So you've finished a draft (or you’re standing over one wondering what the hell to do with it). First off—well done. Getting to this point is no small thing.
Now comes the next mountain: revision. And here’s the twist a lot of writing advice misses:
How you revise depends a lot on how you wrote the thing in the first place.
If your process is discovery-driven, your revision will look nothing like someone who planned every scene in advance. That’s not wrong—it’s just you.
Let’s break it down by writer type and explore how your creative instincts shape your best next steps.
You had a plan. Probably a spreadsheet. Maybe even a scene-by-scene breakdown. Now that you’ve drafted, you’re in familiar territory: evaluating what stayed on track and what veered off-course.
You wrote your way in. Followed vibes. Let the story show up one step at a time. Now you’re staring at a mess that’s full of feeling but maybe… lacking form.
You probably plotted the first few acts, then started winging it. Or you outlined the character arcs but pantsed the plot. Your draft is half-planned, half-discovered—and now revision is about reconciling those sides.
You didn’t write this in order. Maybe you wrote the ending first. Maybe you wrote one intense conversation and a setting description and then filled in the rest when the mood struck. Now you’ve got pieces—but how do they become a book?
You wrote fast. You wrote raw. You might not remember what happened in chapter 4. But the clay’s on the table now—and sculpting is where your genius shows up.
No matter what kind of writer you are, revision isn’t cleanup—it’s creation. You’re shaping, refining, and discovering what your story really wants to say.
The key is to revise in a way that matches how you work—not how someone else told you it should look.
And if you’re not sure which path you’re on?
👉 Take the Writer Type Quiz
Find your creative rhythm—and build your revision process around it.
One draft at a time, one vibe at a time. The plot abides.
– The Plot Dud
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Copyright 2025, Troy "the Plot Dude" Lambert, All Rights Reserved
“Plot Nihilists believe in nothing. Don’t be like them.”