How I wrote a bestselling book while working full-time as a journalist
I wrote a book by keeping a consistent writing schedule at night and on weekends.

How I wrote a bestselling book while working full-time as a journalist

I wrote my book, Life Between Moments: New York Stories , in eleven months while working full-time as a journalist for Business Insider . I did this by keeping a consistent schedule with my fiction writing at nights and on weekends, while making sure not to burn myself out from writing.

During the day, I report on markets and the economy . The daily reps of news stories helped me improve as a writer, and bolstered my stamina and speed.

The metabolism of a financial markets desk is extremely high. I publish several stories day, with each ranging from 200 to 400 words. But the sparse quality of business writing taught me to trim down my prose and be specific in my language.

I usually go workout immediately after work, then have a meal, then sit down to write for about 30 minutes before seeing friends or attending evening events.

That’s it. Thirty minutes, five days a week, as I explained in my slideshow story for Insider .

Consistently good beats occasionally great

The lesson here is not that you need outrageous bursts of writing, but rather consistent, small bites. Even on days I was tired or busier than usual, I would sit and write for 15 minutes.

That kept me constantly chipping away at my writings, and allowed me to always have the project front of mind .

And, after almost a year of following that schedule, I had a complete book , ready to publish after dedicating very small moments of my day for a year.

Naturally, I did have many weekends of all-day writing sessions. But I know that if I had aimed for those, rather than the small bursts in the evenings, it would not have been sustainable.

Scheduling smaller sessions is far more effective than longer ones, because there’s less mental friction to tackling them in the same way it is easier to convince yourself to run two miles than ten.

Hard work has a long tail

Consistency can make up for lapses of effort or a lack of talent. I do not consider myself particularly clever but I have learned not to miss any days of writing.

Action begets action. The more you do, the more you will have done and the more you will have to show for it. That couldn’t be more true when it comes to writing a book.

Here’s the takeaway: Set a schedule, and don’t negotiate with yourself. Respect your own commitments, and they will take care of you. The things you can accomplish when you do not miss days are limitless.

Now, I have a book I’m proud of that I worked on entirely outside of working hours .

Life Between Moments: New York Stories is now available on Amazon.


This post originally appeared on philrosen.blog .

md sohag

Attended Arizona State University

11 个月

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回复
Bianca R.

Content Writer | Proofreader/Editor | EN/PT Translator

1 年

I've always wanted to write my own book, but writing for others + perfectionism keeps getting in the way. So, thank you so much for the tips! They are really helpful :)

Martine Paris

BBC Features Correspondent, Forbes AI Columnist

1 年

Wonderful!!!

Andrew Whatley

Economics | Mortgage Intel | Data | Writing

1 年

I love this line. So true. "Respect your own commitments, and they will take care of you.?"

Steven Ward

Assistant Vice President, Wealth Management Associate

1 年

Thank you for sharing

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