Collaborating on research: the value of multiple perspectives
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Collaborating on research: the value of multiple perspectives

Two or three researchers can do better than one. Here’s how to take advantage of that. For the purposes of this post, I’m talking about Web research that informs writing, whether that’s an article, a book, a white paper, or an internal document. Even if you’re doing actual primary research, such a survey or interviews,…

All self-help books are basically the same. Here’s how yours can be different.

All self-help books are basically the same. Here’s how yours can be different.

I’m grateful to Chris Taylor, who wrote a piece on Mashable that breaks down everything you learn from self-help books — and why they’re all the same. If you’re an author, you may find it depressing. Especially if your ideas are ordinary. The piece is called “Every self-help book ever, boiled down to 11 simple…

Parts, chapters, sections, and  subsections: how to organize your nonfiction book

Parts, chapters, sections, and subsections: how to organize your nonfiction book

You’ve written (or plan to write) 40,000 to 70,000 words of brilliant prose. Publishers — and readers — will bring a set of expectations regarding structure to the work. Publishers expect you to know how books are organized, but they rarely discuss those conventions explicitly. So let’s break down how nonfiction books are organized. Chapters…

The fundamental insights in Natalie Nixon’s book “The Creativity Leap”

The fundamental insights in Natalie Nixon’s book “The Creativity Leap”

Creativity emerges from the interplay of wonder and rigor. That is the central message of The Creativity Leap, a fantastic little book by Natalie Nixon. She taps into a background in cultural anthropology and fashion to create a book that struck me as somehow fundamental, connected to the core of what it means to be…