Go pro, or go home

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kevinjohnsGuest post by Kevin Johns, author and creative writing coach

 
You may be surprised to learn that, as a writer, the best thing I have ever done didn’t involve plotting a story, crafting a poem, or composing the lyrics to a song. Rather, it was a simple email that I wrote and sent to four friends, and it changed my life forever. 
But before we get into that email, I want to discuss my biggest mistake as a writer.
For several years, I edited an online arts and culture magazine. I wrote almost a hundred articles for the magazine, and edited hundreds more. The website got thousands of hits every month, and by the time I left the magazine, dozens of young writers, photographers, and illustrators had contributed to the magazine. 
 
And no one made any money from it.
 
Sure, we received a few small grants that allowed us to pay our contributors a small fee per article, but as an editorial team, we never identified or implemented a real long-term plan for monetization of the magazine. 
 
This was largely because monetization had nothing to do with why we had started the magazine in the first place. 
 
We created the magazine because we were a group of young writers, journalists, and artists who were passionate about the topics we were writing about. 
 
I, like the other editors at the magazine, was in it for the art, not the commerce… and that was my big mistake.
 
Being in it for the art is just fine, if you want to treat your writing like a hobby. At the magazine, we called ourselves “journalists” and we were treated as such, but ultimately, we were really just hobbyists. 
 
It is only when you learn how to monetize your art that you make the transition from hobbyist to true profession.
 
At some point, the transition from amateur to pro becomes absolutely essential, primarily because monetization is a huge part of sustainability. 
You can romanticize the starving artist persona all you want, but the reality is that not much art gets created when you haven’t eaten all day because you are too broke for groceries. 
 
 If you plan to be a writer, or an artist of any kind, who is in it for the long haul, you need to make the conscious decision to turn profession. 
 
Which leads us to that fateful email I mentioned earlier… 
 
See, the entire time that I was working on the magazine, I was also drafting a novel. When my children were born and I chose to leave the magazine to ensure I had time for my growing family, I continued to work on the manuscript. 
 
the-page-turners-paperbackAfter eight long years of fiddling away at the book, like the hobbyist that I was, I finally made the decision to go pro. That decision was made in the form of an email that I sent to four of my closest friends. It read something like this:

Friends, 

By way of this email, I am committing to completing and publishing my novel in the next six months.

Kevin Johns

That was it. It was the best thing I ever did, because it was what forced me to make the leap from amateur hobbyist to profession novelist. 
 

After eight long years, I suddenly had a deadline, and it was only six months away! I had to hire a cover designer, interior layout designer, and an editor, and, ultimately, I needed to sell enough copies of the book to recoup those costs. 

After writing a hundred articles for a magazine that never made a dollar, after scribbling away at a manuscript for almost a decade, I had final taken real action to monetize my art and go pro. 
 
And from that moment on, there has been no looking back.
novelblueprintKevin T. Johns is a creative writing coach, and author of the young adult horror novel, The Page Turners. His instruction book for aspiring authors, The Novel Writer’s Blueprint: Five Steps to Creating and Completing Your First Book, will be published in May 2014. Get his free ebook, 12 Common Mistakes Rookie Author Make, at www.yournovelblueprint.com

And read Scott Bury’s simultaneous guest post, “Learning the hard way,” at Your Novel Blueprint.