Productivity Tip #6: Set Goals for Yourself—and Stick to Them

From Publisher Kevin J. Anderson—The fourth of eleven tips to help you get more time for writing, and to produce more writing when you do have time

Set Goals for Yourself—and Stick to Them

Writer to do listI’m a goal-oriented person. Give me a target, or a list, and I’ll set out to accomplish the task, milestone by milestone. When I moved to Colorado, I got a book listing all 54 mountain peaks in the state higher than 14,000 ft, along with hiking or climbing routes to each summit. I immediately made up my mind to climb all of them—and I did.

Similarly, if you set yourself a writing objective, you have a target to shoot for, and a greater chance of achieving it. Make up your mind to set aside one hour per day of dedicated writing, or produce four pages a day, or complete a new story each month.

A caution: Know yourself well enough to set realistic targets, rather than ridiculous ones. If you repeatedly fail to meet your goals, day after day, you’ll get discouraged. Once you learn how to meet your goal of 1000 words per day, for example, then up the stakes to 1500 words a day. Push yourself.

If you find yourself making too many excuses to yourself, try a more clear-cut goal to keep yourself accountable. A regular writer’s group may provide you with incentive, if you need to finish a story before the next meeting. Or you can form or join a support/competition group of your own. Groups can set goals for their members (e.g., each member must submit a piece of writing at each meeting for the other group members to critique).

Rather than viewing this as undue pressure, you can see the friendly competition as mutual support among your fellow writers. The members of a highly successful group in Oregon regularly engage in competitions among themselves. In “the Race,” they compete with one another, keeping track of who has the most submissions in the mail at any one time. The reward is a dramatically increased writing output, as a group. The penalty? The loser buys the others dinner. But no one is the loser, really, because even the person with the lowest output is more productive than he or she would have been without the inspiration of those fellow writers.

Each November is National Novel Writing Month, where entrants challenge themselves to complete a novel manuscript in 30 days. In last year’s NaNoWriMo, participants produced 2.8 billion words in a single month. (Not as part of NaNoWriMo, but because if my deadlines, I wrote the first draft of each of the three books in my new Dan Shamble, Zombie PI series in less than a month, and all three will be published in the space of a year.)

Try entering writing contests, such as those listed in Writers Digest or Writers Market. All of these contests have deadlines which force you to complete your entry by a certain date. In the science fiction and fantasy field, one particularly successful contest is theWriters of the Future; it’s been around for more than an quarter century, and my wife and I are both judges, along with many of the most respected writers in the genre. We highly recommend it.

There are plenty of contests you can track down on the web, and the prospect of winning, as well as a set deadline for entries, may give you the nudge you need. (Beware: Avoid contests that claim all publication rights to submissions. You shouldn’t have to give up your story, no matter how good the contest sounds.)

KJA

Productivity 320To buy a copy of the book Million Dollar Productivity, click here Million Dollar Productivity (The Million Dollar Writing Series)

For the ebook, click here Million Dollar Productivity (Million Dollar Writing Series)