33: Why Children's Book Illustrator Melquea Smith Ditched the Lone Wolf Creative Myth
JUN 10, 202680 MIN
33: Why Children's Book Illustrator Melquea Smith Ditched the Lone Wolf Creative Myth
JUN 10, 202680 MIN
Description
What if the secret to creative success isn’t your portfolio... but your people?Melquea Smith is a children’s book illustrator and artist who creates clip art of black and brown kids.Her journey from side-hustling artist to full-time creative is built on one foundational truth: community changes everything.In this conversation, Melquea shares why the lone genius myth is killing creative careers, how she’s learned to create her own luck through intentional relationship-building, and what it really takes to survive the marathon of creative entrepreneurship when patience is basically a required skill.HighlightsThe marathon mindset separates survivors from quitters.Melquea is refreshingly honest about what it takes to make it as a creative.The glamorous overnight success stories we see on social media? They’re not real.What’s real is showing up consistently, even when the work feels invisible, even when progress feels impossibly slow.“I’m learning through all of this is that it’s a marathon, not a sprint. And really it’s just like longevity, just outlasting everyone.”Her story is proof that persistence trumps perfection every time.Sometimes the only difference between the creative who makes it and the one who quits is one decides to keep going even when it gets hard.But surviving the marathon isn’t just about persistence. It’s also about strategy.Standing out means zigging while everyone else zags.Most creatives hide behind their portfolios, hoping their work will speak for itself.Melquea took the opposite approach.She embraces podcasts, public speaking, webinars, workshops, and Instagram Lives. She does all the visibility work that many creatives shy away from.“Right now I’m in my promotion phase where… people need to know that I exist.”She understands something most creatives miss: talent without visibility does not get you noticed.The goal isn’t just to create great work. The goal is to make sure people know your great work exists.You can’t be discovered if nobody knows you exist.Melquea is in what she calls her “discovery phase”—that crucial period where building awareness matters more than perfecting your craft.Because your ideal clients can’t hire you if they don’t know you’re available.“It’s just our job as creators and marketers to just remind [people], hey, this exists.”It isn’t about being pushy or salesy. It’s about consistent, generous visibility that keeps you top of mind when opportunities arise.The best marketing doesn’t feel like marketing at all. It feels like building relationships with people who genuinely care about your success.Community amplifies everything you’re already doing.Melquea has cracked the code on something most creatives struggle with: she doesn’t just create work, she creates advocates.By building genuine relationships with other creatives and business owners, she’s created a network that does the heavy lifting for her.“Other people will do that heavy lifting for you. They’ll share your work or repost your work without even asking.”The magic happens when creatives genuinely support each other’s success.When you help others win, they remember. When opportunities come up that aren’t right for them, they think of you.Luck is just preparation meeting intentional outreach.Melquea believes in making her own luck through relationship-building.She reaches out to people in her network regularly, follows up consistently, and treats every connection like it could lead somewhere meaningful.“You just never know what email will land into your inbox or DM on Instagram.”We should avoid being transactional. We should create opportunities by staying genuinely connected to people.The creatives who seem “lucky” are usually just the ones who’ve been planting seeds consistently, even when they couldn’t see the harvest coming.Closing ReflectionMelquea’s story dismantles the myth that creative success is a solo journey.Her path from side-hustling artist to full-time illustrator wasn’t built on raw talent alone. It was built on community, consistency, and the courage to be visible when it would be easier to hide.She reminds us that the creative life isn’t just about making beautiful things. It’s about building the relationships and systems that help beautiful things find their way to the people who need them most.What’s one way you’re building community around your creative work? Share in the comments.