Newsletter Subject

6 ways to keep your focus (your writing will thank you!)

From

awaionline.com

Email Address

thewriterslife@awaionline.com

Sent On

Mon, Nov 15, 2021 11:20 AM

Email Preheader Text

This will make a big difference in your productivity – and your income November 15, 2021 Hi {NA

This will make a big difference in your productivity – and your income [The Writer’ s Life]( November 15, 2021 Hi {NAME}, Time is money … Especially when you're getting paid to write! Which means every time you lose focus, your earning potential suffers. Or maybe a better – more positive – way to put it is … You have a great opportunity today to make more money as a writer, by simply increasing the time spent focused! And to help you do it, I've asked AWAI Success Mindy McHorse to break down six tricks to keep (or regain) your focus. As the Executive Editor of Barefoot Writer Magazine, Mindy has produced over 100 issues to date … While also writing promos, content, and emails for numerous clients … Making six figures a year … working part-time hours. 🤯 #focused Although a decade ago, she was an aspiring writer wondering if the promise of the writer's life was even real … After doing a lot of research, she left behind a job and long commute she hated, and jumped in to the copywriter's life with both feet. At her first Bootcamp (of 13 — so far!), she made the decision to join [Circle of Success]( because she saw the training and accountability she needed to make her dream of writing from home a reality. Copywriting enabled her to have the career — and most importantly, the family life — she was searching for. If you're ready to take the first step forward towards paid writer … [This is how you do it.]( This ultra-focused and simple "first step" will give you everything you need … Fast. And better yet? You won't have to do it alone. Instead, you'll be able to look over the shoulder of a working writer who's eager to share her process with you … You'll experience a day in the life of a professional copywriter as you "sit in" on real writing sessions … Come to understand the professional writer's process … And walk away with the skills and know-how to write your own paid writing project … [Get started right here.]( To your success, [Rebecca Matter’ s signature] Rebecca Matter President, AWAI Turn Your Focus Into a Gold Mine (and Earn an Extra $69K per Year!) By Mindy McHorse [Woman in headphones writing on laptop in home office] According to a UC Irvine study from just a few years ago, it takes an average of 23 minutes to refocus your writing mind after an interruption. The same holds true for getting started in the first place. Few of us can power on our laptops and dive right in. Instead, we poke around here and there — maybe surfing internet, maybe skimming email — until we have a goal and a kickoff point. And then we write. Unless we're interrupted, in which case we waste 23 minutes until we're interrupted again. But this is no way to work, or earn for that matter! It's frustrating and wasteful. Think about it … If you could regain five of those wasted 23-minute chunks, you could claim almost two hours a day in extra writing time. Two hours a day, five days a week, working maybe 46 weeks a year is 460 reclaimed hours. Let's say you average $150/hour (which is low for this industry) … That's an extra $69,000 earned in one year! Even if you reclaim only half those hours, you're still pulling in an extra $34,500 a year. Which is a lot when you think about how easily it could be syphoned away to interruptions. I've lately been working hard to regain and reclaim my ability to focus. A year and a half of kids schooling from home and the world in flux has done a doozy on my attention span. I've found the changes I need start with avoiding interruptions in the first place. Here's what works for me: #1: Shut out your loved ones. For ages, my husband and I have taken advantage of my relaxed work schedule to go out to lunch, meet with contractors (for home improvements or whatever), or even just catch up over the phone. (It's surprising how little we communicate once all our kids are home.) And while that connection and flexibility is important, and a valuable tenet of the writer's life, if you have a project to work on or the opportunity to bring real money in the door … then it's okay to tell your friend or family member, "I'm flat-out not available." I find this easiest to do when I take advantage of technology, such as using the "do not disturb — work" setting on my iPhone to silence and hide all notifications. It also helps when I take a moment at the end of the day to share with him just how much more writing I got done — and what that dollar value is — in an effort to reinforce our new commitment to quiet. #2: Find and use quick-energy fixes. One ironic distraction for me is that with all the quiet and lack of interruptions, I get sleepy. And when I'm sleepy, I either go take a nap (because I can), or I find something to munch on in the kitchen. Both sleeping and eating cost me 30+ minutes of time where I'm not writing, and then comes the additional 23 minutes it takes to refocus after those interruptions. So my fix is to try and avoid both sleeping and eating while writing. If I'm sleepy, I do a series of jumping jacks or stretches. I also find that inhaling the scent of peppermint oil aromatherapy is energizing, as is taking 30 quick (panting) breaths followed by holding my breath for 30 seconds (weird, but it works … and remember, the point here is not to look cool!). In lieu of snacking all day, I have two to three glasses of water at the ready, plus a handful of nuts or carrots in grabbing distance. They're easy to eat, filling, and don't spark the need for more food (as opposed to getting stuck on the salty/sweet teeter-totter). #3: Hand-write your writing goals at the beginning of the day. There's something about putting pen to paper and writing out your goals that makes you more likely to achieve them. Do this every morning then, and your overall focus will be more centered, making you less likely to jump around, get distracted, or multitask. So those three tips will help you with avoiding distractions … But the second part of the puzzle is getting yourself back to a focused place after inevitable interruptions. Because if you work from home, the doorbell will ring at some point with a package you need to sign for. The dog will bark and startle you out of a writing reverie. You will need to get up and walk around, or grab a snack, or run out to that appointment you could only schedule during your designated writing time. Here's how you reclaim that interrupted focus: - Leave projects open. If you have to get up from your computer, leave everything open — your Word doc where your writing is, your research notes, your email correspondence about the assignment, all of it. That way, when you return to your desk, you can jump right back in without having to figure out where you left off. (And without any new distractions tempting you from your work.) - Use the five-minute trick. If you're having a hard time refocusing, tell yourself you're just going to work on something for five minutes. That's it. No big commitment, nothing hard. What you'll find is that after five minutes, you're more likely to continue with the task because that "getting started" barrier has been removed. So by starting with just the five-minute-plan, you can sidestep the 23-minutes-wasted trap. - Assume you won't finish. Especially for bigger projects, it's easy to think you need a two-hour block to really make a dent. So if you only have half-an-hour, it's not worth even starting, right? Wrong. 30 minutes here, 12 minutes there, 41 minutes later on … that's how people get things done. Part of the dilly-dallying that goes on in the 23-minute refocus challenge is simply the fear of starting, which is triggered because of the fear you won't finish. So try this: Don't expect to finish, and instead just aim to add a few more solid sentences, read a few dozen pages, or find five good sources for your project. You can do that in small chunks, which then become easier to dive right into because they don't require a huge chunk of time. But if you keep doing this, then before you know it … you will finish that thing you're working on. All that aside, the final and most important thing you can practice is self-compassion. You're going to have off days, you're going to get distracted … And that's all okay. Just keep putting in the effort, be conscientious of the challenges (like interruptions and refocusing hurdles) … And you'll still be able to build the writer's life of your dreams. (But hopefully this helps you build it a teensy bit faster!) Do you have any questions about making progress on your copywriting journey? [Please share in the comments]( so we can help. Editorial Note: Mindy has been living the writer's life for over 10 years now. One key factor in Mindy's quick rise to success was participating in Bootcamp for free through Circle of Success. But free Bootcamp is only one of the benefits of COS membership. When you join our highest level of learning right now, you'll have access to a new personalized training program that's like nothing we've ever done before! Plus, you'll get personal mentoring … customized career planning … feedback on your writing … live, instructor-led training … complete access to AWAI's entire library of resources … and much, much more … The list is long! But, your opportunity to sign up is short. The doors to Circle of Success close soon. [Go here to get all the details and enroll now.]( NEW: "Let's Write!" Training Experience Want to get started as a paid writer WITHOUT investing a ton of time and energy before ever seeing a paycheck? This ultra-focused and simple "first step" will give you everything you need to take your first step into the world as a paid writer … fast. And better yet? You won't have to do it alone. [Get started right here.]( Breaking Into Video Script Writing Good at writing stories? Want to get paid for it? During our next Inside AWAI session, Breaking Into Video Script Writing, on Tuesday, November 16th at Noon ET, AWAI's Pam Foster and Rebecca Matter will interview Andrew Davis — one of the top experts in the world on video script writing for businesses. In under an hour, we'll cover … - How to make $1,500 to $2,500 writing a 3–5-minute video script (wait until you see how few words this actually takes.) - Why video is the perfect opportunity for storytellers (and why it's actually EASIER than writing stories.) - The #1 way to land script writing jobs, even if you've never been paid to write one before (we'll tell you exactly what to do and say!) - How to use local video production companies to find clients (spoiler: they do everything BUT write the scripts!) - And so much more! [Go here for access instructions.]( Your ALL-ACCESS Key — Just $1! Get instant access to the exclusive B2B writing community and ALL their private resources, including … - All the success roadmaps … - All the writing templates … - All the articles … - All the how-to videos … - All 150+ training webinars … - The Forum, the Job Board, the tutorials, the tools … - And much more! [Go here for more details.]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Trouble viewing this email? [View in your browser, here](. For questions or requests: [contact us online](. --------------------------------------------------------------- ©2021 American Writers & Artists Institute Do you know of someone who would benefit from reading The Writer's Life? Simply direct them [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------- American Writers & Artists Institute 220 George Bush Blvd, Suite D Delray Beach, FL 33444 (561) 278-5557 or (866) 879-2924 Ensure your subscription delivery. AWAI Whitelisting info available [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- You are subscribed to this newsletter as {EMAIL}. To unsubscribe from any future issues of The Writer's Life, please click here: [Unsubscribe from The Writer's Life](. To unsubscribe from all AWAI broadcasts click here. [I want to permanently unsubscribe from all AWAI emails](.

EDM Keywords (270)

year writing writer write world works working work words without whatever way water want videos video using us unsubscribe understand two tutorials try triggered training tools ton time think thing thank tell technology task takes take surprising success subscribed stretches storytellers still startle starting spark something someone snacking snack sleepy sleeping skills sit simply silence sign sidestep shoulder short share series see searching scripts schedule scent say saw run ring return resources research require removed remember reinforce regain refocus reclaim ready reading quiet questions puzzle put promise project productivity produced process practice power point plus phone paycheck participating paper paid package opposed opportunity one okay nuts notifications newsletter never needed need nap munch multitask much money moment mindy maybe matter makes make made low lot look long living little list likely life lieu left lately laptops laptop lack know kitchen kids keep jumped join job iphone interruptions interruption interrupted instead inhaling industry income importantly important husband hours hour hopefully home holding hide helps help hated handful half grab going goes goals goal go give getting get frustrating friend free found forum food focus flux flexibility flat fix finish find final figure feet fear far experience expect exactly everything even enroll energy energizing end emails effort eating easy easily easiest earn eager dreams dream doozy doors doorbell door done dog details desk dent decision days day date cover could copywriter contractors continue conscientious connection communicate comments comes circle changes catch case carrots career businesses build browser breath breaking break bootcamp better benefits beginning bark back awai avoid average available assignment aside articles appointment aim ages add achieve accountability access able ability 13

Marketing emails from awaionline.com

View More
Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.