20
Apr

The wrong goal?

   Posted by: Greg Schwartz   in Commentary

Meredith Farkas tackles the issue of what to tell newcomers to the profession when they ask how she’s done so much in so little time in the profession. Seeing as I’m clearly suffering from logorrhea this weekend, it made more sense to talk about it here, rather than in her blog comments.

The ultimate question from the post: “What advice would you offer a new librarian looking to start speaking, writing and networking on a national level?”

There’s a part of me that says they have the wrong goal in mind (excepting the networking part). As Meredith said, most people who are seen as movers and shakers didn’t set out to be movers and shakers.

But there’s the other part of me that says there aren’t any barriers to writing on a national or global level, so what’s the issue? Just do it. That’s how I got started. There are so very few impediments to self-publishing online that it’s unfathomable that anyone who wants to be writing isn’t doing it.

But as I said, I’m not sure I can recommend focusing on speaking and writing as a goal in and of itself for the new librarian. Following the sage wisdom of Walt Crawford, first have something to say. Figure out what gets you excited in the profession (or outside of it!) and write about it. Get that blog started. Share your passion. Share your experiences. But remember that the writing, while immensely valuable, is not the experience itself, at least not for most newbies.

At the same time that you’re writing, join conversations, whether on other blogs, Twitter, wherever. And when you join those conversations, don’t forget to tell people what you’re doing and where to find you. Self-promote. Tactfully, yet shamelessly. We’re notoriously poor self-promoters in this profession. It’s an undervalued, misunderstood skill amongst library professionals.

Soon, you’ll find that you’re the one starting conversations. And that’s when you’ll know that you’re starting to find your unique voice. Those conversations are often the ones that turn into mainstream articles or conference presentations.

And if you plan on speaking, you’d best be submitting proposals, because until you’ve established yourself as a speaker, people aren’t going to come looking for you.

If I can be said to be on the right path to “making a name for myself” in library land, I attribute it to two things: good timing and, exactly as Meredith said, “seeing an unfilled need and filling it.”

Good timing, because I started my blog over five years ago, when there weren’t nearly as many voices in the blogosphere. I was noticed simply for listening to Sonic Youth, which I’m not sure is a realistic expectation these days. [Note that said post from Mr. Cohen was my first taste of librarian-related fanboy giddiness.]

That link from Library Stuff was really the beginning of everything else that happened to me outside of my day job. It crystallized the potential of the blogging medium and emboldened me to keep going. Not long after, I stumbled into something of a niche searching for new library blogs. This led not only to my stint as the LIS Weblogs editor at DMOZ, but to LIS Blogsource (big ups to all five of you who remember it!) and to my first national conference presentation, talking about blog search.

And again, good timing when it came to seeing a need and filling it. Librarianship needed a podcaster. I needed something to obsess over. A library podcaster was born.

“Anyway, enough of me talking about me,” he said self-referentially. In the end, I agree with Meredith: Writing and speaking have been benefits of being passionate, curious, motivated and willing to put myself out there. I didn’t set out to be a writer/speaker. I still don’t think of myself that way. In fact, one of the main draws of librarianship was the opportunity to “do the research and not write the paper.” But that’s a different blog post for another day.

This entry was posted on Sunday, April 20th, 2008 at 10:04 pm and is filed under Commentary. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

2 comments so far

 1 

Great post! Not only do I remember LIS Blogsource, but I remember how utterly thrilled I was to be mentioned in it back in late 2004 (shortly before you all hung up the towel). My experience was much like yours. I wrote and I wrote and then Jessamyn mentioned me and I got more readers, and then Dorothea mentioned me and I got even more readers, and the rest is history. I didn’t know that I’d write a blog that people would want to read, but I think my posts on the so-called “librarian job shortage” and about my own frustrating job hunt really came at the right time. Very few people were writing about their job hunting experiences in an honest way, and I touched a chord. I remember after I got the job wondering if anyone would continue to read my blog. I’m glad folks stuck around. :)

April 21st, 2008 at 9:23 am
 2 

You have correctly advised to have something to say before saying it–one needs to establish oneself (at least a little) in the career to have concrete things to relate to the profession, even if that experience is nominal to start.

Mostly I say this because the blogging and the speaking and the writing on a national level do not translate into success or reward on the job unless you are Stephen Abram or Michael Stevens. The job success is its own separate pursuit that requires just as much care and attention.

I have also learned that it doesn’t matter how well known you are in the profession, if the people hiring you for that next job are not also in the same profession and been following your public career, they are going to have no idea who you are and it will be to little advantage.

On the other hand, this is not to dissuade someone from stepping forward to inspire us all. I want to hear new voices! I want to hear from the next generation of librarians, and the next! Please, come forward and show us the passion that should be part of this profession.

If you do, I promise my best to help you figure ways to translate that into job success, too. Because really, if you are seen as having expertise in the profession by most of you colleagues, it should translate into expertise on the job. You’d think.

April 21st, 2008 at 10:15 am