Photo Recap of Writer’s Digest Conference, 2012

I just finished an incredible couple of days mingling with writers at Writer’s Digest Conference, 2012.

As usual, the event takes place in New York City, home of tall buildings:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

The calm before the storm:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

A first look at the crowd, about 400 writers in attendance:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

The keynote by A.J. Jacobs, sharing his amusing experiences writing about his life:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

A common appearance: laptops, iPads, and mobile phones, all taking notes:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

We got a bit of snow on Saturday, but nothing like what we received during the 2011 conference:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

And there were moments of sunshine:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

My session at the event: “Becoming an Author Entrepreneur”
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Me speaking:
Dan Blank speaking at Writers Digest Conference 2012

George Davis covers Christina Katz session:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

James Scott Bell’s session on craft was literally standing room only:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Lunch:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Some authors were selling and signing their wares. I picked up Barry Eisler’s book, as well as Christina Katz’:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Christina Katz signing her book:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Barry Eisler gave the keynote on Saturday, a very honest look at not just his views on publishing, but the revenue streams that support it:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

The crowd around Barry after his talk:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

The lineup for the Pitch Slam, where authors get something like 3 minutes to pitch agents with their book idea:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Agents waiting for writers:

Writers Digest Conference 2012

The floodgates are unleashed:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

And the lineups begin:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

My wife and son joined me at the venue. He is not yet writing:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

A night on the town with friends from the publishing world. New York lights even make slush look romantic:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Writer’s Digests’ own Phil Sexton introduce a panel I was on called “Hardcore Author Marketing”
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Kate Travers answering a question from the audience:
Writers Digest Conference 2012

Me on the panel with Kate Travers:
Dan Blank at Writers Digest Conference 2012

Overall, a really great event. Thank you so much to the organizers, speakers, and everyone who attended!

Upcoming Speaking Events

In the next week, I am excited to be a part of three major events for writers and publishers:

  • Writer’s Digest Conference – I am presenting this session: “Becoming an Author Entrepreneur: The Business of Being a Writer and Building Your Platform” and on the “Hardcore Author Marketing – What to Do to Rise Above in the Digital Age” panel.
  • Digital Book World – I am running a 3-hour workshop titled “Measuring Content Strategy ROI: What, Why and How to Present It”
  • Columbia School of Journalism Social Media Weekend – I am participating as a “social media doctor,” and moderating a panel with employees from Mashable titled: “Mashable’s Secrets: What we can learn from one of the largest online news communities.”

Other upcoming speaking events include:

So excited for these events, and will likely speak at other events for publishers and writers.

Thanks!
-Dan

 

 

Join Me For The Social Media Weekend At Columbia School of Journalism, Jan 27-29

If you are near New York City at the end of January, and at all interested in social media, I highly recommend this event: the Social Media Weekend, organized by the Columbia School of Journalism.

I will be involved in the event in two ways:

  • Moderating this session: Mashable’s Secrets: What we can learn from one of the largest online news communities.
  • Serving as a “Social Media Doctor,” providing hands-on assistance with social media for anyone who attends.

And of course, I will be taking in the AMAZING speakers and attendees that show up. Here is a highlight of some of the speakers & sessions:

  • Fred Wilson (@fredwilson) investor in many of the biggest social networks, who writes an incredible blog at http://avc.com
  • An 1.5 hour session from the folks at Facebook.
  • Eric Carvin (@EricCarvin), the new social media editor of the Associated Press with Erica Anderson (@EricaAmerica), Twitter’s manager for news & journalism.
  • A session from Google, where they will be conducting live one of the first public “Hangout On Air” – a new type of Google Hangout.
  • The Mashable session

And there is SO MUCH MORE! There are so many other sessions with amazing folks who are leveraging social media. Check out the full schedule here.

Tickets are still available, but my feeling is they won’t be for much longer. They cost $50 for Friday, and $100 each for Saturday and Sunday. or, $200 for the weekend.

Full details here: https://socmediaweekend.wordpress.com/

Thanks so much to Columbia’s Sree Sreenivasan (@sree) for organizing such a cool event, and for allowing me to be a part of it. If you are curious about what last year’s Social Media Weekend was like, check out some great photos here.

-Dan

Announcing: Build Your Author Platform, Winter 2012

I am thrilled to announce the Winter 2012 edition of my 8-week online course for writers: BUILD YOUR AUTHOR PLATFORM. This is an intensive course that helps you establish your writing career and grow your audience.

 

What This Course Provides:

  • A cohesive strategy for creating your brand as an author – to build your author platform.
  • Specific tactics to grow your audience.
  • A framework to focus your efforts with clear goals and actionable steps to reach them.
  • How to best communicate what your work is about in a way that it aligns to the existing needs and desires of your audience.
  • Ways to find and engage a community of people who will become your fans.
  • How to create the online elements of your author platform, such as a website and blog.
  • Tips to best leverage and manage social media.

I have also lined up INCREDIBLE guest speakers, including:

Guest Speakers for Build Your Author Platform

 

Structure of the Course

The course is designed to balance flexibility and a personal connection:

  • 8 week online course, February 1 – March 27, 2012
  • A structured curriculum, with a new lecture delivered each week, taking you step by step through the process of how to develop your author platform.
  • Weekly homework assignments that I provide feedback on to ensure that you walk away from the course having built the core aspects of your platform.
  • A forum where you can ask questions, learn about what is and isn’t working for the other class members, and get past the biggest challenges you are facing.
  • Weekly Q&A conference calls where I answer your questions and the entire class can share insight into their experience.
  • An online classroom where you can access the material and learn about the other students, which can be accessed from anywhere with a web connection.

The course costs $799, and you can read full details here.

 

Free Webinar!

If you are even mildly interested, please consider joining me on Thursday January 26th at 1pm ET for a free webinar: Why You Need An Author Platform. Register for it here:

Register

If you have any questions, just let me know. Thanks!

-Dan

When To Hire a Professional to Help You Push Your Career Forward

When do you hire a professional to help you move your career forward? Sometimes this might be paying for a specific thing (such as a website); othertimes, it may be hiring expert advisors to help you move past a barrier and develop a strategy via training or consulting.

I have recently been addressing this topic for myself, as I have been outlining in the previous two blog posts of this series:

Today, I want to discuss the decision-making that goes into when and how to go about hiring a professional to assist you.

Deciding You Need Help

The hardest part of achieving a goal is starting. The second hardest part is to not stop, to keep going. Deciding that you need assistance is not a sign of weakness, it is often admission of reality: that you can’t do it all.  Sure, you can get by all by yourself, a jack of all trades; but sometimes having is help the difference between success and continuing to run on that hamster wheel.

Hiring someone can provide expertise that you simply don’t have. Yes, you could read a book. But that is not the same as years of real-world experience, truly executing, not just learning theory.

Hiring someone can also save you time. Likely, you are juggling many things with few resources. Putting someone on your team to tackle a specific task means it frees you up to do other things, and pushes you forward more quickly.

For me, I built We Grow Media for nearly two years before I made many investments in hiring others. I wanted to make sure it was stable in terms of cash flow, but I also wanted to really learn more about who I served and how I served them. In the beginning, you make assumptions. I wanted to be SURE that whatever I invested in was exactly the right thing to encourage further growth.

Who To Hire

There are so many people out there who offer professional services. You need to find someone you trust and who will get the job done. I tend to break this out into two parts:

    1. Ensuring it’s someone I connect with. So I get a recommendation from a friend, or have a phone chat with someone I am considering hiring first. Or maybe I follow them on social media to get a sense of their work style and personality.
    2. Don’t just assume someone can deliver the goods – where possible look for real proof that they can execute on what they promise. Maybe this is experiencing the results of their work or it could be social proof – talking to their past customers.

Personally, I like hiring those who are building a small business, people who I can partner with and help them move towards their goals just by doing business with them.

Do your research on their background. Reach out to others who have worked with them. Look for a long track record. Go with your gut too – those who feel right.

Scary Legal Agreements

When possible, get an agreement that clearly states parameters, timeframes, process, deliverables, fees, etc. I used to be scared of this stuff – there is something about signing your name to a contract that can make people uncomfortable. But I have found that it sets proper expectations and protects people on both sides. Making too many assumptions will lead to serious problems down the road. You don’t want two people’s memories differing about what was agreed upon. Put it in writing – that way you have a paper trail and proper expectations.

Did I hire a lawyer for most of this stuff? Nope! There are loads of free guidelines and agreements online. Use those as a starting point – but keep it simple. I don’t like agreements that are more than a single page. I have also spoken to friends who have done this stuff before, which gave me lots of wisdom from those I trust.

Don’t be afraid to negotiate agreements. READ THEM! Fred Wilson, a very successful venture capitalist, has written in the past that no clause is “standard” in a legal agreement. (I can’t find the link to his great story on this, sorry!) If something doesn’t feel right, address it. Don’t be afraid to have a clause removed or modified. It’s better to address issues up front to move past them, than to let the fear linger in the back of your mind, and threaten to affect the relationship down the road.

I look for long-term partnerships, even if an agreement only addresses the short term. The idea is to build a relationship and resources that grow over time.

Focus on Communication & Relationships, Not Just Stuff

A big focus for me is working with those who work WITH me, not just do something FOR me. There is a value in the working relationship, in having conversations, not just sending email.

Some people put barriers to connecting – to me this is a warning sign. Examples: there is a form you need to fill out before you chat; you can’t find an email address; they try to keep things ONLY on email, never on the phone. I don’t mean these are “red flags” in terms of them not doing great work, I mean in terms of whether they align to the method in which I like to work. You have to consider how you work best with others, and keep that primary in your mind as you consider who to hire on a professional basis. Communication is critical – if those channels aren’t open, you will receive less value regardless of the other person’s skillset.

Consider how you are building relationships for the long-term, how you can find new ways to work together, to provide resources, and to assist in other ways of helping each other succeed.

The people I have hired recently are those I would openly recommend to others. Not because I get some kind of affiliate commission (I don’t), but because I want their business to grow, and have others benefit from their expertise.

As I detailed in my website redesign process, I would gladly recommend Ben and KJ from Spruce Solutions if you need work done on your website. Likewise, if you live in the New Jersey area, and need a great photographer, consider reaching out to Meridith Bailin Hull. I really enjoyed working with her, and loved the photos she created.

What About the Money!?

If money weren’t an issue, of COURSE each of us would hire people all the time, and always only the BEST of the best. But money is an issue  – we have limited resources to work with, and want to ensure that every dime that we spend somehow repays us down the road with a quarter.

Pay people to help achieve goals that truly move your career forward. Maybe it’s a “thing,” such as a website. But maybe it isn’t – maybe it’s a service or expertise that helps you develop a strategy or move past a barrier. If you walk away from the experience much closer to achieving your career goals, then it is likely money well spent. So: define your goals clearly before you consider what you are hiring people for.

Work in phases when you can. It’s tempting to say that you will hire an agency to build your career from the ground up. They make promises, and send you a huge bill for the service. But… why not step through the process in phases. One thing at a time – one investment of your resources at a time. You learn things in the middle of a process that you never could have imagined at the outset.

Don’t always think that the most expensive option is always the best. Sometimes the most expensive option is only that: the most expensive, not the most EFFECTIVE.

Likewise, don’t always think that the biggest player – the most prominent name in a field is the person you need to hire. Some big names leverage their skills and experience across so many different projects that you get a mere sliver of what they are capable of, especially at the price you can afford. Sometimes hiring an upstart provides 100% of their resources – they NEED for you to succeed in order to further their own career.

When You Can’t Afford Something: Negotiate

When needed: negotiate. I am always SHOCKED that people are too sheepish to do this. That someone will send them an estimate for a project of $5,000 and even though they could afford $3,500, they end up just saying: “No, sorry, I can’t afford $5,000,” and walk away. Work with people to come to a price that works for each of you.

Measure the investment against how much it would cost you to do it yourself. Could you do it yourself? If so, how much time and resources would it take? I could have redesigned my own website. BUT – it would not have turned out nearly as nice at what Ben and KJ provided me, and it would have eaten up TONS of my time – time better spent on other projects that deliver more long-term value to my business.

Don’t Disregard the Emotional Benefit of Working With an Expert

Most people don’t pursue their dream in life. They will tell you it is because of some barrier such as time or money. But often it is fear – it is lonely to take a risk to build something that no one else expected of you. It’s too easy to just do what you have always done.

Hiring a professional can be the key thing that pushes you forward to attacking and achieving your dreams and goals. It builds momentum. It means that there is someone in the world 100% focused on making this happen for you. Imagine that. It’s HUGE. Most of us spend our days surrounded by people trying to ensure things don’t change. That you remain as you are, in your station. But when you hire someone, they wake up in the morning focused on helping you achieve.  Are you paying them? Sure – of course. It doesn’t come cheap. But then, if it’s the difference between you becoming what you want to be, and not, well, maybe it’s worth it.

Thanks!
-Dan