Earlier this week, I sent the Bloodfields manuscript off for copyediting! It was an exciting and intimidating moment. I spent a whole day knocking out all the remaining little bits and bobs throughout the text before having a video chat with my editor, Vi Huntsman. The chat with Vi was great and they really helped to make the process approachable and were very open and honest which is great for me as a newcomer to editing in the RPG space. In the past, I have almost always been the one editing my own work and most often in a local newsroom environment. RPG writing is a very different beast, but as always, everyone in the community is so helpful and transparent so it is much easier to get in and to grow then I would have initially thought.
That said, now that I am not focusing on the text of the zine itself. I need to focus on the next big task: the Kickstarter page! At this stage in the project, a great Kickstarter page is probably the single most important thing to do. There is plenty of time to finish the text, experiment with layout, commission more art, and get books shipped, especially with the extended time tables I’m giving myself as a first time crowdfunder, but there is less than 2 weeks to launch and what’s on that page is all that is going to make the majority of people decide to give me their money (or not)!
In the past, I worked a handful of sales jobs and was quite good at them, but I didn’t like that I was. Being too good at sales often feels like straight up manipulation or exploitation of others, especially if you don’t truly believe in the value of the products you are actually selling (like when I worked for a huge corp in car insurance, for example).
This is where self-promo differentiates itself from the typical sales work: I have already spent all of this time (and some money) creating this project I want to see exist and now I get to tell people, openly and honestly, about how excited I am to have the chance to make it a real physical thing for myself and others to enjoy. If I have to “sell” anything, I would always rather it be something I created and I am excited to have exist in the world (beyond any hopes of individual profit or some grander career plan).