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Alexa Donne

Alexa Donne

164,000 subscribers

👁 67,441 views

Fast Drafting Tips! | What is a Zero Draft?

Video Overview & Insights

What is a zero draft? How do writers use them and how can you get in on it?

First part of the video is defining zero drafts, and then fast drafting section is: 05:26 Why you might want to fast draft 07:33 Fast drafting tips

— @AlexaDonne

Related, how do you better dirty draft/fast draft? I'm sharing tips and tricks for drafting faster and pushing through to a zero or first draft quickly and efficiently.

00:00 What are zero drafts?

I just did a zero draft and it sucks, but now I kinda actually know what story I want to write

— @JonasBuechner

05:26 Why you might want to fast draft

07:33 Fast drafting tips

I write six days a week. I schedule my day so that I start writing at noon, but the hours before noon I warm up. It might be that I come up with good paragraphs before noon, but by officially starting at noon takes the pressure off.

— @victorialahertyadams9096

Add J. Elle's debut WINGS OF EBONY on Goodreads! https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/51050653-wings-of-ebony

Add THE IVIES, my YA thriller featuring competitive college admissions & murder, out in 2021, on Goodreads! https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/48896122-the-ivies

After watching your video i realised i have a zero draft. I did a 30k draft in a month. I just needed the basic story out, and i knew i would be revising it. But your term zero draft makes so much sense. I need to do more, i knew as i wrote it that i wanted more.
Basically my zero draft was my discovery writing faze, a half outline, now im going back and reivisng it but i am going to be adding at least 50k to it and adding discriptions and character and smoothing out my plots.
Tha js for introducing me to the term becauae i thought my first draft was greatly underwhelming 😊

— @jodyclaire6835

+OTHER PROJECTS+

Support NovelTea Show on Patreon! We're launching a podcast, with your support. https://www.patreon.com/novelteashow

A zero draft, if I'm understanding it right, feels like the midway point between an outline and a proper first draft. And I think I love that. I'm a plantser, which can be more trouble than its worth because a) while I definitely NEED an outline to act as guardrails and a guide for the work, I know that b) a lot of my stories are crafted via discovery writing and I'm also itching to go go go in terms of the actual writing and need to capture that momentum while I still have it (ADHD writer struggles, iykyk). I'm so grateful for this video, I'll definitely be giving the zero draft a shot. I can already picture it. Thanks again!

— @TheGhostofAbigailMills

+BUY MY BOOKS+

Add THE STARS WE STEAL (Jane Austen + The Bachelor, in space) on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/40950392-the-stars-we-steal

I called it Pre-draft in my head, and it was more just heavy/meaty plot outline ... Shit draft for the next level, which was the first one with actual prose...

— @the_medievalchick

Buy BRIGHTLY BURNING from Book Depository (ships worldwide!): https://www.bookdepository.com/Brightly-Burning-Alexa-Donne/9781785659423

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Imagine my shock when I thought I finished my first draft only to realize I left 5 chapters completely unfinished and realized I had done a zero draft.

— @marenomorgan

Get Brightly Burning on Audible.com! https://www.audible.com/pd/Brightly-Burning-Audiobook/B07H41CPVC?asin=B07H41CPVC&source_code=AUDOR2220912189OII

+LINKS+

Rewatching this video for the third time! ❤

— @lucas_girardi

Goodreads:

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/35065031-brightly-burning

I saw Dirty Drafting in the late 80s. Liked Jennifer Grey (and I guess Patrick Swayze was there too).

— @pastureexpectationsfarm6412

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/alexadonne

If you’re going to do a zero draft you might as well just write a super-outline with bullet points of every action and piece of dialogue in the scene. Without having to write elaborate descriptions and flowy sentences, you can just flesh the idea out in order (and fix plot holes/make the structure cohesive)

— @VinnyTheory

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I'll recommend Abbie Emmon's immersive writing sessions all day for getting your writing done.

— @SharkBagel

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I absolutely love your videos! Thank you for the hard work!!

— @blazedchaos

Website:

http://alexadonne.com/

I consider a Zero Draft as this nebulous entity existing somewhere between solid [Outline] versus completed [First Draft]. So for me the process is like this:

Idea Vomit
Loose Plot
Solid Outline
Zero Draft
First Draft

* Edited to add that my crutch words are "literally" and "totally" and "entirely" and HOLY WOW do I annoy myself LOLOL

— @andi-roo-pookins

Wattpad:

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Isn't this better known as a rough draft?

— @lindenstromberg1

+FILMING SPECS+

Camera: Canon t6i

Tysm for making this video

— @absolutelycitron1580

Mic: Rode VideoMic Go Light

Lighting: Limo Studio Soft Kit

Everything I have is in the zero draft stage! I realllllyyy don't want anyone to see it as it is. 😅

— @annatheawesome1

Editing Software: Pinnacle Studio 22

This was incredibly helpful as a first time novelist! I intend to write my zero draft almost as a screenplay: very stripped down and bare bones, then fill in all the details on my first draft. Thanks so much!

— @marcusmcmahon9650

More User Perspectives

@

Something I do when writing is if I can't think of what to write, I have two documents open, one for the draft and one for randomness, and if I can't think of what to write I type phrases or whatnot in the randomness document because the act of typing keeps my brain moving for some reason and I don't lose the desire to write as fast as if i just stopped altogether 😊❤ love your videos btw!

@KetchupCanvas
@

This is how I write in general, I think. I am trying to work toward working out an outline at least, but I write out of order, sometimes just putting a few lines for a scene, just to get everything out and down on paper. I never knew how to describe this to other people.

@smallworld_sims
@

Thank you so much Alexa! Your videos are such an inspiration.

@SanatRenovat
@

NO ONE reads my first drafts- let alone do I even mention what I’m working on. Yes, I’ve been doing zero drafts now for a long while; thought that was just part of it.

@DougerSR
@

I really like this concept. I've been trying to push through drafting by adding comments or putting stage directions in brackets where I don't feel like doing scene descriptions, which are really boring for me to write. Now I know there's a term for this.

@erichitchens6749
@

Im working on my first novel (technically I’ve fast drafted a different one or two but I’m much further in the process of the one I’m working on now) and i pumped out what i call the bare bones draft in 6 days. Its 40k words, only focuses on story with the minimum description needed to be interesting and understandable. Right now i am rewriting with my bare bones draft open to the side, following it like a guide and expanding on it as needed. The word count is doubling which is a relief and its taking a little longer (5k or so a day) but I’m finding it works well for me so far and the continuity is easier to maintain when i know where I’m going. (Im not fond of outlining lol)

@blenderbeetle
@

I call my zero drafts “my rough, ROUGH drafts” because it’s with pencil and paper. During this part of my writing process, I don’t care if there are spelling mistakes, there are notes where I need to add things so my reader connects to my main characters more, I forgot a bit of dialogue/description, or I’m still working on certain characters dynamics. Everything is still in flux for me during a Zero Draft.

However the most important thing is that it isn’t overwhelming or scary. I went to start my book on google docs, my anxiety was spiking because I was scared to mess up these characters that I love and have spent so long crafting. However, with a Zero Draft with paper and pencil I don’t have that fear because I feel like I can mess up and play around a bit, versus of it I were to do this on google docs where I feel like typing is a bit more permanent.

@WriterofChaos42
@

That anti tip made me go "OMG that's what's happening to me right now". I wasn't in a good place mentally/emotionally to work on it dur8ng this time, but I've been waiting for months and the person I thought I could rely on hasn't read a single word.

@sapphiresquire
@

I'm a unicorn! I wrote a very rough draft that I'm now going to call a zero draft because. Love that!
But I wrote a 70k book in a month minus the end because I knew so much would change I decided to come back to it.
I used a website that is called 4thewords and it is brilliant. I can fight monsters and get loot by writing fast enough. It makes my adhd brain go brrr. 🎉

@Kate_Fyria
@

I wrote a full manuscript in 2 weeks, thanks to you. When you go down to edit? What do you actually do? Do you just start cutting scenes and adding new ones, or what?

@vogueeesub3781
@

Nice to listen to and follow

@tulinaboruviri116
@

thanks

@stevenmnyema281
@

"If it does work for you, write the ending first."
Me as I just wrote the phrases of the final part of an act, and working backwards to make sure I get all my braindump in without is going all over the place.

@lrso5152
@

I am a plotter so I use beat sheets a lot. I put my main points into the sections and then expand and expand and expand until I have what I call a 'chunky outline'. Occasionally it will have dot points in a scene, but it is usually more fleshed out. I've been writing for many years now and am still figuring out 'my process'.

@michellesommerville8544
@

when i do stuff like this i just write as if i was telling someone the story in my own conversational speaking like 'and then the character was like OMG and the other one was like NO WAY and then THE BUILDING FALLS!!' shit like that. its stupid but at least its words.

@boots1622fan
@

been drafting over five weeks. this tip speaks to my blood. a zero draft. absolutely genius

@iosyntropy
@

Are you Sagittarius?. Yaeee

@growithjoy
@

I feel like my issue was I was trying to do a complete draft, by doing a draft 0 this might help me and make me feel a lot more confident as my draft so far has me feeling a bit silly. Thanks

@carolinenightbloom2778
@

I stopped writing for 2 days because i was stressed that it wasn´t perfect, i would stop to correct the repetitive words and i just felt like i couldnt write, and after watching this video i feel so relaxed and so inspired. Thank u!

@crisaguiar4285
@

I like using cheerleaders because mental health says I need to know its good while I write, BUT I'm trying to make sure I keep writing regardless of how long it takes them to get back to me! because at least if they enjoy it I'll already be done with one or two more chapters:D

@dawnvalentinex
@

I’ve been doing this for years without even knowing it was a thing. I have an entire method before I actually start drafting.

@sincityquinn
@

Are zero drafts supposed to end up much shorter in word count than a first+ draft? Could authors aiming for a certain word count for their novel (due to genre conventions) end up shooting themselves on the foot by trying to hit that in a zero draft that is actually supposed to be much slimmer than the real thing?

@yvesgomes
@

Coffee and snacks as a tool? Yes please.

@Sea_Flowerz
@

I call this my frankendraft lol same idea though. Thanks for the tips!

@lauraVSthepage
@

I can’t imagine writing only a thousand words in a sitting. I wouldn’t be able to do that. I need to get through a cohesive section of my story or I get lost. But I am a plotser. I have a sentence or two for each scene or chapter that I use and keep my themes in mind like she suggests. I don’t sit down to write without the intention of writing 3000+ words.

@jaydehall5117
@

Huh. I didn't know that was what I was doing.

@kimberlycowger9909
@

Great tips!

@nicolettacarlone8150
@

I'd been dwelling on the way that I draft. Then I watched a video that offhand mentioned Zero Drafting, and it turns out thats exactly what I do, and theres a word for it. lmao
I 100% just write to get the story on the page. I can dwell on a sentence for days, so I push myself until the story is over, then I can make everything prettier.
It does pose a problem when some of this is submitted for school. lmao

@arcadelinkauthor
@

I've always heard it referred to as a vomit draft. Maybe that's a screenwriting thing?

@jamesphillips92jp
@

One tip I've heard a lot is to draft at first in Comic Sans. Presumably because you expect something written in Comic Sans to be bad lol.

@amouramarie
@

I'm currently trying to finalise a first draft of a novel (then plan to leave it to breath and review again over Xmas etc) and I planned to try and do nano next month with a new novel idea... But haven't fleshed out the novel idea yet so trying to work out a realistic schedule as I've realised I can't work on two at the same time haha. Trying to keep myself grounded. Useful tips, thank you.

@Apinklady
@

Wow! Okay, I have been hitting that 80-90% wall and abandoning the work because I guess I was convinced that I had to write the entire first draft, do or die, and if I didn't the story wasn't going to work. This is a game-changer for me. Whole frame of reference for this just flipped. Thank you!

@ginnykemerer2708
@

Me trying to fast draft/zero draft:
My perfectionism: 👁️👄👁️

@dreamingofmagic