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Author: lwidmer

Top Tips Series #4: Samar Owais

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: God Only Knows by The Beach Boys I couldn’t tell you where I first met Samar (pronounced “Summer”) Owais. I remember her interviewing me for a podcast, and I remember interacting with her quite a bit on a blog or two. Then there were the personal emails, which are always fun….

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Free Advice Friday: 10 Commandments of Writing Value

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: I Will Follow You by Rivrrs What a week. A sizable client project, almost completed, has occupied seven of the eight or more hours I spend a day at this electronic box. I’m happy because the client is happy, the project is in a good place, and we’re about to wrap…

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6 Ways to Increase Writing Income

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: Sing by Ed Sheeran It’s been a fairly slow week so far. After the last two weeks of 9-hour workdays, I’m glad for the breather. I have a few projects still pending, and I’m working through edits with a current client. I’m marketing (aren’t I always?) and there have been a…

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Top Tips Writers Series #3: Paula Hendrickson

Posted on by lwidmer

What I’m reading: Vita and Harold by Nigel Nicolson What’s on the iPod: Serpentine by Chris Bathgate Know what I love about Paula Hendrickson? Everything. Here’s a person who’s not only hugely successful in her niche (and entertainment/celebrity is not an easy niche to break into), but someone who extends herself to her fellow freelancers….

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Free Advice Friday: This Job, Not That Job

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: Would You Fight for My Love? by Jack White What a busy week. I feel like I’ve run marathons standing still. One project is consuming all my time. I had to carve out time yesterday to market. If I hadn’t, there was a good chance there would be a gap in…

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Reducing Writing Client Shock

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: Gee Baby by Joe & Ann I’m making good progress on my big project. Having talked with the client, I’m feeling confident that I know what they want. I had provided them with a rough draft for review, because I wanted to get a sense for where their expectations are in…

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Monthly Assessment: September 2014

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: Hard Way Home by Runaway Dorothy (with scenes from my friend’s living room) October already, huh? I can’t believe how quickly this month came up on me. It’s always a major mind shift in September; first there’s the last holiday of the summer, then the work starts piling in, then it’s the…

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Top Tips Writers Series #2: KeriLynn Engel

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: Prove It To You by Kris Allen I love when this blog introduces me to new people. KeriLynn Engel is one of those people. When Keri signed up for my newsletter, we struck up a conversation. What I learned was this is a woman who is bright, eager to learn, and…

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Free Advice Friday: 10 Hard Facts About a Writing Career

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: Skinny Love by Birdy Quite the busy week. I’m deep into a sizable project and doing well with it. I’m hoping to deliver it to the client by next Friday, when I suspect we’ll go through a round or two of revisions. After that, I may have another project in the…

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Writers and Attribution

Posted on by lwidmer

What’s on the iPod: One by Ed Sheeran It’s been a busy start to the week. Like I expected, the work is flowing in. I’ve already hit my target for this month, and October is looking just as sweet. Today, I’ll be working on a large project, finalizing plans for another large project, and marketing…

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  1. Cathy Miller Avatar
    Cathy Miller

    Right on, Lori. I always try to give credit and if my boomer brain forgets, I admit it's not my idea or that my post was inspired by someone else.

    I've experienced having a blog comment of mine lifted verbatim and included in another writer's (and I use the term loosely) list post – 10 Ways to Do XX.

    It's not that I wanted credit as much as it was such a blatant rip-off. She didn't even have the decency to create a variation. How rude. 😉

    Reply
  2. Lori Widmer Avatar
    Lori Widmer

    Cathy, I forget sometimes, too. It's when it's constant that I start to wonder, hmm…is that person just not getting how to do this?

    Oh, I've had that happen, too. That's another example of how NOT to use another person's ideas — maybe the best example!

    Reply
  3. Paula Avatar
    Paula

    I tend to do the same thing with recipes and knitting patterns, too.

    I never claim I invented a recipe or pattern if I got it from someone (or somewhere else). I'm not making my famous mac & cheese, I'm making my sister-in-law's mother's recipe (which she got off a Cremette box in the '70s). I didn't make my roasted tomatoes last week, I made Meetal's roasted tomatoes. Even if I've adapted a recipe or pattern, I'll do my best to mention it or at least say where I found the original.

    The same should apply to any ideas. Occasionally you'll forget where something comes from, but that's not license to claim you created it. Writers — or anyone dealing with any form of IP – should know better.

    When those bloggers lift ideas without giving credit, it only negates the air professionalism they're trying to project.

    Reply
  4. Lori Widmer Avatar
    Lori Widmer

    That's what separates you from the pack, Paula. You get that attribution is required in all cases.

    Reply
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