Okay, it's taken me three days to process this past weekend in Portland, when I went to the Second Annual Kidlit Blogging Conference.
I met so many ubercool people - literally a whole new community of friends! I learned a ton, and got so many great ideas for things I want to do with this blog! I took some notes, and even managed to snap a few photos. So here's some of the best things I heard and learned, with pictures of some favorite folks I met (mind you, I'd make a terrible wedding photographer, as I missed some of my favorite peeps completely!)
Friday night was great fun, meeting up with folks at Powells and then going to dinner at some brewery, and then back to the hotel for pre-conference schmoozing. Stayed up late making new friends, and then after a refreshing four hours of sleep, was all set to go Saturday Morning!
So we were all set to go, pens in hand, for the first panel:
Left to right: The Lovely
Readergirlz blogger Dia Calhoun, Readergirlz co-founder
LorieAnn Grover (with a new blog here), The Quirky and Delightful
Betsy Bird of Fuse #8 Fame, The Charming and thoughtful
Alice Pope (she's the editor of "Children's Writers and Illustrator's Market"), and The Podcasting Wizard and super nice guy,
Mark Blevis (who with his wife Andrea does the Just One More Book podcasts!)
Pearls of Wisdom I caught during this panel:Betsy Bird: Find your cool niche. It's consistent writing (and posting) in that niche that gets readers' attention. Know that Editors, Agents, and Publicity People DO read blogs.
Dia Calhoun: The founding idea - conceived by
Justina Chen Headley - behind
Readergirlz was to provide author visits online for Teens whose schools can't afford them.
Lorie Ann Grover: The Readergirlz divas came up with a list of 12 traits they want young women to explore, and those qualities help guide the selection of the books they (and their postergirlz) choose.
Alice Pope: Recognize that you build an audience for your blog over time. Also, look out for a new social networking community site from writersmarket coming in the future...
Mark Blevis: Be passionate so it resonates with people following you. The trick is to get in the conversation - comment on other people's blogs! (This last point became a bit of a theme during the conference!)
The next session was
Left to Right: The inspiring Powerhouse
Colleen Mondor (of Chasing Ray and the founder of
Guyslitwire) and The uber-awesome
Jackie Parker (of Interactive Reader, and a Postergirlz for
Readergirlz, as well as the Cybils YA organizer)
These gals were FUNNY. Seriously, they could take it on the road, or to Vegas, with their banter like:
Jackie: "If you can get my humor, I'm probably going to like your book."
Colleen: "Good luck with that."
They talked about their Summer and Winter BLOG BLAST TOUR, which was this amazing re-thinking of what a blog book tour can be - and a real sign of the power of the blogging community. It was inspiring.
Then I went to MotherReader's session on "Kick your blog up a notch!"
Pam Coughlan, a.k.a.
Mother Reader, talking to a seriously standing room only room!
Pam was awesome, and spoke about lots of ways we could improve our blogs. Some of the stuff that really sunk in for me was:
Know why you're blogging and keep that focus - go back to the CORE
Keep commenting on different blogs - after a few comments on someone else's blog, people will backtrack to see who YOU are, and it will drive YOUR traffic up. It will also make you feel that you are Part of the community, which you will be!
She also challenged us to write down the three core values for our blogs - this is an excellent exercise!!!
She talked about branding youself, pinpointing blogs you think most resonate with you and commenting there, and if she was starting out today, she'd try to blog with a group of others rather than individually.
It was awesome, and I felt so fortunate that when we hung out later that night, Pam's ideas just kept on rolling!
Next was Mark Blevis' PODCASTING session.
Mark Blevis keeping us mesmerized with his
"There's a PODCASTER at the end of this book" homage!
The amazing Mark basically did a
podcasting 101 session, and I was sooooooo inspired, and emboldened!
So keep your eyes out for some podcasts coming from me in the future!In addition to the twenty or so technical "oh, so THAT's how you do that!" epiphanies, the main points I got were to consider:
CONTENT
CONTEXT
DELIVERY
And to recognize that you need unique stuff even within a show and blog - that it's important to break up the rhythm every once in a while.
Mark and I had a great discussion afterward about the pros and cons of video versus audio podcasting, and that segued into a really yummy lunch at the hotel restaurant, with a bunch of other cool cats! (yeah, I was so hungry, taking a picture completely eluded me.)
However,
Holly Cupola (the newest Readergirlz diva!) did corner me (in the nicest way) to introduce myself on video -
here it is (oh, and that's Mark Blevis being so silly!)
After lunch, Laini Taylor and Jen Robinson kept us riveted:
The super-smart and creative
Laini Taylor, conference co-organizer and
author of one of my favorite fantasy YA novels (Faeries of Dreamdark: Blackbringer),
is in the pink hair,
and
Jen Robinson, Renowned Book Reviewer
and one of the Cybil Awards founding advisors is the brunette!
Laini and Jen spoke about author blogs versus kid lit blogs, and the distinction between being a book reviewer and a book recommender. (That last one really floored me - it's so obvious, and interesting, and I'd never considered it in that way before.)
Another point that really stuck with me from their panel was that with author interviews, remember that you shouldn't try to make it a commercial for yourself or your book - your goal should be to make it an interesting conversation.
Next up was blogging guru Gregory K.
Gregory K., a.k.a. Greg Pincus,
"I'm geeky... so you don't have to be"
was AMAZING! Not only is Greg the NICEST guy,
he's savvy about technology -
AND he's able to translate geek-speak into plain English!
His session was covered by his brother, Jon, in an impressive feat of simul-blogging, here.
Greg talked about "setting yourself up for the happy accident," and the list of things I felt that I needed to do in the aftermath of his talk took up two pages in my notebook!
He spoke about about how for a LONG career, you want to promote your name recognition.
And to consider tapping into the latent groups of people out there in the world that you can bring together via your blog - i.e., people who care about children's literature.
You MUST (I mean this)
check out this website he set up which will inspire you.
Okay, then I went to Sara Zarr's session!
The brave and honest and charming
Sara Zarr,
talking about the Personal / Professional balance in blogging.
Sara spoke about how a blog has power - to let Teens know they're not alone.
She advised us to be professional ALL THE TIME - don't write anything on our blogs that we wouldn't want our agent or editor to read (for that matter, recognize that ANYone can read it!)
She talked about her advice when talking about politics, religion and sex:
Use care, take your time, revise, let it sit... Be compassionate, generous. Think about the person who would disagree the most with what you are writing, and be compassionate towards them.
Have a private life and private thoughts, even when being personal on your blog.
After that there was still so much more -
The meet the authors event
Dinner and the raffle, and then
the Readergirlz' party celebrating Holly's book deal
and being made an official "Diva!"
The late-into-the-night hanging out and talking blogs
and kid lit with some awesome new friends!
Left to right: Jackie Parker, Colleen Mondor, Lorie Ann Grover, Holly Cupala, and Me!
And the bleary-eyed breakfast before flying home...
Left to right: Holly Cupala, Dia Calhoun, and Colleen Mondor
Left to Right: Jackie Parker, me, and Lorie Ann Grover
It was a wonderful experience! While the photos above are nice and well focused and look like a moment frozen in time, I think this photo best sums up the wonderful energy of the experience:
My heartelt and giant-sized THANK YOU! to
Laini Taylor and
Jone MacCulloch, who really pulled off an AMAZING event.
Next year will be in Washington D.C., organized by the unstoppable
MotherReader - and I can't wait!
Check out ALL these other fabulous blog posts from the other bloggers who were there!Namaste,
Lee