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Telling a story through multiple viewpoints can be a great way to create a more expansive (and objective) look at your characters, world, plot, and/or theme. But with each additional viewpoint character you add to your story, the more room there is for mistakes. In this episode, I'm sharing the 5 most common multi POV mistakes writers make and how to avoid them in your draft.
Here’s a preview of what’s included:
[2:10] Mistake #1: Including too many POV characters without an intentional reason for including each one.
[6:10] Mistake #2: Not developing each POV character as if they were the protagonist of their own story—they lack their own goal, motivation, and conflict.
[9:01] Mistake #3: Not tying the characters' storylines together via a common plot problem, a central relationship, or binding their fates together.
[11:47] Mistake #4: Head hopping between different POV characters without making the switch clear to the reader.
[14:56] Mistake #5: Rehashing the same scene from different POVs without offering the reader new and potent information.
Links Mentioned In This Episode:
Click here to register for my FREE training: 3 Things You Need to Write Your Novel in 2025.
FREE QUIZ: Take this 30-second quiz to get a custom action plan that'll help you move from stuck writer to published author!
Support the show
👉 Looking for a transcript? If you’re listening on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, scroll down below the episode player until you see the transcript.
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Telling a story through multiple viewpoints can be a great way to create a more expansive (and objective) look at your characters, world, plot, and/or theme. But with each additional viewpoint character you add to your story, the more room there is for mistakes. In this episode, I'm sharing the 5 most common multi POV mistakes writers make and how to avoid them in your draft.
Here’s a preview of what’s included:
[2:10] Mistake #1: Including too many POV characters without an intentional reason for including each one.
[6:10] Mistake #2: Not developing each POV character as if they were the protagonist of their own story—they lack their own goal, motivation, and conflict.
[9:01] Mistake #3: Not tying the characters' storylines together via a common plot problem, a central relationship, or binding their fates together.
[11:47] Mistake #4: Head hopping between different POV characters without making the switch clear to the reader.
[14:56] Mistake #5: Rehashing the same scene from different POVs without offering the reader new and potent information.
Links Mentioned In This Episode:
Click here to register for my FREE training: 3 Things You Need to Write Your Novel in 2025.
FREE QUIZ: Take this 30-second quiz to get a custom action plan that'll help you move from stuck writer to published author!
Support the show
👉 Looking for a transcript? If you’re listening on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, scroll down below the episode player until you see the transcript.
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