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Author: lwidmer

Saving the Project

Posted on March 8, 2010 by lwidmer

We spent the weekend in CT with family, sharing stories of a wonderful life – that of his uncle Ted. While I’d met him only once, I came away from the memorial, which was a six-hour storytelling and singing, seeing several sides of this remarkable person – good and bad. It was time also to…

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Fridays, Dark Clouds, and Weekend Redemptions

Posted on March 5, 2010 by lwidmer

Let’s just say this week has not been the most inspiring or motivating for me. It started out shaky with some project-related tensions. Though the project was completed successfully, it was an exercise in patience as things went from odd to completely bizarre. Another project seemed poised for disaster, as well. Still another jolt came…

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Guest Post: How to Succeed in Business Writing

Posted on March 4, 2010 by lwidmer

Usually by Thursday I run out of things to say. Oh, I can vent until the cows come home, but I mean things to say about writing that’s new or unique. Lately I feel spent because of the “luxury” of having a lot of ongoing work. While normally creativity is inspired by lots of writing,…

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On Shaky Ground

Posted on March 3, 2010 by lwidmer

Today’s a vent day. I swear this week New Orleans has nothing on my career when it comes to that sinking feeling. By six pm Monday I was emptying a bottle of Chianti. It wasn’t just work related, though that was a large factor. It was also Tivo related. Damn thing has a broken hard…

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Spec-ulating

Posted on March 2, 2010 by lwidmer

I remember my first “real” magazine gig. It was for Highlights for Children and it was a piece I was writing on spec (for those new to freelancing – that’s a piece you write that the magazine reserves the right to reject without pay). Not the best solution for breaking into “the big time” but…

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Sending the Wrong Mesage

Posted on March 1, 2010 by lwidmer

I saw an ad recently – in the mall – that was just plain insulting. I won’t name the company, but the banner ad hanging prominently in the mall said, “Surf the Internet while your wife buys you slacks.” What’s wrong with that ad? I counted a number of sins in that one sentence. First,…

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Monthly Assessment – February 2010

Posted on February 26, 2010 by lwidmer

Wow, short month! Here we are again, baring our souls and our progress together. It was a very busy month for me despite my dropping a long-time client last month. The income I thought I’d miss was quickly replaced with better-paying work and much better working conditions. Here’s how my month shaped up: Queries:One. Seriously….

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Raindrops on Roses?

Posted on February 25, 2010 by lwidmer

When Julie Andrews sang that song in Sound of Music about her favorite things, it’s obvious her character wasn’t a freelancer. Either she’s an eternal optimist or she’s never waited months for payment. And while there’s a place in the world for optimism (a very large place), there’s also room for a little skepticism and,…

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Quelling the Beast

Posted on February 24, 2010 by lwidmer

What sends fears, chills, and anxiety right into your bones? For me, it’s when a client wants to talk about my project results, but not the same day. It’s not even that they say it’s bad – it’s that they say nothing. That’s when the voices in my head scream “They hate you! You suck!”…

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Stepping Back

Posted on February 23, 2010 by lwidmer

I had an interesting interaction with an interview source recently. The project the source was helping with belonged to my client, whom the source knows quite well. Maybe that’s where communication went wonky. There was an issue after the interview that I referred directly to the client. The solution was worked out, or so we…

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  1. Wendy Avatar
    Wendy
    February 23, 2010

    Some sources can be quite the pain in the butt and unfortunately we find ourselves trapped in the middle between client and source on occasion. In my case, the client works furiously to get the source to direct their anger to them and not me, but some of the so-called professional sources prefer trying to control everything by treading on me as I'm "nothing but the writer." Notice the quotes?

    I don't respond. It's the client's beef not mine. If I did respond to them, I probably wouldn't be professional about it, so I leave it to the client. I do, however, send any copies of emails of any issues the source brings up to me, to the client. Mainly because I don't want to be accused of invoking the source's anger.

    Reply
  2. Lori Avatar
    Lori
    February 23, 2010

    I saw the quotes. 🙂 I get the same sense sometimes, Wendy. I'm "just" the writer, so I can be walked on. Nothing doing. I'm a champion for the client. If it's not in my client's best interests, I'm not budging. And like you said, the beef is not between writer and source.

    Reply
  3. Dr John Peragine Avatar
    Dr John Peragine
    February 23, 2010

    Agreed I had a similiar situation with a client and source a couple years ago. In the end I backed out and let them work out the issues. I did what I was hired to do. I am not sure how it ended except that the client apologized greatly and we went a different direction with the project.

    Reply
  4. Lori Avatar
    Lori
    February 23, 2010

    Hi John! Welcome.

    That's the best outcome – the client realizes the fault rests with someone else and doesn't blame you. That's as it should be! I've yet to have the finger pointed at me, but for some reason I look for that to happen this time. I don't know why, but it's a gut feeling.

    Reply
  5. Journaling Woman Avatar
    Journaling Woman
    February 24, 2010

    I love the word wonky. If I had another child I would name he or she- Wonky.

    On your question. I don't know, I don't have clients. But I love reading your blog.

    Reply
  6. Damaria Senne Avatar
    Damaria Senne
    February 24, 2010

    I also had a similar issue, but on a minor scale, last week. We were in the final run of the approval process, and instead of signing off ( source had seen text before), she decided to completely rewrite it. The result was waffly crap and padded my 200-word text into 450 words or so. So I emailed the new text to the client with a note explaining why i can't use it, and asked my client to explain my position to the source. Client was happy to deal with it.

    Reply
  7. Lori Avatar
    Lori
    February 24, 2010

    Well I love having you read the blog, Journaling Woman. 🙂

    Damaria, don't you hate that? I understand they want to help, but sometimes they simply want to get their message out regardless of the client's needs and requirements. Frustrating.

    Reply
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