Show Your Work (Austin Kleon) Summary, Notes & Highlights
Get yours here: https://amzn.to/3xjJRL5
🚀 The book in a few sentences
- Share your process and progress online.
- You don't need to be a genius to provide value to others.
- By sharing your work online, you’ll attract an audience of people who care about the same stuff you do - this can be life-changing.
🎨 Impressions
This is one of the three books that most changed my life. It completely changed the way I thought about sharing stuff online and encouraged me to start my blog in January 2016 this was on Medium but I feel like it counts.
Who should read it?
If you’ve got an interest in creativity (of any sort) or entrepreneurship or business (of any sort), you should stop reading this and just read the book.
Even if you don’t have the slightest interest in putting yourself out there in any capacity whatsoever, you should still read this because it’ll open up neural pathways and possibilities that you never knew existed.
☘️ How the book changed me
- It made me more comfortable with sharing online
- It made me generally more comfortable with putting myself 'out there
- It made me realize I don't need to be perfect to help others
✍️ My favorite quotes
- Amateurs know that contributing something is better than contributing nothing. On the spectrum of creative work. The difference between the mediocre and the good is vast. Mediocrity, however, is still on the spectrum. You can move from mediocre to good, in increments. The real gap is between doing nothing and doing something.
- Carving out a space for yourself online, somewhere where you can express yourself and share your work, is still one of the best possible investments you can make with your time
- The minute you learn something, turn around and teach it to others. Share your reading list. Point to helpful reference materials. Create some tutorials and post them online. Use pictures, words, and videos. Take people step-by-step through part of your process. As blogger Kathy Sierra says, “make people better at something they want to be better at”
📒 Summary + Notes
A new way of operating
The world has changed. It’s no longer enough to just make stuff and hope that people find it. You have to be findable. This happens to be one of my maybe regrets. I grew in the middle of the social media boom - but I wasn't able to position myself to take advantage. Mindset just wasn't there. But as they say, the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago, the next best time is now.
Austin teaches us to think of work as a never-ending process. You can share your process in a way that attracts others.
Imagine if your next boss didn’t have to read your résumé because he already reads your blog. Imagine being a student and getting your first gig based on a school project you posted online. Imagine losing your job but having a social network of people familiar with your work and ready to help you find a new one. Imagine turning a side project or a hobby into your profession because you had a following that could support you.
Or imagine something simpler and just as satisfying: spending the majority of your time, energy, and attention practicing a craft, learning a trade, or running a business, while also allowing for the possibility that your work might attract a group of people who share your interests.
All you have to do is show your work.
Austin elaborates that there are two ways to go about it.
A) Do your work in silence - show the end product.
B) Show your work - progress in public. Which is so much more elegant.
1. You don’t have to be a genius
Find a scenius - We need to move away from the lone genius myth of creativity.
“Scenius” is a healthier way to think about creativity - “a whole scene of people supporting each other, looking at each other’s work, copying from each other, stealing ideas, developing and contributing ideas”.
Anyone can contribute to the scenius. You don’t have to be an expert.
Be an amateur - Sometimes, amateurs have more to teach us than experts. An amateur understands the beginners' mind. The expert doesn’t. The amateur is dealing with an issue the expert dealt with decades ago. Who would you prefer to have in your corner? Someone battling with you, or someone who used the tools of 10 years ago to fight a somewhat similar enemy but not really?
So find something you want to learn. And learn it in front of others. Share your process. Share your successes, and more importantly, your failures. Help others who want to be on the same path.
2. Think process, not product
Take people behind the scenes - The finished product model of creativity is a relic of the pre-digital era. Where the only way artists could find an audience for their work was to show the finished product in all its glory. The internet has changed this. People really do want to see how the proverbial sausage gets made. Audiences want to connect with the person behind the product.
Become a documentarian of what you do - As Gary Vaynerchuk says, “document, don’t create”. Share screenshots as you’re going along. Take photos of your process. Write down your thoughts in a notebook. Whether you share it or not, documenting your process has its own rewards.
3. Share something small every day
Sharing vs oversharing - Share stuff that might be helpful or interesting or entertaining to someone on the other side of the screen.
I think of it as “Will this potentially help at least one person in the world? If so, I should share it.”
Get your own domain name - You need a personal website. Yes, even you reading this now. You might not have anything to write yet. But trust me (and Austin) - you need a personal website. Go find a domain name, preferably www.[yourname].com, but if that’s not available, use another extension (eg: .co.uk, .com.pk, .io, .me etc, there are hundreds of them). Figure out how to install a blog on it (eg: Wordpress or Ghost, I prefer Ghost personally). Yes if you’ve never done this before it’ll take some time and you’ll have to do some Googling. But it’ll be one of the best investments you ever make with your time.
Google domains affiliate link ^
4. Open up your cabinet of curiosities
Share other people’s work - We all like different things. If you can share the stuff you like, if you can curate it for others, good things will happen.
Credit is always due - Obviously, if you’re sharing other people’s work, you want to credit them. Attribution = providing context for what you’re sharing. It’s about putting little museum labels next to the stuff you share. Preferably attribute with a link.
5. Tell good stories
People want to read (and hear) good stories. You’ll become more effective at sharing yourself and your work if you can tell a good story. Dan Harmon's way:
Talk about yourself at parties - It’s okay to talk about yourself if people ask. Don’t think of it as an interrogation. Think of it as a chance to connect with someone who might be interested in your work.
6. Teach what you know
The impulse to keep to yourself what you have learned is not only shameful, it is destructive. Anything you do not give freely and abundantly becomes lost to you. You open your safe and find ashes. -Annie Dillard
Teaching people doesn’t take away from what you do, it adds to it. When you teach someone how to do your work, you’re actually generating more interest in your work. People will feel closer to it because you’re teaching them what you know. Sure, a few may buck your work without any caution but most won't and a whole bunch will become avid followers for it. It's worth the risk.
When you teach and share your work with others, you’ll get an education in return. People will see your stuff, connect with it, and reach out to you with recommendations and their own thoughts. This is magic.
7. Don’t turn into human spam
If you want fans, you have to be a fan first. If you want to be accepted by a community, you have to first be a good citizen of that community. If you’re only pointing to your own stuff online, you’re doing it wrong. You have to be a connector. The writer Blake Butler calls this being an open node. If you want to get, you have to give. If you want to be noticed, you have to notice. Shut up and listen once in a while. Be thoughtful. Be considerate. Don’t turn into human spam. Be an open node.
You want hearts, not eyeballs - Stop caring about how many people read your stuff and how many people follow you online.
The vampire test - “Whatever excites you, go do it. Whatever drains you, stop doing it” - Derek Sivers
Meet people IRL - Make online friends, and then meet them in real life. Meet-ups are great. If you know someone online and you’re in the same town, grab a coffee with them. When you’re traveling, let your online friends know you’re going to be around.
Meeting people online is awesome, but turning them into IRL friends is even better.
In fact, as I write this in a coffee shop in central Cambridge, I’m sitting with a guy called Ross. He’s a doctor with an interest in medical education, and he found my work online. He emailed me saying he was in Cambridge and wanted to grab lunch. We’ve been hanging out for the past 4 hours - first, we grabbed lunch at a burger place, and then we came over to this coffee shop. I’m writing this book summary. He’s sitting opposite me reading a book that I recommended (The Third Door by Alex Banayan). We’re IRL friends now :)
8. Learn to take a punch
When you put stuff out there, you’re going to get a bit of criticism. This is natural. Learn to take it. Don’t let the fear of haters stop you from putting yourself out there. They’re a tiny minority, and they have no real power over you.
Compulsive avoidance of embarrassment is a form of suicide. - Colin Marshall.
Don’t spend your life avoiding vulnerability. If you do, you and your work will never truly connect with people. Not even Jesus pleased everyone. You have 86,400 seconds per day. If you spend 10 seconds reading a negative comment don't let it infect the other 86,390 you have left. Let it go. Take the punch.
9. Sell out
We need to get over our “starving artist” romanticism. There’s nothing wrong or evil about money. Charging money for stuff doesn’t hamper your creativity and having money doesn't detract from creative potential.
Michaelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel ceiling because the pope commissioned him.
But at the same time, be careful about selling the work you love.
Beware of selling the things that you love: When people are asked to get out their wallets, you find out how much they really value what you do. My friend John T. Unger tells this terrific story from his days as a street poet. He would do a poetry reading and afterward, some guy would come up to him and say, “Your poem changed my life, man!” And John would say, “Oh, thanks. Want to buy my book? It’s five dollars.” And the guy would take the book, hand it back to John, and say, “Nah, that’s okay.” To which John would respond, “Geez, how much is your life worth?”
Keep a mailing list - Even if you don’t have anything to sell right now, keep a mailing list. There are people who run multimillion-dollar businesses off their mailing lists. The model is simple - give away free great free stuff on your website. Collect the emails of people who enjoy reading it. When you have something remarkable to sell or share, send them an email letting them know.
Pay it forward - When you have success, help people who reach out to you. Help people who helped you get where you are.
Caveat - Don’t sacrifice your art or your work for the sake of answering emails. Be as generous as you can, but selfish enough to get your work done. In The 4-hour Work Week, and several other productivity and process books it's recommended to check email only a few times a day. I haven't gotten there yet but it would certainly be a dream!
10. Stick around
Don’t quit - Keep doing your work, and keep sharing. If you're tired learn to rest not give up. Resting, recharging, doing things you love while taking a break from others is just as important if not more so than the actual work you're looking to accomplish.
Take sabbaticals.
Don’t be afraid to change things up. It’s not really starting over. You’re still keeping everything you learned before. You’re just starting from chapter one, again, with a