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Show Your Work!

10 Ways to Share Your Creativity and Get Discovered

by Austin Kleon

A Summary by StoryShots

The minute you learn something, turn around and teach it to others.

Introduction

Most creative people wait for permission that never comes. : 10 Ways to Share Your Creativity and Get Discovered argues the opposite: share your process now, not your masterpiece later. The audience you build through daily generosity becomes the career you have tomorrow.

Stop Waiting for Permission to Share

You think no one cares because you're not famous yet. Wrong. The internet demolished the old gatekeepers. You don't need a gallery showing or a book deal to start sharing. The catch: most people wait until their work is "ready." Ready is a moving target that never arrives. Share before you feel ready. Post the sketch, not just the finished painting. This builds an audience while you're still developing your craft. It also trains you to see your work through other people's eyes, which makes your work better. "Don't show your lunch or your latte; show your work." But sharing everything indiscriminately is noise, not generosity.

Share Something Small Every Day

Your daily process contains more value than your final product. You spend months working on something, then release it in a single moment. That moment is one data point. Your process is hundreds. Each one is an opportunity to connect. Share a paragraph from today's chapter. Post the color palette you're testing. Explain one decision and why you made it. These small shares let people feel part of your journey instead of spectators at the finish line. Over time, these breadcrumbs form a trail back to you. Someone discovers one post, clicks your profile, finds a year of generosity. "Be so good they can't ignore you, then so generous they can't forget you." This creates a feedback loop most people never activate.

Teach Everything You Know

Sharing your knowledge makes you more valuable, not less. You worry that giving away secrets eliminates your competitive advantage. The opposite happens. Teaching establishes you as an authority and attracts people who value what you know. Your secrets aren't actually secret. Someone else already knows what you know. The difference is they're not explaining it in your voice, using your examples, filtered through your experience. That's what makes teaching valuable. Start by teaching what you wish someone had taught you a year ago. Write the tutorial you needed when stuck. The people one step behind you are your natural audience. They're not looking for the world's foremost expert. They're looking for someone who just figured out the thing they're trying to figure out right now. "The minute you learn something, turn around and teach it to others." If this changed how you think about sharing your work, someone in your life probably needs to hear it too.

Final Summary

This summary of Show Your Work! by Austin Kleon threads together three insights: abandon the permission mindset, document your daily process, and teach generously. But Kleon also reveals how to turn online attention into offline opportunities, survive criticism without losing your voice, and why your influences shape your originality rather than dilute it. He maps the "so what?" test every share must pass and dismantles the "sell out" myth keeping talented people invisible. The full summary of Show Your Work! is live on the StoryShots app now, with a visual infographic and animated video breaking down all ten principles.

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