Welcome to Lynn’s Design Blog
Author Tips Published Every Monday & Thursday
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Let Them Say You're "Just" Indie
You're at a local literary event, feeling proud as you chat with other authors about your recent success. Your self-published novel just hit 10,000 copies sold, you've built an email list of devoted readers, and you're finally earning enough from your writing to cut back your day job hours. You're explaining your journey to a traditionally published author when she nods politely and says, "Well, that's great for indie publishing. But when are you going to try to get a real publisher?"
Silence for Authors: Why 5 Minutes of Quiet Can Unlock Your Creativity
The science-backed reason why the busiest authors need quiet time the most—and how this Miracle Morning practice transforms your writing life. "I Don't Have Time to Sit and Do Nothing." Let me guess what you're thinking right now: "Meditation? Really? I barely have time to write, let alone sit around doing nothing." "My brain never stops racing. I'd be terrible at meditation." "I'm not a woo-woo person. I need practical solutions, not mystical practices." "Five minutes of quiet won't solve my writer's block." If any of these thoughts crossed your mind, you're not alone. These are the exact objections I hear from authors every single week.
Let Them Expect You to Follow Trends
The Terror of Trends. You're at your local bookstore café, laptop open, working on the fantasy novel you've been passionate about for the past year. A fellow writer slides into the chair across from you—someone you know from the regional writers' group who always seems to have their finger on the pulse of the industry. "Still working on that dragon book?" they ask, glancing at your screen. "You know fantasy is kind of over, right? Everyone's writing BookTok romance now. Have you seen how much money those authors are making? You should pivot to enemies-to-lovers contemporary romance. That's where the readers are."
Let Them Rush Your Timeline: Take Back Control of Your Publishing Schedule
Sound Familiar? You're at Sunday dinner with your family, feeling pretty good about the progress you've made on your novel this week. The revision is coming along nicely, and you finally solved that plot hole that's been nagging you for months. When Uncle Bob asks about your book, you're happy to share that you're working on making your manuscript the best it can be.
Let Them Question Your Hybrid Approach
Picture This: You're at a writing conference. That familiar buzz of excitement fills the hotel conference room as authors swap business cards and publishing war stories. You've just struck up a conversation with a fellow novelist, and she asks about your publishing journey. You light up—this is exactly the kind of conversation you'd hoped to have here.