The Lessons Of Fandom: Business Sense

This is part of a new series where I'm going to examine specific "general skills" that people learn in fandom and their hobbies.  I talk specific skills quite a bit, but fandom also teaches you general or "metaskills" that can help your career quite a bit.

First up – your fannish and hobby activities teach you good business sense.

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Profan Career Ambiguity

There's a peculiar ambiguity to turning your hobby into your career, the life of the progeek, profane, and protaku.

Work and hobby fuse.  What we love to do and what we do for money are fused and seemingly impossible to separate.  What we do at home teaches us lessons to use on the job, what we do on the job gives us new ideas for our hobbies.

Co-workers and friends become hard to define.  You hang out with co-workers because you understand each other's unique experiences.  You introduce friends to your industry due to shared interests.

Casual reading?  What exactly is that when what you read for fun also gives you ideas for work?

You get the idea.

So when we, the profans and progeeks, look at our lives and careers, we ask ourselves "what is hobby, what is job" in that vague quest to figure out just where the division is.  Maybe we're compelled to find the division so we can relax more, or work harder, or just because we figure we ought to know where the division is.

Here's what I've found: stop looking.

The ambiguity between hobby and job is not a problem in the profan lifestyle – it's a feature.  The ambiguity is what makes you a hobbyist-turned pro, a working geek, a protaku.  You can't find a separation point because there isn't one.

When you do what you love as a career, what you're really doing is finding a way to connect the different parts of your life together.  At times things are more "recreational", at times more "professional" but at all times it's about your life – one giant, wriggling, connected mass of you, your past, and your future.

If you could pick it to pieces, then your life would not be unified.  If you could divide it up you probably wouldn't be that working geek or successful fan because then your life would be composed of several separate pieces, and your passions and interests would be constrained.  Sure that's not the case for everyone who turns what they love into a career – but it's true for most I'd wager.

So if you're a profan and you're having trouble finding work/life division, maybe it's time to accept the ambiguity of your situation.  Maybe you need to focus on different issues like "relaxing" or "working harder" or "spending more time with family" as opposed to trying to break your life into convenient chunks.

Chances are, some time ago, you didn't want it broken into chunks anyway.

– Steven Savage

Technology And Image

We are nerds, geeks and otaku.  We love technology.  We love gadgets.  We're into them.  We're fully 100% out as raging technophiles.  From the youngest geek to the oldest profan and protaku, we love our gizmos.

We use technology all the time.  We take our gaming systems on the train to kill time.  We take our smartphones to conventions to stay in touch and take photos.  We take our iPad to our job interviews to overwhelm people with how cool we are.

In many cases, we may realize that technology says something about us.  Having a DS is an invitation to trade Pokemon (even if you don't play it).  A smartphone will lead people to assume you have a GPS (which they may not tell you until they're lost).  An iPad says you're cutting edge and have spare cash.  We usually enjoy what these things say about us.

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