Which writer’s conference should you go to this year?
American Christian Fiction Writers? Or Realm Makers, the hub for Christian
speculative writers? Today, I’d like to compare these two conferences, so we
can find out which is the conference for you.
Note: I’ve been to a grand total of two conferences: one
ACFW conference and one Realm Makers conference, so I haven’t been able to
include as many comparisons as I’d like, since I’m uncertain how similar the
conferences are from year to year. As the conferences change, some of the
following may be inaccurate.
Size
ACFW: Huge (around 500)
Realm Makers: Medium (around 200)
My critique partner and I were trying to find each other at
ACFW, but couldn’t for the first few days. We kept on texting back and forth
until we found a snippet of time and a clear hallway to meet in.
At Realm Makers, I easily found all of my critique partners.
It’s a sizable conference, but small enough that you can find the people you
need to.
While Realm Makers makes it easier to find people, ACFW’s
size means that there are more opportunities to meet an agent, author, or
writing coach you’ll click with. The appointments themselves offer more
opportunities. This year, ACFW has 13 agents available for appointments, while
Realm Makers had two, but to be fair only four agents in ACFW are open to
speculative.
Formality
ACFW: Formal
Realm Makers: Casual
For ACFW, think business casual to business professional.
For Realm Makers, think casual to business casual.
As a rule of thumb, try to dress at the upper end of the
spectrum. At ACFW, I brought two sets of business suits with matching skirts
and blazers along with two professional dresses. For Realm Makers, I packed
pretty blouses and nice jeans. Even some business casual outfits would be
pushing it.
Activities
ACFW: Worship and Market Place Browsing
Realm Makers: Splickety Kick-Off Party Games and Nerf War
I don’t remember how frequently, but at ACFW, there was a
part of the conference where everyone gathered in the main room and a worship
band played. ACFW also has a marketplace available, which essentially means an
area with folding tables where people who have something to offer authors can
set-up a stand. Realm Makers did have a bookstore (where they sold gorgeous
Elven crowns, which you can see me wearing below with a couple from Star Trek behind me), but it didn’t offer the things that the ACFW market place did,
like writing coaches and website design.
The first evening at Realm Makers was the Splickety Kick-Off
Party. In one of the games they offered, you had to hold two wooden skewers
inside either side of your mouth and move them like chopsticks with your lips to
take three marshmallows to a table a few feet away. Then you had to stack the
marshmallows on top of each other, so they stayed upright for three seconds. I
participated and—unfortunately—lost, due to the fact that one of the
competitors was “using his head.” ;) In other words, he mashed the marshmallows
together with his forehead.
And the Nerf War. That was definitely one of the highlights.
If you go to Realm Makers, take a Nerf gun and Nerf darts—just in case. They’ve
had a Nerf War for the past two years, but I’m not completely sure they’ll have
one next year. On the last night, I stayed up until 1:30 playing capture the
flag. It’s a ridiculous amount of fun. Until you die. Then you have to hang out
in the morgue, talking with other dead people and eating brownies.
An activity that both conferences offer is a costume dinner.
At ACFW, you dress according to your genre. For Realm Makers, you dress up as your
favorite speculative character or a character that interests you.
And here are a few Realm Makers and ACFW terms translated:
ACFW Continuing Education=Realm Makers Continuing Session
ACFW Workshop=Realm Makers Elective
At ACFW, you specifically sign up for all of your classes.
At Realm Makers, you sign up for the Continuing Session and just show up at the
electives.
Both offer panels and various appointments with agents and
editors. Many appointments offered at Realm Makers were with small publishers.
Both have early bird sessions, while ACFW has a post
conference session in addition.
Both offer opportunities to volunteer and have people
available to pray for you.
Both have recordings of the conferences. I haven’t listened
to the recordings from Realm Makers yet, but judging from the device used to
record (a black, plastic recorder), the recording probably won’t be as high
quality as the ACFW recording, since they had some sort of recording program
connected to the microphones.
After Thomas Locke’s Continuing Session, he asked me which
conference I liked better. I couldn’t say then, and I can’t say now. Both have
an amazing community and offer amazing opportunities. It simply depends on what
you’re trying to get out of the conference. If you want to have as many agent
appointments as possible, go to ACFW. Want a more casual environment? Go to
Realm Makers. If you write speculative, you’ll obviously find more like-minded
people at Realm Makers and more agents/publishers looking for your genre, but
the diverse group of authors you’ll meet at ACFW is worth meeting too.
Which writer’s conference would you like to attend? Have you
been to an ACFW or Realm Makers writer’s conference?
Thanks for reading!
Great post, Liz! It was really interesting to hear your perspective of both conferences, since I've only been to Realm Makers. I'm guessing I'll end up at Realm Makers more frequently in the future, but I'm definitely hoping to make it to ACFW one of these years, too!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Awesome! I hope to see you again in person then :)
DeleteThis was so helpful. I think Realm Makers sounds like it would be more my speed- more casual and intimate, plus having fewer crowds of people would be good for this introvert. :) But I can definitely see the advantages of being able to meet lots of agents at ACFW. Thanks, Liz!
ReplyDelete~Brenna
My pleasure, Brenna :) Glad you liked it!
DeleteThis is a great thorough and clear comparison, Liz! It's so helpful to know these things before making a decision and spending the money for the experience.
ReplyDeleteThank you! So glad you found it helpful :)
Delete