Four-Part Class Series: MAKING IT UP - Creative Entrepreneurship for Writers
Four-Part Class Series: MAKING IT UP - Creative Entrepreneurship for Writers
Writers have all the skills needed to be entrepreneurs, yet we often don’t have the support to transition into that self-led space. MAKING IT UP: Creative Entrepreneurship for Writers is a four-part virtual learning series offering guidance and insight to writers of all levels about becoming self-employed, entrepreneurs, and using our writing practices to catapult us toward owning our own time and labor.
From insight on business operations, financial/legal considerations, to guidance on funding, and how to leverage the skills you already have along the journey, these sessions are built to ensure you leave with tangible steps towards entrepreneurship whether that’s part-time, full-time, or something in-between.
Each session will consist of a combination of interactive activities, community conversations, guest speakers, and resources and tools to help guide you toward your entrepreneurship journey. Participants will also be added to the growing Starshine Arts Collective. Community virtual community to connect with other writers and to receive resources and guidance virtually.
Register for all four sessions (at a discounted rate) below or register for individual sessions here.
Once registered, you’ll receive a Zoom invite to registered sessions within 48 hours.
Session 1 - Manifesting: Owning Your Own Labor Through Entrepreneurship
September 4th 7-8:30pm EST [VIRTUAL]
Through guided activities and overview of my own practice, this session will demystify what entrepreneurship is, and help participants discover what skills, passions, and more within their own lives as writers can help them build their entrepreneurial life. All participants will receive a toolkit of resources throughout and after this session.
Session 2 - Actualizing Your Entrepreneurship Journey with Guest Speaker Minda Honey, Writing for Fakers
September 11th 7-8:30pm EST [VIRTUAL]
What are the tangible steps one can take toward becoming an entrepreneur? What’s an LLC? What’s contract work? What’s my grant strategy? What services can I offer? We’ll explore all of these questions and more along with hearing from real-world entrepreneurial writer and author Minda Honey [LINK], from Writing for Fakers [LINK].
Minda Honey BIO
Session 3: Maintaining Your Entrepreneurship Journey with Guest Speaker Hannah Cole, Sunlight Tax
September 18th 7-8:30pm EST [VIRTUAL]
What are the financial implications of being an entrepreneur? How can I build consistency and stability within entrepreneurship? We’ll explore these questions and more while also chatting with Hannah Cole, artist and founder of Sunlight Tax to explore how to maintain our entrepreneurial ventures.
Hannah Cole is a tax expert, artist, and small business owner who specializes in working with self-employed people, especially creative and mission-driven ones. She’s helped tens of thousands of self-employed people skill up with accessible tax and money education, through her Money Bootcamp program, tax workshops from Florida to Alaska, and on the Sunlight Tax podcast. Her book, Taxes for Humans: Simplify Your Taxes and Change the World When You’re Self-Employed, is the most funny and empowering tax guide you’ll ever read. You can get the simple tax tips and the podcast each week on her Substack, Taxes for Humans. Hannah is the founder ofSunlight Tax.
Session 4: Growing Your Entrepreneurial Vision
September 18th 7-8:30pm EST [VIRTUAL]
In this final session, we’ll combine all of our learnings together while also learning from the instructors own processes and systems as a founder and writer. We’ll also discuss the tangible next steps you can take to continue making progress towards owning our own labor as writers.
Recordings will be available and sent to all who’ve registered after each session.
Please note this learning series will not offer any financial and legal advice. All content is for learning purposes only. Please connect with a professional for any specific advice on financial and legal matters.
Series Instructor: Tatiana Johnson-Boria, MFA
Tatiana Johnson-Boria (she/her) is the author of Nocturne in Joy (Sundress Publications, 2023), winner of the 2024 Julia Ward Howe Book Prize in Poetry. As an educator, artist, facilitator, and mother; she uses her writing practice to dismantle racism, reckon with trauma, cultivate healing, and to explore the complex magic of mothering.
Tatiana is an award-winning writer and recipient of fellowships and grants from Tin House (now the McCormack Writing Center), the Massachusetts Cultural Council, MacDowell, the Brother Thomas Fellowship, and the St. Botolph Club Foundation, among others. She’s the winner of the Matt Clark Poetry Prize at New Delta Review (2021) and her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net recognition. Tatiana has also been named a finalist for the Philip Levine Prize for Poetry at Anhinga Press, the Black Warrior Review Poetry Prize, The Southern Humanities Review Auburn Witness Prize, and the 92Y Discovery Contest. Her work appears or is forthcoming in The Academy of American Poets, Ploughshares, Kenyon Review Online, The Cincinnati Review, Transition Magazine, and many other publications.
Tatiana is the founder of the Starshine Arts Collective, a creative community focused on tending to writers, especially writers most often marginalized in our society. She’s a trauma-informed certified teaching artist and brings more than a decade of experience teaching to her work. The Starshine Arts Collective was born from Lucille Clifton’s poem “won’t you celebrate with me” specifically the line, “i made it up//here on this bridge between// starshine and clay.” With this origin story she guides writers to see themselves as sacred storytellers who also have the power to manifest their creative work. Tatiana is currently a visiting lecturer at Framingham State University, and has served as an affiliated faculty member at Emerson College, teaching courses on poetry, composition, and intersectional identity within poetics. She also teaches at GrubStreet and has previously led workshops at Catapult and the Boston Center for Adult Education. Her teaching philosophy is rooted in accessibility, social justice, and the power of storytelling as a tool for self-discovery and change.
In addition to her literary work, Tatiana has an extensive background in strategic communications and marketing and is founder and principal strategist at her own consultancy, Johnson-Boria Creative LLC. As a strategist, she has developed messaging and tactics for mission-driven organizations, ensuring that their narratives focus on people, their lives, and their communities.
Tatiana holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Emerson College and a BA in English and Cinema & Media Studies from Simmons University. She is represented by Lauren Scovel at Laura Gross Literary.
This learning series is offered by the Starshine Arts Collective. Learn more about us here.