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The usual advice is...'don't do it!' But you'll ignore this if you're determined.
What comes next?
*Space
Have a special place to work.
*Time
Appoint seconds, minutes, hours for yourself and your writing.
*Write
Put words on paper every day - even if it's a letter to your auntie.
*Edit
Learn to edit. Unless you deliberately place a character in your story who spouts endlessly and bores the pants off everyone around him/her and is essential to your plot... then cut. Line up adjectives, adverbs and qualifiers for the chop. Go for strong verbs and the action!
*Rejection
Learn to use it. After you've crumpled that sixth or sixteenth 'sorry to disappoint you' letter in your writerly hand, have a nice hot cuppa, unpick the notepaper, read the letter objectively and see if there's some hidden helpful hint.
*Research
Enjoy it! Keep focussed notes, and date them. Above all, remember where you discovered that fascinating fact about bats/spacemen/cookery and note it down. Otherwise, you will never find it again. Trust me.
If you are aiming for women's magazines, take time to see what articles, advertisements, stories and style your target magazine already uses. This will tell you about your most important focus... your reader.
*Write what you'd like to know.
I think this is better advice than the more usual 'write what you know.' Both are useful hints, of course. But if we only wrote what we knew, there'd be no need for imagination. Even non-fiction writers need their imagination.