On Not Solving Things You’ve Already Solved
We re-solve problems a lot.
And it’s a bad habit.
See, we’ve solved a lot of problems already. Things like what email or creative tool to use, or how to communicate with a team.
These don’t need solving over and over again. Yet new developments often tend to introduce as much re-learning as they do progress.
For fun, I tried to work out when I started using a handful of solutions…
…Here’s what I found:
- Made websites for 24 years.
- Used Photoshop for graphics for 20 years.
- Ran on macOS for 17 years.
- Managed assets with Bridge for 17 years.
- Communicated on Skype for 17 years.
- Edited photos with Lightroom for 16 years
- Drawn digitally with Wacom tablets for 15 years.
- Stored photos with Flickr for 15 years.
- Shot on Canon cameras for 15 years.
- Managed email with Gmail for 14 years.
- Socialised on Twitter for 14 years.
- Browsed with Chrome for 13 years.
There’s absolutely a time and a place for learning and exploring new tools.
I love innovation, and I when real meaningful innovations are discovered.
For the rest, consider not solving things you’ve already solved.