March, 2008

Are you a creator or a consumer?

guy_jaisalmer
Thinking / Jaisalmer, India, Dec 2007

Most likely, you create AND consume. But what it your balance between the two? Do you produce something for the world, or do you consume others? Are you taking in information or producing information? Are you creating your own thoughts, opinions, strategies, ideas, plans, experiences, or are you consuming those created by others? Is there even a question over which is more valuable?

I’ve been ruminating over this relationship between the two for awhile, but recently saw it mentioned in a PSFK note from SXSW:

Henry (Jenkins, Co-Director of CMS at MIT) talked about how he always tells his children to monitor the amount of information they take in versus the amount they put out. … We’re a culture of information overload and if we don’t turn around and put out information then we can quickly lose our ability to process information.

Usually creating requires a bit of consumption: aggregating, listening, analyzing, structuring, finding and linking connections, processing information, researching past learnings, understanding new ideas, thinking, tinkering, reconfiguring and playing. Every day we consume information and experiences: conversations with others, broadcasts from media (TV, magazines, the Internet, books, billboards, videos, etc.). Listening to the world is an important part of being able to create.

But it’s easy to consume too much. In fact, some might say we are hard-wired to overdose on information.

At the end of the day, how do you use this information? Do you add something to the conversation? Do you produce something that causes the world, your company, your friends, to listen? Are you helping others create, or merely passing information along, adding to the swimming, wavering, undulating mass (or mess, depending on your outlook) of information out there?

It’s a virtuous cycle: by adding to the conversation, by listening to the world and contributing our own original thought and experiences, we help others create, we raise the bar.

Put simply: you can either create or consume value: which one do you do more?

Listen to this… Muxtape

I’ve been fighting this, but maybe it’s time to admit it: the Internet is my life. I’d like to think otherwise, but I think I’d only be fooling myself.

I often get lost for hours. Sometimes I look up, wondering where the time went, wondering what I accomplished or what I did, saw or read that I will actually remember in the morning. Sometimes I find wonderful things.

Muxtape is one of those wonderful things.

A music-sharing web application launched this week by Justin Ouellette, Muxtape brings the focus back to playlists, back to showcasing the skill it takes to make a good mixtape. Refreshingly simple, clean and focused, Muxtape is a great way to browse music. It’s gotten a lot of rave reviews from a lot of early adopters, and I can’t agree more.

I was asked last weekend how I listen to music, and I find that I live off Internet radio. Pandora is always open in my browser and playing non-stop when I’m at home. SomaFM operates some really great Internet radio stations, NPR has some great recorded concerts in its archives (as well as All Things Considered, a personal fav), and even YouTube works pretty well for a one song fix.

Muxtape is the newest addition to the list. The application just launched, but there are already some very cool mixes… rest assured I’ll be browsing for more…

 

MORE: Financial Models for Entrepreneurs