Self Marketing
Many individuals and companies honestly believe that their work and talents are strong enough to stand alone without any sort of canvas or easel. Yet, more often than not, thosesuccessful from employing this particular strategy benefit from other factors as well -- "luck" may be one, "partiality" may be another. While accounting for all these factors in the measurement of aproject's success is important, relying on them isn't necessarily a guarantee for a positive outcome.
In essence, your productivity as a creative professional requires that you create an advertisementof you. Not a literal advertisement, but rather a concise message, a repetition of your goals, and a collective display of all you have accomplished and learned in the pursuit of your passion.Whether it is your virtual or physical portfolio, day-to-day correspondence, or your actual physical appearance, constant effort is a necessity; this may be as simple as running a spell-check or makingsure you're wearing clean socks or as complex as redesigning your entire website. For some, these things may come more naturally than for others -- in theory, writers should be able to edit, anddesigners able to create portfolios -- but all too often the adage "a dentist's children have the worst teeth" rings true.
You are your own PR agent, and you must manage the opportunities and risksthroughout every interaction, communication, career move, and decision.
Being busy isn't an excuse to neglect something that actually enables you to sustain that level of activity. Spend some time on thepackaging your product arrives in. You owe it not only to your clients, but to your work and most importantly, to yourself.
Creative achievements seldom happen in isolation. A big part of making...
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