-
Website
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/ -
Original page
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/thinking-blogger-or-writing-blogger/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Ari Herzog
120 comments · 23 points
-
Don Lafferty
59 comments · 3 points
-
Danny Brown
77 comments · 28 points
-
Dale Cruse
65 comments · 2 points
-
gerardmclean
43 comments · 7 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
While the Iron is Hot
1 day ago · 61 comments
-
I Was Wrong About Twitter Lists
2 days ago · 64 comments
-
The Visible Media Maker
1 day ago · 23 comments
-
Simplicity Trumps Most Other Emotions
3 days ago · 53 comments
-
How to Make Goals Happen- Part 1 – GoalBox
5 days ago · 65 comments
-
While the Iron is Hot
This is definitely something I want to tackle and get more out there.
- Neil
the thinking one will be ready in a couple days, maybe with video, maybe not, but then it will be written in one draft and sent.
Due to my sometimes crazy work schedule. during the average work week, I generally write out my first post of the day before I go to sleep the night before.
In a perfect world I'd have time to say, "well, this point should be made earlier, that one later." and mess with structure.
Yes, occasionally my ramblings look half-baked even to myself, but the cardinal rule of becoming a better writer is "Write, dammit!" and trust in Kaizen. If I made writing into a chore, it would happen even less frequently than it already does.
I'm too self-conscious to just post pure ramblings.
But I considere myself as both: thinking & writing blogger
Spent too many years as a copy editor and I'm also a perfectionist my nature, so it takes courage for me to hit the Send button. I'm working on combating this because it means I don't post as frequently as I should.
One technique I adopted this week - created a Tumblr account to use as a place to practice being a Writing blogger. It's a great way to post snippets, links, photos, quotes. I called mine TumblrWeeds--"stuff that blows through my mind and gets snagged on my keyboard."
Which doesn't mean I haven't gone back and edited the ramblings after I've hit publish and seen them on the screen, but I have always been a writing writer, a talking talker, whatever. Even my few forays into podcasting, with the exception of a song list mapped out, I dove right in without a net. Usually, when I blog something, I've hit an inspirational moment and I just HAVE TO GET IT OUT OF MY HEAD, grammar, syntax, semantics be dammned. Sort of like this comment. ;)
I get a germ of an idea in my head, decide what the main point of my post will be, then I just start writing.
The act of writing clarifies my thinking. There have been a couple of times when I'm surprised by what eventually gets posted because it's so different from what my original "main point" started out as. In such cases, the act of composing my entry helped me realize that the original idea was actually quite lame, and that the real point lay elsewhere.
I write best when I simply imagine myself talking to an old friend. This tactic works for me since I maintain a personal blog, and not a blog for my profession / work.
Nice question. It made me stop and think for a while.
Haven't tried OmniOutliner for blog posts yet, though I hear great things....
There are upsides and downsides to this behavior. Almost all upsides. I save time, sure, but I also get my thoughts across most clearly. Like they say about True Or False tests, go with your first thought, it's most likely correct.
Now I know that Hemingway once said "The first draft of anything is shit." But I also know that Hemingway was a sad man, chasing ghosts and the love of a crazy mother whom he couldn't ever please well enough. For me, the first draft is the heart and bones of it, and if I bring my A Game, the first draft won't need more than a quick polish.
But that's me.
Now the next question should be: do you edit or just hit publish?
I have posts, or post ideas, in the queue almost at any time. While working on (and thinking about) those, I may well spew out a few "write" style posts (or "write" leaning anyway) before one of the "think" style posts is done (some, well perhaps many, never make it to the blog).
I envy those that can apply the "write" approach to good effect.
Maybe vaporware...
Frequently, I'll get an idea for a blog post while walking or driving, and so I'll "pre-write" it in my head due to lack of computer at hand. Otherwise, I just start typing and see where it goes.
That's how I give live presentations, too. Come to BootCamp and marvel at my off-the-cuffery.
In fact, change that to obsessive.
I keep a notoebook for ideas in my purse, plus a folder on my laptop of ideas. Things I have seen in my life, or read that I would like to let percolate for a bit in order to maybe comment.
I generally write my posts on the train, and then when I get to work (connected), read them again, fiddle with them and then copy into my blog.
However, like David Beckemeyer, I've always got longer posts in my queue that I keep stewing around in my brain waiting for the moment when I have the time to write them all down. I do pretty much all my blogging using an offline editor (either MS Windows Live Writer or the open source Semagic) and so it's very easy for me to have drafts lying around of longer pieces. Unfortunately, like Aswath, sometimes those longer pieces never see the light of day because they are no longer relevant.
But probably 90+% of the time in my blogging, I simply pop open an editor window, write the blog post, read through it to see if I can tighten it up or make it read better, preview it to make sure image links work... and then hit Publish and go on to something else.