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The Steve Laube Agency

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Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » Archives for 2013 » Page 5

Archives for 2013

Your Writing Team: Creating an Advisory Board

By Karen Ballon October 30, 2013
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Business people in office

As I write this, we’re smack-dab in the middle of football season. The town I grew up in was—and still is—a football town. I LOVE football. I was in the band, so marched at all our school games from junior high through college. My friends and I played football. I even, a few times, ran the chain for JV games in highschool. It was great fun. But more than that, I saw the importance of having a team that works together toward a goal. The quarterback may be important, but he’s nothing without the team—from analysts to coaches to cheerleaders to countless others–to support him.

As we discussed last week, though writing is a solitary endeavor, we don’t have to do this career alone. Indeed, it’s better if we don’t! We all need people around us to give us encouragement, perspective, and counsel.

A number of years ago I was faced with some big decisions in my career. I knew I could think through the options myself, but I also knew Proverbs 15:22—“Plans go wrong for lack of advice;
many advisers bring success.” So I contacted a number of people who knew me well. A couple were involved in publishing, but I also contacted people who had nothing to do with publishing. Some were my age, several my parents’ age, and one younger than I. I wanted a “team” of advisers who would bring a broad scope of wisdom to the table when I needed them. This board has been instrumental over the years in helping me think things through when I was faced with a tough decision. They were, in essence, my analysts. They asked the right questions, issued important challenges, and brought much-needed clarity.

I encourage you to consider creating an advisory board as part of your team. And as you do so, ask yourself these questions:

  1. Whom in my life do I trust implicitly?
  2. Whom do I respect most on a professional and/or personal level?
  3. Who knows me well, warts and all, and will be constructively honest with me? (Think about people in the industry and out of it.)
  4. With whom would I be willing to share my concerns, dreams, and worries?

Make a list of those you’d like to ask to be on your advisory board. Then write out what you’ll ask them to do. I let my advisers know that I needed them to:

  1. Consider the issue I brought to them in light of what was right for me professionally and personally.
  2. Pray over whatever issue I bring to them, then let me know if God gave them any insights or direction for me.
  3. Brainstorm with me, if the need calls for it.
  4. Above all, be honest with me.

Last but not least, if you decide to add this group of people to your team, realize you’ll be entering into a close relationship with these people. They’ll become, in many ways, your counselors and sounding boards as you process possibilities and issues. Respect their time, and let them know how much you appreciate that they’re willing to give of their time and wisdom.

Then go for it. And see how God chooses to use these wonderful folks in your life and career.

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Category: Career, Communication, KarenTag: advisors, Career, critique group

Real vs. Imaginary

By Dan Balowon October 29, 2013
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Simone Weil was being quite profound when she commented:
“Imaginary evil is romantic and varied; real evil is gloomy, monotonous, barren, boring.  Imaginary good is boring; real good is always new, marvelous, intoxicating.”
I can see the truth in those words in just about every book, TV program or movie. Anywhere a story is told, fictional villains or real heroes are the most interesting …

Read moreReal vs. Imaginary
Category: Art, Craft, Creativity, DanTag: Art, Craft, Creativity

Fun Fridays – October 25, 2013

By Steve Laubeon October 25, 2013
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Too cool. Playing a piano and a cello on the Great Wall of China!
The music is a combination of the song "Oogway Ascends" from the "Kung Fu Panda" film soundtrack and Frederick Chopin’s Prelude Op. 28 No. 20 in C minor. (The music really builds starting at the 1:07 mark.)

Creative genius.

[I apologize in advance for any ads that may pop up. I cannot control how YouTube monetizes these …

Read moreFun Fridays – October 25, 2013
Category: Fun Fridays, Steve

My Amazing Fake Day

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon October 24, 2013
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I've been intrigued by some blogs and articles about how Facebook makes people depressed because everyone else's lives seem so perfect. I hope that no one thinks the sum of my life is reflected in two recent Facebook posts that my uncle killed a bear on our family farm in Southern Virginia and here in Northern Virginia, we are host a family of walking stick bugs. I took great comfort in the …

Read moreMy Amazing Fake Day
Category: Communication, Craft, Humor, Social Media, Tamela, Writing CraftTag: Facebook, Humor, Social Media, Twitter

Your Writing Team

By Karen Ballon October 23, 2013
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You've heard it before: “Writing is a solitary endeavor.” Yes, that’s true. The responsibility for getting the words on the page rests on the writer’s shoulders. And yet, we don’t have to be Lone Rangers. In fact, if you think about it, the Lone Ranger wasn't alone! He had Tonto. And a whole network of sheriffs and people that he’d helped, all of whom supported and were rooting for him.

Anyone …

Read moreYour Writing Team
Category: Career, Communication, Craft, Creativity, Karen, Writing CraftTag: Career

Castor Oil for the Soul

By Dan Balowon October 22, 2013
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I am taking a big risk here, knowing there are authors and avid book readers looking at this post.

Columbia University Press polled hundreds of editors, writers, booksellers, librarians, literary critics, and general readers in order to produce a list of the ten most boring books of all time among the great classics. The winners were:

Pilgrim's Progress, Bunyan
Faust, Goethe
Don …

Read moreCastor Oil for the Soul
Category: Craft, Creativity, Dan, Writing CraftTag: Craft, Creativity, Writing Craft

You Are Essential

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon October 17, 2013
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On Sunday our pastor's sermon was on 1 Corinthians 12:12-27. Although in this passage, St. Paul writes about how each person is a special part of the body of Christ, with a comparison to how all the parts of the human body work together, I couldn't help but think of how essential we all are to the publishing process:

Writers: Without authors' creativity and courage, no one would have a book to …

Read moreYou Are Essential
Category: Book Business, Career, Editing, Get Published, Tamela, The Publishing Life, Writing CraftTag: Book Business, publishing

The Oddest Profession

By Karen Ballon October 16, 2013
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Guest blog by Stephanie Grace Whitson

Writing is the oddest profession in the universe. Why? Because whether or not I get to keep doing it (in the traditional, royalty-paying part of the world I inhabit) has nothing to do with whether or not I’m good at it. Why? Because the one thing that reigns over my career is sales numbers, and I can’t affect sales enough to impress publishers (i.e., by …

Read moreThe Oddest Profession
Category: Book Business, Career, Guest Post, KarenTag: Book Business, Career, Stephanie Grace Whitson

HAL 9000 Writes a Book

By Dan Balowon October 15, 2013
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Since most readers of this blog are writers, this might just ruin your day.

A company called Narrative Science started as a research project with Northwestern University computer science and journalism students. (The Medill School of Journalism is arguably the best in the country)  It was called StatsMonkey.

StatsMonkey was a computer program that automatically generated a usable text recap …

Read moreHAL 9000 Writes a Book
Category: Book Business, Dan, Humor, Technology, Trends, Writing CraftTag: Book Business, Technology

Fun Fridays – October 11, 2013

By Steve Laubeon October 11, 2013
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You love your Apple device? Now they own the alphabet!

Read moreFun Fridays – October 11, 2013
Category: Fun Fridays
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