Forget all that complicated advice and memorize these two writing rules.
By: Grant P. Ferguson
Last Updated: March 3, 2025
Rule #1: There are no rules, only writing principles.
Rule #2: Don’t forget Rule #1.
Discover why all those writing rules don’t count.
The First of the Writing Rules
If you read enough bestselling novels, you’ll discover many of the top writers often break what’s taught as writing rules.
You may recall how learning those ironclad ways to write never felt natural. You wanted to know how to tell your story, not how to diagram and punctuate sentences. Later, as you tried to finish your first draft, you found that striving for perfect content kept you from letting the story unfold.
Fortunately, you don’t have to get everything right on the frontend because you can edit out anything that keeps readers from engaging with the story.
The Second of the Writing Rules
After a skin-peeling critique of your work in progress, too often writers give up on free-writing and focus on perfection.
That’s an enormous problem. The definition of perfection states there’s no room for improvement. Have you ever had anything in your life to stay perfect for more than a moment of time? I haven’t, and trying again but getting the same results produced nothing but frustration.
In contrast, the definition of excellence suggests you can make incremental improvements, and each uptick in progress is an opportunity to celebrate those small but important writing victories.
More Writing Principles, Not Rules
Embedded in the Trellis Method’s 12 workbooks are dozens of writing principles.
As I wrote this post, I recalled how those writing principles are spread over the 12 steps in the Trellis Method, and that makes it difficult to find them quickly when you need a reminder.
☞ Would you like those writing principles in one book?
☞ Would that book help you remember Rule #1?
Please let me know if you think it’s worthwhile to create a brief reference book of writing principles.
For example:
Writing Principle: If you want to write and sell novels, overcome the tyranny of the OR by replacing it with AND to find the intersection of your creativity and the marketplace.
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What is the chief writing principle that helped you move forward on your storytelling journey?


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