musepreneur - a creative entrepreneur using right-brain intuition and inspiration to launch and grow a business
I was most amused by a term used to described creative entrepreneurs - musepreneur - a creative entrepreneur who uses the right-brain intuition and inspiration to launch and grow a business.
I think the key is to conversation, community and inspiration - communicate and surround yourself with people who can understand you and/or going on or have been on a similar journey - all of whom can serve to inspire you and vice versa.
I found this list of 10 tips to keep us going on our journey:
1. Enlist your imagination. Use your creative intuition to paint the biggest picture of your business success (literally or figuratively). Spend some time envisioning where you want to be a year from now and have fun with it. When you're in touch with your vision, it's easier for the details to follow.
2. Create a Right-Brain Business Plan. Your business plan doesn't have to look like a traditional plan. What's key is that you're clear about your goals and that you have them on paper. My Right-Brain Business Plan is a collaged accordion book. The front has inspiring images to connect me with my big vision. The back holds details like financial targets, milestone dates, and marketing goals.
3. Play with the Post-it Note project plan. If detailed project plans overwhelm you, try planning with Post-it Notes instead. Write each task on a Post-it Note. Use different colors to categorize. Then begin arranging them on a large piece of paper attached to a wall. You can draw rows on the paper to show weeks or months and start sequencing the notes on a timeline. The cool thing is your plan isn't set in stone. You can easily move the notes around as you gain more clarity about what's next.
4. Track your progress (with flair, of course). When you're juggling many creative projects (as most musepreneurs do), it can feel like you're not getting anything done. Rather than getting frustrated, acknowledge that you're moving forward even if it's one baby step at a time. A great way to do this is to find a beautiful bowl, and each time you complete something from any of your projects, drop a bead into the bowl. Before you know it your bowl will runneth over!
5. Follow the flow. If you're feeling stuck, do something creative to find your flow again. Maybe you sing a song or knit a scarf. The important thing is that you keep your creative momentum. See what fresh perspective emerges.
6. Build on what you know. Use something you're already familiar with to gain clarity on an unfamiliar issue. For example, how is creating a budget like following a recipe? What's the first thing you do when you prepare to cook? Perhaps it's finding the right recipe (or a template for the budget). Next, you gather all the ingredients (or the line items on your budget). Then you measure the ingredients (or you put numbers to the different line items). By walking through the steps of something you know, you'll discover your own creative resourcefulness and the new tasks will feel less daunting.
7. Learn something new. What do you want to know more about as it relates to your business? Find fun ways to pick up that new knowledge. If you enjoy reading, get an interesting book about your business that speaks to you. If you love interaction, take a class. The more you know, the more empowered you'll feel.
8. Make time for reflection. At least every quarter, carve out time to look at where you've been and where you're going. What targets did you set for yourself in your Right-Brain Business Plan? What action steps did you outline in your Post-it Note project plan? How many beads do you have in your bowl? Identify where you might need to course-correct and acknowledge your successes and accomplishments.
9. Ask for help. You don't need to do it all! Outsource what you're not as good at or don't enjoy. Hire an accountant to set up QuickBooks. Gather a board of advisors to strategize on marketing. Get a virtual assistant to schedule meetings. Delegating frees you up to focus on the heart of your business.
10. Connect with creative cohorts. Get inspired by other musepreneurs. Reach out to someone you admire for some mentoring. Make a date with your fellow creative cohorts to brainstorm ideas and support each other. Together you can help each other grow your businesses!
Henry Ford was fond of saying, "If you think you can or can't - you're right".
Cheers
Culled together from a number of sources
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Member Profile
- Alex Lee
An Asian New Zealander, Alex is a film-maker who produces, directs and writes. He is passionate about story-telling and use of media to empower social change. Alex believes that the future of media is in cross-media which enables both practitioners and audiences to have a 360degree experience both in making and viewing media.
One of Alex’s passions is to enrich our community with more ethnic stories and to enable our media to be more representative of the community and wider world we live in. Diversity is a key motivator.
Alex is also involved in the film & TV industry, having set up the Documentary NZ Trust and the Asia NZ Film Foundation to help promote these various constituencies. He also sits on Film Auckland and until 2010, was an Executive Board Member of the Screen Directors Guild of NZ. Alex also co-directs the Documentary Edge Festival and Forum, New Zealand’s documentary film festival and industry event.He is also active in performing arts, having also set up the Oryza Foundation for Asian Performing Arts, which advocates for better Asian participation in performing arts in New Zealand and directed the very popular “The Mooncake and the Kumara” at the Asian Tales season at the Herald Theatre.
Alex is also an actor/presenter and was previously, the Writer/Presenter on The World Today, a prime time nightly English language current affairs programme screened on Asia TV in Hong Kong as well a radio producer and host on Planet FM.
Currently, Alex is working on developing a new company, Inkubator Limited, a company set up to help mentor and create cross-cultural stories for production across a variety of media and platforms from big screen, TV, web, print, performance etc. It has a number of features, short, online and TV projects in development
In 2002, he returned to the University of Auckland to do a Masters of Creative & Performing Arts (Film & TV Drama Directing) and graduated with First Class Honours in September 2004. He wrote and directed Wong Cha Cha, a Creative New Zealand supported short film, completing it in February 2004. He has also been a line producer for overseas television and commercial productions. A short documentary Ma-kara at Makara Alex co-directed and produced was screened at the 2004 Warsaw International Jewish Film Festival, the 2004 Jewish Film Festival in Jerusalem, and DOCNZ International Documentary Film Festival 2005. He also produced the independent feature film The Last Magic Show which won Honourable Mention at the 2007 Dances with Films Film Festival in Los Angeles and Best Technical Contribution to a Digital Feature at the NZ Screen Awards 2007. It has been picked up Arkles Distribution Ltd. He is also the Executive Producer of Song of the Hunted, at Middle Kingdom fantasy feature film due to release in 2008. Currently, he is working on post-production of a documentary feature Musical Chairs, which he is the Co-Pro ducer and Director.
Alex is a director of T.A.G Creatives Limited (a management agency for actors, directors and screenwriters), Tamarillo Films Limited, Timeline Productions Limited and Smiley International Documentary Film Distribution Limited.
From 2004-2006, Alex taught Production Management to the postgraduate film students at the University of Auckland.Alex is passionate about screen and performing arts as well as capturing our stories and realizing these stories honestly.









