Learn more about personaldevelopment with this collection
Effective communication
Persuasion techniques
Closing a sale
If you share the work of others, it’s your duty to make sure that the creators of that work get proper credit.
If you share the work of others, it’s your duty to make sure that the creators of that work get proper credit. Online, the most important form of attribution is a hyperlink pointing back to the website of the creator of the work. This sends people who come across the work back to the original source. l
If you don’t include a link, no one can click it. Attribution without a link online borders on useless: 99.9 percent of people are not going to bother Googling someone’s name.
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721 reads
MORE IDEAS ON THIS
One little blog post is nothing on its own, but publish a thousand blog posts over a decade, and it turns into your life’s work.
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1.06K reads
Social networks are great, but they come and go.
If you’re really interested in sharing your work and expressing yourself, nothing beats owning your own space online, a place that you control, a place that no one can take away from you, a world headquarters where people can al...
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1.02K reads
Is it something I’d be comfortable with my boss or my mother seeing?”
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1.3K reads
Where do you get your inspiration?
What sorts of things do you fill your head with?
What do you read?
Do you subscribe to anything?
What sites do you visit on the Internet?
What music do you listen to?
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855 reads
Become a documentarian of what you do. Start a work journal: Write your thoughts down in a notebook, or speak them into an audio recorder. Keep a scrapbook. Take a lot of photographs of your work at different stages in your process. Shoot video of you working.
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When you find things you genuinely enjoy, don’t let anyone else make you feel bad about it. Don’t feel guilty about the pleasure you take in the things you enjoy. Celebrate them.
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839 reads
Share what you love, and the people who love the same things will find you.
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1.61K reads
documenting and recording your process as you go along has its own rewards: You’ll start to see the work you’re doing more clearly and feel like you’re making progress. And when you’re ready to share, you’ll have a surplus of material to choose from.
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2.07K reads
What i understand from this chapter is,
we have to be storyteller while sharing our work,
In this chapter author shares the story of some people who picks up the things from flea market at $128 and sells on ebay at around...
183
794 reads
Teach people processes, techniques, any kind of knowledge come along with your job!
you can share your reading list, any tutorials etc. it can be helpful for others who shares the same interet as yours.
people will feel closer to you when they know what ...
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802 reads
Put yourself, and your work, out there every day, and you’ll start meeting some amazing people.
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We all love things that other people think are garbage. You have to have the courage to keep loving your garbage, because what makes us unique is the diversity and breadth of our influences, the unique ways in which we mix up the parts of culture others have deemed “high” and the “low.”
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879 reads
Obituaries aren’t really about death; they’re about life. “The sum of every obituary is how heroic people are, and how noble,” writes artist Maira Kalman. Reading about people who are dead now and did things with their lives makes me want to get up and do something decent.
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Be open, share imperfect and unfinished work that you want feedback on, but don’t share absolutely everything. There’s a big, big difference between sharing and over-sharing.
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your stock is best made by collecting, organizing, and expanding upon your flow. Social media sites function a lot like public notebooks—they’re places where we think out loud, let other people think back at us.
You can revisit and flip back t...
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1.09K reads
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.
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Don’t think of your website as a self-promotion machine, think of it as a self-invention machine.
Fill your website with your work and your ideas and the stuff you care about.
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990 reads
The best way to get started on the path to sharing your work is to think about what you want to learn and make a commitment to learning it in front of others. Find a scenius, pay attention to what others are sharing, and then start taking note of what they’re not sharing.
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1.8K reads
Your daily dispatch can be anything you want—a blog post, an email, a tweet, a YouTube video, or some other little bit of media. There’s no one-size-fits-all plan for everybody
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“A lot of people are so used to just seeing the outcome of work. They never see the side of the work you go through to produce the outcome.”
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