Getting to Know
Your Inspiration: Goals for Writing Success
Susan Spann
Faith without
works is dead, and so is inspiration without follow-through.
Successful
writers focus on both the writing and its goals from the moment inspiration
strikes. Your goals, like your writing, will undergo many revisions before
reaching a final state, but identifying your objectives early in the process
often makes the difference between a successful author and an orphaned
inspiration.
What are the
goals of writing?
They are as many
and as diverse as a writer’s imagination.
Some people write
for professional goals: publication, awards, and sales. Others want to share
their stories with friends and family. School projects are writing too, with
unique criteria and goals.
Regardless of
whether you write for personal enjoyment or public consumption, setting clear
objectives early on will help you and your writing achieve maximum success.
Journalists know
that a well-written article must answer six questions: Who? What? Where? When?
Why? and How? Successful authors use the same questions to identify their
goals.
When inspiration
strikes, use the following questions to help you organize your thoughts:
• What am I
writing? “Big ideas” come in many creative forms,
and sometimes more than one. A story about a little girl who visits her
grandma, only to discover a wolf dressed up in Grandma’s clothes, can inspire a
novel, a play, a feature film, or even a narrative poem—as Little
Red Riding Hood, in its various forms, has proven. When
inspiration strikes, your first goal is deciding what path your creativity will
take. This is even true in the educational field. There is always more than one
way to complete an assignment, even while obeying all of the rules.
• Who is my
audience? A junior high essay often contains less than 700 words. This
article has 934. A middle-grade novel runs 20,000–40,000, and while adult
fiction varies with genre a novel rarely has fewer than 65,000 words. Your intended audience controls everything
from word count to structure, word choice and theme. Every aspect of your work
is impacted in some way by the people you want to read it. You should know your
audience—and know them well—before your first word hits the page.
• Where will
this project find its home? A creative work intended for “traditional” publication requires a
different level of writing than a high school essay intended to prove that the
author read and understood To Kill a Mockingbird. Works written
for competitions must meet the contest rules without deviation. Your goals
control the way your work is written, and also the way you polish and edit the
finished piece. But beware! You should never accept any less than your very
best effort, regardless of your goals. Excellence is never optional.
• When is my
deadline? Some projects have clear timelines.
Homework must be delivered in timely fashion. Magazine articles have due dates,
and novelists have manuscript deadlines in their contracts. But even if your
work has no required completion date, you and your inspiration can benefit from
scheduling. Many talented writers fail because they never complete their
projects. Self-imposed deadlines and due dates will help you stay motivated and
on track. Don’t forget to build in time for the editing phase as well. In most
cases, you will need at least as much time for revision as it took you to write
the initial draft.
• Why am I the
right person to write this work? With school assignments, the answer is simple: your teacher told you
to. With novels and other creative works your response is no less important,
and sometimes more so. Authors of nonfiction books need a “platform,” which
consists of practical experience and public recognition in their fields.
Platforms are less important for fiction works, but you still need a reason for
what you write. What inspired you to put these words on the page? Have you done
your research? Do you know the topic well? If you can’t convince yourself that
you’re the right person for the job, don’t give up right away. Perhaps more
research is required. Perhaps you need
practice writing, or a critique group to build your confidence and skills.
Sometimes the only difference between the “wrong” author and the proper one is
sufficient determination to develop the knowledge and skills to do the job.
• How will I
get my finished work into a reader’s hands? With homework and other assignments, the
answer may seem as simple as “turn it in,” but even here the inspired writer
has pitfalls to avoid. Print your work on clean paper and staple or bind it
neatly. Double-check the instructions, comply with the rules, and make
absolutely certain your work is free from typographical errors and other
avoidable flaws.
If you want to
write for traditional publication, your completed project will need an agent, a
publisher, or both. If you want to self-publish electronically, you will need
to decide on a format and a retailer, like Lulu.com or Amazon.com.
Regardless of
your goals, you must do your homework, know the submission guidelines and
follow the rules exactly. If the assignment calls for electronic delivery, use
a format that’s easy to read. Avoid unnecessary graphics, funky fonts, and
other distractions. Every writer wants to be original and distinctive, but it
should be your writing that sets you apart. Gimmicks are not the way to writing
success.
And if you don’t
know how to achieve this final goal, don’t panic! Upcoming articles in The
Inspired Homeschooler will help you find your way through the writing and
publication maze. In the meantime, listen for your inspiration, organize your
goals, and above all . . . keep on writing.
Susan Spann is a
partner in the law firm Llewellyn Spann, where she specializes in
copyright, trademark, and corporate law.
Formerly a professor at Trinity Law School in Santa Ana,
California, she currently teaches business law at William Jessup University.
Copyright 2012,
used with permission. All rights reserved by author. Originally appeared in the
January 2012 issue of The Old
Schoolhouse® Magazine, the trade magazine for homeschool families. Read the
magazine free at www.TOSMagazine.com
or read it on the go and download the free apps at www.TOSApps.com to read the magazine on your mobile
devices.
No comments:
Post a Comment