Behind The Tech with Kevin Scott - Chase Jarvis: Entrepreneur, artist and photographer
Episode Date: June 21, 2021Join Kevin for a fascinating conversation with Chase Jarvis – CEO and Founder of CreativeLive. The CreativeLive platform gives millions of people ways to discover their passions. Find out how explor...ing your “creative side” can inspire a successful career. It’s Creativity with a capital “C”. Click here for transcript of this episode. Kevin Scott CreativeLive
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I believe that it's our job as adults to unlearn a lot of those constraints that school and
career counselors and parents and often people who meant really well for us, that they placed
on us so that we can reach our true potential.
Hi, everyone. Welcome to Behind the Tech. I'm your host, Kevin Scott, Chief Technology Officer for Microsoft.
In this podcast, we're going to get behind the tech.
We'll talk with some of the people who've made our modern tech world possible and understand what motivated them to create what they did.
So join me to maybe learn a little bit about the history of computing and get a few behind-the-scenes insights into what's happening today.
Stick around.
Hello and welcome to Behind the Tech.
I'm Christina Warren, Senior Cloud Advocate at Microsoft.
And I'm Kevin Scott.
Our guest on the show today is Chase Jarvis.
Chase is an award-winning artist. He's the founder of CreativeLive and author of the new
national bestseller, Creative Calling. Now, I know that a lot of our listeners tune into the show to
hear about all things tech, but we believe that creativity is at the heart of every great tech
innovation and that parallels exist in the creative process,
whether you're a software developer or a business leader
or an artist like Chase.
Yeah, I think Chase has a really good take on this
that hopefully we'll get a chance to chat about here in a minute.
But I am a very, very strong believer
that all forms of creativity are similar in many, many ways.
I spend a lot of my own time doing creative things like making furniture or learning how to use my machines in my machine shop. And I'm really convinced that it helps make me better at making technical decisions
and writing code. And I've always believed that coding is a creative undertaking.
Yeah, no, I totally agree. I think creativity and coding go hand in hand. But let's go ahead
and get into our conversation with Chase.
Hello, and welcome to Tech Fit for Europe, a new podcast series looking at the big policy questions behind today's technologies and the people who shape them.
My name is Kasper Klöging and I'm the Vice President for European Government Affairs at Microsoft.
We believe in the power of dialogue and finding common ground, and that's exactly what our new podcast is about.
Join us as we discuss some of the most pressing digital policy issues of our times,
affecting us here in Europe and beyond.
Can we protect and preserve democratic values in an era of digital disruption?
What is the role and responsibility of the tech industry in ensuring a climate-neutral future?
And how can technology companies support governments in driving economic recovery from COVID-19?
Europe's policymakers are grappling with these and many other questions as they look to set
out the rules for developing and deploying technology.
But the global reach of technology regulation and the digitalization of geopolitics means
that these issues have implications far beyond our continent's borders.
Nowadays, what happens in Brussels matters worldwide.
In this podcast series, you'll hear from some of the most influential voices on key Thank you. Our guest today is Chase Jarvis.
Chase is an award-winning artist,
author, entrepreneur, and photographer.
His expansive work ranges from shooting advertising campaigns for
companies like Nike and Red Bull to
collaborating with icons like Lady Gaga.
He's the founder and CEO of Creative Live,
where more than 10 million students learn photography, video, design, music, and business from the world's top creators and entrepreneurs.
His new book, Creative Calling, launched this spring, debuted an instant national bestseller.
Welcome to the show, Chase.
Thank you, Kevin. I appreciate it.
Yeah, so I really, really want to get into CreativeLive and your book.
And I am a customer of CreativeLive, actually.
Love to hear it.
So first, maybe we can start with your background.
Were you always a creative person?
What was your childhood like?
Well, that's a great place to start off.
First, I do want to say thank you so much for, you know, behind the technology, you as a technologist for embracing that a great example of creativity, I always want to
talk about creativity with a capital C. And that includes, you know, creativity underpins a solution
to every problem we will ever know. Writing code is incredibly creative, as is this conversation
we're having here. We're co-creating this conversation right now. And either one of us
could take this in an
exciting, different direction. And to me, that's part of what makes creativity so sort of, A,
misunderstood, but B, vital. It's like, you know, great lives, great products, great experiences.
You know, they're not found. I'm what they call a founder. I didn't find anything. I built
CreativeLive, youLive from the ground up
with hundreds of other committed people
so I think I want to first
establish that creativity with a capital
C is what we're all talking about here
and as it relates to my childhood
I think I did have a very
creative childhood because in part
I was an only child and my parents
would say things like okay here's a block of wood
go play in the backyard by yourself for a few hours and entertain yourself and cultivate curiosity and people understand that that creativity that we were all able to connect with as young people is actually the same vital driving force as adults.
And yet we have found ways to, in large part, write it out of our day-to-day because we were coached by either a career counselor or a teacher or a parent or a
spouse that for some reason wasn't practical. And so my fundamental principle is that it's actually
the most practical thing there is on the planet. And we do it all every day. And if we just
acknowledge it as such, we could drive it to our advantage in a way that few people actually get
to do. So let's create a more accessible, creative world.
And my childhood was very much that.
My parents, I was raised very middle, lower middle class.
My dad was a cop.
My mom was a secretary at a biotech company.
And that didn't stop me from trying to express who I was until I started, you know, bumping into all those teachers and the school
system and so many of the things that sometimes for good reason, you know, provide constraints.
I believe that it's our job as adults to unlearn a lot of those constraints that school and career
counselors and parents and often people who meant really well for us,
that they placed on us so that we can reach our true potential.
Yeah. I so agree with that sentiment and push.
One of the things I'd love to get your opinion on is,
I think oftentimes people look at the end product of
creativity. So like a work of art, a photograph, a recording, like a software system, a business,
a book, whatever it might be. And the creative process that helped create that thing isn't visible.
And like,
we think it's mysterious and hard and inaccessible.
And it's one of the things that I love about creative lives.
So I'm a,
I'm an amateur photographer and I've taken a whole bunch of classes on
creative live to try to get my photographic technique better.
I didn't feel like I was being intimidated by the process of looking at
a great photographer and saying,
oh, I don't understand this,
I can't do this.
I was just curious,
how on God's earth do these folks do what they're doing?
I want to know, I want to understand,
and CreativeLive and so many resources that we have available to us now help with that.
So how do you think about that,
this process of creativity?
Well, I love that you ask the process question because I think at its foundation, that's one of the reasons that it's wildly misunderstood. And I think it's a good place for me to interject. my life, there are three core principles. The first one is that every person is creative by
nature. Limitless possibility. Again, just the example that you and I are co-creating this
conversation right now that you create every morning. You wake up, you decide. There's this
idea of autonomy and opportunity that we all decide what we're going to do with our time.
Principle two, which relates to your question directly,
that creativity is a habit, not a skill.
It's a process, it's a practice.
It's just like a muscle that we develop.
If I were to ask you,
if you want to develop bigger biceps, what would you do?
You would work those biceps out.
So creativity is the same thing.
It's this act of repeating, creating, or repeating a bicep curl that's going to make you stronger.
Now, there are skills that can help you create prettier things, but creativity itself is a habit.
It's a process. Now, the third thing, which I think is the, this is where hopefully the, the, the, your, your brain's gonna wake up now if you're a listener right now.
The process that we go through in creating anything, whether it's a photo, a computer
program, a business, many of the examples that you gave, the process that we go through
in creating anything, the muscles that we use, those are the exact same muscles that we use to create our lives.
Creating a life is just look at it as a creative process, as a process where you're putting one foot in front of
another over and over, hopefully, you might be 10,000 hours away from mastering your life,
but you're only one decision.
And that is the decision to try, to begin the process of creating with intention the
life that you want.
So it's crazy that you're going to
go home tonight, you're going to decide what to cook for dinner, and that's a creative process.
And the same things that are at play there, what am I going to do? What ingredients am I going to
put in? How long am I going to take to do it? Where am I going to do it? All of those things
are the same ingredients that we have in creating our life. So again, everyone's creative. Two,
creativity is a habit. And three, the process
that we go through in creating anything is how we actually create our lives. To me, that,
just the triumvirate of those things is it ought to embolden everyone listening with this
opportunity that, you know, we don't stumble into this world.
You're not a cork in the tide that with a little bit of intention,
just like you could create a meal for your family,
that you can create this life that you might feel distanced from right now.
That is inspiring and enriching and this is this one precious thing that we get.
So let's make it a masterpiece.
Yeah. It's not just a beautiful sentiment.
I actually believe the truth of what you're saying.
I do want to focus a little bit on this idea of creativity as habit,
because that really strongly resonates with me.
As we're having this conversation right now,
I'm about to take some time over the next couple of weeks
to just spend two weeks of my time learning.
And what I intend to learn
are adding a set of things to my creative arsenal.
It's almost like working out the creative muscle.
So I've got someone who's going to come to my shop and teach me how to use my TIG welder
better.
There you go.
Amazing.
Yeah, and I tell people I'm doing this and they're like, what does TIG welding have to
do with being CTO of Microsoft? And I really do believe this thing that you said,
that adding that skill to my arsenal and then using it,
like I have a project.
I'm not just going to learn the skill in a vacuum.
I've already designed this steel and walnut bench that I'm going to make.
Amazing.
And so it's going to be so much fun.
And I'm going to make. Amazing. And so it's going to be so much fun. And I'm going to then have this creative experience
that's going to not just be fun,
but I think it's going to help me be more creative in general.
This is, let's use science for a second.
The science on creativity is really clear.
That creating anything helps you create everything.
And so truthfully, like you learning to weld and expressing what it's like to try and put two or more things in your world that previously weren't put together to try and put those ideas together in real time.
Your brain is literally, you know, it's neuroplasticity is not new
pride to your audience that means your brain is the capability of learning new
things and creating new pathways and connecting things that used to not be
connected like that is the act of creating at its most fundamental level
and that is a transferable skill that experience of creating you know the the
walnut and and steel piece.
Was it steel? Is that right? Walnut and steel?
Yep.
The act of conceiving, of planning, of activating those neural pathways,
that's the same set of muscles that is going to help you solve the problem in the boardroom.
That's going to help you unlock the next chapter of technology for Microsoft.
And this idea that somehow we as humans are divorced from this process,
that we either have it or not.
The really sad thing, I'll tell you a short story about my childhood.
So you asked, did I believe I was creative? I did until second grade.
And I walked into my second grade classroom. It was the student teacher conference night,
and they paired it with the ice cream social. So you could show up after school.
Your parent or guardian would have 10 minutes with the teacher while the kids are supervised
eating ice cream in the gymnasium
or whatever. And I happened to go looking for my mom in my second grade classroom, Ms. Kelly.
And I happened to walk in, there were some other students, there were some other folks waiting in
line. Then I walked in there just in time to hear my teacher, Ms. Kelly, tell my mom that I was so much better at sports than I was at
art. Now, I had just come off of my, I made my first film in the summer between first and second
grade. I had a magic show. I had a stand with comedy act. I thought of myself as artistic.
And to hear that from my teacher was just, was like, hmm. And maybe some empathetic listeners out there
are saying, oh, poor young Chase.
But what poor young Chase did was just adapt.
So I did whatever my second grade teacher said
is like, hmm, I'm good at sports.
That's how I'm going to get revered and respected
and patted on the back as a good little boy.
And so I ran headlong into sports
and sure enough, it served me well.
I went on to be successful in sports. I went on to be, you know, successful in sports.
I went to college on a soccer scholarship, played in an Olympic development team, but
I turned my back on creativity because my second grade teacher said I wasn't good at
it.
And so how to, how, how sort of sad.
And it was only through a, if you read the book, I chronicle the story pretty carefully
about my grandfather actually died and I was given his cameras and this was a catalyst for me to sort of
dig back into it. But, you know, if you look at your initial question or comment about
the relationship between trying new things and how it could possibly affect your ability to be a better CTO, like the science is really clear.
It's messy, because right now there's someone
who's listening to this who subscribes to your show
because they think of themselves as a technologist
and thinks that creativity is sort of a nice to have.
But if you look around, and just to be direct,
I have deconstructed the lives of hundreds
and hundreds of the most creative, successful people in the world that have been on my podcast,
that teach on CreativeLive, that are now my friends. These are billionaires, entrepreneurs,
genius creators, everything in between. And there is a correlation. They all understand that the opportunity to learn new skills,
to put yourself around people who build you up rather than knock you down,
this idea that spending time pursuing things that interest you for which you have curiosity, that these are force multipliers to everything in your life.
And ultimately, sort of a concept that I've taken away from these hundreds of conversations
are that choosing creativity in your life is ultimately refusing to betray your potential. Choosing creativity is refusing
to betray your potential. And it seems like with your project, deciding that you're actively going
to invest in learning and experimentation and building that, your creative bicep by actually
learning to weld and doing hobbies that seem irreverent
relative to your professional life, that's actually where the best stuff in life really is.
Yeah, I strongly, strongly agree with that. And it's sort of interesting, when your teacher
told you or was telling your mom that you were so much better at
sports than art like i think this is another thing people get confused about all the time
so she may have had in her head that like you weren't good at some like uh like technical skill
whether or not you're creative.
So like you can learn skills, you can accumulate them.
Like this loop that you were describing where, you know, curiosity and investing in yourself, you know, is sort of at the core of creativity.
Like you can learn anything.
Like I'm really convinced of this especially with kids like i hate this idea that you are that like we tell children that they're not good at something
for sure i mean let's walk into any second grade classroom since i use grade two as my example and
miss kelly shut me down walk into any first second grade classroom go up to the front of the room and
say who wants to come to the front draw me a picture how classroom, go up to the front of the room and say, who wants to come up to the front and draw me a picture?
How many hands go up?
Every hand.
It's just poof.
Every hand goes up.
And then you ask the same question as a sixth grader,
and then a ninth grader, and then a senior,
and the number of hands that go up
sort of systematically goes down.
Now I feel like we are on the cusp
of a complete transformation and a reawakening, largely in part of the work that you do to put tools get the permission of a photo editor, a magazine editor to write.
And now, because of the internet,
we're largely on the early part of the backside
of the democratization of all of these tools
where they're free or cheap or widely accessible.
And look what's happening.
The creator economy, I mean, 40% of Americans
have a side hustle where they make money
beyond their
actual nine to five. That's 70 million working Americans have a side hustle. And that's one of
the fastest growing parts of the economy. I think it's the fastest. So this idea that for somehow
not entrepreneurial, not creative, when you look at the economic creative class to use Richard
Florida's term, it's a transformational size of the economy.
And then if you look one level below that, what's beneath that?
The human beings that are actually doing that work.
That's you, that's me, and that's that would-be doubter who's saying, hmm, I don't think of myself as creative because it wasn't fostered in me.
What if we could turn that frown upside down?
What if we could change that belief that that person who does not see themselves as creative?
I just think the power there is acknowledging our own creativity is the human superpower.
It's part of what differentiates us from every other species on the planet.
Let's maybe talk a little bit about the process of being creative.
One of the things that I think people get hung up on is fear of critique or fear of failing.
I remember I went to a Ralph Gibson workshop on photography. Ralph is one of the most famous photographers
of the mid-late 20th century.
I have no business on paper being at this workshop with him.
I didn't go to art school,
I'm not a professional photographer. My photographs haven't
been in any galleries. There's nothing by any sort of traditional measures that would say that
my photographic skill or my work would merit me being know, like me being able to, you know, sit down and learn with
someone like Ralph Gibson with a group of other, you know, aspirant photographers.
You know, and so like, that's one weird thing, like the I am not worthy, you know, mindset that
sometimes people have. And then the other is like, I was a little bit anxious about going to this thing
because like, you know,
what is this person who is like
a really eminent photographer
going to think of my work?
And is he going to think it's all garbage?
And, you know, am I going to be embarrassed?
And, you know, like the thing
that I've just sort of learned
is my process of becoming a computer scientist
and like a tech person over the years years is that I've had to get over
this imposter syndrome that I always have and be willing to make myself
vulnerable to situations where I'm pushing myself beyond my limits.
Whenever I do that,
I learn something and I'm able to do more afterwards using what I've learned.
So I don't know whether you see that pattern with other folks.
Oh, what you just described is it's beautiful when you actually are able to transcend that fear, even for a moment.
Because you do it once and you're like, wait, all the best stuff
in life is on the other side of fear. And whether that's fear of being judged, fear of not being
enough, fear of someone laughing at your creation or your first stab at something,
on the other side of all of that is where the best stuff is. And again, I go back to this concept of
just imagine if you could set aside
your ego even temporarily in order to try something new to try that thing that
that lights you up like that is to me the human superpower when you enmesh
some passion a little curiosity a opportunity, and the temporary suspension of fear
to do something that you are enthusiastic about. If you don't love your job or you're tired all
the time, what you're really tired of doing is things that don't inspire you. And as soon as you can direct your attention,
your experience, and to be clear, again, you are in charge. You might have bills, you might have
all of the things that are typical trappings and excuses that I hear people make that are all very
real. There's privilege involved. There's opportunity costs. There's opportunity period
with the capital O. All those things are hurdles. But if you take, even for a small moment, and even once a week, and then once a day,
and then once an hour, you start leaning into overcoming or transcending or just borrowing,
pretending for long enough that those fears and trappings don't exist. That is the ticket to being able to live the dream
that how you spend your time, what you work on,
who you work with, it's actually,
again, it might be 10,000 hours away
if you actually to get to do those things professionally
or for a living or even if you just want them
to be an enriching hobby,
but you're only one decision away from deciding to try. And to me, that is exciting. And when I hear you say you're going to go to this class with Ralph, the book that you mentioned early in the intro and that I wrote, essentially, it's a Trojan horse.
It's a book about creativity.
And yes, it will help you supercharge all your creative endeavors, whether you want to, again, make a workbench or a computer program or a business or a meal or whatever.
But the Trojan horse is that this is sort of this key to unlocking your human potential.
And it's intimidating.
Like, where do I even start?
So I've tried to make it brutally simple. The book's divided into four parts.
And the acronym is very simple.
It's a creative process.
And you can apply this to anything.
You can apply it to dinner.
You can apply it to your life. I-D-E-A, idea. I stands for imagine, D for design, E execute,
and then A amplify. This is just a very simple four-step process for anything creative. And I'll
just walk you through one example.
Imagine is we have lost our ability to imagine what's possible. We're told by our career counselors. We're told by our parents, you know, you got to, okay, you're going to be a job,
but you're going to do one of these four jobs. You're going to be a doctor, a lawyer, you know,
whatever makes your parents proud. That's not imagining what's possible for this one precious
life. That's, you know, and to be be fair it's confusing because this comes as information comes
from people who we care about and who care about us very much and so you know
to go against these you know the messages that we get from popular
culture to be rich and fit and all these things that look at we've lost our
ability to imagine what we want for us.
So how do you start? How do you rekindle that? You just start to play in your mind. Imagine
what if you could write a script, what would it look like? So imagine the second step. And this
is true again with dinner or your life. Imagine what you want to eat, design a plan to get what
you want to eat. That's, to get what you want to eat.
I got to go to the grocery store.
I got to spend $18 on, you know, I got to get some chicken.
I got to get some pasta.
Whatever the thing is.
So you're designing a plan to get there.
If I go to the store and I allow enough time, I'm going to be able to cook a different, new, exciting meal.
And I found a recipe, whatever.
Imagine.
Design the plan. Execute the thing. right? Do the thing, do the process,
make the bench, go to the photography seminar, make a new picture. And then the thing that is
missing from 99% of the people's equation out there is this idea that I call amplify. It's the
A in the idea framework. And that is show other people.
Talk about it.
Because in doing so, in verbalizing it and saying, hey, I made a new meal.
It's a little bit of an experiment.
Join me at the table.
Tell me if it's too spicy or you don't like olives. In engaging, that is inherently human.
And you get feedback on your process.
You get to develop an awareness of
are you hurt by that feedback?
Are you inspired by that feedback?
Does it make you want to do more or less?
But most importantly,
when you put it out there in the world,
it's acknowledgement that you are creative.
So if this little people that are,
say, technologists or listen to your podcast
or are the victims to what I shared earlier, that cultural sort of narrowing of creativity with a capital C.
If you just apply that four-step process to anything, I think it's a good step in getting you where you want to go. I really do think that last bit around amplifying,
like showing your work,
it's also helps create connection.
So many of the best conversations that I have ever had come
from meeting people I otherwise wouldn't have
met because I show them something that I've made.
There's a vulnerability in there. There's an authenticity. And for people that are scared
or don't have skills, great. How do you get any skill? You practice. And whether you're practicing
singing or guitar, or again, there's any number of things that we've named, like that's actually
a bonding experience when you sit down with other people who have shared interests or again, there's any number of things that we've named, like that's actually a bonding experience
when you sit down with other people
who have shared interests or are,
and you don't have to actually sit down,
you know, whether you're still, you know,
emerging from the pandemic here
or whether you live in, you know, Muskogee, Illinois,
or in the middle of what you don't consider
to be a creative hotbed,
you can actually connect with people,
use CreativeLive as an example.
There's a community of 10 million people
there who are creating and learning.
If you start to do that together,
that is an empowering feeling.
As you've shared just moments ago,
that vulnerability and sharing and connecting around
these ideas that you have about what you can do,
make, be, or become,
we're social animals, whether you're an, make, be, or become. Like that, we're social animals,
whether you're an introvert or an extrovert.
This is, you know, this is something
that will light you up.
Yeah.
And honestly, I think,
so I'm an introvert,
like super duper capital I introvert.
And I think maybe for introverts,
like it's one of the more valuable things that
you can do because it's like a super structured way for you to connect with other people. It's
like, you know, it's a built-in icebreaker. Like here's this thing. I made a bench. I made a
mechanical doohickey. I wrote a piece of software that I make an open source. I, you know, I've done
this thing and like, I'm just going to put it out there into the world.
And then the conversation can be around that thing.
And so like, you just know what you're walking into.
Yeah.
And it is, it's an invitation to connect with just a little bit of distance when necessary.
I'm married to an extreme introvert and I'm relatively extroverted myself. And so observing, I approached that,
like her introvertedness as a little bit of a learning for how the different sort of introvert or extrovert or ambivert might look at the creative process or might look at feedback.
And what I learned you know
we've been married for more than 20 years now so this is that it truly is accessible to everyone
and creativity is this invitation to connect around shared ideas shared experiences and now
with the internet being you know connecting us and providing a vehicle a set of pipes for connection,
that serves any personality type.
It serves the opportunity for you to have mentors that would historically have been way out of your league.
You talked about getting together in Ralphs.
Well, if you couldn't sign up on the internet,
you probably wouldn't have been there.
And that's why CreativeLive was so disruptive because people used to spend $3,000, $5,000, fly across the country to New York, stay in a hotel for three days and to try and learn with some master.
And now you can not just take a classroom, you can correspond with them in real time, ask them questions.
And to me, that's glorious.
For those who are listening to this right now and this idea is new to you,
this is what you're missing.
For those who are practiced,
this is your ticket to pursuing your dreams for this one precious life.
Yeah. I think CreativeLive is a really amazing community.
One of the first class that I took on CreativeLive was from a photographer named Joey L.
Joey is this very super talented young documentary portrait photographer. I think he shot advertising and a bunch of commercial work.
But he uses that as a way to fund these explorations that he does.
He'll go to Africa,
he will go to India,
he goes into these communities and he tries to
capture something about these communities that are-
He's very cause-driven. and he tries to capture something about these communities that are reflected.
He's very cause-driven, right?
He uses the money that he makes from commercial to make other great art
that unlocks our awareness about indigenous peoples and conflict. And, you know, I think that's a, a great way for people who are
introverted or are, you know, are looking for an example of where to get started.
Like, how can you learn from someone like Joey L? How can you start to
apply your skills and experience and whatever you've done for your life, you have a gift.
And whatever is in your childhood thing that lit you up when you were eight or 10 or 15 or 20,
or it was a guitar or a computer, those are available to you right now, today. You can
stop listening to this podcast. You could drive to a store. You could look something up online.
You could join a free class. There's so many ways to activate. And I just think that that's so refreshing, so empowering.
And this idea that we're a cork in the tide, we can sort of shelve that, what I think is
antiquated, understandably, because so many people feel like that. That's what a school system and a work system is designed to do.
There's no malevolent dictator making us feel that, but that's a mass cultured society. That's
part of how it manages people, right? You have to put them in a system. Otherwise, it's too much for
the system to handle. And yet, you don't have to succumb to that. And it takes a little bit of awakening,
just a tad bit of awareness,
and then the application of this process,
this creative process,
imagine, design, and execute,
amplify towards anything.
And I promise, if you do this one or two or three times,
the first time it's a little painful,
I'm not going to lie.
It's sort of like Bikram yoga,
or I think it's just hot yoga now
because the guy Bikram is a real jerk.
So they took his namesake away from him.
But hot yoga,
like the first time you do it,
it kicks your butt.
And then if you're willing to sign up for five sessions,
the second time you're like,
it sucked a little bit less,
but I can see the benefits.
The third time,
like, wow, I've never felt better.
Fourth and fifth,
you're excited.
And the same is true with going to the gym
or creating.
The first time you sit down to try and write a song
after you haven't written one since you were 14, painful.
Yeah, and it's certainly true for code.
Like, coding is this thing where it takes everyone a while to get good at it.
This is the thing I tell people all the time,
you shouldn't let the fact that your first attempts are painful or not quite as
successful or as easy as you would like them to be to deter you from continuing to try
i mean it's like the like a virtuoso concert pianist like i think sometimes we have this
romantic idea that these virtuosi are just sort of born with uh you know the ability to
you know play you know lisp piano concerto chopin ballad you know it and it's just not true like they practice they they start off their crap
in the beginning because they have nothing in their fingers and like don't understand anything
about music theory composition and and they just spend an enormous amount of time building all of
the understanding and skill and repertoire so that they can perform at a very
high level. And like, it's the only path to getting to the high level. Like it's,
this is available to everyone in any discipline that you choose. And people say, you know,
the example I always get is like, well, if you're, you know, five foot four, it's really hard to play
in the NBA. Well, first of all, people have done it. I'm not saying I recommend it, but my guess is that you might be in love with basketball generally. And there's lots of
things to do around basketball if you're five foot four, besides start on the Utah Jazz or
the Knicks or the Bulls or whatever. There's lots of things to do. And by exploring that,
you're going to uncover things about yourself and things about your passions and area of interest.
I think it's important to make another point, which is, you talked earlier about,
I didn't feel qualified to be in that class with Ralph and these other people and didn't know, look at this, I think this idea that I might not belong or that
creativity is for everybody else.
I want to be crystal clear.
You do not need a new set of friends.
You do not have to wear a beret and move to Paris and smoke some cigarettes and be... That
is not what creative is.
That is this romantic and I think perversely romantic view of what creativity is.
None of those things are true.
You can be creative right now in this moment with what you have.
And in fact, that's the only place to start.
Start right now where you can with what you have and go from there.
And I believe that if you start walking,
you know, in the book,
I'm going to talk about this sort of a calling,
a curiosity,
and then you put yourself on this path where, you know, nothing is a waste of time,
even a road where you find out
that something doesn't interest you.
Like that's actually a discovery in and of itself.
And, you know, there's this toggling back and forth
between lessons in creativity and our personal back and forth between lessons in creativity
and our personal exploration and expression
and lessons in life.
They're basically one in the same.
So you don't need a new set of friends.
Even if you don't feel welcome,
it's probably you more than it is the community
and if it's the community that it really is turning you off,
then find a different community.
But the most important thing
and the thing that I feel like we do our disservice to ourselves
is to not start.
The list of reasons why is long.
And if you do anything or take anything away from our conversation here, dear listener,
it's just start.
No one feels ready.
Everyone starts before.
If you deconstruct the work of the most successful, happy, fulfilled people, it's that they would say, just start.
I've done the research.
I've interviewed hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people.
And there's, you know, a handful of common threads.
One is just start.
Just begin.
Yeah. That is certainly consistent with what I've seen in my cohort the curiosity and the creative impulse and to get
started than it is to like have a skill or a tool if you have this creative impulse and this
curiosity you can always earn the skills and you can earn better tools so that you can make more complicated
things, like different things.
I won't even call them more interesting
things, but
you don't have
to wait to get started
until you have the skill
or the good tool.
If you're waiting
for that, you'll never get started.
So true. And if you're waiting to that you'll never get started so true and if you're waiting to be
happy and fulfilled and rich and set before you take on this creative endeavor you're going to
be waiting forever as well it's actually the other way around the science is really clear here
you know i heard it it was my own experience i heard it from everybody interviewed
all the my podcast guests guests on creative CreativeLive. It's the opposite.
If you decide that you're creative, if you call yourself a creator and you start to apply these principles, those are the things that unlock happiness, connection, fulfillment.
It's not the other way around.
If you wait for happiness, fulfillment, contentment, connection in order to start this thing whatever that thing
is for you and everybody has a thing if you wait you're going to be waiting forever and there's
you know the number one regret for the dead and the dying is that they they pursued the
dreams that everybody else had for them rather than their own yeah so if on your deathbed, the thought of regret is terrifying for you
as it is for me,
this is the unambiguous,
virtually universal agreement
is to pursue the things that you want
and anything in pursuing what you want
is a creative endeavor.
Again, coding, building a business, a restaurant,
like any of those things.
And so why wait?
Those things, that pursuit in and of itself,
is the initial vehicle to jumpstart your curiosity,
your creativity, your positivity,
your emotional connection with your capacity as a human being, which, again,
the thing that differentiates us from all the other species on the planet is our ability to
combine unlikely things that would not have been combined for it not being us. And the last point
there is you do not have to. It's not like you're going to create a symphony
that's a masterpiece or nothing that is not true no no one has experienced that even the most
talented gifted geniuses of our time they had to you know they had to create some things that
weren't genius level long before they could ever you know truly you know be known for the reasons that you know them.
Yeah, so, so, so true.
And a thing that I think a lot of people forget
because we sometimes get too enamored of the end product of fully mature genius
and just sort of assume that it was easy to get there,
like there weren't all of these intermediate steps or that it was, uh, like we, you know, we, we try to pretend that
it wasn't hard, uh, for the, you know, for the person that's, you know, like whether it's an
athletic performance or like, it's, it's all, it's all hard work. It is. And it doesn't, the cool thing,
this is why I get so passionate about helping direct people
towards things they care about.
Because if you could fail or struggle
at something that sucks,
that isn't an expression of you,
why would you, you know,
the thought of sucking at something
that you don't even care about
versus like pursuing something, having a chance to pursue something that you care't even care about versus like pursuing something,
having a chance to pursue something that you care about. And this is not, again, this is not about
quitting your job. You know, some of the happiest, you know, most balanced, fulfilled people have an
amazing job that provides them resources, time, space to do the thing that they want to do on their side.
This is not just about, again, quitting your job and moving to a cabin in the woods to write poetry,
although that may be someone's jam.
It's not required.
Again, you can do 99% of the things that we're talking about in this show where you are right now.
The thing that matters is that you start in an imperfect
awkward way you just start playing and there are things in your past that when you do them i don't
care if it's hitting baseballs into a field or you know the easy bake oven that you had when you were
nine yeah like just pursue that for a little bit and the cool thing is that you had when you were nine. Just pursue that for a little bit.
The cool thing is that because this is a habit, not a skill,
you start to realize that this is available to everyone,
and I literally mean everyone.
Yeah. Some of my favorite stories are like Aaron Copland composing Fanfare for
Common Man and a bunch of his works while he was on the train to his job as
an insurance executive or John Grisham,
I think was a lawyer while he was writing his first novels.
And the thing is, you're not trying to optimize for easy.
You're trying to optimize for fulfilled.
Yep.
And that's a whiff for most people culturally, right?
This idea of, again, you have to be successful, all these other things, before you feel fulfilled.
It's the other way around.
Pursue things that are meaningful to you. Create meaning in your life. Put yourself, if you're the average
of the five people you spend the most time with, put yourself around people that lift you up,
that are interested in the same things you are, or challenge your ideas. And that vehicle creates
the success downstream that it's not the other way around.
Yeah. We got time for a couple more questions.
We talked a little bit earlier in the conversation
about how technology is changing the creative landscape.
We talked a little bit about how it helps people to do
the amplify part of idea that you can sort of put yourself out there and connect with other people.
It lets you build a platform like CreativeLive.
What other ways do you think technology is changing the way that people can express their creativity?
Tools, community, just two completely transfer access right three
three ways that that technology is completely transforming this world you know tools they're
for free or cheap you have access i mean you know our phones they're not phones anymore they're
they're cameras first and foremost recording devices, communication devices to share work, connect with others.
You know, this access to the world's top experts at CreativeLive,
where you can have access to 2,000 classes from people like Brene Brown,
Richard Branson, Damon John from Shark Tank, Tim Ferriss, Sherry Riley.
You want to learn about money, you want to learn about creativity,
about design, about photography
that's crazy, so if you think about technology
in those terms
it's not even kidding
it's literally
transformational, the opportunity
to have that
the access, again, we've talked about that
how the spaces
to share your work, to be a distribution
platform on your own used to be reserved distribution platform on your own, used to
be reserved for the gatekeepers behind them.
And now you can start a blog and start writing in five minutes.
You can share your photos on Instagram for free in five minutes.
There's so many vehicles.
And the community part is hard to overstate.
I wrote a quarter of my book
is about community that's really the whole amplify section of the book is about putting
yourselves around people that build you up um creating a a set of you know fans and followers
and people who like your work or want to connect with you and what you're doing, or are similar minded, or working in areas of interest.
All those things are completely new as of
the last 10 years and enabled by, for example,
the work that you do, Kevin, at Microsoft.
Awesome. Well, I want to thank you
so much for taking time to chat with us today.
Everybody should go buy a copy of Creative Calling.
I am very much looking forward to reading the book myself.
And I just want to say I'm deeply appreciative of the work that you're doing because I think nurturing this and encouraging this creative impulse in people is just such an extraordinarily important and good thing to do.
It's just a beautiful light in my life.
And I'm one of the few who has discovered their calling.
And I can't overstate how joyful.
And it's not that easy.
It's not easy building a community or a platform that serves millions and millions of people.
You know that from your job at Microsoft.
But is it fulfilling?
Does it feel good?
It feels incredible.
And again, I'm part of the process.
I'm connected with people all over the planet who are similar-minded and believe that we're not a cork in the tide and we have autonomy and opportunity.
And we can cultivate that and chase what we're all after cork in the tide and we have autonomy and opportunity and we can cultivate
that and chase what we're all after, which is love and connection and fulfillment, whether that's
personal or professional. So thank you so much for having me on the show. I love the work that
you're doing at Microsoft. It's been incredible having been born and raised in Seattle and
Microsoft has always been in my backyard. It's been fun to see what I would consider, you know, I've used the word transformational
a few times in this conversation.
I don't use it lightly.
Y'all are doing incredible things over there
in Redmond and beyond.
And there's a new,
it's just a beat of a new drum over there
and it's fun to watch.
And I look forward to seeing more from you all
in the near future.
Well, thank you so much.
Appreciate it. Thanks for having me on the show, Kevin. It's a dream. It's a treat.
Awesome.
Well, that was Kevin's conversation with Chase Jarvis. So I was really inspired by that
conversation. I'm somebody who has
more of a creative than technical background, at least academically. And so a lot of this really
resonated with me, especially when you were kind of, when you two were discussing creativity as
habit. I thought that that was really powerful because I think that a lot of people do go into
creative pursuits thinking that it has to be like this instant on thing.
Like I'm either good at it or I'm not. And there is a habit aspect to it that I think is really
important. Yeah, I totally agree. I mean, I certainly take this approach with my children
where I'm less concerned about the particular creative thing that they're doing and more that they are just doing something creative.
And I have two kids, like 10 and 12,
and they have different creative interests.
My daughter is 12 years old, just loves writing
and is a voracious reader.
And so the thing that she spends her creative energy on is writing.
And just, I can watch her get better and better
the more she does it.
And yeah, getting over that activation energy
just to start to like whatever is stopping you,
whether it's fear or like you're worried
that you're not going to be good enough
or that people aren't going to appreciate what you're doing,
if you can get over all of that and just start,
you will get better and better.
And that's the thing where just indulging in that habit is so important.
No, I totally agree.
It's interesting because I have a lot of people who still to this day
ask me for advice on how to get started writing and how do you do this? How are you good at this? And that's always my advice, which is similar to what you and Chase were talking about, just start. And I say to people who want to write, just write, do it. The more you do it, the more familiar you'll feel. It doesn't matter what it's about. It doesn't matter. You know, make it part of your day. Before I was a journalist and had to do it every day to get ready for that,
I used to journal and I used to write every single day, didn't matter what it was, whether it was
snippets of poetry or screenplay or whatever. And I'm convinced that that's how I worked that
muscle. And I think the same is true for anything else. I'm sure with you and your photography
or with your woodwork stuff, just the very factor of doing it makes you better at it.
And that's certainly true, as you can attest to, to coding.
I mean, that's legitimately how we all get better at it,
is just by doing it over and over again.
Yeah. Not only will you get better at it,
it's easier to start the more that you do it.
Yeah.
So I had a very similar experience writing. My PhD advisor told
me that I should be writing every day. And I'm like, what do I write about? It's like, doesn't
matter. Just like set up a discipline, like find a place, find a time, just go write. Like even if
it's typing someone else's words, just get into the habit of doing it.
It really helped.
It got me habituated to this whole process
where he was doing it
because he was getting me ready to write a dissertation,
and to get into the habit of being able to produce a lot of written output,
which is a lot of what being an academic is.
And just having that habit was crucial.
And I think it's true for anything,
like whether you're a coder or whether you want
to be a creative cook and make a great meal once a day,
whether you're a flower arranger, whatever it is,
there's so many ways to express that creativity.
But the only way that anyone's ever going to know how creative you are is like, you just
got to do it. Yeah. You have to get out of your head and actually, you know, do it. And it can
be daunting, but as, as you said, I think the more that you do it, the easier it becomes and the less
daunting and scary it is. So, yeah. And the, and the more you realize how things are connected, that being creative in one thing helps you be creative in another.
And I think one of the things that Chase said that's really just sort of practical advice, no matter what you are,
even if you don't have the aspiration to earn your living through some sort of creative practice. Like we're all trying to create a life and like you want it to be a good and
meaningful and fulfilling life. And so, yeah,
just being creative in general,
I think helps you just live that more fulfilling purposeful life.
Yeah, I totally agree with that. I totally agree with that.
I think that's a great place to, to end this.
So that's it for the show today.
Thank you to Chase Jarvis for your creative inspiration.
And if you have anything that you would like to share with us,
email us at behindthetech at microsoft.com.
Thanks for listening.
See you next time.