Sports writer - Grant writer

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Get Out There! Two Blogging Networking Events and Tips For Success

I’m embarking on a month full of fun events, both personally, professionally and writing wise, and I wanted to share two of them with you. In addition, I wanted to share some of my own networking tips for socially-tentative sports writers like myself.

The Events

On October 21st, I will be attending Boston Blogtoberfest for the first time. The event is sold out, otherwise I would urge you all to join me. Blogtoberfest is a gathering assembled by the past few years by Boston based social media specialist Jenny Frazier, and draws a wide-range of bloggers and social media types.

On November 6th, I will be attending the second Boston Sports Blogapalooza at The Baseball Tavern. Boston Sports Then and Now’s Joe Gill has put together a second edition of his sports writing bonanza, which will include panel discussions this go-around. No matter your level of experience within sports media (new blogger to a writer with a major site), the event is a must attend – the networking I did at the first edition is still paying dividends for my writing. Registration is still open, and I think Joe is even looking for some Sox and Celtics panelists – check out their registration page or their Facebook fan page.

SportsGirlKat’s Tips for Overcoming Networking Shyness

As an introvert, going to events like Blogtoberfest and Blogapalooza can be extremely intimidating. Having to speak to absolute strangers? Not my fortay. (Part of the reason why I became a writer in the first place.) However, if you ever want to parlay your blogging to a freelance writing career (which I am working towards), you must put yourself out there and break through the shyness. Here is what I’ll be doing to prepare for both events:

1) Stock up on business cards. They need not be fancy – just clean, clear and easy to read. I’ve seen great work done by UPrinting.com, which is one of the many online printing companies offering professional looking print goods at discount prices. Even if you go to an office supply store and buy print-your-own business card sets, it’s imperative to have them on you when you attend one of these events.

2) Practice a 20 second hook of what you are all about. While I write about a wide variety of sports, at the first Blogapalooza I knew I would have to stand out among the masses of Red Sox bloggers and Patriots writers. Therefore, I emphasized my lacrosse writing. I rehearsed how I would introduce myself, “Hi, I’m Kat. I write about professional and college lacrosse for several publications.” Don’t sound fake, and don’t recite the introduction verbatim every single introduction. Think of this 20 second hook as your angle – how are you going to stand out – and keep it in mind when having these discussions.

3) Be willing to listen. I am an adviser/mentor by training, so I genuinely enjoy listening to what others have to say. Being willing to actively listen to others thoughts, pitches, and what have you at networking events – even if you aren’t interested – earns you a ton of social currency. By being willing to listen to others, I earned introductions I would not have normally.

4) You are never too “big” to network. At the first Blogapalooza, several writers and editors from NESN and other larger media sources were in attendance, and this go-around, Comcast Sports Net New England is sponsoring the event. They understand the exposure their brand receives by attending an event with a hundred sports fans, and know how worthwhile it is. Your site might receive a 1,000 hits a day, or you might be a columnist with a bigger site, but there’s never a time to slow down the hustle. Keep telling people what you do, keep meeting people with similar interests, and stay hungry. Keep the exposure of your own brand high, just like the bigger media outlets are doing.

If you are attending either event, tell me in the comments! I would love to connect with you there!

A Quiet October in Kenmore Square

Kenmore Square, 10/4/10 (Taken by my handy dandy iPhone)

I walked through Kenmore Square to the train Monday night, and took the above photo of a sad sign left over from the Red Sox season ending game on Sunday. It was gray, rainy and covered in autumn leaves.

This is only the second October that I have lived in Boston where there has not been playoff baseball in Fenway Park, so the stillness of an early off-season in the neighborhood is not normal to me. But these things happen – not every team can be on top every year.

Sports in Unexpected Places: Celtics in Autumn

On Friday night, I visited  the Topsfield Fair, which is a giant agricultural fair that marks the end of the fair season in Massachusetts. (For my fellow New York natives, it’s like a less state-pridey version of the New York State Fair, without the dairy bar and the New York State Lottery booth. Which, I mean, are the only parts of the NY State Fair I remember.)

Dodging downpours while leaping from exhibit to exhibit, I came across a vegetable display that any Boston sports fan has to give major props to: The Boston Celtics in Gourd Form.

A diorama of the Boston Celtics done in gourds from the Topsfield Fair.

The Gourd Celtics (Photo by me)

A local Cub Scout troop submitted their autumn gourd Boston Celtics display to the vegetable diorama competition, and obviously won first prize. What better way to celebrate your defending Eastern Conference Champions than to make semblances of them in gourds?

Oh no! Kendrick Perkins is down. Out three weeks with a bruised pumpkin. (I don’t know how well you can see the writing on the “jersey,” but it did read Kendrick Perkins.)

The Kendrick Perkins Gourd is down.

Oops. Kendrick Perkins Gourd is down. (Photo by me)

Major kudos to this Cub Scout troop for giving us a great example of Sports in Unexplained Places. Congratulations on winning first place.

Steve Young is on my iPod. All is Good with the World.

My Buffalo Bills lost rather embarassingly to the Miami Dolphins today, and in order to either cheer me up and/or lambast me more, my husband started searching “Steve Young” on YouTube. (In case you’re new to this blog, when I was a teenager, instead of liking Jonathan Taylor Thomas like my best friends, Young was my celebrity crush.) During his search, we found the following:

After some Googling, we learned the Steve Young Football they were singing about in the ad was a new game for the iPad and iPod touch released on Thursday by Vaporware Labs. In searching, we found the developers’ YouTube Channel, which includes several videos starring the man himself. As a fan of his since I was ten, I have to say they might be his best work since his turn on Beverly Hills, 90210. Continue reading

Two Words for You: Wing Fest.

Wings. Yum.

I don't know if there will be Buffalo wings there, but wings are wings. (Photo: Me)

Every year, I lament not being able to attend the Buffalo Wing Festival over Labor Day Weekend. Buffalo is only a few stops down the Thruway from Big Roc City, so one of these years I need to time my annual summer trip home appropriately and attend.

But my sadness has been tempered by the following announcement, which I spotted on one of my favorite non-sports blogs, Boston Restaurant Talk.

Game On! is hosting a King of Wing Competition next Thursday, September 16th at 6pm. And I need to attend. Not want. Need. This is mandatory attendance for me. While I do not believe all the wings will be Buffalo flavored – nor would I expect that of them, because this is Boston – they are still wings, and they are still all you can eat.

From Boston Restaurant Talk:

During the event, chefs from dining spots such as Game On!, East Coast Grill, Eastern Standard, The Harp, Jerry Remy’s, Kings, Myers+Chang, Stadium, and Sweetwater will take part in a chicken wing competition, with wings being judged for authenticity and creativity, as well as “best BBQ” by guests and a panel of celebrity judges.

Eastern Standard = the unofficial restaurant of my office = my pre-event favorites for best wing.

Tickets are $20 and include all-you-can-eat wings and a drink ticket good for non-alcoholic drinks or Bud Light. Now, I think Molson and Labatt are the only appropriate wing beers, but I’m not going to rag on what was probably purely a sponsorship decision. (I recognize when people do what they gotta do.)

If I attend, I will be sure to take photos and tell you about the deliciousness – if not here, definitely on Twitter.

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