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The
Maker
craft

Care to Fail

The Maker craft is about doing. It is about being curious about the unarticulated, emotional needs of the actors in a system, and then designing and developing interventions and solutions while also articulating the underlying story that is emerging.

Applying the Maker craft involves mastering the skills of creating, producing, developing, doing, prototyping and pivoting. Makers are comfortable experimenting with new ideas and surfacing assumptions in the process. They bring the story together.

🌱  The 8 Crafts is a living resource of stories, tools and practices. There is more to come.

Origins

The Maker’s foundation in The 8 Crafts

Design Thinking

Design thinking is about harnessing creativity in order to foster collaboration and solve problems. It is about constant iteration and taking a human-centered approach.

South

The South represents summer, a time of busyness, focus, and hard work. In this phase, we harness our sense of focus in order to fully develop the projects we’re working on.

Outcomes

When The Maker guides change

Builds and tests solutions

The Maker spurs us into action, designing and building solutions and interventions in an iterative way, constantly adjusting, experimenting, and prototyping based on new information.

Creates with beauty and function

The Maker is constantly probing, surfacing new assumptions, and seeking out unarticulated needs in order build solutions that work, beautifully

Guiding Questions

Love the questions themselves

Questions are pathways to wisdom. Guiding questions spark conversations that shift how we see ourselves and how we relate to the world around us.

What is the most beautiful solution?
The Maker answers
What problem will we solve?
The Maker answers
Who will be the beneficiaries of our solution?
The Maker answers
What are their (un)articulated fears and dreams?
The Maker answers
Given everything we know, how might solve the problem?
The Maker answers
What would be the simplest way to test our next make-or-break assumption?
The Maker answers

Leadership Practices

Develop your
inner capacities

Leadership is not just the actions you take, it is a quality of being. The way we cultivate our inner state of being enables us and others to do our most creative work.

The 8 Crafts practices are inspired on the open source framework of the Inner Development Goals

Application

Get started

Weave together a selection of practices and tools from this craft to achieve outcomes and progress your initiative.

1
Choose your niche
Roll up your sleeves and prepare to dive in fully. You are the doer, the one who gets things done. Be unafraid of risk—but also, be meticulous, clever, and detail-oriented. Know who your audience is and design for them. Feel into their needs, their unarticulated desires. Be selective—you can’t please everyone. It’s ok to throw spaghetti at the wall, but make sure you’re throwing the right pasta in the right direction first.
2
Develop prototypes
Now the fun part begins: experimentation. Don your white lab coat (figuratively, at least) and start designing your first prototype. Validate your assumptions, become aware of the risks, and mitigate as needed. Start small, be creative, prioritise learning over success. Test only what you need to in order to confidently take the next step. Record your insights in detail. Evaluate along every step of the way. Adjust, iterate, pivot, persevere.
3
Elevate your game
Time to take it to the next level. Become a disruptor. Think further than just the features and benefits of your offering and how they solve someone's problem. Consider the user experience, your brand, communication style and pricing. Don’t make the user come to you—meet them where they are. Conduct a thorough audit of your offering. Scan the competitive landscape. Assess your impact. Make a move.
4
Keep validating
The testing never ends—and it never will. More experiments will lead to more failures. Embrace them. Treat mistakes as learning experiences. Maintain a positive outlook. Share stories of failure—throw a party! Ensure that everyone feels comfortable sharing their mistakes, their errors, their ‘oopsies.’ Create a culture of learning that is fast-paced, fun, and friendly. Track your progress. Fail forward.
5
Maker craft outcomes
Successful application of the Maker craft will result in an ever-evolving prototype and an iterative and creative process of experimentation. You will become adept at taking in new information and adapting accordingly. The result will be a beautiful, effective solution that addresses the unarticulated needs of your user base.

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