(Except more geeky) |
At the same
time, I was off in London and Dublin, visiting schools, not-winning awards, and
chatting to the other writers who were there.
I’ve done a few
events of this kind and, although I am a terminally shy person and practically
allergic to small talk, as my last blog post will attest, I actually find the
‘networking’ bit of it the highlight. I hadn’t actually thought of it as networking
in fact. And maybe that’s the secret.
Some primitive and
unconscious part of your brain (that’s probably still on the lookout for woolly
mammoths) knows instantly the
difference between someone introducing themselves to you because they’d like to
get to know you, and someone who’s ‘networking’.
If you’re not sure, they’re
the people who only talk to the most successful people in the room, the people
who talk constantly about themselves, the people who only talk about their
successes not their rejections, the people who treat you as the competition,
the people who treat you like a stepping stone, the people who are carrying a copy of their competitively priced book, the people who don’t ask you a
single question about yourself and the people who glaze over when you talk.
Yeah, them.
Don't be this person |
I have met writers like that but actually
not very many. Because, as I told my husband, writers don’t really do the polite-chit-chat,
awkward-networking-conversation thing. We bond. Deeply and instantly. And this is
due to the important and uniting fact that we have a common enemy: EVERYONE.
It’s true. When
writers get together, they can spend whole lunch times plus the bus ride home
just ranting. Publishers, reviewers,
schools, overhead projectors, celebrity authors, festivals, Twitter, families,
libraries, they’re ALL out to get us. And we live solitary lives surrounded by
muggles who don’t understand this, so when we get hold of another writer...
We love having someone who gets it, someone
we can have a good moan to about our first world problems. It’s not
‘networking’, it’s brilliant! And deeply comforting. I genuinely sympathise
with my fellow-persecuted, but it’s really nice to know you’re not the only
one.
I complain to
my husband that he has to go to these computer conferences in person instead of
doing everything by Skype. Travel is environmentally unfriendly and I have to cook
for myself and what is the point of a
computer company if they can’t do meetings by Skype?
But I have to admit,
networking has to be done in person. If all your ‘networking’ is done online
then you’re really only meeting the curated version of other writers, which is
the quickest way to despair. Meet them in person and suddenly you’re comparing
the real-life stuff. The sales figures, the rejections, the public speaking, the
difficult schools, the impossible second novel.
And actually, things
have gone amazingly smoothly for me so far and I really haven’t had much to
complain about (I just do it for fun), but it’s still nice
to share your experiences with people who know what you’re talking about.
My book is one year
old now and I wanted to mark the occasion with a one-time-only positive and upbeat
blog post that isn’t a massive whinge-fest. But apparently the closest I could
come was a post about how great it is to have a rant. Ah well.
Seriously, one of the best bits about this amazing year has been all the lovely writers I’ve met. So I highly recommend getting out there and doing some 'networking'. Go to literary events, go to classes, join crit groups, all that schizz. *Googles how to spell schizz*
Seriously, one of the best bits about this amazing year has been all the lovely writers I’ve met. So I highly recommend getting out there and doing some 'networking'. Go to literary events, go to classes, join crit groups, all that schizz. *Googles how to spell schizz*
And if that’s not a
possibility for you, then use social media in a way that won’t wreck your head.
Join the Facebook groups for the SCBWI, Scattered Authors Society, or whatever local groups you have (please do suggest any you know of) or
start your own. These are private groups where you can have a rant and get advice
from other writers while keeping your Twitter account all shiny and
publicity-friendly.
You need support like this. It’s not healthy
to work in a job where you can’t turn to a co-worker and say, ‘Hey, is it just
me or…?’ A Room of One’s Own is great, but I am firmly of the opinion that a
Staff Room of One’s Own is also a basic requirement.
Kelly McCaughrain is the author of the YA novel Flying Tips for Flightless Birds.
She blogs about Writing, Gardening and VW Campervanning at weewideworld.blogspot.co.uk
@KMcCaughrain
7 comments:
What a joy of a post - and all so true! Rant on, Kelly, We love it!
Where are you geographically, Kelly? Would love to share stuff with you, and would be happy to buy you a coffee/several coffees/cakes or even booze for the pleasure. And congrats on your book.
Great post, Kelly! When someone (a non-writer, obviously - actually, my sister-in-law!) said I was "networking" when I was meeting some fellow-writers for lunch, I felt really insulted! As you so rightly put it, in my mind "networking" involves only making "friends" with people you feel will be useful to you. Whereas writers are a lovely supportive bunch who enjoy a good rant.
Thanks Sue and Penny!
Enid, I'm in Belfast so geographically inaccessible for most of the cool stuff but if you're ever in the area give me a shout.
Thanks Lynne, writers are the best!
I love this! Fabulous post. I find those professional 'networkers' a little bit scary too! But, meeting lovely, lovely writers... well that's always such a treat.
Years ago I did some film work on a TV Series called Mayo. Cue... a freezing cold day in Warwickshire. A murder scene. Actors and crew at a petrol station/car wash. ( The machine rollers had somehow closed in on the victim ,and washed him to death..., or something like that. ). To keep warm, several of us waited in the office. A couple of feet away, actor Jessica Oyelowo,on the phone, networked furiously on behalf of her husband, future Oscar winner David. Comments about whether this or that person was worth meeting... "Are they important ..?."..
Never seen anything like it.
Actually, I used to be a computer programmer. A freelancer.
I never did any networking, at least not in the way you mention in your post. Indeed, the thought of actually spending free time to talk computerese would never have occurred to me. I started off on freelance life by phoning an agent. In a computer world of shyster agents and chancers I found a good one. A decent bloke. I did have an advantage in that I had rock solid expertise. And a willingness to travel.
He and I, over about 11 or 12 years, must have spent only about 7 or 8 hours in each other's company, inclusive of 2 long lunches. But 60 to 65% of my work came from him. I'd receive a phone call, a brief description.., and.. "Are you interested..?
The rest of my work came from people I met along the work way, who, later, remembered me. A phone call, a drink in a pub. A chat.., "What do you think..?".
Offices here, offices there, Portakabin in a civil engineering company with a grand view of the dumper trucks, and JCB's, in the yard. Crouched over a computer in a shed beside a jungle, re-writng software for an ammunition dump. Posh clothes for the State Secretariat in Brunei. A name-your-price offer, with someone who knew of me, but of whom I knew nothing, over a drink in a Sheraton, to write software for Saddam Hussein's Mukhābarāt ( intelligence services ) in Iraq. ( Declined that one ).
Weeks later, back in the UK, working for the NHS.
An eclectic mini career.
Wow, Andrew, you've been around! And probably met lots of interesting people without having to network at all.
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