Writing process: From discovery to done (complete guide)
The writing process has many stages, from discovery and investigation to publication. Read authors’ insights on finding ideas, revision and more, and tips and methods to find the process that works for you.
- Post author By Jordan
- 5 Comments on Writing process: From discovery to done (complete guide)
The writing process is a complex, not always linear creative process. From ‘plotters’ vs ‘pantsers’ (to ‘bashers’ vs ‘swoopers’), this guide unpacks stages of the writing process, what authors have said about the practices and habits of writing, and more. Use the links above to jump to the section that interests you now.
Writing process stages: 7 areas of practice
Some writing schools and authors divide writing into four stages, some five. Yet these seven see a story from first idea to publication:
- Discovery. Before you can draft, you need an idea, a premise. This is the investigative stage of finding the seed for a story with the most potential.
- Prewriting . The preparation to write before drafting begins. Depending on whether you’re a ‘plotter’ or ‘pantser’ (more on this below), this may include outlining, brainstorming, freewriting, or other common prewriting techniques.
- Drafting. You write narration, exposition, scenes, chapters (depending on your story’s format). Drafting may be fast or slow, depending on your preferred methods. Try different approaches and techniques to shake up your usual writing habits.
- Writing feedback and story development. Once you are comfortable to share your work-in-progress (WIP), you may share early drafts with a trusted friend, writing coach or critique circle for perspective and insight.
- Revision . The process of reviewing what you’ve written, deciding what to keep (and which ‘darlings’ to ‘kill’).
- Editing. While revision entails making decisions about the content of your story, editing involves making decisions about the presentation of that content – how best to make the story more impactful and polished.
- Publication (and promotion). Isn’t the writing process over at this stage? Not at all – your query letters, story pitches, blurbs, review requests and other matter will be some of the most important material of the entire writing process. This is the writing that puts the story you’ve labored over in the right hands.
Keep reading for tips, methods and ideas about each of these stages, supplemented by reading from the Now Novel blog.
Recommended reading
- The writing process: 7 steps to structure and success
To the top ↑
Sometimes we fail for a week, a month, a year, a decade. And then we come back, circle the fire. Our lives are not linear. We get lost, then we get found. Patience is important, and a large tolerance for our mistakes. We don’t become anything overnight. Natalie Goldberg, The True Secret of Writing (2013), p. 58.
Discovery: Finding and investigating writing ideas
The writing process may start from an idea that arrives like a soothsayer. A flash of inspiration, insight, wisdom – a dream, unexpected connection, some kind of beguiling chance encounter or happenstance that makes you say, ‘I’ve got an idea’.
Yet the idea-finding process may equally be deliberate, even robotic. Consistently trying your hand at writing prompts until an idea niggles away at your waking mind, for example, persistently saying, ‘pick me’.
Finding and developing writing ideas is a skill you develop like any part of the writing process. That way you can make an idea come, not just for a first book, but a second, third (if with a little coaxing).
Essayist and cultural theorist Walter Benjamin said of the writing process:
Work on a good piece of writing proceeds on three levels: a musical one, where it is composed; an architectural one, where it is constructed; and finally, a textile one, where it is woven. Walter Benjamin, quote via Goodreads .
Before you make a picture with those threads, you need the wool you spin into finer thread: The fluffy stuff of an idea.
Writing process methods: Ways to find ideas
There are many ways to find ideas and find joy in the discovery stage of writing process.
Discovery and investigation may include a little or a lot of research, depending on what you need to know. The seed of an idea may come from multiple sources at once, as Toni Morrison says of her Pulitzer-winning novel Beloved :
Beloved originated as a general question, and was launched by a newspaper clipping. The general question (remember, this was the early eighties) centered on how – other than equal rights, access, pay, etc. – does the women’s movement define the freedom being sought? Toni Morrison, ‘On Beloved ‘ in Mouth Full of Blood: Essays, Speeches, Meditations, p. 281.
Here are fifteen ways to find ideas:
15 ways to find writing ideas and begin the writing process
- Try writing prompts such as the step-by-step prompts to find a central story idea in the Now Novel dashboard.
- Ask ‘What if…?’ For example, ‘What if a mysterious satellite held captivating mysteries about an alien race?’
- Draw from life. What experience could you use/alter for non-fiction or fiction?
- Use visual prompts. Use a photo or artwork as your starting point. Free-write a paragraph describing what you see, then continue and keep or turf the opening material.
- Play/combine. William S. Burroughs’ famous ‘cut up’ technique reassembles random cuttings from print into new ideas, for example.
- Trawl headlines. Google intriguing subjects in the ‘news’ tab. E.g. ‘travel disasters’ brought up ‘How ‘dark tourism’ can pass on the lessons of past tragedies’. Mine your headline for ideas.
- Explore myths and legends. Reads stories from world mythologies. You could update an ancient tale with modern touches.
- Argue with other stories. Maybe a story’s annoyed you, or you want to explore a secondary character’s viewpoint (from a work now in the public domain). Write back.
- Test out ideas in short fiction. Famous novels (such as Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce) began as short story test runs.
- Draw inspiration from music. Listen to a song. What ideas, characters, premises do the lyrics evoke?
- Try creative constraints. The collective OuLiPo used devices such as writing stories omitting a chosen vowel entirely to find the unexpected.
- Browse famous quotes. Take something like ‘Happy families are all alike…’ from Anna Karenina . Where else could it lead?
- Join writing groups. Prompts set by members for each other may inspire new ideas.
- Research historical figures or eras. You may unearth a riveting idea from the past.
- Tap into your subconscious and keep a dream journal or meditate, silence and going inward often brings clarity.
FAQs about the discovery stage of writing
Share your idea with trusted people for external perspective. Test it out in a writing group or class. Ask questions about ‘who’, ‘what’, ‘why’ ‘where’ and ‘when’ to finesse a hazy or partial idea into something deeper, fuller.
The varied ways myths and legends are recycled (Thor in Norse mythology becoming Marvel’s popular character) reminds us there are no new ideas. Originality lies in the specifics of voice and execution. Be specific, be yourself and find your voice through practice and intentional execution.
This is where it helps to remember the writing process is not linear. The discovery stage is also a good time for research, finding out what is being done (and overdone) in your genre. What agents are looking for (or tired of seeing). Resources listing recent publishing deals give insights into what’s sold recently and book market appetites. To start though, focus on telling a good story. Great stories find their audience.
🗣️ How did you find your last story idea? Let us know in the comments, and keep reading for tips and methods for prewriting, drafting, and more.
- 38 plot ideas (plus 7 ways to find more)
- How to find book ideas: 15 easy methods
- Book ideas: 12 fun ways to find them
- Finding story topics when stuck: 5 simple methods
GET YOUR FREE GUIDE TO SCENE STRUCTURE
Read a guide to writing scenes with purpose that move your story forward.
Ideas are like fireflies; go hunting for them and they elude you. Sit and enjoy the night, and they appear from out of nowhere. You have to let the ideas come to you. Expand your world, read outside your comfort zone, take walks. The fireflies will come. Just give them the chance. Sabrina Jeffries in 101 Habits of Highly Successful Novelists: Insider Secrets from Top Writers by Andrew McAleer (2008), p. 69.
Prewriting: Useful preparatory writing processes
Prewriting is the processes before you start drafting a story which help you prepare.
There are many kinds of prewriting. Because the writing process is not linear, you might come back to one or more of these methods at some stage of drafting:
Common prewriting steps and methods
- Picking a premise. If you have multiple ideas, go with the idea that pulls you most and (if you want a marketable book) the one you know has the better market potential.
- Choosing a genre or subgenre. This goes hand in hand with picking a premise, since if you set your book in outer space and explore future technology, chances are you’ll be shelved with sci-fi.
- Brainstorming. A process of generating ideas, whether you use mind maps, answer prompts and questionnaires, or churn out every idea you can think of in scenario- or topic-driven lists.
- Creating a story outline. This may be a meticulous, detailed outline, or a cursory collection of notes. The more complete your outline, the more handrails you’ll have. This prevents wandering off into irrelevancies, plot holes and impossible paradoxes, and so on.
- Creating initial summary material. Summary material includes things like character profiles or IDs, scene summaries , or a one-page synopsis of what your story is about (also a useful exercise in the Publication and promotion stage of process).
- Freewriting. Before more structured drafting, you might explore a topic or scenario with freewriting. Set a timer for 15 to 20 minutes and just write whatever comes into your head about a topic you think will be important to your book. It might spawn scene, chapter, or character ideas.
- Research. This may overlap with the discovery/investigation stage, as your idea may also need a little research to solidify what you want to write about. It might include fiction set in a similar era or place, making a bibliography of potentially helpful non-fiction, speaking to subject exploring films and documentaries, or visiting physical or digital archives. For some tips on how to research place when you can’t visit those places, read our tips.
- Interviewing. This is especially pertinent for types of writing such as historical fiction, non-fiction, memoir. Interviews with subject experts, people who lived through specific events or an era, could provide helpful nuance, context, and ideas for relevant story details.
You don’t necessarily need to do every kind of prewriting. Some authors favor ‘just-in-time’ research (an idea Bujold spoke about in relation to fantasy worldbuilding ).
Authors on prewriting and whether or not to plan stories
The prewriting perspectives below show there are many way to skin (or rather save) a cat. Try different methods and find what works for you .
Loose story outlining
Author Scott King gives this reminder that prewriting (planning, creating structure, organizing) should serve the needs of your story, and stay adaptable to its unique needs:
An outline is a map of your story. It’s not set in stone. Even when you work from an outline, you will discover new twists and turns as you progress. The outline is there to remind you of where you are going so you can’t ever get too far from where you need to be. Since I was working under pressure, I didn’t want to get crazy with how I structured Ameriguns . I defaulted to a three act structure, the kind you’d use in a screenplay, but altered it to fit the needs of the story. Scott King, ‘Outline’ in The 5 Day Novel , 2016, p. 58.
Pullman on how establishing rules is part of play
More broadly, Philip Pullman, in ‘The Practice of Writing’, talks about how having some rules at the start of creative process gives paradoxical freedom to play. He compares guidelines such as rules (or outlines) to choosing where touchdown lies for a football game:
And as we know about all games, it’s much more satisfying to play with rules than without them. If we’re going to enjoy a game of football in the playground, we need to know where the touchline is, and agree on what we’re going to regard as the goalposts. Then we can get on with playing, because the complete freedom of our play is held together and protected by this armature of rules. The first and last and only discovery that the victims of anarchy can make is: no rules, no freedom. Philip Pullman, ‘The Practice of Writing’ in Daemon Voices , pp. 18-19
‘Plotting’ vs ‘Pantsing’: Find your balance between prewriting and drafting
So much has been written and said about whether you should plan stories in detail in advance (‘plotting’), or go where imagination takes you (‘pantsing’, after the expression ‘to fly by the seat of your pants’ or work with instinct and gut more than organized knowledge).
Your writing process may change to suit your project
Author K.M. Weiland raises the useful reminder that your writing process doesn’t need to ape a famous writer’s approach, or be the same across every story you tell:
Each author must discover for himself what methods work best for him. Just because Margaret Atwood does X and Stephen King does Y is no reason to blindly follow suit. Read widely, learn all you can about what works for other authors, and experiment to discover which methods will offer you the best results. K.M. Weiland, ‘Chapter One: Should You Outline?’ in Outlining your Novel: Map your way to success , p. 11.
Planning stories helps character development
Edith Wharton, the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for writing, said of the space and planning deeper characterization requires:
Type, general character, may be set forth in a few strokes, but the progression, the unfolding of personality […] if the actors in the tale are to retain their individuality for [the reader] through a succession of changing circumstances—this slow but continuous growth requires space, and therefore belongs by definition to a larger, a symphonic plan. Edith Wharton, The Writing of Fiction: The classic guide to the art of the short story and the novel (1925), p. 33.
Not planning, creative freedom and excitement
Author Lee Child, on the other hand, extolls the benefits of not planning (and not being as pedantic about the marks you hit as an editor or publisher might be):
I write without a plan or an outline. The way I picture my process is this: The novel is a movie stuntman, about to get pushed off a sixty-story building. The prop guys have a square fire-department airbag ready on the sidewalk below. One corner is marked Mystery, one Thriller, one Crime Fiction, and one Suspense. The stuntman is going to land on the bag. (I hope.) But probably not dead-on. Probably somewhat off center. But biased toward which corner? I don’t know yet. And I really don’t mind. I’m excited to find out. Lee Child, ‘Introduction’ in How to Write a Mystery: A handbook from Mystery Writers of America
🗣️ What is your preferred prewriting method? Or do you pants it all the way, or pants a little then switch to planning? Tell us in the comments.
- What is prewriting? Preparing to write with purpose
- Story plotting and structure: Complete guide
- Story planning and outlining: Complete guide
- Story planner success: How to organize your novel
GET HELP PLANNING YOUR BOOK
Join Now Novel for a helpful crit community and live webinars and plotting tools when you upgrade.
Writing process challenges you may encounter
Before we discuss drafting and the writing process, let’s explore common process challenges (and tips to overcome them):
Common hurdles in creative process
There are challenges in creative process that beginning authors and veterans alike face. You’re not alone if you’ve ever gone rounds in the ring with:
- Fear of failure (or success). What happens if a publisher or agent says no? What if reviews or crits are harsh? Or how will you handle sudden public recognition and scrutiny in the event of success?
- Procrastination (avoidance behaviors). When writing a story feels hard, it’s easy to put it off (or use not having time or something else as an excuse not to write).
- Distractibility. Whether you have a condition such as ADHD that adds further focus challenges or are a social media addict, we live in a highly distracting, ‘always on’ world.
- ‘Time Burglars’ . There are many thieves of time that take away from the writing process if you don’t make regular writing a top priority.
- A harsh inner critic. Many aspiring creative people have harsh inner critics who destroy their work before anyone else can.
- Laziness. This is a common reason not to write, too.
- Unpreparedness. Many writers find projects spool out and become much harder and more complex than originally anticipated. That can be discouraging.
Overcoming writing process challenges
How can you work with and overcome some of the above procedural challenges in writing?
- Keep SMART goals: Specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and time-based goals are much easier to track and attain than hazy aims
- Work on tolerance for your mistakes: Everyone makes mistakes starting out, and seasoned pros do, too
- Chunk up complex tasks: Struggling to write a chapter a week to schedule? Try write 300 words per day and set a bigger ‘stretch goal’ (an extra target if you make your first easily)
- Turn off the net if you need to: Put your phone in airplane mode and pause all notifications
- Remember the difference between procrastination and waiting: It’s fine to wait for maturity, fuller knowledge of your subject, to be in the right frame of mind. It’s not putting off but letting process take its necessary time for this story
- Get up and move often: The writing process is (for the most part) a sedentary one. It’s easy to forget to move. Stone-like posture may lead to petrified process, even if your mind’s going a hundred miles a minute
The accountability of working with a writing coach or joining a crit circle that meets regularly helps (in Now Novel’s experience), too.
Natalie Goldberg writes, on procrastination vs waiting:
Waiting is something full-bodied. Perhaps waiting isn’t even a good word for it. Pregnant is better. You’ve worked on something for a while. You are excited by it, even happy, but you are wise and step back. You take a walk, but this walk isn’t to avoid the writing on your desk. It is a walk full of your writing. It is also full of the trees you pass, the river, the sky. You are letting writing work on you. Natalie Goldberg, ‘Procrastination and Waiting’, in Wild Mind: Living the writer’s life , p. 210.
How to nurture your writing process and avoid common pitfalls
We asked Now Novel’s writing coaches their best advice on the writing process, and about patterns they see in beginning writers (and ways to overcome destructive habits).
Romance author and writing coach Romy Sommer on remembering why you’re telling your story:
Writing is hard work. Probably harder than you thought it would be when inspiration first struck and you decided to write a novel. So find the joy in what you are writing. Remind yourself daily of WHY you are writing this story. Remember that spark that first inspired you to sit down and write, because that is what will keep you going when the going gets tough.
SFF and YA author, editor and writing coach Nerine Dorman on allowing yourself to make ‘happy accidents’:
Many writers I’ve worked with lack confidence in their ability, and tend to focus on those first chapters to the point where they lose the momentum to push forward with the rest of the plot. I give them Bob Ross’s advice of making plenty of ‘happy little accidents’ as we can’t actually work on writing if there’s nothing there to revise. Your first draft can be as messy as you need it to be. The most important thing is to get into the habit of writing as regularly as your schedule allows, and to see your writing as a very personal way to express yourself. Granted, there are the basic building blocks of writing and style, which I aim to teach, but I like to think that we also look at what it means to be a writer – a constantly evolving, growing creative person.
Recommended Reading
- How to overcome writer’s block: 14 methods
- Motivation to write: 7 simple strategies
- End writing procrastination now: 7 steps
- Silence your inner critic: 8 ways to write in peace
We have to accept ourselves in order to write. Now none of us does that fully; few of us do it even halfway. Don’t wait for one hundred percent acceptance of yourself before you write, or even eight percent acceptance. Just write. The process of writing is an activity that teaches us about acceptance. Natalie Goldberg, Wild Mind: Living the writer’s life , p. 61.
Drafting stories: Getting knee-deep in scenes
We could equally call the drafting stage of process ‘discovery’ like the first stage. After all, drafting is where you discover many of the ‘happy accidents’ Nerine describes above. Discoveries that may often depart from your outline (or lead you back into revision-planning).
Learn more about approaches to drafting, what authors say about doing fewer vs multiple drafts, and tips to make this part of process work for you.
Types of draft in the storytelling process
There are many terms authors use to refer to drafting. Numbered (first, second, third) drafts. Even drafts before the first, the so-called ‘draft zero’ (which describes a discovery draft, the purpose of which is just to learn the broad scope of the story and set down some of the material in full).
In one of Now Novel’s live webinars, writing coach, author and editor Hedi Lampert shared a drafting concept by the late author and writing educator Anne Schuster, who hosted women’s writing workshops in Cape Town.
The idea is a simple, three-part drafting process. To paraphrase:
- The down draft: The draft where you get your ideas down on the page, with as much messiness or as many placeholders as you need to keep moving.
- The up draft: A second draft in which you pick up on details for development, expansion, and color in more of your story.
- The dental draft: A third draft in which you polish the work of your first two drafts, paying attention to language and finer detail now the story elements have solidified.
This is a useful concept in that it gives each stage of drafting a proper focus and purpose (and allows for not getting everything ‘right’ straight away).
Authors on the drafting stage of writing process
Will you draft chapters in chronological sequence or out of order? Should you worry about chapters and scene breaks or carve up the text later?
These are some of the questions authors face about drafting. Read authors on drafting and their individual processes. These perspectives show that what works for one person might not work for another. Try different methods until you find what works for your process, or this project.
Toni Morrison on creating chapters and parts in a draft
Toni Morrison describes putting in story segment divisions at a later point in process:
Chapter and part designations, as conventionally used in novels, were never very much help to me in writing. Nor are outlines. (I permit their use for the sake of the designer and for ease in talking about the book. They are usually identified at the last minute.) Toni Morrison, ‘The Writer Before the Page’, in Mouth Full of Blood: Essays, Speeches, Meditations , p. 266.
Sir Terry Pratchett on the purpose of a first, second and third draft (creative freedom, shaping, addressing detail)
Sir Terry Pratchett said that the first draft is ‘just you telling yourself the story’, and qualified something like a systematic per-draft process when he said:
First draft: let it run. Turn all the knobs up to 11. Second draft: hell. Cut it down and cut it into shape. Third draft: comb its nose and blow its hair. I usually find that most of the book will have handed itself to me on that first draft. Sir Terry Pratchett, via Goodreads
Colleen McCullough on how many drafts until done: It depends
How many drafts ‘should’ you write? It depends, writing is rewriting as Colleen McCullough describes:
Once I’ve got the first draft down on paper then I do five or six more drafts, the last two of which will be polishing drafts. The ones in between will flesh out the characters and maybe I’ll check my research. Colleen McCullough, quoted by Writers Write here .
🗣️ What is your drafting process currently? Is there a system, number of drafts or method that works well for you? Share it in the comments.
- Writing first drafts: 10 ideas to reach final drafts
- Write with purpose: 7 ways to keep drafts focused
- How to write a rough draft: Finish your novel faster
The concept of finishing a piece of writing, taking it through successive drafts, did not yet exist for me. I reveled in the heady pleasure of committing a few words to paper and treasured each like a rare jewel I had dug from the earth with my bare hands. A journal suited my fledgling status as a writer and made me feel serious and important, a real writer, and honored the scant output I produced. In my journal I practiced being a writer in both senses of the word: practiced as in trying out, and practiced as in keeping a daily practice, the way the nuns observed their daily order of prayer services. Katherine Towler, in Writers and Their Notebooks , edited by Diana M. Raab, pp. 65-66.
Writing feedback and story development
Remember that we said the writing process is not always linear?
When you get writing feedback depends on you. You may want feedback on your story idea or summary, your early chapters. You may prefer not to show your WIP to anyone until you’re at least one or more drafts deep. Tweet This
Maybe you move between drafting rounds, and feedback rounds, as you use readers’ perspectives to tweak your story and workshop it.
Why getting feedback is a crucial stage of writing process
When we don’t have critiques, manuscript evaluations, editors or beta readers, we only have our own perspectives to rely upon. You get used to your own mistakes, and nobody knows their own blind spots or the details they hadn’t thought of (that a shrewd second opinion might).
To ensure feedback aids (more than frustrates) your writing process:
- Get feedback from writers you trust. You might want input from writers at a similar stage of development to yourself, or editors who have been story doctors for some time.
- Take feedback from whence it comes. That crosspatch member of your crit circle who never has a nice word to say? Expect the kind of feedback that person usually gives. If a crit circle or beta reader is harsh or overwhelmingly negative, it’s OK to find a better fit.
- Stay open to perspectives and use what’s useful. There’s that saying, ‘You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink.’ Don’t get parched just to protect your ego. Reviewers on major platforms could be way harsher if you don’t take time to fix what isn’t working.
- Describe what feedback you’re looking for. Now Novel’s critique submission system contains categories you can check off for feedback, such as ‘grammar and language’, ‘characters’, ‘structure and flow’ and ‘dialogue’. Specifying what kind of feedback you want helps readers tailor their feedback to be more relevant to your needs.
- Give any necessary context. Nobody knows your writing process or story better than you do. Remember to contextualize anything an editor or beta reader may need to know to have a better understanding of what you’re aiming for (in style, subject matter, tone, characterization, etc.).
Giving feedback also does wonders for many authors’ writing processes – helping others with writing challenges helps you build the tools to solve your own.
Channeling feedback into the writing process
Too much feedback (especially if overly harsh as it can be in poorly moderated communities), especially in the early stages of a story, may inhibit or discourage. When evaluating writing feedback, ask:
- Is there overlap between what feedback givers are saying? This could signal a real and higher priority issue to address in revision
- What is higher vs lower priority feedback to implement? Major confusion-bringing issues such as continuity issues or tense drift and head-hopping are naturally a higher priority than minor details that don’t affect whether readers can understand the story, for example
When getting and giving feedback in a crit circle or a beta reading community, it’s easy to compare yourself to other writers. Writing coach Romy Sommer advises against comparisons:
Do not compare yourself to other writers. We each work differently, we each need to find the writing process that works best for our lives and the way our brains work, and what works for one person doesn’t necessarily work for another. Accepting that took a huge weight off my shoulders and enabled me to embrace my own process.
The development stage of creative process: Comb story’s nose, blow its hair
As Terry Pratchett says, developing a story – later rewrites and drafts – gets into grooming-like detail. Combing a story’s … nose!? You may well find that there are Picasso-like parts, or the princess’s hair is snotty, not sleek. Tweet This
At the developmental stage of writing, ask yourself questions an editor would, such as:
- Is it clear? Does the reader have sufficient context or clear wording to understand the story and follow along?
- Does it have cohesion? Do actions and reactions flow and make sense? When characters converse, does it have the pattern of real call and response or is it like two people with crossed wires?
- Is the story ‘colored in’? Is there sufficient description (and are descriptions specific/detailed, not hazy)?
- Are events and actions clear and intriguing? Does the procession of events create questions the reader wants answered?
- Is there flow between lines, scenes, chapters? Or if the story is non-linear, do the pieces come together to make an interesting, impactful whole?
Here’s a fuller checklist with 34 story development questions for rewrites and successive drafts:
- How to find beta readers for final draft feedback
- Writing circle pros: 8 reasons to share your story
- 100 character development questions to inspire deeper arcs
- How to master plot development: 8 steps
Writers have always struggled with the same core issues: getting the work done (productivity) and creating something worth reading (creativity). And, unless you believe that misery is necessary for true art, aim for a third goal: making the process enjoyable, cultivating a fulfilling and happy life that includes writing. Let’s consider this our triple objective: productivity, creativity, and enjoyment. Surely that’s not asking too much? Anne Janzer, ‘Finding Your Own Process’ in The Writer’s Process: Getting your brain in gear, p. 15
Revision: Seeing again with fresh eyes
The word ‘revision’ says it all. The fifth stage of the writing process is seeing again, reviewing what you’ve written, to make insertions/deletions as needed.
There may be parts of your story that would benefit much from expansion, coloring in. Maybe there are parts that you have to cull, as much as you may feel attached to them.
Revision vs editing: What’s the difference?
Revision is a process of making decisions about the content of your story. It may include:
- Adding in new scenes, chapters or sections
- Rearranging scenes, chapters or sections
- Cutting out subplots or other material that aren’t contributing to the whole sufficiently
- Trying a different person to determine the effects on POV
That last example touches on an important truth about revision: it’s as creative as drafting, and it can be a fun process of play, of trying out different things.
Editing, on the other hand, is focused on improving the presentation of decisions made about content. Often, you may find that an editor suggests further revisions. This is work that you’ll do, because only you (as the author) are qualified to make this level of creative decision, it being your story.
Authors’ ideas on revision and the writing process
What do authors say about the revision process?
Joyce Carol Oates on revising as you go being arduous
Joyce Carol Oates shared that her writing methods changed over time, as she grew older:
I think that I envy my younger self because I used to write a whole draft of a novel and then go back and rewrite it […] Today, I do a lot of revising as I go along and that seems to be more painful and arduous. It’s a slow process, almost like putting a mosaic together or weaving things in and out, whereas before it felt more like galloping on a horse and then creating the manuscript. For some reason I’ve become more attuned to the individual sentence and reworking the sentences. I’m not sure why that happened. Joyce Carol Oates, USA Weekend , quoted by famouswritingroutines.com here .
This raises an important decision about revising: When will you stop to review and tweak elements? If you stop every page, prepare for a first draft that may take years! Give yourself the time your process dictates.
Jamaica Kincaid on the internal revision process
Of course, your revision is not only the work you do on paper. Dame Agatha Christie said the best time to plot a novel was while doing the dishes. Jamaica Kincaid, in conversation with Publishers Weekly , says:
I write a lot in my head. The revision goes on internally. It’s not spontaneous and it doesn’t have a schedule. You know how some people write every day at a certain point? I’m not like that. I carry something around for a long time. I weigh the words and the sentences. I weigh the paragraphs. The process is much more meditative for me. So, when I put something down on paper, I’ve already edited a lot. Jamaica Kincaid, interviewed by Liesel Schwabe, ‘The Age of a Mountain: PW Talks with Jamaica Kincaid’, December 2012.
🗣️ What is your approach to revision? Do you sit with ideas a long time, write at a gallop and then revise, or make painstaking revisions as you go? Share in the comments.
- Revision in writing: How to improve between drafts
- Novel editing insights: 9 big lessons from critique
GET FEEDBACK AND HELP WITH REVISION
Join The Process for weekly editor critiques, monthly live workshops, story outlining tools and more.
Editing: The polishing stage of writing process
Editing, the penultimate stage of writing process, is itself made up of several important stages. It’s often a challenging one because there is an even bigger degree of ‘letting go’. Letting someone make tracked changes and suggestions to your manuscript, for example.
When you hand over writing to an editor, you may be getting your first sample of ‘reception’ (if you have been working in private, not with a crit circle). T.S. Eliot drily said, ‘Some editors are failed writers, but so are most writers.’
Editing is often an immensely enriching process, though, for both editor and author. Earnest discussion and deep thought about a story’s strengths (and how best to serve them) and challenges (and how best to address them) may unearth surprising gems.
The main types of fiction editing
The four main types of editing are:
- Developmental editing. This examines large-picture aspects such as character and story development, narrative structure and pacing.
- Line editing. More detail-oriented, line-level editing that examines issues such as language, style, flow and clarity.
- Copy editing: Focuses on grammar, spelling, punctuation, and eliminating errors and residual issues with style or flow that may be left over from (or have crept in after) line editing.
- Proofreading: The final stage of editing, catching any final errors before publication (a stage self-publishing authors may be tempted to omit, but do so at risk of excoriating reviews).
Many editing providers, including Now Novel, offer manuscript evaluations . This is often bundled with developmental editing as a part of discovery process (we subtract the cost of an evaluation from developmental editing). A manuscript evaluation produces a reader’s report with actionable recommendations on aspects such as plot and character development, narrative structure, pacing, conflict and more.
Is editing writing process? It is in that it is en route to publication. How much writing you’ll do at this stage depends on how much revision there is to be done.
If you have excellent language faculty and a strong grasp of story, an editor may recommend you proceed straight to copy editing from an evaluation, if there are no large-scale issues.
- Editing and revising: 7 tips from top authors and editors
- Editing copy? 8 tips for a word-perfect manuscript
Publication and promotion: Writing around your story
Does the writing process end once your work’s edited? Some would say ‘yes’. Yet publication and promotion involve a lot of writing ‘around’ your story, about your story. Press, promotion, selling.
This isn’t a type of writing (and part of process) that’s for everyone (you may want to outsource some of this work – for example writing social media captions – to a marketing agency if or once you can afford it).
Publication and the writing process
Types of writing you’ll do when you’re ready to publish include:
- Writing query letters or script pitches
- Writing bios for author pages
- Writing newsletters, social media captions, and other marketing material
- Writing speeches or guest blogs about the process of writing your story
Promotion and publication are a whole other side of process that we’ll cover in fuller detail in another complete guide.
See the resources recommended reading below for tips on aspects such as creating your author brand, creating a business plan, and ways to get more reviews.
Helpful resources for publication and promotion writing
Here are several resources that provide tips on publication and promotion as well as useful examples:
- Publishers Weekly – frequent round-ups of publishing news and interesting developments in publishing
- Query Shark – examples of query letters dissected by an agent
- Jane Friedman’s blog – with twenty years’ experience in the publishing industry, Jane shares helpful publishing insights such as how to query and how to avoid publishing scams
- Joanna Penn’s The Creative Penn – a helpful blog featuring podcasts and articles packed with publishing and book promotion insights
- Kindlepreneur – writer Dave Chesson has a site devoted to book publishing and promotion how to’s, useful for self-publishing authors.
🗣️ Is there a book publishing and promo resource you love you don’t see here? Let us know about it in the comments.
- How to write a query letter: 10 easy steps
- Writing to market: 10 pros and cons to weigh
- Self-publishing on Ama zon: 20 pros and cons for authors
- How to create a business plan for writers
Now Novel provides help with every stage of the writing process. Learn more about membership benefits for serious writers .
Related Posts:
- Writing dialogue: Complete guide to storied speech
- Character writing: Complete guide to creating your cast
- Writing romance and love stories: Complete guide
- Tags writing process
Jordan is a writer, editor, community manager and product developer. He received his BA Honours in English Literature and his undergraduate in English Literature and Music from the University of Cape Town.
5 replies on “Writing process: From discovery to done (complete guide)”
I’m mostly a pantser, I think. I let the ideas take me where they want to go with an end point in mind. The problem is that I don’t always like the direction, missing that fireman cushion completely. I feel like I’ve given away a piece of my soul to have to start over (I don’t want to say second draft because it feels more like a new zero). I know how important it is to get to the end, but if I truly have a fresh idea I have to go down that road, but I’m so scared it’ll take me straight to Hades… again. Eventually, I’ll be very well versed in writing my own story, I suppose. Lots and lots of practice.
Hi Margriet, thank you for sharing that. It’s very interesting as a method as you do end up doing a lot of review and revision as you go. Have you every thought of having some kind of ‘pantsers compromise’ of maybe outlining one scene ahead? Something Ernest Hemingway said was to the effect of ‘stop for the day when you know what happens next’ which might be one way to keep Hades and his kidnappers at bay 🙂 Thank you for sharing your process!
Thanks for this Jordan – comprehensive doesn’t do it justice!
For me, the difference between being someone who wanted to complete a first draft and actually doing it was definitely when I stopped being a panther and embraced the value of plotting & planning.
I’m still more of a plantser than someone who plots things to the nth degree, but having a very clear idea of at least the first 20-30% of the novel is going to go, with an idea of the way it’s going to end allows me the flexibility and freedom to start the novel with confidence that I’m going to finish, because I have a pretty good map of the journey and the destination.
I know I’m going to get “there”, even if the actual final destination changes along the way, or if I take a few pretty little detours along the way. I’ve used two different plotting approaches to complete 3 first drafts now – so I think it’s not necessarily what plotting style you go for, it’s about having one and making it work.
Hi Mark, it’s a pleasure. Thank you for sharing that. I love the happy accident of ‘panther’ in particular. Because that describes what pantsers are like, pouncing with minimum hesitation. That makes total sense to me; each story will also have its own demands in terms of the mix of research and other stages required so process may have to adapt to the demands of a specific work.
I saw that and had a little chuckle at myself – the inner pantser lives on!
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
Pin It on Pinterest
- May 26, 2024
What is the Writing Process? A 5-Step Guide for Success
Julia mccoy.
Creator and Co-founder
You’ve got a brilliant idea for a piece of writing, but you’re not sure where to start. The writing process can feel overwhelming, especially if you’re new to the game.
But here’s the thing: even the most seasoned writers struggle with getting their thoughts down on paper. The key is to break it down into manageable steps.
In this post, I’ll walk you through the five essential stages of the writing process. From brainstorming to publishing, you’ll learn how to create compelling content that your audience will love.
Let’s get started!
[cm name=”aio_blogger_1″]
Table Of Contents:
What is the writing process, the 5-step writing process, step 1: prewriting, step 2: drafting, step 3: revising, step 4: editing, step 5: publishing, great content starts with following the writing process.
Writing is a 5-step process that includes a prewriting stage, writing the first draft, revising and editing, and finally publishing.
Each step has its own set of activities and strategies to help you move your writing project forward.
However, the writing process is not always linear. You might find yourself jumping back and forth between stages as you refine your ideas and improve your work. That’s totally normal and part of the creative process.
Now, you might be wondering, “Why can’t I just sit down and start writing?”
Well, you could, but the result might be a disorganized mess.
Following these writing steps helps ensure that your final product is well-structured, coherent, and effective in communicating your message.
Plus, following a process can reduce stress and writer’s block. When you know what steps to take next, it’s easier to keep moving forward, even when the words aren’t flowing as easily as you’d like.
Here’s a breakdown of the five key steps of the writing process:
This is the brainstorming phase, where you generate ideas, research, and organize your thoughts.
Prewriting strategies like mind mapping, freewriting, and outlining can help you get the creative juices flowing.
Time to start putting your ideas into writing.
In the drafting stage, you take the ideas from your prewriting and start fleshing them out into full sentences and body paragraphs.
Don’t worry about perfection just yet – the goal is to get your thoughts down on paper.
Once you have a rough draft, it’s time to start making improvements.
Revising involves evaluating your content, organization, and word choice to make sure your writing is clear, coherent, and effective.
This is also a good time to get feedback from others.
After revising, it’s time to polish your writing at the sentence level.
Editing involves checking for grammar, punctuation, and spelling errors, as well as ensuring consistency in your formatting and citations.
A thorough edit can take your writing from good to great.
Finally, it’s time to share your work with the world.
Publishing can take many forms, from submitting a paper to a professor to posting on a blog or submitting to a literary journal.
Whatever the format, the key is to get your writing in front of your intended audience.
Now let’s dive into the nitty-gritty of the writing process.
Prewriting is the first stage of the writing process, and it’s all about getting those creative juices flowing. This is where you brainstorm ideas, do some research, and start organizing your thoughts.
One of my favorite prewriting strategies is mind mapping . Mind maps are a great way to visually organize your ideas and see connections between different concepts. To create a mind map, start with your main topic in the center, then branch out with subtopics and supporting details.
Another technique is asking journalistic questions about your topic – who, what, where, when, why, and how. This can help you generate ideas and identify areas where you need to do more research.
Speaking of research, it’s an important part of the prewriting process, especially if you’re writing about a complex or unfamiliar topic.
Start by gathering information from reputable sources like books, articles, and websites. As you read, take notes and jot down ideas for how you can incorporate the information into your writing.
But don’t just regurgitate facts and figures – think critically about the information you’re gathering. Consider the credibility and biases of your sources, and look for ways to synthesize and analyze the information to support your own ideas.
Once you’ve generated some ideas and done your research, it’s time to start organizing your thoughts into an outline.
An outline is like a roadmap for your writing – it helps you see the overall structure and flow of your piece.
Start by identifying your main points or arguments, then add supporting details and examples under each one. You can also use your outline to identify areas where you need to do more research or development.
Remember, your outline doesn’t have to be set in stone – it’s a flexible tool that you can adjust as you write and revise. But having that initial structure can make the writing process feel much more manageable.
Alright, you’ve done your prewriting and you’re ready to start drafting. It’s time to start putting your ideas into full sentences and paragraphs.
Drafting can feel intimidating, but remember – it’s just a first attempt. The goal is to get your thoughts down on paper, not to create a perfect final product. Give yourself permission to write freely and without judgment.
Create a Thesis Statement
One key element of drafting is creating a strong thesis statement. This is a sentence or two that summarizes the main point or argument of your piece. It’s like a signpost for your readers, telling them what to expect in the rest of your writing.
Your thesis statement should be specific, arguable, and clearly stated. It’s okay if it takes a few tries to get it just right – you can always revise it later.
Write Topic Sentences
Once you have your thesis statement, it’s time to start fleshing out your ideas in the body of your piece.
One helpful strategy is to write clear topic sentences for each paragraph. A topic sentence introduces the main idea of the paragraph and connects it back to your thesis.
Think of your topic sentences as mini-thesis statements for each paragraph. They should be specific, relevant, and engaging, and they should give your readers a clear sense of what to expect in the rest of the paragraph.
Develop Your Paragraphs
With your topic sentences in place, it’s time to develop your paragraphs with supporting details and examples. Each paragraph should focus on one main idea that supports your thesis statement.
As you draft, try to use concrete, specific language to illustrate your points. Avoid vague or general statements – instead, use vivid descriptions and examples to bring your ideas to life.
Use Supporting Evidence
To make your writing more persuasive and credible, it’s important to use supporting evidence to back up your claims. This can include facts, statistics, examples, and expert opinions.
As you incorporate evidence into your writing, be sure to use proper citation and attribution. This shows that you’ve done your research and helps you avoid plagiarism.
When you’re drafting, just get those thoughts flowing onto paper. Don’t stress about making it super polished yet—you’ll have your tune-up time later for all the tweaks and edit magic.
You’ve got a draft – congratulations. Now it’s time to take a step back and evaluate your work with a critical eye.
Revising is all about making improvements to your content and structure to make your writing as clear, coherent, and effective as possible.
Evaluate Content
Start by reading through your draft and asking yourself some key questions:
- Does my writing have a clear purpose and audience?
- Does each paragraph support my main point?
- Is my evidence convincing and relevant?
As you evaluate your content, look for areas where you can cut irrelevant or redundant information, and add more detail or explanation where needed.
Remember, every sentence should serve a purpose and contribute to your overall message.
Improve Organization
Next, take a look at the overall organization and flow of your piece.
Does it have a clear beginning, middle, and end? Do your ideas logically build on each other? Are there any gaps or jumps in your reasoning?
If needed, don’t be afraid to move paragraphs around, add transitions, or restructure your piece to create a more logical and coherent flow.
A reverse outline can be a helpful tool for evaluating and improving your organization.
Enhance Word Choice
As you revise your draft, pay attention to your word choice and tone.
Are you using clear, concise language that your audience will understand? Can you replace any vague or overused words with more specific or descriptive language?
Think about the connotations and emotional impact of your words, and choose language that supports your purpose and engages your readers.
Refine Sentence Structure
Finally, take a close look at your sentence structure and variety.
Are your sentences clear and easy to follow? Do you have a good mix of simple, compound, and complex sentences?
Look for opportunities to vary your sentence beginnings, lengths, and structures to create a more engaging and dynamic writing style. But be careful not to overdo it – too much variety can be just as distracting as too little.
Remember, revising is an ongoing process. You may need to go through multiple rounds of revision to get your writing where you want it to be. But each revision brings you one step closer to a polished, effective final product.
You’ve revised your content and structure – now it’s time to polish your writing at the sentence level.
Editing involves carefully reviewing your work for errors in grammar, punctuation, spelling, and formatting.
Proofreading for Grammar and Punctuation
One key aspect of editing is proofreading for grammar and punctuation mistakes. This includes things like subject-verb agreement, pronoun usage, comma placement, and more.
Reading your work out loud can be a helpful technique for catching awkward or incorrect phrasing. You can also try reading your work backward, sentence by sentence, to help you focus on each sentence without getting caught up in the overall flow.
Checking for Consistency
Another important aspect of editing is checking for consistency in your writing. This includes things like verb tense, point of view, and formatting.
For example, if you start your piece in the present tense, make sure you stay in the present tense throughout.
If you’re using MLA formatting, make sure you follow MLA guidelines consistently throughout your piece.
Formatting and Citations
Speaking of formatting, it’s important to make sure your work follows the appropriate style guide for your discipline or publication. This includes things like font choice, margin size, and citation style.
If you’re using sources in your writing, make sure to properly cite them both in-text and in your works cited or reference list. Proper citation not only gives credit to your sources but also helps you avoid plagiarism.
Editing can be a tedious process, but it’s an important step in creating a polished, professional piece of writing.
Don’t be afraid to ask for help from a friend, tutor, or colleague – a fresh set of eyes can catch mistakes that you might miss on your own.
You’ve brainstormed, drafted, revised, and edited – now it’s time to share your work with the world.
Choosing a Publishing Platform
The first step in publishing is choosing the right platform for your work. Consider your audience, purpose, and genre when making this decision.
For example, if you’re writing a research paper for a class, you’ll likely submit it directly to your professor.
If you’re writing a personal essay, you might consider submitting it to a literary journal or magazine.
If you’re writing a blog post, you’ll need to choose a blogging platform and domain name.
Formatting for Publication
Once you’ve chosen your publishing platform, it’s important to format your work according to their guidelines.
Pay close attention to submission rules and follow them carefully. A poorly formatted submission can hurt your chances of acceptance, even if your writing is strong.
Promoting Your Work
Finally, don’t be afraid to promote your published work. Share it on social media, send it to friends and family, and include it in your writing portfolio.
If you’re submitting to a literary journal or magazine, you can also promote your work by attending readings or events hosted by the publication.
Building relationships with other writers and editors can help you grow your audience and find new opportunities for your work.
Remember, publishing is not the end of the writing process – it’s just the beginning. Use the feedback and experience you gain from publishing to continue growing and improving as a writer.
The writing process is a journey, not a destination. By breaking it down into these five essential steps, you can approach your writing with confidence and clarity.
Remember, the key is to stay focused on your message and your audience. Whether you’re brainstorming ideas, drafting your piece, or polishing your final draft, keep your reader in mind every step of the way.
With practice and persistence, you’ll develop your own unique writing process that works for you. So don’t be afraid to experiment, take risks, and let your creativity shine through.
It’s time to build your blog empire.
Want to be a real Content Hacker along with us, but not sure where to start?
We’ve got custom-created resources just for you, friend.
Get inside the Content Hacker Community ❤️ – at just $20/month, it’s a no-brainer. On-call, expert support, live calls, and so much more.
Want to go deeper? Check out our AIO Blogger course – an immersive one-week course teaching you everything you need to know to build a money-making online blog.
Can’t WAIT to welcome you inside.
with gratitude,
[cm name=”no_more_low_ranking”]
Become a Content Hacker
Collaborate with other growth-minded, savvy Content Hackers – plus a host of experts. The price of two coffees/month gets you in.
- Cancel Anytime
- For the Price of 2 Coffees a Month
- 100% Risk Free
Where marketers and founders get the content strategy, skills, and systems to grow exponentially online.
Join thousands of Content Hackers learning smarter content and business strategies.
© 2024 Contenthacker.com
IMAGES
VIDEO