TEN
HABITS OF HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL SCREENWRITERS
By Derek Rydall
Founder, ScriptwriterCentral.com
“Bad habits are like a comfortable bed, easy
to get into, but hard to get out of,”
-- Unknown
“Your net worth to the world is usually determined
by what remains after your bad habits are subtracted from
your good ones,”
-- Benjamin Franklin
Think of this as a quick-reference for instant inspiration
– whether you’re a screenwriter or script consultant:
1. DO SOMETHING PRODUCTIVE EVERY DAY
Write something every day – whether it’s your
project or an assignment. If you find yourself stuck just
staring at a blank screen, try staring at a great script instead
-- and try to figure out how it’s put together. It might
inspire you to get your own writing done. The point here is
to keep exercising and refining your craft, building your
knowledge, and keeping the momentum – all of which will
give you a competitive edge. This isn’t about becoming
a workaholic. It’s about breaking through the inertia
of complacency. It’s so easy to get comfortable, to
settle for the status quo, to rationalize why you’re
not doing what you know you need to in order to succeed. “I
don’t fee like it,” is not a viable excuse anymore.
2. TAKE FREQUENT BREAKS
This may sound like a contradiction to the above habit. It’s
not. In fact, without this one, you won’t be able to
sustain the level of quality and productivity referred to
above. Unless you’re able to take a break (whether it’s
ten minute, an hour, a day, or a week) and recharge, you’ll
soon be booking a room in burnout city.
3. GET ORGANIZED
A messy, disorganized office is an energy sapper if there
ever was one. Not just because it takes longer to find that
important document under that stack of unopened bills, but
also because it literally pulls power from your psychic field.
Every little ‘toleration’ you put up with burns
fuel that could be put to much better use in growing your
business.
4. WORK WHEN YOU WORK BEST
Some of us are morning people. Others are struck with the
muse at the stroke of midnight. If you don’t already
know, find out what time of day you work best, and gear your
most labor-intensive activities for that time period. (Of
course, if you’re on a deadline, you might have to work
around the clock, but that’s a different issue.) If
you schedule your activities based on your energy cycles,
you will find your productivity take a quantum leap. For example,
I have two periods when I work the best – late morning
and late afternoon. So I try to schedule the heavy-lifting
(writing, analyzing) during those hours. When I first get
up, I need to ease into the day’s work, so I do more
preparatory work, like going over the day’s schedule,
straightening up the office, e-mails. Once I’m warmed
up, I crack open the script or writing file and get to work
for a few hours. I break for lunch, meditation, make calls,
work out, do some errands – and start my second writing
period. Then it’s home for family time, dinner, and
bedtime stories. But not my bedtime. Because at night, my
energy cycle is perfect for opening mail, paying bills, filing,
during simple research – tasks that don’t take
a lot of energy.
The point of this example is that if I opened my mail and
paid my bills in the late morning, I would waste my most productive
energy cycle (not to mention become depressed) which I couldn’t
make-up very easily at night during my bill paying, mail-opening
time. Make sense? It may take some time to find your perfect
energy-schedule, but it’s worth the experimentation.
I’m still making adjustments.
5. GIVE EVERY PROJECT 100%
Treat every project like it’s the job of your dreams
– and you’ll soon attract more and more of your
dream jobs. Why? Because you don’t get what you want
in life, you get what you are. Ghandi said we must become
the change we want to see in the world. Likewise, we must
become the kind of person who would get the kind of jobs we
want in the world. This is another one of those universal
principles I keep slipping in here. If it gives you a headache
to try and make sense of it, don’t. Just give it a shot
and see what happens.
6. KEEP LEARNING
To have what others don’t, you must do what others won’t.
The average person – and for that matter, the average
script consultant – has a tendency to take the path
of least resistance. So you must take the road less traveled.
Stay open at the top. Maintain a Beginner’s Mind. Besides
continued study in related and complimentary fields –
read and investigate areas outside of your field – and
outside of show business. Some of the most innovative ideas
have come from people adapting concepts they discovered in
completely unrelated fields.
7. ACT AND DRESS LIKE A PRO
This is another relative rule. A stockbroker acts and dresses
quite differently than a tennis pro. In the entertainment
industry, an executive acts and dresses differently than an
actor. Even more specific, different clients will have different
expectations. In general, business casual seems to work best.
You also want to have an updated resume and work samples readily
available. Do your homework, show up to appointments with
all the right gear to get the job done, and treat each client
or prospect with the utmost respect and value.
8. HONOR YOUR WORK HOURS
During work hours, especially in a home office, you’ll
have plenty of opportunities for distraction from well-meaning
friends and family members. In the most diplomatic tone you
can muster, kindly inform them that you’re at work not
at home. This is a real business, not a hobby. You’ll
talk to them after hours, or on your break.
9. TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF
Feed your mind and body with high quality nourishment -- and
exercise. I know this is obvious to most people -- yet most
people still don’t do it. Writing and consulting is
hard work that requires real endurance. If you want to be
a high-performance person, you need to run on high-octane
fuel.
10. KNOW THYSELF
The most successful people, in this or any field, know who
they are so they can be true to that. They also know their
strengths – so they can play to them – and their
weaknesses -- so they can compensate for them.
If you’d like to take this to the next level, check
out THE WRITE SYSTEM or THE SCRIPT CONSULTANT INSTITUTE at
www.scriptwritercentral.com
We look forward to helping you achieve
all of your writing and/or script consulting goals!
“As a screenwriter, Derek Rydall has sold, optioned,
or been hired on assignment for over 20 film and TV projects.
He has developed projects for the producer of Ghost, RKO,
U/A, Miramax, Saturn (Nick Cage), and many indie producers,
as well as worked as a staff writer for Fox, Disney, and Deepak
Chopra. As a story consultant/script doctor, Derek has helped
writers, producers, actors, and directors turn books into
screenplays, secure millions in financing, make six-figure
script deals, get hired to exec produce, direct, star in their
movies, obtain major distribution, and win awards. And as
an author, Derek's book, I Could've Written a Better Movie
than That!: How to Make Six Figures as a Script Consultant--
Even if You're Not a Screenwriter, is due out October by Michael
Wiese Publishing.
For more info, you can check out his sites:
www.scriptwritercentral.com
www.enlightenedentertainer.com
email derek@scriptwritercentral.com
or call (661) 296-4991
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