Tuesday, November 30, 2010

- reaching the finish line -

I'm sure everyone has big goals they'd like to accomplish someday. Here's what I learnt from NaNoWriMo (and other delicious sources):

Visualize-able End Goal

You have to know what success looks like or you will never be able to know whether you've really hit your target. For NaNoWriMo, success was defined in an incredibly straight-forward way: write 50,000 words in November. Not everything will be that clearly scoped out for you - in most cases, you will have to define how success looks like yourself.

Action-able Steps

You have to know what is the immediate next step for your project. This may require brainstorming to figure out all the potential steps, and then analyzing which step is the best one to take. For NaNoWriMo, I had to figure out a general outline of the plot and sketch out my main characters. Then I simply wrote 1,667+ words a day.

Steps can be adjusted. When I could had nothing left to write about, "planning" replaced "writing" as my next step. When I lost ten days to non-stop overtime at work, I had to replace "1,667+" with "3,000".

Small Pieces Relate-able to Big Picture

Tying the two concepts above, you need to be able to keep in mind the overall goal when you work on your next action. Seeing a visual or numeric representation of your overall progress can be helpful here. This was easy for NaNoWriMo: I simply updated my word count every night and saw it slowly increasing to 50,000. A progress meter can be really motivating, which leads me to the last point...

You Have to Want it Badly Enough

If you want to complete something - as opposed to simply experimenting - you have to really want the end goal. Seeing your progress is worthless if you do not care about where that progress leads to. Novelty wears off quickly. Writers for NaNoWriMo are warned that the second week was the toughest and I can attest to that.

And that's it! Time for me to try this out on my next project.

5 comments:

echomyst said...

What made you want to accomplish NaNoWriMo badly enough that even ten days of overtime at work did not derail you?

echoblaze said...

Just to prove to myself I can get a decent-size project done if I put my mind to it =)

Renae M. said...

Dude you are beginning to sound like a cooperate drone!

echoblaze said...

a very cooperative writing machine =)

Renae M. said...

LOL HAHA oh fail, yes I meant corporate. durrr.