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Author: lwidmer

Stepping Back

Posted on 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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List Maker

Posted on by lwidmer

Last week was pretty busy thanks to lots of ongoing work and a larger project due. This week is a little better, but one ongoing client is now sending two projects a day instead of one, which makes payday that much sweeter. And it makes a list almost essential for me. I’m busy today, so…

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Hourly or Not?

Posted on by lwidmer

I make my living writing, but I should get paid for talking. I do a lot of it. One freelance friend and I commiserate regularly (yes, that’s the right word) on the ills that befall the profession. We also chat up ideas and tips, including this most recent one – don’t quote an hourly rate….

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Worthy Tip: Man Up

Posted on by lwidmer

Ladies, this post is for you. I’m about to give you a novel piece of advice that could save your business reputation – man up. Here’s what I mean. We women tend to be – how shall I say it? – a bit weak in several business areas. Negotiations get us clammy and worried. Client…

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The BS Litmus Test

Posted on by lwidmer

I slept in this morning – for me that means getting up at 7:30 instead of 6:54 (I’m punctual even in my sleep). It felt great. But it was a sleep loaded with odd dreams – foreign countries that looked like my grandparents’ backyard, school buses, Indians in saris, friends shouting, toilets, ex-husbands and guns….

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Erasing and Starting Over

Posted on by lwidmer

I’ll admit it – last week was less than stellar for me. It seemed every time I typed a sentence, I mucked it up. Not major mucking up, but enough that by Friday I was afraid to write on a birthday card. I missed a spell-check-induced error, which switched an acronym to a word, which…

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Flipping Off Our Favorite Excuses

Posted on by lwidmer

Anne Wayman had a great post on her About Freelance Writing blog last week about letting excuses go. Her excuses were ones she’d made in just that week, and they showed just how easily we put excuses in the way of getting something done. And we do that in our careers too, don’t we? We…

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Worthy Tip: Show Enthusiasm

Posted on by lwidmer

I’ll be the first to admit the thought of writing one more workers compensation article appeals as much as root canal without pain killers. But it’s information that people in the industry in which I specialize need pretty badly. So I get enthusiastic about the topic. What about workers comp is interesting enough to become…

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Snow Day

Posted on by lwidmer

Yesterday was my snow day. It was a day spent shoveling, trying to keep ahead of the storm that didn’t want you to win. When we dug from the garage to the road, we turned around and dug back. Clients were around, but the majority I deal with currently are on the eastern seaboard, so…

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Ownership Rights

Posted on by lwidmer

It’s uncommon, but it still happens occasionally. I’m talking about sources for stories taking control and giving their version of what’s newsworthy or worse, thinking it’s up to them to approve the story before you print it. Neither of these are very helpful to writers. In fact, it can become a royal pain in the…

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  1. Gabriella F. Avatar
    Gabriella F.

    Hi Lori.

    I've have every one of those experiences, but I especially liked the one recenly where the guy tried to get me to have his legal department "approve" the article. Whah?!

    I'd never heard that one before, and I don't remember what I said. Whatever it was, the guy backed down and wrote me an email shortly after telling me his legal department said no review was necessary.

    Wow, thanks, pal. I can now go forward with the article that has nothing to do with your company and easily could have been done with a source other than you.

    People never cease to amaze!

    Reply
  2. Kimberly Ben Avatar
    Kimberly Ben

    Yes! I once interviewed a book publisher for a magazine article and when she asked to review the article before I sent it to my editor, I innocently saw no problem. BIG MISTAKE.

    She began telling me that I should be including A B and C in my article – even though her suggestions were NOT within the scope of the topic. She got so heated when I tried explaining that I was unable to expand the story to include her ideas that she refused to consent to having her interview/comments published. I had to let the editor deal with her. Luckily it all worked out.

    The editor was really quite understanding and advised me not to let sources review an article before publication in the future to save myself that kind of headache. Whew – And I thought I was a control freak!

    Reply
  3. Paula Avatar
    Paula

    My worst experience with that was last fall (and fully recounted in my comments to one of your blog posts).

    What I dislike is when the interviewee or their publicist tries to make it sound as if I'm being the unreasonable one. "But this is how we ALWAYS do it!" Right. Only when people are stupid or gullible enough to let you get away with it. When this last woman tried that, I said, "Then apparently you have no idea how the editorial process works." Of course, she never stopped talking, so I doubt she heard me.

    Reply
  4. Lori Avatar
    Lori

    Gabriella, I hope you just cut out his comments and kept going. If he's not your sole source it's easier. I had a case recently in which the source wanted to review his quotes. Since the story was a Q&A, I granted him that. I didn't feel right printing that story without his approval. If he'd been one of three people, no way, but when he WAS the article, I made that exception.

    Kim, does she not realize it wasn't up to her to rescind consent? Talking with you in the first place was her consent. No take backs. 🙂

    Paula, I had a PR dude try that with me once. No way!

    Reply
  5. Yo Avatar
    Yo

    I've had the approval problem with insurance agents. Some captive agents have to get their compliance department involved. Since I record interviews I usually just send the MP3 to the compliance officer and get the go ahead, but I have had to cut some people that I've interviewed out of the story when their compliance department did not get back to me in time. Pain in the rumpuss is what it is.

    Oh, one time I interviewed a woman in person. Told her where I was from and what I was doing there, showed her my card, took notes on what she said and then, after the interview, she said, "I don't want you to use any of that in the paper." Um… maybe you could have said that when I introduced myself?

    I can't say I've been led anywhere by an interviewee before. Can't wait until that happens… I'm not as pleasant as you are 😉

    Reply
  6. Lori Avatar
    Lori

    Yo, don't you LOVE the "Oh, but you can't use that" interview? I have had one myself, but luckily it was one I could omit easily. Waste of almighty time, though.

    I've not had too many agents turn me down. I've had the insurer's legal department go catatonic once or twice at the thought of their people talking willy nilly. Yes, workers comp IS the hotbed of controversy, so they think! Sheesh. Lighten up, people!

    Reply
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