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Priceless career tips from inspiring creative women to help you get ahead

Every creative career is littered with mistakes and learning things the hard way. And that鈥檚 as it should be. But there鈥檚 no reason you can鈥檛 learn things the easy way, too.

Illustration by [Jane Bowyer](http://bowyerjane.co.uk), commissioned by 99精品视频 for International Women's Day 2019

Illustration by , commissioned by 99精品视频 for International Women's Day 2019

In this post, we鈥檝e teamed up with 鈥 the current account for freelancers and self-employed people 鈥 to bring you a selection of game-changing tips from brilliant female founders and creatives.

These tips will help to boost your career and aid you in achieving your creative goals.

1. No one will make your dreams come true but you

"Whatever it is that you think you want to do, and whatever it is that you think stands between you and that, stop making excuses. You can do anything." 鈥 Katia Beauchamp, co-founder and CEO of Birchbox

Beauchamp鈥檚 tip is the starting point for any creative career: it鈥檚 all down to you. That can be scary, especially early on, when you鈥檙e used to having parents or teachers to catch you when you fall. When the knockbacks subsequently come (and they will), it鈥檚 easy to shrug and give up. But let鈥檚 face it, you only have one life. So pick yourself up and keep forging your path ahead. As Beauchamp says, as long as you鈥檙e determined, nothing can stop you.

2. You can learn to conquer your fears

"Fearlessness is like a muscle. I know from my own life that the more I exercise it, the more natural it becomes to not let my fears run me.鈥 鈥 Arianna Huffington, editor-in-chief of Huffington Post Media Group

Everyone, in every creative field, feels 鈥榯he fear鈥. To take one example, even the most world-famous and experienced actors talk about the bag of nerves they become before they take to the stage. So whether it鈥檚 an important presentation or a job interview, the only thing to do is recognise your fears, confront them and ideally, harness that all nervous energy into something positive. And as Huffington points out, the more you do so, the easier over time it becomes.

3. Don鈥檛 ask for permission

"The question isn鈥檛 who鈥檚 going to let me; it鈥檚 who is going to stop me.鈥 鈥 Ayn Rand, writer and philosopher

We live in a rules-based society, and whenever you do something new, it鈥檚 natural to ask permission from someone. But to truly create something new, you need to escape that mindset. People are naturally conservative (with a small c), so whether you鈥檙e experimenting with a new colour scheme for a web design or inventing a new type of bicycle, ask permission and the answer will probably be 鈥榥o鈥. So don鈥檛 ask: just do it anyway, and see where the cards fall.

4. Hard work is compulsory

"I never dreamed about success. I worked for it.鈥 鈥 Est茅e Lauder

Reality shows like X-Factor and Fame Academy often give the impression that you can become an overnight success if you get the right break. In reality, the 鈥榮upermarket checkout girl鈥 who wins those shows has often been working hard as a professional singer for some years; we don鈥檛 hear about it on the programme because that would spoil the illusion. And it鈥檚 the same whatever creative career you enter: don鈥檛 expect things to fall into your lap. Decades of hard work are invariably necessary for success, so get used to it.

5. Stay flexible in your thinking

"Option A is not available. So let鈥檚 kick the sh** out of option B.鈥 鈥 Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook

It鈥檚 essential to stay focused on your goal, but that doesn鈥檛 mean there aren鈥檛 multiple ways to get there. For example, if you've been turned down for that university graphic design course, there鈥檚 nothing to stop you self-teaching through books and online videos, and then freelancing once you鈥檙e ready. Be as creative in forging your career path as you are in your actual creative work, and you should go far.

6. Be emphatic

"People respond well to those that are sure of what they want.鈥 鈥 Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of American Vogue

There鈥檚 nothing more off-putting in a job interview than someone who seems uncertain in their answers. Even if you give what the interviewer thinks are the wrong answers, being confident - although not cocky - and outlining a clear and consistent vision is always preferable. Stick to this throughout your career, and you鈥檒l find that, even if you rub some people up the wrong way, others will flock to you. If you continue to be unsure of yourself, however, and try to please everybody, you'll probably end up pleasing no one.

7. You need to know where you鈥檙e going

"So often people are working hard at the wrong thing. Working on the right thing is probably more important than working hard.鈥 鈥 Caterina Fake, Co-founder of Flickr

While Anna Wintour鈥檚 advice, above, is that it鈥檚 important to stick to your guns, that doesn鈥檛 mean you should be dogmatic to the extreme. When you know a specific project isn鈥檛 working, or a particular team or client isn鈥檛 right for you, pivoting or bailing altogether can be the most positive thing you can do for your career. There鈥檚 no hard and fast rule on when to do this, but listen to your instinct, ask advice from others, and be prepared to do a 180 when it feels right.

8. Be open to change and learn as you go

"The road to success is always under construction." 鈥 Lily Tomlin, actress, comedian, writer and producer

Lily Tomlin鈥檚 insightful quote echoes the famous line from John Lennon, 鈥淟ife is what happens when you鈥檙e busy making other plans.鈥 In other words, whatever detailed plans you make for your life and career, the one thing you can be almost certain of is that they won鈥檛 pan out in the way you intended. The important thing is that when things go wrong, you don鈥檛 get disheartened but treat every problem like a new opportunity. After all, if life was predictable, wouldn鈥檛 that be dull?

9. Push through your panic

"I always did something I was a little not ready to do. I think that鈥檚 how you grow. When there's that moment of 'Wow, I'm not sure I can do this,' and you push through those moments, that's when you have a breakthrough.鈥 鈥 Marissa Mayer, former CEO of Yahoo

We won鈥檛 lie: there will be moments in your creative career (if you鈥檙e doing it right) when you feel like you鈥檝e bitten off more than you can chew. That might be agreeing to an impossible-seeming deadline, working with a collaborator who you鈥檙e intimidated by, or promising a level of creativity you鈥檙e not sure you鈥檙e capable of. What you need to remember is that everyone has these moments, and it鈥檚 a natural part of your career progression. Those who stare down impostor syndrome and get on with it are the ones who succeed.

10. Gradually build your confidence

"Confidence is achieved through that willingness to continually put yourself in vulnerable situations. Success or failure has nothing to do with it." 鈥 Debbie Millman, graphic designer and founder of Design Matters

There鈥檚 no 鈥榤agic鈥 way to get confidence: it only comes as the result of a hard slog through trying circumstances. Play it safe - avoiding difficult decisions and challenging projects - and you鈥檒l never get there. Alternatively, you can follow the advice of Debbie Millman, as revealed in this interview and right dive in. Although things may well get tough, you will emerge a more confident, grounded and successful creative.

11. Making mistakes is a way to grow

"It's through mistakes that you actually can grow. You have to get bad in order to get good." 鈥 Paula Scher, graphic designer and Pentagram partner

Wouldn鈥檛 you like to go through your whole career without ever making mistakes? Sounds good, but as Paula Scher points out, if you did that, you鈥檇 never progress. So when an error happens, don鈥檛 beat yourself up: embrace it and learn from. Because that鈥檚 what鈥檚 separates the career successes from the career failures.

12. You define "success鈥, not them

鈥淪uccess isn鈥檛 about how your life looks to others. It鈥檚 about how it feels to you. We realised that being successful isn鈥檛 about being impressive; it鈥檚 about being inspired. That鈥檚 what it means to be true to yourself.鈥 鈥 Michelle Obama

When we鈥檙e younger, we have a particular idea of what success looks like, which is usually informed by what our peers and superiors think. When you get older, though, you realise that having the high earning job with the big house and career may not be what you want out of life. Maybe success to you is doing something you love, regardless of financial benefit. It could be working fewer hours and having a great work-life balance. Whatever it is, the important thing is to ignore what other people think entirely and work towards a version of success that鈥檚 right for you.

13. Embrace what makes you special

鈥淲hatever you do, be different 鈥 that was the advice my mother gave me, and I can鈥檛 think of better advice for an entrepreneur. If you鈥檙e different, you will stand out.鈥 鈥 Anita Roddick, founder of The Body Shop

Many people see creative success as emulating others they admire, and that鈥檚 fine. But there comes the point as a creative when you have to become more than just a carbon copy of someone else. Be inspired by others, for sure, but it鈥檚 vital to focus on what makes you and your work unique. Whatever that is, it鈥檚 what will make people notice you and want to commission you. Without it, you鈥檒l vanish into a crowd.

14. Put in the hours

鈥淩epetition makes reputation and reputation makes customers.鈥 鈥 Elizabeth Arden

People often perceive creative success as a one-off event: a hit film or song, or a piece of work that wins awards or goes viral. But you don鈥檛 want to spend your whole career looking back at your 鈥榤oment鈥. Real success, as Elizabeth Arden suggests, is about having a reputation for continuous good work, and that means putting in the hours. This may not be what most (non-creative) people think a 鈥済lamorous life鈥 is about. But genuinely creative people know that doing what you love isn鈥檛 arduous work at all.

15. Keep your integrity

鈥淒on鈥檛 compromise yourself. You are all you鈥檝e got.鈥 鈥 Janis Joplin

When a great deal of money or attention is involved, it鈥檚 often tempting to accept a commission that clashes with your ethics. But as Janis Joplin says, compromising your integrity is a sure-fire way to risk your entire career. Reputations are built on consistency and authenticity, so if a job feels wrong, don鈥檛 do it. Stick to your guns, and better opportunities will be sure to come along over time.

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