Writing for love and money
Apr 11, 2008 Writing
Get this. I’m supposed to deliver this talk in June for the Greater Columbus Arts Council:
Becoming a Working Artist: What it Takes to Make a Living (Workshop)
June 25, 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
GCAC Large Conference Room, 100 East Broad Street, Ste. 2250
Writer Dawn Friedman will talk about her switch from part-time writer to full-time freelancer and family breadwinner. She will discuss the challenges of balancing artistic and financial needs and share the way she learned to market her job skills through marketing her creative self. Space is limited to 25 attendees, so pre-registration is required by June 13 to attend this informative event.
And of course that came into my email and my addled insecure little brain shouted, “Fraud!” at itself because I was invited to do this during a particularly high point of my life last year and today happens to be a rather low point of my life this year. (That sounds overly dramatic — I mean I’m having a week where I spend a lot of time worrying.)
See, I made sure my work calendar would be clear while I was in Portland (for the most part) and kinda forgot to line up work for the weeks after, which means down the line there the mailbox will be woefully empty of checks. Oops. That reminds me — any of y’all got any writing you need written? Because I’ve got a keyboard right here and I’m not afraid to use it!
As you can see, I’m hustling. And the meetings are revving back up and soon (one hopes) the email box will be filling up with assignments again.
I know one thing I’ll talk about at the workshop is branding because I absolutely absolutely absolutely think that branding is vital to consider in a creative career although it might not seem quite like it on the surface. Branding is such a shallow word for such an important thing, which is that you (I) need to understand how people see you (me). The difference between a working (as in trying to make a living) artist and a corporation is that the corporation is something of a slave to its brand and an artist isn’t but an artist still needs to understand the message her work is sending in order to understand how to get more work.
I mean, this is as simple as saying if you’ve built a reputation as a sculptor and now you’re working in pastels, you have to understand that some folks will have a hard time visualizing your work outside of the sculpture box they’ve set you in and this may play into how they feel about giving you a grant or a show or a commission. It doesn’t mean that once you sculpt you must always sculpt; it means that understanding what you’re up against in other people’s minds will help you get around those barriers.
What I’ve realized recently is that I’ve built a pretty good platform within the adoption community and now I face the danger of limiting myself (i.e., only speaking to the adoption community) and that I need to concentrate on my brand as Writer. Because I’m not an adoption writer — I’m a writer who writes about adoption an awful lot. But I want to have room to write about other things and (importantly because of the message I want to send) I want to write about adoption for more than just an adoption audience.
Is this making sense?
These are two things that I think confuse other writers: branding and marketing. And these are huge things. Once you’ve understood your brand, you have to understand how to market yourself (I am confused by this myself and am working hard to get clear on it, which means sifting through a whole bucket of neuroses. So fun, this artist stuff). Some of it — the marketing — is obvious like knowing which clips to mention in a pitch to this market or that. But some of it is hard like knowing how to hammer down the doors when I have huge emotional roadblocks to pitching. (What is up with that??? I’ve been pitching for, what, 8 years now? And still — the horror!)
Oh and if you want to come to my talk even though I’m outing myself as a person afraid to give it, hit up the good folks at the GCAC. I’ll be awfully glad to have you.



April 11th, 2008 at 7:35 am
I have a good friend, a Korean adoptee, who writes about adoption for a Korean-and-adoption-issues-focused journal, and freelances on medical and health issues. Somehow he keeps the boundaries straight, and is well-recognized in both arenas. If you’d like his name, let me know, he’d be a great contact, I think.
April 11th, 2008 at 7:37 am
Margie »
(this is my first time using this reply plugin — I hope it works!) I’d love his name.
April 11th, 2008 at 9:20 am
Holy Maude, woman, you’re the bomb!!! Maybe by then, Astrid will separate from my leg long enough for me to attend.
Congrats–you’re funny, witty and concrete when giving advice. I imagin you’ll blow the house down!
April 11th, 2008 at 9:21 am
Now please advise me to edit more carefully before I hit ‘POST.’
April 11th, 2008 at 11:09 am
Hey there! I wanted to let you know about a movie airing on PBS nationwide next month called Tie a Yellow Ribbon about a girl who grew up in an adoptive home with one other biological child. The movie encompasses more than just her story, but I thought, having been following your blog, that it might be pertinent and of interest to your audience. Please let me know if I can pass you more info about this wonderful little film for your to share with your readers! Thanks so much for all of your wisdom!
April 12th, 2008 at 8:50 pm
Sounds very interesting, and I can’t wait to hear more of your thoughts on all of the above! I also think of branding as ones “persona” on different stages out in the world, but “branding” sounds more strategic and deliberate.
April 12th, 2008 at 10:01 pm
I think this whole branding/marketing thing is fascinating. It’s something I have only really recently thought about and yet I have been writing professionally for years. Mostly it’s been in the theatre arena which maybe explains the shrinking violet tendencies but I totally get the way you can be boxed into one genre/style etc. I would love to hear more about your thoughts on breaking this, on effectively branding yourself and incorporating all areas of writing: fiction, non fiction, blogging etc.
I also think that gender can play a part, as can age. I see a lot of young confident male writers in the theatre world, and a hell of a lot of shy, retiring 30+ females.
June 24th, 2008 at 9:48 am
[...] GCAC workshop is full so that means there are a lot of people who are hoping I have something useful to say. [...]