From hoarding drafts to shipping tools
What I learned about letting my work see the light of day.
Last week, I published the Scope Check tool as a reusable template in Miroverse.
It’s a small thing, but it feels like a big deal.
The Scope Check isn’t a new tool. I shared it a while ago. It resonated with a bunch of you. Got reposted and shared. A few people even asked if there was a template they could use. I nodded. Took notes. And… sat on it.
You see, I’m a chronic overthinker. A perfectionist. I love iterating, tweaking, zooming in. Hitting publish doesn’t come easy.
So making Scope Check a real, usable template (and actually submitting it to the Miroverse) took more guts than I’d like to admit.
But I did it.
Now when I look back, I realize I’ve shipped eight tools in the Proof Sprint toolkit over the past 6 months. That’s wild. For someone who used to hoard unfinished drafts, that’s growth I can feel.
I’ll be pulling them all together soon into a single "vault" on Substack so you can explore them in one place.
And later this week, I’m sharing a new tool: a dead-simple simple way to make roadmap planning just a little less agonizing.
Sometimes, the big win isn’t building the thing. It’s in giving yourself permission to let it see the light of the day.
Until then,
Pragati
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