Balancing Writing and Business

Two friends balancing on railroad ties. by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

Sometimes dealing with both creative work and the business end can be overwhelming.  On any given day, I’m brainstorming plots, researching a new promo approach, and reading articles about the publishing industry.  It’s a lot to juggle.

The part that probably takes up the most time and energy for me is learning something new.  And I’m always learning something new.  I’m branching into hardcover, I’m reading about new translation platforms, I’m trying a new app, I’m using a new aggregator, I’m reading up on Amazon ads.  There’s rarely a time that I’m not figuring something out.

I’ve discovered a few things that work for me in regards to both balancing the writing and business sides and making myself feel less-frantic in the process.

Write first.  There is so much to learn and apply with the business end of things that it’s easy to get wrapped up in it and lose out on writing time.  By hitting your writing goals first, you know you’re staying on track.  It has always reminded me a little of housework.  If I tackle a large project at home, like clearing out a closet, if I haven’t done my regular housework (loading the dishwasher, making beds, putting away clutter), then despite how much progress I made with the closet, I’m still feeling frustrated and behind.  By writing first, you know that anything else we accomplish that day is above and beyond.

Don’t try to multitask it.  I love using the Pomodoro method for my writing and at one point was interspersing the writing with research or business in 20-minute sessions.  But I found that this wasn’t good for either the creative work or the business work.

Set a time limit.  I usually set a timer for myself when I’m working on business-related stuff or learning something new. Otherwise, one link tends to lead to another and soon I’m lost in a rabbit hole of new information.  I can eat up hours that way if I’m not careful (and usually I don’t have hours to spend).

Keep notes.   I’ve learned that even though I’ve spent hours figuring out how to do something on my website or how to make the best ad, etc, this does not guarantee that I’ll remember how to do it the next time around.  There are tons of ways to keep notes on this stuff: use an old-fashioned notebook, create a folder in Word, or use OneNote (OneNote is my current method for organizing my notes and works really well.  Plus, it’s free).

How do you handle the balance between the writing life and business?  Any tips I’ve missed?

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Filling the Creative Well

Paintbrushes lie near a paint palette and a blank notebook is close by.

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

I was stumped a couple of months ago by a question from a very sharp writer in a high school creative writing class.  He asked me what I do on those days when I didn’t feel inspired to write.  I had to babble out some answer about what I hear that other writers do on days when they don’t feel inspired to write.  The truth is that I’m rarely inspired when I write…I just do it and fix anything that sounds ‘off’ later.

But I know what I wished I’d answered.  Because I do always make a point of filling my creative well.   I may not feel inspired when I write, but I sure as heck don’t want to feel burned out when I write.  I’ve written through burnout several times over the past ten years and it didn’t feel good.  Forcing the words out isn’t fun and the end product will need work.

For me, the answer is two-fold.  It’s surrounding myself with other people’s creativity and giving myself quiet, empty time to think or just be.Continue reading

Tips for Using Goodreads

Computer on white background.

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

I’ve written a few times recently about using Goodreads to better advantage.  If you’ve missed anything (making better use of giveaways and using Goodreads widgets on your website and Facebook page to find new readers), then pop over to The IWSG where I have a guest post today.

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Twitterific Writing Links

Bluebird with beak open and 'Twitterific Writing Links' by ElizabethSCraig superimposed on the image

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 45,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.

Have you visited the WKB lately?  Check out the new redesign where you can browse by category, and sign up for free writing articles, on topics you choose, delivered to your email inbox!  Sign up for the Hiveword newsletter here.

I’m planning my editorial calendar for August and September.  Is there anything like you’d like to see covered on my blog?  Any publishing-related questions (trade or self-pub?)  Here’s a one-question anonymous form to give me some ideas.

Business / Taxes

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