Why do we have to bother about setting goals? Some aspiring writers usually put this aside as they believe that they have the right skills and resources to become successful in the profession.
A few writers do not even believe in goals and say that it is all about the journey. That may be partly true, that is why it is encouraged to create a lifestyle of writing, rather than just sit back for a month and create a novel. Yet, goals are definitely important for various reasons
Clarification: have you worked out exactly what you want to achieve by writing? Is it just to maintain an up-to-date and much followed blog? Or is part of the goal to get a novel traditionally published? Is it to get a book published twice a year? Or win awards and contests? Do you want to be listed as a 'Best Selling Author'? Because all of these require you to work in slightly different ways, and in the end if you haven't specifically stated what you want you might get to the end of the journey and find you have been traveling on the wrong path.
Achievement: There is always more writing to be done. Always more words that could be said, always more time you could be etching out of your life. Short-term goals allow you to say 'enough is enough' for one day. This is a beautiful thing, having reached your goal number of words (or whatever) and being able to go off guilt free and watch a movie. You cannot underestimate the difference to your quality of life this will make. Then mid-term goals will help you stay focused, knowing that you are reaching your long-term goal in the end. Also, they give you reasons to crack open the sparkling wine at certain intervals along the way. A complete first draft is not a published book, but it is still pretty damn exciting.
Justification: Knowing specifically where you are going with your writing will save much time at dinner parties, and many mumbling and usually looking for escape routes. After many people have asked what you have published upon knowing that you're a writer, (If you can resolve this one satisfactorily you are sweet, although the next question will probably come anyway), they generally follow this up with a query about what you are working on now. A small pitch is never out of place here. But at some point, following a few more glasses of wine have been drunk and the prejudice of the employed rises to the top, somebody asks where it is all going. They might probably say that you can't support yourself, or a family, on one book and eventually ask if you have ever considered that. Now, you could look them calmly in their red-shot eyes and reply that you have considered that, and you are working at a regular and achievable pace to have two books published each year, long with having a passive income from the online articles you produce and the teaching material you have developed, thank you very much for asking. This is much preferable to curling up in a whimpering ball with groans addressed to your mother that you didn't desire to be a lawyer, until somebody kindly hands you a paper bag to breathe into deeply.
A few writers do not even believe in goals and say that it is all about the journey. That may be partly true, that is why it is encouraged to create a lifestyle of writing, rather than just sit back for a month and create a novel. Yet, goals are definitely important for various reasons
Clarification: have you worked out exactly what you want to achieve by writing? Is it just to maintain an up-to-date and much followed blog? Or is part of the goal to get a novel traditionally published? Is it to get a book published twice a year? Or win awards and contests? Do you want to be listed as a 'Best Selling Author'? Because all of these require you to work in slightly different ways, and in the end if you haven't specifically stated what you want you might get to the end of the journey and find you have been traveling on the wrong path.
Achievement: There is always more writing to be done. Always more words that could be said, always more time you could be etching out of your life. Short-term goals allow you to say 'enough is enough' for one day. This is a beautiful thing, having reached your goal number of words (or whatever) and being able to go off guilt free and watch a movie. You cannot underestimate the difference to your quality of life this will make. Then mid-term goals will help you stay focused, knowing that you are reaching your long-term goal in the end. Also, they give you reasons to crack open the sparkling wine at certain intervals along the way. A complete first draft is not a published book, but it is still pretty damn exciting.
Justification: Knowing specifically where you are going with your writing will save much time at dinner parties, and many mumbling and usually looking for escape routes. After many people have asked what you have published upon knowing that you're a writer, (If you can resolve this one satisfactorily you are sweet, although the next question will probably come anyway), they generally follow this up with a query about what you are working on now. A small pitch is never out of place here. But at some point, following a few more glasses of wine have been drunk and the prejudice of the employed rises to the top, somebody asks where it is all going. They might probably say that you can't support yourself, or a family, on one book and eventually ask if you have ever considered that. Now, you could look them calmly in their red-shot eyes and reply that you have considered that, and you are working at a regular and achievable pace to have two books published each year, long with having a passive income from the online articles you produce and the teaching material you have developed, thank you very much for asking. This is much preferable to curling up in a whimpering ball with groans addressed to your mother that you didn't desire to be a lawyer, until somebody kindly hands you a paper bag to breathe into deeply.
About the Author:
Learn how to become a prolific writer, see Buffy Greentree's new book The Five Day Writer's Retreat
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