Why I'm writing my introduction last (and why it's fixing my essays) 💭

Gavrr

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Mar 25, 2026
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I used to stare at the introduction for hours, trying to craft the perfect opening before I'd written anything else. I'd stress over the hook, the context, the thesis. Then I'd write the rest of the essay, and my argument would shift. My beautiful introduction no longer matched what I actually wrote.

A grad student told me: “Write the introduction last. You can't introduce something you haven't fully figured out yet.” I tried it. It felt wrong at first. How could I start without a roadmap?

But when I finally wrote the intro, it was easy. I already knew my argument. I knew what evidence I used. I knew what my conclusion said. I just had to summarize it.

Now my process is:
  • Working thesis – a placeholder sentence.
  • Body paragraphs – write them first, using evidence.
  • Conclusion – summarize what I argued.
  • Introduction – write it last, now that I know what I'm introducing.
My essays are more coherent now. The introduction and conclusion actually match. And I'm not staring at a blank page for hours.

For other writers, do you write your intro first or last? I'm curious if anyone else has made this switch. 🎯
 
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The working thesis as a placeholder? That's the real hack here. I think people hear "write the intro last" and panic because they think they need nothing to start. But you still need a direction. A rough thesis. Something to aim at. Then you adjust as you go.

That's what I do too. Start with a garbage thesis. Write the body. See what I actually argued. Then rewrite the thesis and intro to match.

It's not "no plan." It's flexible plan. Big difference. Thanks for naming that distinction.
 
The working thesis as a placeholder? That's the real hack here. I think people hear "write the intro last" and panic because they think they need nothing to start. But you still need a direction. A rough thesis. Something to aim at. Then you adjust as you go.

That's what I do too. Start with a garbage thesis. Write the body. See what I actually argued. Then rewrite the thesis and intro to match.

It's not "no plan." It's flexible plan. Big difference. Thanks for naming that distinction.
 
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