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#Lee Ashby Watts
roysexton · 9 months
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From Answering Legal: A Discussion On The Future Of Legal Marketing With Leading Voices From The Community #lmamkt #lma23
VIEW VIDEO: https://youtu.be/JQ3NLFzY-Dc Thank you, Nick Werker and Answering Legal! “Last month, Jacob Eidinger, Lee Ashby Watts, Nancy Leyes Myrland, Roy Sexton, Toni Toomer Wells and Nicholas Werker gathered at our Law Firm Summer Reboot Camp for a panel presentation called ‘A Discussion On The Future Of Legal Marketing With Leading Voices From The Community.’”
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#5yrsago Anthology of 21st Century Science Fiction
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Patrick Nielsen Hayden and David Hartwell have edited Twenty-First Century Science Fiction , a 250,000-word anthology of short fiction by writers who came to prominence since the turn of the century. The authors include "Vandana Singh, Charles Stross, Paolo Bacigalupi, Neal Asher, Rachel Swirsky, John Scalzi, M. Rickert, Tony Ballantyne, David Levine, Genevieve Valentine, Ian Creasey, Marissa Lingen, Paul Cornell, Elizabeth Bear, David Moles, Mary Robinette Kowal, Madeleine Ashby, Tobias Buckell, Ken Liu, Oliver Morton, Karl Schroeder, Brenda Cooper, Liz Williams, Ted Kosmatka, Catherynne M. Valente, Daryl Gregory, Alaya Dawn Johnson, James Cambias, Yoon Ha Lee, Hannu Rajaniemi, Kage Baker, Peter Watts, Jo Walton, and Cory Doctorow." The book comes out on Nov 5 (pre-order now). Patrick has posted some of the preface:
https://boingboing.net/2013/09/09/anthology-of-21st-century-scie.html
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roysexton · 1 year
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Laura Gassner Otting and Athena Dion join Rob and me on Legal Marketing Coffee Talk to discuss #LMA23, authenticity, advocacy, and framily … and how #dragisnotdangerous
ICYMI – catch the replay here: https://fb.watch/kDGjJaum8Y/?mibextid=v7YzmG … fab guests Laura Gassner Otting and Athena Dion joined Rob Kates and me to relive a bit of #LMA23. But quickly (sequins notwithstanding) the conversation turned toward authenticity and advocacy and framily. … Learning that wonderhell isn’t a destination but a journey; that once you’ve achieved your goal living in a…
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roysexton · 9 months
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VIEW VIDEO: https://youtu.be/JQ3NLFzY-Dc
Thank you, Nick Werker and Answering Legal! “Last month, Jacob Eidinger, Lee Ashby Watts, Nancy Leyes Myrland, Roy Sexton, Toni Toomer Wells and Nicholas Werker gathered at our Law Firm Summer Reboot Camp for a panel presentation called ‘A Discussion On The Future Of Legal Marketing With Leading Voices From The Community.’”
#lmamkt #lma23 #artificialintelligence #AI #branding #marketing #legal #law #legalmarketing
Legal Marketing Association - LMA International
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roysexton · 10 months
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Legal Marketing IS “Rocket Science”: Great advice with a hint of spice!
“What Every Managing Partner Needs to Know About Marketing and Business Development” … VIEW HERE: https://youtu.be/sobbMm_Te4c Thank you to Managing Partner Forum’s John Remsen, Jr. and Uri Gutfreund for hosting Susan Slifer, Lee Ashby Watts, and me for this robust, engaging conversation the other week. And we only got *spicy* once (catch it at the end!) when someone suggested legal marketing…
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roysexton · 10 months
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"What Every Managing Partner Needs to Know About Marketing and Business Development” https://youtu.be/sobbMm_Te4c … thank you, Managing Partner Forum’s John Remsen, Jr. and Uri Gutfreund, for hosting Susan Slifer, Lee Ashby Watts, and me for this robust, engaging conversation the other week. And we only got *spicy* once (catch it at the end!) when someone suggested #legalmarketing isn’t “rocket science.”
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(I *may* have been triggered 😅)
#lmamkt #marketing #businessdevelopment #clientservice
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roysexton · 11 months
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Oh, thank you, Yasmin Zand and Charlotte Knight and Passle, for this lovely opportunity to discuss #LMA23, my professional and personal journey as a member of the #lgbtqcommunity, and what authentic #allyship can (and should) be: https://blog.passle.net/post/102igso/cmo-series-represents-born-this-way-roy-sexton-of-clark-hill-on-inclusion-com
Very grateful for you, for this series, and for what you provide our community and #legal industry so generously.
Shout outs and thanks to friends, colleagues, and allies, all mentioned (or alluded to!) in the show: Laura Gassner Otting, Athena Dion, Lisa McDonald Kamen, Diana Lauritson, Megan McKeon, Lee Ashby Watts, Jennifer Petrone Dezso, Holly Amatangelo, Kaitlin Heininger, Danielle Holland, Jennifer Weigand, Ellie Hurley, Ashley Stenger, James Fisher, Nancy Leyes Myrland, Gina Furia Rubel, Laura Toledo, Gail Porter Lamarche, Heather Morse-Geller, Lindsay Griffiths, Amber Bollman, Mike Mellor, Ruth Morayniss, Arthur Uratani, Tahisha Fugate, Susan Ahern, Mary Ann Hastings Stephens, Jon Brewer, Joseph Edmonds, Cheryl Bame, Don Sexton, Susie Sexton, John Mola, and more.
Episode description: On this episode of CMO Series REPRESENTS, Yasmin Zand is lucky enough to sit down with Roy Sexton, Director of Marketing at Clark Hill Law and 2023 Legal Marketing Association - LMA International President, to discuss his journey both inside and outside of the legal marketing industry.
Roy shares how his formative experiences as a gay man have impacted his approach to leadership and why finding safe and inclusive communities that allow him to be his authentic self has become so central in his career.
The conversation delves into Roy’s childhood, passions, and why his headline performance at the 2023 LMA Annual Conference in Florida was so poignant in support of the #LGBTQ+ community in that moment.
#pride #law #legalmarketing #community #DEI #wellbeing #kindness #community
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roysexton · 1 year
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ICYMI - catch the replay here: https://fb.watch/kDGjJaum8Y/?mibextid=v7YzmG … fab guests Laura Gassner Otting and Athena Dion joined Rob Kates and me to relive a bit of #LMA23. But quickly (sequins notwithstanding) the conversation turned toward authenticity and advocacy and framily. …
Learning that #wonderhell isn’t a destination but a journey; that once you’ve achieved your goal living in a place of “how can I top that?” is giving yourself a disservice; that achievement is about what you learn about yourself and others in the process; that taking the pause after is ok and good because your next adventure will come naturally and organically through; and more.
Yes, we talked about #Florida and how #dragisnotdangerous but also how this moment has revealed the good (and sometimes the disappointing) in those around us. We learned that “you don’t have to give your trophies back” after achievement. They’re yours. You earned them. Don’t feel an apologetic need to put them back in the universe. And that sometimes after achievement, a fulfilling path can be helping others then find theirs. And, oh, sometimes “rage and greed” (and borrowed couture) are the only spark one needs to go to that next level!
Shout outs during the show to Megan McKeon, Jennifer Petrone Dezso, Lee Ashby Watts, Danna Tauber, Rich Bracken, Jessica Aries, Holly Amatangelo, Lisa McDonald Kamen, Kevin Iredell, Jessica Haarsgaard, Susie Sexton, and more!
#drag #lgbtqcommunity #allies #lgbtqia #lgbtqplus #bekind #compassion #community #saylove Legal Marketing Association - LMA International
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roysexton · 1 year
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ICYMI - catch the replay here: https://fb.watch/kDGjJaum8Y/?mibextid=v7YzmG … fab guests Laura Gassner Otting and Athena Dion joined Rob Kates and me to relive a bit of #LMA23. But quickly (sequins notwithstanding) the conversation turned toward authenticity and advocacy and framily. …
Learning that #wonderhell isn’t a destination but a journey; that once you’ve achieved your goal living in a place of “how can I top that?” is giving yourself a disservice; that achievement is about what you learn about yourself and others in the process; that taking the pause after is ok and good because your next adventure will come naturally and organically through; and more.
Yes, we talked about #Florida and how #dragisnotdangerous but also how this moment has revealed the good (and sometimes the disappointing) in those around us. We learned that “you don’t have to give your trophies back” after achievement. They’re yours. You earned them. Don’t feel an apologetic need to put them back in the universe. And that sometimes after achievement, a fulfilling path can be helping others then find theirs. And, oh, sometimes “rage and greed” (and borrowed couture) are the only spark one needs to go to that next level!
Shout outs during the show to Megan McKeon, Jennifer Petrone Dezso, Lee Ashby Watts, Danna Tauber, Rich Bracken, Jessica Aries, Holly Amatangelo, Lisa McDonald Kamen, Susie Sexton, and more!
#drag #lgbtqcommunity #allies #lgbtqia #lgbtqplus #bekind #compassion #community #saylove
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#5yrsago Anthology of 21st Century Science Fiction
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Patrick Nielsen Hayden and David Hartwell have edited Twenty-First Century Science Fiction , a 250,000-word anthology of short fiction by writers who came to prominence since the turn of the century. The authors include "Vandana Singh, Charles Stross, Paolo Bacigalupi, Neal Asher, Rachel Swirsky, John Scalzi, M. Rickert, Tony Ballantyne, David Levine, Genevieve Valentine, Ian Creasey, Marissa Lingen, Paul Cornell, Elizabeth Bear, David Moles, Mary Robinette Kowal, Madeleine Ashby, Tobias Buckell, Ken Liu, Oliver Morton, Karl Schroeder, Brenda Cooper, Liz Williams, Ted Kosmatka, Catherynne M. Valente, Daryl Gregory, Alaya Dawn Johnson, James Cambias, Yoon Ha Lee, Hannu Rajaniemi, Kage Baker, Peter Watts, Jo Walton, and Cory Doctorow." The book comes out on Nov 5 (pre-order now). Patrick has posted some of the preface:
That phrase “came to prominence” explains our approach. Many writers publish their first work long before they come to general attention. William Gibson exploded into the consciousness of science fiction, and then the world, with Neuromancer in 1984, but he had been publishing short fiction for years before that. Likewise, there are writers in this volume whose first stories appeared as early as the 1980s, but nobody in this book came to wide notice before 2000.
The idea of an anthology showcasing the SF voices of the new century seemed like a natural project for the two of us. Our tastes are not identical, but we can fairly well agree on good writers and good stories. And we are both students of the history of SF without holding all the same opinions about it. Neither of us is especially interested in being genre policemen, dictating what is and isn’t proper SF. And yet, both of us emerge from the core SF audience of the twentieth century—the SF subculture, professional and fannish, that emerged from the earnest and urgent desire to defend and encourage quality SF in the face of a dominant culture that seemed to hold it in contempt. Decades later, many of the battles of those days have been won. Others have become irrelevant. One of the interesting things about the stories presented here is that they were written in a world in which SF, far from being marginal, is a firmly established part of the cultural landscape.
Twenty-First Century Science Fiction
https://boingboing.net/2013/09/09/anthology-of-21st-century-scie.html
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Anthology of 21st Century Science Fiction #4yrsago
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Patrick Nielsen Hayden and David Hartwell have edited Twenty-First Century Science Fiction, a 250,000-word anthology of short fiction by writers who came to prominence since the turn of the century. The authors include "Vandana Singh, Charles Stross, Paolo Bacigalupi, Neal Asher, Rachel Swirsky, John Scalzi, M. Rickert, Tony Ballantyne, David Levine, Genevieve Valentine, Ian Creasey, Marissa Lingen, Paul Cornell, Elizabeth Bear, David Moles, Mary Robinette Kowal, Madeleine Ashby, Tobias Buckell, Ken Liu, Oliver Morton, Karl Schroeder, Brenda Cooper, Liz Williams, Ted Kosmatka, Catherynne M. Valente, Daryl Gregory, Alaya Dawn Johnson, James Cambias, Yoon Ha Lee, Hannu Rajaniemi, Kage Baker, Peter Watts, Jo Walton, and Cory Doctorow." The book comes out on Nov 5 (pre-order now). Patrick has posted some of the preface:
That phrase “came to prominence” explains our approach. Many writers publish their first work long before they come to general attention. William Gibson exploded into the consciousness of science fiction, and then the world, with Neuromancer in 1984, but he had been publishing short fiction for years before that. Likewise, there are writers in this volume whose first stories appeared as early as the 1980s, but nobody in this book came to wide notice before 2000.
The idea of an anthology showcasing the SF voices of the new century seemed like a natural project for the two of us. Our tastes are not identical, but we can fairly well agree on good writers and good stories. And we are both students of the history of SF without holding all the same opinions about it. Neither of us is especially interested in being genre policemen, dictating what is and isn’t proper SF. And yet, both of us emerge from the core SF audience of the twentieth century—the SF subculture, professional and fannish, that emerged from the earnest and urgent desire to defend and encourage quality SF in the face of a dominant culture that seemed to hold it in contempt. Decades later, many of the battles of those days have been won. Others have become irrelevant. One of the interesting things about the stories presented here is that they were written in a world in which SF, far from being marginal, is a firmly established part of the cultural landscape.
Twenty-First Century Science Fiction
https://boingboing.net/2013/09/09/anthology-of-21st-century-scie.html
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