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Overworked and Under Deadline

Posted on July 23, 2008 by lwidmer

It never fails – announce to the world you’re going on vacation and the work comes out of nowhere. Yesterday’s email brought a large book editing project and a ton of articles (which I can’t do because of the time needed for the editing project). Today – a press release needed by Friday. I have…

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Misspellings and What We Do Wrong Regularly

Posted on July 22, 2008 by lwidmer

I volunteered to teach a Vietnamese woman English. Every Wednesday for the past 2 years, we’ve met at the library and worked our way through new words, new idioms, and proper spelling. She gets the spelling part very well. Too bad we Americans don’t. We’re kind of lazy when it comes to spelling. Sure, English…

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Down Time

Posted on July 21, 2008 by lwidmer

Time spent on a swing is never time wasted. I bought a swing a week ago – one of those ones with a canopy and room for two. It’s amazing how much that little swing has changed my perspective. I sit down and I’m in a different world. I’m not running through lists of things…

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Working with the Ebb and Flow

Posted on July 18, 2008 by lwidmer

Jennifer over at CatalystBlogger had this post echoing my Seven Truths of Freelancing post of July 1. Jen’s points were equally true. A number of them stood out, but her point about learning to love the ebb and flow of our jobs stood out to me. It’s because right now, things are slowing down. That’s…

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What Kind of Editor Are You?

Posted on July 17, 2008 by lwidmer

I was meeting with a potential client last night about her book project. She came well prepared with an outline of what’s been done and what’s to be done on her manuscript. Amen. This is someone who understands how to organize! I can’t wait to get to her story. In the conversation, I asked her…

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The Sexy Side of Technical Writing

Posted on July 16, 2008 by lwidmer

Yesterday’s post showed you the downside of technical writing points, which are actually more your problem than ours (we tech writers, that is). We love what we do. And here’s why: 1. We can talk geek. Oh, honey. It’s sexy when someone opens up to a conversation with, “So, how are those captives of yours?”…

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The Downside of Technical Writing

Posted on July 15, 2008 by lwidmer

I write technical stuff. Okay, stop that yawning right now. When I say technical, I’m not talking math or science or even computers. I’m talking stuff you use or come in contact with, like insurance (okay, go ahead and yawn, but just for a second!), risk management, healthcare, offshore investing, accounting, financial services, sales reps,…

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Terror and Self Doubt

Posted on July 14, 2008 by lwidmer

I’m facing a brand-new project area today. I will meet with the client and go over her plans as well as my outline of her project. It’s an area I’ve long wanted to expand into, and the outline’s been written for a year. And I’m terrified. With all this experience, with the skill set I…

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The Absence of Copy Editors

Posted on July 9, 2008 by lwidmer

You just have to read it to understand. This article appeared in The Washington Post last month. Hysterical!

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Six Phrases That Mean “I’m Not Paying”

Posted on July 8, 2008 by lwidmer

By now we can pretty much recite most of these, but just in case you’re new to writing, here are some sure signs the employer has no intention of paying you for your work. 1. “This is a labor of love for us.” Time and again, this has gone on to say “….and for that…

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  1. Amanda Nicole Avatar
    Amanda Nicole
    July 8, 2008

    My personal red flag fave: “We’re a start-up business.” This is not to say all start-ups are looking for free labour, but in my experience it’s definitely the majority.

    Also, any ad that has the word “exposure” in it sends off sirens for me.

    Reply
  2. Lori Avatar
    Lori
    July 8, 2008

    That’s true for me too, Amanda. My experience with most startups has been their inability to pay or to pay on time.

    Exposure is for nudists. I want cash. :))

    Reply
  3. Amanda Nicole Avatar
    Amanda Nicole
    July 8, 2008

    Indeed!

    Reply
  4. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    July 13, 2008

    How about: “I gave up on freelancing and have a job now, so I am looking for guest blogger to try out for free”?

    Reply
  5. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous
    July 13, 2008

    Make that bloggers–plural. Luckily, I did not try out, huh?

    Reply
  6. Erica DeWolf Avatar
    Erica DeWolf
    July 14, 2008

    I once got the comment from a small business owner “your hourly rate is more than I even make.” Of course it is. I’m going to be working 5 hours a week for you. You work more than 40 hours a week because its your business.

    Reply
  7. Lemski Avatar
    Lemski
    July 14, 2008

    One of my favorite lines: “I’m looking for interns” blah blah blah. I think it’s because they know they could pay less or none at all because of the so-called “lack of experience” and a comprehensive portfolio.

    Reply
  8. Lori Avatar
    Lori
    July 14, 2008

    Oh gawd, I hate that one! Interns, college students, moms, and those looking to gain exposure – excuses used to avoid payment. Good one, lemski!

    Reply
  9. David Niall Wilson Avatar
    David Niall Wilson
    July 14, 2008

    Nothing is more irritating to a writer (this one, anyway) than those who don’t understand that writing is work – creative effort – and should not be taken for granted.

    Editors and publishers can be almost as guilty as these no-pay sites you mention because they often don’t take authors and artists into the same consideration they would their secretary when it comes to payment.

    DNW
    Macabre Ink

    Reply
  10. french panic Avatar
    french panic
    July 15, 2008

    My favourite is “Wanna have some fun and get paid with free stuff?” This is a famous line for a lot of blogs catering to the sucker crowd: 20 somethings desperate to build their careers. One local entertainment blog asks their writers to post at least 3 times a week, the writer should ideally have a camera, and the rewards are: press passes to local music gigs.

    The fantastic part is when the writers then complain bitterly on the blog that the “so-and-so music/film/whatever festival” are being jerks and not putting these writers on the guest list. Because they actually start to believe that they are Real Journalists and not suckas that are writing for a blog that has been around for 4 years and has yet to actually get enough traffic to justify payment through aforementioned “ad revenue”.

    When I contacted the blog in question, I received an email from the admin with the previously mentioned “rah! rah! be cool and write for us!” crap PLUS a whole sob story on how they are planning to get rid of their current writers who just aren’t producing the quality they are looking for. Nice. Trash talking about your current suckers in a bid to attract more suckers? Yeah, you sound real “cool”.

    Madness!

    Reply
  11. Lori Avatar
    Lori
    July 16, 2008

    Wow. That’s just absurd. You gotta admire the kahonas of the blog admin, who seems to think the entire writing profession has taken enough blows to the head to not see what’s going on.

    I hope you countered with a “Sure. My fee is ten times what you were paying them because you’re now paying for QUALITY writing, and quality is worth more.”

    Reply
  12. Jen Brister Avatar
    Jen Brister
    September 8, 2008

    I had to laugh at your post. How many times have I seen those phrases!? I just wrote an article about people who scam others into writing for them by advertising writing jobs and having them send in “original content” as part of the app. process.

    Priceless

    Reply
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