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Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/11228-Benefiting-from-Writing-Conferences.html
For Authors: February 23, 2022 Issue [#11228]




 This week: Benefiting from Writing Conferences
  Edited by: Vivian Author IconMail Icon
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Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

         Every profession has conferences and sometimes festivals for its members, conferences and festivals that have workshops, presentations, and sessions to help those members keep abreast of changes in the profession and help them renew and discover new understanding.

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Letter from the editor

Benefiting from Writing Conferences


         Writing is a profession, and attending writing conferences and festivals are a necessary part of staying professional. Conferences allow a writer to gain new ideas to improve his work, to reinforce good writing practices, and to learn other aspects needed for his writing business. Networking allows writers to know they are not alone in the wilderness. So, how can writers benefit from writing conferences?

         Best selling author William Bernhardt gives a few ways an author can benefit from a writing conference:
 1. Come prepared. Research speakers to know what they offer that will help you. Research editors and agents to know which will provide insight into what you write or who want what you write.
 2. Listen more than you talk. "...a person gets a few minutes alone with someone who might have some good advice for them, but they use the entire time to talk about themselves or their project." Bill continues, "My advice has always been to go for the 20/80 talk rule...talk being the twenty percent."
 3. Relax and learn. "The best favor you can do for yourself is come with the expectation of learning not selling. If you're able to absorb the information, you're going to be a better and better writer. The time will come when you'll find yourself in front of the right people at the right time. And because you've been educating yourself, you'll be ready.

         Attending conferences to learn should be the first objective for attending a conference. I don't always learn something every session I attend, but, even though I taught writing for nearly 30 years, I always learn something that helps my writing improve every conference I attend.

         If you have completed a manuscript, attend a conference prepared to pitch to an editor or agent. That means you learn how to make a pitch, prepare your pitch, and practice your pitch before the conference.

         Listen to those who have been in this business for years. Gain from their experiences. Will everything you hear work for you? No, but at least you can learn what to try. If something works, you gain. If it doesn't work, you also gain the knowledge that idea won't work for you. We are made with two ears and one mouth for a reason. We need to listen more than talk.

         Absorb what you hear and see. I retain more if I write it down than if I just hear it. Therefore, I take notes so that what I hear is absorbed into my mind.

         One of the biggest reasons I attend conferences any more is to meet and greet other authors, to network with writers and publishing gurus. I become more energized and recharged after attending a conference and networking with others in the same business.

          As Bill Bernhardt says, "Go to learn. Prepare to pitch. Listen. Absorb. Meet and greet." Conferences are needed to build a writer's professionalism.


Editor's Picks

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Ask & Answer

Words from Our Readers



Cathryn Author IconMail Icon
Hello, Vivian;
A very timely message (to keep writing, regardless)for me today as I sit drinking cold coffee and not feeling one creative thought stirring in my head or heart.

Cathryn


         Once we stop, we may have trouble restarting. That's one reason I may have several projects going at once, so that I have something to work on, something to keep me writing.

Jenstrying Author IconMail Icon
Since I am working on my novel this was a very timely article. I find myself staring off into space sometimes trying to work things out in my head or worse talking to myself working things out. It is one thing when I am at home doing that but it looks a bit odd at work so I try to keep a small notebook with me at all times to jot things down. My last full stop on this novel saw it sit for months then I got a flash of inspiration and tore it back down to the bare bones and started again this time going in a completely different direction with the story.
Thanks for another great article!

          I'm glad I can help. I often write about obstacles I face in my writing.


brom21 Author IconMail Icon
I have never dealt with writer's block moments until recently. They lasted briefly on each occasion but were so annoying! I think a good way to push through writer's block is reading. I recall someone (perhaps a person from WdC) say "Reading is the life juice to writing." I haven't read a book in a while until I got a trilogy from my favorite author Stephen Lawhead. I am eating up the first book! Anyway, I appreciate your NL and what I gleaned from it. Thanks!

          I'm always reading. I read at least two or three books a week plus projects I edit. Writers who don't read are not going to be good writers. I hope I can always help other writers.



Thank you for joining me again this issue. I hope you'll share what topics you would like for me to cover and let me know what has helped you.

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