Tag Archives: networking

Building a Community – Not a Platform


T0 blog or not to blog, that is the question.  

Whether it is nobler to continue to share my personal life in a time of financial lane changing, or to set it aside for another day….that is the question that must be asked.

Since I’ve recently found myself traveling down yet another unexplored road in the pursuit of becoming an author and writer, I decided to stop a moment and re-assess  my reasons for continuing the Writer’s Journal  portion on my blog site ( particularly when my original intent was to share the journey of writing a first novel >which is now on hiatus).

Let’s face it, it’s not like I don’t have enough things to write about. Between the Marketing Director position, the re-write on my non-fiction book, this blog and the writer’s group I’m a part of, the keys on my laptop are beginning to look in serious need of replacement parts.

But as nothing is ever permanent,  and I am always in the process of evolving and re-inventing myself,  I thought it was important that I take a few minutes and touch base with the original idea.

So I sorted through the file cabinet in my mind until I came to the drawer marked SSpjut>Writer’s Blog>Stardate, found the file highlighted  ”Why Blog?” (For those who don’t know me, almost all my mental files begin with “Why?”), and pulled it up out of the shadowy recesses of my memory. 

After carefully dusting off the cover, I flipped it open and found myself staring at the headline of the first page.  It didn’t take but a moment for the clamoring voices of indecision and doubt to stop and slither back under the murky waters of insecurity and unbelief.  With a smile and a sigh I closed the cover, slid the file back where I’d found it, went out to the kitchen where I poured myself a cup of coffee, grabbed the other half of my English muffin and moseyed back here so I could share my findings. 

I began by asking  whether blogging on my journal was still relevant to my current journey and  found instead,  that as so often happens, I was asking the wrong question. The one I should have been asking (and was so forcefully reminded of when I opened that file) was, “Why did I feel compelled to start a blog in the first place?”

Was it to have a creative outlet for my compulsion to write?

Was I trying to promote myself before the ink had even dried on the first draft of my first novel?  

Or did having a blog to call my own give me a sense of purpose and belonging? 

In truth, each of those questions might have played a part in my initial reason,  but the real headline is actually something  quite a bit different.

It was in the beginning and still is, my passion for doing all things through the connective wheel of relationship and community, that I found the impetus for starting this blog.

Several years ago I was part of a leadership development team in which our primary avenue of developing leaders was through building relationships. We took a look at where the company wanted to go, who we were going to need to partner with to get there and how we could invest in those lives in a way that not only helped them grow but created a community of like-minded individuals who supported and encouraged one another in the journey. 

It was (and still is) individuals like Jesus Christ , John C. Maxwell, Graham Cooke, Frances Hesselbein, Peter Drucker and George Barna who committed their lives to developing organic leadership that are some of my greatest hero’s. At every opportunity they sought to empower others by investing emotionally as well as intellectually.  

As John Maxwell ( founder of INJOY Leadership Development Group) teaches in the The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, a person can only rise as far as the lid  over their lives will allow them  to (how they see themselves), and it is the responsibility of leaders to do everything they can to lift that lid higher. 

When individuals, such as you and I, are more intent upon establishing and building relationships than we are in building our own platforms or personal empires, we not only help grow a community of individual’s whose limitations are being organically removed by that investment, but we are building a network of people who, like Jesus and his twelve disciples, may just become powerful enough to change the world.

So in the pursuit of continuing to build and invest in relationships and community, the Writer’s Journal on my blog will stay. 

Will all my postings be so altruistic as to qualify me for sainthood, I seriously doubt it. But I will do my best to stay as transparent as possible in my pursuit of investing in the development of community so that in the bigger picture of things, my success will not be measured so much in what I have bought or sold, but in the value of those I took the time to get to know.

 From the laptop of an uncensored dreamer

SSpjut

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Changing Landscapes: A Multiverse of Transmedial Storytelling


Changing Landscapes: A Multiverse of Transmedial Storytelling.

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Filed under Articles, My Favorite Authors, Publishing @4GSpeeds, Tools For Writing, Uncategorized

Morphing at the Speed of Light


Morphing at the Speed of Light.

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Morphing at the Speed of Light


 

 

Writer’s Stardate: 5-23-2012

Writers, Blogger’s and Wannabe’s: 

Recently I have had to put a temporary hiatus to the re-write on my novel while I invest in the more pressing socialistic needs of finding a way to pay the bills. This necessary pause has been both painful as wells as enlightening.  

 In my last post In Search of SEO’s I mentioned that I had been given the opportunity to do some free-lance writing for friends of mine who are in the birthing stages of a new company, and are themselves in the midst of the flux capacitor of change that is causing all of us involved to morph (whether we like it or not) at the speed of light. 

And as with all cosmic forces of change, this current one is causing the left part of my brain (the A-Type > analytical > cathectic > card-carrying > post-it-note personality) to wake up on three out of ten mornings on the cusp of yet another panic attack muttering, “My God girl, you are so far over your head right now that drowning you would be an act of mercy.” 

Yet it’s those other seven days of right brain > free-falling bliss (the other two-thirds of me that  loves jumping off cliffs, developing wings on my way down and screaming, “What’s the worst that can happen?”),  that comes fully awake asking the Lord, “So where to now Kemosabe?” 

 Even if my right brain hasn’t figured it out yet, at least the left side knows that once again we’re on a great adventure and the possibilities for treasure are endless. 

But just so my faithful follower’s don’t think I’ve abandoned myself entirely to the ‘crass-ism of socialism’, I have delegated three days a week to blog on my own site, work on my SM platform and edit my non-fiction book (which I hope to have finished by the end of this summer). I also have plans to begin a second non-fiction book that follows along the same lines as the first (I already have a title, theme as well as a loose outline). Throw into that mix the work I’m doing to help my new employers get their own business and books up and running, and you’d have to admit that my cup doth runneth over

There are tons of opportunities in this new season of my life to soak up some really great information. If someone had come up a year and a half ago and asked me what I was doing to develop my SM platform, build an internet relationships and get my name and work out where other’s could read and give me feedback, I’d have stared at them for thirty seconds, tried to swallow past the terror of ignorance and made up something that I hoped would have been misleading enough that most people wouldn’t know just how clueless I really was. 

Yet now when I read terms like content, tag, categories, ping, SM, SEO, SMM, Ezine etc I not only feel all warm and fuzzy, but I can nod in all the right places, swallow with relative ease and actually add to the conversation. And I don’t feel the least bit stupid stopping someone and asking them to explain some new technology, writing tool or networking term I have neither seen nor heard before. 

So the fictional work may have to simmer on the creative back burner of my right brain for a little while longer, but I am convinced, that by the time I am able to go back and once again make writing my novel a priority, I will not only have become a much more skillfully honed writer,  but will have a social media platform that will make even the left side of my brain lean back, pull on its long-handled mustache and say, “Well I’ll be darned. She figured it out after all.” 

And for those of you that are sharing similar unmapped experiences, you’ll be able to appreciate what that means. 

From the laptop of an uncensored dreamer

SSpjut

 

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Intelligent Blogging


                               

Writer’s Blog:

Stardate 4-21-2012

 Writing beyond an author’s need to express themselves in today’s market requires greater social media intelligence than simply writing a web blog, article or even a book. In an age where we can access an abundance of information at speeds faster than light, it isn’t enough to simply know how to produce a well written story or be current on the correct style or use of grammar. No, the author or writer who aspires to have their work seen by a greater audience than family, friends and support groups is going to have to come to terms with the cold hard facts that in order to become visible to the reading consumer at large, they will need to also become as educated about marketing their wares as they are about producing them.

Recently I started blogging for a friend of mine who is so busy with the hands on portion of their business that they have absolutely no time to blog about it, let alone promote said wares on the social media highway.  In the process of gathering as much information as I could to set them up with their own blog site as well as help locate the multitude of communities where they can network with other like minded individuals, I found my own tool box of helpful blogging tips and resources growing by leaps and bounds.

The cornucopia of willing individuals who love to share their experiences and advice is literally mind boggling. I discovered everything from how to overcome the sometimes indecipherable site managing tools on WordPress.com, to what is pinging (pro’s and con’s), to the best sites to be social and the site netiquette that goes with it.  I discovered ways with which to improve my blog and its content as well as researchingkey words or ‘tags’ (and all this time I thought they were talking price tag’s at Macy’s) so that when other bloggers or social media investigators are searching through this vast pile of internet knowledge, they will find my work in the stack (hopefully closer to the top than the bottom).

With greater and greater demands being put upon authors, writers and blog composer’s to promote and market themselves (both on the internet highway as well as the hands on physical realm) it behooves us to spend a portion of our time sorting through this vast sea of rapidly changing – enlarging – transforming spectrum of evolution in order to gather as many of those tools to ourselves as possible.  Unless you’re an established NY Times Bestselling Author (and that will only take you so far), syndicated journalist ( who must still continue proving  that they’re work is worth paying for) or  a well known blogger it is no longer enough just to be a really good writer who knows how to spin a tale or deliver an exceptional prose. Unless we are willing to enlarge our repertoire of talents to encompass sales and marketing as well, we’ll never see our literary efforts become more than just a fly speck in the whirlwind of overnight media moguls and disappearing literary giants.

From the laptop of an uncensored dreamer

SSpjut

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