Creator Convo

New Initiative: “Creator Convo”
Artist Knack and Social Media Hacks
Fri., June 6th, 11am-11:45am (LA Time) via zoom
with Founder Jeffrey Gordon (JG) & Potential Guest Experts
Zoom RSVPs will be accepted until Noon the day of the event. Once you RSVP, zoom will control your access.
Please join Writers Boot Camp Founder Jeffrey Gordon (JG) as we host alumni and colleagues for a helpful conversation about how best to manage social media and propagate and potentially monetize your creative content.
While short-form content creators will gradually extend to long-form entertainment, artists who create long form–TV series, feature films, books and novels–can benefit from utilizing short-form media and social platforms.
This may be especially activating for more experienced writers, actors, artists and filmmakers (read: mature), whose core competency has been fashioned prior to trends of disruption and the takeover of the 10-15 second video.
We welcome you to attend the conversation with other artists who share their experiences, fits and starts, and success stories, whether promoting job skills, viral videos, web series, or product launches, as well as other ventures.
Personal Note from JG about Writers Boot Camp’s Social Media Experience
“For me, there’s a long story about social media, because I naturally meet so many people. When fb took off, we were juggling two websites and had 60K people in our company database, so I felt uncomfortable potentially compromising that network.
Recently, I decided it might be convenient to connect with colleagues and friends, as well as thousands of my alumni, by joining LinkedIn. There are so many frustrating things about it, though one mentor literally said, “Well, I’ve been on the platform for 24 years and I have 22,000 contacts, so you are now one degree from that many people. Now, 36 years into supporting writers and artists, it’s interesting to realize that if someone went through Writers Boot Camp in my living room at age 45, they’d be 80 years old today…there’s always an argument for continuing to embrace the learning curve.”