Weeknotes: what they are, how to write them
Author: Joe Roberson;
Reading Time: 5 minutes
We've made this resource open. You are free to copy and adapt it. Read the terms.
This guide is for anyone. You don’t have to be working on Catalyst projects or even a non-profit. All you need is to want to work more openly.
This guide covers:
- What weeknotes are
- Why weeknotes are healthy and cool
- Tips for writing good weeknotes
- Platforms to use
- Styles or types
- Ways to share your weeknotes
**Update: We added a link to weeknote templates. You can use any of these templates to make it easier to write your weeknotes.
Weeknotes are notes, not blogs
Weeknotes are notes about what you’ve been doing at work this week.
They are personal. They follow no set format. You write them in whatever style you like. There are no set rules. There is no set length.
You can write them for you. You can write them for your team. Your team can take turns.
You can write what you choose. You don’t have to write every week.
They don’t have to be everything that happened. They can be snippets or stories. They can be a handful of bullet points, a few paragraphs or even longer if you wish.
Weeknotes are healthy and cool
If you’re running a project, weeknotes can be a good habit to get into. Because:
- They help you reflect on your work, learn from it and make better decisions
- They create new connections – people who read them understand what you are doing and can help if you ask for it
- They show that you are willing to working openly and share – cool
- They help you find your writing voice – very cool
- People want to read them (we’re curious about people doing work like us)
Tips for writing good ones
Giles Turnbull wrote some great tips. I’ve summarised them here. They are his words and mine, but mainly his.
- Don’t worry too much about structure – use the same, or vary it. No rules here.
- Sometimes there’s not much to say, and that’s fine – some weeks are full of news, others are slower. Use photos if you want to show something differently.
- Write on a Friday – by next Monday you’ll have forgotten what happened this week.
- You can include jokes and gifs – when people smile they enjoy your writing.
- If you’re a leader, write your own weeknotes – don’t delegate it as a chore. Write your reflections on the past week, the way you see it. The more you can write like this, the more likely it is that people will bother to actually read your weeknote.
- Let team members take turns to write weeknotes too – anyone can write weeknotes. People will have different styles.
- If you treat weeknotes like a burden, they’ll feel like a burden – they aren’t a reporting tool. They are personal.
- Be personal – a genuine personal reflection of the week. Allow thoughts and feelings to creep in, alongside news. Be open, be candid, be the sort of refreshing honesty that most colleagues are yearning for. That will result in excellent weeknotes.
Platforms
Using a new online platform can put people off writing weeknotes. But it’s super easy, even if you’ve never written on the web before. And it’s free. Here are three good options:
Medium – probably the easiest place to get started. Simple to use. Beautiful design and easy writing experience. You can even publish on our Medium blog and reach more charities, just follow our guide.
WordPress.com – another good option. Choice of themes. Straightforward to learn. Doesn’t need to be used as a website.
LinkedIn – easy place to get started. Good for reaching networks. Not as pretty as Medium and WordPress.com
You could also use the blogging feature on your organisation’s website. But because weeknotes are personal reflections they usually fit better on a place or platform that belongs to you or your team.
Styles and types
Sam Villis at Weeknot.es wrote some great ideas for formats and styles. I’ve summarised them here. See examples of each style on her original post.
1. The ‘jump straight in’– no structure: just thoughts and words. Simple and quick. Hard to do if you prefer to follow a structure.
2. The daily breakdown – simple. Use days of the week as your headings. Write as much detail as you like. Can feel mechanical.
3. Lean-notes – communicate about specific projects or programmes.
4. The ‘[X] things that happened’ – flexible, repeatable and concise. Helps you pick out the most important things. For example ‘5 things that happened this week’.
5. The Good, The Bad and The Ugly – group by theme, without thinking of themes. Choose your own themes e.g. good things, learned things, difficulties, achievements, or overarching feeling, highlights, lessons
6. Stretching questions – like themes, but framed as questions, to help you think, e.g. What did you experiment with? What was hard? What did you enjoy? What was fun? What did you learn?
7. The anti-structure – feelings over thinking. Stream of consciousness.
See examples of these styles in action.
Sharing your weeknotes
Share new weeknotes via their link in all the usual ways:
- tweet the link
- email the link to people you think might be interested – both colleagues and people outside your organisation
- give the link to your newsletter team
Need some help?
Use weeknote templates.
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Photo by Emma Matthews Digital Content Production on Unsplash
Commissioned by Catalyst