The discipline required to write alongside a full-time job

Trying to write a book while working full-time can feel like living two lives and failing at both. One pays the bills, while the other keeps tapping you on the shoulder, whispering, “What about me?”

Writing alongside a full-time job isn’t about grand gestures or weekend retreats. It’s about showing up when you don’t feel like it. Choosing consistency over intensity. Progress over perfection. Words on the page over perfect prose in your head.

What publishers actually look for beyond “good writing”

It is true; having brilliant prose isn’t enough to get published. After all those hours perfecting your sentences and agonizing over word choices, this feels like a betrayal. But understanding what publishers really want will actually make you a stronger writer and give you a much better shot at getting that yes.

Why creative expression is not a luxury for children

Creative expression isn’t the cherry on top of a child’s education. It’s not a luxury reserved for families with extra time and money. It’s actually one of the most fundamental building blocks of healthy child development, right up there with learning to read and basic numeracy.

Why finishing drafts matters more than talent

The most naturally gifted writer in your writing group probably isn’t the one who’ll get published first. It’s the one who actually finishes their drafts.

Does talent matter? Yes it does. But talent without the ability to finish projects is like having a sports car with no engine. It might look impressive, but it’s not taking you anywhere.

How we are nurturing the next generation of storytellers

At Accomplish Press, we’ve made it our mission to give young people the tools to share their inner worlds and ideas with the rest of us. But nurturing the next generation of storytellers isn’t just about teaching kids to write pretty sentences (though that’s part of it). It’s about fostering creativity, building confidence, and showing young minds that their stories matter.

Why you’re not too old to start writing that book

Your years of living aren’t just background noise; they’re your raw material. Every job you’ve hated, every relationship that taught you something, every mistake that made you wiser, that’s all fodder for your writing. In non-fiction especially, deep knowledge of your subject matter is essential. You might not have possessed that expertise in your twenties or thirties. Now you do.

How daily creative writing practice can boost your child’s problem-solving skills

The brain science behind creative writing and problem-solving – When children engage in creative writing, they activate multiple areas of the brain simultaneously. They’re organizing thoughts, choosing precise words, structuring ideas with clarity, and managing several story elements at once: plot, characters, dialogue, and setting. This mental juggling act is exactly the kind of cognitive flexibility that translates directly into academic success.

Getting unstuck: everything aspiring authors need to succeed

The path from aspiring author to published author isn’t always smooth, but it’s absolutely possible. Every successful writer was once where you are now, staring at a blank page and wondering if they had what it takes.

Why professionals should turn their expertise into books

A book doesn’t just establish your expertise: it creates opportunities that didn’t exist before. Speaking engagements, consulting offers, media interviews, and partnership proposals all become significantly easier to secure when you have a published work to point to.

How to inspire your child to start writing stories

Whether your child is naturally drawn to books or seems more interested in video games and sports, every kid has stories inside them waiting to come out. As parents and carers, we have the power to unlock that creativity and help our children discover the joy of bringing their imaginations to life through words.

The magic happens when you start writing. Once your fingers are moving and words are appearing on the page, momentum builds. You remember that you actually can do this writing thing.