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The Official Blog for Jen Nipps

To Pseudonym or Not to Pseudonym (Or: Why I Use the User ID I Do)

(Note: This is about what name I choose to use for various accounts/sites online, not for what name I choose to write/be published under.)

When I first found the internet in the late 1990s, I didn’t want my name out there. I didn’t want people to know who I was. At the time, I barely let people know I was a writer.

That, obviously, has changed. People know I write. They know I have had things published.

Sometimes they even look for me.

That is the main reason I use a version of my name as my user ID on sites like Twitter, LinkedIn, Plurk, etc.

There is a marketing strategy used among many professions, but seems most common among writers, of transparency. You make no effort to hide who you are or what you do. You’re open and honest about yourself, your business, and what you do.

That’s what I try to do.

There’s another reason, too, though. From time to time, disagreements crop up on the Internet, as in life in general. But there is a key difference.

On the Internet, you can use a pseudonym for your user ID. You don’t have to use your actual name. Because of that, it’s easy to hide from what you say. You don’t have to take ownership of what you have said and can pretend it didn’t happen.

In life, you can’t do that.

I generally don’t go to places where such things are common practice, but eventually, wherever I go, things are bound to happen that cause disagreements and confrontations on some level.

This is my name. I have to take responsibility for what I say. I can’t hide behind a pseudonym.

That’s another reason I use a version of my name online. It keeps me honest with myself as well as with whoever might read what I write.

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Quick Conference Wrap-Up

The Oklahoma Writers’ Federation, Inc., conference was this weekend. I came away with three great things.

1. On Friday afternoon, I had an appointment with Dan Case, editor of WritingForDollars and publisher of AWOC Books. Last year, I learned that he was doing a “Devoted to…” series of devotional books. As of right now, there are Devoted to Writing, Devoted to Cooking, Devoted to Fishing, and Devoted to Truck Driving. I wanted to pitch DEVOTED TO CREATING.

A few weeks ago, he posted on Twitter that he was accepting appointments at the conference (which I knew about) and I replied I already had an appointment with him. He asked me to e-mail 10 pages of “something” to him so we would have a more productive 10 minutes.

So, as I’m sure you’ve figured…He wants it!!

2. Also…In May, with the writers’ organization, we change officers. This year, I’m Publicity Director. I’ve already started on that. OWFI is now on Twitter.

I have ideas of other social media-type ways to promote the organization between now and the next conference.

3. My historical romance novel-in-progress, BENEN’S BURDEN, won 1st Honorable Mention in the Historical category of the OWFI contest.

The keynote speaker for the banquet on Friday night was the amazing Tess Gerritsen. I had a previous commitment/promise to help with moving some baskets, so I didn’t get to go to her booksigning afterward. She is a wonderful speaker. The crux of it, in my opinion, was her closing line: “Write from the heart because that’s where the stories are.”

Also on Friday, I hosted a buzz session on Twitter, microblogging, and blogging in general. Around 10-15 people came through (in & out). There is some interest in an actual conference session on it sometime in the future.

Who knows? It could happen.

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(Photo © 2008 La-Dair)

 

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