This post originally appeared on the Buffer blog. At any given time, I have a side project running. It’s often a new blog or a Tumblr or a book or a newsletter. Sometimes I try to design WordPress ...
You built something nights and weekends. A few people use it. One even paid you. Now you’re stuck in the most psychologically ...
Most people take up side hustles to make some money on the side — a little extra cash to help make the ends meet. Others work side gigs as passion projects because they think that with a few investors ...
Whether born from creativity, a convenient opportunity, or boredom, side projects have been popular since the early days of music. Often overlapping with the term “supergroup,” these side quests ...
Tech leaders’ opinions are divided on the importance and even desirability of allowing developers to work on side projects. Some feel such projects can distract team members and potentially lead to ...
Side-projects are sanctuaries in heavy metal. For established artists who might feel creatively confined by their day job, a second outlet with little or no commercial pressure can offer an oasis of ...
That question keeps coming back to me. Especially now, as the world watches the ripple effects of the USAID funding freeze and the relentless wave of climate disasters. Tech companies sit right at the ...
Side projects—They’re often the musical groups that famous artists look to in order to get a different side of their musical expression out into the world. One that somehow for some reason doesn’t fit ...