Friday means get in the van, kid.
Posted on November 20th, 2009 in braindump
FREAKANGELS is free every Friday, just like everything else the grown-ups always told you not to take from strangers.
Every now and again, someone will realize that I’m up at (a little before) 4am every Friday to post the comic and start the weekly discussion thread on Whitechapel. And good heavens, no, I don’t have to be, haha. There are plenty of ways to automate the entire process (well, this part of the process — fortunately there’s not reliable way of automating scripts or art, yet). I could even have wired the comic into the (runs on Vanilla) forum to auto-post the discussion thread when it all goes live.
But Warren and I decided — way back in the first days of webdev for the sites, when they were still just notes in email — that since I’m usually up anyway (either still or, more often, just because I’m crazy), and past noon GMT is when he’s getting online for the day, that we might just as well team up in the mornings to shake the community awake and say g’morning. So I get the comic and our forum, and Warren does the links and hellos via his website, social nets, and mailing list.
So, on Friday mornings, I help out (a leettle) with something Warren’s very good at and has been doing for ages: engaging with the people as more than just "nameless audience of who-knows-whats."
Which is the point where this post circles back to the POD and DIY topics I’m still on about, yes. (FREAKANGELS is not Print On Demand, but it is web-to-print.) Because these things you’re making (and you are making them, yes?) — well, you probably want to sell them to someone eventually, right?
(Oh, don’t worry, I’m going to address the crassness of commercialism and the horrors of working for profit, later. Suffice to say, for now, that it’s all well and good to make stuff for the love of making it, but at some point you’re going to have to eat, and I endorse projects that pay for at least the energy and supplies to make new projects.)
So, for right now, let’s assume that you are making something, and you do want to sell it to someone: You probably want to find those someones and let them know that you’re making something. I mean, when I put it like that it’s a no shit sorta statement, innit? And now that I’m into it, I can see that this is going to lead to a whole long post about networking, socializing, marketing… and not being a prick about it or losing sight of the Making Things goal that started the process.
But first I think I need coffee. So you go read FREAKANGELS while I get good and caffeinated, and I’ll be back in a bit with that bit of a POD segue.







