How to Stop Juggling Ten Writing Tools and Actually Finish Your Book
- Shana Vernon
- Jun 8
- 2 min read

Raise your hand if your writing process looks like this:
An app like Notion or Plottr for plotting
Another app for worldbuilding
A spreadsheet for your timeline
A random notebook for character notes
Google Docs or Scrivener for drafting
Grammarly for editing
Vellum or Atticus for formatting
And maybe a text thread with yourself for good measure (Okay, this one might just be me.)
Same.
It’s like writing a book has turned into project management—and not the fun kind.
Here’s the truth: writing shouldn’t feel like juggling ten tools just to get one chapter done.
Why Tool Overload Is Killing Your Flow
Every time you have to switch apps, dig through tabs, or scroll back five pages to check what color your villain’s eyes are, you break your flow.
You lose momentum.
You forget what you were about to write.
And worst of all?
You end up spending more time organizing your story than actually writing it.
What Writers Really Want
In survey after survey, authors told us the same thing:
“I just want one tool that keeps everything in one place. Plotting, writing, editing, formatting—everything.”
That’s it. That’s the dream.
Because when all your stuff lives together—your characters, your worldbuilding, your beats, your chapters—you spend less time hunting for info and more time actually telling your story.
Meet Your All-in-One Writing Tool
If you’re nodding along, you’re not alone.
Thousands of writers are ditching the tool-hopping chaos and moving toward platforms that actually support their brains and their process.
It doesn't matter if you’re a planner, a pantser, or a little bit of both (hi, fellow plantsers), having everything in one calm, beautifully organized space can be game-changing.
Opening one tab and seeing your whole book at a glance
Jumping between drafting and plotting without breaking stride
Never again wondering where you saved that random character backstory
That’s the power of Skriptzi's all-in-one writing tool.
Your Book Deserves Better
You don’t need ten tools to write one book. You need one that understands how writers actually work—and helps you finish the thing.
Because you’ve got stories to tell. Let’s stop wasting time juggling and start writing.
PS: What tools are you currently juggling in your process? What’s the one thing you wish they all did better? Let’s swap chaos stories.👇
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