1913 New Year's resolution postcard |
Everyone who made a New Year's resolution, singular or plural, raise your hand. Okay, you can put your hand down.
A month has now passed since you vowed to make some sort of change to better your life. How many of you made a resolution which had to so with your writing? Did that resolution have the goal of writing a set number of words within a fixed time period? Or maybe the goal of selling X number of stories per year? How many of you are reaching or are on track to reach that goal? Show of hands.
You might want to know that a 2023 market data research report by Gitnux shows that 50% of people make a New Year's resolution, but only about 8% of those people keep it. Whoa! So much for good intentions. And, only 64.6% of those people keep their resolution past the first month, which means that more than one third of these resolutionists have dropped out of their own well-intended program. My friend, the odds are against you. You may already have both feet well on the road to perdition.
Now, we don't want you to end up being roasted in some writers' hell, or even temporarily delayed in a writers' purgatory, so listen up, here's what you're gonna do.
First, you should always choose a goal where you have control. If your stated goal was to sell more stories, then you are probably already in trouble. For instance, should the readers, and therefore the editors, agents and publishers, decide that your chosen genre is going out of fashion this year, that is something over which you have no control. Under those circumstances, your well-intended goal becomes more difficult, if not impossible to achieve. If you don't believe that can happen, then ask yourself where the westerns went.
You also have no control over a situation where the editor receives more than one story similar in plot, story arc, ending, setting, etc. and therefore your submission is rejected because he only has room for one of these similar stories. Or, if the editor suddenly decides to put a themed edition together for that month and your story, as great as it is, doesn't fit the theme. Or, my favorite, "Your submission doesn't fit our needs at this time." You, as the writer, have no control in these types of situation
The second way to help you not break your resolution(s) is to choose a reasonable goal to begin with. Can you really write a thousand new words a day, five days a week, fifty-two weeks a year Sure, your favorite author may be able to accomplish that feat, but don't set yourself up for failure and disappointment because of a goal set too high. Remember, time must also be set aside for rewriting, editing, promoting, networking, conferences, meetings, family time and just plain living. You can always start out with a lesser goal and gradually raise the word count as time goes by and you become more proficient at your craft.
Okay now, everybody with a good idea on how to make a New Year's resolution and/or how not to break one…
RAISE YOUR HAND
I have two good ideas, R.T.:
ReplyDelete(1) DON'T MAKE ANY NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS.
(2) The one resolution you could (probably) keep: I will sit down at my desk once a day and do something.
You'd make a fine preacher, Brother Robert. We pray for saintly acceptance and don't step in the slush pile.
ReplyDeleteI don't make resolutions, but I have been chiding myself this month for not sending in stories. Yes, Brother, I am a sinner and a laggard. Pray for redemption.
Like you two, I haven't made New Years resolutions in years. Very few of them seemed to have worked out. Here's hoping you have a good year.
ReplyDelete