
TL;DR
- Plottr is more than outlining software. Authors use it to plan books, build series bibles, organize edits, track timelines, and even manage marketing calendars.
- Visual organization helps writers see problems they can’t always feel clearly. Sagging middles, pacing gaps, dropped characters, and tangled timelines are easier to spot when the story is laid out visually.
- The series bible may be Plottr’s most valuable non-plotting feature. Long-running series, connected worlds, and overlapping timelines all create continuity challenges that readers absolutely notice.
- Plottr works for plotters, pantsers, and everyone in between. You don’t need to outline every scene before drafting to benefit from seeing your story structure.
- Author tools work best when they reduce mental load. Whether you’re planning a book or preparing an ARC campaign, organization helps protect the creative energy you need to finish and launch well.
The problem with keeping an entire book in your head
Most authors begin with a dangerous amount of optimism.
We think we’ll remember the side character’s eye color. We’ll remember whether the dog was male or female. We’ll remember if book one ended in March or April. We’ll remember that one throwaway character from thirty books ago who was never supposed to matter again.
And then a reader emails.
That is often the moment authors discover that “I’ll remember” is not a system.
Celeste Barclay, Booksprout’s Head of Marketing, chatted with Plottr founder Cameron Sutter, along with Plottr’s Troy Benton. They described the tool as “software to help [authors] outline and organize their books visually.” That simple description gets to the heart of what many writers need most: a way to see the moving parts of a story before, during, and after drafting.
For indie authors especially, the challenge is rarely just writing one book. It’s writing the next book, and the next one, and the one after that while managing launches, newsletters, ARCs, edits, promotions, reader expectations, and sometimes multiple series at once.
At a certain point, the issue isn’t whether an author is talented enough to tell the story.
The issue is whether their brain has enough open tabs left to hold all of it.
“It’s hard to keep that much stuff in your head, even though you think you can.”
— Plottr
That’s where visual planning becomes less about “plotting” and more about sustainability.
Like many author tools, Plottr was born from frustration.
Cameron was writing his own books while working as a software engineer. He had already published a couple of books and was working on another when he became tired of rewriting, reorganizing, and keeping notes scattered across different places. He described seeing story threads in his mind as parallel lines that eventually wove together, but he couldn’t find a good way to actually visualize that process.
He tried spreadsheets. He tried Scrivener. He tried Google Docs.
None of them gave him the view he wanted: a way to see what was happening in each chapter, for each character, across the story.
So he built it.
That origin story matters because Plottr was not created from a theoretical idea of how authors “should” work. It came from a working writer trying to solve a real craft problem: how do you track the emotional, structural, and logistical pieces of a book without losing the thread?
And as the tool grew, so did its uses.
What started as a way to outline visually became a flexible workspace authors could adapt to their own process. Some use it before drafting. Some use it during edits. Some use it after a draft is complete to reverse-engineer what they wrote. Some use it for series continuity. Some use it for marketing.
That flexibility is one of the reasons the tool has remained useful across writing styles.
Plotters, pantsers, and the messy middle in between
One of the more interesting things about Plottr is that it is named like a tool for plotters, but it is not only useful for authors who outline every chapter before they draft.
In fact, many authors fall somewhere between plotting and pantsing. They may start with a loose idea, a few tentpole scenes, a couple of character arcs, or a general sense of where the story needs to go. Then the book changes as they write it because, well, books are rude like that.
A tool like Plottr can support that kind of process because the author does not have to know everything upfront.
For a pantser, Plottr can become a record of what already happened. For a plotter, it can be a roadmap. For a “plantser,” it can be both: enough structure to prevent chaos, but not so much that the story feels trapped.
That matters because author workflows evolve.
A writer who used to outline every beat may become more intuitive over time. A lifelong pantser may reach book four in a series and realize the vibes-only method is no longer cutting it. A rapid-release author may need tighter systems because the schedule no longer allows for endless rereads and continuity checks.
The tool’s value is not in forcing every writer into one method. It is in making the work visible.
For many authors, especially those writing series, the series bible is where Plottr becomes less of a nice-to-have and more of a sanity saver.
Long-running series create a specific kind of problem. Each individual book may be manageable, but the world compounds. Characters age. Family trees expand. Locations repeat. Timelines overlap. Secondary characters become main characters. Toss-away details become canon because readers remember them, even when the author does not.
In the interview, Plottr’s team pointed to the series bible as one of the most popular ways authors use the software beyond basic plotting. They noted that authors often return to book two or book three years later and realize they no longer remember what happened.
That is not a failure. That is the natural result of building a large creative world.
But readers experience a series as one connected promise. They expect continuity. They notice when a character’s eye color changes. They notice when the family dog mysteriously changes gender from book to book. They notice when a character appears important in chapter four and then vanishes forever.
Sometimes readers are forgiving.
Sometimes they email.
“My readers email me all the time and ask, why did you change their eye color?”
— Plottr
A series bible gives authors a place to store the details that become harder to track over time: ages, relationships, physical descriptions, locations, backstory, timelines, and character connections. For authors writing connected worlds, sprawling romance families, fantasy kingdoms, mystery towns, or multi-series universes, that kind of organization is not just convenient. It protects the reader’s experience.
Plottr is not only useful before the draft.
For many authors, it may be even more useful after the draft exists.
Editing requires a different kind of brain than drafting. Drafting often happens close to the page, sentence by sentence, scene by scene. Editing requires distance. You have to see the shape of the book. You have to notice pacing, repetition, dropped threads, missing motivation, underdeveloped conflict, and scenes that are doing the same job twice.
That is difficult when the book lives only in manuscript form.
A 90,000-word draft does not make it easy to see the whole structure at a glance. A visual outline can.
Plottr’s team talked about how seeing a story visually can help writers identify sagging middles, pacing problems, and structural issues. Templates can also help authors compare their story shape to a familiar framework, but the bigger benefit is often perspective.
When you can move pieces around visually, you can ask better revision questions:
- Does this subplot disappear for too long?
- Is the romantic tension escalating or circling?
- Did the antagonist vanish for half the book?
- Are the emotional beats too close together?
- Does the midpoint actually change the direction of the story?
- Does the ending have enough setup?
For authors who get stuck around the messy middle, visual planning can also reduce the panic of “what happens next?” Sometimes the answer is already in the draft. The author simply needs to step back far enough to see it.
“Seeing your story visually helps so much with that. Seeing the sagging middle, seeing pacing problems, and using a template can go a long way.”
— Plottr
Templates are helpful, but guidance matters too
Plottr includes templates for different story structures, and that library has grown over time. But one of the smartest observations from the conversation was that more templates are not automatically better.
Too many options can create a new problem: overwhelm.
An author may open a tool looking for clarity and instead find a list of unfamiliar frameworks. Hero’s Journey. Heroine’s Journey. Snowflake Method. Freytag’s Pyramid. Save the Cat. Romance beats. Mystery structures. Thriller structures.
For authors with a strong craft background, those templates may feel like useful starting points. For others, they may feel like one more thing they are supposed to understand before they can write.
Plottr’s team acknowledged that the next step is not simply adding more options, but helping authors get value from the options that already exist. Templates are only useful when writers understand how to adapt them to their own workflow, genre, and story.
That distinction is important.
A template should not make an author feel like they are failing because their story does not fit perfectly. It should help them ask better questions. It should reveal possibilities. It should offer structure without flattening the author’s voice or instincts.
The best writing tools do not replace craft judgment.
They support it.
Author organization does not stop at the manuscript
One of the most practical takeaways from the conversation is that authors are using Plottr for more than books.
Some use it as a marketing planner. They map newsletter swaps, promotions, BookFunnel promos, campaign dates, launch tasks, or content calendars. One example discussed in the transcript was an author using Plottr almost exclusively as a newsletter project management tool, with blocks for swaps, promos, and message bullet points. Plottr’s team also noted that many authors use it to lay out marketing campaigns and track what is happening when.
That makes sense because indie publishing is not one project.
It is a sequence of overlapping projects.
You are drafting one book, editing another, promoting a third, collecting reviews on a fourth, and trying to remember whether you already emailed your ARC team about the bonus epilogue. Meanwhile, your newsletter needs content, your launch calendar needs dates, and your backlist needs attention.
This is also where Plottr and Booksprout complement each other naturally.
Plottr helps authors organize the front end of the creative and planning process: the book, the series, the timeline, the world, the launch ideas.
Booksprout helps authors organize the review and reader side of the process: ARC campaigns, review copies, reader communication, campaign follow-up, and review collection.
Both tools solve a similar author problem from different sides: they reduce the number of details an author has to manually hold in their head.
And that matters because the more mental space you spend chasing logistics, the less energy you have for the story.
The pressure to write faster makes systems more important
Self-publishing has changed dramatically over the last decade. Authors are navigating faster release expectations, long series, connected worlds, algorithmic pressure, Kindle Unlimited strategies, direct sales, AI conversations, and readers who can binge an entire backlist faster than many writers can produce the next book.
Cameron noted that algorithmic pressure has increased the feeling that authors need to write more books faster. He also pointed to AI as one of the major shifts affecting author conversations in recent years.
That pressure can make organization feel like one more task.
But for many authors, systems are what make a faster or more consistent publishing schedule possible without sacrificing quality.
A series bible prevents continuity mistakes.
A visual outline speeds up revision.
A marketing planner reduces launch chaos.
A clear ARC process helps authors get reviews without scrambling at the last minute.
A campaign calendar makes it easier to line up newsletter mentions, reader communication, and release-week promotion.
The goal is not to turn creativity into factory work. The goal is to keep the business side from eating the creative side alive.
New ideas need somewhere to land
One newer Plottr development mentioned in the conversation is Idea Threads, a mobile app designed to help authors capture ideas quickly. The concept is simple: when an idea appears while you are in line, out running errands, or away from your desk, you can speak it, type it, or take a picture, then organize it later into Plottr as a character, note, scene, or another story element.
That may sound small, but every author knows how quickly ideas evaporate.
You think you’ll remember the perfect line of dialogue.
You will not.
You think the plot fix is so obvious you couldn’t possibly forget it.
You absolutely can.
Capturing ideas quickly is part of protecting the creative process. Not every idea will become useful, but giving ideas somewhere to land means fewer scraps of paper, fewer mystery notes in your phone, and fewer moments of “I know I had the solution to this scene while I was buying toothpaste.”
The real goal: less isolation, more momentum
Near the end of the conversation, the Plottr team made a point that applies well beyond software.
Writing is hard.
Not fake hard. Not “I stared out a window and drank coffee” hard. Actually hard.
It is creative, emotional, technical, lonely, and often full of invisible decisions no one sees unless they go wrong. Authors are building worlds, managing reader expectations, learning business strategy, handling launches, and trying to improve their craft at the same time.
That is why tools help, but community matters too.
Plottr’s team encouraged authors to give themselves grace, find other writers, and use tools that genuinely support their process. That advice may sound simple, but it is the kind of reminder authors often need when they are stuck in the middle of a book, buried under revisions, or convinced everyone else has a cleaner system.
They probably do not.
They may just have better containers for the chaos.
A better system helps you keep writing
At its best, Plottr is not about forcing an author to become someone else.
It is not there to tell pantsers they are wrong, plotters they are too rigid, or overwhelmed authors that they should have organized everything three books ago.
It is there to help writers see.
See the story.
See the series.
See the timeline.
See the gaps.
See the launch plan.
See the pieces that need to move before readers do.
For indie authors, that kind of visibility can be the difference between a draft that stalls and a draft that gets finished. It can be the difference between a series that slowly collapses under its own continuity and one that keeps readers happily turning pages. It can be the difference between launching in a panic and launching with a plan.
And whether you are building a forty-book connected world, revising your first novel, trying to survive the messy middle, or preparing your next ARC campaign, one truth keeps showing up:
The more clearly you can see the work, the easier it becomes to keep moving.
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