Book Update 3/15/2010

And now the latest update on the Fan To Pro Book:

  • It's done and available at lulu.com.
  • It'll be available internationally through other stores in about 5-7 weeks.

 . . . and that's about it.  I'll be bringing copies to Chibi-Con for sale if anyone wants to buy an autographed copy.

Now what did I learn?

  • There really is a point to stop editing.  There are five errors I found in the latest copy of the book, one an arguable use of plurals, another an appendix subheading sizing, and three where I violated some of my preferred header punctuation rules.  I looked at this, realized that I'll be editing this thing forever, and just pushed the button to publish it.
  • In editing for style, I recommend going in "sweeps" – pick a style issue and spend time troubleshooting it throughout the book.  If it's headers sizes or formatting questions, etc. pick a subject and if possible do it in one go.  It's easier to focus on one thing.
  • In formatting and setting up a book know your word processor and take advantage of every time saving tool especially styles (for the non-word processing, styles lets you assign a style to parts of a book then with one go change that style and thus alter every part of the document using that style).  By using styles in Microsoft Word I was able to do all sorts of experiments with formatting fast.
  • Always assume a second edition – I did.  I even have a to-edit version ready to go and will probably do a second edition early 2011 to correct any errors and add any new information.
  • Lulu.com is overall easy to use – it reminds me of LinkedIn.com with some seriously impressive formatting and publishing tools.  It's practical, actually simple in many cases, and is focused on doing whats important over flash in most cases.  In a few cases some of the workflow seemed clunky and the design philosophies didn't seem consistent, but that's a minor argument – the company, to put it simply, built an entire web-based publishing system, and when you see it work, it's impressive.
  • Covers are still a pain.
  • Again as I harp on the fear that self-publishing will produce a wave of lousy stuff (well more lousy than some of the stuff out there) is an illusion.  It takes a lot of effort and commitment and knowledge to get a book out there.  That's a filter for both quality AND dedication right there.
  • I need to start buying more small press books.  There's all sorts of neat stuff out there.

So there you go.  Now will I continue this update series?  Probably intermittently, ramping it up for the next books.

Books?  You got it.  Stay tuned . . .

– Steven Savage

Weekly Challenge: Find Your Precision

When it comes to our careers, balance is appropriate.  Too much time looking for a job and you burn out, not enough and you don't find one.  You can take classes constantly, and neglect the rest of your life and your social obligations.

There's a sweet spot of effort in our careers that we have to find, where you can be incredibly precise, yet appropriate.  You can step on the Tiger's Tail and not have it bite.

  1. Pick your last job search.
  2. Now, list all the times you overdid it and the things you overdid – did you work too long, change your resume too much, be too aggressive?
  3. Now, list all the things in that search you could have done better, been more aggressive on, done more on.
  4. For each of the lists in #2 and #3, ask what you should have done to have the right level of precision.  Bit of hint – #3 is harder to figure out.

– Steven Savage

Convention Idea: Make Something!

The roundup of convention ideas is here.

So you want to do a professional event.  There's the speakers, the advice, the stories . . . but what about adding more oomph?  Some extra?

How about doing a pro-level project at the con?

Imagine a project that lasts the entire duration of the convention that involves people leveraging their professional skills to produce a complete work.  People would cooperate, work with pros (who would oversee it), and in the end have a result – and learn a lot from it.

Consider such possibilities as:

  1. A team-drawn and team-written manga or set of manga.
  2. Pro-level costumes made from scratch?
  3. A round-robin serious writing project?
  4. Creating a fan website from scratch?
  5. Actually creating a browser-based game?

Everyone participating gets some advantages:

  1. They make new friends.
  2. They have a piece of work to show off in a job search.
  3. They learn teamwork.
  4. They get to stretch their skills.

So how about it?  Want to jazz up your con's profan events?  How having your attendees sign on to make something . . .

– Steven Savage