Review in Practice: Million Dollar Productivity

Book Cover: Hands flying across a keyboard so fast they leave trails.
Text: Million Dollar Productivity, #1 Bestselling Author Kevin J. Anderson, Get the Most Out of Every Minute You Have to Write, The Million Dollar Writing Series

I have to tell you, Kevin J. Anderson is the most prolific writer I know, but there are others. I met many of these incredibly productive authors through my studies under Kevin J. Anderson. I think they all hang out together. And honestly, when I first began to see what KJA does, putting out at least five novels a year, plus co-authoring books and screenplays adapted from his books, run WordFire Press, orchestrate his SuperStars Seminars every February and his classes at Western Colorado State University, and go to numerous Cons and writing seminars throughout each year, all I could say was, “Wow!”

Million Dollar Productivity, by Kevin J. Anderson is the book where he reveals all the tips and tricks which make him into the most prolific writer I know. So, when I received a digital copy of Million Dollar Productivity, for the 9th Stretch goal met in KJA’s Dragon Business Kickstarter Campaign last January, I had to give it a read. (I had already read the companion reward book for this stretch goal, On Being a Dictator. You can read my review here.) As I had suspected, I already knew and practiced many of the tips given in this book. After all, I studied under the author. But there were others that I either didn’t know about or hadn’t tried.

One of the ones I think have been most helpful to me was to set goals and stick to them. In class, we were required to create business plans and set goals for the coming year. I began to employ this strategy in the fall of 2021, a year in which I had published two anthologies, one poetry and one short fiction, and nothing else. When I am listening to people in the business who are telling me that you need to have a large inventory of IP (intellectual propeties), be prolific enough to put out several books each year, and have multiple streams of income to make a sustainable living from your writing, and looking at the couple of books per year that I was putting out, I knew I was going to have to do better, and I planned accordingly. I found that making a plan and setting some goals which keeps me moving in a forward progression.

As a result, in 2022, I published five anthologies: Ask the Authors 2022, Poetry Treasures 2: Relationships, Once Upon an Ever After, Refracted Reflections, and Visions. Anthologies probably aren’t as helpful as novels would be, but it was a start. In 2023, I will publish two anthologies, Poetry Treasures 3: Passions and Midnight Roost, plus two books of my own, Delilah and The Rock Star & the Outlaw, and of course, my debut poetry collection, Small Wonders. And I’ve already begun to plan out the books I intend to publish in the coming year. You have to admit, four to five books per year is an improvement on the one or two per year that I was producing previously, so that one suggestion, which is offered in this book, helped to make me a more prolific publisher.

Working on different projects at the same time is another tip which I have found helpful, although this is something that I have done for several years, but it is included in Million Dollar Productivity, and it is an effective strategy for getting a lot accomplished. I’m not talking about multi-tasking, but more like time-sharing – you work on your latest manuscript for a time, but when you seem to tire of it, you set it down and go work on the editing for the anthology you’re working on, and when you get tired of that, answer a few emails and then back to writing, for instance. Of course, KJA suggests an approach that is a little less haphazard, but it’s good advice none-the-less. He also points out other modes of writing, which can be used in various places.

Letting the first draft be bad and edit, goes hand-in-hand with knowing the difference between writing and editing, tips which most writers have heard many times in their writing careers, but that doesn’t make them any less true. These are both tips that I will have to work at incorporating into my writer’s toolbox. I am notorious for editing as I go, which takes extra time, but turns out a top quality draft with little editing required.

This book is filled with lots of writing tips and advice for busy authors who want to increase their productivity. These are the strategies that worked for the author, Kevin J. Anderson, and they could work for me or you. Whether you’re a full time author or one who writes on the side while working at some other job for your livlihood, this book will have something helpful for you. It’s one of those books I will have to go back and visit time and again.

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Head shot: Kaye Lynne Booth

For Kaye Lynne Booth, writing is a passion. Kaye Lynne is an author with published short fiction and poetry, both online and in print, including her short story collection, Last Call and Other Short Fiction; and her paranormal mystery novella, Hidden Secrets; and book 1 of her Women in the West adventure series, Delilah. Kaye holds a dual M.F.A. degree in Creative Writing with emphasis in genre fiction and screenwriting, and an M.A. in publishing. Kaye Lynne is the founder of WordCrafter Quality Writing & Author Services and WordCrafter Press. She also maintains an authors’ blog and website, Writing to be Read, where she publishes content of interest in the literary world.

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10 Comments on “Review in Practice: Million Dollar Productivity”

  1. C.E.Robinson's avatar C.E.Robinson says:

    Kaye Lynne, what an impressive education and prolific writing history. Thanks for the details of Anderson’s book. It might be a help for me. I’m a slow writer. Debut historical fiction book took me three years with a professional researchers help. The sequel in progress is going slow with more research in the late 1960s including events and music. I do edit as I finish a scene. And I have a professional team; editor, proofreader, formatter and cover designer. And I finished a year long copyediting certificate program in 2010. For me, it’s the marketing phase that is the most difficult. A unknown author, historical fiction not a standout. Any tips on that? 📚🎶 Christine

    Liked by 1 person

    • Hi Christine,

      I have a review for Delilah right now that claims all the historical settings slowed the story down and weren’t needed. While it is true that those scenes may slow the story a bit, I felt they added to the western feel and felt they were absolutely needed. A lot of research went into those scenes. I believe some people just don’t get historical fiction. I marketed Delilah as western, historical and women’s fiction because of my strong female protagonist, and used related keywords. I am a member in several western fiction groups, and I made sure to promote Delilah in them. But honestly, I sold more books via my Kickstarter campaign than I have through distributors, although I think they may be catching up now.

      KJA’s book has some great tips. I think it will be helpful to you. I know it was for me. 🙂 Thanks for the comment.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Christine Elizabeth Robinson's avatar Christine Elizabeth Robinson says:

        Kaye Lynne, thank you for your comment. It was helpful. Yes, some people don’t get historical fiction! I worked the history into scenes with dialogue. It was about my famous German born grandfather’s life. Real events and imaginative ones. And there was antisemitism to deal with. I’m going to check out your book and KJA’s. And your kickstarter campaign. I need to pay attention to the book keywords. I’ll add women’s fiction to historical. I’d like to sell more books with the sequel. 😊 Christine

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Wow, sounds like a book every writer needs to read. Thanks for the wonderful review.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. HI Kaye, thanks for this interesting review. I feel I should be working on my novel but I just have no inspiration for it or any of my other half finished works. I am focusing on short stories, children’s books and poetry in the meantime. I think my recently discovered enthusiasm for drawing has a lot to do with my lack of motivation to embark on large writing projects.

    Liked by 1 person


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