This post is for you if you fancy taking your writing to the next level in 2022, or if you’re fed up with putting off your writing goals because something else keeps coming up, or if you would like to get your next twelve months of writing planned so you feel super-organised going into the new year.
Maybe you want to know how to create workable writing goals in the first place or you have set goals before and after a while life took over and you kept putting off your writing, until those goals seemed unimportant. I promise you there is a way to work on your writing goals without sacrificing the other important things in your life, you simply need to learn the right way to do it and put it into practice.
Ten years ago, I wrote a book on goal-setting and time management, inspired by my undergraduate students. The techniques I learnt about as I researched the book are life-changing and they’ve stayed with me every since. In the next couple of posts, I’ll summarise the approach I developed in that first ‘small steps guide’ and how you can apply the small steps method to your writing life in 2022.
First of all, think about a writing project you feel enthusiastic about, and create a specific writing goal for it. Dedicate a notebook to your goal and write the goal down on the first page. Now answer these questions:
These question are simply to get you thinking, you don’t have to know the answers yet. Here are a couple of made up examples.
You can see how both goals are time limited, both are concrete and measurable, and it will be easy to tell whether these writers achieve their goals or not by the end of the year. You can also see that both writers could come up with the answers to these questions without knowing exactly how the goal would be achieved.
You might also have noticed that the emphasis in goal one is on submitting the work. In goal two, the emphasis is on publishing and selling the work. These two fictitious writers have quantified their goals in different ways. Personally I think that 1) knowing why you write and 2) knowing how you want to quantify your writing goals in 2022 is key to your writing success. I’m creating a new course about precisely that at the moment – but more on that another time.
Using a diary, planner or calendar, block off any times when you can’t work on your writing (a holiday or wedding for example). Michael Hyatt calls these your ‘big rocks.’ Then mark in some ‘signposts’. Signposts are stages that you want to reach by a certain point in the year. The novelist in the above example, for instance, wants to submit by December, so perhaps s/he decides to get a finished draft done by November. Working backwards, s/he decides to start redrafting the book in August, so needs to finish a first draft by then – so s/he needs to finish half of it by April. These are all signposts that will let him or her know if s/he’s on track. By the way, your signposts will also tell you if you need to revise the goal.
Reaching your writing goals doesn’t happen by accident. It happens through planning. And that’s precisely what the Plan Your Writing Year Masterclass will help you to do.
A powerful combination of video, workbook and downloads, you’ll get all the tools you need to get super-organised and take your writing to the next level this year.
More soon. Until then, happy writing,
Louise xx