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February 10th, 2010 by Bob Mayer
Writers, Don’t Quit Your Day Job???

I was listening to a panel at the Surrey International Writers Conference and one of the authors on it, Ann Perry, said one should not quite their day job while writing.  I’ve heard that many times from many different authors at various conferences.  It always worried me, because I would think “well, I quit my ‘day job’ twenty years ago.”  But yesterday something struck me and I turned it around:  writing is my day job.  And I’m not going to quit it.

I’ve listened to a lot of authors over the years and taken in their advice.  I’ve seen some patterns that are consistent among those whose careers have gone well:

  1. They work.  They write consistently.  Not just when inspired, but treating writing like any other job; one where they have to suit up (actually not really) and show up every day.
  2. They are professional.  They deliver on time; they make sure they understand the business of publishing.
  3. They never think they have it ‘made’.  They are always seeking to be become better writers.  They always try to make the next book ‘better’.
  4. They put writing before everything else:  before promoting, before social media, before checking their email.

I’m not saying quit your day job.  When I consider the vagaries of the publishing world, I always feel like I’ve been insane to have been doing it for 20 years and to try to keep on doing it.  But the other thing I’ve noticed about authors is they have a passion for it—it’s the thing they want to do more than anything else in the world.

The key is to work hard enough at it; learn enough of the craft; pour enough passion into it; that it can become your day job.

Related posts:

  1. Maximizing Writers Conference Part II
  2. Do Writers Have To Be Closers?
  3. Change for Writers part 1– the key to succeeding in today’s market

7 comments to “Writers, Don’t Quit Your Day Job???”

  1. Liz Kreger
    Comment
    1
     · February 10th, 2010 at 10:59 am · Link

    Good points, Bob. There is no way I could quit my day job at this time and write full time. Just isn’t in the cards … yet. But I do agree that it is a job (part time for me at this moment) and every writer should approach it as such.



  2. Andrew McKay
    Comment
    2
     · February 10th, 2010 at 8:01 pm · Link

    I am a newbie and am learning this well. Use to write small little stories when I worked in a guard shack. Then I got laid off, and am trying to get back to my writing side. I try to do that eight hours, and look for a part time job, but it is harder then it looks to stay concentrated on one thing. :shock: I so far am up too about 3 hrs on just writing.



  3. NinaP
    Comment
    3
     · February 11th, 2010 at 8:53 pm · Link

    Great post, Bob! All so very true. The only problem is, your “consistent patterns” are mighty rare in Corporate America.

    NinaP (downsized, laid off, HR Analyst and writer who writes every day)



  4. Chris LeBlanc
    Comment
    4
     · February 12th, 2010 at 2:13 pm · Link

    Why not write to support your writing?! I take freelance writing gigs on Elance to pay the bills while I work on my own stuff. It keeps me in the writing headspace, pays the bills, and even if the contracts don’t inspire me – any writing I do makes me a better writer.

    It’s worth checking into.



    • Andrew McKay
      Comment
      4.1
       · February 13th, 2010 at 12:14 pm · Link

      I am checking elance out. Thanks though for the suggestion



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