
Completing the first draft of a novel is an exhilarating moment, but as I’ve said before, that’s where the real work begins. The journey from a messy draft to a professional, published book is a marathon of meticulous checking, structural review, and technical preparation. It’s a multi-stage process that transforms the raw material of a story into a polished artefact ready for readers. This is the complete workflow of my post-draft process, right up to pressing ‘publish’ as an independent author.
The First Pass: Architect and Detective
Once the initial adrenaline wears off, I jump into the first major review, wearing two hats: that of an architect and a detective. The architect’s job is structural, looking for plot holes or inconsistencies. Does Character A know information in Chapter 10 that they shouldn’t have learned until Chapter 15? Have I maintained the political rules established for the story’s setting throughout the entire narrative?
The detective’s job is to focus on the fine print: an intense round of proofreading and continuity checks. This is where I ensure the spelling is correct, names are consistent, and details like eye colour or scene locations haven’t changed accidentally. This painstaking self-review is crucial for cleaning up the inevitable chaos of the initial creative burst, making sure the foundation of the story is solid before anyone else sees it.
The Fresh Eyes: Beta Reading and Feedback
With a clean-but-not-perfect draft ready, it’s time to bring in the outside world. I send the manuscript to my trusted beta readers (including my girlfriend and loyal followers), who provide invaluable feedback analysis. They aren’t looking for typos; they’re checking for pacing, character motivation, emotional resonance, and whether the climax actually pays off.
Managing this feedback requires discipline. I collect all the comments and look for patterns: if two or more readers point out the same confusing plot point or dull chapter, that section demands a rewrite. This process results in the final draft manuscript, which is the version I am confident is structurally sound and emotionally powerful, ready for the final, technical preparations.
Preparing for Publication: The Front and Back Matter
Before the manuscript can become a book, it needs the required front and back matter. These are the elements that give the novel a professional, finished structure. I start by finalising the Contents Page, ensuring all chapter titles and numbers are accurate. This is immediately followed by the Dedication and the Author’s Note, where I get a chance to directly speak to the reader and thank those who helped the project along.
The back matter is just as important. This includes the “Also By” page, which is a vital piece of marketing that directs readers to my other published works. Crucially, I also finalise the marketing visuals I’ve been designing, using Photoshop for detailed image work and Canva for creating clean, professional promotional graphics. All of these pages and visuals must be meticulously prepared for the final step.
Publishing Day: Submitting and Marketing
The very final stage is a rigorous final proofread and edit for any lingering errors, often using text-to-speech software to catch mistakes my eyes have missed. Once I’m completely satisfied, I prepare the file for publishing. I upload the single, complete file, including all front and back matter, to Draft2Digital (D2D). D2D handles the technical conversion and distribution, sending my book out to major retailers like Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, Kobo, and Barnes & Noble Nook.
As an independent author, once the book is published, the work shifts entirely to marketing and promotion. My involvement doesn’t end when the files go live; it’s just the start of the next phase. I rely on the graphics created in Photoshop and Canva for all my social media campaigns, driving awareness and sales. That final click of the publish button is the start of the book’s life in the world, and I’m there every step of the way to promote the story I’ve spent so long creating.

