#1 01-17-2011 12:00:47
Writing conferences
I'm getting ready to register for my first writing conference. Good GRIEF! It's pricey!! Are they worth it?? I would appreciate any advice about attending these conferences . . . Don't want to be a newbie goober.
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#2 01-17-2011 12:40:56
Re: Writing conferences
Hey squarepeg --
The price of a conference, I think, depends on what they have to offer, particularly the agents, editors, and guest authors/speakers.
I've been to the Faulkner conference in New Orleans twice, and it cost, if I remember correctly, $380 for its entirety, plus an additional $50 per agent/editor to review and discuss your writing project which I had to submit in months in advance.
I'm going to the Space Coast Writers' Guild conference here in Cocoa Beach this Jan 28 and 29 (fortunately, this time it's right up the road from me--I can walk to it), and will be the third time I attended. Frankly, I got a lot more out of this Space Coast conference than I have from Faulkner's. Faulkner has author panels that discuss their work. The Space Coast conference has practical workshops put on my published authors, which helped me a lot more. And it provides face time with agents and editors as well.
The Writer's Digest conference is in NYC the end of this month, and I considered going, but thought the entire expense, for the conference, air travel, hotels, etc, made it prohibitive for me this time around.
Overall, I'd say conferences are great. You meet aspiring writers like yourself, can get really motivated, and meet agents and editors which provides a back door when you're ready to submit, or have something ready to submit. Saying you met at a particular conference will usually have them dive through the slush and look at what you got. If you met at a conference, I think they might consider you're more serious about writing than those who send in "over the transom." One agent at the Faulkner conference said to me, "You have no idea the garbage we get." I said, "I can imagine." He replied, "No. You can't imagine!" :0
Good luck!
Last edited by jaames (01-17-2011 14:26:46)
"Writing is an act of ego, and you might as well admit it. Use its energy to keep yourself going" William Zinsser, "On Writing Well"
"No one becomes a Tom Wolfe overnight. Not even Tom Wolfe." -- I forgot who said that.
"The first draft of anything is shit." Ernest Hemingway
"I am not a good writer. But I am a good re-writer." James Michener
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#3 01-18-2011 10:20:25
Re: Writing conferences
Thanks. The conference I'm looking at (PNWA in Bellevue, WA) is something like $500 plus $35 for contest entries. I can either meet with 2 agents for 10 mins each or 10 agents for 2 mins each - which would be better I wonder??
"The book to read is not the one that thinks for you, but makes you think." - James McCosh
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#4 01-18-2011 10:30:09
- TirzahLaughs
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Re: Writing conferences
It's not the conference cost but the travel/hotel expenses that kill me.
Research them. Some conferences are very much worth it.
Others not so much.
All things are possible...but no one said any of it would be easy. BLOG: acleverwhatever.blogspot.com
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#5 01-18-2011 10:31:29
- s_thatcher
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Re: Writing conferences
SquarePeg wrote:
Thanks. The conference I'm looking at (PNWA in Bellevue, WA) is something like $500 plus $35 for contest entries. I can either meet with 2 agents for 10 mins each or 10 agents for 2 mins each - which would be better I wonder??
I'd go with the 10 agents for 2 mins. I don't know why - the more the merrier? I've been eying that conference, too. I think Flo has offered up her house to stay at for everyone from tnbw. Party at Flo's! ![]()
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#6 01-19-2011 15:42:43
- crazeesharon
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Re: Writing conferences
I think the 10 agents for 2 minutes would be more advantageous. You just have to have an excellent two-minute pitch memorized. However, what happens is Agent #1 might advise changing something in your pitch. You go to Agent #2, and you're trying to change your pitch from what you memorized to include what Agent #1 advised. So you could blank out.
I used to be in sales (old-school type from long ago). We were taught that sales people could talk themselve out of a sale. I saw this happen many times. The salesperson didn't know when to shut up. To sit face to face and discuss your book for ten minutes may be like writing a too-long synopsis (been there, done that) which turned out to be a turn off.
You should have various items prepared and carry them with you when you sit down to do these meets. One is a one-page synopsis you can leave with the agent if they are interested. Kristen Nelson, agent from Denver, Colorado, has an online newsletter, and a few months ago addressed these very meetings and what you should take. You might want to see if you can call it up on her website -- the Kristen Nelson Agency.
Some agents will ask that you email your manuscript to them, and you should be set up to do this right from the conference, not have to wait until you return home.
For some reason, Kristen advised that if you are a blogger, make sure to update your blog right before the conference, with a message that you are attending that particular conference.
Last edited by crazeesharon (01-19-2011 15:44:12)
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#7 01-19-2011 17:27:09
Re: Writing conferences
$500 in Bellvue, WA!
Even the Writer's Digest Conference in NYC is less than that! And that's one of the most prestigious of all!
I wouldn't pay $500 for a conference, unless it got me a lunch with the author, agent, editor of my choice.
"Writing is an act of ego, and you might as well admit it. Use its energy to keep yourself going" William Zinsser, "On Writing Well"
"No one becomes a Tom Wolfe overnight. Not even Tom Wolfe." -- I forgot who said that.
"The first draft of anything is shit." Ernest Hemingway
"I am not a good writer. But I am a good re-writer." James Michener
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