Recover from Writing Burn Out: 18 Tips for Writing with Gusto

We have to look at our own inertia, insecurities, self-hate, fear that, in truth, we have nothing valuable to say. When your writing blooms out of the back of this garbage compost, it is very stable. You are not running from anything. You can have a sense of artistic security. If you are not afraid of the voices inside you, you will not fear the critics outside of you.” ~Natalie Goldberg

A guest post by Tess Marshall of The Bold Life.

Burnout can be described as severe exhaustion, feeling depleted, running on empty and lack of inspiration and motivation. Frankly, you feel like you don’t give a damn.

You begin doubting your capabilities and the value of your work. Your enthusiasm and energy have vanished. Your ideas have dried up and you fear everything you write isn’t worth publishing.

Understanding burnout, can help you face your problem and refresh your writing and creativity.

What causes burnout?

Lack of down time
Feeling overworked and undervalued
Too much responsibility
Lack of monetary rewards for your work
Doing unchallenging or tedious work
Failure to socialize
Consistently working too many hours
Lack of support
Demanding perfection
A negative view of yourself
Unwillingness to delegate
The need to control everything
Feelings of overwhelm

Symptoms can be physical, emotional or behavioral

Physical
Headaches
Poor sleep patterns
Feeling tired
Feeling sick

Emotional
Depression
Lack of energy
Irritability
Disengagement
Lack of motivation and productivity
Loss of meaning and passion

Behavioral
Isolation
Coping with alcohol or drug abuse
Ignoring work and deadlines

“Life is actually really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.” ~Confucius

Steps to Enjoyable Writing

Use the following suggestions to bring the joy back to your writing and other areas of your life.

1. Clear your desk. A cluttered workspace influences your state of mind. A neat and sparse desk will help you stay focused and clear. Keep only the necessities in the open. Find a place for everything else or get rid of it.

2. Mind your own business. Don’t allow other writers to drive you. Don’t make comparisons. There will always be better and worse writers than you. Focus on improving your writing and enjoy the process.

3. Learn to accept constructive criticism. Everyone experiences criticism and rejection. Don’t internalize or take things personally. Improve your work and let the rest go.

4. Read books on writing. Read books on writing for enjoyment. Skip the “how to” exercises therein. See if you can relate to the author. If the author was sitting across from you at dinner what would you talk about? What advice would you want? What questions would you have?

5. Free-writing. If you want to enjoy writing, learn to write for yourself. Find pleasure in your writing, challenge yourself. The purpose of free-writing is to express yourself for your eyes only. It’s very liberating.

6. Chill out. If your bored, stressed or tired, deal with those emotions before sitting down to write. Take a walk. Write in your journal. Clear you head. When you are in a relaxed state begin again. You can’t do your best work when you don’t feel your best.

7. Connect with yourself. When you are tempted to fill up bits of free time with texting, checking emails, Facebook or Twitter, take a few moments to pause and breathe. Breathe in “calm” and breathe out, “peace.”

8. Become unreachable. The world doesn’t end when you disconnect. Take 10 minute breaks throughout your work day and walk away from everything digital. Go outside for a breath of fresh air. Sit silently and gaze out a window and daydream. Anything can be put off for 10 minutes.

9. Decompress and reflect. Take a mental health day, a vacation day or a sabbatical for personal renewal. Spend a day at the beach. Watch the sunset. Check into a bed and breakfast or a hostel in another city. Spend a day in a museum or attend an art fair. Choose to do something unrelated to writing. It’s a great way to silence your inner writing critic.

10. Empty your brain. Do a mind dump by writing down everything that comes to mind on paper. Write down dreams, goals, memories, random thoughts, ideas, everything. Do this for fifteen minutes. Next, read over your list and look for future topics and ideas for your writing.

11. Mix it up. If you currently like to write essays experiment with list or how-to articles. Write about your personal experiences. Change the tone of your articles, be conversational, revealing, funny, silly or serious. Make experimenting fun.

12. Communicate. Seek help and support from a therapist, coach, a friend or family member. Explore your problem area and do what it takes to prevent burnout from happening again. A second party can help you turn things around and prevent future burnout.

13. Diet and lifestyle changes. Avoid sugar and caffeine. Drink enough water and get adequate sleep. Take nutritional supplements. Learn to  meditate or schedule a massage.

14. Make exercise fun. Do what you enjoy. Partner with a friend to dance, walk, or bike. Get outside and move. Hiking to the top of a mountain can feel like you’ve conquered the world!

15. Expand your mind. Learn new things. Study a second language, read about great philosophers, and everyday heroes. Avoid depressing news both online and off.

16. Find quality time for the important people in your life.Take your brother out for dinner or attend the symphony with a neighbor.  Play board games with close friends. Meet your mentor at a favorite coffee shop on Saturday morning. Never underestimate the power of creating good times with the people you love.

17. Slow down and be of service to others. Send a distant relative a hand written note, talk to a lonely neighbor, send flowers to someone special, make a meal for someone who is ill. When you get out of our own story and help others you keep life in perspective.

18. Change your scenery. J.K. Rowling wrote her first Harry Potter book in a cafe near her flat in Edinburgh. Natalie Goldberg recommends writing in coffee shops and restaurants. It’s easy to get distracted by the household chores, the refrigerator, and television when you work and write from home.

Be gentle on yourself. Remember there is no end to self-care and creativity. When you write for love and with conviction, joy leaps from every page.

Tess Marshall is a speaker, author, fear shattering, calculated risk taker, obsessed with being happy, couragous and bold.  Her blog, The Bold Life is a juicy mix of inspiration, spirituality, and personal development.  Download for free her eBook, “Peace, Love, and Connection” and follow her on Twitter.

“The best blogging decision I’ve ever made was to invest in A-list Blogger Club. The knowledge I’ve gained in 6 months would have taken me 2 years to learn on my own. The friends and connections I’ve established in the forum have been life changing. Thank you Leo and Mary for all that you’ve done to help so many of us move forward and succeed!” Tess Marshall of “The Bold Life”

10 Tips for Writing Excellence From Top Writing Bloggers

Do you want to drastically improve your writing? Are you looking for new ways to boost your writing career, retain more clients, stick to your writing schedule, or get more readers addicted to your blog’s content?

We asked the winners of our Top 10 Blogs for Writers Contest for their best advice on how to achieve excellence in the business and art of writing.

Here are their top tips. I think you’ll agree that there are some excellent ideas here.

#1: Dream Big, Write Big

Here’s what Larry Brooks of Storyfix, a blog on writing fiction, recommends:

“Not so long ago there was an elephant in the writing room: the work was all about getting published.

You did that by writing a great story.

But today, with digital venues having no qualitative criteria, the elephant has a new mantra: you’ll still need a reallygreat story. That is, if you want to sell to anyone besides your family and your critique group.

But not just any story.

Until recently, publishers did all the vetting. Today that power exists in the digital marketplace.

Which means you, the aspiring author, need to play the odds: a “small” story about your grandmother’s childhood in Des Moines is less likely to make a dent in the Amazon rankings than, say, a story that takes an astoundingly compelling concept and sends it sailing over the fence.

So think big. Out of the box. Don’t try to compete with James Patterson or Nora Roberts – you can’t, they’re still out there. Rather, become the next James Patterson or Nora Roberts by swinging for that fence.

Write the story you were born to write. Do it now… the door has never been open wider.”

Top Ten Blog For Writers Nomination: Jennifer Blanchard loves Storyfix because “Larry tells it like it is–there’s no sugar-coating whatsoever… Larry’s blog is invaluable for any writer who wants to be successful in the fiction writing industry.”

#2: Why Your Writing Doesn’t Really Matter

Here’s what James Chartrand of Men with Pens, a blog that offers “world-class web design and web copy,” recommends:

“Most writers jam up. In fact, very few writers actually write with complete peace of mind, firing off words and then hitting publish without a doubt in the world. They edit. And re-edit. And edit again. Stress levels go up. Self doubts rise. And hours of blood, sweat and tears go into the smallest pieces of writing.

Here’s the thing: Your writing doesn’t really matter.

That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t care about making your writing the best it can be. You should edit and try to catch the typos, use proper punctuation and grammar and work out the kinks in awkward sentences, sure.

But there comes a time when you need to stop twisting yourself up in knots. Let the writing go. Because it doesn’t really matter.

What I truly mean by that is that the medium of your message isn’t as important as you think it is. People don’t get excited over “perfect” writing. They don’t leave comments that say, “Wow, that was some damned fine editing!”

No. People get excited about the message you have to share. Not your “perfect” writing.

And if you’re preventing yourself from letting people see your writing because you’re stressing over the perfection of it… well, your message never makes it out there to the people you want it to reach.

So give yourself permission to write what you need to write in the way you want to write it. Stop stressing over what people will think of your work. That’s not important. Start getting excited about sharing your message instead – and making sure that the people who need to hear it actually do.

Your writing doesn’t really matter. Your message does.”

Top Ten Blogs for Writers Nomination: Andrea Vahl loves Men with Pens because "James consistently delivers thought-provoking posts on writing, web copy and small business."

#3: The #1 Reason Your Blog Post Goes Unread

Carol Tice of Make a Living Writing, a blog that offers “practical advice for hungry writers,” says:

“Did that headline make you feel you simply had to read this section? You’ve just seen a demonstration of why strong headline writing skills are essential for writers who want to succeed in the Internet age. If you can write intriguing headlines with key words, it will help your audience find you. You can really stand out from the crowd, too — I reviewed more than 100 writer’s blogs recently, and weak headlines were the single biggest problem I saw.

Where newspaper headlines have a subhead to help fill in the details for readers, online your headline stands alone. It must grab readers who see it on search engines and compel them to click through to your piece, or you won’t be read. Strive to make your headlines both meaningful and intriguing. In my view, improving your headlines is the single most powerful thing you can do to help your online writing career.”

Top Ten Blog For Writers Nomination: Stefanie loves Make A Living writing because “Carol has a wealth of information for anyone looking to have a freelance writing career success story.”

#4: To Get Inspired, Embrace the Mundane

Judy Dunn, founder of Cat’s Eye Writer, a blog that helps bloggers “get their posts noticed more, read more and shared more,” recommends:

“Whether you are writing a blog post, telling a story in a marketing piece or penning a novel, ideas and topics are right in front of your face— if you watch and listen.

In everyday life—at the grocery store, at the bank—turn the camera on yourself. Carry a notebook and record what you see and hear. There is enough bizarre behavior out there to spark the creative juices indefinitely.

Mine your family for rich material. I spun my experiences in raising my daughter into stories that are still educating, engaging and entertaining my blog readers.

Writers should be avid readers. Reading across genres is a catalyst for new ideas. It improves your vocabulary. It helps you find your voice. It shows you how to touch the senses and emotions in writing. And it helps you tell your stories better. My reading ranges from children’s books, true crime and memoirs to 19th century classics.

Finally, write, write, write. I am a big fan of free, stream-of-consciousness writing because it brings me some of my most unique ideas. Try journaling for 15 minutes every day and see what happens.”

Top Ten Blog For Writers Nomination: Patty loves Cats Eye Writer because Judy’s “advice is practical, useful and presented in a style that is enjoyable to read.”

# 5: Blast Perfectionism and Thrive

Linda Formichelli, author of The Renegade Writer, a blog about “living and loving the freelance life,” recommends:

“I teach and mentor writers, and a huge sticking point I always hear from them is that they’re afraid to put their work out there if it’s not perfect. So they wait and wait, and get caught in analysis-paralysis — and of course, they have no success.

I don’t know about you, but nothing I do is perfect. That includes the way I parent my toddler, my cooking skills, and — you got it — my writing. And yet, I’ve been published in more than 130 magazines, from Woman’s Day to Health to Redbook.

Let me assure you: There is no such thing as perfect. Editors (and readers) are all individuals so what one loves, another will hate. You can’t predict it. All you can do is do your best and get your ideas and your queries and your letters of introduction out there. The mediocre idea you send out has an infinitely better chance of being accepted than the one that you never send to an editor because it’s not “perfect.”

If it makes you feel any better, when I was first starting out, I sent out some terrible ideas, including a query to Family Circle called “Quik Dri Cheez: Why Advertisers Can’t Spell.” No one blacklisted me for sending out imperfect ideas. I learned from my mistakes, kept pitching, and ended up writing a dozen articles for Family Circle after that. If I can do it, so can you.

Now: Get pitching!”

Top Ten Blog For Writers Nomination: Dana Britt loves The Renegade Writer because she has “learned SO much and gained so much insight on writing and a writer’s life from this blog.”

#6: Understand the Importance of Perseverance

Therese Walsh of Writer Unboxed, a blog about “the craft and business of fiction,” recommends:

“I’m not sure who said that the difference between an unpublished and published writer is perseverance, but I believe it. I worked on one fiction project from 2002-2008; my debut novel, The Last Will of Moira Leahy, was published in 2009. Why does it take such a long time to perfect a story? Because even though we begin the writers’ journey believing we know enough to write a book, we usually don’t. As we write–if we’re able to cast a clear eye on what we’ve written–we’ll see weaknesses in our prose, our characters, the structure of our stories. We’ll pick up craft books and ask critique partners for guidance, and apply new ideas and knowledge to our works-in-progress. Until we hit the next snag, and then again we’ll try to understand what the problem is, and we’ll learn more, then make new changes. This may seem a crazy process–write, learn, rewrite. But in the beginning, it may be the best way to produce quality work. You must have something inside of you that says write, learn, rewrite, don’t quit, repeat. Listening to that voice truly can be the difference between the unpublished and published writer. Write on!”

Top Ten Blog For Writers Nomination: Rachael Herron loves Writer Unboxed “for their sheer number of inspiring, helpful posts from a great variety of writers!”

#7. Establish a Consistent Writing Routine

K.M. Weiland of Wordplay, a blog that focuses on “helping writers become authors,” says:

“The only way to succeed at the writing business is to treat it like business. That means showing up for work every day, rain, shine, or smog. Write every single day, if possible. If not, plan a workable writing schedule that will allow you to write on a regular basis—and then stick with it. You may be able to set aside several hours a day, or you may only be able to manage twenty minutes. Start small if you have to, and work your way up. Bestsellers have been written a paragraph a day. It isn’t quantity that’s important, so much as consistency.

Once you’ve chosen a reasonable schedule for your writing, stick with it like a bulldog on a drumstick. Remember: The only person who can make your writing a priority is you. If you’re not willing to make sacrifices and enforce your writing time, no one else will do it for you. Explain the needs of your writing schedule to family and friends, asking them to respect your need for privacy during this time—and then guard your desk with a machete and a flamethrower if necessary.”

Top Ten Blog For Writers Nomination: Lindsey Lucas loves Wordplay because “her posts are always immensely helpful but still condensed enough to read even if I’m busy that day. …I feel as though she’s an old friend giving me advice over a cup of coffee.”

#8: Write What You Love to Read

Joanna Penn, author of The Creative Penn, a blog about “writing, publishing, and book marketing,” recommends:

“For years I was held back in my writing because I thought I had to write Booker prize-winning literary fiction in order to be a ‘proper’ writer. I also thought that every sentence had to be perfect when it went onto the page. These two misconceptions blocked me for a long time. But it’s not true! Take a look at your bookshelf and chunk it down into what you’re passionate about reading. I realized that I had mostly thrillers and books on religion and psychology – these are the things that consume me and drive my interest. So I started to write a thriller that blended these topics and it was so much fun to write! If you’re writing what you’re passionate about – whether it’s your blog, ezine article, fiction or non-fiction book, then you won’t find it hard to enthuse about your writing. It’s also important to know your market and if you’re writing what you love to read, then you will naturally hit the right chord. Let that passion carry you through a first draft and then edit your way to a brilliant finished product.”

Top Ten Blog For Writers Nomination: Monique Wildewood loves The Creative Penn because Joanna “helps budding authors from woe to go with plenty of good advice, links, and personal experience.”

#9: Love Blogging for Writers

Victoria Mixon of A. Victoria Mixon, Editor, a blog that focuses on “the art and craft of fiction,” recommends:

“Writing and blogging aren’t about what you get from others, they’re about what you get from yourself.

So love it. Love blogging for writers.

Love writing—the tools and techniques of written language, the humanity that comes through understanding readers, this art that gives words to everything in life that has no words.

Love writers— your audience and inspiration. It doesn’t matter whether you have one reader or thousands or if the only person reading is you. Whoever they are, that reader is a writer. Appreciate their presence in your life. Love them for loving what you love too.

Love your life—the source of all writing. You don’t have to blog about yourself. But if you pay attention to the world around you and write in telling, significant details, crafting each post along the classic structure of storytelling (hook, development, climax), taking your time to draft, revise, and polish your voice until each post is the best post it can possibly be, striving always to say something unique, something that truly needs to be said. . .

Then, no matter what your numbers are, you’ll get the most out of yourself. And that’s the excellence in blogging for writers.”

Top Ten Blogs For Writers Nomination: Roz Morris loves Victoria Mixon because she is “Hilariously funny, deeply wise. She’s an editor who really knows her stuff."

# 10. Learn How to Inspire Your Readers

Ollin Morales, author of Courage 2 Create, a blog that offers “writing and life advice,” recommends:

“For me, writing isn’t worth it unless it inspires.

People seem to believe that if you show your reader a character who is at her most successful and does not have one speck of ugliness, inconsistency, or imperfection in her, that this character is inspiring in herself.

That isn’t true.

Whether your character is a character in your novel, or whether your character is YOU as a character on your own blog, the key to infusing your reader with knock-off-your-socks inspiration is by doing the complete opposite of what you think will inspire:

Show your character as ugly, imperfect, needy, arrogant, confused, lost, struggling, in pain–show her at her absolute lowest. Be brutally honest.

Why? Because your readers will relate. Why? Because they’ve been there, too.

Once you got your readers relating, show how your character triumphed, even though all the odds were stacked up against her.

Have her say to your readers:

“Yeah, I know life’s tough. But you can make it through, in spite of it all.”

The deepest of valleys are what make the highest of mountains. So make the valley of your story 10,000 feet deep, so that its peak is twice as high.”

Top Ten Blogs for Writers Nomination: Linda loves Courage 2 Create because "Ollin has a wisdom beyond his years that allows him to write honestly and on a level so relatable it feels as if you’re reading advice from a good friend."

Now It’s Your Turn

These tips are the beginning of a great foundation to achieve excellence in the art and business of writing.

What do you think? How do you achieve writing excellence? What other tips do you have to share? Please leave them in the comment box below.

The Critical Importance of Sandwiching your Copywriting

A guest post by Sean DSouza of Psychotactics

I don’t know if you’ve ever tried eating a one-slice sandwich.

Yeah, one slice. Put one slice down. Then pile the slice with chicken, mayonnaise, pickles, tomatoes, lettuce and sauces. Now eat the slice of bread, will ya?

Ummm…I’d rather not, you say

Because even a dumbo knows that a one-slice sandwich is a recipe for disaster. The chicken pieces will drop; mayonnaise will ooze; pickles will pop and your clothes will be a sea of green lettuce.

Come to think of it, there’s no such thing as a one-slice sandwich!

There’s no such thing as a one slice-article either!

Your first fifty words of your article are the top slice. The last fifty words are your bottom slice.

Ever noticed the difference between slices of bread?

There is no difference. They look the same. They’re the same colour, the same tone. In any normal sandwich, two slices of bread are mirror images of each other. And the sandwiching effect is what keeps the stuffing together.

Why on earth would you bother with sandwiching?

In one word: Closure.

Every showbiz person cringes at the curse of a bad ending. They know fully well, that a great presentation would crumble like a week-old cookie, if the ending wasn’t dramatic enough.

You don’t have, or need, the whiz-bang of show-biz

You don’t need the 70 piece orchestra. You can create a great crescendo by simply sandwiching your article.

Tah, dah…Live examples of sandwiching in action

The first example/article below starts with Sarah and her testimonial. It starts with the problem of Sarah not being around to give a live testimonial. The article ends with Sarah and her testimonial.

The second article starts with the Olympics and deadlines. The article ends with Olympics and deadlines. And it gives you the solution, by recommending external deadlines. Read the articles below to see exactly how the opening and closing paragraphs are mirrors of each other.

Example No.1:

Opening paragraphs:
You’re at a live speaking event and you sure miss Sarah.

You see at your last event Sarah stood up and told the audience how wonderful you were. She told the audience how reluctant she was before buying your consulting services, and investing in your product. Then Sarah revealed her trump card. As a result of working with you, she now earns over $50,000 more than she did last year. She told the audience how much more confidence she has. How clients are flocking to her like they’ve never done before. How she took her first vacation in years.

And darn, Sarah’s not around at this event. And no one’s around to take Sarah’s place. Darn, darn, darn.

Closing Paragraphs:
A written testimonial doesn’t allow for description of a customer. If you described a customer, you could at best talk about their occupation/post and designation. You could have a photo. Any other description would seem like overkill. In a real life situation, you have no such restrictions. You can paint a powerful picture by simply describing the customer in great detail. And then it will seem like Sarah’s around — At every event!

Example No.2:

Opening Paragraph:
Ever seen an Olympics opening ceremony postponed because they needed to push the deadline just a little further? Have you ever seen an Olympics abandoned because some one was ill or feeling lazy? So how come your tiny marketing project runs into so much trouble, time after time? I call it the curse of internal marketing deadlines.

Closing Paragraph:
Get yourself a whole bunch of external deadlines.
Take the client’s money in advance. Then see how your you-know-what will be on fire. Your Olympics will loom up and you’ll have no choice but to deliver. Internal deadlines are a curse. Go for external deadlines. They give you focus.

The Psychology Behind Sandwiching

The biggest reason your customer started reading the article, is because they snuggled up to your first fifty words. When you use ‘sandwiching’ in your copywriting, you close with the same thought that attracted your customer in the first place.

You didn’t have to create a whole lot of whiz-bang to end on a crescendo. All you had to do was mirror your ending paragraphs with the opening paragraphs. And yipee-yahooey, you have a powerful closure.

Ahem, remember one more thing

You noticed that the articles started with a problem, and ended with a solution, didn’t you? Starting with the problem gets your customer’s attention, and closing with the solution, creates a parallel form of closure. In all your copy, look to create drama when opening your copy and create closure when closing your copy.

Don’t let the drought in…

The ending of your copy needs closure. Don’t leave the door on your article open.

Stop for a second, and look at the copy you’re writing today. Do the opening and ending paragraphs nicely hold the contents of your article/copy together? Does your copy have a top and bottom slice?

Or are you still taking a gamble on a one-slice sandwich?

To read more articles by Sean DSouza—and get a very useful report on “Why Headlines Fail”, go to PsychoTactics.com

The Dummies Guide to Using Virtual Assistants to Create Online Content

This is a guest post by Chris C. Ducker of Virtual Business Lifestyle.

Writing can be a joy. A real way of expressing ourselves and what we’re all about. It can also focus on helping, inspiring and motivating people to do great things.

When I was at college I used to write a lot. I mean, I was always working on some short story, or the odd essay for school. I was, and still am a big reader, too – averaging at least one book (normally business focused) a week.

As someone who owns and operates an outsourcing company in the Philippines, I see a lot of people contacting us to outsource all types of tasks. Telemarketing, customer service, back-office work, chat support – the list is, literally, endless.

However, as a notable authority on the subject of virtual business and in particular, working with virtual assistants, as well as being a blogger myself, I am often asked the question “Can you use virtual assistants to create original content to use online..?”.

The answer is yes, of course you can.

But, what you decide to do with that content is a different ballgame, obviously.

Five Tips to Get You Started!

Here are my Top Five Tips to working with a virtual assistant to create original content that you can use online, for either personal or business purposes.

  1. Don’t get a VA to blatantly write blog posts for your personal blog. Your personal blog should be ‘your place’ (except for the odd guest post, obviously!). Having a VA write content for this outlet of yours kind of defeats the object of blogging in the first place!
  2. If you are going to use a VA to help create content for your blog minimize it as much as possible. Activities such as online research for a particular article you are planning to write, then perhaps formatting your blog post with bold and italics, and headlines, etc., to help save time on the publishing side of things.
  3. VA’s are perfect for creating online content for anything related to link building. These articles are generally easy to write in a short time, are rarely seen by your target audience and work excellently. As long as they are 100% original. Plus, most VA’s can even go ahead and submit them to specific article submission or marketing sites for you.
  4. You can also use a VA to help edit your eBooks or other types of written content. Having a VA do the first round of proof reading is huge. You can then send it onto a second source (perhaps a colleague or family member – my favorite is my wife!) to give it the final once over.
  5. Be sure to pay your content writing VA what they are worth. There are many, many good VA’s working as full-time content creators. However, the fact of the matter is that if you don’t pay them what they are worth, they will either do a bad job for you, or simply not want to work with you at all.

They’re Good, but You’re Better!

Whether you’re utilizing the services of a domestically based virtual assistant, or one from another country, the simple rule of thumb to remember is that even though their writing may be good, it probably wont be as good as if you were to write the content yourself. So, always spend some time reading over their work and making sure that its good to go – before it goes!

Using virtual assistants for creative writing and other types of written tasks, such as sales copy, website content, etc., is ultimately a great move for all us who are busy business owners, or entrepreneurs – either online or off.

Nowadays you really don’t have to do everything – the world is a much smaller place, we’re in a global economy and the skill-set’s of people from all around the world are out there for us to get our hands on.

Try it out for yourself with a simple 500-word article on whatever subject you can think of. Look at the quality, and then simply figure out if it makes sense to do it again.

The chances are, it will be.

Chris C. Ducker is a full-time Virtual CEO and a sought after virtual business consultant. He blogs at VirtualBusinessLifestyle.com and is the author of the highly popular free eBook, Saving the Day, the Virtual Way, which has been downloaded over 5,000 times to date.

The Problem of GTR: Do You Know How to Use These Words Correctly?

By Mary Jaksch

As writers we need to write correctly, right? It’s embarrassing if you publish stuff with mistakes. Yes, all of us writers need to guard against extravagating. So, let’s see if you know how to use some important words correctly.

But before I do that, let me tell you a story:

I was recently enduring a kilfud-yoking with a fellow-writer.  His pawky humor was enough to make me keck. In fact, after a while I felt like levigating him!

With me so far?

No?

Well … the words I’m introducing you to are unusual. OK, so using them correctly isn’t maybe that important. And that’s the point here. So often, we are obsessed with ‘getting things right’. Many writers never publish anything because this fear holds them back. I know a bunch of would-be bloggers who never get going because they fear they won’t ‘get things right’.

We all have our particular problems with GTR (Getting Things Right). For example, I have problems with proofreading. Why, oh why can’t I see those nasty, obreptious little gremlins? Luckily, most readers are kind and give me a heads-up about what needs correcting. Some send me strange emails, like this one:

“Are you aware that there is a mistake in the first paragraph?”

Answer: “No. If I was aware of this mistake, I would correct it.”

A few months ago  I got a fire-brand email that made me murl inside: “How can you call yourself a blogger if you can’t even PROOFREAD what you write?!” (I deleted that email…)

Are YOU anxious about ‘getting things right’?

If so, my suggestion is to allow yourself to be less than perfect. It’s nice to be perfect, but creativity and perfectionism aren’t good bedfellows. I think it’s much better to be creative and productive as a writer than to get things right.

A great antidote to GTR is to have some fun. Here is a task that will help you refollicate:

Find a weird word in a reputable dictionary and use it elegantly in a comment below.

Let’s see who comes up with some funny examples, followed by a glossary. Like this one:
To extravagate: to wander away from the right course into error.
Kilfud-yoking: Fireside disputation
Pawky: dry humor.
To keck: to make a sound as if to vomit.
To levigate:to reduce to powder.
To murl:to crumble
To refollicate: to refresh.


What words can you find and use creatively? How do you deal with GTR?

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