publicity

Being a Go-getter, or: Why My Friends Are Awesome

by Marian Schembari on October 9, 2009

While this may seem like a shameless plug, I promise, it’s not. You will not often hear people call me “sweet” or “nice”… So when I do say something nice, you can rest assured it’s true. So on to the news:

My Davidson friends are all moving to New York this month (yay!) to begin what will no doubt be successful careers in theater. Of course, success in this department is even harder than publishing (gasp!) and it will take some time to get their collective foot in the door. Check out their sites:

Desi Domodesisplash1

Kelsey Formost6878921-1

Additionally, the beautiful Kelsey has started a design company to help pay the bills until she lands some sweet gig on Broadway. Read that again: She started a design company. I mean, come on! How cool is that?!?!

And along with said company, she created an amazing site! Talk about personal branding. Seriously, the woman has some talent. The plan is to make a few bucks painting portraits, taking photographs and refurbishing/painting furniture. While her moving date is still a little over a week away, the site is already up and running. And, because she’s incredibly talented, orders have already started flooding in.

I don’t think I can possibly stress enough the importance of being assertive and clever. For some reason I think this info goes in one ear and out the other. But a few people have picked up on the skills needed to actually get somewhere.

I came across another publishing/job hunting site called Julia Reads – which is run by a woman who is in the same boat I was a month ago. Instead of sitting by the computer hitting refresh every minute on Mediabistro, she is productive and learns everything she can about publishing and spews that info out into the blogosphere.

Why aren’t more people catching on to this amazingly useful, easy and effective job hunting tool? Ah, well. More for me.

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by Marian Schembari on October 3, 2009

In honor of banned books week...

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Why I’m In Love With Chris Brogan

by Marian Schembari on September 25, 2009

(CC) Randy Stewart, blog.stewtopia.com

(CC) Randy Stewart, blog.stewtopia.com

So, not entirely sure how this happened, but I had no idea who Chris Brogan was until a few days ago. How is this possible you ask? Again, no idea. But you should absolutely not be using social media for personal branding purposes until you read his blog. Because. It’s. Awesome.

He doesn’t need my promotion. Check out all his followers on Twitter (it’s a lot), but I can’t help writing a love letter to this brilliant, brilliant man.

Just go to his site, since I can’t really do it justice. There’s a ton of stuff out there (meaning the internet) making it practically impossible to sort through, never mind learn anything. Chris has it all in one place and explains it all perfectly.

When I first decided to get with the program and start using social media as a job hunting tool, I was bombarded with information. It took a while, but I finally weeded through it all and thought I knew a lot. Until I found Chris. Seriously, the man knows everything: Web tools I didn’t know existed, blogging ideas, advice on personal branding… The list goes on.

So if you’re even remotely considering using the world wide web for any reason besides watching Hulu, read everything Chris Brogan has ever written.

And hopefully – if I’m following his advice correctly – he will some day come across my blog, I’ll profess my undying love, and then we can finally run away together…


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When I first started my job hunt, I never once considered freelancing. When I think “freelancer” I think someone with experience, who’s been in Industry X for years and years and eventually broke off to do their own thing. Naive 22-year-olds do not freelance. We are interns and assistants and work for scraps.

But what I’m finding is that due to the economy, a lot of the big publishers are outsourcing. Just because there have been layoffs doesn’t mean the need for labor has decreased any. According to Publishing Trends, book publicists (outside of the big houses) are getting a ton more work. PR funding has been cut so lesser-known authors go elsewhere for their publicity needs. And it’s my impression that this is the case for all aspects of publishing – sales, editorial, marketing (especially digital)…

The first experience I had with the idea of freelancing was from a website called The Snooze Blog. An old boss runs the site and asked me to edit the posts before publication. I was paid per post, and it was a pretty sweet gig. My boss trusted my ideas and my writing, paid me per post (and always on time) and I did out of the comfort of my old home. Then, after my Facebook ads ran, Debbie Stier from HarperStudio contacted me about doing hyper-targeted ads for the imprint’s upcoming books.

Which is when I really started thinking about it. I mean, why not? More than one person was emailing me after those ads came out, saying I should consider striking out on my own. In the words of one such advice-giver:

“Typesetting, cover design, editing, PR, marketing–all of that an author can procure for herself, increasingly cheaply. It was the physical distribution the author couldn’t do, and the more that becomes irrelevant in the digital age, the more the companies in which you’re seeking employment become irrelevant. But, as your Harper friend said, authors will still write books (perhaps you’ll be one of them one day!), and they’ll still need editors, layout people, PR people, book marketers, etc. And those are all functions that lend themselves to freelance very well…”

According to Publishing Trends, their list of book publicists has increased 50% since 2004, and smaller firms have only seen an increase in business after the recession, not the other way around.

But is freelance is smart move for the average 22-year-old? Not sure… I don’t know anyone my age who’s done it. I’ve met a few young people here and there who have branched out on their own, but they’re still young, so it’s hard to gauge how successful they’ve been. Also, to be perfectly honest, if I were writing a book, I’d prefer someone who did (or had) worked at a big company, with years of experience under their belt. Some young whippersnapper just wouldn’t cut it.

My suggestion is to pick up freelance gigs if/when you can. The money will help tide you over until you find something more permanent, plus add to your resume. I can’t tell you how much having HarperStudio on my resume helped. Even though I wasn’t a permanent or long-term employee, I think it showed I had serious potential if a house that big wanted my services.

I also highly suggest you pick up social media skills when you can. Publishing houses are picking up on the craze and are using it to their advantage. Problem is, many of them have no clue how to use it effectively. Freelance writing and editing jobs are abundant too, if you know where to look. Some suggestions:

Craigslist

Mediabistro Freelance Marketplace

The book Free Agent Nation by Dan Pink

And just Google “freelance publishing” and search around.

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Officially and Gainfully Employed

by Marian Schembari on September 4, 2009

Success! Today I was officially hired by a lovely book PR firm as their new “junior publicist.” Honestly, I couldn’t ask for a better opportunity. I know I’m going to learn a lot from them and I’m super excited to start.

So I want to recap: Over the past month and a half I’ve done some “out-of-the-box” things to find work: advertisements, Twitter, blogging, Facebook, networking groups etc etc. If you take out the time I spent messing around after graduation and really only going at this half-assed, it took me a month and a half to find a pretty awesome job. Lesson? You can’t get a job by just clicking “apply” on every publisher’s website. HR is there for a reason, but I don’t know one person who’s actually gotten a job the old fashioned way. Maybe every human resources person will hate me for saying this, but it’s true.

However, it does make for an interesting story. My campaign actually made me consider a career I hadn’t  thought of before: book PR. So all in all a pretty successful endeavor. However, as we’ve learned, getting a job in publishing is pretty (scratch that, enormously) difficult. So even though I have a job now, will continue to keep the blog up in the hopes other people can learn from my experiences, making your job hunt a little less stressful…

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