An Award-Winning Author

Janet Lane is the author of multiple award-winning books, including three IPPY awards for Tabor's Trinket, Crimson Secret, and Etti's Intended. Find out more about her award-winning books below. 

Crimson Secret, by Janet Lane (Dreaming Tree Publishing)

 

Tabor's Trinket, by Janet Lane (Dreaming Tree Publishing)

  

Etti's Intended, by Janet Lane (Dreaming Tree Publishing)

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1, 2, 3: How to Reach Your Writing Goals

Advice from an Award-Winning Author

Wannabe goals. We all made them for the New Year, right? Often our goals are unspoken but sincere, something we know we need to accomplish to advance our writing. They inspire us for a moment then, in the face of our busy lives, we allow them to fade.

"Write my synopsis. Develop my marketing plan. Finish my outline. Finish/Revise my book. Query my top five publishers. Learn how to blog. Get reviews." (Fill in your goals here.)

You know you need to do it. You keep thinking you will. But you don’t.

Read this. Follow the steps, and you’ll do it.

It starts with number one. Three Dog Night sang, “One is the loneliest number that you’ll ever do.” When it comes to goals, I consider it the most difficult number. If you’re having trouble reaching your goals, try starting with number one. It will help you progress to number two.

Still reading? Okay, here’s the not-so-secret formula.

 

STEP ONE

Tell someone important. Your critique group. Your most stalwart friend who supports your dreams. “I am going to (specific goal) this (week/month/summer)."

It must be specific. Not, “I’m going to write more,” but “I am going to write to The End by August.” Not, “I’m going to market more,” or “I am going to develop a marketing plan,” but rather, “I’m going to write a marketing plan by August."

Something good happens when you commit to another person or group. The goal becomes real. Increase your odds of success further by insisting that your friend follows up weekly to ask about your progress.

 

STEP TWO

Generate ideas. Browse the Internet, searching for topics such as “How To (Goal)” and “Top 10 Ways to (Goal).” Then create a mind map, incorporating what you’ve learned from your initial research.

You complete number two to better achieve your number three goal.

 

STEP THREE

Brainstorm with someone your local writing group, or a national group like the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers, who has accomplished this goal. Having completed number two, you will have learned enough to ask good questions and you will demonstrate to your expert fellow associate that you’ve given this some thought, and have taken those first steps already. Show you’re committed to learning, and others will be more willing to help you.

Seek out friends and/or associates have become known for their expertise in, for example, writing, editing, public speaking, workshops, book tours, blogs, reviews, podcasts—the list is extensive. Connect with them through your organization’s on-line loop, monthly newsletter and/or programs, and special events such as an annual conference.

Be bold and ask for help, and you’ll appreciate the power and inspiration of having friends to cheer you on.

Remember that this is brainstorming, not mentoring, which represents an extensive commitment that may scare off your targeted expert. Make it clear you’re only looking for suggestions and resources that you will pursue to complete your own plan of action.

 

STEP FOUR

By now, you will have gathered a daunting amount of information and options to consider. Sort by level of difficulty, easiest to most challenging. If your goal includes some area of marketing, sort by affordability. Sort also by effectiveness, based on what you learned in steps three and four.

 

STEP FIVE

Create your action list. Based on the completion date you initially told your critique group or stalwart supporter, put dates on this action list that will reasonably bring you to the finish line.

Make adjustments, if needed. Share your list, and if you keep a hard copy or digital planning calendar, insert those dates with a big star, color code—whatever triggers you to remember the importance of your intermediate goals.

It’s a simple concept, proven over time and as reliable as gravity. It’s also proven over time that you must take step one first.

 

Go for it! Your next novel is just one step away! 


Janet Lane has independently published five novels. Her historical romance novel, Tabor's Trinket, won an IPPY Award in 2015, Crimson Secret won an IPPY in 2017, and Etti's Intended won a 2019 IPPY. 

Find out more about Janet at her website here