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Six ways to become a more productive writer

I’ve been thinking about how to become a more productive writer. Here’s six ways I came up with that could get the creative juices flowing:

Make chairs

1. Taking the stress off: Too many times, we forget that writing is just like an art or a craft or any other activity. It’s about making something. Would you be as stressed out about making a chair or a vase? Often, if it’s strong enough to serve the purpose (to sit on or hold flowers or convey meaning), it’s good. The finessing can come later or never. Being as worried about it as if you were about to author an epic or the next philosophical tome of your generation is not only foolish but self-defeating.

2. Mapping your writing habit or persona: Do you write during the day or at night? Do you write plenty of words first and then edit or do you fill pages slowly but surely so that your first draft is close to the final one? Are you more comfortable outlining first/ writing down the body first and then working on the trimmings or do you just start and keep writing as it comes? Mapping your writing persona can help you plan but more importantly, it can prevent a feeling of frustration on days when you’re seemingly not producing anything but may be conceptualizing ideas.

3. Exploring the kinds of writing you can do: Many people make the mistake of lumping all kinds of writing together and having a vague idea that they want to be in the writing profession. Although none of these differentiations are watertight, some people are better at critical, academic writing, some at creative writing, some are funny, some serious, some better at logical expository writing while some can do technical writing. Many significant years can be wasted pursuing a kind of writing that isn’t a good fit based on what one wants to do rather than what one can do. At the same time, some of us make the opposite mistake of thinking these areas are completely separate. Common sense is a friend here but this self exploration can  prevent wastage of time and other investments including emotional ones.

4. Setting weekly realistic goals: Based on mapping your own writing habit and exploring the kinds of writing you can do, it’s a good idea to set realistic goals. Realistic is key here. If one has a day job or very young children or other commitments, it will only lead to frustration at the end of the week if one has set up goals one is unable to fulfil. Even within writing commitments, it helps to set aside time for long projects vs. short ones. For most people, critical writing comes more slowly than creative writing. For some, writing comes in uneven spurts. It’s a good idea to keep these specifics in mind while planning to get a periodic sense of achievement and prevent feelings of frustration.

5. Settling for the good enough rather than the perfect: While it’s not a good idea to send out every stray idea that comes our way, perfect has often stood in the way of the good for many of us preventing us from writing that first line or by making us obsessed with revision before sending out anything. Beware of perfection. It’s far better to have a nice, comfortable kitchen chair than the ethereal throne that does not exist!

6. Separating yourself from your work: I  read this somewhere about entrepreneurs who set up startups. Apparently, if you’re too attached to the company you’ve made, you’ll burn yourself out constantly tracking it and thinking about it.  You have to concentrate and write but also distance yourself from your work to maintain your sanity.

Finally, beware of ending up mostly writing about writing (as opposed to actually writing).

I know. That’s this blog here!

326 responses to “Six ways to become a more productive writer”

  1. fasigwrites Avatar

    Ummm …Oops I only follow three of the six. Thank you for giving me the directions to get back on the right road. Hey I was half way there, right?

    Like

  2. lynnwyvill Avatar
    lynnwyvill

    Thanks for the like on my post “Old Friends. All good tips on writing. Number 2 is important. I spent years thinking my writing habit/persona was wrong. It’s only in recent years that I’ve accepted it as mine.

    Like

  3. Soledad Trudeau Avatar

    Thanks for the like on my post “Slightly Going Insane” and I absolutely love this post! I definitely need to work out a few of the kinks I have with this list in mind! Thanks again and keep up the good work! 🙂

    Like

  4. SimplySimplisticComplexities Avatar

    Sounds like you speak from experience. Yes Im guilty of all the above… I am kind of unfriendly with new technology.
    I tend to confuse because I edited as I go, Made small errors. etc.
    I overloaded readers Uploading to many from my “very old” toshiba satellite “pro” 4300 series, (Floppies aren’t used anymore really)
    I like to tinker with words, Flow, rhyme/free verse again ect.
    But I also like to speak, theorize. So i’ve been working on prose, and editing more. It is a learning thing, and slow going. So I thank you for your knowledge = )

    Like

  5. change it up editing Avatar

    Sorry for the shameless self-promotion, but #7 is to hire a professional editor. You’d be amazed at how much more productive you can be when you have a) someone working with you to polish your writing, and b) someone to do the not-fun (for you) gruntwork while you keep the creative juices flowing. Thanks for visiting my blog, too. Hope you’ll be back soon!

    Like

  6. Tammy J Rizzo Avatar
    Tammy J Rizzo

    Reblogged this on Tammy J Rizzo and commented:
    Words to live by … or, at least, to write by. Wonderful post!

    Like

  7. Tammy J Rizzo Avatar
    Tammy J Rizzo

    Thank you for visiting my blog. I love this post! You gave me several new ideas to think about, and I appreciate that so much. With NaNoWriMo looming ever closer, tips on writing more productively are becoming more and more important! I’m reblogging this – more people need to see it. 🙂

    Like

  8. doripolk Avatar

    Great post. I like your point about separating yourself from your work. That has been important for me in my “day job,” but I hadn’t thought about applying it to my writing. It feels like an extension of myself, but just like my profession, it doesn’t define who I am. Thanks for the advice.

    Like

  9. money prizes contests Avatar
    money prizes contests

    I like Ray Bradbury’s advice: just let the words flow. I tend to get bogged down by being a perfectionist. I’ll get stuck on one dratted sentence, when I should be letting go, allowing the story to unfold like an effortless dream.

    Like

  10. janet Avatar

    I’m in on this conversation rather late but I think another important thing is to just write. Keep notebooks all of the place and jot down ideas, phrases, whatever you can whenever you can. You can always go back and enlarge or prune but often if you don’t write it down, the idea is gone. I have a file on my laptop, a notebook that floats around the house and a smaller, spiral-backed notebook in the van for thoughts that come while I’m driving, which on long drives, is often. I’m very, very, very careful about writing while driving, so much so that because I’m only looking at the notebook in tiny spurts, my writing is sometimes undecipherable. 🙂 Better than an accident. (And I only jot when not around other vehicles.) I’m also getting quite good at remembering things by thinking about them often while getting to a point where I can write them down.

    I love the name of your blog, BTW.

    Like

  11. loosiditee Avatar

    Your article has perfect timing as I embark on my own writing mission. What spoke to me was good versus perfection. That is my common sticking point but I’m learning to get over it one blog at a time. Thanks for your insight!

    Like

  12. Z Avatar

    I love it…seperate myself from work!!! Do you have some chain cutters please, thanks for the support and keep advising me..I NEED HELP…JASON

    Like

  13. Z Avatar

    Reblogged this on ZYNKIN MARKETING and commented:
    I just keep learning..thank you

    Like

  14. darkbrightly Avatar

    I think I love your blog. I keep finding more and more posts that are perfect. Thanks for this – I want to write novels, and I wrote a couple (that I even like!), but I think my real strength is academic writing. And realistic goals… oh, how they elude me!

    Like

  15. Cara Olsen Avatar

    Wonderful, insightful article. Every writer should take a look at this. While we are all individuals, operating and functioning at different speeds, levels, and whatnot, we do share one dynamic commonality: that being the love to write, and the struggle which comes from that yearning.

    Blessings,

    ~ Cara

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      That’s so well put!

      Like

  16. Six ways to become a more productive writer | bottledworder | The Blue Yonder Avatar

    […] writer | bottledworder October 16, 2012 · by Shaan · in BlogCrunch. · Six ways to become a more productive writer | bottledworder. Share this:Like this:LikeBe the first to like […]

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  17. sherrianguestwrites Avatar

    Thanks for visiting my blog. I really relate to the points you have made here.
    I have found making myself write a poem a day for posting a great discipline which has helped with procrastination.
    I’m looking forward to reading more of your blog.
    Feel free to comment on any of the poems on my blog.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      thanks for visiting

      Like

  18. […] 6 tips on being a more productive […]

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  19. lynnwyvill Avatar
    lynnwyvill

    Thanks for visiting my blog. Like this post with good advice. Numbers 2 and 5 – oh yeah!!!! I used to get really frustrated because I thought I was doing it wrong, and I would agonize over the whole thing. I’ve had a lot more fun writing since I’ve figured out it doesn’t have to be perfect and my “process” is mine.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      yes, absolutely!!!!

      Like

  20. contentrambler Avatar

    Thanks for visiting my blog! Productivity is definitely an issue. Right now I’m at 2 posts every week which I feel I need to gain experience. Since I have a part time job and a family, only experience will allow me to post more often in the future. We’ll see where all the effort leads me 😉

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      am sure this will take you towards a more productive direction

      Like

  21. Celeste Avatar

    Thank you for liking my post “BOOKalicious!” This is a great and useful blog!

    Like

  22. skhphotography Avatar

    Fantastic advice it all makes good sense mI write better late at night and once I accepted it I found my work comes along much quicker.

    Like

  23. abhishekpsen Avatar

    Wonderful blog you have here, Bottled Worder.. Shall soon read more of your posts..

    Like

  24. kimhaas Avatar
    kimhaas

    Number 4 really hit home with me. I either set goals that are not challenging or impossible to meet. Must find my inner Goldilocks and find the goal that is “just right” 🙂

    Like

  25. justcallmetyra Avatar

    LOL @ “Beware of ending up mostly writing about writing!” Duly noted, my stranger friend! 😉

    Like

  26. Tom McKenzie Avatar
    Tom McKenzie

    This really applies to me. Not as easy as it sounds with work and 1 year old. It does happen occasionally then I write like a man possessed

    Like

  27. laurenjweaver Avatar

    I definitely have a problem when it comes to #6! I love going at my stories like there’s no tomorrow, then suddenly, boom! No motivation anymore and it just falls to pieces. On the flip side, I also find myself trying to work on too many ideas at once and it gets hard after a while to keep the ideas in order.

    These are great points though! Definitely good to keep in mind!

    Like

  28. Grant McDuling Avatar
    Grant McDuling

    Some really useful ideas here. It’s always good to come back down to earth every once in a while and think about things like this. Thanks for sharing. Oh, and I like to remember that writing is a business that has to be managed: unless, of course, you are writing for fun.

    Like

  29. sued51 Avatar

    Great post. #3 and #5 hit home. And what if you are COMPLETELY clueless as to what you should be writing? My favorite pieces of writing do not seem to make the same impression on others…kind of eats away at your confidence in your own opinions…that’s the part about figuring out what kind of writing you are good at.
    I read a lot of writing books just so I don’t feel alone…it initially takes time away from my writing, but I usually get more productive afterwards because I gain some confidence again.

    Like

  30. M. Ziegler Avatar

    Great post. My blog is another culprit of writing about writing rather than writing 🙂 It’s just easier isn’t it?

    Like

  31. gwyncurbygodwin Avatar

    You have expressed some great ideas. Thanks for stopping by my blog and liking my post “I Have a Novel in My Mind.”

    Like

  32. cynryan Avatar

    It’s that kind of day when I needed to read a list of six ways to become a more productive writer. Thanks! Oh, and I appreciate you stopping by my blog: Cancer Hits the Streets!

    Like

  33. Sue Judd Avatar

    I liked this, especially point 3.

    Like

  34. mskatykins Avatar

    This is a really great post with very useful advice! 🙂

    Like

      1. mskatykins Avatar

        Very welcome! 🙂

        Like

  35. marcys Avatar

    I can’t go for the “good enough” writing instead of perfection. If I strive for perfection I just might hit good. If I strive for good enough I’ll probably be mediocre. I’m very realistic about my writing as compared to that of the writers I most admire; I know where I am and where I am not, and if I want to do better I have to aim high.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes that works for some people too!

      Like

  36. kittykatmandoo Avatar
    kittykatmandoo

    I completely agree with exploring the types of writing one is good at – it’s only taken me a creative writing degree, a decade of turning my nose up at poetry and late-blooming travel to figure that one out!
    Thanks, too, for dropping by my blog 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Yes, we keep figuring ourselves out and that’s part of the journey. But getting lost all the time? That hasn’t been very helpful to me. These points were written more as instructions to myself, really 🙂

      Like

  37. Swirling Turnip Avatar

    Good stuff, I saw myself more than once. 🙂 Nicely done.

    Like

  38. camerashoot365 Avatar

    All your points were very informative. I especially can relate to #3. I enjoy writing fiction and that’s what I do most of the time. In the back of my mind I wanted to also write devotionals, but each time I had a professional writer look at my devotionals there was always a lot of work in rewriting I needed to do. Whereas, with my fiction I usually get quite positive feedback. I have finally responded to God’s hitting me on the head and realize once and for all that at this time in my life I am to concentrate on fiction and let the devotional writing sit on a back shelf (at least for now). Finding the kind of writing you can do can be difficult and takes some time. However, once you find it the fun begins.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for sharing your ideas.

      Like

  39. kelihasablog Avatar
    kelihasablog

    Great information… now if I can just remember it. Appreciate the helpful suggestions! 😀

    Like

    1. marcys Avatar

      Adorable baby girl!

      Like

    2. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading.!!

      Like

  40. Margarita Avatar
    Margarita

    Good stuff. I’d add one more — staring at a blank screen until words come and making this staring a scheduled activity. 🙂

    Like

  41. Nine Mile Writers Avatar
    Nine Mile Writers

    Great post from your bottle ;-). One I might re-post in the series of Happy Writing I’m starting – if that was okay with you.

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Sure. Any sharing with proper attribution is welcome 🙂

      Like

  42. EJ Runyon Avatar

    Glad you like brought me to notice your blog.
    I’m following now.

    Like

  43. Stephen Marte Avatar

    Ditto on #5. I once had an English professor tell me, “Ideas are a dime a dozen. Art comes through execution.”

    Like

  44. Judith Post Avatar

    I liked your presentation–a light tone but with seriously good information. Thanks!

    Like

  45. Maia Avatar

    Thanks for the like on thesaltwatertwin. I’m glad it led me to you. Oh, how I like #1. Make something. Love that idea! Thank you for that, too!

    Like

  46. Angie Young Avatar

    Interesting. I especially like the idea of mapping your writing persona. That definately would go along with my writing on both sides of the brain. Thanks for stopping by my blog. Angie 🙂

    Like

    1. bottledworder Avatar

      Thanks for reading! 🙂

      Like

  47. ravingreader Avatar

    After years of struggling to become a novel writer (in my own head), I have finally come to the conclusion that I am much stronger and better paid as an academic writer so that’s where I am now. I write full-time for a big university, It’s a great fit, very little creative angst and I get to learn new stuff every day. Your #3 and #5 were very on-target for me. Good post. (#5 esp. as I work with engineers who love *perfect*… Learning experience for all! 🙂

    Like

    1. sued51 Avatar

      RavingReader…I can totally relate! Seems I am a much better editor than I am a writer…much to my dismay! 🙂

      Like

  48. Jill Weatherholt Avatar

    Great post! I can completely relate to #5.

    Like

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I’m, Bottledworder. Always inhabiting the half-streets, catching paradoxes, thinking in greys, trapping the world in words in my bottle.

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