Worksheet Wednesdays

Worksheet Wednesdays blog post banner

I have notebooks and notebooks full of thoughts and ideas. Usually I’m inspired by something I’m reading so I write my thoughts down to get them out of my head. Last summer, I picked up an old book by Seth Godin at a second-hand shop and this quote hit me:

Are you one of those people? One of the people with too many good ideas? The folks who have notebooks filled with notions, or daydreams filled with the future? You’ve certainly met these people. They’re too busy taking notes to get anything done, too busy inventing to actually instigate. To stop this process, one needs to do only two things: Start. And then… Ship.

~Seth Godin, Poke the Box

I realized that my sketches and ideas aren’t doing me (or anyone else) any good hiding on the pages of my notebooks. It is time to ship… and see what happens.

In fact, most of the content on this website can be traced back to notes I made years ago. Worksheet Wednesdays is a personal project that forces me to publish ideas often and experiment out in the open. To ensure consistency I gave myself ten simple rules.

Each worksheet must:

  1. Fit on one sheet of paper (e.g., portrait or landscape)

  2. Function best when completed with a pen or pencil

  3. Take no longer than 20 minutes to complete

  4. Include visual design (i.e., more than a list of questions)

  5. Explore a single aspect of leadership or management

  6. Reference the original source of inspiration

  7. Include basic instructions for use

  8. Be licensed as a “free cultural work

  9. Invite conversation and feedback

  10. Ship on Wednesdays

I guess Worksheet Wednesdays, and the rest of the content on this site, is really my attempt to follow more of Seth Godin’s advice:

Ship creative work. On a schedule. Without attachment. Without reassurance.

~Seth Godin. The Practice

Hopefully, you can find something that intrigues you!


Source of Inspiration

Godin, S. (2020). The Practice. New York: Viking.

Godin, S. (2011). Poke the Box. The Domino Project.

Previous
Previous

Who should you emulate?