Working on a post
The title of the post should become something like „Creation of a post“, „From not having an idea to a full post in 7 days“, „God created the world in 7 days, I did a blog post“, you get the idea.
Outline
- Intro: how I got the idea for this post
- Main thought: breaking the process down into several overlapping steps (add a visual)
- Explain each step/phase in more detail
- …
What else could you call this: step/phase/part/task/activity/…
While sitting in front of the keyboard and musing what to write about, I thought about what goes into a ready post. When I have nothing written down yet and wait for inspiration to strike, I stop myself with my inner critic. To address this, I just started to write something. Here is how this post started:
I don’t know what to write, but write I must. This is a short thing, yes, I know. There’s always a mix of actual writing, of structuring, of editing. bringin the logic out and of research - there’s a question where I don’t know the answer to…
All of sudden I noticed there’s something there. Now the idea was to write about the elements of the writing process. One of them obviously finding the key topic to explore. Next could be just listing a few ideas (or drawing a mind map on the topic):
- Putting words to paper (doesn’t matter which)
- Finding the thought/observation/topic of the post (the spark)
- Building the logic of the argument/the storyline
- Doing research
- Remove the fluff to make the ideas clearer.
- Rewrite for clarity (using more appropriate words, find analogies, use examples)
- Fix grammar and spelling mistakes
- Select a title (cover, packaging)
- Publish
Establishing the practice
To write, you have to write. To make music, you have to make music. What I mean: act first, then motivation and inspiration can hook onto something. Therefore you must establish a practice. Consistently set aside a few minutes (or hours, depending on your ambition) each day to write.
Starting the engine, the spark
You can’t just wait until inspiration strikes, you need to go. If you want to establish flow, you have to start. Just write )do!) something. Think of it as cleaning the pipe, oiling the engine, the warm-up, getting into position, … see freewriting or the reference to morning pages.
Finding the idea to write about
This will come naturally if you a) keep a list with ideas and b) use the starting the engine approach.
Outlining
What about outlining? I didn‘t try this for this post, but could do it for the next post. Could also combine. Keep the outline at the top of the post, and freewrite at the bottom, updating the outline with new observations/ideas. Then convert the outline to a full post using the freewritten snippets.
Remove the fluff
The main theme of your post should stand out. Should have clear contrast with the background. Shouldn’t have (ausgefranste Kanten?). In a post on watering your plants you don’t want to hear about something else, what?
This means removing everything that distracts from the main idea. It does not mean sterile writing. You still can fill in interesting remarks and side notes as long as the core message keeps standing on it‘s own.
Add a visual
Strictly spoken a visual might not be necessary–the words should stand on their own. But the brain can much easier connect/associate and remember the content if it has something visual.
Rewrite for clarity
Sometimes called editing. (Or copy-editing? -> research) this is were you tighten up your copy. A program like iA Writer can be especially helpful as it can show you those filler words.
It’s also were you remove the weasel words.
Similarities to other creative processes
While thinking about this I noticed the similarity to composing music. First I doodle around until a riff, chord progression or similar catches my ear. Then I work on it.
Doing research
When you build your logic you might miss some connecting idea. Then you need to research the topic, I.e. looking things up, or asking an expert.
Polishing strokes
This is where you read the post out loud. This is extremely helpful, and is best done after a few days without interaction with the post (not how I do it at the moment)
Selecting the title
A good title is more important than you might think. It should raise interest, but not be click-baity. Here are some options for this post:
- 5 things you need to know to write a post
- The anatomy of post writing
- The elements of post writing
- 7 steps to write a post
- How to write a post in seven days
- How I write
- Writing a post
Which of those titles do you like and why? Do they spark interest and give you an idea what it’s about?
Last pass: fixing typos
The temptation is very high to fix spelling mistakes or errors early on, but this should come at the very end. When you focus on these things in the beginning it is much harder to get the more essential information and the logical chain right.
Publish
Publishing a post is a forcing function. Especially if you have a deadline around. That’s the part that makes it count. Ship it. Show your work, etc. (References?)
Remark: This and the follow days of rewriting the post are hindered a bit by me being traveling and writing on the phone.