Writers write.
That may seem just a tad obvious, but it’s true. We write. But—brace yourself—that’s not the whole story, at least not for writers who publish. Those folks wear many hats, so to speak. Some fit better than others, but we ignore them to our peril. Here’s a baker’s dozen of a writer’s many hats, mixed metaphor or not:
- The writing task requires editing skills, as even the most gifted among us must rewrite and edit his or her own work. Ad infinitum. Ad nauseum.
- Good writers are always learning, improving, adding to their skills and knowledge of the craft and the industry.
- Marketing professional. Writers who publish must also pay regular, even constant, attention to their audience, building a platform (speaking events, podcast, email newsletter, social media followers, etc.) that will augment a publisher’s marketing efforts.
- A book is only one delivery vehicle for a writer’s message, so speaking to audiences—especially for nonfiction authors—expands an author’s impact.
- Computer and software tech. These days writers must acquire, maintain, and update computers, programs, and other forms of supposedly helpful technology.
- Website and social-media manager. Every author needs a sharp website and a well-managed, strategic social-media presence, so either a writer must do that himself or herself or engage someone else to do it.
- Booking agent. See #2 and #3 above. Someone has to book those events, right?
- Travel agent. See #2 and #3 above. Someone has to get the writer to and from all those celebrity appearances, right?
- Purchasing agent. Someone has to order the supplies a writer uses, books a writer reads, coffee a writer consumes, and books a writer gives away (for reviews, etc.) or sells at events, right?
- Disbursement clerk. Someone has to pay for the books a writer gives away or sells at events and process the proceeds from all those sweet, sweet book sales, right?
- Warehouse manager. Someone has to find a place to store the books a writer gives away or sells at events, right?
- Shipping clerk. Someone has to package and ship the books a writer gives away or sells at events, right?
- Accountant and tax professional. Whether they produce income or debt, writers must track income and expenses and pay taxes accordingly.
I’m sure that’s a partial list. Readers of this blog may want to add roles I’ve overlooked in the comments. And also, perhaps, remind me why we put ourselves through all this.


The list is overwhelming, which is why so many people simply write something and upload it to KDP. The question is, do we want to do all the hard work to be the best we can be?
God deserves nothing less, right? My poor, tired brain fights the hard work, but it would be so unsatisfying not to do it.
The next time someone says, “I’ve always wanted to write a book.“ We should send them your list.😉
Bob, this reminds me of the work being a wife and mother. I am no longer the first, but I will always be the second.
Then there are all the people who would have to do all the things that wouldn’t get done while we are doing those things: I also have a regular job, a house to clean, shopping to do, meals to prepare, a dog to walk, bird feeders to fill, church, prayer group, Bible study group, and a new husband. Yesterday was our one-month anniversary. We briefly dated 60 years ago in college, both had wonderful 50+ year marriages to others, served the Lord in the US and overseas, had children and grandchildren then lost our spouses and after a few years and found each other again when he read something I had written. Merging into “our” home is very time-consuming! This is the first time today my hat has been “writer.”😁