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The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

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Home » Career » Page 12

Career

The Pessimist’s Guide to Things That Will Never Work

By Dan Balowon March 4, 2014
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tired young businessman

This is the first in a three-part series on attitudes toward work, specifically for people in publishing.

Today, I am writing about pessimism.  If there were a book glorifying its virtues, it would be the title above.  It would be a thousand pages long with an updated and expanded edition published annually.

Full disclosure…I became a baseball fan of the Chicago Cubs in 1966, a year when they lost a team record 103 games.  Their last World Series Championship? Just five short years after Orville and Wilbur Wright flew twelve seconds in a powered aircraft at Kitty Hawk, NC in 1903.  A long time ago.

Trust me, I understood pessimism from a young age. 

I define pessimism as a defense mechanism for anyone who wants to avoid disappointment. Pessimists expect to lose a coin flip even though there is just as good a chance they could win.

Back to the Cubs, the late Chicago newspaper columnist Mike Royko once wrote, “An optimist looks at a glass of water and sees it as half full. A pessimist looks at the same glass and sees it as half empty. A Cubs fan looks at it and says, ‘When’s it gonna spill?'”

There are good reasons to be a pessimist, especially for authors. The odds are stacked against both the new author and previously published author.  Considering all the people who want to write a book in the world, you have a better chance of getting hit by lightning than publishing a best-seller that makes enough money so you can quit your day job.

There are even some pessimists at publishers, because even after deciding to publish a book, the chances are about 50/50 that it will never earn back the advance paid to the author. 

The most interesting aspect of this is that while eternal optimists are considered unrealistic, pessimists are often considered wise, when really they have simple 20/20 hindsight mistaken for wise foresight.  You know them.  The “I knew it wouldn’t work” crowd.

Publishing is a tough business, but if it were easy, everyone would be doing it and making lots of money.

The great science fiction author Robert A. Heinlein said it best,  “Don’t ever become a pessimist…a pessimist is correct oftener than an optimist, but an optimist has more fun, and neither can stop the march of events.”

It is pretty simple.  Choose this day your attitude.  Optimism is just a lot more enjoyable!

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Category: Career, Dan, The Publishing LifeTag: Career

What Will You Give Up for Lent?

By Karen Ballon February 26, 2014
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Believe it or not, Easter is just around the corner. Which means something else is almost upon us:

Lent.

I love the idea of a 40-day preparation for Easter, of refocusing our hearts and minds to spend more time in prayer and contemplation of what Christ has done for us. And I’ve always been intrigued by the idea of “giving up” something for those 40 days. Even more intriguing—and sometimes …

Read moreWhat Will You Give Up for Lent?
Category: Career, Christian, Faith, Karen, Personal, TheologyTag: Career, Faith, lent

Spring is Here!

By Karen Ballon February 19, 2014
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A picture of a beautiful flower I took this morning in our garden.

It started two weeks ago. Little green sprouts poking up through the frozen, barren ground. Ground that, thanks to a winter of record-breaking cold, was so hard just a month ago that not even my shovel made a dent in it. So you can imagine my delight when I spotted those bits of green pushing their way through that same, dead …

Read moreSpring is Here!
Category: Career, Craft, Karen, Personal, The Writing LifeTag: Career, Spring, The Writing Life

Five Reasons Not to Brag

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon January 23, 2014
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We've all done it -- bragged -- whether intentional or not. Not only should all glory go to God for your accomplishments, but bragging may not get the reaction you think. Say you tell someone you made ten million dollars last year. Rather than the reaction you're expecting, you may instead:

1.) Look foolish. Ten million dollars? I paid more than that last year in taxes.

2.) Hurt someone …

Read moreFive Reasons Not to Brag
Category: Book Business, Career, Communication, TamelaTag: Career, Communication, Success

Overcome the Discouragement of Expectations

By Steve Laubeon January 15, 2014
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Guest post by Erin Taylor Young

This is Henry, our dog. Not my husband.
I love my husband. Really I do. But there are occasions I’m tempted to take a sharp, pointy pencil and stab him somewhere non-fatal. Especially when I’m torqued over my anemic word count, frustrated by a recent edit, or discouraged by yet another rejection.
I’m venting why, why, WHY, and my hubby turns into a fixer. …

Read moreOvercome the Discouragement of Expectations
Category: Career, Guest Post, The Writing LifeTag: Career, Discouragement, Expectations

Staying Healthy Over the Holidays

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon December 19, 2013
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Now that we are in the midst of the holidays, it’s easy to lose sight of keeping our bodies in top form. Since we in publishing have sedentary jobs, we must be vigilant about our health. Even though many of us work at home, we still have parties at church, our outside jobs, our spouse’s work, clubs, and other food-laden events. I’ve already been challenged by two events: …

Read moreStaying Healthy Over the Holidays
Category: Career, Personal, TamelaTag: Career, Health, Holidays

Competitive Spirits and Battling Discouragement

By Steve Laubeon December 18, 2013
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Guest post by Roseanna M. White Roseanna M. White is a writer with a passion for bringing history to life. Her most recent historical series, The Culpepper Ring series (Harvest House) has received rave reviews from readers and reviewers alike. In addition to being a writer, Roseanna is the senior reviewer at the Christian Review of Books, which she and her husband founded; the senior editor at …

Read moreCompetitive Spirits and Battling Discouragement
Category: Career, Guest Post, The Writing LifeTag: Career, Discouragement, Encouragement, The Writing Life

So You Want to Be in Pictures?

By Dan Balowon December 17, 2013
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At some point in their careers, just about every novelist will yearn to see their books on the silver screen.

However, the number of authors who are fortunate enough to have movies made and actually like the final film version, are few and far between.  Movies have been found to be a proverbial “good news, bad news” experience for authors.

An illustration of this is Roald Dahl’s children’s …

Read moreSo You Want to Be in Pictures?
Category: Career, DanTag: Career, movies

Staying Sane Over the Holidays

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon December 12, 2013
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Just because you're a writer doesn't mean you get a pass over the holidays. Many writers are contract-bound by December and early January deadlines, while other writers have self-imposed deadlines to keep their careers moving. The late arrival of Thanksgiving has also put a monkey wrench into many of our plans. I don't know about you, but I just can't get in the mood -- or find the time -- for …

Read moreStaying Sane Over the Holidays
Category: Career, Personal, TamelaTag: Career, Holidays, Personal

A Writing Life – Pearl S. Buck

By Dan Balowon December 10, 2013
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Seventy –five years ago today, Pearl Buck became the first American woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.  The king of Sweden gave her the award at a ceremony on December 10, 1938 in the Stockholm Concert Hall.  It read:
“By awarding this year’s Prize to Pearl Buck for the notable works which pave the way to a human sympathy passing over widely separated racial boundaries and for …

Read moreA Writing Life – Pearl S. Buck
Category: Career, Dan, Writing CraftTag: Career, Writing Life
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