Need Time on Your Side?
I always say I need more time. What I really need is to be more productive with the time I have. I'm also guilty of heaping too many projects on my plate, but that's for another post.
Today, mystery writer Jan Christensen is here to share suggestions on how we can gain more productive time in our day. I've tried a couple of her suggestions, and they work.
Jan has to be doing something right. She's currently writing two mystery/suspense series - one of them about a professional organizer - and several short stories. She also writes an article on reading in each issue of Mysterical-E magazine. I've probably forgotten something.
Anyway, when Jan speaks, it pays to listen.
Oh, yeah ... Jan also happens to be my critique partner :)
AND
Today I'm at Julie Kemp Pick's blog, Empty Nest Insider, talking about A Day in the Life of a Writer. See you there after you take some notes on Jan's post and leave her a comment.
For most of us it’s best to decide what to do when and for how long. Otherwise you drift, which works for some, very few, creative people. If you focus without micro-managing, that can also work if you’re not a procrastinator and are extremely self-motivated.
If this all seems daunting, I agree, it is. The best way to handle it is to set aside about fifteen minutes a day to update each of these. Right after dinner is a good time, or just before bed if you work into the evening.
Today, mystery writer Jan Christensen is here to share suggestions on how we can gain more productive time in our day. I've tried a couple of her suggestions, and they work.
Jan has to be doing something right. She's currently writing two mystery/suspense series - one of them about a professional organizer - and several short stories. She also writes an article on reading in each issue of Mysterical-E magazine. I've probably forgotten something.
Anyway, when Jan speaks, it pays to listen.
Jan is also doing a giveaway of the first book in her organization series, ORGANIZED TO DEATH. The winner will have a choice of a Kindle book, a paperback, or a PDF file. Leave a comment before 10 p.m. Thursday, and random.org will choose the winner. I'll post the winner's name at the top of Friday's post.
Oh, yeah ... Jan also happens to be my critique partner :)
AND
Today I'm at Julie Kemp Pick's blog, Empty Nest Insider, talking about A Day in the Life of a Writer. See you there after you take some notes on Jan's post and leave her a comment.
TIME MANAGEMENT FOR WRITERS
Thank you, Carol, for hosting me today at the fabulous Tiki Hut. Just my style—I even wore my beach hat. Carol suggested I combine my two main interests, writing and personal organization, to point out ways for writers to get more done and be more organized. A large topic, but I’ll try to be succinct.
I think most writers start off believing all they have to do is write, edit, submit their work, and then sit back and let the royalties roll in.
If that were ever true, how times have changed. Now it’s write, edit, submit or publish it yourself, and market our work.
I think many of us are finding out more of our time is spent marketing than the writing, editing, submitting of old took all together. Some writers thrive in this environment, some hate it and some are okay with it some days, and not so much other days.
Is there any way to get a handle on all this, to make it manageable? I do have several suggestions.
The very first is to learn how to use your computer and two basic computer programs—your word processor and your spreadsheet. Learn how to do an advanced Google search. Learn how to bookmark pages, how to send URLs in emails and on groups so that they work (copy and paste and be sure there is no period at the end or other mark or letters that will make it fail), and how to organize your computer files and browser bookmarks. And backup, backup, backup.
Then plan your days by either:
- Drifting. Do what you want each day when you feel like doing it. Write awhile, socialize awhile, edit some, submit somewhere, see what happens. Sounds rather pleasant, doesn't it?
- Focusing. For example, plan on an hour for writing, an hour for editing something else, two hours for social media, and quit when your time is up.
- Micro-managing. Decide exactly how much time you’re going to spend on each activity every day and then at what time of day you’re going to perform those activities. Further, decide if you’re going to try to juggle all four things every day (a balanced life), or concentrate on one thing for several days or weeks or even months (alternate obsessions) before tackling something else. See my blog post about planning a balanced life or using alternate obsessions to boost your productivity here: http://www.janchristensen.com/obsessed-or-balanced/
For most of us it’s best to decide what to do when and for how long. Otherwise you drift, which works for some, very few, creative people. If you focus without micro-managing, that can also work if you’re not a procrastinator and are extremely self-motivated.
Now for some specific ways to help this happen. You probably use some or all of these already, but a quick review might help or give you new ideas.
- Master List. Besides your writing and editing plus doing your usual social media every day, you have other things that come up. Make a running list of those items.
- Schedule. When you’re starting out, it’s best to have a written schedule for your days.
- Calendar. I like Google Calendar for appointments because it sends me an email alert the day before an event.
- Log. A log keeps track of what you've done when. Yes, you will forget otherwise. Make one for each project. Spreadsheets are ideal for these. You might mark down how many words you wrote each day on each project, or hours for writing and editing. You could list where you have submitted it for publication, where and when it was accepted, and all the places you marketed it, with dates. You can track your sales, reviews, anything that comes up.
- Income/Expenses Report. Again, using a spreadsheet for this is helpful.
- Notes. For each project, I keep a notes word processing file to dump everything about the work as it comes up. When I start out, I have a table with a timeline and a couple of sentences summarizing each chapter. My research goes in this file (I don’t do a lot—if you do, you might want a separate file for this). Maps, images, anything I can think of. When the work is ready to publish, I input my final log line/elevator pitch and the description at the top for easy access. Then, once the work is published, I put in the date of publication, ISBN numbers, price, buy links, both long and shortened, and anything else I think might be needed. It’s also a good idea to keep a separate document for reviews. Reviewer’s name, date published, where published, URL, and a copy the review.
If this all seems daunting, I agree, it is. The best way to handle it is to set aside about fifteen minutes a day to update each of these. Right after dinner is a good time, or just before bed if you work into the evening.
If you don’t keep it all up, you will panic at tax time, you will panic when you can’t remember if you did something, or you will embarrass yourself by forgetting to do something or doing something twice when you only needed to do it once.
Now, excuse me while I go cross this off my to-do list, and log it in my notes about ORGANIZED TO DEATH. Or maybe take a nap. I've become expert at that. Maybe Carol will invite me back for a post about napping. It would be a lot shorter than this one. Good luck to all! And a tip of the beach hat to Carol for having me here!
Back in her hometown of Newport, RI, Tina Shaw, twenty-nine, is picking up the pieces of her shattered life. She begins her first job as a professional organizer in a house filled with cardboard boxes and clutter, only to discover a dead body in an eerily neat baby nursery. She fears this career move may be a short one until the handsome but spooky new doctor persuades her to reorganize his office left in disarray by the former physician. Ignoring the doctor's obvious interest in her, Tina begins seeing her former boyfriend.
When he protests against her new profession, she realizes what a control freak he is. Then there's another old flame who is making her hotter by the minute. As she works through the office clutter, she learns the doctor has a possible motive for the killing. But when someone else is shot, the doctor has a solid alibi--Tina herself.
Drawn unwillingly into the case, she searches for answers as her list of suspects multiplies. When the killer begins targeting Tina and her friends, she works harder to learn the murderer's identity before someone else is found dead.
Jan Christensen grew up in New Jersey and now resides in Texas. Her published novels include Sara’s Search, Revelations, Organized to Death, and Perfect Victim. She's had over fifty short stories appear in various places over the last dozen years, two of which were nominated for a Derringer Award. She mainly enjoys writing mysteries, but every once in a while steps out of that comfort zone and goes for something else, blogging about personal organization and the writing life, for example.
Website: www.janchristensen.com
Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/Jan-Christensen/e/B004XTXSYO/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_pop_1
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JanSChristensen
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/janchristensena/
See you at Julie's!
The Goodreads Giveaway for In Name Only
ends at midnight Wednesday Pacific Time.
Congrats to whoever wins
Organized to Death by Jan Christensen!
Comments
Thanks, Jan, now I see where else I need to organize.
Carol, I'm off to see what you're up to.
Mason
Thoughts in Progress
I have a friend who swears by spread sheets. I'm still working on liking those, lol! I do make lists tho, and I have a calendar. That's the only way I stay organized.
My writing projects are all very well organized. Files are all there, labeled and updated regularly. When I'm not taking off a month, mostly, I usually dedicate early morning to writing, and allow myself to hit the social media after that and two other times during the day. And part of that schedule has to work around a job.
Like your hat, ma'am!
Sia McKye OVER COFFEE
Carol, We lost our Internet connection during a storm last night, and it's finally up and running. Sorry for the delay with your post.
Julie
Carol and Julie, on my way over!
Alex, thanks for commenting. I see you often here at the Tiki Hut. I hope these tips will help you.
Mason, absolutely, I use these tips and even more every day, or try to. I blog about personal organization and time management on Mondays. I found it much easier to be organized when I worked for someone else, so I need systems now that I’m a writer entrepreneur. (Like the sounds of that, don’t you?)
Delores, you can get organized again. Just sit with pen and paper for a while and figure out what would work for you. Or maybe you’re just a seat-of-the-pants kind of gal. If what you’re doing is working, no problem.
Shelly, glad to help. As you can guess, I really like researching this type of stuff and being my own guinea pig. Good luck!
Clarissa, it does my heart good to know you’re going to keep this. And thanks so much for the well wishes about my book.
Jemi, spreadsheets aren’t for everyone, but for those who take the time to learn how do them, they can work very well.. Carry on!
To A Beer for the Shower—doesn’t it get watered down? But I can see it would be a time saver. LOL Yes, the internet is a time-suck. All those quotes and cute pictures and YouTube. Then there’s email. And life! Yes, life.
Julie from Empty Nest Insider, sorry about your loss of connection last night. Interesting the same thing happened to me this morning. Glad you liked the tips, and thanks so much for commenting.
Julie Leuk, thanks for commenting. All these comments do a bloggers heart good, as all of you who blog well know!
VR Barkowski
Southpaw, I think most people are that way a lot of the time. Just do the best you can. I do recommend sort of an overall plan for your days
S.P., I simply didn't have the energy (I'm a low-energy person, which is one reason I think I try so hard to be organized) when my kids were little to do ANY writing. Good luck to you.
No problem, Julie. We're up and rolling now!
Carol: With all that you have on your plate, I think I would velcro myself to the carpet under the bed and refuse to come out. I so admire your stamina.
I have a set schedule, but seem not to have time for everything. I need 2-3 more of me.
Glad to see everyone here today. Jan will be here through Thursday. Feel free to ask her questions.
The book sounds great! Hope I win. :)
Seriously, Organized to Death sounds like a good read, so I'll be checking it out.
Hi there, Carol. Yes, I’m having fun. I’m delighted to see all the comments. And your smiling face. Now where are these cabana boys you were talking about?
Elephant’s Child, please explain your name to me! Glad you find the tips helpful. I have dozens more on my own blog, BTW.
M. Pax, we all need clones, I think. Or at least assistants. People. Minions. Not enough hours in the day.
Stina good for you! Schedules are extremely helpful.
Melissa. Once you lean to use spreadsheets, you’ll find all kinds of things to do with them. For example my husband wants to know what our electric bill average for the year is. I can put the info in there and have the program do the math. Since I’m lousy at math, this is quite a boon! I’d say I hope you win the book, too, but I don’t want to tick anyone else off. LOL Of course, I have no control over this—Carol uses a nifty program to do the choosing.
Helena, that’s exactly the right idea. Do it as you go so you don’t got nutso at the end of the year. Sometimes being nutso is a lot of fun. But definitely not at tax time. Thanks for checking out my book.
Love,
Janie
Enjoyed your post over at Julie's, Carol. :)
Elephant’s Child, interesting reason for your choice. It sure is memorable.
Susan, I’m the same way, and I think lots of people are. Outside pressure often works better than our own desire to get things done on our own. We have to create our own deadlines.
Shelley, I’ve made lists, at least mental ones, and schedules since I first got married and had to do housework. Like you, I couldn’t live without them.
Julie, there’s lots of time management advice out there right now. I don’t know how much is specifically for writers, so I’ve started doing a bit of that as I find what works for me. Nice to meet you, too!
You offer excellent suggestions for keeping organized, and yes, I'm paying attention!
Love,
Janie
Jacqueline, thanks for coming to the Tiki Hut. And thanks for paying attention.
Hi, Carol, good to see you here. LOL
Hi, Words Crafter, I like your moniker. And thanks for liking my tips so well that you’re going to print them out.
Janie Junebug, I do hope you’re getting some help with the chronic fatigue. I know it’s a lot harder to get things done if you’re tired all the time. Take care.
Jenneifer, thanks. I hope something or even all, will be helpful.
Emily, you don’t sound like a drifter to me. You do have a process that is working. But I don’t think everyone does. I think you are quite focused when you do your draft then your edits. Good for you!
And I already stopped by Empty Nesters site and said hello.
I like your idea of balancing the activities each day so that one can move from activity to activity before it get boring. I think that the amount of structure would vary with each person--I am pretty boring and like to have as much of a set schedule as possible so that I can be most productive.
Rula, thanks for commenting. I do hope the tips will help.
Stephen, the first step in getting organized is realizing that you’re not. And that there are way to become more so. Good luck! I hope these tips help. BSP: there are lots more on my own blog every Monday.
Jan, this is Jan, thanking you for commenting. I’m the first to admit I’m not perfect at this organizational stuff myself. Some days are a lot better than others, though, and that’s probably because I’ve been studying this stuff for years now.
Elaine, I find that one trick that might help is to set our own deadlines. Or at least an amount of time or number of words we want to write every day, or edit every day. That’s really the only way I know how to get it done.
Slamdunk, I have to ask about your name. LOL Because I’m such a tall woman (5’11”) people always ask if I played basketball. Just as your name catches my eye. I am sure you’re not boring. I’ve never met a boring writer. That said, I vacillate between doing lots of different things every day or trying to concentrate on one major thing, like editing a novel. It doesn’t hurt to mix it up as long as you have a plan.
Nice hat! Some excellent informative tips for actual writers, aspiring and published.
Personally, I don't require time management. I write when I want to write. Or if I cannot be bothered, Penny the Jack Russell dog and modest internet superstar, takes over. She's good like that.
Like the title of your book. I'm organised to life :)
Good of you to bring this awareness, Carol.
And with that, my highly cherished comment, abruptly ends!
Here, I can lend you a crayon.
Lynda, I’ve actually found that if I’m drifting and read up on time management in a book or a few articles on-line, that often kick-starts me again. Don’t know why that works for me, but it might also work for others.
Klahanie, I have lots of hats. I’ve always loved hats. Hats can change your whole look. Thanks so much for your delightful highly cherished comment.
Carol, you need more help than I can give, sometimes. LOL Did you find your pencil?
Klahanie, Thanks so much for helping Carol out. I think.
Cleemckenziebooks, Actually, I believe most of us are like you. Good days and bad days. Although taking a swim would make a day good. Hmm. I do think most writers are pretty driven to write. Planning can help make us a little less crazy. Which I think is probably a good thing. We’re already crazy enough, no?
Great post.
Leslie, glad I gave you a jumpstart. Just call me the cable gal.
Medeia, I recommend you put your writing first and do the rest in an order you prioritize. Many books have been written by people (especially women) getting up before the rest of the family and doing their writing first thing. Alternatively, set a time each evening or another part of the day, and unless there’s an emergency, only allow yourself to write then. Just one hour is a good timeframe to shoot for. Hope this helps.
Congrats and all the best!
Nas
Raquel, so nice you like my hat. I couldn’t resist buying it. Job hunting is extremely stressful, so give yourself some slack while doing it. Your schedule is not your own, and it’s just a worrisome time. You will get on a good schedule when your life is on a more regular one. Good luck!
Jan, thanks so much for blogging with me. You're always welcome to return.