If you need to write for your job, you probably have trouble starting or finishing a writing project. Academic writers face especially tough hurdles: urgent priorities compete for their time. Many such writers find that a support group speeds their projects.
Experience shows you must want such a group, choose motivated members, and stay accountable when you feel like hibernating instead. If you are an academic writer, don’t choose a group of journalists or fiction writers. For joining or starting your own Writers Accountability Group, here are some tips:
Spiritedwriter is a site with a religious tone. It supplies practical steps to setting up a Writers Accountability Group.
Don’t be fooled by the post’s title, “Shut Up and Write.” This longish article by Kerry Rockquemore argues that you deserve and can find (start?) a writer’s accountability group.
A writer named Bridget Cowlishaw has started a Writers’ Accountability Group on Facebook. You don’t have to join this one. You could start your own, using the group options in Facebook.
At women-on-writing, this newsletter, The Muffin, posts inspiration and writing tips. Most of these people are freelance authors and journalists, but this post includes links to other writers’ groups.
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