Showing posts with label productivity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label productivity. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2025

10 Ways to Help Yourself Write More

Hello, and happy Friday, y’all. Yay! It’s Friday. I hope everyone has amazing weekend plans, and I hope you all manage to stay warm somehow. If you’re trapped in the house because of the weather, perhaps you can put some of today’s tips into practice and see if they help you. I know these are the things that help me, but I’m also a bit weird…

Anywho, grab a blankie and some hot chocolate, and let’s get into the nitty gritty. Here are TEN tips to help your productivity (with annotations, of course).

1. Use the Damned Planner - I’m sure you all know this one and already have a beautiful, new, 2025 planner sitting on your desk that you haven’t touched. Knowing is separate from doing. Make it a habit to sit down every week on Sunday and fill it out for ONE week. Use stickers or anything else that makes you smile. What we’re after here is something you can look at so you know what to do next. Surprisingly, this helps your brain focus on what you’re doing, which is writing. Right?

2. Have a Start and Stop Time (and stick to it) - This is probably one of the most important things you can do as a writer for productivity and to write better and faster. Your brain will go into writing mode when it knows it’s time to perform. After a certain hour, do NOT go back to your manuscript. Leave that for one day out of your week.

3. Set Aside Time to Learn - You can do this on the weekend. Read freaking books on craft. Read blog posts (like this one). Take away the tips you want and discard the others, but learn as much as you can as often as you can. This will also help you focus when it’s time to write.

4. Treat Time Like It Matters - Your time should be protected. If you went to an actual office every day, no one would even think to ask you if you can do this or that during the day. You can’t unless they pay you to do it. Your time is money, too. Your home office is an office, too. YOU WORK, TOO! If little Timmy’s mom needs you to get him off the bus every day, she can pay you just like she’d pay a sitter.

5. Read and Write a Lot - Even if you’re just scribbling nonsense in a notebook, you’re writing. When you read, you’re learning how to write. Even those novels published by your peers will teach you something about plot, construct, and flow. You can’t write if you’re not a reader. You can’t write WELL if you’re not a reader.

6. Set Aside Time for Marketing - You don’t always have to be on when it comes to marketing. This goes back to #4. Your writing time is precious. Use tools that will help you market your books better. If you have yet to publish, start researching tools now. CRM (Customer Relationship Management) has come a long way. Yes, it will probably cost you money, but if you do the right research ahead of time, you’ll know where to put it for maximum impact. Set aside time to tend to it.

7. Become Your Own Worst Critic - If you write something and read it later only to think, this is trash, delete it and do better. If you think it’s trash, so will your readers. Just delete it. JUST. DELETE. IT.

8. Your Books Aren’t About You - You should be writing what you’re interested in, yes, but you’re not talking about yourself, so go crazy. People may look at you and think you’re unhinged (I mean, have you read the PPSK series?), but that’s the point of all this. Writing should be fun, and you shouldn’t be concerned with what Great Uncle Walter will think of you. Have fun, It’s not about you.

9. Don’t be Afraid to Publish - This goes hand in hand with: PLEASE READ YOUR REVIEWS. Readers will point out things you can do better as far as flow and pacing, even character development, so publish your dang work then read the reviews. Yes, they may be harsh, and yes, you may get discouraged, but take a step back and go again. Rome wasn’t built in a day, y’all.

10. Write Because You Love Writing. Period. - If you’re in it for the money, you may be disappointed. It’s not about the dollars. Don’t make it about the sales. It’s about your need to put words on a page. If you don’t have that drive, that story inside you itching to get out, then you need a different career. This one won’t spark joy.

Yes, I did quote Ms. Kondo. She has a point.

When you’re creating your weekly schedule, be sure and include at least an hour a day for writing. At least. Some days, you can do more, but if you’re consistently writing an hour a day, and you manage 1500 words every time, that’s 390,000 words a year. Read that again. At just 1500 words a day. Once you train your brain to write from X to Y, you’ll be able to do that consistently. I promise. Our writing group would run sprints, and I’d actually manage around 2k words in an hour, sometimes more. You can do it, but you must be consistent.

I hope this helps you start to pump out the words. Remember! A good editor is worth their weight in gold, too. Find one you love.

Well, that’s all for today, folks!

Until nest time, WRITE ON!

Jo

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

6 Routine and Productivity Tips

Happy Wednesday, good people of the blogosphere! I hope you're all enjoying your new year thus far. Today, I'm talking about how to stick to your routine and be productive no matter what you're doing. I won't bore you with a long introduction up here, so grab your coffee or tea, and let's dive on in!

As you all may know, when the pandemic hit, my characters ran from Covid like the bulls in the streets of Pamplona, abandoning me to the woes and worries of the world with nothing to distract me and the very real possibility of getting trampled by depression. It was touch and go there for a minute, but I managed, through the power of flour, to pull myself out of the trenches and keep forging ahead. I created my baking channel and companion cookbook.

My biggest assets have always been my ability to schedule myself for maximum productivity and form routines to keep myself focused. I changed gears so fast I'm surprised my transmission didn't fall out, but here we are, nearly a year later, and I'm still going strong. Below, I'll share a few of my most helpful tips for achieving something you wish to do.

  1. Take the time to learn everything you can about the thing you're trying to do. Whether that's using a video camera, editing reels, or proofing dough, find out the how and the why. You'll be better prepared when you get to the action stage of this list.
  2. Use a calendar and be realistic. Don't set yourself unobtainable goals a year in the future. Start now (or as soon as humanly possible) and start small. There's no need to go crazy. 100 words every day for a year is 36,500 words. Things add up. Pick a date and just start!
  3. Plan ahead. Grab yourself a day planner with the hours of each day outlined (mine was $20 at Michael's). Spend an hour each Sunday planning your week. If that's not realistic, loosely outline targets you want to hit then segment and figure out how many hours you need to use to achieve them. Find those hours. For my YouTube channel, I plan a whole three months ahead, and I know exactly when I need to start taping recipes for the next quarter to get them all done in time. Then, I break that down by days then by hours (photo below). Usually, I have lunch breaks planned out, too, but I've been horribly lacking in that area lately, choosing to eat what I film instead. :)
  4. Stick to your planned routine as though your very life depended on it. Don't let anything get in the way. If you have other obligations, schedule around them to begin with. If something pops up that you can't avoid, reschedule your action item right away. Don't put things off with the intention to "get to them" later and not making a firm plan to do so. You'll never get to them.
  5. Tell people what you're doing, and ask them not to disturb you during that time. Turn off all your ringers if you need to, and step away from the computer if you can. If not, disable your internet while you write or film or hammer or knit, whatever you're doing. Be as protective of your time as a mama bear is with her cubs. People interrupt? Maul their asses. You now have permission. :) Aren't I generous? haha
  6. Be a finisher. If it matters to you, you'll find a way, and if not, you'll find an excuse. Close your eyes, dive in, and give it everything you've got. Even if nothing comes of it, you gave it your all, and that makes you a winner every time. Celebrate those successes of finishing. Even if it's only forty-five minutes all to yourself (if you get this reference, you're now my bestie-haha! I'm totally kidding, Tia. You'll always be my bestie!).


Above all, don't be hard on yourself. Enjoy whatever it is you're doing, because if you don't enjoy it, what's the point? You don't have to be what everyone else considers perfect. Be your own version of greatness. Yours is the only opinion that matters.

I hope you all got something out of this and forge ahead with new energy in this year of 2021. Our future is what we make it. Let's make it great.

Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!

Jo

Monday, August 7, 2017

5 Things to Make You a Happier, More Productive Human and Writer

Happy Monday, everyone! I hope you all had a fantastic, relaxing weekend and are looking forward to the week ahead. I have so very much left to do in order to be ready for Chapter.con, but I have it worked into my schedule for next week. Yay! But that's not what this post is about. Today, I'd like to give you a quick list of ten things you can do that will help you become a happier, more productive individual. Ready? Grab your coffee, and let's get going!

1. Take Care of Yourself
This might be the single most important thing you can do. If you're not functioning at 100%, you're doing yourself a disservice. Need a mental health day? Take it. Trying to find a way to not go crazy every day? Find an outlet. Do something for you each and every day.

2. Stop Stressing About What Other People Think
If there's someone you don't want to interact with, stop. No one should own you or your mental space. Don't let those people eat your time. You have more important things to do.

3. Schedule Yourself
New to the blog? You can find my tips on scheduling here. An old hat? Y'all know exactly what I'm talking about.

4. Let Things Go
Don't let others' actions nag at you, and don't beat yourself up over mistakes you've made. Apologize and move on. If that means moving past that person, go back and read number two. Let it go. Sometimes, "it" is a person.

5. Write (or be Creative) at the Same Time Every Day
This way, your muse knows when to show up. If you're asking her to pop her head in on odd days, chances are, you'll end up staring at a blank screen (or canvas) pretty often, not knowing where to go next. And if it's not working, go do something else for a minute then come back, but don't give up.

Got anything to add?

Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!

Jo

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Writing Caves or Coffee Shops - Writer Groove

Happy Tuesday, good people of the blogosphere! Today, I'm gonna chat about the different ways writers get their novel creating groove on. Similar to NaNoWriMo, but when every day should be about words. So, grab those pens and notebooks and let's get going!

What's a writing cave?

Well, a writing cave is your zen space. Think of it as the place you go when you need to bang words out on the keys of your laptop, bringing yourself to a place of complete relaxation and creativity. When you enter your writing cave, it should feel like it's begging you to create.

Many writers have a bookshelf in their writing cave. What's on those tall, dark, handsome slabs of wood varies depending on what tasks the wordsmith takes on when in the room. For example: Mine is a short table with design how-to and editing books stacked on it. My issue of the CMoS is right on top, staring at me. It inspires me to do more and be more, and it's a handy reference shelf I access often.

Some writers have novels lining their shelves. Others have mementos, photographs, or other items to spark their creativity. It depends on the mood you're trying to set.

What else should be in your writing cave?
  • A visible schedule
  • Nail clippers (yeah, ever tried to write with a hangnail?)
  • Notebooks (for those ideas you get)
  • Pens 
You might also want to have a printer for those scenes you need to work out. Trust me, stepping out of the writing cave with scene in hand can make a huge difference.

I know one writer who prints images of her characters and a snatch of their bios, then hangs them on the wall where she can see them as she writes. When I asked why, her answer was: Because they speak better when I'm looking them in the face.

If you write romance, light a candle or two. Paranormal? Try some posters of otherworldly things.

Or, maybe you prefer to write at a coffee shop. Does the hustle and bustle, or conversations of other people, get your spark moving? Here are a few things to watch out for when choosing to write in public:
  • Fluffy chairs (they tend to make typing difficult and staying awake even more of a challenge)
  • High-traffic areas (you don't want to get bumped a lot)
  • Wi-fi (if you don't need it, turn it off so you aren't distracted by social media or e-mails)
  • Bad coffee (yeah...)
  • Chatty people
Regardless of where you choose to write, make it your zen space.

Whatever you do, be sure the mood is right for you and your process.  It's your book, and you need to make sure your surroundings are conducive to the creative side of your brain.

Where do you write?

Well, that's all for today, folks! Until next time, WRITE ON!

Jo