"I know I can. I know I can..." Pushing a project through on the internet is like laying one rail at a time for a train with no road map.
Building a website is a long process that has one goal in mind, to launch. The launch date is built on shifting ground, one snag slows down the project or a change in plans sets a new direction and the track laid before is scrapped. It's never a straight line, it is a spider's web of round abouts and cul de sacs, the project weaves in and out with many lined coming in and ending up going nowhere.
A website is composed of many moving parts, each one controlled by a different job description, one cannot move forward without the others, much like a 10 legged potato sack race. Happenstance can bring a new idea that will make a sweeping change in the internet but most of the time it is ideas cobbled together to make a variation of the same three piece suit. A meeting of the people behind a website will show a diverse group of people that would never be lumped into the same group anywhere else, but that is where the ideas spring from a group that shares little in common except the idea of what a website is and that as a team they must move forward together.
Building a website is like a train moving one rail at a time, each rail brings you closer to your final destination, you just don't know how many rails or where that final stop is. All you can say is "I know I can, I know I can".
Image: Ophelia Chong / A beautiful web


Putting together a website can be a struggle, especially when presented with a clean slate, too many ideas, and no idea where to start. But my, what a payoff! What website are you working on? Whatever it is, keep on chuggin'!
This post rocks. You took our conversation from that podcast and made it incredibly clear. I’m going to practice it so I can be much more eloquent.
ed hardy
Hey Maxwell, I am working on a series of websites for a corporate client (always in the news). And it's an amazing train ride so far. :O)) thanks for commenting and visiting.