Tag: jobs

  • What I’ve Learned in a Year of SEO

    The year 2012 was a big milestone for me with many life changing events. I got married, moved across the country from Arizona to Louisiana, and I started a new job at Search Influence.

    Over the past year I have learned many things about New Orleans, life, marriage and the workplace. New Orleans has taught me that a parade isn’t real unless there are “throws” and that almost everything is better with some hot sauce. I’ve learned to appreciate the good and smile through the difficult. In marriage, if you burn dinner, your husband will still love you, and you can always order a pizza.

    In the digital marketing world, I learned that you can’t run a great social media campaign on memes alone, people actually do click on Google Ads, and they really do generate business. Not only have I learned to explain the technical jargon, but I’ve also learned that no matter how many times you explain it: To a business owner, it is the results that matter, and it is the results that will speak for your work.

    Most importantly, I’ve learned SEO is a constantly changing landscape, and to be good, you must not only learn to roll with the punches but also be quick and think on your feet. As each update from Google continues to roll out, the ever pressing themes shine brightly.

    1. You can’t cheat the system.

    SEO is all about building natural online authority. The keyword is natural. And in real life, things move a little slower than creating 10,000 links in a month, or 100 reviews in a day, or 20 instances of an exact keyword phrase throughout one webpage. Take time and create real online partnerships and produce information your potential clients would appreciate.

    2. SEO is not an exact science!

    All sites are not created equal. Some SEO practices may work wonders on one site but may do nothing for another. Before you throw links at a site or slap some optimized content on a few pages, take a look at the online presence of a company and make educated decisions on what can best strengthen the site.

    3. Successful SEO is a melting pot.

    You can’t rely on just on-site versus off-site optimization strategies or specific aspects of either. Successful SEO campaigns take a holistic view on strengthening a whole site and online brand from start to finish. For keyword phrases, don’t just focus on one area of business and the terms with the highest search value. Fortify the brand from its core elements then branch out. While you edit the site, work with all elements to better improve it – not just optimize it. Finally, build up the online brand by utilizing signals from various places and types online.

    SEO is an ever changing world, and this year I’ve learned to work for the results and appreciate the strategy behind every client. Finally, I’ve learned that what I do makes a difference. My favorite part of my job is when my clients let me know their phones are ringing off the hook or that they’ve had to hire additional help because of the increase in business.

    Here is to a great year and looking forward to the next!

  • Seeking PPC Talent! Take Your Career to the Next Level at Search Influence.

    Screen Shot 2013-09-13 at 10.10.21 AM

    Since our start in 2007, Search Influence has grown to be the largest online marketing firm on the Gulf Coast and the third largest advertising agency in New Orleans. As the most qualified Google AdWords company in Louisiana, we’ve had the opportunity to bring aboard some of the best talent in the online marketing industry, and we are looking to expand our team!

    Currently seeking an Online Advertising Associate to join our nationally recognized search marketing team, we are accepting applications from those with experience in online display advertising planning, negotiating and buying.

    Have Paid Search Experience?

    If preparing, analyzing and managing paid online advertising campaigns sounds like your ideal work day, look no further. Our paid search team manages on average $112,000 per month in Google Adwords for PPC campaigns, including search and display campaigns for our direct clients and partners’ customers.

    Our PPC Team responsibilities include (but are not limited to):

    • Analyze performance data to optimize for campaign performance
    • Execute and analyze monthly online advertising paid search budgets and reports
    • Maintain constant communication with Online Advertising Supervisor on account performance
    • Collaborate with Account Management team to fully understand client goals for each campaign
    • Track online advertising best practices, bid management systems, keyword developments, and industry trends
    • Explore online advertising alternatives and be innovative in recommending campaign solutions
    • Leverage online ads management platforms to increase effectiveness of account

    The Search Influence Culture

    Screen Shot 2013-09-13 at 10.16.19 AM

    We’re a close-knit, tech-savvy office family, and we work to cultivate a positive environment that provides a sense of passion and teamwork to our everyday projects. With over 50 in-house employees, SI brings innovative and intelligent minds together under one roof to help small businesses grow online.

    Screen Shot 2013-09-13 at 10.13.42 AM

    We’re located on New Orleans’ bustling Oak Street, which proves convenient come lunchtime with dining options that include Tru Burger, Pho Bistreaux, Mellow Mushroom and of course Oak Wine Bar for those nights that deserve a glass of wine (or two).

    Think You Have What it Takes?

    Preferred Skills:

    • Time management
    • Deadline driven
    • Creative
    • Strong writing and editorial skills
    • Excellent communication and interpersonal skills; including phone and e-mail
    • Detail oriented and resourceful
    • Positive attitude / good sense of humor
    • Analytical skills
    • Ability to work independently

    You’ll Get First Look If You Have Any of These Qualifications:

    • Google AdWords Certified Individual (Search)
    • Google AdWords Certified Individual (Display)
    • Google Analytics Individual Qualification
    • Bing Ads Accredited Professional

    Are you Eligible?

    Requirements:

    • Bachelors Degree in Related Field of Study
    • An entrepreneurial mindset
    • Outgoing personality with great communications skills
    • Ability to demonstrate analytical skills, technical knowledge and attention to detail
    • Experience in online display advertising planning, negotiating and buying (including banner ads, rich media and more)

    Apply Today!

    Send your cover letter, resume, salary history (with proof of salary) and writing samples to [email protected]. No phone calls, walk-ins or hand-deliveries please.

  • Team Building With the Development Department

    Spider Bat Monster FightOn the night of Monday, September 9th, the Search Influence Development Department had what turned out to be a truly exhilarating team-building experience. It helped us learn to work better together as a group and, through its recounting here, can hopefully help readers and colleagues get to know their fellow SI Developers a little better.

    NOTE: Everything that follows is absolutely true, with no usage of metaphor or hyperbole at any point.

    As you may or may not be aware, the city of New Orleans has a fundamental propensity toward unprecedented natural disasters, particularly during the summertime. So it came as little surprise that once again this August, we received word of a looming attack by a giant mutant spider/bat hybrid monster. This year’s monster was named Gerald by meteorologists and, after its formation by way of an unfortunate cooking accident in Honduras, forged a devastating path up through the Gulf of Mexico in late August. By the morning of September 9th, it became clear through both science stuff and the monster’s Twitter feed, that it would reach New Orleans by the next morning.

     

    Given Gerald’s evident intention to eat and party a lot, it was immediately clear to the SI Development team that this giant and clearly dangerous creature would be heading straight for the Riverbend area of New Orleans, because that’s how we do. Not wishing to frighten or alarm any of their innocent, loving coworkers, the Development team had to hash out their plan of combat in total silence and secrecy. In fact, the rest of the SI staff will likely have had no idea that any of this happened until reading this blog.

    The first thing the Developers knew they needed was time, because that’s what the star of a cheesy 90’s action movie would probably say in this situation. Fortunately, Developer Mattie Kenny is extremely active on the local music and cultural scene, always up on the latest action around town. Using her incomparable presence around the city combined with her acute social media skills, she began blasting Gerald with a wealth of event suggestions and hot spot recommendations in an effort to distract the monster from its primary goal of destroying and/or consuming everyone in the fair city of New Orleans.

    As Mattie worked her magic, resident Development team bassists and all around cranky music snobs Leigh Aucoin and David Fransen reached the natural conclusion that the one event no human or mutant in the world could ever turn down would be a rooftop one-on-one electric bass battle. Featuring themselves as the primary challengers, Leigh and David knew the monster would eventually find the opportunity to out-jam them on the roof of an abandoned warehouse building utterly irresistible. It was important, however, to schedule this competition the night before Gerald’s imminent destruction of the city and to make this impromptu bass-off appear as legitimate and official as possible.

    Enter one of the Search Influence Development team’s newer additions, WordPress Wizard Macario James. Mac was able to throw together an expertly designed 2013 Mutant Rooftop Bass-Off “OFFICIAL” site in practically no time. Mac configured the site to make use of easily editable home page widgets so that whenever Leigh and David decided to waste another 45 minutes agonizing over who would make up their list of most direct musical influences, either one of them could log in and add yet another obscure post-punk band to the needlessly lengthy list with ease.

    Crazy Justin's CorndogsAs soon as Mac had the site’s general functionality in place, the team realized that since Gerald was clearly in midflight but still tweeting, the monster was most likely to be viewing any site it visited on a mobile phone of some sort. Fortunately, SI Developer “Crazy” Justin Scott is an expert with responsive design techniques. Within mere hours, Justin had restyled Mac’s basic site so that all menus, links and the on-site sign-up form were all visible and properly sized for the spider/bat monster’s mobile phone (which they assumed had to be an Android, because monsters). Justin was also kind enough to grant sponsorship for the event through his alternate project Crazy Justin’s Corndog & Meatball Emporium, making for an irresistible competition grand prize of a specialty limited edition Mad Crazy Corndog.

    Orchestrating a masterful turn, Mattie began targeting the Bass-Off specifically in many of her online interactions with Gerald. By early afternoon on Monday, September 9th, the team was able to confirm that the monster appeared to be taking the bait.

    This kicked the Development team’s preemptive strike program into Phase 2. The plan at this point was to lure the creature into a position of exposure at a high altitude, whereupon it could be immobilized and ultimately destroyed. It appeared at this point that the team would have Gerald where they wanted him, but now they needed to work out how to freeze and then destroy him.

    In addition to his innumerable web development skills, Developer Andre Eble is an expert builder and woodworker in his spare time. Given his experience constructing shelving units and tables for use at home, it was only logical that Andre be called upon to build a giant stun gun capable of freezing a giant flying bat/spider monster in its place for exactly 5 minutes and 11 seconds on short notice. As Andre began to systematically reconstruct scrap metal and discarded plywood into a super-freeze raygun, Leigh and David began warming of for the evening’s bass-off.

    Understanding that there was no margin for error in timing and execution when it comes to killing giant monsters, Lead Developer Luke Ledet and Developer Evan Rinehart determined that it would be best to automate as much of the latter phase of this plan as possible. The conclusion of the bass battle would trigger the firing of Andre’s super stun gun, which would in turn send a signal to Developer Shane Kretzman, who had been placed in command of actually executing Gerald once he had been immobilized.

    No one else really understood what Luke and Evan did exactly, but they both put on rollerblades, typed really quickly, each hand on a different keyboard transmitting to 34 different monitors, each displaying a whole lot of numbers and things moving around all fast and weird while intensely pounding techno music played in the background. So obviously, everyone knew that whatever they were doing was going to work out in the end — against all odds — because that’s just how programming goes.

    As stupid as that sounds, it turned out to be true, since everything went exactly according to plan. Gerald showed up to the 2013 Mutant Rooftop Bass-Off with a cheesy, custom 5-string metal bass in tow, just as planned. Even though Leigh and David planned to lose the bass battle just to give Gerald a temporarily distracting sense of dominance and the illusion of victory, they were both pretty impressed with Gerald’s performance. Since he could fly, Gerald was able to do that hover-over-the-audience-and-headbang thing like Michael Anthony from Van Halen but without the complexities of a Jack Daniels-fueled pulley system, which is undeniably sweet.

    Anyway, as the monster was arrogantly preening and strutting after its bass battle victory, it, of course, took a bite out of its victory corndog. What it couldn’t have known was that Evan’s programming mastery had made him the first person in history to effectively hack a corndog. Gerald’s celebratory bite of a savory Crazy Justin’s Mad Crazy Corndog triggered Andre’s giant stun gun, freezing the monster in place.

    Meanwhile, Luke had configured the stun gun to not only hold its victim within its power for exactly 311 seconds, which was exactly the amount of time required for Shane to receive the expertly automated Code Amber alert sent via chat client. At this point, it was all up to Shane.

    Shane-on-dragonNow one thing many don’t know about Search Influence’s newest Development team member is that Shane owns 3 pet dragons. And his dragons aren’t cute Epcot Center dragons with paintbrushes and catchy tunes; they are giant, terrifying Manowar album cover dragons that breathe fire and can totally kill a giant mutant bat/spider monster with no difficulty whatsoever. Right on cue, Shane came swooping from the sky atop a giant dragon, which promptly torched Gerald and melted his stupid bass with its totally superfluous fifth string. After forming a circle and high-fiving each other in slow motion while that Simple Minds song played over speakers no one was ever able to locate, the Development team went and ate a lot of pizza together, as coworkers do.

    This potentially difficult situation for the Search Influence Development Department couldn’t have gone more smoothly, and it proved to be an invaluable team-building exercise for everyone involved. Every company has its own particular approach to team building, but if your company has the opportunity to defend its home city from a giant mutant bat/spider monster attack, I know 9 members of the SI team who would strongly suggest you take it!

  • The Search Influence Education

    Affecting a smooth transition into any company requires an emphasis on education at the outset. From best practices and company traditions to memorizing industry protocols and even coworkers’ names, there’s definitely a lot to learn. For the first few weeks, even the first few months, your new job may feel like a trip back to grade school. Eventually you graduate, but hopefully the learning never stops.

    for dummies

    This is especially so at Search Influence, where our clients come from a variety of industries, are located across the country and have a wide range of goals. Through these clients, Search Influencers are continuously granted unique insight into expertise other than our own. A week’s work may require us to brush up on the qualities of stainless steel, the psychology of a floor plan or the history of beer. As to what Search Influence itself offers, we know the qualities of a good website, we embrace teamwork no matter our floor plan, and coffee is our beverage of choice.

    Some fields interest different people while others don’t, but familiarizing ourselves with clients’ industries is a vital part of our work. We make efforts every day to pick up more and more knowledge from each client so to properly represent them and act in their best interest. That’s one of the main things I’ve learned here at Search Influence–knowing the basics of a wide variety of subjects can help in ways that more specialized knowledge cannot. Each day, I strive to learn more about our clients, and I always learn something new. Hopefully this makes me more able to understand clients’ motivation and give them exactly what they need to succeed.

  • Pizza Party USA: Finding a Way to Survive While Working an Unpaid Internship.

    One of the most important bits of advice I was given while finishing my undergrad in Graphic Design and Communication Studies was to get an internship. So while I was in my senior year, I did just that. However there was one small problem, it was an unpaid internship. Although the fairness of unpaid internships is a hotly debated topic in the media right now, it’s pretty common practice. What you need to remember is that it’s not impossible to live while doing so.

    pizza

    So as I did my 6-month internship gaining valuable experience that I rely on today, I was faced with a dilemma: I needed to make money somehow to pay my rent and buy my ramen food supplements. With school and work during the day, I was at a lost of how I could work at night without lessening the already dwindling hours I slept each night. It was a friend that came up with the solution: pizza delivery.

    The most taken-for-granted job ever became my savior to my financial problems. I could work from 6 till 11 p.m., which was great compared to being a bartender and staying up till 3 a.m. I could listen to class notes or use the alone time to think of assignments or projects. I could use the opportunity to talk to the very people I was trying to design for in some of my projects.

    intern

    So my advice to students or recent grads, get an internship. Go out there and try to get a job at your dream company. The connection you make as an intern could lead to a full-time position once you graduate, and even if it doesn’t, you’ll gain invaluable experience. Don’t be afraid if it is unpaid either. While not ideal, you can survive. Just think creatively about part time work available to you–even if it means going on a Ramen diet, like I did.

  • Team Building 101: Kickball

    As our team was beaming from a 10 to 0 victory over a clearly superior opponent, I began to think about how good this absurd adult kickball league was for the relationships in our office. If you are not familiar with adult kickball leagues, you might be doing your organization a disservice by not looking into it.

    I joined Search Influence only about a month or two before our kickball team got started, so I thought, “I can’t pass up this chance to get to know my new coworkers.” After all, no one wants to be known as “the new guy” any longer than they have to.

    kickball

    In it’s inaugural season, the Pay-Per-Kickers (that’s right–we are nerds) managed about a .500 season, but the friendships that were forged had immeasurable benefits. We would all get out to the field no earlier than we had to to have a beer before the game, and the conversations slowly shifted from office talk to congenial discussions about what we were doing that weekend.

    Our first couple games were shaky. I think everyone was trying to find their comfort level hanging out with their colleagues on a much more personal basis. In the meantime, we were all trying not to look like fools while playing a child’s game. When we did look like fools, it was just something to laugh about the next day at work.

    After the kickball games, all of the teams go to the same bar for trivia. I’ll say this, we were much better at trivia than kickball. With a slew of 1st and 2nd place trivia finishes throughout the season, we had built up an impressive bar tab by the time we lost our last playoff game.

    play nola

    PLAYNOLA’s kickball league became a topic of discussion and an event to look forward to each week. I think the word got around the office how much fun we were having, because for our second season, we had 23 people sign up!

     

  • Introducing Team Jeanne

    IMG_0262

    Team Jeanne, JKELTS and Team Orange is the New Black are only a few of the names we like to call our work group. I am the newest member of Team Jeanne and wanted to share a little bit about the women that I have the pleasure of spending my days with and why we love our team. Coming into the workforce as a recent graduate, I didn’t know what to expect, but Team Jeanne has really embraced me with open arms. I couldn’t feel more at home.

    To introduce our team, I will start with the newly engaged, Jeanne Gaudet. Jeanne is a Senior Account Manager and leader of our team. Jeanne is super organized, which is fitting as she was high school valedictorian at our alma mater St. Mary’s Dominican High School, and she has a killer fashion sense.

    Tina Hua is an Account Manager and has been with Search Influence for about two years.  Tina is a problem solver and has the coolest dog named Harry, who she gets to visit during lunch.

    Emily Kerner is the Account Manager that manages me. Lucky Emily! Emily’s cat, Holly, “uses” Twitter (check her out @catwhotweets).

    Laura Manning is an Account Associate who is the social media wizard of the office. Laura has been to Disney World 26 times and has three paralyzed toes – believe it or not, she can still run!

    IMG_7748

    Susannah Bunch is a Junior Account Associate and also the comic relief of our office. If you’re looking for a Snapchat buddy, she is one to add (per Susannah’s request I could not provide her phone number in this post).

    I am Kendall Finn, a Junior Account Associate and the newbie to the group and the working world.

    Why do we love being apart of Team Jeanne? I believe I can speak on behalf of everyone when I say our team is filled with smart, independent women who value each other and the time we get to spend together–and the endless amounts of Snapchats don’t hurt either. I am so lucky to have had the opportunity to meet these lovely ladies and can only hope that one day you will too.

  • Dungeons & Dragons: An Inspirational, Creative Team-Building Exercise

    The path before five adventuring comrades follows the dark tunnels of an ancient ruin. With only a torch to share among them, and their wits and reflexes, they must avoid traps, goblins, disease-ridden rats, and other unknown horrors that they would never expect to find. But at the end of this adventure, should they succeed in overcoming their obstacles, is a treasure trove of gold and jewels, and a single item that might protect them in the coming months. Will they succeed? In a campaign of Dungeons and Dragons, that is up to the creativity of the player and the roll of the dice.

    Search Influence employees at a weekly DnD game.
    Search Influence employees at a weekly DnD game.

    Dungeons and Dragons (DnD) is a Tabletop Role-Playing Game (RPG) that allows for a group of people to fall into a largely unknown and dangerous fantasy realm as characters other than themselves.

    So why talk about an RPG within a blog for an SEO company? That’s because the game itself is a way to give employees, and their supervisors, a chance to have fun, separate themselves from reality for a little while, and create a level of teamwork and adaptability.

    In many ways, this is a great opportunity for like-minded (or open-minded) coworkers to come together and experience a kind of adventure that can span about as long as a career. There are even a few stories of DnD players that have outgrown their characters, but have continued the story with some of their children. The game develops a very strange, but professional and long-lasting, friendship and also supports a creative, and adaptable mindset. It also tends to make people more open with each other. If you can’t trust a friend that you fought side-by-side with against a mountain-horde of Trolls and Orcs, then who can you trust?

    rafiq_blog2
    Various dice used for a DnD game

    In order for a campaign to be successful, everything and everyone needs to come together to reach an eventual goal, survive, and then move on to the next stage of the adventure. Players team up and start to understand each other’s strengths and weaknesses, and figure out ways to support each other with their ongoing endeavors. The Storyteller, or Dungeon Master (DM), then provides goals in the form of quests, as well as obstacles and ways to reach each goal. Sometimes, very little information is given, and it’s up to the creativity and adaptability of the party to find an answer that perhaps even the DM never thought of.

    Of course, Dungeons and Dragons isn’t the only RPG in existence, and it’s better to find a setting and a genre that everyone is interested in following. The important thing is the journey, and the times you work together to keep moving forward.

  • Influencer Spotlight: Annette Golemi

    Annette Golemi

    What do running, LSU tigers, and New Orleans cuisine have in common? They are all beloved by SI’s PR/Marketing Associate, Annette Golemi! Born in the Chicago suburb of Park Ridge, Annette moved to Mandeville, LA when she was only 6 months old. From then on, New Orleans and Southeast Louisiana held a special place in her heart. With much love for the area and its food, people, and sports, it was no surprise to Annette’s family when she moved to Baton Rouge to attend LSU. “I bleed purple and gold,” said Annette of her beloved alma mater.

    After graduating from LSU with a bachelors degree in public relations, Annette moved to Austin, TX, where she began an internship with a local PR firm. Shortly after, she was offered a position at a different local PR agency where she worked for over a year. It was at this point family, food, and fantastic job opportunities called her back to New Orleans, where she then began work at SI.

    As a PR/Marketing Associate, Annette’s day to day activities revolve around building the Search Influence brand as a nationally recognized and premiere Internet marketing company. Annette truly excels at her job with her fantastic ability to connect and engage with those around her. When asked about her favorite part about working at SI, Annette replied, “I absolutely love our company culture. I feel so privileged to work with such intelligent, well-versed, and hard working colleagues that truly work as a team. I am always so pleased to know that if I ever need help with a project, I can reach out to any of my team members and receive a positive attitude along with helpful results.”

    Influencer Spotlight

    When she’s not building up the Search Influence brand, Annette loves trying new local restaurants. “I keep a running list on my cell phone of restaurants I hear people talking about or places I learn about from Eater NOLA.” Also an avid runner, Annette enjoys the outdoors, especially the running paths in Audubon Park.

    We are thrilled to have such a wonderful team member in Annette and look forward growing as a company with her and through her hard work!

  • Influencer Spotlight: Joe Romito

    Joe Romito

    With both a B.A. and an M.A. concentrating in English, 24-year-old Joe Romito may first appear like one of many students with the same popular degree, if it was not for one distinguishing feature: comic books.

    A Philadelphia native, Romito attended the University of Pennsylvania, deciding to combine a minor in classic Greek and Roman literature with a focus in graphic novels.

    Although the combination was unique, Romito was not deterred when programs were scarce as he got ready to pursue a graduate degree. “Nobody really picked me up for a Master’s degree,” he said. “Initially, I was going to get my Ph.D, but I highly specialized in graphic literature, which is kind of a hard sell for universities right now.”

    However, after graduation, Romito decided to move to New Orleans instead. His girlfriend was attending law school at Tulane at the time, so it made sense for the couple to move closer together. “I had no job,” he said, “and I said, ‘Screw it,’ and packed up all my stuff and got in my car and drove down here.”

    Thankfully, Romito found a professor at the University of Chicago that specialized in comic book literature named Hillary Chute. “I thought, if she could do it, this might be a viable option,” he said. “In the end I wanted to teach about graphic novels, comic strips, graphic comic books, the whole medium.”

    After receiving his Master’s, Romito ended up moving back to New Orleans and after a brief employment at a local restaurant, Romito decided to pursue a career that better suited his academic goals. “I was tired of being a dishwasher,” he said. “I was a dishwasher at Delachaise, and one day I thought, ‘Maybe a master’s degree student should not be here washing dishes.’ It was a little ridiculous, if thats all I was going to do.”

    At the time, Romito was also freelance writing for Search Influence, and I decided to apply for an in-house position. He has now been a full-time IMA with the company for nearly 6 months and seems to much enjoy his new career choice.

    “It’s just weirdly comfortable,” he said. “I don’t feel stressed out. I feel like if I was in one of those TV offices with the cubicles I would just feel bad. I like the open air feel. I think it really makes you feel like a team, opposed to if everyone was stuck in cubicles and had to pop over the top like meerkats every time they needed to talk to someone.”

    IMG_0118

    Romito has certainly taken advantage of the sense of community at the company, organizing  game nights with his fellow employees. “When I first got here, I played my favorite game, which is “Find the Nerd,” he said. “Whenever I’m in a new social situation, I don’t tone myself down at all. I just max out on how nerdy I am around other people, and I’ve found in like 99% of situations, someone responds with the nerdiest thing that they do back at me. And I’m like, ‘Ok, I found a nerd.’”

    Romito found that the majority of the web developers in the office were interested in role playing games, so he decided to begin an inter-office game of “Dungeons and Dragons.”

    About 7 people are involved in the game, including Romito’s girlfriend, who is also a freelance writer for Search Influence. “Every Sunday we meet up at my place and play “Dungeons and Dragons,” and drink beer, and hang out,” he said.

    As far as pursuing his interest in comic books, Romito has not given up on the dream, he said.

    In his free time, Romito plays around with ideas for sci-fi fantasy novels, novellas, and short stories. He also has a number of “art friends,” he said, so would have no trouble enlisting the help of an illustrator if he ever decided to seriously move forward with a project.

    “I’m terrible at drawing,” he said. “I took drawing courses in college, and got good enough to know how bad I am. It was like, ‘Now I know enough to know this sucks.’ However, if I could ever get words on paper enough to actually say, ‘Hey, I got an actual, solid idea, do you want to get in on this project?’ I know I would be able to write it, and I would be able to get someone to do the illustrations.”

    As for now, Romito remains a humble IMA for Search Influence. But look for him to accomplish great things in the world of science fiction in the near future.