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Productivity For Authors. Fighting Overwhelm And How I Am Refocusing My Workload

OLD POST ALERT! This is an older post and although you might find some useful tips, any technical or publishing information is likely to be out of date. Please click on Start Here on the menu bar above to find links to my most useful articles, videos and podcast. Thanks and happy writing! – Joanna Penn

To be a successful indie author means wearing many different hats.

Indeed, to be successful at anything involves wearing many hats! But sometimes, we can look up from the mountainous To Do list and wonder what the hell is going on!

I have been feeling this way lately (again!) and two things have helped me to refocus.

a) The brilliant interview on strategy with Charlie Gilkey, when I asked about outsourcing and Charlie suggested elimination first, as well as focusing more on the primary goal

b) My game changing experiences at London Book Fair, where I recommitted to my growth as a fiction writer

I have also spent a lot of time writing in my journals with a strategic focus, trying to decide what I want to achieve over the next 5 years, both as a creative and a business-woman. I can't keep doing what I doing and expecting a different result. I have to change what I'm doing in order to reach my goals.

In this article, I explain what I am doing to refocus my workload. This list is not meant to be a recommendation for you, it's merely my own response to overwhelm, and it's based on where I am in the author journey. But I am keen to hear your thoughts in the comments section!

(1) Focus on writing more books and creating more products

I've talked about the magic of rights before, how one manuscript can be turned into multiple products and multiple streams of income. But at LBF 2014, I saw my potential future in the Indie Bestseller group. I've known how this process should work intellectually for a long time, but I don't think I have had the confidence in my own writing to think I could get to that point until now.

I've just written ‘Day of the Vikings,' (currently with my editor) and I loved writing it and surprisingly, it was much easier than previous books. The first draft was also a lot cleaner than usual, because I think the fundamentals of story may have become more embedded in my brain. I still do all my research, which is super fun, but the actual first draft writing is a quicker process. So I will be writing more books, and also focusing on turning those into multiple products – publishing direct on the main platforms in ebook and print, as well as focusing on audiobooks, foreign translations and other country markets.

To make time for this, I do have to eliminate certain things.

(2) No more guest posts on the blog

Guest posts take up a lot of my time in terms of coordination and scheduling, often rewriting articles as well as sharing. I have always done it in order to help out other authors with traffic to their projects, but the time it takes is too much these days. I also need to slow down my content production and the site is established enough to get away with that now.

When I started this blog, there were very few people talking about self-publishing and so this site was original. Nowadays, self-publishing is mainstream and there are so many blogs about it, that last year, I said I would be changing the focus to more graduate level posts on marketing and the author-entrepreneur side of things.

You'll be hearing more from me! Credit: Jason Moon Photography

Now I need to go further, because the only thing that makes any of us original is our voice. We are all unique. I hope you come to this site primarily because you want to join me on my journey. So it's going to be MY voice you hear from now on, and maybe the occasional amazing guest article, but very rarely. Of course, I will be continuing to bring other people to you via the podcast and also my YouTube channel, as well as sharing people's work on Twitter and Google Plus, so it won't be all ‘me-me-me'! But it will be more me than it has been 🙂

(3) Reading more books and fewer RSS feeds

I took email off my phone months ago now and don't miss it at all. But I had replaced the email checking with RSS feed checking, which is just as disruptive!

I've been subscribed to ~400 blogs for the last 5 years, which have fuelled my twitterholism and my sharing, but the other day I went through and culled ~370 of them. It was interesting to visit the list as so many had just stopped months or years ago. Most blogs don't last long, because people lose interest or focus, or wonder why they are doing it. I've had 3 other blogs that didn't last, so I understand that impetus. I got rid of any without a strong voice and kept the best ones, with the focus on what I want to continue sharing online.

I want to write about books more on the blog. I read a lot and have notes I want to share with you, but because guest posts have been scheduled 3/4 months in advance, I just haven't been able to share what I want even on my own blog! That's crazy! I also want to read more books and fewer RSS feeds, so culling the masses was a good idea in general.

(4) Outsourcing specific jobs

Indie authors are control freaks!

That's partly why we love doing everything associated with our books, but I am getting to a point where I need help with things that aren't my core focus.

I have just started using a fantastic Virtual Assistant (who I will introduce at some point!) and she is doing author-related things e.g. researching for book reviews. I am also using PeoplePerHour.com for specific jobs, and using specialists per job, rather than trying to find one person to do everything.

I've had a new HTML newsletter designed, my ePub files for Nook fixed and a visual presentation for ‘How to Market a Book' which will go up on Slideshare soon. Because the tasks have to be clearly specified on PeoplePerHour, it helps me to write down exactly what I need, and several times I have read my own task and then deleted it. Elimination, rather than outsourcing, is sometimes the better option, as Charlie says in the strategy interview!

I'm also using a transcriber for my podcasts and thriller author interviews, which saves me the need to write show notes and watch the video all over again, halving my time on a significant task. Thanks Liz at Libroediting!

(5) Saying ‘no' more

I get hundreds of emails a week asking for help with things, as well as people pitching me with publishing startups which seem to have proliferated recently. I used to reply to everything, but it is getting to the point of overwhelm, and some emails are clearly lazy in their approach. For example, I still get emails that ask “How do I self-publish?” or “How do I sell more books?” Clearly, I have answered that a gazillion times on this site, and also have links to the key resources here.

I love to hear from people who have spent the time searching the site for answers (see the Search bar on the right!) and who have a genuine question. I also love to hear success stories, so please do continue to contact me if you have sincere questions or queries about interviews and speaking opportunities:)

(6) Giving up Facebook (almost) and doubling down on Twitter and G+

Social media can be one of those time sucks if you don't utilize your time well, so I am a massive fan of incorporating marketing into real life. If you don't enjoy it, don't do it! Twitter is my real social network, as well as my ‘marketing,' and I am increasingly enjoying Google Plus.

BUT/ I haven't been enjoying Facebook for a long time, and the tipping point has really been their algorithm change so the reach of any post is so much smaller. Paying to Boost is the only way for people who have already opted in to see your updates, and I've spent ~$100 doing that since Nov with some good results – BUT I resent it, as do many disgruntled Page owners. I put a comment on Twitter about potentially leaving Facebook – here are a few of the results, and there were many more.

I love Twitter and G+, particularly the serendipity of connecting with people who are not already in your circle. Facebook increasingly feels like pain to me, and I don't like pain! I also hung out with my 17 year old god-daughter this week, and she said that her age group have left Facebook and use Snapchat, Instagram and Twitter. She didn't even remember mySpace 🙂 Times change, social networks rise and fall, and we have to be nimble and adapt accordingly.

I still haven't made the big jump to leave Facebook entirely, but I am certainly pulling back, and focusing more on Twitter as well as G+, and my core ‘social' uses of blogging, podcasting and video through YouTube.

How do you manage your time? What steps are you taking to manage your overwhelm? Are there things you're considering eliminating? Any thoughts on leaving Facebook as a business tool? I'd love to know what you think about all this in the comments below.

Top image: Flickr Creative Commons hats by arbyreed

Joanna Penn:

View Comments (73)

  • Wow, very interesting tips. I definitely wasn't expecting some of them.

    The biggest surprise was (almost) leaving Facebook. Facebook is my favourite social media platform for socialising. But I've been looking at author-related pages and groups, and the vast majority are just places for indie authors to blast their 'ads'. Very sad.

    But there are real discussions going on in LinkedIn, I noticed. And when I set up my new Twitter account last week, I found authors everywhere. :-)

    I haven't tried G+ out properly, but you've motivated me to now.

    • Thanks Trisha, and I go back and forth on FB every day. I need some way to connect with my readers, but FB just isn't fun anymore. Groups may be an option, but there's no video like G+ Hangouts and I suspect that after FB have finished monetizing Pages, they will do the same with Groups since so many are moving to them ... Twitter is indeed chock full of authors :)

  • Sure. Perhaps for nonfiction authors, Facebook may be useful to buy ads on that go to a landing page with a free chapter of your book. But maybe not so much for creating a community?

    • I think Facebook Boost is just reflecting the early days of Google Adwords, and basically, you need a higher priced product to justify the ad spend. Books have such low margins that advertising is expensive - but you're right, non-fiction authors with a back end business like consulting or speaking may benefit more.

  • Yet another great article.

    I've definitely left FB behind as I've made the decision to concentrate my efforts on G+ and Twitter.

    Picking up on your comment about your god-daughter, my own (13 year old) daughter and her friends have also left FB and moved to more instant messaging (apps and online applications) - so the social media landscape is shifting again with each new generation.

    Good luck with your strategy - I'm still digesting all the different mediums I can utilise for my stories/fantasy world!

  • I'm still hanging out on Facebook, because Twitter has become a sea of advertising for me. Maybe it's time to cull who I follow and see if I can get some real interaction. I have G+, but it feels artificial. My friends are still on FB, but I really dislike the way FB is handling everything. It changes so fast, it's tough to keep up. I definitely think that they don't understand what keeps them afloat (the little guys) and when the plug gets pulled they will be asking why. G+ is poised to take on all the customers, just like it has with everything else. I hear Instagram is the place to be, but I'm wondering about Wattpad. Maybe that is the social media spot for authors to hang out. What do you think?

    • Hi Jessica - for twitter, you just make a list of people whose feed you want to see regularly, and steer away from uncurated feeds :) I have about 200 in my main watchlist.
      Instagram is popular for image sharing but I find Pinterest better as an author for my collated images around books, but then I barely use it socially :)
      Wattpad is for readers and reading, and it's about reading work and commenting on it, plus writing some if you like. It's a great community, skews younger and international, so YA authors would definitely benefit.

  • I'm with you, Joanna. I love and hate Facebook every day. I usually scroll through my newsfeed twice a day, get bored and wonder why I bothered. I'm also not getting enough out of my author page to make it worth the time of maintaining it. With FB gods throttling what people actually see, conversations have dwindled and made it not as fun. And since I write young adult and based on what your god-daughter and my 14-year-old daughter say, FB is not the place to chat with my readers.

    Like you, I've been analyzing where my time is better spent these days. And my decisions need to be based on making sure I give myself more time to write, not less. I'm concentrating on developing my newsletter list (which I use mainly to release book-related news). As far as social media, I'm present on almost all popular platforms, but I'm ready to make bold decisions and narrow that list down to what's reaching readers and doesn't take so much time that I forget that my real priority needs to be the writing.

    I will add... I sent out a title reveal newsletter this past Monday, and I had more conversations with actual readers via email in two days than I've had on FB or other social media in a month or more.

    • Hi Heather - I totally know what you mean with email - and I might focus on that too :) Do we all really need communities for our readers?
      As a reader myself, I hardly ever want to converse with the author after a book. I just want another book from them. I don't need to go on Facebook with Stephen King :)
      (he's my idol!)
      We all just need to make the bold moves and go with gut feel = write more, build email list and email people who care :)

      • I think the goals of all social media interactions should be:

        1. Meet people and build relationships with them
        2. Build your email list readership with people in your niche

  • I quit my business Facebook page a few months ago and the response was fascinating. There are so many people plugging away with minimal results but feel like they "have to" have a Facebook page. So getting the "permission" to quit something they hate was cathartic for a lot of people.

    On the other hand, I love my personal Facebook page, and have actually gotten a lot of business from it (book sales, client work, speaking opportunities), because the people I'm connected with there are people I actually know and have relationships with.

    Congratulations on your decision to refocus, Joanna. In the past year I've seen blogger after blogger take steps to make the process more manageable and strategic.

    • Thanks Rob - I find my personal page less and less useful as it is divorced from business, and I just prefer Twitter. Thanks for sharing that you quit the page. I don't think I will be doing it for much longer :)

  • I've missed your 'voice' in blog posts, so I will be looking forward to hearing from you more often! After all, people do return to blogs because they like the voice of the blogger.
    I'm also surprised you respond to emails like that. All they have to do is look through your archives...
    It's always good to revaluate what you're doing to make sure it's up to date with current goals.

    • Thanks Cassandra - I appreciate that :) and thanks for saying that it's obvious to find info on the site. I do try to make it easy! I'll definitely answer your emails ... :)

  • The absolute best thing I do to manage my writing time?

    I use Freedom to lock me out of the Internet for X-number of hours. If I hit a point in the story where I need to look something up, I use the old journalists' "tk" to mark the place, then keep writing. Sometime later, I go through, searching for all the tk's, and fixing them appropriately.

    "tk," by the way, is NEVER found in any English word ... so you can find all your uses immediately without having to modify your search results.

    • Good tip Jeff - for me, I love to research as I write, so I will use Freedom to block twitter.com and gmail.com but leave the rest :)

  • I think this paring back is a mature move on your part. Being a writer is primarily about writing! As a reader I'd rather see one concise and pithy post a week with one actionable piece of advice than a flurry of guest posts and long tip lists articles. But that's me. In addition to writing fiction I'm a marketer and taking one action a week is a prime piece of advice I offer my often overwhelmed clients. And it adds up fast.
    Thx!

    • Thanks Martin - I used to allow guest articles in order to help other authors reach an audience, but I think the efficacy of guest posts has really tailed off in the glut of content. However, the number of posts has helped my own Google ranking over the years, and now I feel I can slack off a bit!
      The increase in the number of podcasts is interesting, as I think that will be the next big rush - I love my podcast and will keep doing that, for sure :)

  • Hi Joanna,

    Coming back to the self. That's good for everyone!

    G+ groups are interesting, but a time sink thus far. How do you use G+? Perhaps the video hangouts?

    • I find G+ very good for SEO, and also good for connecting with people who are overwhelmed elsewhere, and the Hangouts are great :)

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