You do not need another giant online course or a five-year plan. You need a way to turn your existing curiosity into concrete outcomes without burning out or drifting. The 10% Curiosity Rule is a practical guide to doing exactly that: short, structured learning sprints that produce one real result in each new domain you explore. Blending clear explanations with simple tools, this book shows you how to design 10-hour learning sprints, run focused expert conversations, test ideas in the real world and capture what you learn so it sticks. You will discover how to choose one-result projects, set honest stop rules, and avoid the trap of endless "research". Along the way, you will learn to see your past and future experiments as a deliberate portfolio rather than a pile of abandoned hobbies. Written for curious professionals, generalists, creators and anyone whose browser has too many open tabs, The 10% Curiosity Rule offers a humane alternative to both over-specialisation and scattered dabbling. It will help you build curiosity habits, design time boxed projects, and turn personal experiments into stackable skills that support real decisions and opportunities. Whether you want to explore a possible career shift, sharpen a side interest or simply feel less overwhelmed by options, this book gives you a repeatable way to practise project based learning and self directed learning across a lifetime.
The 10% Curiosity Rule
SKU: 9789376558537
$29.99 Regular Price
$22.35Sale Price
- Julien Noor is fascinated by the messy gap between what people say they want to learn and what they actually do. Over many years he has treated his own curiosity as a laboratory, running small projects in areas as varied as technology, communication, creative work and everyday life skills. This hands-on experimentation has shaped his belief that most of us do not need more information; we need better containers for it. Julien writes and teaches about practical ways to think, decide and learn, with a particular care for people who feel "too interested in everything" to fit tidy career boxes. He is drawn to the old European tradition of the cabinet of curiosities, where collectors assembled objects not as trophies but as starting points for questions. In a world where the internet has become a global cabinet of curiosities, he aims to help readers build their own shelves with intention, turning scattered interests into a coherent, usable body of experience.


















