Good Advice on Buying Your First SLR Digital Camera

December 21st, 2007, 13 Comments »

Two tripods and some ducks, black and whiteAvid photographer Dave Sifry has written what looks to be a very useful introductory article on buying your first SLR camera plus peripherals for less than $1000:

What’s funny is that most people who are deciding on what to buy think the priorities are exactly the opposite. They think that by getting the most megapixels or by buying the camera that the pros use, they’ll get great pictures. Don’t believe this. The camera companies are just trying to brainwash you into buying more camera than you need, and you’ll end up puzzled as to why your photographs end up looking, well, mediocre.

Dave recommends acquiring a card reader and not using the USB interface on your camera–he says that it’s slow and wastes your camera’s battery life. I noticed that professional photographer Kris Krug also uses a card reader. I’m not serious enough to bother, I guess. Plus, do I really need another peripheral kicking around my desk?

UPDATE: Tim Bray adds some worthy additional advice.

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Wear Sunscreen (and Be An Intern)

March 18th, 2007, 7 Comments »

If I could offer you only one tip for the future, sunscreen would be it. The long term benefits of sunscreen have been proved by scientists whereas the rest of my advice has no basis more reliable than my own meandering experience…I will dispense this advice now.

I’m sure you know where that’s from.

I’m rather late on this, but Drew invited me (and you, my lovely, darling readers) to contribute our two cents on what university graduates should know about breaking into the marketing and advertising industries:

The birds will soon be chirping, the flowers blooming and the college grads descending like locusts on every marketing agency, marketing department and media outlet. They all want one thing — their first real job.

I remember how scary it was. 20+ years later, I shake my head at the mistakes the grads make while trying to vie for my attention. So I decided we (yes WE) could give them a gift that will put that digital camera to shame. We can help them get that job.

Here’s the thing: my first career job was in software development as a technical writer. So, too, was my second and third. I eventually grew bored with technical writing, and my employee kindly shifted me over to the more exciting world of web marketing.

I probably do one informational interview a month with a recent grad, and inevitably they ask a lot of questions about ad agencies and large corporate marketing departments. I can’t answer those. I’ve never worked in either (though I’ve consulted in both), and given that I prefer a diversity of work (and work environment), that suits me fine.

So my advice to new graduates is degree-neutral–it applies whether your rolled-up paper says “Engineering” or “Visual Arts”. It’s also pretty obvious, but it worked for me and I truly believe it’ll work for anybody.

Do an internship.

About a year after I graduated, I did a two-month internship at Radical Entertainment, a Yaletown game developer. This guy, a frequent blogger, was my boss. It was the height of Web Bubble 1.0, and I played more Quake and Starcraft than did actual work, but it got my foot in the door. After two months they didn’t bring me on (they were busy laying people off, if I recall correctly), but I left their offices with a tech company on my resume, a decent portfolio and a glowing reference. In a couple of weeks I had two offers, and I’m still good friends with the guy who hired me at MPS. A similar strategy worked for my brother.

What does an internship do for you?

  • It forces you to research the local job market, and to actually choose the employers for which you want to work. It makes you ignore the classified ads, which is a good habit to get into.
  • You get a ton of interview experience at a reduced stress level. After all, there are lots of companies that might want to intern for, and you might as well talk to them all.
  • You learn how to promote yourself. You have to make cold calls to potential bosses, and that’s scary.
  • Once you land an internship, you get to practice over-achieving. Obviously you want a job with the company, so you’ve got a short amount of time to convince them of that fact.

My two-month internship was unpaid, and I think that’s okay. Happily, I had the structure of a UVic alumni program (I think this is it) which provided a context for the potential employers. Regardless, accept that during your internship you’ll make little or no money. That ought to make you all the hungrier.

The whole process–from assembling a resume to calling employers–can be difficult work for a young person, but it’s well worth it. It’s the proverbial toe in the door, and that’s more than most graduates get.

Along similar lines, I can’t recommend co-op programs enough. I didn’t do one, but both my brother and Julie did, and it placed them in very good stead upon graduation.

What advice would you give new graduates?

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