Cartoon Career Cruising

So after having the photographer out yesterday from CareerCruising.com, I thought I’d dig into their site a bit and see if cartooning was indeed the right job for me.

I answered somewhere between 75 and 100 questions and (drum roll please) …

Career1

Yep! It works! Pretty well, really. I’d say it nailed me fairly quickly.

Here are the factors that apparently mattered the most:

Career2

After reading through the job description, earnings and working condition portions of the site, I’d say they have good realistic info on cartooning as a career as well.

Boy, this stuff’s come a long way from when I was in high school.

I remember filling in little dots and having them calculated some weeks later into a list of careers that might suit me. Tops on that list? Dancer and garbage man.

Take THIS Old High School Guidance Counselor!

Got this email recently:

Hi Mr. Anderson, i am a local photojournalist looking to take pictures of a Cartoonist doing his job for an educational career guide called Career Cruising. if possible, i’d welcome the opportunity to take photos of you at work for this great educational tool. please contact me at your convenience.

Neat, huh?

The photographer came over this afternoon and took a slew of pics of me inking, coloring, pretending to talk on the phone, and thinking of ideas. (Lemme tell you, that last one’s a stunner!)

She asked a lot of questions, and the experience, albeit a little embarrassing, was interesting. The photographer was very complimentary about my work, and really sweet around the kids.

I was told a few times, very earnestly, that I have the coolest job in the world. And I gotta say, it’d be difficult to disagree.

Anyway, at the end I took a pic of her taking a pic of me just for fun.

Img 2920

We traded looks at each other’s digital pics and said good day.

Word is my pics will be up on their site within a few months. I’ll letcha know…

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The Gag Cartoonist’s Business Plan

PlanGot this in my email the other day:

Hi there,

I am a product design student from Wales, UK and I am working on an assignment where I have to come up with a business plan. I just wanted to know what it takes to set up a business in cartoon illustration, and what it involves, as this is an area I have great interest in. What do you do that sets your business apart from other similar businesses?

I’d be very grateful for any information you could offer.

Thanks very much for your time.

Normally I just ignore stuff like this. I get a fair share of “tell me what all your markets are and how I make money” emails, but the above note seemed nice and it gives me an opportunity to blog about the business side of gag cartooning.

Let’s see… Business plan…

I’ve used the phrase before, but to be honest, cartooning isn’t the kind of business where you get your idea, get a loan, set up shop and hope to make a profit in a year or two.

Here’s some advice on how I’ve done it so far (I say “so far” because it’s a precarious job and I may very well be wearing an orange apron next week while directing you to the key copying guy), and I’m going to keep it more on the financial end of things:

1) Keep your day gig as long as you can

I worked for a screw manufacturer, a metals distributor, and an auto advertising website for a combined total of about six years before making the leap, and even then it was with the caveat that I juggle cartooning with being a stay-at-home dad.

Being a professional cartoonist most realistically means fitting it in, even when it’s your only source of income. I drew cartoons early in the morning before work, on my lunch hour and at night for years. Now I do it while the kids are at school, and on the weekends.

2) Things you should buy

As I said, cartooning isn’t business as usual, but there are some things I found helpful starting out:

  • A decent computer – My first was an Emachine that came with a printer, monitor and scanner for $500. It was a piece of crap, but it worked. Get something you can afford that gets the job done. You can get that tricked out Mac later.
  • Some sort of website – When I started out blogs didn’t exist yet, so I built my first site myself. It was horrible. Now there’s all sort of options from a blog with ComicPress to Tumblr to Rapidweaver. Keep it on the cheap, but make it look professional.
  • Reasonable art supplies – Cheapo printer paper, a pencil and something other than a Sharpie will get you a long, loooong way.
  • The Complete Cartoons of the New Yorker – You can get the paperback for about $30. When I was starting out I raided about every library in the state and read every book of cartoons I could find. This is more or less a one stop gag cartoon education.
  • Mountain Dew – You’re gonna be up early and stay up late. Coffee is good too.

3) Things not to buy

Even more important is avoiding unnecessary expenses. Don’t bother with:

  • A drafting table – It’s nice and it makes you feel professional, but no one cares what you drew the cartoon on. I worked at a coffee table in my living room for almost a decade
  • Mailing lists – Don’t waste a grand and upwards for hundreds of markets that couldn’t care less about cartoons. Use the library to find the biggies, read cartoonists’ blogs and websites, and just plain hunt around.
  • Business cards – I had 1000 printed up and used about five. Plus, your style is going to be changing a lot early on. A total and complete waste.
  • NCS membership – You need to be earning at least half of your income off cartoons to even apply, but as much as it’s a great place to meet other cartoonists, it’s largely social, and certainly not neccesary to work as a cartoonist.
  • How-to-cartoon books – It’s not rocket science here folks, and if you can’t draw a little already, you shouldn’t be looking at a career in cartooning. Most are outdated.

4) Watch your money

Anyone will tell you most businesses fail early because of accounting issues. Know how much you are making, spend as little as you can initially, and track it to the penny. Generally artists don’t like the business end of things. Learn to be good at it, or be an instant success and hire an accountant.

5) Stick to it

It’s hard, it’s discouraging, and you’re going to fail almost constantly. But if you love it you’ll keep doing it because, in the end, no cartoonist really does it for the money.

 

 

Playing In the Minors

Mw-RromToday there are two really interesting blog posts out there: Mike Lynch discusses the uneasy business of gag cartooning, and The Daily Cartoonist reported on an upcoming panel on non-traditional syndication at the New York Comic-Con.

The combination of the two got me thinking about the nature of gag cartooning and our status within the larger world of cartooning.

I think gag cartoonists are seen as minor leaguers. Most comic strip cartoonists start out, at least partially, doing gag cartoons. Then, if you’re good enough, you get called up to the big leagues of newspaper syndication.

If you’re not syndicated, there’s a certain stigma about you. You’re more or less looked down on as obviously a lesser talent. You see it a lot, and it’s painfully obvious at cartoonist get-togethers. (That being said, what’s funny is that the absolute biggest names couldn’t be nicer and, generally, are actually interested in who you are and what you do. It’s weird – almost another tier within cartooning.)

Here’s the thing though, I’m not sure I want to be a big leaguer anymore. I like it here.

After almost a decade of doing it professionally, I’m reasonably confident in my ability to earn a comfortable living. I don’t have an editor per se, so I can pretty much do whatever I want, and I don’t have to rely on or pay anyone else to sell my work. It’s pretty great.

One of the things I like most about gag cartooning is the competition. Syndication is competitive too, but not in the same way.

As I understand it, with syndication you submit to the syndicates, you get your development contract, you launch, you get a year or so of hard selling and then you’re left or sink or swim. Hard, yes, but the main hurdle seems to be getting the contract.

Gag cartooning works like this: you draw up a bunch of cartoons, and send them around to a bunch of different publications. Out of 15 or so that you do in a week, you might sell one. The others come back and are rerouted to other publications. It’s a much more focused competition here. It’s all about who’s funnier right now.

I think if your average comic stripper had to worry about editors choosing every day’s strips based on how funny they were that day, there’s be a lot more Pepto consumed.

Let me clarify, though, that I’m not anti-syndicate or comic strip. Everyone who does it seems to be mostly happy, and it’s worked very well for a long long time. It’s just not my brass ring anymore.

I think it all comes down to respect. My work is well drawn, funny, and published consistently in markets large and small worldwide. Cartooning is isolating enough, it’d be nice if more cartoonists outside gag cartooning took notice.

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Submit! Submit I Say!

Reubenstatue350-2Yes, it’s that time of year again when we cartoonists dig through our file cabinets to find the funniest cartoons with the fewest creases, send them to the NCS and…  well…  usually nothing happens.

Still, every year a few really talented people win a neat statue!

Think you got what it takes, bubby?!  Huh?!  Well do ya?!

Then get to it!  Here’s the info (thanks to Mikey for the control X/V-able text):

The 2007 National Cartoonists Society Division Awards

Cartoonists are invited to submit their work (or the work of someone else) for consideration for one or more of the following Division Awards.

NCS members, and non-members alike, are eligible.

You will need an NCS Division Awards Entry Form. Contact information is below.

TV ANIMATION

Submit one or more samples in VHS or DVD format of aired or exhibited work that was released in the year 2006.

FEATURE ANIMATION

Submit one or more samples in VHS or DVD format of aired or exhibited work that was released in the year 2006.

NEWSPAPER ILLUSTRATION

6 samples of published work.

GAG CARTOONS

12 samples of work published in 2006.

GREETING CARDS

6 samples of work published in 2006.

NEWSPAPER COMIC STRIPS

12 samples of work published in 2006.

NEWSPAPER PANEL CARTOONS

12 samples of work published in 2006.

MAGAZINE FEATURE/MAGAZINE ILLUSTRATION

6 samples of work published in 2006.

BOOK ILLUSTRATION

6 samples of work published in 2006.

EDITORIAL CARTOONS

12-20 samples of work published in 2006.

ADVERTISING ILLUSTRATION

4 samples of work published and marketed in 2006.

COMIC BOOKS/GRAPHIC NOVELS

3 samples of work published in 2006.

DEADLINE: February 23, 2007

Three finalists will be announced at the National Cartoonists Society web site by April 2007.

An award plaque will be presented at a black tie dinner at the 61st Annual Reubens Award Dinner in Orlando, Florida on May 26, 2007.

FOR AN ENTRY FORM and more information contact:

Mike Lynch fatcats3@gmail.com

or

Dave Coverly speedbumpcomic@comcast.net

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