Don't know where to start with your CV?
Give me the info and I'll write it for you.
Don't know where to start with your CV?
Give me the info and I'll write it for you.
I sometimes do copywriting work for clients who struggle to define exactly what they want. My tactic, which often surprises people, is to come up with what I call “a bad first draft”. It’s easier to look at what I’ve come up with and tell me why it’s wrong than agonise over trying to create a brief for the copy you want.
That’s because even writing a brief represents a form of “getting it out there”, with all the attendant vulnerabilities and worries. If I take the lead and quickly bang out a first draft, one designed to be torn to pieces, I’m taking that vulnerability on myself and giving the client “permission” to be clearer. (Very occasionally, there’s a champagne moment when the “bad first draft” actually turns out to nail the non-existent brief.)
They say “Don’t let the perfect become the enemy of the good.” I say: don’t let the good be the enemy of getting started at all.
The “bad first draft” tactic is so effective that I actually had concerns about revealing it in this blog post, in case other writers copy it and steal all my business. Then I got over myself.
If you change one thing in 2013, perhaps it should be this: write more bad first drafts. Maybe it’s a blog post, a press release or an article. Maybe it’s a novel. Maybe it’s a business plan. For me in 2012, it was a sitcom script. The same principle applies to all these things. Write the bad version. Make yourself vulnerable and move forwards with the things you really want to do.