Pages

Monday, May 9, 2011

The Power of Attending Writing Conferences

Attending a literary or writing conference can have a profound impact on your writing, your career, your self esteem, and your over all personal spiritual health.

That's why I'm such a fan of attending them as often as time and money allow.

As I mentioned in a previous post, I attended the 11th LDS Storymakers Conferences this past weekend in Salt Lake City. I mentioned in that post that it was one of my favorite all time conferences. Here's why.

1. The Power of Networking
A. I'll post more extensively about this tomorrow in a post about rethinking my e-Publishing plan. But suffice it to say that through this conference I connected with 3 literary agents, several editors, and several New York Times bestselling author friends that I see mostly at conferences. Their advice changed the landscape for me.

B. I felt rejuvenated talking with so many writing friends. The more conferences I attend, especially locally, the better friendships I develop. Now I consider some of them good friends, and chatting with them always boosts my energy and ego.

But it does more than that, and this is one reason conferences are awesome: I felt really connected with the writing world. I felt part of that bigger community that we are all trying to break into professionally. And I surprised myself at how excited I was at how successful so many other people were doing. I honestly want them to succeed. Actually, that means you, too, my writing friends and associates.

You'd think I'd come away from this feeling jealous because extremely talented authors like Tyler Whitesides are making great strides. Just the opposite happened. I made a good friend in Tyler, and I'm really excited for him. And the better he does, the more excited I'll be. That's a great feeling to have.

C. I also learned about how to network with each other in a way that will increase our global reach together. The interesting thing about blogging and social networking is that it works even better when we promote each other. I have been spending too much time spinning my wheels alone when I now realize I can be so much more effective working with others and building each other.


D. I pitched to several agents, and one requested a full manuscript review and the other a 30-page partial review. Folks, that is HUGE! I am so excited! And I made such connections by being at the most laid back environment I've ever experienced at a conference. Way better than World Fantasy last fall. People here, even the national agents, were truly interested in chatting with us and offering advice and hearing what we had to say.

2. Learning
I already mentioned this in 'C' above, but I learned a great deal at this conference about marketing. In fact, I mostly attended marketing classes on the power of effective Twitter usage (I'm converted, finally, even though I still don't know how), blogging, and a horde of other things. Excellent.

3. Teaching
I taught two classes at this conference: writing for the Church magazines, and how to write back cover copy, or the secret to pitches and queries. Both classes went very well. In fact, I already have plans for improving the back cover copy class and make it more interactive, enhanced, and more my own baby. For this presentation I relied heavily on others' ideas. Now they are becoming more and more my own.

4. Love of the Game
Well, that about says it all. The writing game is extraordinary, and this conference brought that to full fruition. I talked to a number of people about their personal plans, learned much, much more about e-Pubbing and legacy publishing, and even presented at the Whitney Awards. Great times, great times.

So, more later about individual authors and about my new plans.

7 comments:

Rachelle Christensen said...

It was great to visit with you and thanks again for letting me use your laptop for my presentation--you saved my class! Good luck with your submissions. I'm really excited to see Lizzie come to life. :)

Anonymous said...

It was great seeing you there!

Joshua J. Perkey said...

Thanks, guys! It was great seeing both of you as well. And thanks for following my blog. Now, if I could only make following others work, too. Here's the problem: when I click on the "Follow this blog" link and go through the process, I then appear on their blog as a follower. But I don't see it anywhere on my blog, nor do I receive their feed. What might be the problem? I'm using my blogger alias--could that be the problem? I created this blog using a Yahoo email account. I'm wondering if the posts are going somewhere else in the ether.

LaRene Gaunt said...

Love your blog. This is inspiring, educational, and unifying!

Deirdra A. Eden said...

LOVE IT!!! It was great seeing you there, Josh!

Chantele Sedgwick said...

Look on your dashboard and you'll see which people you are following. The feed is constantly moving. It shows the most recent blog posts on there. :) Hope that helps! I saw you a few times at the conference but never got to say hello! I'm glad you had a great time! :)

Joshua J. Perkey said...

Thanks, Deirdra and LaRene. And thanks, Chantele, for the advice. I've been watching the dashboard, but it doesn't seem to populate those new blogs I follow. I'll keep trying!

And yes, the conference was awesome! Hope you enjoyed it, too.