How did they get so many eyeballs on their projects within (what seems like) a very short amount of time?
They were all doing a very small selection of actions. They continue to do this.
They practiced daily for a *very* long amount of time to an audience of nobody.
That daily practice attracted somebody.
That person would share it with somebody else.
The day after you had 2 people watching.
Repeat every day.
Day after day they built their audiences through making a commitment to make daily content.
Show up, whether they wanted to or not.
Be willing to produce bad work to get to the good work.
Build in public daily.
Over time that daily practice can build into hundreds of thousands—if not millions—of fans.
I want to show you how to do the same with visuals.
Why should you listen to me?
I'm Craig. I've been a professional designer for over 15 years. I've ran my own design agency in the UK for over 10 years. I've made thousands of visuals to a professional standard for many many years.
Over the last year I've become obsessed with the idea of Visual Twitter.
More importantly, I have completed lots of daily projects. Most of them I run for a year.
I designed a poster a day for 365 days. I improved my skills, became a better designer, built an online following and put on an exhibition of my posters.
I took a photo a day for 365 days. I found 20 other people to do it with me, and built a social experiment around people doing stuff more regularly.
I designed a 12" record sleeve every day for 365 days. I failed this one at day 142. I'll tell you more about that in the book.
I learned how to make a podcast by making one every day for 365 days. On day one, I didn't even know how to make a podcast and had never previously recorded my voice. On day 365, I'd created 3 shows and had learned how to record, produce, market and make a