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How to Plan Your Year in Reverse – Daily Planner Printable

January 11, 2018 by kirstenoliphant@gmail.com 1 Comment

This post shares how to plan your year in reverse with a free daily planner printable (inside of my Yearly Content Planner). Keep reading or listen to the podcast episode to get the most out of your strategy.

January is a time of resolutions, goal planning and taking action. It can also be a time of guilt. It’s so easy to fail hard and fail quickly! But what if you could start the year strong with an effective strategy? The best way to accomplish this is to plan your year in reverse. I’ve got a daily planner printable plus a yearly strategy guide to help you do just THAT.

Download your Yearly Content Guide with a Daily Planner Printable! 

 

If you’d like it on your device, you can find it on Amazon, Nook, or Kobo!

Now that you’ve got your daily planner printable in front of you (or at least downloaded and ready to print), you need to know how to use a daily planner well. This means zooming out to look at your big goals and how each day’s activities moves you forward.

Learn more about the planner and how I plan out my year in this Free Printable Planner post. 

Listen Up: How to Plan Your Year in Reverse

 

Subscribe and Listen on Apple Podcasts

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This post contains affiliate links, which means if you make a purchase after clicking a link, I may earn a commission for referring you. 


Get a free daily planner printable and strategy guide to help you plan your year in reverse!HOW TO PLAN YOUR YEAR IN REVERSE

“You’re doing it backwards.”

Does that sound like a good thing…or a bad thing? Usually when someone says that to you, what they mean is that you’re doing it wrong. You are going about a task in the wrong order.

But when it comes to making goals and accomplishing them, the best way is to work backwards on purpose. You need to look at your big goal as Point B. You are currently at Point A. Then work backwards to think about the steps in between to bridge the gap. If you look at your Yearly Content Guide and the daily planner printable sheets, this will make much more sense! Let’s walk through the process.

1 / How do YOU Work?

Before you can really start planning effectively, you need to take some time to figure out how YOU work. You don’t want to waste time on methods that don’t work for you. I’ll give an example to make this more clear.

When I was in college, I wrote a ton of papers! I can’t begin to think about the hundreds of pages I wrote and the all-nighters that I pulled. But it took me ’til my senior year to realize that I wrote papers BEST when I finished them a day or so in advance.

Giving myself that cushion of time meant that I wrote in a leisurely, focused way. I had no frantic, stressful moments. I didn’t pull all nighters, fueling up on Mountain Dew and Twizzlers. I wrote faster and I wrote BETTER when I made my own personal deadline ahead of the imposed deadline.

That doesn’t mean I cannot work well under pressure. In December I started writing under a pen name, Emma St. Clair, and wrote two short stories in the sweet romance genre. (You can check those out here if you like light and fluffy non-steamy romance.) I cranked out two stories and published them within the space of two weeks.

And the effort was a success! I garnered 26 five-star reviews for Four Days of Christmas and have a new email list of over 100 people and am still making sales and money now in January.

What I’ve learned about myself is that I work better with self-imposed goals and deadlines, not ones that someone else forces me into.

Questions to Ask:

  • What time of day do you work best?
  • What work space works well?
  • What stresses you out?
  • What circumstances make the work easy and fun?
  • How do you like to write– pen & paper, computer, typewriter?

Before you can plan well, you need to know yourself well. This isn’t as easy as you’d think and it may change according to the season or circumstances. Ask yourself questions about the ways you work and make note whenever something stresses you out OR has great results.

2 / Working Backwards

My whole Yearly Content Planner shows you how to work backwards. It starts with looking at your goals, your stats and analytics from the past year (I keep this simple, so don’t freak out if you don’t like numbers), and then moves into weekly and daily planner printable sheets to give you laser focus.

As an example of what this looks like, say I want to write 8-10 books this year. (Which I do.) This means that I need to write a book every month or so (if I’m working in a 10-month year, which is my plan).

I can then get super specific and think about how much time I need to give my cover designer, how much time I need to format, how much time I need to give my editor, and how much time to write the book itself. When I take that backwards, I can plan out just when I need to do what based on the tasks involved and how long each one takes.

If you want to increase your pageviews from 5k a month to 50k a month, you’ll have to look at what current traffic sources you have and how many posts you write per week. Then you have to create a strategy for creating content and for promotion that would scale up your pageviews that much. When you’re trying to grow, typically you can do two different things (or a combination).

How to Scale Up

  1. Deepen the content you already have – make what you have do more for you.
  2. Widen how much content you create – do a lot more of what you’re already doing

Chances are you’ll do a little of both, but it’s worth thinking about this to pick a focus. Would it help you to get more pageviews if you wrote five times a week? Or repurposed content and promoted the heck out of fewer posts and the ones you already have?

With books, I could spend more on AMS ads or Facebook ads or increase the price of my current books. Or I could write more books quickly and promote them to up my income through having lots of books for sale.

If you aren’t sure, try things to see! But once you see what’s working, double down on that! Look at the end goal and then ask yourself if all of your actions and investments of time and money move you toward your goal…or not. Cut what doesn’t. Do more of what does.

3 / Asking for Feedback

It’s always a good idea to ask people you respect and trust for feedback. This might be other people in your industry who are knowledgeable or it might be people who like that content. As in, you could ask other indie authors your questions about a book and you could also ask indie readers who are not authors. Both are helpful.

But when people give you feedback, you need to be willing to TAKE IT. Sometimes we don’t want to hear the truth or we are unwilling to give something a shot. We hold on tightly to what we love, even if it doesn’t work.

Don’t. If fifty people tell you that your book cover sucks, you should trust them. Get a new cover.

Feedback may not work in every step of your planning, but is an important part of finding what works. You need to get out of your own head and let other people share their experience and understanding.


Are you ready? Download your free daily planner printable and yearly content planner to get started!

 

Links Mentioned in the Episode

  • KDP Rocket – a keyword research tool to help you find the right terms to use in your books on Amazon.
  • Four Days of Christmas – the clean romance short story by my Pen Name, Emma St. Clair
  • Free Facebook Community
  • Weekly Quick Fix email from me every Friday

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Comments

  1. Lizzie Comrie says

    December 20, 2020 at 2:49 am

    Planning is my weak point. I too easily find excuses why I don’t follow a schedule and a plan. As a result, my productivity is incredibly low. I definitely want to rethink my approach to planning. And you’ve given me some interesting thoughts. Thank you!

    Reply

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An epic course for fiction authors with practical strategies to create a six-figure income.

Hey, I'm Kirsten!

(Rhymes with BEER-sten.) I am the author of Email Lists Made Easy for Writers and Bloggers and the host of the Create If Writing podcast. My goal is to help writers, bloggers, and creatives like YOU turn readers into raving fans and learn to make a living doing what you love...without being smarmy. Questions? kirsten at kirstenoliphant.com

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