Welcome back to Copyblogger! I'm Stefanie, Copyblogger's Editor-in-Chief, and today Sonia Simone is sharing guidance that will help you move forward with the work that matters most to you. --------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsored by Digital Commerce Partners Free for a Limited Time: [Give Us Just 30 Minutes and Weâll Transform How You Sell Online](â --------------------------------------------------------------- How to Stick to a Schedule, Even If You Lack Writing Confidence written by Sonia Simone Itâs tricky to stick to a schedule when you can see all of the flaws in your own writing. So, how can we publish content every week, or even every month, when we still have so much to learn? Most of us run into this sometimes â and it can turn into an ugly case of writerâs block. We have a real desire to serve an audience with our work, but unhelpful perfectionism holds us back from meeting our writing goals. Letâs knock that one out before we start talking about how to get comfortable clicking Publish â even if youâre not a âgreat writerâ yet. How (savvy) new writers stick to a schedule Maybe youâve seen Ira Glassâs famous quote about what he calls the gap: âNobody tells this to people who are beginners, I wish someone told me. All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste. But there is this gap. For the first couple years you make stuff, itâs just not that good. Itâs trying to be good, it has potential, but itâs not. "But your taste, the thing that got you into the game, is still killer. And your taste is why your work disappoints you. A lot of people never get past this phase, they quit. Most people I know who do interesting, creative work went through years of this.â
â Ira Glass You know what âthe good stuffâ looks like, but you donât have the chops yet to create work at that level. And thatâs painful. Honor the writer you are today Now, thereâs a school of thought when learning to draw that âyou have 10,000 terrible drawings in you, so get them done as quickly as possible.â And of course, in the place of âdrawings,â you can substitute blog posts, podcasts, videos, or any other kind of creative work. Some people find this idea liberating. If youâre one of them â get on it! I find it unspeakably depressing. In the first place, I think 10,000 is an insane number. You donât have 10,000 genuinely bad pieces of creative content to get through. Maybe you have 10. Or 20. When you stick to a schedule and get through those first rough pieces, youâll improve your craft. And youâll begin to write content thatâs better than the content you wrote last month. Thatâs not terrible â thatâs fantastic. In my experience, both in my writing and my teaching, I find itâs more helpful to honor the work that reflects where we are today. With all of its flaws and all of its imperfections. Once youâve decided to at least try to appreciate the early days, Iâve observed three things that will let you do well with your content today, even while youâre still working on your craft. --------------------------------------------------------------- Get Your FREE Assessment This experimental offer is free for a limited time ... At Copyblogger, weâve created hundreds of funnels, generating tens of millions of dollars in sales. Then we thought, âWhat if we could distill our process down to its essence while retaining its effectiveness â could this work in other markets? Our initial tests tell us it can, but weâre looking to test it in more markets. For free. Answer 10 simple questions, and weâll map a 3-part content conversion funnel for you. Delivered to you in 7 business days. â[âClick here to transform how you sell online](. --------------------------------------------------------------- Give it some G.A.S. The first element is caring, a lot, both about the quality of your content and the audience you serve with it. If you actually care about what youâre writing, youâre ahead of most people. Writers who stick to a schedule and put in the work, to the best of their abilities, still stand out, even in the overwhelming sea of content being published today. And if you genuinely care about putting content out that benefits your audience, theyâll appreciate it and find use in it, even if itâs not âperfectâ by some unreachable standard. Give it some time The second really important element is giving yourself enough time to produce a piece youâre proud of. Check your facts. Check your spelling. Make sure your arguments are well supported. If you can, strive to get most of your commas in the right place. Let your content sit for a little bit, and youâll see the places where your argument is weak, or your phrasing is confusing. Time is a great replacement for talent. A lot of crappy content isnât crappy because the writer lacked skill. Itâs crappy because they werenât given enough time to do a good job. Plenty of the writers you most admire produce dreadful first drafts. Between you and me, itâs one reason I donât draft in the WordPress editor. I wouldnât want my colleagues to see some of the total dreck I write as Iâm getting my thoughts together. Go ahead and meander. Let your mind and fingers ramble across the keyboard. The ideas that emerge can be much richer that way. But it only works if you stick to a schedule and give yourself enough time to really polish the final results, and remove the tangents and cruft. Give it some standards The third element might seem not-so-sexy, and thatâs having a clear set of editorial standards. Copyblogger publishes a pretty good volume of content, and getting bogged down in perfectionism isnât an option. But you can make a conscious decision about your standards. Yes, a typo might slip through occasionally, but they should be rare. No editor can check for everything. But our standards give us a list of the most important items to check off, to make sure they meet our standards. When you decide on a set of writing rules to live by, you create more trust and authority with your work. If you apply these three elements â caring, time, and standards â to your content, even if you arenât a âgreat writerâ (yet), youâll be able to produce useful work that you can be proud of, and that will serve your audience. Read on Copyblogger: [How to Stick to a Schedule, Even If You Lack Writing Confidence](â Talk with you again soon, â â[Stefanie Flaxman](=)â
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