There is a very, very fine line between plotters and pantsers (i.e. those who write "by the seat of their pants").* At some point, everyone has to just buckle down and make up a bunch of crap. The primary difference between these two extremes of writers is that when pantsers wing it they end up with a draft, while plotters end up with an outline.
Both of them still have a lot of work to do.
* For the record, I hate the term pantser. It reminds me of Jr. High and a desire to wear too-tight belts for "security reasons." But since I'm not a panster, and since I've never heard a better a term for them, that's the one we're rolling with.
Anyway, this is where my method starts to look like pantsing (gah, seriously, there's GOT to be a better term). I chose
the idea, figured out
the major plot points, fleshed it out (and
worked through all the sticking points), now I'm ready to congeal my notes and outlines into Something I Can Write From.
For me, that's a chapter outline, but don't worry, the chapters come last.
I do a lot of bouncing between documents, but always revolving around my outline. Sometimes I'll jump out and write a quick doc (I think better typing random lists in a text or Word doc, but that's just me) on some aspect of world history or character backstory, or maybe a single character arc, action scene, or point of motivation. Once I've figured it out, I'll jump back into my outline, add the necessary details, and move on.
For example, in my current WIP I had to come up with
a whole game to revolve a third of the plot around. I wrote a doc outlining every scene dealing with the main romance (or what passes for romance, anyway; there were only 7 mini-scenes). I brainstormed two or three docs to figure out the tactics of the climactic siege (I may have gone overboard there, it was kinda fun).
I also cheat. Technically a plotter is supposed to plan the whole thing ahead of time before they write, right? Well, I have a Word doc for those scenes I just have to get out of my head right now. I don't go into great detail with any of them. Often it reads like a crappy screenplay -- a little stage direction and a lot of dialog. Heck, sometimes the "scene" is one clever line (or what I think is clever at the time).
But writing it in its own document helps shut up my inner editor and frees me to use it or not when the time comes.
So you see, even the staunchest plotter can end up leaving gaps, writing things out of order, and making stuff up as I go. But I don't think it matters
how you put together a novel, so long as you end up with a novel at the end.
What about you? Where are you on the spectrum of plotter to pantser? And what the heck can we call it other than pantsing? Please!