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show-your-work-kleon

Apply Austin Kleon''s sharing framework. Trigger on: "what should I share?", "build an audience", "document my creative process".

Install in Claude Code
Copy
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/simbajigege/book2skills /tmp/show-your-work-kleon && cp -r /tmp/show-your-work-kleon/skills/show-your-work-kleon ~/.claude/skills/show-your-work-kleon
Then start a new Claude Code session; the skill loads automatically.

SKILL.md

## Core Philosophy

Austin Kleon's *Show Your Work!* makes a single counterintuitive argument: **you don't need talent, credentials, or a finished body of work before you start sharing. You need to share the process of becoming.** The audience finds you not because of what you've produced, but because they recognize themselves in how you work.

The fundamental reframe: stop thinking "I need to finish this before I can share it." Start thinking "sharing IS the work."

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## When to Use This Skill

Use this skill for queries that match the trigger phrases in the description and require applying the decision framework from *Show Your Work!* rather than summarizing the book.

## The Framework

### Principle 1: Scenius Over Genius

Kleon borrows the term "scenius" from Brian Eno — the idea that creativity is not the product of lone geniuses but of **collaborative ecology**: a group of people in the same scene who share ideas, steal from each other generously, build on each other's work.

**Why this matters for sharing:** You are not a solo creator broadcasting to an audience. You are a node in a scenius. When you share your process, your influences, your failures, and your questions, you contribute to a creative ecosystem that is larger than any individual. The scenius rewards contributors.

**Practical implication:** Credit your influences publicly. Show what you're learning from. Make your "scenius" visible — the books you're reading, the artists inspiring you, the problems you're wrestling with.

### Principle 2: The Amateur Advantage

"Amateur" comes from the Latin for "lover." An amateur does work for the love of it, not for money or credentials. Kleon argues the amateur has a structural advantage over the professional:

- Less to lose by experimenting publicly
- Willing to ask "dumb" questions that experts have forgotten to ask
- Enthusiasm that is contagious (professionals often hide theirs)
- Learning in public at full speed, which is itself compelling to watch

**The amateur's assignment:** Share what you're learning as you learn it. The tutorial you write the week after learning something is better than the tutorial an expert writes years later — because you remember what it was like not to know.

### Principle 3: You Are What You Share

"In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert's mind there are few." — Shunryu Suzuki

Your online presence is not a resume — it's a **cabinet of curiosities**. What you share signals who you are, what you care about, and who you want to attract. You don't need to brand yourself explicitly; you reveal yourself through what you find worth sharing.

The curation question: **"Does this add value to the audience's day, or is it just noise?"**

Kleon's "So What?" test: Before posting anything, ask: "So what? Who cares? What's interesting about this?" If you can't answer it, don't post it. If you can answer it clearly in one sentence, post it.

### Principle 4: Open Up Your Process

Most creators show the finished product. Kleon argues you should **show the work behind the work** — the messy middle, the false starts, the revision history, the tools you use, the questions you're asking.

"Become a documentarian of what you do." Think of yourself as a filmmaker doing a behind-the-scenes documentary, not a marketing department. The behind-the-scenes footage is often more compelling than the film itself.

**What to share from your process:**
- Your current influences (what you're reading, watching, listening to)
- Problems you're trying to solve and how you're approaching them
- Work-in-progress — sketches, drafts, prototypes
- Your method: tools, routines, systems
- Failures and what you learned from them
- Questions you're genuinely wrestling with

**The Chris Hadfield example:** When Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield went to the International Space Station, he began sharing daily glimpses of life in space — videos of how astronauts cry in zero gravity, how they brush their teeth, how Earth looks at sunset from orbit. By the time he recorded his cover of David Bowie's "Space Oddity" in space, he had 1 million followers who had been with him daily for months. The song video got 22 million views in the first month. He didn't wait until he had a finished product to share.

### Principle 5: Share Something Small Every Day

Kleon's "daily dispatch" practice: **Share one small thing every day.** Not a finished piece — a scrap, an observation, a question, a photo of what's on your desk, a sentence that struck you while reading.

The consistency principle: Daily sharing over years creates something no single post can — **familiarity and trust**. An audience built through daily small shares is more resilient than one built by viral moments.

"One sentence a day is enough." The discipline is in showing up, not in producing great content every day.

### Principle 6: The "So What?" Test

Before sharing anything, apply the **"So What?" test:**

1. What is genuinely interesting about this?
2. Who specifically would care about this?
3. What does it add to them?

If the answer to question 1 is "nothing" or you can't articulate it, don't post it. If you can answer all three questions, you have something worth sharing — even if it feels small or unfinished.

**The "stock and flow" model** (from writer Robin Sloan):

- **Flow** = the daily stream: tweets, short posts, daily updates. These are ephemeral — they catch people in the moment.
- **Stock** = the durable work: essays, tutorials, portfolio pieces, long-form writing. These compound over time and remain findable years later.

Most creators default entirely to flow (social media posts) or entirely to stock (infrequent long-form work). The most powerful strategy is **both**: daily flow that builds a habit of sharing and relationships, plus regular investment in stock that gives those relationships something permanent to anchor to.

### Principle 7: Turn Your Flow Into Stock

The flow/stock int
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