Share the process, not just the result

Show the work in progress to attract collaborators, feedback, and serendipity.

Why it works

Sharing process turns a solitary practice into a network: it surfaces feedback while the work is still malleable, and it makes you findable by people working on adjacent problems. Because creativity is recombination, more exposure to other minds means more combinations available to you. Visibility multiplies the inputs the rest of the practice depends on.

How to do it

  1. Share one in-progress artifact — a sketch, a draft, a question — rather than waiting for the finished piece.
  2. Document what you are learning, not just what you made, so others can connect to the thinking.
  3. Engage with the people who respond; the connection, not the applause, is the payoff.

Evidence

Grounded in the role of weak ties and network exposure in the diffusion and recombination of ideas. The benefit of openness is mechanistically clear; “show your work” is a practitioner framing of it. (mechanistic)

The weak-ties literature is about information flow generally; its application to creative practice is plausible inference, not direct evidence.

Sources

  • Granovetter (1973), “The Strength of Weak Ties” (network exposure and novel information)

Common mistake

Treating “show your work” as self-promotion of finished pieces. The value is in sharing the messy middle, which is what invites useful input.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you build the habit of sharing process by lowering the bar — prompting one small in-progress share at a time rather than waiting for a polished launch.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).