(Skip directly to ten for the fastest shortcut!)
Like any field, excellent writing requires study, practice and mentorship. Very few
successful authors ever published their first draft of their first work. Nearly all had to
expend considerable effort to improve their craft. Here are some ways to prepare for that
moment of publication. These tips also help keep you on your toes after publication for
better and better writing results as your career develops.
1) Read, read, read in your field. You can never read too much when youre trying
to excel as a writer. Reading in your field helps you develop a discerning eye. You need
this discerning eye for when you step back and look at your own work.
2) Cultivate role models. Know who the top-selling authors are in your field. Find
out more about them. How did they get to where they are? Do searches in the Internet
(available in most libraries-ask your librarian how to use a search engine) for information
about particular authors whose careers you admire. Let your role models inspire rather
than daunt you. There is no competition, only inspiration, potential teachers and
opportunities for cooperation. That author you envy this year may be writing a blurb for
your first novel next year.
3) Research your markets. If you want to publish in periodicals, whether literary
fiction, journalistic writing, or anything else, realize publication standards serve a purpose
other than to frustrate new authors.
4) Take classes. Many cities offer writing classes through community colleges or
local writing groups. Online writing classes are popping up everywhere. If possible,
choose a writing teacher who has published in a field youd like to enter. Even better, find
someone you already consider a mentor. Not every published author has what it takes to
offer beginning writers what they need, but many do.
5) Join or start a writers group in your area. We teach best what we most need to
learn. There is no better way to improve your own writing than to help others with theirs.
6) Find a writing buddy with whom to check in on a regular basis. The two of you
can be each others inspiration, accountability market, guidepost and reality check.
Having structure and someone to check in with may help you look forward to your
otherwise lonely writing sessions.
7) Play with changing voices. Copy other writers you admire. How does that feel?
Pretend you suddenly got an injection of creativity serum or I.Q. booster, then write like
mad for ten minutes. What happens to the quality of your words? Is this a possible new
direction for you? As creative and intelligent beings, we have so much more within us
than we could ever dream.
8) Accept the reality of rewriting. Unlike other professions who get to rest on their
milestones, for writers, a completed manuscript often represents a beginning. The best
writing comes after lots of rewriting, even for seasoned authors. You neednt throw any
of it away, but not every sentence belongs in every work. Save the scraps, but dont get
attached to where they go, or the integrity of your project will suffer.
9) Get clear on what you want out of getting published. Many writers move forward
without knowing where they want to wind up. As a teacher once told me, If you dont
know where youre going, any road will take you there. The answer to what you want
out of getting published will help you determine the best route to take. And in publishing,
those routes are many and varied. You can use our Twenty Questions as a self-help guide.
10) If what you want is to get published in the least amount of time, considering
hiring a ghostwriter. An extremely common but rarely discussed practice, many
successful authors talk to ghostwriters, who put their skills to work on an authors behalf.
Although some such ghostwriters get a cover credit, many do not, hence the ghost
terminology. If you have more money than time or inclination to toil, ghostwriting may be
the option for you. Learn more
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Author Jill Nagle is founder and principal of GetPublished,
http://www.GetPublished.com, which provides coaching, consulting, ghostwriting,
classes and do-it-yourself products to emerging and published authors. Her most recent
book is How to Find An Agent Who Can Sell Your Book for Top Dollar
http://www.FindTheRightAgent.com.







