by Bamidele Onibalusi
For at least 16 consecutive days now, I’ve been averaging 5,000 words a day; that’s around 80,000 words in a little over 2 weeks.
In the past, I’ve had certain occasional days where I wrote 8,000 – 10,000 words, but that often meant I was unable to write for the rest of that week.
Now, it seems I’ve found a system that can keep me consistently productive, and I want to share it with you.
Here are my top tips for writing 5,000 words a day, or 150,000 words a month:
1. Write in the morning
The earlier you start writing, the earlier you can finishing writing; this is a good thing, considering that research has shown that most people achieve peak productivity in the morning and are often distracted from noon to 4 p.m.
If you can get all your writing done before noon, you’re a winner.
I find mornings a lot more productive for me; I try to start working before 9 a.m. in the morning. This means I have the rest of the day to write whatever I want.
2. Take breaks between writing
Having a lot of time to write does not necessarily mean you should write for long periods without taking a break. That will only make sure you burn out quickly.
What I do now is take 5 minute breaks for every 25 minutes of writing I do, and I’ve found it to be immensely helpful. The concept also has scientific backing, and you can read more about this by researching “Ultradian Rhythms.”
Managing working at intervals, and taking breaks, can be difficult, so I rely on an app called Teamviz to help me automate this; it has a to-do list and a timer, and it can be installed on your computer. It is developed based on the Pomodoro Technique.
3. Write Every Day
As cliché as this might sound, it works.
I’ve found writing easier and pleasurable by developing a habit of writing every day; every day now, for the past 16 days, I have been writing an article first thing in the morning.
By writing at least one article every morning, it prepares me to think carefully and write more effectively for the rest of the day.
For me, writing is now a lot more fun. It’s a pleasure, and this is thanks to the fact that I write every day.
4. Eliminate the distractions
I find it more productive to work in a place without noise or distraction.
I used to love watching movies a lot. I’ve spent an average of 40 – 50 hours a week, every week, watching movies for a whole month. Yes, I was that addicted!
However, I now watch an average of an hour of a movie daily; it was hard, but I eventually realized that movies were distractions. I also make sure I don’t work in an environment where people are watching movies.
By eliminating the distractions, I’ve found myself to be more productive.
For you, this might mean working in an office or separating a room in your home for your work. Give it a try for just one week and let me know about your progress. It works. I can guarantee that!
5. Use a dual monitor setup
A huge part of my writing, especially when I’m doing client work, relies on the internet for research.
Minimizing my writing window every time I have to research changes my mindset and makes me more likely to be distracted by email, Twitter, Facebook, etc.
A dual monitor setup ensures that I can write and research at the same time, since my writing window and my browser are equally open on a different screen; I don’t have to minimize one to access the other.
Your second monitor doesn’t have to be fancy, too; I bought mine, fairly used, for around $50 here in Nigeria.
6. Don’t wait for ideas, or muse, or whatever they call it, to come
Relying on muse, inspiration, ideas, or whatever else they call can be highly impractical. It is mostly an excuse lazy writers use to comfort themselves.
Muse, or inspiration, in the way most writers view it, is a myth.
I used to believe this myth too, and I was a fool for doing so. Now, by debunking it, I’ve had the most productive 16 days of my life; the only problem I now have is determining what ideas to write on. Still, you’ll be surprised at how much more productive coming to the reality that there’s nothing called muse can make you.
You get really good at writing by training your writing muscles; with writing, just as with anything, practice makes perfect.
7. Write first before doing anything
Remember my earlier point about writing once a day? What I didn’t say was that I write first before checking my email, or website, or Twitter, or Facebook.
Believe me, writing before facing the pressure from these sites can go a long way to prepare you for the day.
Research has shown that email, Twitter, Facebook and other forms of media leads to a “dopamine rush”, which makes it almost impossible to stop doing what lead to the dopamine rush.
In case you don’t know how dangerous this can be, dopamine is the chemical your brain releases that makes you addicted to drugs and other substances that make you “high” (good or bad).
The last thing you want to do, if you want a productive day, is start your day by checking social media or email.
8. Take a walk
Let’s say you were so excited about the previous day that you checked your email before writing–what do you do?
Take a walk.
This applies whenever you’re not in a good mood (you woke up on the wrong side of the bed?), when you break a certain productivity rule, or when you need a refresh before you start writing again.
9. Don’t Edit as You Write
Editing as you write will kill the flow of your writing; you will see how “awful” your writing is.
Instead, write all you will for the day and then go back to editing your writing once you’re done. That’s what has worked for me.
10. Form your own rules
Follow mine, for a while. If they work, experiment with them to see if you can get even more done by tweaking them. If they don’t, ignore them.
Don’t be afraid to break rules; “there are no set rules!” Make that your motto and you will get far in life!
Guest post contributed by Bamidele Onibalusi. Bamidele is a freelance writer from Nigeria who has been writing for a living since 2010. He has been featured in Forbes, interviewed in Digital Journal, been featured in Millionaire Magazine in Italy and on several popular blogs online. You can see all his media features here.
This is a dream! Having the time to write 5,000 words a day is something I aspire to, but between my full time job, family and three side projects, there just aren’t enough hours in the day. Thanks for the advise, and certainly, I need to set aside more time for creating and need to determine where to trim the fat. As it is, I only lay my head down 6 or so hours a day… This is great advice though! So thanks.
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I firmly believe we can always find time/money for the things we most want. If other things have a higher priority maybe they should? Or maybe writing isn’t as important to you as you think.
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That’s the truth.
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I totally agree! strangely enough, i wrote an article about finding time to write just last night.
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Great advice! 5,000 words is a lot! I still haven’t done any writing for my book and am kind of disappointed in my self. I just can’t stop procrastinating.
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Sounds like pretty sound guidelines. 🙂
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#9 is the one I don’t seem to be able to move beyond… 😦
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“#9: Don’t Edit as You Write”
Try covering your screen with a dishtowel. I used to have my students do this in some of my classes… because they were hooked on editing as they wrote. Another way to do this is to write freehand. I’ve been doing a lot more freehand writing. Based on sound research, this kind of writing improves the writer’s abilities to get ideas onto the page.
For what it’s worth, I hope something here helps. 🙂
Jo
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I couldn’t help but think of the future-people in the Disney / Pixar animated film Wall-E. Do we even still have the hand musculature to be able to write that long, or would our hands just flop and wobble down the spaceship?
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This is really great, thanks! I run into so many pitfalls while writing. I definitely need to eliminate the distractions!
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This is wonderful advice! I have heard some of it before, but the way I see it is if more than one person is experiencing positive results then it is definitely something worth trying! 🙂
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Bookmarked this before I even finished reading the whole thing…I’m happy to see I’m on the right path. It’s still a miracle if I meet 2000, but I’m heading there! Thanks for the great advice!
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I work in the mornings, too. One thing I do is never eat until I’m finished for the day–usually between 12 and 3 p.m. That keeps me from going into a digestive stupor. Two pots of coffee, though.
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When I was a kid, I had an issue with breakfast cereal. Blame it on being a “growing boy” and the appetite that is usually attributed to it, or blame it on a blossoming OCD that will eventually carry with me for the rest of my life. Sometimes, I would put too much cereal into the bowl, and would have to compensate by putting more milk in. Then, upon noticing one or two Cherrios still floating in an ocean of milk, I would put more cereal in. And back and forth I went until I would finally be satisfied with my milk-to-cereal ratio, or I emptied the box…whichever came first.
Same scenario for #9. I could write with reckless abandon for as long as it would take me to get to my goal, and then go back and edit, and in the process uncover something else I could shoehorn in, or take a dialogue in a different direction… next thing I know, it’s the next day, and I haven’t bathed or eaten since then.
…exaggerating, but not by much.
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Reblogged this on A Young Writer's Notebook and commented:
There are some really useful tips here. I highly recommend the dual monitor set up as well.
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Reblogged this on Mitzi Flyte and commented:
I’m going to try. I really am going to try!
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#9 works well for me. Blast out a chapter or two then go to bed (I tend to find myself more productive around 6pm onwards). I then spend the next day adding detail in my mind and the next chance I get to write is editing.
Maybe that is a slow process, but it would be great if I could manage 5000 words a day. 5-10k on a free day, but that’s it.
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I have written more than 5,000 words (20 pages) in a day, but I found that the writing wasn’t nearly as good as writing only 2500 words. Perhaps it depends on what you are writing.
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Some really good advice there. Personally I found when I started obsessing over my word count the quality of my writing went down hill. Now I don’t worry about the number of words but how good they are. I write as a hobby not for a living so I don’t have the pressure to produce anything.
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I have so much that I want to and need to write but I do not know where to start. What I try to do to alleviate what I just described is planning, jotting down, or even graphing ideas and bullets points to help me focus my writing to concisely get across what I feel I need to.
Cheers
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Great suggestions. I am in the process of getting back to working on my manuscript, as opposed to writing other things, ever day. I will have to use some of these rules for focus.
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This would be ideal, but I have a day job
I have managed to write every day, but I isually average 1000-1500 words per sitting. I also appear to be a “writing vampire” as I call it. I can blog or write essays/articles, but creative writing only seems to flow when the sun goes down.
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Great advice! I’ve been struggling to write while working a full time job, but I will try out some of your tips!
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Reblogged this on Books and More.
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I’ve just started keeping track of all the words I write in one day. Love the information I’m gathering, and proud to know its more than I thought. Great pointers, and all valid. Make the writing important and you make the writing time productive!
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As an author and blogger, as well as a mentor, I can say this: don’t try to do everything at once. Bamidele has offered some great ideas here, for sure. But what will happen if you try to implement them all at once is that you will say, “OK, I need to get that second monitor” … and *BOOM*, you’re stuck. You won’t get that monitor for weeks or months, because it requires going out of your way, and so you won’t have changed your writing goals.
As with ANY new goal or undertaking in life, just start. Change one thing. Ask yourself, “What is the very next thing I can do right now to change my patterns for the better.”
Maybe you’ve been used to getting up at 11:00AM. So get up at 10:30AM.
Maybe you haven’t started that book for which you have a really great idea. And you read this post and thought, “Wow, if I do all this, at 5,000 words a day, I’ll have my whole book completed in a few weeks!” Big mistake when you haven’t even started. You won’t keep to it. Again, ask yourself, “What is the very next thing I need to do to get in motion. Maybe that is simply opening a blank document and saving it to your desktop with a working title.
As you gain momentum, asking, “What is the very next thing?” will lead to bigger and bigger goals. When writing 1000 words per day becomes consistent, your “very next thing” might be 1500 words.
This is not to say that Bamidele’s advice isn’t stellar. It is. But it was reflective of a career writer who had a lot in place before asking himself what his “very next thing” was.
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Let me also add a big congratulations to you, Bamidele! Awesome goal-setting and discipline, man! And a highly informative, useful and well-written post. Glad to have found you.
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Hi Ryan,
This is great… really great!
When my best friend from New Mexico was up this summer for about a month, we decided to do what we had originally planned on during a trip to Italy that didn’t come to fruition: We wrote – regularly – and we used her routine:
– Up about 6:30 a.m., eat, and journal about writing
– Write – in the morning, which is best for both of us.
– Take breaks and go for short walks periodically and regularly.
– Break for lunch and maybe a longer walk.
– Work on other writing/work (research, Fizzle, editing/revision, reading, etc.) – with short walks included as breaks
– Meet at 4:00 on the porch to talk about our writing.
She left a couple of weeks ago, but I have continued her routine… except that we talk on the phone now late afternoon. This planned phone, FaceTime, or Skype meetings has kept us accountable. Our meetings have strengthened our validity. Our feedback on each others’ work has been (and continues to be) invaluable.
It all fits in nicely with your post – which I appreciate so much.
Jo
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I’ve never traveled with a serious writer (I don’t think I’ve even met one in person yet). Sounds perfect!
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I like the suggestion to write before you do anything else. I did that for about a week. It worked. I forgot about it. Maybe I can put in place again. Thanks! Great post
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While I don’t necessarily see the need to write “5,000” words per day, the advice you’ve offered is quite useful for anyone wishing to write successfully. A variation on #9 that I find helpful is this: Each day, when I sit down at my computer, and before I write a single new word, I read and edit whatever I wrote the day before. Not only do I find errors, or a better way of saying something, but the process often provides a springboard for new writing.
Very nice post!
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Very good advice! Number 9 is a habit I need to break.
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my biggest distraction is the internet. need to be strong and disconnect
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Ruth, you may find THIS helpful. It’s an irony isn’t it? We get encouragement to disconnect from the Internet … from the Internet itself!
Try limiting Internet hours to a specific and set window of time. Believe it or not, you’ll get just as much of the important stuff done online as trickling through it all day. Everything in balance. To each thing, its place.
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so true, get a balance.
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Thanks for this great advice. Love the “Take a walk.” Take Care and thanks for this great post.
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I started writing seriously a few months ago and ever since I forced myself to do it every day I have found it to be much easier. I only get 2000 words a day right now, but I will try out these techniques. 5000 words a day would be awesome! Thanks for the post!
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Sounds like you’d have no problems with NaNoWriMo! 🙂
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I just learned something new (which I love!). I’d never heard of NaNoWriMo until your mention of it … and a quick Google search. Thanks!
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I will not be writing 5,000 words a day – not writing a book. But the advice on how to structure a day when writing was great. If you were in my neck of the woods (as it were) you would take the dog up on the South Downs in England and your thoughts would come thick and fast.
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Love the image you’ve painted here, Lucy.
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thank you erik
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I enjoyed reading this. 😛 And I feel like it actually applies to everything that requires a bit of a daily milestone. xD But jesus… I don’t think I can hit a 5000 word count a day. D: If I did, I’d be so happy. xD
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A dream I aspire to (even 2000 a day would be fab). During a normal term though (the day job as a rhet/comp prof), I have to slog through at least 125-150 papers a week, many poorly written, so it saps every ounce of creative energy that I have, devoting to those who can’t or don’t write.
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Reblogged this on quirkywritingcorner and commented:
My biggest problem is that I don’t write every day.
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Write First Thing — Oh so important — while the brain is the freshest.
Don’t Edit While You Write — If I could only learn that…
Two Screens — absolutely! That extra real estate to be able to have your info/sources/research right in front of you. Dead On, but expensive!
If you’re writing for $$$ then obviously you have to write to eat. If you’re writing for other reasons then I wonder whether any goal — like 5000 words a day — fits as nicely. Just putting words on paper accomplishes nothing. Knowing why you’re doing it is everything.
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Reblogged this on michaeljgould and commented:
I want this for later, so I will reblog.
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Thanks for the reblog, Michael!
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Reblogged this on Emily Arden, author and commented:
Some fabulous tips in here. It is important to shut down distractions when you want to write – that includes social media 😉 In my experience, it is certainly possible to write 5,000 words a day (on a good day) and these tips will really help.
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This is great! I am not sure I can write 5000 on a work day but I’m gonna give it a try for one full month! By then I’ll actually know what I am capable of! Thanks for the inspiration!
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Funny thing. If I hadn’t been checking my Facebook (before writing) I wouldn’t have seen this shared post. Hmmm….. seems checking my social media and e-mails BEFORE doing anything worked for me!
But then, that’s one of MY rules. Get the business done first before writing.
Regardless. Good motivational post. Will absolutely implement some of the ten steps into my writing life.
Thanks.
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Reblogged this on toolittletoolatedotcom.
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Excellent tips and advice! Mornings are definitely the most productive for me, but so far, I rarely break the 2500 word mark. Think I’ll give your advise a run.
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Thank you for the inspiration! I really want to translate your idea into Thai!
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I would love to write 5000 words a day! I loved the idea of a second monitor, that I can do. As for not editing while I write, a little harder. LOL
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I think some of these points are good, but others not so much. For instance – writing in the morning? No way, that just doesn’t fit my body or my mind! I’m way sharper in the afternoons into early evening. And 5000 words a day are just not possible for me right now, as I have other responsibilities, e.g. a day job. I do agree to an extent with the point about distractions. Even writing or commenting on blog posts (like now!) for example, are distractions for me, while my book-in-progress awaits my attention! Sigh…
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Reblogged this on John Oliver Mason and commented:
I need this k of constant inspiration for my writing and my life.
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