The website content provides insights into a free ebook that offers 15-minute writing exercises designed to enhance a writer's skills, particularly focusing on non-fiction writers.
Abstract
The article introduces a collection of writing exercises aimed at improving various aspects of writing, such as headline building, concise writing, and editing. Authored by Lipika Sahu, the ebook is available for free and is tailored to benefit non-fiction writers. It emphasizes the importance of regular practice through targeted exercises to strengthen writing muscles and improve overall writing quality. The exercises are self-paced and can be easily incorporated into daily routines, with the potential to evolve from exercises into lasting writing practices. The article highlights a few sample exercises, including the Nitpicking Exercise for editing skills, the Daily Bread Crumbs for idea generation, and the Honey I Shrunk The Thing exercise for brevity and clarity. The overarching goal is to help writers deliver effective and fast content to meet the demands of today's readers.
Opinions
The author believes that writing, like any sport, requires regular training and exercise to maintain and improve skills.
It is suggested that writers can benefit from critiquing and editing the work of others to enhance their own editing abilities.
The article posits that collecting and reusing compelling lines and phrases can be a powerful source of ideas for future writing.
Brevity with clarity is emphasized as a crucial aspect of writing, necessary to engage today's impatient readers.
The author endorses mindless writing as a method to overcome writer's block and generate ideas, referencing the practice's effectiveness as noted by famous writers like Natalie Goldberg.
The ebook is presented as a valuable resource for both new and seasoned writers to stay in shape and maintain their writing skills.
The article encourages writers to connect on LinkedIn, suggesting its effectiveness as a lead generation network for writers.
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15-Min Exercises That Can Make Your Writing Go From ‘Meh’ To ‘Aah’!
Build on your writing muscles || Excerpt from my FREE ebook
Usain Bolt doesn’t just run. Michael Phelps doesn’t just swim. And nor Messi just play football.
They do a lot of other things to keep themselves in shape that collectively equips them to perform the ultimate act — the sport.
Similarly, for a writer, writing is the ultimate act. But in order to perfect the same, many attributes need to be right. There are many facets of writing that writers must practice so that they master the art.
Writing exercises are training routines for writers that strengthen their writing muscles.
I have compiled a FREE ebook that has 15 such effective exercises. You may access it here. Listing all of them would make this a humongous article, so I am sampling a few here.
Who is this book for?
Though this book is good enough for all writers because the fundamentals are the same throughout the world, it would help non-fiction writers more.
What types of exercises are there?
Many. And each exercise targets to work on a certain crucial element of writing.
Broadly, they fall under these categories:
Headline building
Formatting
Concise writing
Idea generating
Writing habit
Writing with precision
Editing
Readership building
What is the best way to approach this?
Well, it is all self-paced. You are the one who is going to decide, pick, and act on it.
15 minutes is what you will need in a day to do it. Hence, it is extremely easy to squeeze some of them into your schedule.
As you do these exercises, you will imbibe them in your writing pattern. Do not be surprised if they graduate from being an exercise to becoming a writing practice. And that is precisely the aim.
#1/15 The Nitpicking Exercise
Sounds fun, right? We all love some fault-finding time — especially of others!
Well, that’s what we will do in this exercise, just that usually it doesn’t do us any good, but here it will.
Take a story (or part of it). Of another writer — preferably a contemporary/parallel writer. Copy it somewhere. And start making notes/changes you feel would make the story better. It can be anything:
the grammar
the formatting
the structure/flow of the story
clarity of the thoughts
basically anything
You may ask, how is this different from editing your own story? It is. When we write something, we feel it is okay. We are emotionally invested in that most of the time. But it is easier to do it on someone else’s work. Hence, the exercise.
The next step is to rectify the changes that you have noted down. And finally compare the two.
Slowly, with time, this practice will strengthen your editing skills which is a critical element of good writing.
#2 /15 The Daily Bread Crumbs
This one is a keeper exercise. I do it to date.
This is a daily exercise. Become a squirrel and stuff good things in your cheek pouch. It can be — a great headline, a good one-liner, a catchy phrase, a coined word.
Every day.
We also come up with wonderful lines in the course of our work. Those are must-store. They are our genius hour by-product. Reuse them guilt-free. But for that, you need to store them first.
I say bread crumbs because ideas come picking on them. A good thought/line has the potential to generate powerful ideas. I have first-hand experience. Many of my well-performing stories have originated from one single line. That’s the power. Hence, it only makes sense to have some in your kitty.
Bank on them and use them.
#3/15 Honey I Shrunk The Thing
Hey, stop thinking naught!!
Take any of your old stories. Say it is 1000 words. The exercise is to reduce it to 75% of its size. 750 words. Without losing its essence or omitting contents.
It is not about writing more. It is about adding more value to the words.
Not fluff. Dense. Intense. If you can say more in fewer words, half the battle is won. The problem with writing in many words is that it can confuse and easily put off your reader.
Remember that today’s impatient readers want information only one way — effective and fast. You must also work on delivering, in the same way, to keep up with them.
Hence, brevity with clarity is the call of the day.
#4/15 Open The Flood Gates
A flash flood of words.
For 15 minutes write mindlessly — no sense, no filter, no rhyme, no rhythm, no pause.
Ever seen a flash flood? Have you noticed how it washes away all that comes in its way? It has just one thing in mind — to flow uninterrupted.
Many times our own insecurities block us — self-doubt, fear of failure, deadlines, and fear of judgment are a few. They block our channel of flow. Mindless writing is a cleansing process to unblock these hindrances. Famous writers like Natalie Goldberg swear by its effectiveness.
You can adopt the same practice.
This exercise is a wonderful way to get the writing juices flowing; it is a proven technique for idea generation too. This routine also enhances the drafting process of a story and handling writer’s block.
So, give it a go.
#5 to #15 await you in the ebook!
Final thoughts
Exercise the writing muscle every day, even if it is a letter, notes, a title list, a character sketch, or a journal entry. Writers are like dancers, like athletes. Without that exercise, the muscles seize up.
Jane Yolen
New or seasoned, all writers need some exercise to stay in shape.