Hello, fellow writers! I hope you find these strategies helpful. I'd love to hear if you have another strategy from a famous writer to share or one that you've created that helps you work more productively. Subscribe to the writing newsletter here: nicolebianchi.com/newsletter
I really genuinely appreciate your such lucrative video about writing ,I have been your subscriber of your awesome newsletter and now subscribed your UA-cam channel also Thanks for huge amount of information about writing anf information 💖💖👍🤗
I work in manufacturing where I press "go" and the machines do the real work. I spend all day in ny head and the realm of my fantasy novel series. When I get a new idea, I jot down a brief note. After a whole day, I generally fill a page. Then at night or another time, I flesh out the ideas and record them into my writing app. It's been a great process and time saver.
Walking works, though I hadn't considered it a "strategy" until now. I get some of my best ideas while walking an enormous manufacturing building at my workplace on weekends when it is empty.
Mowing the lawn is my favourite time to think of stories. Easy, repetitive work allows your mind to wander freely while the easy manual labor keeps you from getting bored and thinking about your life.
im so stressed out because ive been distracted with side quests all week. i really appreciate this. im going to watch this again and implement these so i dont feel so directionless and drained all the time.
This info video is not only motivational but all inspiring with the best author advice and quotes to spur us on as writers. When I'm at a loss and 'lagging along' without the motivation I need, I enjoy getting inspired by the knowledgeable published ones ! Thank you !
I watch a lot of material on writing and your videos are very well put together, packed with good tips from the greats of our craft. Kudos and thank you.
I've been struggling trying to write consistently. Recently, I've been going to the library after work every day and using their computers to work on my novel via Google Docs. I've been writing around 500 words now each day. It's been two weeks, and I finally feel like I can write freely again. It was easy when I told myself to just write what came to mind, then I could make it good later.
Break each chapter into 5 scenes (just 5 phrases in an outline), then create an outline of 5 parts for the first scene (again only 5 phrases). Those ten phrases, and sometimes it's only 10 words, represent where you think the characters will go. Then start on start writing the first part of the first scene and forget everything else. As soon as you have any words on the page, forget about that first outlined words that represented what you were to write in the first part of the first scene and just continue writing until you feel that part of the scene is real. Then repeat that with each of the 5 parts of the first scene. You will realize that you likely have somewhere between 1000 and 2000 words (or sometimes 12k). As you get better, you will average 2500 words per day. Do not think about the word count when writing. The only place the word count matters, in my case, is that people who read ebooks tending to only be able to digest at most about 3500 to 5000 words a day. If you are writing 2500 per day and publishing a chapter a week (I work 6 days a week, and publish on Thursday), that is 15k words per week which should keep them busy for a week. Editing can take up some of that time, so about half the time I will decide to publish twice per week (publish what I have ready on Tuesday and again on Friday). When you have more than you need, you feel less bad about chopping parts out that don't work when you are editing. ps. creating the outline is really only to give your editor (internal) something to think about while you are busy breathing life into the characters, pay it no attention. Publishing weekly adds a level of the real to it. Real people out there somewhere in the world are waiting. The above 👆is 326 words. After editing and formatting, 162 (total time 15 minutes). 👇 The astute math students will calculate 8 hours/15 minutes * 162 and realize that would be 5184 words per day. 😉 Break each chapter into 5 scenes, outlining 5 key phrases for each. Further outline the first scene into 5 parts, again with 5 phrases. Focus on these 10 phrases to guide your writing. Start writing the first part of the first scene. Once you have some words, let go of the outline and continue until that part feels complete. Repeat this for each of the 5 parts. You'll likely have 1000-2000 words or more. With practice, aim for 2500 words daily. Don't focus on word count while writing. It matters mainly for ebook readers who typically read 3500-5000 words daily. Writing 2500 words/day allows publishing a chapter weekly (15k words). Editing takes time, so consider publishing twice a week if you have enough material. Having more than you need makes it easier to cut during editing. The outline is mainly for your internal editor while you focus on the characters. Publishing weekly adds a sense of reality, as readers are waiting.
The human mind is a creature of habit. If you write at the same time every day, when you sit down to write you will always be able to. The only catch is you don't get to take the weekends off!
Hello, fellow writers! I hope you find these strategies helpful. I'd love to hear if you have another strategy from a famous writer to share or one that you've created that helps you work more productively. Subscribe to the writing newsletter here: nicolebianchi.com/newsletter
I really genuinely appreciate your such lucrative video about writing ,I have been your subscriber of your awesome newsletter and now subscribed your UA-cam channel also
Thanks for huge amount of information about writing anf information 💖💖👍🤗
@@bookseasysummaries6958 Thank you for subscribing! Happy to hear you are enjoying the writing resources.
More than helpful. 🤗
Thank you!! :)
@@InkwellMedia ✌️
I work in manufacturing where I press "go" and the machines do the real work. I spend all day in ny head and the realm of my fantasy novel series. When I get a new idea, I jot down a brief note. After a whole day, I generally fill a page. Then at night or another time, I flesh out the ideas and record them into my writing app. It's been a great process and time saver.
Very cool! All the best with your fantasy novel.
Thanks for your important video. I've 63. All my life I've reading books and thougt about write novels. I've a lot ideas. Let'z go ahead!
Good for u mate. I and many would like to hear some update about your work at some day.
Walking works, though I hadn't considered it a "strategy" until now. I get some of my best ideas while walking an enormous manufacturing building at my workplace on weekends when it is empty.
Mowing the lawn is my favourite time to think of stories. Easy, repetitive work allows your mind to wander freely while the easy manual labor keeps you from getting bored and thinking about your life.
im so stressed out because ive been distracted with side quests all week. i really appreciate this. im going to watch this again and implement these so i dont feel so directionless and drained all the time.
So glad you found the strategies helpful! Hope they'll help you get back to your main quest. 😀
This info video is not only motivational but all inspiring with the best author advice and quotes to spur us on as writers. When I'm at a loss and 'lagging along' without the motivation I need, I enjoy getting inspired by the knowledgeable published ones ! Thank you !
Thank you! So happy you found it helpful. I love reading motivational author quotes too.
I watch a lot of material on writing and your videos are very well put together, packed with good tips from the greats of our craft. Kudos and thank you.
Thank you so much! Glad to hear you are enjoying the videos.
I've been struggling trying to write consistently. Recently, I've been going to the library after work every day and using their computers to work on my novel via Google Docs. I've been writing around 500 words now each day. It's been two weeks, and I finally feel like I can write freely again. It was easy when I told myself to just write what came to mind, then I could make it good later.
This video is amazing! Thank you.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it!
Well done video! Thanks!
Thank you!
This was SO helpful!! I'm going to implement right away!!
So glad to hear that, Tracy! Thank you!
Break each chapter into 5 scenes (just 5 phrases in an outline), then create an outline of 5 parts for the first scene (again only 5 phrases). Those ten phrases, and sometimes it's only 10 words, represent where you think the characters will go. Then start on start writing the first part of the first scene and forget everything else. As soon as you have any words on the page, forget about that first outlined words that represented what you were to write in the first part of the first scene and just continue writing until you feel that part of the scene is real. Then repeat that with each of the 5 parts of the first scene. You will realize that you likely have somewhere between 1000 and 2000 words (or sometimes 12k). As you get better, you will average 2500 words per day. Do not think about the word count when writing. The only place the word count matters, in my case, is that people who read ebooks tending to only be able to digest at most about 3500 to 5000 words a day. If you are writing 2500 per day and publishing a chapter a week (I work 6 days a week, and publish on Thursday), that is 15k words per week which should keep them busy for a week. Editing can take up some of that time, so about half the time I will decide to publish twice per week (publish what I have ready on Tuesday and again on Friday). When you have more than you need, you feel less bad about chopping parts out that don't work when you are editing.
ps. creating the outline is really only to give your editor (internal) something to think about while you are busy breathing life into the characters, pay it no attention. Publishing weekly adds a level of the real to it. Real people out there somewhere in the world are waiting.
The above 👆is 326 words. After editing and formatting, 162 (total time 15 minutes). 👇 The astute math students will calculate 8 hours/15 minutes * 162 and realize that would be 5184 words per day. 😉
Break each chapter into 5 scenes, outlining 5 key phrases for each. Further outline the first scene into 5 parts, again with 5 phrases. Focus on these 10 phrases to guide your writing.
Start writing the first part of the first scene. Once you have some words, let go of the outline and continue until that part feels complete. Repeat this for each of the 5 parts. You'll likely have 1000-2000 words or more. With practice, aim for 2500 words daily.
Don't focus on word count while writing. It matters mainly for ebook readers who typically read 3500-5000 words daily. Writing 2500 words/day allows publishing a chapter weekly (15k words). Editing takes time, so consider publishing twice a week if you have enough material.
Having more than you need makes it easier to cut during editing. The outline is mainly for your internal editor while you focus on the characters. Publishing weekly adds a sense of reality, as readers are waiting.
this year i have to make the Final Degree Project and this video will help me a lot to write it.
Glad you found it helpful!
What kind of typewriter is that in the "intro photo"?
Thanks for the insight! I have made podcasts on a publication on which I feature called Resell Decadence, would love your insight😊
You just go on typing thinking about the final part of the thing that you are writing. Just make it finish whatever you are going to tell the readers.
The human mind is a creature of habit. If you write at the same time every day, when you sit down to write you will always be able to. The only catch is you don't get to take the weekends off!
Very true!
Someone send this video to George RR Martian
“Hmmm. What would Hercule Poirot do?”