If you write 1,000 words a day it can equal a lot a year. Here’s how:
SIX DAYS A WEEK
If you write 1,000 words a day for six days a week for one year, you will have 313,000 words written by the end of the year. Divide by four, and you will have four 78,250-word books in rough draft.
Your novel or nonfiction book may need to be a few thousand words more than that, but you can, no doubt, squeeze those words in before the end of the year.
Write a short story every month. = 12/year by writing 1,000/words or less one day a week.
Write an article every month. = 12/year when you have some extra time
At the end of one year you could have three novels, one non-fiction book, twelve short stories and twelve articles written. This means that you have to do only two things: Write 1,000 words a day, and edit 1,000 words a day, Monday through Friday, plus write and edit 1,000 words for your short story quota (could do 500 words in one story, and 500 in another, for example) every Saturday, and squeeze in that article when the mood strikes, but aim for one a month.
RADIATE
FIVE DAYS A WEEK
If you write 1,000 words/day, five days a week, you will have 261,000 words at the end of one year. Divide by four, and you have exactly enough for four 65,250-word books. Make one or two a bit shorter, and you can squeeze in a two-week vacation.
If you get most everything you write published, each will help sell the others. Someone may read your nonfiction book and find out you wrote a mystery, so will try that out, or vice versa. Someone may read a couple of your short stories or articles, see your bio, and decide to try one or more of your books.
The trickiest part is to keep up the pace and to make sure that if you edit out a whole chuck of one of your pieces that you also write enough words in that day to make up the deleted words.
Make up a chart for tracking how much you actually accomplish every day in a spreadsheet, and you will be amazed at how much you have done in just half a year.
Excuse me while I work on my second 500 words for the day. (But no, although I wish I could meet this goal, I haven’t yet. But there’s still time.)
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