Tech IT Easy » artisan http://www.techiteasy.org A Technology and Business Weblog provided to You by a Global Group of Friends. Wed, 29 Dec 2010 09:44:02 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.4 On Having Heroes in Your Craft http://www.techiteasy.org/2009/06/25/on-having-heroes-in-your-craft/ http://www.techiteasy.org/2009/06/25/on-having-heroes-in-your-craft/#comments Thu, 25 Jun 2009 10:01:14 +0000 Vincent van Wylick http://www.techiteasy.org/2009/06/25/on-having-heroes-in-your-craft/
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    superman_obama I think I’ve just discovered a new hero of mine in the area of blogging. Her name is Penelope Trunk and I really like her writing style as well as the focus of her blog/site/company, called The Brazen Careerist. Previous heroes include Fred Wilson, whom I also like for his style of writing, and, I’m a little ashamed to say, Robert Scoble.

    The way that heroism works for me is that I start writing like these people. Scoble has this habit of asking himself questions like “Why do I like Friendfeed? Here’s 120 reasons..” Somewhat banal, when you think about it, because it’s like you’re saying “Why am I so right? Here’s 1 million reasons…” I actually adopted it for a few blog-posts, then I dropped it. Fred Wilson writes essays, shorter than Paul Graham’s (thank god), but still I like the flow of the text. And for a while, I’m sure, I tried to sound like Fred Wilson. And Penelope Trunk just has a very personable style, for lack of a better word.

    That’s not to say that I will now try to write like Ms. Trunk, or that I even do it intentionally. Back when I was a kid and tried to write fiction, I always remember that it read like Stephen King, J.R.R. Tolkien, or Isaac Asimov, depending on who I was reading at the time. It wasn’t on purpose, it was more like my brain adopted the writing style more easily than say, if I spent time with an accountant and tried to replicate what he/she did.

    I think each of us have brain-patterns that fit a certain craft best and for me it happens to be writing. Which is interesting, because I also read and talk to a lot of entrepreneurs, yet I am not one right now and wondering if I ever will be. Food for thought.

    Have you experienced the same thing in your craft? How do you take in information from your heroes, though conversations, reading, observation, interaction, or other means? How effective has it been for you? And is it something that stays with you always or just in the beginning of your life? And, the most important question of them all… Who are Your Heroes?

    Vincent

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    Related posts:

    1. The Right Mix between Idea and Execution
    2. Why Universities work and Self-Study doesn’t
    3. Poll: Decide the future of Tech IT Easy (my part in it, at least)
    4. The key to prolific writing, part 2: scheduling & bundling
    5. A different way to comment

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