See Them as People, Not Functions

Do

Let secondary characters act from their own moral compass, even when it complicates the protagonist’s path.

Give them flaws that matter—a nurse who avoids confrontation might miss a crucial symptom; a brother’s loyalty might border on delusion.

Avoid

Reducing them to one-note traits (“the skeptic,” “the comic relief”).

Using dialogue to summarize their purpose instead of revealing personality through conflict or contradiction.

From My Work

Let Relationships Define Depth

Do

Show relationships shifting under stress—how a side character argues, forgives, or walks away says more than backstory ever could.

Avoid

Keeping their emotional lives frozen once the protagonist’s arc moves forward. The best supporting cast evolves, even if they drift out of frame.

From My Work

Give Them Stakes of Their Own

Do

Allow supporting characters to make irreversible choices. Let them fail. Let them change their minds.

Avoid

Treating their presence as utilitarian. Readers can tell when a scene partner exists only to deliver exposition or set up a punchline.

From My Work

Final Thoughts

Extras