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Writers Get Stuff Done – Andy Zach’s Method

What is novel Writing Like

Writers Get Stuff Done – I’m talking to you: a writer or an aspiring writer. I’m also talking to you if you’re not a writer. I’ll show you how you can get things done, and how to overcome problems getting things done.

I’ll give you methods that work for me, well enough for me to write and publish seven books. Here they are, if you don’t believe me.

Life After Life Chronicles
Writers Get Stuff Done
Enjoy all four novels in audiobook, paperback, or Kindle format!
Andy Zach Newsletter Zombie Detective Audiobook
Writers Get Stuff Done
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Interesting Links
Writers Get Stuff Done
Secret Supers – click for a free audiobook.
2021 Reviews
Writers Get Stuff Done
Villain’s Vacation Audio book

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Writers Get Stuff Done – All You Need

Let’s not beat around the bush. Let me give you the three main points, then I’ll address common obstacles.

  1. Write what you love or desperately need to write
  2. Every day, write at the same time and place
  3. Write something every day and measure how much you write.

Why do I give you these three points?

First, you need strong motivation. Doing what you love or yearn to write should be something you want to do more than anything else.

If you don’t have this, stop reading now and figure out what you want to do every day for years.

Second, you need a plan to build a habit. Pick a standard time and place. I start between 9-10 am every day, between Monday and Friday. Pick what works for you. Do this for a month and you’ll have a habit.

If you don’t have a plan to create a habit, you’ll fail. You’ll forget and be interupted. The purpose of this plan is to ensure you schedule everything around it.

Third, you must accomplish something every day. You need positive feedback every day. You wrote one word. Or ten. Or a thousand. Since this is a habit that continues until to complete your writing goal, the number of words a day doesn’t matter, nor the time it takes. It’s all about steady, daily, progress.

It goes without saying you track your daily word count–but I said it anyway. Here’s the spreadsheet I use:

Writers Get Stuff Done
Spreadsheet for tracking progress

You can download it here.

Writers Get Stuff Done – Conquering Obstacles

  1. The main obstacle I face is distraction – the Internet, television, children, spouse. Here’s how to overcome distractions.

Prioritize – A. The one thing you must get done today. Get out of your burning house. Realize your house is burning until you write something.

B. What you should do today. For example, eat something. You can eat after you write something.

C. Everything else is what you could do–like watching the latest episode of your favorite TV/Youtube program. Read a book. But only do this after you write and eat.

Our family is vitally important to our lives. Love them, accept their interruptions, but explain your priorities. After taking care of their needs, ask them to take care of your needs and give you a bubble to work. Your bubble is your planned time and place.

There are a zillion other ways to prioritize. Here’s one:

Use the urgent/important matrix

2. Your Next Obstacle – Research

You need facts even when you write fiction. What’s the speed of an unladen swallow?

The speed of an unladen swallow

Research like this can sidetrack you endlessly. Don’t let it. Write down exactly what you need to know, WHY you need to know it, and HOW it will help the reader. Then go find out those specifc facts. Do this as a SEPARATE task from your writing, preferably BEFORE you start writing.

More general research is like the nature of a scene. Where in central Illinois will turkeys go? Where along the shore of Loch Lomond would there be a bed and breakfast? Those are questions I asked and answered for Zombie Turkeys and My Undead Mother-in-law. Then there was the question of where in Kansas are the underground ICBM sites? I found them and a diagram.

Writers Get Stuff Done
Underground missile silo – Click to get my book

On to the final obstacle next!

3. Your Final Obstacle: Overcoming Interruptions

Stuff happens. Pets and children throw up. You get into a fender bender. A traffic jam delays you. A snowstorm hits. Will these normal events of life stop you?

NO! You have a burning desire to WRITE. You’ve written down you daily goal right by your computer screen. After the interruption, you read it again. You get motivated, picturing your completed book. You realize you only need to write one paragraph, one sentance, to make some progress today. This is your number one priority today. That’s how Writers Get Stuff Done.

So write one sentence. Write one paragraph. Write a page. Before you know it, you’ve written five hundred, a thousand words.

Or seven books.

Writers Get Stuff Done
Meet Andy Zach.
Andy Zach meditates upon success. Click to get a signed book.
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Problems of a Self-Published Indie Author

Quizzes, Questions

Problems of a Self-Published Indie Author exactly as I have experienced them over the past five years.

I’ll go through this in the order I’ve learned these lessons.

Indie Author Problem Number One

Mistakes. Writing mistakes.

“But Andy!” you say. “You paid for a professional editor!”

You’re right. But I make mistakes that slip past even the editor. I was reading Zombie Turkeys after it came back from the format editor. It was perfect–except I had the wrong character name in one sentence. Zombie Turkeys had over eighty named characters. (I know–that’s too many for a 54,000 word novel. I haven’t repeated that mistake.)

I’m glad I found it on the last read through before publishing. But that doesn’t solve every problem.

My Second Indie Author Problem

What about book covers? I complicated things by asking for and paying for a full back cover illustration plus chapter icons.

I have a great illustrator, Sean “Fuzzy” Flanagan. But artists are creative types. And Fuzzy was doing his first commission with me. The covers weren’t always done when I needed them. Also, they had to be in precisely the correct format for print books.

This took time. I made mistakes. I missed schedule dates.

But wait–there’s more! Kindle (and CreateSpace) have very strict guidelines on covers. My Createspace (print) cover for Zombie Turkeys was not acceptable for Kindle. It had too much blood on it. So I had to switch the colors after I released the book. That took time away from sales while it was being changed. Here’s the Kindle cover for Zombie Turkeys.

Do you have any questions so far? Ask me. I cover the whole publishing process in my blog post here.

My Next Problem: Getting Audible AudioBook Completed

I bet you didn’t see that coming! I wanted to publish each of my books in as many formats as I could. Audiobook publishing with royalty share was easy–you put your book on Audible for audition and you select the best voice actor.

I hit a home run with my first voice actor, Phil Blechman, who’s voiced Zombie Turkeys, My Undead Mother-in-law, and Paranormal Privateers with his voice actor assistant, Raven Perez.

So what’s the problem? My Undead Mother-in-law is six hours long. I had to listen, very carefully, to every minute to make sure there were no mistakes. And there were some in almost every chapter.

You try to read for six hours without making an error, let alone acting with the right nuance. And this doesn’t count production errors like too much background noise, or voices that are too soft. Audible is very picky about its volume levels. They rejected some chapters all by themselves.

All in all, audiobook production took much longer than I expected.

The Final Problem – Changes Later On

Once you publish a book, it never changes, right? Wrong.

Each time I publish a book, I updated the books I published to show all the books I have. That way, I can possibly entice people to buy my other books.

No biggie, right? Wrong. I have to update the front matter, and the back matter, the preview of the next book. I also put in links to the other books.

This only has to go through format editing for print and ebook formats–but it still must be done.

Then there’s the time I changed a book cover because the old one wasn’t selling. But that’s a story for another time. I’ll tell you if you ask me. Hint It’s this next book: