You’ve done it. You’ve typed “The End” on your zero or rough draft. Maybe it’s a messy, chaotic pile of ideas. Maybe it only kind of resembles a novel. Either way, congratulations are in order — because finishing a draft of any kind is a huge milestone.
But now what?
That post-draft moment can be overwhelming. You know the story isn’t done, but diving right into edits without a game plan can feel like trying to rebuild a house while you’re still living in it. This is where scene mapping becomes your best friend — and your secret weapon.
What Happens After You Have a Zero or Rough Draft?
A zero draft (sometimes called a discovery draft) is your story in its rawest, most instinctual form. It’s often full of plot holes, dropped threads, inconsistent characters, and tangled pacing — and that’s perfectly okay. Its job was to exist, not to be perfect.
Once that first version is out of your head and onto the page, you’re ready for a different kind of work: structural clarity. Before you can revise well, you need to understand what’s already there. Scene mapping lets you do exactly that.
Author Note: My Scene Mapping Journey
I outlined Ghostwalker: Katje Storm Chronicles, Book 1 (Paranormal Women’s Fiction–Midlife) as a 150-word short form on Medium, which grew into 82 serialized posts. That became my first zero draft.
But the story still wasn’t clear.
So I started over, reshaping those skeletal scenes into something fuller—still under 10,000 words. In truth, I wrote two zero drafts: one long and exploratory, one lean and focused.
Reading it through, I saw logic gaps, underdeveloped scenes, characters that needed to go, and others begging for the spotlight. Worldbuilding emerged naturally as I told the story to myself from start to finish.
To get clarity, I built a story bible. It gave me focus, themes, and even a clearer ending.
Then I broke each scene into cards using Google Docs. It’s my way of crafting a fully fleshed first draft—without shutting down the pantser inside me.
The template below is what I use to track pacing, purpose, and momentum.
Why Scene Mapping Works
Think of scene mapping as laying all the puzzle pieces of your draft out on the table so you can see what’s missing, duplicated, or doesn’t quite fit. It’s not about line edits or prose yet — it’s about understanding the architecture of your story.
Mapping your scenes helps you:
Visualize the flow of the narrative
Track your protagonist’s emotional or character arc
Identify scenes that serve no clear purpose (or serve the same purpose as five others)
Spot missing beats in pacing, cause and effect, or rising tension
In other words, it turns the chaos into something you can work with.
How to Map Your Scenes Step by Step
There’s no one right way to do this. The best method is the one you’ll actually use. Here are three approaches that work well for different types of writers and thinkers:
Spreadsheet Method
Great for analytical minds who like structured overviews. Create a spreadsheet with columns such as:
Scene Number
POV (if multiple characters)
Location
Word Count
One-sentence Summary
Purpose (plot, character, theme, etc.)
Conflict or Tension
Outcome or Decision
This method is especially helpful if you're tracking arcs, timelines, or chapter balance across multiple drafts.
Index Card / Sticky Note Method
Perfect for visual and tactile learners. Write each scene on a separate card or sticky note. Lay them out on a table, wall, or corkboard.
Move scenes around to experiment with flow
Identify where tension rises or falls
Visually cluster related scenes (e.g., by subplot, POV, or theme)
Remove or combine redundant beats
It’s flexible, intuitive, and great for spotting patterns and gaps.
Kanban Board Method
Ideal for writers who like visual project management tools (like Trello or physical whiteboards). This method lets you track the status of each scene as you revise.
Set up columns such as:
To Review
Needs Rewrite
Needs Expansion
Cut / Combine
Good as Is
Then write each scene on a digital card (in tools like Trello, Notion, or Scrivener’s corkboard view) or a sticky note and move it across the board as you work. You can color-code scenes by POV, plotline, or emotional arc for extra clarity.
This approach turns your messy draft into a living revision workflow. Plus, it feels incredibly satisfying to drag a scene into “Good as Is.”
What to Look for Once You’ve Mapped It
Now that you’ve got a bird’s-eye view, here’s what to check:
Scene Purpose: Does each scene advance the plot, deepen a character, or raise the stakes?
Flow and Momentum: Does each scene build on the last? Or does the story stall?
Character Arcs: Can you see change happening? Do key turning points show up?
Redundancy: Are you repeating emotional beats or exposition?
Missing Scenes: Are there gaps in logic, setup, or payoff?
Scene mapping helps you diagnose before you rewrite. It's a story triage.
From Mapping to Meaningful Rewrite
Mapping doesn’t mean you have to scrap your draft. In fact, it often shows you that less needs to change than you feared — just more strategically. You’ll rewrite with intention, not overwhelm.
It also makes external feedback easier to use. Instead of vague critiques like “The middle is slow,” you’ll know which specific scenes are dragging — and exactly how they fit in the bigger picture.
In Closing...
Scene mapping isn’t just a tool — it’s a lens. It helps you see the story you’ve already told, and gives you the confidence to shape it into the one you meant to tell.
You already did the brave thing by writing the draft. Now let this be the strategic thing that turns it into something powerful.
P.S. I’ve created a free Scene Mapping Template you can use to jump-start this process. Download it [here].
Your Turn: Do you map your scenes? What’s your favorite method — spreadsheets, sticky notes, something else? I’d love to hear your approach in the comments!
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ABOUT
Juneta WRITES SPECULATIVE FICTION that is Evocative, Mythic, a little Magical, Adventurous, and somewhat Humorous! Come Explore Her Worlds.
She loves writing about Grumpy Old Gods, Space Opera, Paranormal Women’s Fiction & Sci-Fi Fantasy adventure, mysteries, and romance with all the complexity of human nature mixed in, whether human or non-human, mage, mystic or pilot. Stories that involve the mythology born of living and the shadows that make us all heroes, anti-heroes, villains, and poets. Learn More.
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