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Poets & Writers Toolkit: Productivity Apps for Busy Writers

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Poets and Writers Toolkit - Productivity Apps for Busy Writers via Tweetspeak PoetryBusy poets and writers must find ways organize themselves and their work. Some find analog methods the simplest way to stay productive, writing to-do lists and notes on Post-Its, three-by-five cards, and bullet journals. Others prefer digital systems to organize and track the tasks associated with their writing life.

For today’s Poets & Writers Toolkit, we’re focusing on digital solutions as four busy writers—L.L. Barkat, Ann Kroeker, Ed Cyzewski, and Charity Singleton Craig—share their favorite apps for increasing productivity.

L.L. Barkat, publisher (online and print). Manages a team of 11. Responsible for an average of 72 ongoing and seasonal tasks and projects with multiple layers, including the need for professional correspondence.

Tool: Workflowy

This past September, a change in my situation created a loss of 14 full work hours a week. Wow! It turns out that 14 hours is a significant chunk of time—especially when there is no hope of recovering it this week or the week after that, and the months of time and structure loss begin to pile up.

As these losses piled up, my effectiveness suffered. I began to forget important tasks and started to make mistakes in more areas than I found acceptable. I’d always been a highly productive, efficient and accurate person, but here I was seemingly unable to organize my day as easily as I had in the past. Something had to give, and I needed that *not* to be my well-being or my work quality.

So I did five things:

  1. Drop inessential tasks (sorry, Facebook!)
  2. Delegate what I could
  3. Change my expectations
  4. Release goals that were now unreachable, or begin plans to reach them by different means or on a different timeline
  5. Turn to Workflowy.com

 

Workflowy Main page

L.L. Barkat’s Workflowy Main page. While some people make “personal” and “business” categories, L.L. prefers the simplicity of using days of the week as an organizing principle.

In a lot of ways, Workflowy was a life saver. It helped me organize my time in a simple, straightforward way that wasn’t going to go floating off on a stray Post-It note. It gave me an unadorned visual of what needed to be accomplished (I call it the Feng Shui of apps). It allowed me to get a spatial sense of my time (which led me to the conclusion that I could only accomplish one to three “big” things per day).

Workflowy Main page with completed task

Workflowy Main page with completed task

My to-do list naturally began to shrink as I could literally see, over time, how many items were realistic to put on each day’s plate. And when I felt a sense of aimlessness that ironically sometimes arises when you have too many things to accomplish in a day, I counted on Workflowy to drive my actions (and it was fun to check off tasks as I did them).

Workflowy Sublist - Productivity Apps for Busy Writers

Workflowy Sublist

These days, because that 14-hour per week work loss has meant a fundamental shift that surpasses even the issue of time, sometimes I ditch Workflowy altogether and simply ask myself, “What’s the one BIG thing I must do today to move my business forward?” And I have agreed with myself to be happy with that.

As an author, editor, and writing coach, Ann Kroeker manages personal writing projects and deadlines while working one-on-one with multiple clients.

Tools: Todoist, Google Calendar, Evernote, Google Docs

As I organize my own writing and editing projects, identifying and working through the tasks I must complete, I’m also coaching other writers as they complete their projects and tasks. That’s a lot of projects and tasks to keep straight! For efficient management, I found some simple, flexible systems and apps that help me sort, track, and organize it all.

In Todoist, I store, prioritize, and categorize every task I must accomplish, grouping and filtering to view content and tasks associated with a given project or client. By coordinating some of my Todoist tasks with Google Calendar, I track deadlines and schedule key assignments. These two apps operate almost like a virtual assistant, with notifications keeping me on task.

I store ideas, notes, research, templates, quotations, and early drafts of short pieces in Evernote, though at some point I usually transfer content to Google Docs, where I can collaborate with writers, offer feedback to coaching clients, and draft material not only by typing but also using its “Voice typing” tool.

Google Drive Doc showing Voice typing tool - Productivity Apps for Busy Writers - Tweetspeak Poets and Writers Toolkit

Google Drive Doc showing Voice typing tool

 

These cloud-based apps ensure that whether I’m at my desk or on the go, my projects, appointments, notes, and deadlines are stored, updated, and easily accessible on laptop or phone.

When Ed Cyzewski isn’t refereeing for his two boys (1 and 3) in the morning, he writes books, freelances for companies who need blog posts and newsletters, edits and coaches for authors, and blogs at edcyzewski.com

Tools: Buffer, Pocket

While writing well demands my full attention for a sustained period of time, I need social media to promote my work, to make new connections, and to maintain existing friendships. I want to use social media to keep sharing my best work, to promote the top writing of friends and colleagues, and to share useful articles and links that could benefit my friends and “followers.”

Instead of dropping into social media every hour or limiting myself to one check in per day, I’ve settled on a system where I combine the Buffer App (using the “Awesome” upgrade) with Pocket, a bookmarking and reading app that makes it easy to track and sort articles and blog posts. Pocket also easily integrates with Buffer so that you can even share directly from Pocket if you like. For a stretch of 30 minutes I can set up my social media posting for Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn for an entire week. Between accessing my favorite feeds in Buffer and my top articles saved in Pocket, I can set up an automated social media posting schedule complete with quotes from the articles or my own comments, customizing what shows up in each channel.

Pocket - Productivity Apps for Busy Writers

Pocket (getpocket.com)

As I see interesting or useful blog posts or articles throughout the day, I need only save them to Pocket and then follow up later to set them up through Buffer. Whenever I need a break or want to check in during my work day, I can certainly drop in to social media at my leisure, but there’s no pressure to find something to share. I’ve already done the bulk of that work earlier in the week, and anything else I share is just a bonus. .

Buffer - Productivity Apps for Busy Writers - Tweetspeak Poetry

Buffer

I have seen many conversations take place thanks to setting up my posting on Buffer, and if I sprinkle in enough posts about my books, I usually see a bump in book sales as well. Avoiding social media isn’t an option for me, but I don’t have to let it take over my creative and client time.

Charity Singleton Craig is a creative nonfiction writer who also does freelance content marketing, editing, and coaching. She works from home and a nearby co-working space.

Tools: Todoist, unroll.me, Google Drive

To stay organized and productive in my writing life, I use three different apps in combination. This system works well for my writing life, which is itself a combination of client, freelance, and personal projects.

First, I used a list-based app call Todoist to create to-do items within individual projects (or folders). Each to-do item gets a due date and a tag based on the kind of task. I can also create recurring tasks for social media, client blog posts, or invoicing reminders. Todoist “tags” help me with my overall workflow, which relies on batching.

Todoist Project View - Poets & Writers Toolkit: Productivity Apps for Busy Writers

Todoist – Project View

Batching allows me to group similar types of work together so that I am not constantly moving in and out of projects. I simply block out time on my daily calendar to allow for each batch category, filter my Todoist items by the same tag, and get to work. This is especially helpful for the many small administrative details I need to complete each day.

Todoist Labels - Poets & Writers Toolkit: Productivity Apps for Busy Writers

Todoist Labels

Two other apps also help me work efficiently. An email management app called unroll.me combines all my subscription messages into one summary email (called a “Rollup”) each day. Using unroll.me in combination with Apple Mail’s “rules” helps me maintain a clean inbox. Also, whenever I receive an email that doesn’t require an immediate action, I flag it in Mail and create a Todoist item with a due date so I don’t forget to respond later.

Rollup - Poets & Writers Toolkit: Productivity Apps for Busy Writers

unroll.me

Finally, Google Drive has become my go-to place for writing, tracking, and presenting my work. I use Docs to write essays and articles, Sheets to set up spreadsheets for billable hours and submissions, and Slides for simple presentations. Four of my favorite features of Drive are easy sharing for collaboration, accessibility across devices, easy searching across all folders and files, and the revision history which allows me to easily work across iterations of work.

What productivity apps simplify your busy writing life?

Photo by Ashton, Creative Commons license via Flickr. Post by Ann Kroeker, writing coach and co-author of On Being a Writer: 12 Simple Habits for a Writing Life that Lasts.

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