Your voice is so much more productive. Like, 14 or 15 sections long, several of which will be new to…Bluehost - Top rated web hosting provider - Free 1 click installs For blogs, shopping carts, and more. Sign in to check out what your friends, family & interests have been capturing & sharing around the world.3,022 Likes, 58 Comments - Emily ✨ (@emily_studies) on Instagram: “Notes on Freud from today!
I feel those are key to quality instruction, which is my preferred type of post.
Thank you for pinning it I agree with your tips. Let me know if you’re feeling stuck? Because it is longer than a regular post I wasn’t sure I was on the right track, reading for the story/the message first.
So my process is never perfect. £12.00. Aubergine A4 subject notebook. start new discussion reply. But revising your content goes quicker, when you outpace your inner critic and ignore her comments during the first three steps.
Use a notebook not only to jot down your ideas but also to organize fabric swatches and paint samples.
22 June 2016Uploaded by ahlam. I think the process varies from writer to writer, and sometimes from topic to topic for the same writer.In my experience, for straightforward topics, most people find outlining okay and they don’t need to do much revision, just editing & proofreading. For complicated topics, where people still try to get their head around an issue, people may use the writing process to think and find the essence of their idea. A piece of content doesn’t need to contain all the best ideas, it needs to communicate one idea (or one tip) that’s useful and illustrate it with examples so it’s clear for the reader.Also, when I want to quote an authority, I look for a useful quote rather than aim for the best quote.I also always have too many ideas. Even the simplest of outlines help.
And a writer should be able to provide what his readers expect from such a post.
Oh, and I also like to include examples. See more ideas about Study notes, Study inspiration, Pretty notes. I’ve been looking forward to your first post for 2017. So finding examples (and again organizing them) slows me down.I’m bad at archiving, so I have to go trawling for sources, too.
Take on any writing project with gusto.I never saw myself as a writer, but in my early forties, I learned how to write and discovered the joy of writing. I’d love to understand the stumbling blocks and see whether I can help out!What holds me back I think is my content curation process (I think I have an information hoarding problem.) Happy New Year, welcome back and thank you for this useful post. So don’t focus on what’s wrong with your draft. instead of bigger (writing the definitive guide on XYZ).I so love your approach, Henneke.
✍️ feliz viernes! It must be somewhere in my head.What I find useful when I’m stuck finding the main idea, is to think about it as AN idea, not THE idea.
I’d use it to track my favourite beers. I still edit a little while writing a first draft.But the more I trust my process, the more I enjoy my writing.Success!
Some paragraphs may be redundant, and you may need to re-order the remaining paragraphs.To check your content flow, read your content relatively quickly again. I was thinking vaguely when reading the post that these ideas needed to be kept handy, rather than filed on my computer. And if they’re confident with their outline (either in their mind or on paper), they often edit while writing. Best to differentiate.Yep, different people, different habits, and different stumbling blocks I also find that length of content matters. And then start pruning and so forth.Some people are fine with writing and editing in one go; and if you have a clear outline, then it may not be a problem.I’ve found it’s good to try out different methods and see what works best – and you may find it differs depending on what type of content you write. Consider limiting your editing time to avoid getting stuck and get your content ready for publication.During the revision process, dealing with our devilish inner critic can be tricky.Shutting up that voice is hard because you know some of the criticism is valid. Somehow you struck me as someone who turns each draft into a published article.When you have a chance to browse through your folder and evaluate the various drafts, I’d love to hear why you think you never finished these posts. For important content, consider hiring a professional proofreader.When I started writing a few years ago, I kept frustrating myself.I wasted time going back and forth. But only 3 are good enough to continue on to post.Not sure why I do that (create so many drafts)but it’s clearly something I need to fix.You picked up right where you left off last year.
Writing is a process of expansion and shrinkage.
. So instead of thinking about writing a whole article, I only pick a topic and write down a few ideas of what my post may cover. Funny enough, for the last couple of days I had been looking for a framework for revising, editing and proofreading for the children’s book I have written.
BTW, Happy 2017, Henneke!Yes, I find that I almost always lose focus with freewriting, but, to look at it in another way: I find the focus I didn’t know was there. I can get more done in my day this way.