How to Write a Script Treatment That Will Get Producers’ Attention

A script treatment is your first opportunity to captivate a producer and sell your story idea. It’s a concise, compelling document that outlines your vision for a screenplay, presenting the core of your story without the overwhelming detail of a full script. A well-crafted treatment can distinguish between a producer greenlighting your project and passing it by. Here’s how to write a treatment that grabs attention and leaves them wanting more.


1. Understand What a Treatment Is

A treatment is a narrative document that details your story in prose form. It typically includes the title, logline, synopsis, and structure, giving producers a clear understanding of the plot, characters, and tone. Treatments are usually 2-10 pages, depending on the story’s complexity and the producer’s needs.


2. Nail Your Logline

The logline is the hook—one or two sentences summarizing your story’s essence. A strong logline should convey:

  • Who: The protagonist.
  • What: Their goal or the story’s central conflict.
  • Why: The stakes that make the journey compelling.

For example: “A down-on-her-luck musician must win a national songwriting competition to save her family home, but her biggest rival is also her ex-boyfriend.”

The logline sets the tone and piques interest immediately.


3. Focus on the Synopsis

The synopsis is the heart of your treatment. Here’s how to make it shine:

Start with a Strong Opening

Your first paragraph should establish the world of your story, introduce the protagonist, and hint at the central conflict. Hook the reader with a vivid description and immediate stakes.

Outline the Key Plot Points

Break down the story into three acts:

  • Act One: Set up the world, introduce the main characters, and establish the inciting incident.
  • Act Two: Delve into the protagonist’s journey, their challenges, and how the conflict escalates.
  • Act Three: Conclude with the story’s resolution, showcasing how the character grows or changes.

Use clear, engaging language and avoid unnecessary subplots. Keep the focus on the main storyline.

Highlight Emotional Beats

Producers are drawn to stories that resonate emotionally. Show the character’s struggles, triumphs, and transformations in a way that evokes empathy and investment.


4. Develop Your Characters

Producers need to connect with your characters just as much as your plot. Briefly describe your protagonist and critical supporting characters:

  • Who they are: Include a few defining traits.
  • What drives them: Their motivations, fears, and desires.
  • How they change: The arc they experience throughout the story.

Keep these descriptions concise but impactful.


5. Establish the Tone and Style

Your treatment should reflect the tone and style of your screenplay. If it’s a comedy, your prose should have a light, witty flair. For a thriller, use concise, suspenseful language. This helps producers envision the project and understand the creative direction.


6. Show, Don’t Tell

Your treatment should be a story in its own right. Avoid dry, procedural descriptions and instead use evocative, cinematic language. For example, instead of saying, “John is scared,” say, “John’s hands tremble as the door creaks open, his breath hitching in his throat.”


7. Include a Brief Section on Themes

Producers often want to know what your story is about beyond the plot. Include a short paragraph on the themes your screenplay explores—love, redemption, ambition, sacrifice—and why these themes are relevant to audiences today.


8. Keep It Professional and Polished

A treatment riddled with typos and formatting errors won’t impress anyone. Follow these guidelines:

  • Use a professional, easy-to-read font like Times New Roman or Arial.
  • Keep paragraphs short.
  • Proofread meticulously.

Consider having a trusted friend or colleague review your treatment before submission.


9. Customize for Your Audience

Different producers look for other things. Research the producer or production company you’re targeting. If they specialize in romantic comedies, tailor your treatment to emphasize your story’s romantic and comedic elements.


10. End with a Cliffhanger or a Memorable Image

The last thing you write should stick in the producer’s mind. Conclude your treatment with a powerful cliffhanger, a poignant emotional moment, or a striking visual image encapsulating the story.


Conclusion

Writing a script treatment is as much about storytelling as it is about selling your vision. By crafting a clear, engaging, and emotionally resonant document, you can ignite a producer’s interest and set your project on the path to production. Remember, your treatment is a promise—a glimpse into the cinematic journey only you can bring to life. Write boldly and make it impossible for producers to say no.

Covid-19 Social Distance Things to Do

Habakkuk 2:2 (ERV)

God Answers Habakkuk

2 The Lord answered me, “Write down what I show you. Write it clearly on a sign so that the message will be easy to read.

It’s incredible to me how much self-improvement information has its roots from the Bible. When reading Habakkuk 2:2, not only is God saying right down what you want. He is also speaking to create a Vision Board as well. Pretty cool!

life, hope, covid-19

As we all struggle to find our way of dealing with Covid-19. Now would be a great time as we all social distance to work on ourselves. Your mantra, “make me better.”

Here are some simple questions to get you started:

  1. If money, time, and resources were not the problem. What would I do with my life?
  2. Am I doing what I want to do in a career or what I must do? How could I change that?
  3. How could I bring a new me to all my relationships?
  4. Am I praying every day?
  5. Do I meditate every day?
  6. Am I taking care of my body, health?
  7. Am I living in faith?
  8. What kind-act could I reasonably do every day?
  9. Am I telling everyone in my life, “I love you” every day?
  10. Am I reading a book or doing something to educate myself daily?

Now is a great time to ponder our lives and begin to formulate a plan. Write down the answer to these questions or whatever comes to mind. In other words, turn off the TV stop binge-watching Game of Thrones and do something for you.

If you’re in a relationship, take time as a couple to do the same thing. What an excellent time to reconnect more deeply.

Instead of worrying about the world, take a moment to bring a better you back to the world. We all know that through the unlikely events we now face. At some point in time, we will move on. As Mathew McConaughey said in a video, “we’re all sitting at a red light that will soon turn green again.”

Remaining vigilant in this time, of course. However, while we sit around thinking of things-to-do. Let’s take some time for ourselves.

My challenge to you!

Go get a notebook, paper, whatever you can find. Begin to think of beautiful ways you can bring a better you back to the world. When we can all say, “thank God this is over.”

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Patience is a Virtue, argg!

At heart I think we’re all a bit spoiled to want instant gratification, we want it now! For me, this is a struggle. When we think about the plan for our life waiting for things to unfold as they should is a struggle for most of us, to accept.

Frustration could not be more pronounced in my life today. I want everything to change right now. Imposing my will only slow down what God can do for me. Do you find yourself battling your head? I do! Just about every day, it seems to hit me the frustration of waiting.

Finding a way to quiet the old noodle is a problem that I want to change NOW. Something I can do right now that is not imposing upon the universe is evolving negative parts of my life to positive outcomes. So I move this situation to prayer. Will, it honestly works faster maybe or maybe not?

patience, Jesus, Faith

What Patience Looks Like

That is the real challenge of faith. Just being able to relax and say okay God I’m with you, so let’s see where you’re taking me today. Bang! I don’t want to wait. I end up having to remember all the beautiful things that have happened to me in God’s good time.

Okay, so ego says you can do this, jump in, we got this. God will unveil to us our destiny if we choose to let him. Keeping busy helps me relax my head enough to slow down and relax, here are a few things I do:

  • Take a walk; I call it my prayer walk. Talking to God, sharing everything that I can.
  • Write as I am now. Do you have something like this you can do?
  • Do you have a home project that needs doing?
  • Work out, play with kids, do something busy.

If you keep your head busy, then the enemy can’t sneak in and muddle your brain. It’s also hard to find whether your thoughts are with God or being directed by you. Always ask in prayer for guidance. Happened to me the other day I started down the path and realized that I was going the wrong way.

Subsequently, I was able to let God know that my choice was not a good one, and moved back onto the right path. It was pretty cool to see that I can make a mistake. That God’s not going to punish me for mistakes that I might make. It’s like I’m a bowling ball that God is the bumpers that keep me going down the lane.

We all need the patience to allow the beauty of our lives to reveal itself in good time. When we force the issue that can delay our journey with unnecessary frustrations. I get it! It’s tough for most of us. I’m certainly not suggesting you sit on your backside and do nothing but don’t force an issue. When you meditate on this, you will gain clarity.

Slow down, pray about it and do what you should every day to keep life moving. When you think about a thing enough, you in your heart know what the right thing is and what is the wrong something. Do the right thing!

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