6 Things You Should Do Before You Sign Your First Book Contract

healthy book contract

by Lynn H Blackburn @LynnHBlackburn

You’ve been writing for a while now. Maybe you have a book or two written. You’ve entered a few contests, pitched to a few agents, even attended a few conferences.

You’ve been doing this writing thing long enough to know you want to keep doing it. You know you want to see your name on a book. But what do you do while you’re waiting for that first sale?

1. Set Your Priorities

How many hours a day/week/month are you prepared to devote to writing? This isn’t a trick question and there isn’t one right answer. But if you don’t know the answer BEFORE you make that first sale, your writing career may take off and you’ll find yourself with so many deadlines that you don’t have time to eat a hotdog, much less grill some with your family on a Friday night.

Take a hard look at your current obligations and decide in advance what you’re willing to sacrifice. Getting up early or giving up your favorite TV shows are no problem, but there’s no book deal worth losing your marriage over. It happens. Don’t let it happen to you.

2. Get Organized

I know you’re an artist and you want to be free to create. And I really do hate to be the one to lick the icing off your cupcake, but while writing is an art, publication is serious business. Those contracts you want to sign? They are legal documents and they obligate you to create on a schedule.

You need to get a calendar and use it. Paper, electronic, both. It doesn’t matter. What matters is that when you get “THE CALL” you don’t agree to a deadline that forces you to write on your anniversary trip to Hawaii. Trust me, when you get the call your brain cells will desert you and you’ll be struggling to form coherent sentences. You need to be able to look at your calendar and see everything coming up in the months ahead.

Not to mention that all those things you currently do—the soccer team you coach, the classroom you volunteer in, the Sunday school class you teach—you don’t get literary license to drop all that the day you sell a book. You may decide to put some of those things aside as you move forward in your career, but in the beginning you’re going to be hopping.

Organization isn’t optional. It’s critical.

3. Stay Healthy

Or get healthy. Now don’t get mad at me for bringing this up. I’ve had more than one writer tell me that writing has seriously damaged their health and no book deal is worth that. (Right? See my first point if you’re on the fence about this.)

If that writing contract you’re waiting on goes the way you hope it will, your life is going to turn into a revolving door of deadlines. When that happens, it’s going to be exponentially harder to find time to start an exercise program or learn to cook new foods. Now is when you need to discover that you love CrossFit or yoga or karate. This is the time to experiment with zucchini noodles and coconut milk and try out all those recipes you’ve pinned on Pinterest.

When your edits are due, you won’t have the mental energy to experiment in the kitchen and it will be way too easy to skip your workout if it hasn’t already become a regular part of your routine. Taking care of yourself now will help you avoid burnout later.

4. Make Connections

I’m not talking about stalking your favorite writers. I’m talking about developing friendships in the writing community and with the people you hope will one day be your readers. Blog, Tweet, post to Facebook or Instagram or Pinterest. Comment on other people’s posts. Review books on Goodreads. Join a critique group, go to conferences, enter contests.

It doesn’t take hours of social media time a day to form the foundation for a thriving platform. And you need a platform.

5. Read

Everything. In your genre. Outside your genre. Fiction, non-fiction, memoir, poetry. Good stuff. Bad stuff. Read it all. If you’re targeting a particular publisher, study their books.

Do it now, because after you sign your contract, you’ll long to curl up with a good book, but every time you do, you’ll start thinking about your own book and how you should be working on it. Or if you’re like me, you won’t trust yourself to read just a few chapters a day, so you won’t read any fiction for a couple of months and then you’ll realize your creative soul is starving for a good story. Don’t be like me. Read!

6. Write

I know how hard it is to keep writing when you don’t see any progress. When your proposals are sitting in slush piles or when the rejection letters keeping coming in. But you have to write. Give yourself a deadline. Ask your writing friends to join you in a 10-day writing challenge. I can guarantee you there are others out there who need the accountability and would jump at the chance to do this with you.

Write poetry, flash fiction, devotions, blog posts, short stories, or newspaper articles. No matter what, always keep working on the stories that won’t leave you alone.

Because someday, your editor is going to ask if you have any other ideas and you’re going to want to say yes!

So that’s my list. Do you agree? Disagree? Want to add something? Let’s talk about it in the comments.

Grace and peace,

Lynn Blackburn

 

 

 

Lynn H. Blackburn believes in the power of stories, especially those that remind us that true love exists, a gift from the Truest Love.

She’s passionate about CrossFit, coffee, and chocolate (don’t make her choose) and experimenting with recipes that feed both body and soul. She lives in South Carolina with her true love, Brian, and their three children.

Her first book, Covert Justice, won the 2016 Selah Award for Mystery and Suspense and the 2016 Carol Award for Short Novel. Her second book, Hidden Legacy, released in June 2017 and her new Dive Team Investigations series kicks off in March of 2018 with Beneath the Surface.

You can follow her real life happily ever after at www.LynnHBlackburn.com and on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram.

 

The Conversation

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3 Comments

    The Conversation

  1. Lynn, These are all great points. I forgot about zucchini noodles. The hardest thing for me is to read in my genre. I read all day for work. I listen to books when my eyes are too tired to read. Your statement, “while writing is an art, publication is serious business,” needs to be etched in every Christian writer’s mind. God wants the message he gives us to get out, but we must do the work and follow the literary path to succeed. One thing we could add to the list, Have Fun. I try to do something fun every day. Even if it’s just joking with my son or taking an hour to walk the beach and hunt for sea glass. Thank you for this list. I’m printing it and hanging it by my unorganized desk. I bet you know which item on your list I need to work on. 🙂

    • Lynn says:

      I love that – HAVE FUN! So important!!!
      Best wishes on all your writing endeavors (and, um, on the organizing thing… LOL!) 🙂

  2. So much yes to ALL of this! I love the part about getting organized and getting healthy now…because once that first contract comes in (!), your world (and brain) starts spinning so fast it’s tough to prioritize. All you can think is, “DEADLINE!” Whatever schedule and healthy habits you’ve already established will have to kick in on autopilot and carry you through the crazy. Now all I need is advice on not caffeinating myself to death while writing… 🙂 Thanks so much for this—so insightful and practical!