Summary and Show Notes\n\nEpisode\xa0#46:\xa0What's the Big Idea?\n\nWhether you start writing and discover what you want to say as the words spill out, or you outline and plot it all out in advance, either way, you probably have a big idea.\n\nWith the first method, you may not be able to articulate it up front, but I\u2019ll bet some spark of a driving thought sent you to the screen or the page. As you write, the big idea becomes clearer and clearer.\n\nIf you are the latter personality as a writer\u2014the outliner or plotter\u2014you probably couldn\u2019t organize your material if you didn\u2019t have that controlling idea.\n\nBack in high school and college, the big idea might have been called the controlling idea or the thesis. Remember the thesis? You were probably trained to express it as one sentence\u2014a statement that is, in fact, arguable. The thesis statement expresses the big idea of your project in that one sentence and then you set out to explore and support this statement.\n\nThat seems so...academic.\n\nAuthor and writing coach Jack Hart's approach is less academic and more practical. He explains:\nI always start every piece of writing I do by thinking about what is the core thing that I really want to say. And the first thing that I always write is theme\u2014the word theme, t-h-e-m-e, colon\u2014and then try to come up with a theme statement that is a simple subject-predicate-object sentence that is my core idea.\n\nIt probably will never appear in print, so there's no angst associated with it. It's not for public consumption. But it's right there on the top of my screen to guide me all through the writing process...it's a lot easier to write if you know where you're headed.\nIn his book A Writer's Coach, Hart offers an example of a theme statement:\nEX: [SUBJECT] [TRANSITIVE VERB] [OBJECT]\n[The myth of the perfect first line] [obscures] [the importance of focus and organization]\nSo that sentence\u2014The myth of the perfect first line obscures the importance of focus and organization\u2014appears at the top of his screen, to remind him where he's headed.\n\nNext time you set out to write, consider writing at the top of your screen your controlling idea, your theme statement, your thesis, or, simply, your big idea. Let that guide you. Because it's a lot easier to write, if you know where you're headed.\n\nClick on the podcast player above or use subscription options below to listen to the full episode.\n\n\nResource:\n\n \tEp 169: How to Be a Better Writer: Boost All 7 Traits of Great Writing\n \t"Getting into the Writing Game, With Words of Advice From a Coach"\xa0(interview with Jack Hart)\n\n* * *\nYou can subscribe with iTunes,\xa0where I'd love to have you subscribe, rate, and leave a review.\n\nThe podcast is also available\xa0Stitcher,\xa0and you should be able to search for and find "Ann Kroeker, Writing Coach" in any podcast player.\n\nFeatured image design by Ann Kroeker (photo via\xa0Pixabay, Creative Commons).