Scott Jangro |
Scott Jangro is a co-founder of Shareist. He's an entrepreneur, an old school affiliate marketer, web developer, a dad, a cyclist, and golfer.
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David Sparks:
Scrivener was designed for writing fiction. But it turns out to be a great tool for business writing, too.
I've been flailing around with different writing tools recently, iAwriter, Byword, NValt, etc. etc. etc.
They all offer distraction free writing, plus markdown support, of which I am a big fan.
But they don't help me with my root problem, which is keeping track of all the stuff I'm writing. In fact, I'm becoming quite a bit more prolific thanks to these tools, which makes the whole problem worse. All this stuff I'm writing is getting dropped all over my digital floor and desktop. After a few months of some fairly heavy brainstorming and writing, I am ashamed to say, I don't even know what I've written or where to find it.
I've always known about Scrivener and its pricetag has kept me from adding it to the growing list of apps that I've tried for writing.
But after reading this post from David Sparks, I think this might be worth a shot.