Alright, so today I wanted to share a bit about this whole “ref Marc Davis” thing that’s been rattling around in my head. It’s not like I found some magic bullet, but more like a… well, a journey, I guess.

How It All Started
I was drowning, you know? At my last gig, everything was “urgent,” “top priority,” “ASAP.” My to-do list was a monster, growing new heads every hour. I was constantly switching tasks, putting out fires, and honestly, not getting much real work done. Sound familiar? I bet it does.
Then, during one of those “let’s try to fix our broken process” meetings, someone, probably a manager trying to sound smart, mentioned Marc Davis. Not the Disney guy, some other Marc Davis I’d never heard of, supposedly a guru on “streamlined workflows” or something equally vague. They passed around a terribly photocopied article, probably from some obscure 90s business journal.
The “Practice” – Trying to Make Sense of It
So, I read this article. The core idea, as far as I could tell from the jargon, was something about “radical simplification.” Davis apparently preached about focusing on the absolute core task and ruthlessly eliminating everything else. Sounded great on paper, like most of these things do.
I decided to give it a shot, my own little experiment. My “practice” was going to be actually referencing this Marc Davis dude’s supposed wisdom in my daily grind. I thought, “Okay, Marc, let’s see if your fancy theories survive a single Monday morning here.”
My first step: I picked what I thought was my one most important task for the day. I wrote it down on a sticky note. Big. Bold. Letters. “FINISH THE QUARTERLY REPORT.” Simple, right?

The Glorious Collision with Reality
And then, reality hit. Hard.
- 09:05 AM: My boss pinged me. “Quick question about the Miller account.” Not my one task.
- 09:37 AM: Emergency meeting invite popped up. “Urgent: Project Phoenix Update.” Definitely not my one task.
- 11:00 AM: Colleague wandered over. “Hey, can you look at this bug? Just five minutes.” Spoiler: it was never five minutes. Still not my one task.
I tried. I really did. I attempted to politely defer. I tried to point to my “Marc Davis inspired focus.” People just looked at me like I had three heads. “We’re a team!” “We need to be agile!” “This is a priority now!”
By lunchtime, my sticky note was looking pretty lonely, and the quarterly report was still gathering digital dust. Marc Davis, bless his hypothetical cotton socks, clearly never worked in a place like that. Or maybe his “radical simplification” involved telling everyone else to buzz off, which, let’s be honest, is a career-limiting move for most of us.
So, What’s the “Ref Marc Davis” Takeaway?
My “practice” of referencing Marc Davis didn’t magically fix anything. Shocker, I know. But it did make me realize something. These gurus, these frameworks, these “revolutionary” ideas – they’re often cooked up in a vacuum. They don’t account for the messy, chaotic, human element of actual work.
So now, whenever I hear someone spout the latest buzzword or management fad, I just internally “ref Marc Davis.” It’s my mental shorthand for “Yeah, sounds nice, but let’s see it survive a week in the real world.” It’s not about his specific advice anymore; it’s about the experience of trying to apply simplistic solutions to complex problems and watching them crumble.

Basically, I stopped looking for a silver bullet from some “expert.” I started focusing on navigating the chaos as best I could, one fire at a time. And sometimes, just sometimes, I even get to that one important task. Usually by working late, but hey, that’s a story for another day.
This whole Marc Davis thing, for me, became less about a person and more about a reminder: the real practice is just doing the work, messy as it is, and not getting too hung up on theories that don’t fit your reality. I keep that experience in my back pocket. It’s my own little case study.