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Post by ericm on Feb 5, 2018 21:46:46 GMT -5
For the last few years, there has been a panel that is dedicated to developing your indie projects. Whether they are podcasts, films or writing, the panel always offered tips and tricks for how to guide you. I'd love to see something like this happen again. It's always really informative.
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bookie
Gotta post them all!
Posts: 63
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Post by bookie on Feb 6, 2018 11:34:47 GMT -5
I'd love this as well.
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Post by crownowa on Feb 6, 2018 13:19:15 GMT -5
If Podcasting 101 and this idea get approved, I don't suggest spending as much time on podcasting as you were originally intending.
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Post by ericm on Feb 6, 2018 22:35:28 GMT -5
If Podcasting 101 and this idea get approved, I don't suggest spending as much time on podcasting as you were originally intending. For sure. The panel I was thinking of last year was the ""Setting & Reaching Fan Goals" panel.
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gsketch
New Member
Professional animator, currently working in Toronto.
Posts: 25
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Post by gsketch on Feb 8, 2018 8:58:10 GMT -5
I would be very interested in this panel. Indie projects can sometimes be very difficult to get off the ground.
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accpi
New Member
Posts: 2
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Post by accpi on Feb 9, 2018 11:40:07 GMT -5
This sounds super cool! I'd really be into helping organize and get this together.
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Post by justusrstone on Feb 9, 2018 19:23:27 GMT -5
I’d be interested in contributing to this panel. I’ve recently started a Patreon & I’m pretty well versed in self-publishing. I’ve put out 3 novels myself and have contacts I could get more info from as well.
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Post by Fingers on Feb 12, 2018 1:47:19 GMT -5
Aha !
Finally got a chance to read this.
We have the making of another one of those.
I think...
F
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accpi
New Member
Posts: 2
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Post by accpi on Feb 12, 2018 15:08:05 GMT -5
I was thinking how this would go, and I think that a lengthy Q&A segment works best in this kind of environment because working on an indie project gets pretty specific.
Each segment would be moderated and a couple questions relating to each topic given to the panelists, who answer them and build off each other's answers to get to the answer.
A sample breakdown of a 1 hour block would go like:
2 min - Set-up, introductions 8 min - Tips and stories related to keeping up personal motivation 8 min - Working on the scale and scope of your project 8 min - How to network and find people who are passionate and are partners on the project 18 min - Q&A 2 min - Packing up, cleaning up and getting the room ready for the next panel
That's 47 minutes of stuff with a couple minutes as insurance in case some things go long or short.
If you've got any questions or feedback on this kind of format, please let me know!
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Post by crownowa on Feb 12, 2018 17:13:35 GMT -5
I was thinking how this would go, and I think that a lengthy Q&A segment works best in this kind of environment because working on an indie project gets pretty specific. Each segment would be moderated and a couple questions relating to each topic given to the panelists, who answer them and build off each other's answers to get to the answer. A sample breakdown of a 1 hour block would go like: 2 min - Set-up, introductions 8 min - Tips and stories related to keeping up personal motivation 8 min - Working on the scale and scope of your project 8 min - How to network and find people who are passionate and are partners on the project 18 min - Q&A 2 min - Packing up, cleaning up and getting the room ready for the next panel That's 47 minutes of stuff with a couple minutes as insurance in case some things go long or short. If you've got any questions or feedback on this kind of format, please let me know! Panels aren't supposed to be Q&A sessions, so unless Fingers advises otherwise, there should be more time for panelists to talk and less time for Q&A.
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Post by Fingers on Feb 13, 2018 8:31:40 GMT -5
I was thinking how this would go, and I think that a lengthy Q&A segment works best in this kind of environment because working on an indie project gets pretty specific. Each segment would be moderated and a couple questions relating to each topic given to the panelists, who answer them and build off each other's answers to get to the answer. A sample breakdown of a 1 hour block would go like: 2 min - Set-up, introductions 8 min - Tips and stories related to keeping up personal motivation 8 min - Working on the scale and scope of your project 8 min - How to network and find people who are passionate and are partners on the project 18 min - Q&A 2 min - Packing up, cleaning up and getting the room ready for the next panel That's 47 minutes of stuff with a couple minutes as insurance in case some things go long or short. If you've got any questions or feedback on this kind of format, please let me know! Panels aren't supposed to be Q&A sessions, so unless Fingers advises otherwise, there should be more time for panelists to talk and less time for Q&A. What she said.
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