I’ve always believed that emulating those who are successful is a key to success. You say to immerse yourself in cinema and I agree. It’s also very difficult to do while working full time at something only vaguely related to writing. I’ve wondered for years how you do it. What does your typical day look like? What did your typical day look like when you wrote K-9, Trojan War or Snowbirds (i.e. when you wake, how long you write, how much you read, when you watch films, are you a Churchill kind of sleeper, etc.)?
I’ll answer this in three parts: (1) How I wrote K-9. (2) How I worked full-time as a screenwriter. (3) How to balance writing with work and family commitments.
How I wrote K-9
In the fall of 1986, I was performing as a stand-up comic, traveling up and down the state of California. When I started working on the spec script K-9, I booked gigs to allow me to maximize my time on my writing. So I’d work for 3 weeks, 7 nights a week, then take off a week, then back on for 2, back off for 1, and so on.
When I was traveling between gigs, I would carry a pocket tape recorder with me. So for example as I was driving up Interstate 5 from southern to northern California, I would work out the plot on tape. Then when I would wind my way back home to Berkeley where I was living at the time, I would transcribe all those notes into my wife’s Apple IIc computer (complete with the 5 1/4 inch floppy discs).
Then back down to L.A. to meet with my writing partner. Once we cracked the plot, I’d head off on the road again for more gigs, but then I focused on working out each scene, again using the tape recorder, and again transcribing those notes.
When it came to actual page-writing, I scheduled a week off and wrote as many hours a day as I could stay awake. I managed to write a first draft in five days and revised it in another two.
After receiving feedback on that draft, I did a marathon rewrite session, basically staying up for 36 straight hours, slept for half a day, then did one final polish. Sent it off and it sold in January, 1987.
So if you have a flexible schedule like I did, here are a few points to take away:
* You can work on your story any time using some sort of voice memo device.
* When you are ready to pound out pages, schedule a good chunk of time (1 week is optimum), then commit yourself to your writing — nothing else.
* Make sure to take off a week or so between drafts to clear your head.
How I worked full-time as a screenwriter
I did that for 15 years in L.A. working on nearly 30 paid gigs for studios and networks. On projects I worked on with a partner, we wrote in the afternoons, generally from 1-5. If we were writing pages, the goal was to produce 5-7 pages per day.
[Note: I always took care of personal business including exercise, emails, and all the rest in the morning, making sure to get all that 'stuff' done by noon].
If I was working on my own projects, I would do that at night (I’m a night owl). Also I would go away to Lake Arrowhead for 48 hour writing weekends. This was especially valuable for pounding out first drafts as I would typically knock out anywhere from 50-75 pages.
But as I described in this Business of Screenwriting Post — The Art of Stacking Projects — whatever paid gigs we had lined up, I always had a couple of things I was working on privately, one spec project I was researching, another I was either breaking the story or writing the pages.
So if you can work at screenwriting full time, a few tips:
* Write every day.
* Set a goal for the number of pages you need to hit each day.
* Stack projects: Researching one, breaking the story of another, writing one, polishing another, etc.
Balancing writing with work and family commitments
Today my life probably resembles yours: I have my day work — teaching, consulting, mentoring, blogging — and my writing (currently working on a screenwriting book and researching a spec script). I’ve found I’ve had to completely alter my approach.
Nowadays the first thing I do in the morning is put in 50 minutes writing. It has to be before I do anything else because as soon as I check my emails or my calendar, I am down the rabbit hole, and lost for hours. I have so many things going on between teaching at UNC, teaching, consulting and doing private mentoring through Screenwriting Master Class, and GITS, if I don’t get my writing done in the morning, I never get to it.
That morning time is for actual page-writing. For research, brainstorming, and prep, I do that at the other end of my day, late at night when I don’t have any distractions.
So if you’ve got a day job and you’re trying to write, read scripts, watch movies, and all the rest, here are a few tips:
* Create a master calendar with goals. Fix those to specific dates. Hit those deadlines.
* Write every day (some things never change).
* Stake out a consistent time during the day to write and stick to it.
Here’s the biggest tip of all: Download this app. It’s called Focus Buster. It sits on your computer’s desktop and gives you a 25-minute work block, then dings to give you 5 minutes to do whatever you want (e.g., check e-mail, stock market, soccer scores). Then start another 25 minute work session.
Given the sheer volume of stuff I have to do each day, this has been a godsend. It just makes you work more efficiently and keeps you focused.
How about you? What time management tips do you have?
Tomorrow’s question: What about writing for the web?


I only need two hours a day for writing. (The rest of the time is for thinking, thinking, thinking about the story).
I write for an hour at lunch, then another hour or two after work if I can.
Then at weekends I usually get up and go to a coffee shop for two hours. You can easily grab 12 hours a week this way and end up with a pretty serious script in two months.
The only thing missing is a big block of time to go through the entire script from start to finish, to proofread and make edits on the script as a whole. That needs a whole weekend away from everything distracting.
Not easy, but doable.
Yes, indeed! This is so true: http://www.advicetowriters.com/home/2011/4/24/be-ruthless-about-protecting-writing-days.html
You have to be ruthless about protecting your writing time. Whether it's ten minutes at a time – which is usually what I can grab – or hours, the key is making sure that time is inviolable.
It's almost like making a deal with your subconscious, in a way: if you can keep the promise to yourself to write without interruption for that amount of time, you WILL produce quality. It works well!
If you don't have a lot of time – and paradoxically, if you DO have a lot of time – any tips I have are from THE COFFEE BREAK SCREENWRITER by Pilar Allessandra. It literally breaks the whole screenwriting process down into ten-minute chunks – but you could easily "cheat" and expand them into 30-minute or hour-long chunks. Perfect for when I have downtime at my job.
It also helps when I have a surplus of time – then, I've got the time but I frequently don't know where to start or what to work on. I think Alfonso Cuaron once likened the process of making a film to eating an elephant – "You have to do it one teaspoon at a time." THE COFFEE BREAK SCREENWRITER does this and gets me into action when I can't see how to break my project down into teaspoons.
I like this topic.
I finished a spec and really wanted to focus on getting as many eyes on the thing as I could.
Before I knew it a month had passed and I was still pounding out query letters and forgot one important thing…
To work on the next project!!
Time to get organized… and it's time to start…
NOW!
Thanks Scott!
Thank you. the bottom line seems to be simple self discipline (as if that's ever simple).
I've been getting up early and writing for an hour before getting ready for work. I'd much prefer to be a night owl, but my schedule just doesn't allow it.
For me, the biggest take away is don't even go near email before getting that time in.
Thank you again.
@Tom and everyone else: If you want a poster child for self-discipline to become a screenwriter, Google "Ron Bass novels middle of the night" or something like that. While being a full-time entertainment lawyer, Ron Bass would wake up at like 3:30AM and write for several hours before going into work. I believe he wrote 3, perhaps even 4 novels before finally either quitting to become a screenwriter or selling a script then quitting. If somebody can Google those details and copy/paste here, great. But I know the general elements of Bass' story are true.