Job Basics: Awareness

woman phone communication information

So, let’s put this bluntly. If you want to get your career going you better bloody well be informed. I’ve mentioned this many times before, and I’m going to mention it again, but it comes down to this:

Follow the news and read about the world and your career. Keep doing it until you die. And possibly after.

One of the major differences I see in people and their careers is between those that know what’s going on and those who don’t – those who stay aware are much more successful than those who don’t. If you want to do good in your career you need to know what’s up in the world and how it affects you.

I guarantee you right now, if you’re not actively staying aware of events that affect your career you’ll have a much harder time of it.

Oh and you should be following the news anyway, but still. With that said,, on with the career-side of staying informed and what you need to do.

Follow The News

Follow the news, know what’s going on in the world because it’s going to affect you. There is no excuse to be ignorant.

I always recommend people keep a newsfeed (you can always try NewsBlur if you want, it has free and paid versions) or find a few sites to go to each day to keep aware of news. By the way, be careful of making them blog-only unless the blogs in question refer to reliable sources that aren’t other blogs. The echo chamber can seem awful large and you can mistake it for the world.

You want to do this as the world is a big, changing place. If you don’t follow what’s going on you can get surprised quite nastily. I write this a few days after an incident in the news (and my followup reading) made me realize some of my further-out career plans may not work in some locations.

And no, as funny as they are, the Daily Show and Stephen Colbert don’t count.  The antidote to a problem isn’t the same as good health.

If nothing else, give www.memeorandum.com a shot. It aggregates news sites and blogs, so some content is biased (that’s the intent) but at least shows what people are talking about – even if they’re being stupid.

Next Step

  • Find at least one news site and follow it each day. Ask what the news you see means for your career (and your life)

Follow Industry News

If you want to work in a certain industry, find out what’s going on there. Not news about an industry but news of what’s up in the industry.

For instance, a book review site doesn’t give you much industry news relevant to your career – a site on writers and publishers does.

You want to have an insight into whats going on on the industry of choice so you know what’s up. You want to look for opportunities, commentary, changes, issues, conflicts. It keeps you informed so you can understand what’s going on – and be part of it.

Every industry is its own world, some exceedingly so. You need to really be part of it, and that means staying informed.

You can probably find some sites easy just by searching – or already know them. Always helps to ask other people for advice.

Next Step

  • Find one news site for your preferred industry and follow it each day for one week. Ask if you see any news that affects your career.

Follow Economic News

Sorry, my position hasn’t changed on this – follow economic news, at least news that’s relevant to you. Understand what’s going on with economies – and if it doesn’t make sense, try a bit of reading until you do.

Now if you’re not an econogeek like me, it may take awhile to wade into it. I recommend asking for useful sites from people, but I’ve found the economic news at Quartz is quite helpful – it touches on specific issues in in-depth ways.  Frankly, they can make usually boring news exciting.

Next Step

  • Find an economic news site that doesn’t bore you and (you got it) follow it for one week and ask how the news is relevant to you.

Act On The News

The reason you do all of this is to stay informed and aware- but you need to use that awareness to choose when to act:

  • A company is hiring, send a resume.
  • A city is in trouble, rethinking your move there (or perhaps taht means your skills are needed).
  • There’s a political conflict locking up a state legislature, find out when the next election is as it may affect your economy.

The news is there, all this information, put it into action – though sometime the action is not doing something.  Choosing to “stay put” is an action,a choice of not doing something more.

Doing this is not only a good idea, but you can make it a habit. Several times in the past I saw the writing on the wall, or saw a new opportunity, and jumped on it. You need to be ready to do that too.

Next Step

  • When you follow the news as noted above, ask what actions you should take based on the news you see.

 

We’ve covered staying aware – time for us to move on to the tools of your job search.

 

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, publishes books on career and culture at http://www.informotron.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.

The Latest Geek Catalog Update 8/15/2014

Crowd Of People
Here’s our latest update to help you take your geek citizenship to the next level.

As always you can find the master list sorted by geek interest or community interest.

Comics

  • Community
    • The Hero Initiative – Being in comics can be a tough road, and this organization helps support comics creators in need.

Computing

  • Female Geeks
    • Anita Borg Institute – A historic institute to assist women in technical careers, fostering innovation by ensuring a broad range of people in technology. Provides a variety of services and ways to get involved.
  • History
    • International Internet Preservation Consortium – An international organization focusing on improving tools, standards, and practices of web archiving and preserving information. Reports, events, and memberships are available.
    • Internet Memory Foundation – A non-profit focusing on preserving the internet for heritage and cultural purposes, and develops a lot of technologies and projects. There’s opportunities to get involved.
  • Open Source
    • Rasperry Pi Foundation – It’s not just easy-to-access technology, but the Raspberry Pi foundation also promotes a variety of community and educational activities.

Fans-Firefly

STEM

  • Students
    • FIRST – For Inspiration and Recognition of Science And Technology – An international organization focusing on inspiring young people in science and technology. There’s programs, events, and plenty of ways to volunteer and get involved.
    • The Science Olympiad – An organization promoting science events – the science equivalent of track meats. With a huge amount of tournaments and resources, there’s alwys a way to get involved.

Writing

  • Literacy
    • Bring Me A Book – Serving underserved communities with portable libraries, teaching read-aloud skills, and more.

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, publishes books on career and culture at http://www.informotron.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.

Way With Worlds: Heroes and Villains – The Deadly Hero

Death Reaper

So we’e talking heroes and villains. Usually at some point we’re talking conflict and outright violence in this case, even if its not physical. However when it gets physical, I want to address a rather poorly handled archetype which I call The Deadly Hero

The Deadly Hero is that character who is a killing machine who leaves a wake of bodies, but is also considered the hero (if only by the author and fans). Now admittedly if said bodies are soulless killer robots and such, probably no harm no foul, but usually they’re living creatures and sentients. Oddly, in much writing it doesn’t seem to matter.

You know the story. It’s an FPS game come to life as enormous amounts of corpses pile up and the character is still considered the hero, still perhaps considers themselves heroic, still acts the part. After a while however something seems wrong, seems off . . .

It is. The Deadly Hero kills worldbuilding as well as legions of people.

The Crux of The Conflict

So what’s the problem? The good guy kicks backside and wins? That’s how it works? So why does this seem . . . off in our worlds?

Beyond gore, gratuitous action, and so on I think the Deadly Hero who acts without repercussion or affect grates on our senses of continuity. After a while the bodycount is like a videogame score, and there’s just no fallout from it.

The world doesn’t matter, the setting is unreal, and the Hero all the moreso for the contrast.

Just consider the impact of violence in our real world.

  1. Violence is unpredictable. A running battle of spells in a crowded city is going to have civilian casualties – having violence be super-surgical and precise seems wrong, and the more there is the less believable (unless you go out of your way to address that).
  2. Violence produces reactions. I don’t care how heroic you think you are, that huge pile of cadavers might make me wonder if you’re the good guy, and I can’t see their badges that indicate they belong to Evil Inc. until the autopsy.
  3. People assess risks. The violent, even the good, may make us wonder if they’re safe. If you’ve got super battle psychic powers that may be well and good, but the secret organization you work for is going to notice the levels of death and maybe wonder if you’re safe to work with . . .
  4. Violence affects people. Ask anyone who has been in a fight, gone to war, killed. Read a biography. Study PTSD. Violence affects us personally, and the person who commits violence is affected as well.
  5. If you’re not affected, something may be wrong. A character who kills without mental and emotional repercussion may be insanely dangerous -or just insane.
  6. Violence takes effort. I mean if nothing else you have to rest, recharge, and buy bullets.

The Deadly Hero, I think, rubs people wrong as it’s death without repercussion or even lip service. A story without repercussion is a story without a working world, and the hero feels abstract and removed from the setting. At that point it’s just a list of things happening against a meaningless backdrop.

Also the Deadly Hero way too often is just a form of wish-fulfillment. The badass without repercussions is a form of pandering – and a sadly obvious form of pandering at that. Poorly written is bad enough, but outright pandering really means your worldbuilding is for naught, its just setting up targets.

I recall once someone talked lovingly of ‘The Punisher” comic. To which I noticed that, realistically, the character would inevitably kill a lot of innocent people (if only by accident) and that everyone who showed up dead would not necessarily be a known criminal and thus upset the public.

They didn’t get it.

Avoiding The Trap

The Deadly Hero is a trap that’s a bit too easy to fall into, and I’d credit the prevalence of this kind of story in the media. There’s also media that veers into this territory but doesn’t go all the way – but following in the footsteps of said media means you may veer all the way.

But if your world and a realistic setting are important, you want to avoid the trap of the Deadly Hero – and a common one it is. Here’s a few pieces of advice

  1. Make sure violence has appropriate repercussions.
  2. Make sure the hero’s reactions to violence are appropriate.
  3. Make sure other characters in your world react appropriately to violence.
  4. Make sure the cost of weapons, armor, repair, etc. are worked into the story.
  5. Think of what a hero is. If you are wrting an admirable character, you’ll need to explore their reasons and reactions to violence – which is a fascinating experience as a writer. You’re poorer if you don’t – why would someone kill, and for what reasons is a great part of a tale and a world.

In short you avoid the trap by making sure the world works and functions appropriate, diving in to the repercussions and richness of the setting and character. In time, this makes not just a believable story, but a better world and characters.

A Side Note: The UHB is still annoying

When I first wrote this column I noted a character I really was tired of was the Uncaring Heroic Badass or UHB. The UHB is the grim, deadly, antisocial, unlikeable character who is the hero that the author wants us to root for even though they’re an a-hole.

My opinion hasn’t changed. The UHB is really a power trip consisting of:

  1. I’m tough and can defeat anyone. Don’t you want to be me?
  2. I don’t care about anyone or anything. Aren’t I cool for not caring.

Really, the UHB isn’t a hero. They’re a sociopath in a costume, meant for pandering, and still freaking annoying.

Fallout From The Flareup

Writing a violent and deadly hero is totally possible – as long as you understand the repercussions of violence and the character. This requires deep thought – and avoiding tropes.

If anything, I’d say tropes about violence are some of the worst challenges we face in writing (along with sex, religion, and politics). It’s almost like we get invested in them, and we need to overcome them.

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, publishes books on career and culture at http://www.informotron.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.