Time Management Tips for Fiction Writers

One of the most challenging aspects of writing is finding time to write. Being an author takes dedication, persistence, and time, especially when writing is not your day job, or when you have children, college, demanding pets, or other obligations.

If you are moving from an amateur writer to a professional, you may also be discovering that marketing, sales, contract negotiation, and promoting – on top of researching, writing, and editing – are dominating your day. And yet, busy people are writing novels all the time. How are they doing it?
Answer: One word at a time.
Here are 3 time management tips that will help you achieve your goals.

Log Off Facebook

Don’t stop at Facebook. Get offline. Unplug your phone, draw your curtains, and pretend to be out.
If you absolutely must be online, you might try Freedom. It aims to help you concentrate by blocking distracting websites and apps. RescueTime, on the other hand, will track your internet usage and motivate you to spend your time productively.

Find or make a fixed time to write, every day

Try to assign a regular time that can be your work time every day. It might only be a few minutes. You might be able to carve out as much as an hour or two. The point is that it should be uninterrupted time and it should be regular.
It might not be comfortable. Vladimir Nabokov famously crafted “Lolita” and other novels on index cards while his wife drove him from location to location. As a single parent, J.K. Rowling wrote her first novel wherever she could while her daughter was napping. She wrote every evening, too, typing up her longhand pages, and then continued to work full-time while writing the sequel.
Your writing time might not be ideal. It might be very early in the morning or late at night. It might be during your commute on the train or lunch breaks. If you are consistent, though, you’ll be improving your skill and moving towards achieving your writing goals.

Perform writing sprints

To perform a writing sprint, set a timer for your desired length of time – say 5 minutes, 15 minutes, 30 minutes, or an hour – and then write, without self-editing, for the entire duration.

Shorter sprints might be more effective. The idea is that they will train you to achieve a flow state quickly. The more sprints you do, the more you will get used to writing fluidly, on demand.

When you have kids or other obligations, you can’t always schedule your life in a way that is ideal for you and your writing. If you can learn to get into ‘writing mode’ whenever you have the opportunity, this will help you reach the end of your novel.

While there is merit in writing and publishing quickly, don’t forget the virtues of just putting one word after another and keeping going until it’s done.
Remember the big picture of why you are doing this, try not to get lost in the small details, and you will get there.