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Friday, May 10, 2013

How to Immediately Become a More Productive (and Better) Writer

Image of Open Writing Notebook

You want to become a better writer.

I know this because you’re reading Copyblogger.

I also know that you fear becoming a better writer.

This I know because you must change to become better, and to fear change is to be human.

But what if I told you that you only need to change one thing — one small thing — to achieve your goal of becoming a better writer?

Would you believe me?

You should. It’s not just theory; it’s science.

One small step really can change you.

Those are the first six words on the book jacket of One Small Step Can Change Your Life, the bestseller by Robert Maurer.

This is exactly what I want this post to do: unleash the potent force of kaizen … in your writing.

Kaizen is a Japanese word representing the process of achieving sustained success through small, steady steps.

The concept actually originated in Depression-era America before being introduced in Japan by General Douglas MacArthur after World War II. There, it quickly took hold and became a driving force in Japan’s economy, growing into one of the most robust the world had ever seen.

Now, thanks to books like Maurer’s, the concept has gone from macro to micro, and become a proven driver for individual development.

So let’s go even more micro.

Rather than change your life (that’s what the book is for), I want to help you change as a writer. In one small but significant way.

Sometimes all it takes is one tiny step to propel you with momentum on a path of continuous development. But you have to take that first step.

Here are a handful of ideas for small changes you can make right now that will improve your writing …

Stephen King — who has surely forgotten more about writing than you and I know combined — believes that adverbs are “not your friend.”

In his book On Writing, King goes so far as to say that “the road to hell is paved with adverbs.”

I don’t know if I would go that far, but I do agree with this quote from him:

They’re like dandelions. If you have one in your lawn, it looks pretty and unique. If you fail to root it out, however, you find five the next day … fifty after that … and then, my brothers and sisters, your lawn is totally, completely, and profligately covered with dandelions. By then you see them for the weeds they really are.

King’s hatred for adverbs is well-reasoned. He believes they were “created with the timid writer in mind” and tell us the writer “is afraid he/she isn’t expressing himself/herself clearly.”

Timidity, be gone!

Write what you mean and mean what you write. Use adverbs where they are pretty and unique in their boldness. Then, and only then.

Mark Twain instructed us to “employ a simple and straightforward style.” Adverbs are neither. They are, more often than not, vanities that offer little benefit to the reader.

Start paying attention to your adverb usage. Be judicious.

Discover the difference between your reader needing an adverb for context or clarity and you needing an adverb to make yourself feel better.

Then write (and edit) accordingly.

There are bloggers, and there are writers.

Bloggers casually write within their WordPress dashboard, adding links, pictures, and videos, as they create content. Bloggers may even have Twitter open to capture any late-breaking news about the topic they are covering. The words are important, but they are just part of the show.

Writers write.

Writers do their research, open up a blank document, have whatever notes handy that they need, block out the world, and then focus on the words and only the words.

Writers don’t edit as they go. Writers don’t break their flow to pull a video embed code from YouTube. They do this after the draft is done.

I came up on the web as a blogger. I am now transitioning into being a writer. And I am finding that what I produce is much better writing as a writer — with my first draft always in Word — as opposed to writing as a blogger.

Editing, linking, embedding, etc., can always be done after the first draft is complete. But you can never recover that uninterrupted wave of initial thought and inspiration. In my experience, once it’s gone, it’s gone.

Do you blog, or do you write? Try writing.

Focus solely on the ideas in your first draft. Record them in Word or a text editor, then transfer them to WordPress for editing and formatting later.

Maybe it doesn’t matter whether you are writing or blogging. Maybe your issue is discipline.

Don’t fret. You are not the first to struggle with this, and you won’t be the last.

Sometimes the single hardest aspect of writing is simply putting the rear end down in the chair and … writing.

If you could make a small change that would increase the frequency with which you do this, you’d automatically be a better writer.

So why not try the technique that worked for one of the most legendary copywriters of all time?

It’s incredibly simple: just set aside certain times each day when all you do is write.

And time yourself. Maybe it’s 10 minutes, maybe it’s 33.33 minutes, maybe it’s an hour. But during that time, allow yourself to do nothing but write.

If you end up staring at the blank screen producing nothing, so be it. More likely, boredom will overcome you at some point and you’ll start to write something.

Something is better than nothing. And every time your butt is in the chair writing, you’ll be getting better.

Just because you’re confined to a chair for a prescribed period time does not insulate you from being intimidated by the blank page. In fact, sometimes it can make the pressure more acute.

The vast white expanse and blinking cursor can get to the best of us.

The next time this happens, turn to a friend.

I don’t mean literally. While talking your ideas out with someone may help in some circumstances, you won’t actually be writing. Instead, think of a friend — preferably someone similar to your target audience — being on the other end of the empty document, as if they would be the only ones receiving these words. Then consider your goal to be nothing more than explaining your idea to them.

Go so far as to write Dear So-and-So at the top of your document (I do).

Now, instead of writing to no one and everyone all at once, you’re writing to one person. It’s like an email. And the ideas flow naturally and with less pressure.

You have the editing process for smoothing out the rough edges. But the ideas have to come first.

Anything you can do to coax uninhibited ideas out of your head will make you a better writer. A small shift in thinking at the beginning of your writing session is all it takes.

Settle down. I’m not talking about plagiarism here. I’m talking about studying other successful writers, seeing what works for them, and incorporating it into your own writing strategies.

That’s right: your one small step doesn’t even need to be an original idea.

Just take what is proven to have worked for another writer — like the timed writing sessions above — and implement it to see if it works for you.

If you want a specific suggestion for how to do this, I say start reading The Writer Files and pick out one tip in each edition to implement for testing.

Maybe you decide to see if waking up at 3:00 am works as well for you as it does for David Meerman Scott.

Maybe you commit to emptying your bladder and filling up a water bottle before sitting down to write, like Lisa Barone.

Maybe you turn off your phone before writing, like Daniel Pink.

Maybe you try listening to jazz while you write, like Seth Godin.

Maybe you try all of these strategies and none work for you. Great! Just by trying them you’ve changed. You’ve initiated the process of improvement. You’ve figured out what doesn’t work, thus getting closer to what does.

Writing may be a solitary act, but the process of becoming a better writer doesn’t need to be.

Yes, I’m serious.

If you’re like me (and countless other writers I’ve talked to), your best ideas come to you in the shower. There’s plenty of science to back this up.

Yet, like an idiot, I have never devised a good system for capturing my epic shower ideas. Sure, I’ll try to remember them and record once I get out of the shower, but all to often I forget the brilliant thought and am left lamenting the loss.

No more.

It finally dawned on me that my shower passivity has cost me a lot over the years …

It’s cost me money, in terms of brilliant story or blog post ideas I never followed through on.It’s cost me arguments, because I’ll forget a perfectly worded rebuttal or explanation.And it’s cost me peace of mind, because a brilliant conclusion to some issue is forgotten, thus leaving a thought train open that must still be dealt with later.

Compared to such costs, the $10.19 Amazon charges for bathtub markers is a bargain!

Now I can write down what I’m thinking on the shower wall and record it later. (If your shower walls won’t allow for this, go with Aqua Notes.)

As writers, our ideas are our most precious assets. Don’t let any more go swirling down that shower drain.

Recording just one great idea that you would have otherwise forgotten will make you a better writer. Just think how powerful this one small step could be if it became a habit.

You want to become a better writer, and I’m not asking you to make any bold, sweeping changes to your life in order to get there.

Just do one thing.

Take one step.

Maybe it’s one of the six steps described in this post, or maybe it’s something else. But by taking just one step in the direction of becoming a better writer, you make yourself ready for step two, and then step three, and so on.

Let me end with a few immortal words from Lao Tzu …

A journey of a thousand miles must begin with the first step.

Take that first step.

You’ll be a better writer tomorrow than you are today.

Image via Lethaargic.

About the Author: Jerod Morris is a copywriter, blogger, and founding member of the Synthesis Managed WordPress Hosting team. Get more from Jerod on Twitter and Google+.

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