Random Tip:Once you publish a lens, email it to your friends and family to show off your masterpiece!

Get Started on your Imperfect Lens

November 20th, 2008 by kimberly

(PS - if you need to unsubscribe, just scroll to the bottom of this email.)

If you’re anything like me, you may find it hard to get started on projects that you haven’t figured out how to do perfectly. Lenses are actually a weak point with me. If I’m not sure what I’ll be saying, it’s hard for me to get started. Yet one of the keys to success with Squidoo is to create great lenses and lots of them.

So how can you get started when you’re not sure what to get started with? Here are three secrets I use to break through my perfectionism and get moving on lensbuilding:

1. Reserve the lens.
“What? Squat a lens?” Not exactly. This is only the first step.

1.5. Fill out the biggies.
*sigh of relief* It’s true that URL squatting happens when you reserve a lens URL and don’t do anything with it, but filling in all the basic info is actually a huge step towards getting a lens in publish-friendly shape. It helps you narrow down your focus and decide what you’ll be talking about.

2. Write your intro.
Writing your intro helps you express what you want to cover in your lens, and sets the tone and style for the rest of your content.

2.5. Use your intro to brainstorm.
In the pre-publishing phase, I often blab on and on about what I want to cover in the lens. Make notes. Write lists. Then assign each line item a module type. This will help you spend less time figuring out what’s next. (Just remember to delete this after you’ve pasted it in the appropriate modules below.)

3. Add your modules and title them.
Even if you don’t put them in order, add the modules you know you want to include and fill in the titles. This will make them easier to reorder later and give your copy direction.

3.5 Write what you know.
As long as you’re adding modules and titling them, go ahead and fill in the easy ones. Just like putting together a puzzle, constructing the border first makes the middle less daunting.

Ok, so there are actually six tips here, but by being oh so sneaky and packing them into three numbers on your to-do list, you can take a promising idea and easily put it into action.

What next? Plan to work on your lens for 20 minutes every day until it’s done. I bet you’ll find that once you get started, knowing you have permission to quit will reduce your stress and open the creative floodgates.

Now you have the “how.” Stumped on the “what?” Make Great Holiday Lenses (and mega Christmas moola) with more simple tips.

Make it a productive weekend!
~Kimberly Dawn Wells
YOUR Community and Charity Organizer

Comments are closed.