each day that’s outside your comfort zone.

It’s pretty easy to try out that new color combination on your next web design, or to experiment with new fonts for that next banner. So just do things like that each day, and after a while it will become a habit – sometimes as soon as a few weeks or a month.

Why Only One Thing?

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On your first day of trying new design techniques or styles that are outside your comfort zone, you’ll no doubt feel you can do a lot more. You might think: “Why stop at just one technique? I could try 3 today!”

Don’t.

You won’t be able to keep that up each day. And the whole point of constantly growing as a designer is to implement small do-able changes that form into a habit.

So sure, you could do 3 or more outside-your-comfort-zone design things today, but could you tomorrow? And the day after? And after that? How about weeks, months, and years from now? Probably not. But doing only one thing is very do-able. It won’t require too much effort, and doing a little each day pays off much more than a lot but at one time.

Just ask fitness experts – a little bit of exercise each day keeps you much more fit than a massive workout once a week. You’re basically “staying fit” with your design growth by doing a small exercise each day. And the exercise is doing one design thing each day that’s outside your comfort zone.

If you really, really feel confident that you could do 2 for example, then by all means go for it. But if you can’t keep it up, don’t give up: just drop down to only one thing a day.

Constantly Grow as a Designer

grow-as-a-designer

Like with anything in life, the way you can most effectively grow as a designer is to do small, consistent changes. By doing one design thing each day that’s outside your comfort zone, you’ll be able to constantly grow as a designer.

Big, sweeping changes aren’t sustainable and will usually cause you to give up. But by sticking to a very do-able one-new-thing-a-day schedule, you’ll be able to form a design growth habit without too much effort. And when you gain that habit, you’ll be well on your way to constantly growing as a designer.

A month, few months, and year from now, you’ll notice that big change in your design style and skills. And because you already have a habit of doing that one new outside-your-comfort-zone design thing, you’ll just keep growing as a designer.

So to recap, here’s how to constantly grow as a designer:

  • 1. Do one design thing each day that’s outside your comfort zone
  • 2. Don’t give into the temptation to do more than one thing (unless you feel really confident in being able to sustain that)
  • 3. Form a habit by continuing doing that every day, which will cause you to constantly grow as a designer

What do you think? Has small but consistent changes helped you to effectively grow as a designer? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.

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  • http://www.jamalnichols.com Jamal Nichols

    So basically you’re saying, the way to grow as a designer is to practice daily. Hmmm. I’m not trying to be a smartass, but I found this article of no worth. The “comfort zone” angle is correct, though, and if you follow that advice you will improve in any field you practice it in.

  • http://www.1stwebdesigner.com Dainis Graveris

    I’d like to add this: buy one magazine related to designing that will be your favorite for the rest of your career! Nice tips, Oleg. Thank you very much! They are indeed simple, the rest is up to the doer.

  • http://www.kennybrijs.net/ Kenny Brijs

    Interesting article.

    If I can give one point of constructive criticism: it feels like you’ve been trying to stretch the idea to a long article, mentioning things different times.

    Again, it’s meant as constructive criticism, not to break it down, I like the article and the idea behind it. (Now I did the same thing myself :p )

  • Andre | Webcrafter

    Amazing post. I was actually already doing it, but still great.

    Cheers from Brazil.

  • http://www.jasonclevine.com Jason C. Levine

    Doing one design a day which is a little outside your comfort zone is interesting but I wonder who has the time to do that?

    I am a new web designer, just out of school, and am working on my first “big” project. I don’t have the spare time to do one design a day, but I am slowly developing wordpress themes to improve my design and development skills.

    • http://www.webmozaic.com Drew Clarke

      @jason
      Being outside your comfort zone can be in small ways as well as big ones.

      For example. I had a meeting in London which finished early and I had an hour or so before my train so I walked along the bank fo the River Thames and visited Tate Modern to see the sunflower seeds exhibit.
      Normally I wouldn’t have time for a gallery, but that tiny little bit of input as well as the shapes and colours of the buildings around me always get filed away and who knows may help in the future.

      You could read a magazine outside your normal range of interest. Browse a range of sites you wouldn’t normally go to.

      Take time to look around you, not just glance, but really look, see the shapes and colours, how the light works at different times of day, look at the really tiny things too.

      There are many ways you can improve your design skils whilst doing what you normally do outside the technical stuff, you need to do that too.

      Perhaps have a go at a random photoshop tutorial each day. I usually spend the first part of my day about 30 mins looking at Smashing magazine and seeing whats new and interesting.

      Best of luck with your project

    • Droid

      Same here, There are so many established techniques for webdesign (evolved over the years) that I’d rather learn one or a few basic design skills.

  • http://avisualidentity.com David ODey

    Its been said but i have to ditto the fact on getting 1 new design magazine each month. Id Publishing has some good ones for web designers and photoshop users.

  • http://www.used4.net Robert

    Im in webdesign for 11 years now and i think if you really want to grow as a webdesigner do this:

    1) get inspiration from everything like architecture, shirts, stickers, printdesign, art, cars and everythink else that has a great design.

    2) learn to code even if poorly.

    3) be up to date.

  • http://www.xcubelabs.com Blackberry App Development

    Consistency and focus is important in design career mainly because of the ever changing trends and intense competition.

    Thanks for the post.

  • Toma

    The best professionals in the world never stop learning. This is the key to growth. Use Twitter and the countless design blogs to learn and find inspiration daily. Then practice. This is the key to growth.

  • http://www.windkr89.nl Erik

    A simple article, with some good points. Especially the focusing on one thing at a time is something that’s really hard for me. I want to do it all! Design, coding, know everything about CMS’s, create fantastic things in Photoshop, online marketing, photography, UX, etc.
    The problem for a designer is that ‘design’ is a really broad concept for a lot of things. You can’t say I want to be the a better designer in general, but be more specific. Basic skills apply for all, but especially when you want to stand out on an aspect of design, you have to specialize (and that means choosing). Still struggling with that…

  • http://www.herbugstudio.com Herbug

    Will take in consideration… thanks for the article

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  • anne

    Yes, I agree. Small changes are better than forcing urself to do something that is way beyond your capability. I used to force myself doing the impossible and constantly stepping on the fuel without realizing the limits of my mind. I grew weary due to that and almost give up. I guess becoming a good designer takes time.

    Thanks for the great article.

  • gopi

    it’s just a usual thing doing things on a consistent
    basis will improve your skill.that everyone know
    that fit for all the field but to design you did’nt anything specific

  • http://www.inzain.org Ints

    Really great idea, thanks!

  • http://nascentstudio.com/ Joshua

    Good concept, and I have to agree with you. Doing one design each day that’s outside of your comfort zone would most definitely help anybody grow as a designer.

    Unfortunately, I have to agree with some of the other comments as well. The idea was stretched out. Also, focusing on “design” specifically each day could cause some amount of stagnation, regardless of whether you’re pushing out of your comfort zone.

    I think it would be a bit more wise to do something “visual” every day. Try taking photos one day, do some illustrations the next, and then focus on design a different day. Increasing skills in various areas of visual creativity would be of more benefit. Just food for thought.

  • http://blog.thisismysketchbook.com Rachael

    I have found myself doing more logo designs in the last few months than I have done in the last few years. It was a design area that I thought I wasn’t strong in but I’m now finding that with each job I’m getting better. It just shows that the more you do something, the better you get. However; I like to try different skills though. For example one day trying something new in Illustrator and maybe the next day work on better ways to process my photography. That’s just me though. I agree that taking small steps is better than trying to achieve everything at once. After all, all the little steps add up eventually.

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  • Jane

    great idea! will keep that in mind. Sometimes it’s just hard to have the time to do it.

  • azyaria

    I would love to see a part 2 to this article, with maybe some specific examples. I found the general idea of the article useful (try one new thing outside your comfort zone each day), but i’m sorry to say that the rest of the article was just fluff. I found the reader comments extremely helpful, and I now have an idea on what to do each day.

    Thanks!

    • http://www.hoditta.com Hoditta

      Me too, I think examples well help us much more.

      thanks for the post :)

  • waqas

    I agree to those who are waiting for examples