
One of the things I like best about social media is the way it helps me discover talented writers. They remind me a lot of distance athletes with their deep conversations about seemingly minor details and long periods of time spent practicing alone.
The web also has a downside. There seems to be a growing belief that having mobile access to information negates any need to regularly consume quality writing.
Some writers point to the popularity of the Twilight series and say it’s a sign the general population no longer cares about quality. In my reply I always point to the wise commentary of Juan Williams:
Pandering to base interests is very different from catering to real needs. (Paraphrased from his commentary on the notion that people of color only want to watch MTV.)
It’s possible that you’ll make money by pandering, but there are a lot of people doing the same thing now. Traipse around online for a bit and you’ll find thousands of desperate writers trying to predict the next fetish in hopes of fame and fortune. It’s sad to watch them trying so hard because in the end they’ll have nothing to be truly proud of. I want to write things for which my only explanation for writing is not, “I needed the money.”
Do you? If so, you may find some portion of the following useful. I’ve gathered some of my favorite quotes from brilliant, prolific, and plain crazy writers and share them here with some tips I’ve found incredibly helpful in my own journey as a yearning writer. I hope you enjoy!
1. Write to make a point, not a target word count
Vigorous writing is concise. ~William Strunk Jr.
Nothing makes me grimace quite like hearing somebody say they’ve reached 50,000 words and so have completed their first novel. Remember dully typing toward a minimum word count for an academic paper you had no interest in writing? If you start to get the feeling about something you’re writing, it’s probably time to stop writing and do some more research (or bribe your editor/professor/mother into accepting the shorter piece of work).
2. Help another edit their writing
I try to leave out the parts that people skip. ~Elmore Leonard
I have a short, round-bellied friend who turned me on to this quote. That said, I’ve found that helping another writer edit their work often leaves me with more insight into my own writing than I gave to the other writer! If you can find a trusted friend to trade nascent work with, you will have found a wealth of improvement.
3. Write something every day that you do not intend to share
Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart. ~William Wordsworth
I have a private blog I update daily with rants, outlines, fears, and bits of nothing that stream out of me when I’m struggling to find focus for another piece of writing. You’ll never see it. There’s no value in my sharing it because the moment I know others can see it is the moment I no longer write just for me. I suggest you give this method a try. It doesn’t have to be a blog. A notebook would work just fine.
4. Outline before drafting & Don’t confuse fiction with dishonest writing
If any man wish to write in a clear style, let him be first clear in his thoughts; and if any would write in a noble style, let him first possess a noble soul. ~Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
I am still learning to to do the first part. I’ve taken great value from sharing outlines of my intended work with friends who are very logical and excel at criticizing arguments without muddling thoughts. The last part… is something I can only hope for. If I someday hear a reader say, “his writing is imbued with kindness” I think that will do.
5. Don’t get caught up in restating the obvious
The role of a writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say. ~Anaïs Nin
As one who writes a lot for the web, I am continually tempted by the low-hanging fruit of trending topics and morning news drivel. Restating the obvious is easy, fun, and very retweetable. But the obvious rarely seems to translate into any sort of real legacy. If I only had a list of all the things my readers already know collectively, it would be so simple to stay fresh!
6. Befriend a dictionary
The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug. ~Mark Twain
Imbue, conjure, nefarious… are just a few of the words I have as friends to help me clearly make a point, share an idea, or call something into question. There’s a joy in having the perfect words at one’s disposal that only a dedicated writer can appreciate. A thesaurus can be useful if you’re bored, lazy, or drunk. Nothing trumps having a word come to mind just as you need its help.
7. Keep a little notebook for moments of inspiration
Write down the thoughts of the moment. Those that come unsought for are commonly the most valuable. ~Francis Bacon
I use a moleskine to store my thoughts for later. Having thoughts and personal commentary all in one place has the added benefit of serving as a source of inspiration for later times of drought. Think of it as you would catching raindrops in a canteen. You’ll be glad for the moisture some day.
8. Not having a pen in your hand doesn’t mean you’re not writing
The best time for planning a book is while you’re doing the dishes. ~Agatha Christie
If you walked into my office at random, there’s a very good chance you’d find me sipping a glass of tea while staring off into space. Am I doing nothing? Not in the least. Contrary to my mother’s early suspicions, I’m not addled. I just like to silently try phrases out in my mind before writing them down. Agatha had a point about dishes, too. There’s no such thing as writer’s block. But there are times when washing dishes is a better use of time than staring at an empty screen!
9. Be kind to yourself
Every writer I know has trouble writing. ~Joseph Heller
I hope you are kind to yourself and forgiving when you cannot find the perfect phrase or paint a story just so! Writing, for me, seems a monumental task at times and I am always delighted to find others who understand my situation and reach out to help. There’s a joy in knowing that no matter how lonely a stretch of path may seem we are never entirely alone, no? We always have our writing and with it an entire community of people who care.
If you’re a writer, and you are one even if you simply compose witty text messages, I hope you’ll say hello.
















Not being perfect is great advice. I remember I used to almost get afraid to write because it would take so long to crank out an article. The reason was that I thought every sentence had to be perfect and there was no room for error. When I gave up this kind of thinking, the words seemed to flow a lot easier and I was able to produce articles much more quickly and with the same level of quality as the ones where I stewed about every single sentence. There is an element of "letting go" that I think all writers need to embrace to be at their best.
Number 5 is reassuring
i liked this post, thanks dude for sharing , points (1~6) quiet good :)
at the present im fighting clutter and always hearing echos of simplify, simplify simplify !
your descriptions are searing inside of me, it rekindles the passion within me to further and improve my writing abilities.
somehow it moved not only my attention but as well as my emotions for all the points you wanted to convey.
hurray for you …!!
good pages. thanks
A helpful and upbeat post. Thumbs up!
Hello. ^_^
Excellent summary of the most common writing wisdom floating around out there. And I still have trouble with number four as well; even with full knowledge of where I want things to go, characters usually end up taking over the story and surprising me despite all my good, well-organized intentions. Nevertheless, I find my writing works better when I'm flexible, than when I rigidly try to force things into the original concept.
I disagree with #4. Not everyone can do outlines. It's very much of an organizational process that is unique to each individual. I have trouble even comprehending basic elements of outlines that other people find easy, and then the outline crashes and burns three chapters in–I've very nearly destroyed a novel by trying to force it into an outline.
Ah, but outlining (planning) can be very useful. There's a military quote about plans being quite useless but planning being entirely useful.
I think it applies to writing as well. =)
Which doesn't address her point. I'm one of those who can't outline either. I can only write a book by seeing where I am and trying to see where it will go from there. Outlines can't be useful if you can't outline.
"I want to write things for which my only explanation for writing is not, “I needed the money.”" Brilliant post, but your comment here immediately invoked the shade of Samuel Johnson, who summoned up all the feelings he had about his early, impoverished life as a Grub St hack when he rumbled out his oft-cited grump: "No-one but a blockhead ever wrote, except for money."
Hey Seth. Thanks for this article. It's kind of funny because I was just writing, went downstairs to eat a peach, came upstairs to check out Lifehack, and your writing article came up! I really appreciate the tips you shared here and your research on those famous authors. A good writing book for reference is The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White. :) Anyway, back to writing!
Also. I would say that being on writer and editor mode often makes writing harder. Write first what comes to mind and then edit/copy yourself…
Brilliant and inspirational points! Particularly quote number 9. I'm in the middle of a 'block' with what I hope to be my debut, so I started searching blogs and am very glad I stumbled on yours. Perhaps I'll go do the dishes…
:)
Thank you for this post – I am distributing this to my students for whom academic writing has become both a chore and an impossible task! I teach at university and write both academically and non-academically; I find your points are relevant for either side of the fence :)
Objection to number 4, to Goethe's quote, in particular :) Quite often writing helps clear your thoughts. It's not that you need to know and plan everything in your thoughts, be it some point or some story. You may only have a clue of what you want to write about, but as you get down to writing and go with the flow, you surprisingly see that in the process of writing your point or your idea gets a crystal clear shape. So, Seth, if you're still learning to do that – I think there's no need to strive to be ever done with this learning. I think writing and thinking support each other, and it's an amazing discovery for every particular piece as you see how clear writing transforms into clear thinking.
Love #1 & #6
I believe people should write from the heart, and write as if giving of your truest self. Also, I agree with having a dictionary on hand – a nice little totable one would do me well. Or, as they say "there's probably an app for that" :).
The idea is not to have a dictionary by your desk. The idea is to know the words. The words you know affect the way you think and the stories you tell. I have on occasion used a thesaurus but never to find a word, only to remember a word, because I already knew there was a better one out there than what I had.
Loved #7 about keeping a note book – I always have an ongoing list of topics and they REALLY come in handy when a dry writing spellhappens.
In regards to #2 – they say you have mastered a skill when you can teach another person, so helping another writer is a win win for everyon. Thanks for sharing!
This is great! I'm not a great writer – heck, I wouldn't even consider myself "good" – but I'm working towards it. Thanks for the tips!
Great advice! I'd like to become a good writer and these tips are truly inspirational.
[...] 9 Expert Tips for Better Writing: Love the quotes that accompany each tip. [...]
[...] Stepcase Lifehack writes a post about creating better writing. They all make lots of sense, and I probably could have thought of them if I put my mind to it, but [...]
At times my students think I am staring at them. Then I have to explain that you were a blur until you spoke. I was actually thinking about what I wanted to write next.
[...] Expert Tips For Better Writing – Stepcase Lifehack http://www.lifehack.org/articles/miscellaneous/9-expert-tips-for-better-writing.html [...]
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nicely written means use of quotes(very good ones) was interesting and very up to the point writing good job and by ur other articles i think your experimenting and that is very good
[...] a comment » Stepcase Lifehack posted some tips to improve your writing including: “Befriend a dictionary” and [...]
These all are good advices. thumps up!
Thanx, these tips are the truth! I enjoyed this post =)
I like number 3. Most of my friends who are writers, find it rather odd that I keep a journal. But it is a source of inspiration for me. I wish our creative writing teacher told us more about number 1.
Seth, I really enjoyed reading your article. I particularly liked your reference to Agatha Christie washing dishes as an opportunity to clarify her thoughts. Sometimes, when writing, the process can become wearisome- just staring at the screen and writing, with little cohesion between one idea and another, and doing anything monotonous, like washing the dishes, or going on a long walk, helps to clarify the mind. Yet, sometimes, when writing the words flow, and cohesion of thoughts happens- even if, at the beginning of the process, I have no idea where I plan to take the article or story.
Maybe that is why writing is both fascinating and beguiling, and why we all persevere!
In reference to "2. Help another edit their writing," I would add "10. Pay attention to grammar and punctuation." One case in point, make sure that pronouns agree with their antecedents.
[...] get in the way. Big things that can stop me from writing. This article from Stepcase Lifehack, “9 Expert Tips For Better Writing”, gives me some alternate outlets that can spark the rest of my writing life. Particularly [...]
Great tips… I like #3 a lot. The biggest way to improve your writing is simply to WRITE MORE, and this tip is a great way to help you do that. Excellent post.