Well I had fun yesterday

Posted in process on September 25th, 2008 by stanmanx

Due to an unforseen sickness in the family, I wound up taking an additional vacation day yesterday. That gave me a great opportunity to sit and write. It was kind of funny, actually, because it’s been a while since I’ve had that much uninterrupted time to not-do a million other things I shouldbedoing. I kind of forgot how to write.

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Writing for Marketing

Posted in BIC HOK, personal experience, process on June 12th, 2008 by stanmanx

I wrote marketing copy at my company for a while. It was kind of off and on, and they recently hired someone else who is going to be taking over (thankfully). A more scholarly person would draw comparisons between writing fiction and writing to sell stuff, but all I have to say is that in both cases you are making stuff up.

The experience was kind of eye-opening for me. At first I was excited about learning a new technique, and how to think from a different perspective. But it got old. Especially when I was writing glowing praises for a piece of software that is as bugged as the Nixon-era White House. Most especially when I learned that a customer had already been using said software for over a year.

The boss man is a smart guy. He knows stuff. He also has a tendency to assume his employees know nothing, so meetings with him last forever. In those meetings, he spent a lot of time talking about how placing restraints on the creative process allows for more potent creativity from the writer — something I have long believed, on account of everything I’ve read and written. But he also wanted to come up with a Detailed Marketing Copy Writing and Editing Super Good Stuff Process so that a person with no knowledge of our software could write the same calibur marketing documents that I could (note: I’m involved in design and testing, so I know our software pretty well). This is where I start to smell something funny.

I’m going to assume that anyone reading this is somewhat familiar with the hero’s journey. I think it’s a wonderful outline for an epic tale. However, I think it takes more than just that outline to craft a good story. A writer needs to approach the hero’s journey with unique characters, different settings, and an assortment of devices to set it apart from every other hero’s journey. So why not create a more specific hero’s journey template? It could include all of the stock characters you need, all of the locations, and even the conversations that need to happen. Excellent! What happens after someone writes that story? Do we just keep writing the same one over and over, and just change the names?

That was pretty much what my experience with marketing copy was, only I spent far, far more time creating outlines and templates for writing pieces than I did actually writing them. It was ridiculous.

And the boss actually made a comment at one point about how marketing writing was useful, unlike fiction or something you write “for yourself.” Sure thing. Deception in the name of filling someone else’s pockets. I’m not sure how that’s useful, since people will be pretty pissed off when our programs crash and halt their productivity.

Writing Excuses (dot com)

Posted in links, process, writers I admire on March 27th, 2008 by stanmanx

A couple of months ago, the creator of one of my favorite webcomics launched a website, with two guys I had never heard of, called Writing Excuses. I finally got around to listening to the podcasts yesterday, and I highly recommend checking them out.

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Random Name #3

Posted in BIC HOK, character, creating, early draft, prewriting, process on February 15th, 2008 by stanmanx

For the record, I decided a few things about this character in advance of picking a name:

  • This character has some connection to Vilhelm. I’m leaning toward “last surviving family,” but I’m open to other possibilities.
  • This character disappeared from Vilhelm’s life, and he is searching for this person.
  • For Vilhelm, locating this character means accepting guidance from Olwen.
  • Olwen has a vested interest in the two characters reunion. I don’t feel like figuring that out at the moment, though.
  • This character will be a sharp contrast to Vilhelm — where he is strong, this person is frail; Vilhelm prefers to fight evil, this person prefers to nurture good; and so on. Seriously, it would be so boring if they were both Lawful Good!

I’m going to run the random generator at BehindtheName for both a male name and a female name, and… well, basically just pick the cooler sounding one.

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Character: Vilhelm

Posted in backstory, brainstorming, character, creating, process on January 29th, 2008 by stanmanx

Okay, I’m going to try something new today. Maybe it will rock, maybe not.

I went over to BehindtheName and used their random name generator to give me a name. With the meaning of the name as a starting point, I’m going to attempt to create a character. I went into this with no preconceived ideas of what kind of character I wanted. If this ends up sucking, blame Elen, since she sparked the thought process that led here.

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