10,000 Hour of Hard Work

January 02 2009

I just wrapped Malcolm Gladwell's newest book called Outliers. Randomly found it in the airport a few weeks ago on my way to Mexico. I plowed through it pretty fast as it was pretty interesting. I haven't read a full book in quite some time because I've been so busy. Needless to say it was a great book about why successful people are successful. Chase Jarvis posted a on this subject after he heard Malcolm speak at an ASMP event, which is a great post. Malcolm's case and point is that success is due to hard work, opportunity, and timing.

The section in his book "The 10,000 Rule" is pretty interesting as it just makes so much sense. Malcolm's idea is that typically when you dedicate 10,000 hours to your craft, is when you start to become proficient at it. Being successful comes down to opportunity, 10,000 hours of practice time, hard work, and talent. A lot of the rich successful people today such as Bill Gates, got started on their 10,000 hours when they were very young and have had the time to grow.

As I thought about this, a lot of the successful photographers that I've talked to lately have hit their tipping point at around the 5-6 year mark. If you break this down, that's working full time (40 hours per week) and that comes out to roughly 10,000 hours. This is just the breaking point of becoming , like a "coming of age" so to speak, and really is the beginning of your career. The reality is, is that it's a lot more than 40 hours a week. Especially when there are so many more things involved to this business that just shooting that require practice.

When it comes down to it, it's hard work and is a majority of what got me to where I am today(just to the beginning of my tipping point). The biggest thing I've learned is that it's an artistic journey, something that is only developed over time which can't be rushed. As I look back, it's been long hours of hard work. It doesn't necessarily seem like hard work, or even work because I love what I do, but regardless, it's hard work. The more you click and practice your skills, the more you develop.

Chase and I just had a conversation about this over breakfast recently, and talked about the bottom line and how some people are willing to put in the time and some aren't. That's the difference between success and not.

Moral of the story: It takes 10,000 of hard work to START to become successful at what you do.

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