My first ever live workshop
The insights and mindset shifts that have shaped how I build my “personal knowledge library”
People ask me how I’ve managed to write consistently for five years. It’s not a feat of genius. I’m just serious about collecting inspiration, and when you do that, newsletters and ideas come out on the other side.
For the first time ever, I'm hosting a workshop where I’ll get up close and personal on how I build my personal knowledge library.
My goal is to show you how this practice can help you think better and be more creative, and how I do it.
Come for the musings on the state of the Internet, stay for the practical tips on how to regain control of your most valuable resource — your attention.
The workshop includes a live Q&A. Participants will get the full slide deck and recording of the session, plus an invite to a private Slack community where you can ask me follow-up questions, get unstuck, and meet other cool people. And of course, you also get early access to Sublime.
The workshop will take place on Thursday, March 28th at 12pm EST.
The cost is $100. Space is limited, so get cozy.
Here’s a taste of what to expect:
This workshop is for you if:
You’re curious about the insights and mindset shift that have shaped how I build my “knowledge library” – a superpower when it comes to writing this newsletter.
You want musings on the “state of the Internet” that somehow manage to weave quotes from Voltaire, Ted Gioia, and Marie Kondo.
You are sick of the bottomless pit of advice on how to do more things faster and find yourself looking for a different narrative, one that puts creativity above productivity.
You spend a lot of time consuming content but struggle to recall, revisit, organize, or use that knowledge effectively.
You’ve tried every PKM tool out there – Obsidian, Notion, etc… but everything is too complicated and nothing seems to stick.
You don’t know what a PKM tool is but are still yearning for a simple way to capture and recall anything interesting you come across.
Think of this workshop as the first step in building a personal philosophy around how you curate your knowledge library – and how you think about your relationship to information and the internet.