Most of the bloggers/ writers always have a question as to what to write? After years of writing I found a solution to myself. This exercise made me overwhelmed. Hope you would experience too!!! Being a Digital Marketing Expert I always used to think of which kind of blogs would fetch more readers to subscribe to the blog posts? We had numerous discussions with lot of Influenced writers. Everyone had a same issue in common. I took up a challenge to overcome this issue in writing content.
At first everything that came out sound like a blame.
I started to dive deep into the process and once its ignited you can never stop the following thoughts. I spent continuously 2 hrs. and I was filled with 55 ideas of writing one blog. I rushed and started adding those thoughts into the notes and felt a tremendous spirit in writing. Within no time I completed 2 pages of writing without any hassles. Writing is Thinking; for most of them thinking is tough. Writing is communication and communication with the clarity is a hard work.Believe me it’s like a magic! Self-thought is a relaxing and a creative process for the content writers/bloggers because it helps in exploring the “Extraordinary YOU “. Self-thought exercise helps the mind to center and reorganize all those spiralling thoughts that leave you in a fog. You’ll start noticing a picture emerging of what you have to do and centralizes all the energy and channelizes the mind and passes very interesting creative ideas.
There are three types of writing which is been stated by Famous Authors :
Free Writing
The carpenter’s Method
The Knitter’s Method
1. Self-thought process
According to “Accidental Genius,” in his book, Mark Levy recommends free writing as a method to boost creativity:
Free writing pushes the brain to think longer, deeper, and more unconventionally than it normally would. By giving yourself a handful of liberating free writing rules to follow, you back your mind into a corner where it can’t help but come up with new thoughts. You could call free writing a form of forced creativity.
2. The Carpenter’s Method
Like many writing coaches, Jack Hart recommends the Carpenter’s Method in his book “A Writer’s Coach.”
This is probably the easiest way to produce content relatively fast. The process involves simple steps like Choose an Idea, outline your post, write a rough draft, Revise your content & finally edit sentence by sentence. This concept purely depends on the writer on how to outline the concept. It’s often a matter of personal preference and how familiar you are with the piece of content you want to write and who would be target audience. This type of content is like a Straight Jacket.
3. The Knitter’s Method
The knitters is the unique method wherein carpenters method you chunk down the concepts from a big frame and present in structured and planned manner. The free writing just starts and waits and sees where the content ends. The free writing often does lot of revisions to create and focus. Both carpenters and free writing completes editing at the last. Whereas the Knitters method is quite unique. Knitter makes each part of the content perfect before moving on.
As Mark McGuinness writes:
When I’m writing, I’m reading, evaluating, and tweaking as I go. I’ll write a few sentences then pause and go back to read them through. Sometimes it’s immediately obvious I haven’t quite captured the thought or image, so I’ll make a few changes before I go on. If I get stuck, I’ll stop and read through the whole piece, trying to pick up the thread of inspiration where I lost it. Once I see where I got tangled up, it’s a relief to untangle it and get going again.The experienced writers would thrive towards knitting method. It’s the most difficult path for the beginners which makes them bugged up. The sweet spot is while editing in this method you may get more ideas to knit in.So, which is your writing pattern? Show you interest through comments
When we’re open minded, we discover unexpected nuggets of wisdom, fresh ideas, stories, or metaphors. So find your own balance between planning and openness.
Source:https://5lines.com/