SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 37
How to Cut the Tether and
Work from Anywhere
Jon Jones
Art Production Director, smArtist
jonjones.com
Who is Jon Jones?
●16 years in game dev, 9 of it remote
●Worked on 50+ titles
●Specializing in freelance outsourcing management and
building remote teams
●Worked with Epic Games, Avalanche Studios, 2K
Games, NCsoft, Sony Online Entertainment, Playdom,
Riot Games, and more.
●Much has been written about the tech,
tools, home setups, and philosophy of this.
●I’m not here to repeat them.
●Here are the less-explored gritty details.
Cutting the Tether
●Same job as now, except from home?
●Freelance from contract to contract?
●Make your own game, freelance to pay bills?
What do you really want to do?
Be open and easy to find.
●Communication and ubiquity are key.
● Identify primary channel of raw communication.
● Email? Slack? Skype? Hangouts? Text? Smoke signal?
●BE WHERE THEY LOOK FIRST.
●Have unquestioned mastery of all relevant dev tools.
● Where are submissionsdeliveries expected?
● Where will highest priority contributions be noticed first?
● How can your thoroughness be easy to verify?
● These are not shell games. This is to verify your worth.
●“I just want to spend more time with my cats.”
●Sad truth:
● Sometimes orgs simply won’t allow remote work.
● Management by walking around is the norm.
● Control = see, speak to, observe you physically
● Worst case, remote work = severed senses
● This leads to anxiety. Anxious boss = bad boss.
●You can practice a lot of techniques onsite first!
Scenario 1: Same job from home
●Your job is to BE WHERE THEY LOOK FIRST.
● If they wonder where you or your work are, you screwed up.
●Actively compensate for being out of sight.
●Learn how to get answers from afar, fast.
● Which coworkers ignore emailIM? Who’s always texting?
● If source control is down, where else does info live?
● It’s late and you need help. Who always stays late?
●Challenge yourself constantly on being resourceful.
Project yourself remotely.
●When working remotely, you are responsible for:
● Hardware
● Storage
● Connectivity
● High responsiveness
● Consistent productivity
●It’s a marathon, not a sprint.
●I’d prefer 90% every day to 110%, 50%, 110%, 50%
●Strive to be a high-performing predictable resource
Accept greater responsibility.
●Plan your moves in advance.
● Step up at work and perform better than ever. Sustain it.
● Increase mastery of tools and tech.
● Write about your craft. Blog and publish!
● Speak at conferences, local and national.
● Practice telepresence while onsite. Be a visible contributor.
● Increase your stature inside and out of the company.
●This will make your request to work from home an easier “yes”
Lay groundwork: Increase your value.
●Ask employer about work-from-home policy.
●Clearly define what “performing to expectations” means.
You need goalposts.
●Suggest 1 daywk to start, review in 3 months
●Next, ask for 2 days per week
●Be consistent, predictable, and dependable
● Don’t be sneaky. Anything except full honesty will ruin the
opportunity.
How to ask?
●“I’m not looking to be tied down right now.”
●Sad truth:
● Freelancing is HARD.
● You will spend ~50% of your time doing biz dev.
● Doing taxes for freelancing sucks.
● Chasing clients for payment sucks.
● You’re in customer service now, and that might suck.
●You will truly appreciate what admin, legal, finance, and biz dev
departments silently do.
Scenario 2: Freelancer life!
●Find out what kind of side work your employer permits,
if any.
●Be prolific. Publish and broadcast your work.
● Start months before you want to go fulltime remote.
● This is a marketing campaign focused on you.
● Establish credibility as an expert. Network. Mingle.
Contract work and offers will gradually come to you.
● Never stop doing this once you start.
Where do I start?
Where to find clients
●Stay in touch with former employers.
●Contact old bosses and ask about work.
●If no, ask for recommendations or leads.
●Stay up-to-date with game dev news.
● Contact new studios opening up.
● Create an “offering my services” email template
and use it. Email outreach is your life now.
●Preparation
●Discipline
●Security
●Marketing
●Tenacity
Cutting the Tether in Five Acts:
●Decide: Mobile or work from home?
●Buy your own equipment
●Broad software proficiency
Preparation
Decide: Mobile or work from home?
●Mobile is good for:
●Producers, PMs, and directors
●Work involving travel
●Cool cities with lots of cafescoworking spaces
●Work at home is good for:
●Artists or devs with serious hardware needs
●VR developers
●Parents that can work with minimal interruption
Buy your own equipment
●You are responsible for all your hardware
● Expensive, but absolutely worth it
●Don’t go cheap
● Invest in your ongoing relevance
● Deduct it on your taxes!
●A dedicated work machine is ideal
●You use whatever tools your clients use
● NEVER MIX WORK AND PERSONAL ACCOUNTS!
● Create new work-only accounts for these services:
●Google, Slack, Trello, Skype, Dropbox, Box, OneDrive
● Pay for and license all your own software
● Common tools used in remote work:
●Perforce, Jira, Basecamp, Trello, Hansoft, SVN
Broad software proficiency
Discipline
●Ubiquity
●Workspace
●Responsiveness
●Disaster readiness
●Use the services your clients use
● “You use this app? I’m already on it. Here’s my work
account info.”
● Integrate with the team in the tools where they work
● Never ask a client sign up for anything - you adapt.
●Establish a powerful, reliable remote presence to
build their trust in you
Ubiquity
●Set aside a dedicated workspace
● Do not work and play in the same area
●That is purgatory: never fully working or playing
● Remove attention-distracting items
● Establish work-time boundaries with family
●You can’t work remotely with constant distraction
●Mismanaging this weakens both work and family relationships
●If you say yes to every contract, you will quickly hate your life
●Learning to balance this takes time
Workspace
Responsiveness
●Always:
● Respond quickly and follow up when you say you will
● Communicate in the channels they expect
● Show up early and dress well for remote meetings
●Remote work on an ongoing basis is earned
● When working onsite, attendance means “I see that seat is
full.” When working offsite, attendance means “they
consistently respond to us quickly.”
●Realistic scenarios to plan for:
● Power outage
● Internet  cell service outage
● Hard drive crash
● Stolen hard drive  laptop
● Hospital or family emergency
● Non-specific hardware failure
Disaster Readiness
Security
●Encrypt your drives
●Use a Password Manager
●Two-factor authentication on everything
●Virtual Private Network on everything
●Professional website
●LinkedIn
●Networking
●Publicity
Marketing
Professional website
●Use your name or a new company name
● Short, easy to remember, professional
● Get the .com or .net
● Avoid weird TLDs (.biz, .radio, .xxx, etc)
●Summarize your services
● 3 - 5 bulletpoints. Ask friends for input
●List prominent projects and employers
● Only list roles where you did what you’re selling
●Being on LinkedIn is not optional
● Top biz networking site in the world
● First place people with money will look you up
● No LinkedIn presence? You look riskyunprofessional
●Polish your LinkedIn presence
● Update rolesdescriptions, spellcheck, use proper tense
● Give and request recommendations
● Add projects, link to coworkers on those projects
LinkedIn, part 1
●Connect to your coworkers
●Connect to recruiters (this expands your network reach)
●Always add people you know, and be polite
●Join relevant LinkedIn user groups
●Get in the habit of cold emailing and introducing yourself
● Don’t be shy. Rip off the band-aid. You must be constantly
communicating and networking
●Follow industry goings-on with LinkedIn
LinkedIn, part 2
●Attend trade shows constantly
● GDC is the highest value, in my experience
● Also XDS, E3, Gamescom, PAX, Steam Dev Days
●Look up and join local game dev user groups
● Attend meetups, game jams, workshops, game nights, beer
nights, drinkups, job fairs
●Always have business cards ready
● Zazzle and Moo offer great quality cards and designs
Networking
●Publish articles on your area of focus
● Publish on your site, cross-publish to LinkedIn
●Apply to speak at industry events
● Local IGDA chapters are a great place to start
●Publish original content frequently
● Do reddit AMAs, Twitter Q&As, request a guest spot on
industry podcasts, be active and helpful on industry forums
Publicity
●Constant biz dev
●Taxes and expenses
●Cabin fever
Tenacity
●Expect 40% of your time to be biz dev
●Always be networking, always be selling
●You work to secure next month’s income, not this
month’s
●When employed, this is invisible to you
● Respect founders, admin, finance, and legal
Constant biz dev
●Retaining clients means ongoing customer service.
●Understand what “doing a good job” means on a per-client
basis
● They may define it differently. Be explicit. Only their opinion matters.
You’re in customer service now
●Be responsive, aware, present, and always check in.
●Always BE WHERE THEY LOOK FIRST.
●Keep in touch with old clients.
●Manage time wisely. Don’t get greedy.
● Shiny new gig is tempting, but serve your existing client well
How to retain clients
●Work with an accountant from DAY ONE
● Do everything they say
● Remember, taxes are not withheld now
●Start a tax savings account for paying taxes
●Be frugal and focus on savings
● Plan for lean times
● Budget for disasters
Taxes and expenses
●A dedicated workspace helps you focus
●Get plenty of exercise and sunlight
●Create healthy daily rituals
● Do yoga, walk your dog, cook for yourself, take language
lessons, develop a new hobby
●Maintain strict separation of work  life
Cabin Fever
●Any questions?
Additional talksresources at www.jonjones.com
Jon Jones
Art Production Director, smArtist
jon@gameartproducer.com  @jonjones
Thanks for listening!

More Related Content

Recently uploaded

UX in an Agile World - Scrum Gathering
UX in an Agile World -   Scrum GatheringUX in an Agile World -   Scrum Gathering
UX in an Agile World - Scrum GatheringKaizenko
 
Create the recognition your teams deserve.pptx
Create the recognition your teams deserve.pptxCreate the recognition your teams deserve.pptx
Create the recognition your teams deserve.pptxStephen Sitton
 
Project Management Professional (PMP)® from PMI
Project Management Professional (PMP)® from PMIProject Management Professional (PMP)® from PMI
Project Management Professional (PMP)® from PMITasnur Tonoy
 
Principles of Management analyze how Zara manage
Principles of Management analyze how Zara managePrinciples of Management analyze how Zara manage
Principles of Management analyze how Zara managessuser4899c8
 
Organization design fashion or fit by Henry Mintzberg
Organization design fashion or fit by Henry MintzbergOrganization design fashion or fit by Henry Mintzberg
Organization design fashion or fit by Henry MintzbergSana Fatima
 
Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...
Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...
Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...Travis Hills MN
 
Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)
Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)
Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)Kristi Rohtsalu
 
Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...
Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...
Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...kamrulShuva
 

Recently uploaded (8)

UX in an Agile World - Scrum Gathering
UX in an Agile World -   Scrum GatheringUX in an Agile World -   Scrum Gathering
UX in an Agile World - Scrum Gathering
 
Create the recognition your teams deserve.pptx
Create the recognition your teams deserve.pptxCreate the recognition your teams deserve.pptx
Create the recognition your teams deserve.pptx
 
Project Management Professional (PMP)® from PMI
Project Management Professional (PMP)® from PMIProject Management Professional (PMP)® from PMI
Project Management Professional (PMP)® from PMI
 
Principles of Management analyze how Zara manage
Principles of Management analyze how Zara managePrinciples of Management analyze how Zara manage
Principles of Management analyze how Zara manage
 
Organization design fashion or fit by Henry Mintzberg
Organization design fashion or fit by Henry MintzbergOrganization design fashion or fit by Henry Mintzberg
Organization design fashion or fit by Henry Mintzberg
 
Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...
Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...
Travis Hills of Minnesota Leads Livestock Water and Energy in Sustainable Inn...
 
Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)
Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)
Risk Management in Banks - Overview (May 2024)
 
Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...
Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...
Presentation On "Yusuf Ibn Tashfin" a true leader (1061 to 1106)_ prepared by...
 

Featured

PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024Neil Kimberley
 
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)contently
 
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024Albert Qian
 
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie InsightsSocial Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie InsightsKurio // The Social Media Age(ncy)
 
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024Search Engine Journal
 
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summarySpeakerHub
 
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd Clark Boyd
 
Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next Tessa Mero
 
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search IntentGoogle's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search IntentLily Ray
 
Time Management & Productivity - Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity -  Best PracticesTime Management & Productivity -  Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity - Best PracticesVit Horky
 
The six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project managementThe six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project managementMindGenius
 
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...RachelPearson36
 
Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...
Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...
Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...Applitools
 
12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at Work
12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at Work12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at Work
12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at WorkGetSmarter
 
Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...
Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...
Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...DevGAMM Conference
 
Barbie - Brand Strategy Presentation
Barbie - Brand Strategy PresentationBarbie - Brand Strategy Presentation
Barbie - Brand Strategy PresentationErica Santiago
 

Featured (20)

PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
 
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
 
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
 
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie InsightsSocial Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
 
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
 
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
 
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
 
Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next
 
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search IntentGoogle's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
 
How to have difficult conversations
How to have difficult conversations How to have difficult conversations
How to have difficult conversations
 
Introduction to Data Science
Introduction to Data ScienceIntroduction to Data Science
Introduction to Data Science
 
Time Management & Productivity - Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity -  Best PracticesTime Management & Productivity -  Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity - Best Practices
 
The six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project managementThe six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project management
 
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
 
Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...
Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...
Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...
 
12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at Work
12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at Work12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at Work
12 Ways to Increase Your Influence at Work
 
ChatGPT webinar slides
ChatGPT webinar slidesChatGPT webinar slides
ChatGPT webinar slides
 
More than Just Lines on a Map: Best Practices for U.S Bike Routes
More than Just Lines on a Map: Best Practices for U.S Bike RoutesMore than Just Lines on a Map: Best Practices for U.S Bike Routes
More than Just Lines on a Map: Best Practices for U.S Bike Routes
 
Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...
Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...
Ride the Storm: Navigating Through Unstable Periods / Katerina Rudko (Belka G...
 
Barbie - Brand Strategy Presentation
Barbie - Brand Strategy PresentationBarbie - Brand Strategy Presentation
Barbie - Brand Strategy Presentation
 

How to Cut the Tether and Work from Anywhere

  • 1. How to Cut the Tether and Work from Anywhere Jon Jones Art Production Director, smArtist jonjones.com
  • 2. Who is Jon Jones? ●16 years in game dev, 9 of it remote ●Worked on 50+ titles ●Specializing in freelance outsourcing management and building remote teams ●Worked with Epic Games, Avalanche Studios, 2K Games, NCsoft, Sony Online Entertainment, Playdom, Riot Games, and more.
  • 3. ●Much has been written about the tech, tools, home setups, and philosophy of this. ●I’m not here to repeat them. ●Here are the less-explored gritty details. Cutting the Tether
  • 4. ●Same job as now, except from home? ●Freelance from contract to contract? ●Make your own game, freelance to pay bills? What do you really want to do?
  • 5. Be open and easy to find. ●Communication and ubiquity are key. ● Identify primary channel of raw communication. ● Email? Slack? Skype? Hangouts? Text? Smoke signal? ●BE WHERE THEY LOOK FIRST. ●Have unquestioned mastery of all relevant dev tools. ● Where are submissionsdeliveries expected? ● Where will highest priority contributions be noticed first? ● How can your thoroughness be easy to verify? ● These are not shell games. This is to verify your worth.
  • 6. ●“I just want to spend more time with my cats.” ●Sad truth: ● Sometimes orgs simply won’t allow remote work. ● Management by walking around is the norm. ● Control = see, speak to, observe you physically ● Worst case, remote work = severed senses ● This leads to anxiety. Anxious boss = bad boss. ●You can practice a lot of techniques onsite first! Scenario 1: Same job from home
  • 7. ●Your job is to BE WHERE THEY LOOK FIRST. ● If they wonder where you or your work are, you screwed up. ●Actively compensate for being out of sight. ●Learn how to get answers from afar, fast. ● Which coworkers ignore emailIM? Who’s always texting? ● If source control is down, where else does info live? ● It’s late and you need help. Who always stays late? ●Challenge yourself constantly on being resourceful. Project yourself remotely.
  • 8. ●When working remotely, you are responsible for: ● Hardware ● Storage ● Connectivity ● High responsiveness ● Consistent productivity ●It’s a marathon, not a sprint. ●I’d prefer 90% every day to 110%, 50%, 110%, 50% ●Strive to be a high-performing predictable resource Accept greater responsibility.
  • 9. ●Plan your moves in advance. ● Step up at work and perform better than ever. Sustain it. ● Increase mastery of tools and tech. ● Write about your craft. Blog and publish! ● Speak at conferences, local and national. ● Practice telepresence while onsite. Be a visible contributor. ● Increase your stature inside and out of the company. ●This will make your request to work from home an easier “yes” Lay groundwork: Increase your value.
  • 10. ●Ask employer about work-from-home policy. ●Clearly define what “performing to expectations” means. You need goalposts. ●Suggest 1 daywk to start, review in 3 months ●Next, ask for 2 days per week ●Be consistent, predictable, and dependable ● Don’t be sneaky. Anything except full honesty will ruin the opportunity. How to ask?
  • 11. ●“I’m not looking to be tied down right now.” ●Sad truth: ● Freelancing is HARD. ● You will spend ~50% of your time doing biz dev. ● Doing taxes for freelancing sucks. ● Chasing clients for payment sucks. ● You’re in customer service now, and that might suck. ●You will truly appreciate what admin, legal, finance, and biz dev departments silently do. Scenario 2: Freelancer life!
  • 12. ●Find out what kind of side work your employer permits, if any. ●Be prolific. Publish and broadcast your work. ● Start months before you want to go fulltime remote. ● This is a marketing campaign focused on you. ● Establish credibility as an expert. Network. Mingle. Contract work and offers will gradually come to you. ● Never stop doing this once you start. Where do I start?
  • 13. Where to find clients ●Stay in touch with former employers. ●Contact old bosses and ask about work. ●If no, ask for recommendations or leads. ●Stay up-to-date with game dev news. ● Contact new studios opening up. ● Create an “offering my services” email template and use it. Email outreach is your life now.
  • 15. ●Decide: Mobile or work from home? ●Buy your own equipment ●Broad software proficiency Preparation
  • 16. Decide: Mobile or work from home? ●Mobile is good for: ●Producers, PMs, and directors ●Work involving travel ●Cool cities with lots of cafescoworking spaces ●Work at home is good for: ●Artists or devs with serious hardware needs ●VR developers ●Parents that can work with minimal interruption
  • 17. Buy your own equipment ●You are responsible for all your hardware ● Expensive, but absolutely worth it ●Don’t go cheap ● Invest in your ongoing relevance ● Deduct it on your taxes! ●A dedicated work machine is ideal
  • 18. ●You use whatever tools your clients use ● NEVER MIX WORK AND PERSONAL ACCOUNTS! ● Create new work-only accounts for these services: ●Google, Slack, Trello, Skype, Dropbox, Box, OneDrive ● Pay for and license all your own software ● Common tools used in remote work: ●Perforce, Jira, Basecamp, Trello, Hansoft, SVN Broad software proficiency
  • 20. ●Use the services your clients use ● “You use this app? I’m already on it. Here’s my work account info.” ● Integrate with the team in the tools where they work ● Never ask a client sign up for anything - you adapt. ●Establish a powerful, reliable remote presence to build their trust in you Ubiquity
  • 21. ●Set aside a dedicated workspace ● Do not work and play in the same area ●That is purgatory: never fully working or playing ● Remove attention-distracting items ● Establish work-time boundaries with family ●You can’t work remotely with constant distraction ●Mismanaging this weakens both work and family relationships ●If you say yes to every contract, you will quickly hate your life ●Learning to balance this takes time Workspace
  • 22. Responsiveness ●Always: ● Respond quickly and follow up when you say you will ● Communicate in the channels they expect ● Show up early and dress well for remote meetings ●Remote work on an ongoing basis is earned ● When working onsite, attendance means “I see that seat is full.” When working offsite, attendance means “they consistently respond to us quickly.”
  • 23. ●Realistic scenarios to plan for: ● Power outage ● Internet cell service outage ● Hard drive crash ● Stolen hard drive laptop ● Hospital or family emergency ● Non-specific hardware failure Disaster Readiness
  • 24. Security ●Encrypt your drives ●Use a Password Manager ●Two-factor authentication on everything ●Virtual Private Network on everything
  • 26. Professional website ●Use your name or a new company name ● Short, easy to remember, professional ● Get the .com or .net ● Avoid weird TLDs (.biz, .radio, .xxx, etc) ●Summarize your services ● 3 - 5 bulletpoints. Ask friends for input ●List prominent projects and employers ● Only list roles where you did what you’re selling
  • 27. ●Being on LinkedIn is not optional ● Top biz networking site in the world ● First place people with money will look you up ● No LinkedIn presence? You look riskyunprofessional ●Polish your LinkedIn presence ● Update rolesdescriptions, spellcheck, use proper tense ● Give and request recommendations ● Add projects, link to coworkers on those projects LinkedIn, part 1
  • 28. ●Connect to your coworkers ●Connect to recruiters (this expands your network reach) ●Always add people you know, and be polite ●Join relevant LinkedIn user groups ●Get in the habit of cold emailing and introducing yourself ● Don’t be shy. Rip off the band-aid. You must be constantly communicating and networking ●Follow industry goings-on with LinkedIn LinkedIn, part 2
  • 29. ●Attend trade shows constantly ● GDC is the highest value, in my experience ● Also XDS, E3, Gamescom, PAX, Steam Dev Days ●Look up and join local game dev user groups ● Attend meetups, game jams, workshops, game nights, beer nights, drinkups, job fairs ●Always have business cards ready ● Zazzle and Moo offer great quality cards and designs Networking
  • 30. ●Publish articles on your area of focus ● Publish on your site, cross-publish to LinkedIn ●Apply to speak at industry events ● Local IGDA chapters are a great place to start ●Publish original content frequently ● Do reddit AMAs, Twitter Q&As, request a guest spot on industry podcasts, be active and helpful on industry forums Publicity
  • 31. ●Constant biz dev ●Taxes and expenses ●Cabin fever Tenacity
  • 32. ●Expect 40% of your time to be biz dev ●Always be networking, always be selling ●You work to secure next month’s income, not this month’s ●When employed, this is invisible to you ● Respect founders, admin, finance, and legal Constant biz dev
  • 33. ●Retaining clients means ongoing customer service. ●Understand what “doing a good job” means on a per-client basis ● They may define it differently. Be explicit. Only their opinion matters. You’re in customer service now
  • 34. ●Be responsive, aware, present, and always check in. ●Always BE WHERE THEY LOOK FIRST. ●Keep in touch with old clients. ●Manage time wisely. Don’t get greedy. ● Shiny new gig is tempting, but serve your existing client well How to retain clients
  • 35. ●Work with an accountant from DAY ONE ● Do everything they say ● Remember, taxes are not withheld now ●Start a tax savings account for paying taxes ●Be frugal and focus on savings ● Plan for lean times ● Budget for disasters Taxes and expenses
  • 36. ●A dedicated workspace helps you focus ●Get plenty of exercise and sunlight ●Create healthy daily rituals ● Do yoga, walk your dog, cook for yourself, take language lessons, develop a new hobby ●Maintain strict separation of work life Cabin Fever
  • 37. ●Any questions? Additional talksresources at www.jonjones.com Jon Jones Art Production Director, smArtist jon@gameartproducer.com @jonjones Thanks for listening!