The Long Wait
Okay, I admit it, I’m bored. After four weeks with virtually
no work, I’ve tidied my desk, cleared out my email, printed new business cards
and almost every other little job on my to-do list you can imagine. Now at this
point, some of you snowed under and stressing about deadlines will be sighing
and wishing you had the same problem, but believe me, the time is really
starting to drag now and the worries about my bank balance along the line are
starting to mount.
As a freelancer, you always have peaks and troughs, but this particular lull is a bit different. I have work, at least in theory, but it’s just all been delayed. I currently have no fewer than four projects which I’d expected to be working on by now that have all been put off; some by weeks, others months. Delays, of course, are nothing new in publishing, but this year really does seem to have reached new highs, or should I say lows, in terms of shifting schedules. And I should say right up front that this isn’t a dig at anyone in particular, the four currently stalled projects are all very different types of work for completely different publishers. So is this a general trend and what’s causing it?
Delays getting started:
I was interested to read a piece over on ELTjam about the
apparent slump in work for ELT writers. One of the reasons they suggested was
that “a lot of projects [at ELT publishers] have been cancelled or are on hold
while in-house training goes on to bring editors up to speed with new ways of
working”. I think I’d add to the projects ‘on hold’, ‘projects taking longer to
get off the ground/get approved’. As a writer who’s sometimes involved in the
earlier stages of a project, I’m sensing a cautiousness around commissioning
new products, which from my end sometimes means a very positive, enthusiastic
first meeting is followed by long periods of silence or start dates that keep
getting moved on by months.
Slippery schedules:
Other work I do involves coming in later on a project (to
write components or teachers notes, etc.) and here I'm being affected by schedules
that just keep slipping and slipping. Again, of course, schedules have always
slipped, but my impression is that the unwieldiness of some ELT projects
nowadays with huge numbers of components having to be produced together by ever-expanding
teams of writers, editors and developers is getting to be almost unmanageable.
From my end, that means that I get an offer from an editor,
often along with a schedule full of very specific handover dates and deadlines.
I book out the time in my diary, then I hear that the material I need to work
on won’t be ready for another 2, no 4, no 6 weeks … All of which leaves me with
big gaps in my workflow that can occasionally be filled with something else,
but often, like now, can’t.
I’m just about to order my wall planner for next year. I
used to write in work on it so that I could see what was coming up when. This
year though, I’ve taken to putting stuff on little post-it notes instead so
they can more easily be moved. I’m hoping that 2014 will prove to have been a
blip, down to bad luck or the wrong choices and not part of a general trend. In the meantime, I think maybe I’ll start
repainting the kitchen …
Labels: freelancing, workflow, writing
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