I came upon this in a book I've been reading:
The Musician's Way: A Guide to Practice, Performance, and Wellness by Gerald Klickstein.
www.themusiciansway.com . It's as appropriate to music as it is to content creation, and it's something that everyone here should think about whether they are creating routes or other assets. This particular section I am reading, is located in a chapter relating to problem solving which is very much part of what we do here as well.
Recognize a problem
If problem recognition strikes you as an easy step, think again. "Creativity can be as much a process of finding problems as solving them," wrote creativity consultant Ken Robinson....
To recognize problems, musicians need keen perceptual skills. (Substitute content creator here). Yet perceptions are fallible. Anyone is likely to conclude that no problems exist when in fact various defects circling beneath the radar. Worse still, if musicians. believe that their perceptions are impeccable, they may turn away from noticing faults to avoid upsetting their glorified self-images.
Now this paragraph hit home...
Problem recognition begins with humility,
with acceptance of the fact that you might be missing something. Assuming that flagrant flaws already set off your alarms, you now need ways to detect less-obvious weaknesses in your music (content creating process), ones that you could overlook if you weren't attuned to the fine details...
(Klickstein, 2009, pgs. 70-72).
In other words, listen to the critics of your work as they will point what's wrong and will assist you in making the stuff better. Without someone pointing out the faults, we will generate the same errors all the time.
John