Posts Tagged ‘freelance writing’

Research, research, research – a mantra for writers

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

My first job after university was with the Nova Scotia Museum as a Curatorial Assistant. In that job, research was a part of my daily activity. When I wasn’t cataloguing artifacts, I was conducting research in the archives, or in the records of local historical societies. By using diaries, contemporary newspapers, probate records and correspondence we were able to provide background information for gallery exhibits or to determine appropriate furnishings for a particular historic house or what grew in the garden. I loved the work.

The challenge was to find out all we could about someone, or something and fit that information into a context for a specific audience. In my business today, I use the same research principles when writing articles, white papers, case studies, or website content for specific target markets.

In the museum context, I wrote material for the various age groups of exhibit visitors. Children aged 6-10 years, teens and adults. I also wrote a “Coles Notes” version of the life in 18th century Nova Scotia to provide some context for historic house guides for sites such as Ross-Thomson House in Shelburne, N.S. I also wrote for a more academic audience with an entry in Volume VI of the Dictionary of Canadian Bilography.

Research was the basis for all that writing and research is the basis of all the writing that I do now. The resources are no longer musty handwritten documents that require deciphering. The skills of understanding what the audience/customer needs, asking questions, seeking out information, keeping notes, organizing and analyzing research material are the same.

Today’s resources

Most of my work today is writing website content. The main information resource is often a one-on-one interview with my customer. At this discovery stage, I digitally record interviews so that I can be sure to grasp the important technical vocabulary and nuances. On second listening the recording often provides new insight. I also take notes but the recording fills in a gap or two.

YouTube provides an immense resource on every imaginable topic. But you must consider the source, its authority, motivation and reliability.

Blogs also provide a great deal of information and advice. I sometimes think of blogs and comments on blogs as the very worst of open line radio talk shows. Everyone has a voice (including me) and not everyone knows of what he speaks! Blogs do give voice to previously unheard contributors. We make careful choices on our listening selection. Every good researcher considers his source.

Similarly, historical research is limited to the documents that have survived. We strive to determine the relevance of the source. Sometimes we don’t know if the writers of these old documents were the nutbars of their time.

In historical research, a primary source such as a diary is always considered preferable. The diary of Anne Frank, for example is a stunning first hand account that delivers colour and context in a way that a history textbook cannot.

Blogs are the 21st century version of a diary and they can be useful sources of information, opinion and context.

WikiHow and Wikipedia also provide helpful backgrounder information on every topic. Do they speak with the same authority as Encyclopedia Britannica once did? This everyman authentication gives a broader interpretation of the world we live in.

Google search is probably the first place people go to find information. The quantity and quality of information is overwhelming. Organizing the information that you find can be a challenge. Bookmarking tools when used properly are a huge help.

Social bookmarking

Sites such as Del.icio.us  can provide useful links to new-to-me information. For a helpful tutorial watch Donna Papacosta’s video about using Del.icio.us to advantage.

Get organized

The two-fold benefit of finding resources that other people are using and organizing your own bookmarks make Del.icio.us a powerful tool.

Uncover the nuggets and write

Research uncovers the nuggets of information that will make your writing glow. Information collected during the research phase provides the foundation for your writing. Research tells you how much more you need to research. That is always the challenge. You need to know when to start writing.

How do you conduct research? What tools do you find the most helpful? How do you organize your notes, interviews, bookmarks?

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Top Ten Reasons Clients Need To Outsource Writing Services

Monday, January 31st, 2011

At a recent networking group meeting I shared these situations and phrases that I have found to be indicators that a company needs writing services.

1. The to-do list is getting unmanageable.

When a small business owner gets overwhelmed with day-to-day tasks, writing new marketing material, a new testimonial story,  updating of the website or writing the customer newsletter usually get pushed off the to-do list.

Business owners can concentrate on running the business when they outsource their writing tasks. Professional writers are skilled at coordinating communication tasks, conducting interviews, collecting the required information to distill messages and write the story for the targeted purpose. They can do the job efficiently.

2. I’ve never written anything like this before.

You may have some experience in writing a specific type of content but sometimes business owners fail to recognize the differences in various writing styles. Brochures, web content, white papers, case studies, media releases, corporate video scripts, advertisements, e-newsletters each require a different style and format. A professional writer knows where to start and how to finish the task with clear, concise messaging aimed at the targeted market and in the appropriate style.

3. My first language is not English.

When a business targets a Canadian English audience, they may need some help with editing text to make sure the message is clear, and uses local phrasing and terminology.

4. I’m too close to this subject.

Familiar subject matter gets in the way of defining the real message. The saying “you can’t see the forest for the trees” illustrates your dilemma. You see all the little details, every fern frond and every pine needle without seeing the bigger picture of the forest. A professional writer can bring a fresh set of eyes to help define or find your message and write it for a particular audience. A proofreader can find all the typos that you cannot see because you are too close the material.

5. It’s a big project but it’s still six months away.

When you start a large project, such as a website redesign or a trade show, deadlines seem to be in the distant future. As a result, your everyday work always pushes the big projects back.

A professional writer brought in at the beginning can handle the writing tasks ensuring the project is done well without the stress of trying to do it all at the last minute.

6. We need some planning time but we still have to get the newsletter out.

I actually had a client ask me to step in to finish some writing assignments so that they could take some blue sky moments with staff for a strategic planning session. They came back with plans for the next year and I had the assignments completed. Calling in a writer to take care of the deadline driven projects was an effective use of their resources.

7. I’m bored with this stuff.

When you are simply bored with the material you’re working on generating any kind of reasonable copy is a major challenge. You have no new ideas and you need a fresh perspective. A professional writer can bring the creative burst that you need.

8. It’s time for some fresh ideas.

Professional writers are skilled at thinking outside the cubicle. We work with a variety of clients in a variety of industries. As a result, we are exposed to fresh ideas and creative people who help to generate new points of view, new directions. The enthusiasm that we bring to our clients is contagious.

9. What is my unique message?

You do have a unique story to tell about your product or service and it needs to be told in an enthusiastic and believable way. A professional writer will ask enough of the right questions to draw out the unique message and tell your story in a way that is suitable for print, the web, podcast or video. The underlying message may be the same but the words and style will vary by the method of delivery. You need an independent writing professional to craft your message.

10. We don’t have anyone we can assign full time to this project.

Businesses need flexibility. Writers work by professional standards on an as-needed basis or by project. Generally, we are flexible with time. This is essential to meet our customers’ deadlines. We constantly push boundaries and strive to deliver value to customers. Customers who see value in the work of freelancers are satisfied customers. Satisfied customers provide referrals and that’s the best business we can get.

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Talking with techies

Monday, January 3rd, 2011
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Image by Filomena Scalise

As a techie* you probably have no difficulty communicating with your peers. You use acronyms, terminology and examples that your colleagues understand. The difficulty arises when you need to communicate with techies in different fields or when you need to talk with non techies such as customers, upper level management or the sales staff.

I write marketing material, presentations and web content for technical products and services. When I talk with techies I need to play the role of “designated idiot.”(I first heard this term used by Bruce Madole in 1994 at an HPCA presentation.) I have found that techies often assume knowledge that their audience may not possess. By being the designated idiot, I ask questions until I understand the process or product. When I understand, know the acronyms, expressions and terminology I can then write the web page, the white paper, the case study, the testimonial story or the marketing brochure.

When techies are presenting, talking to customers or training their sales staff they need to keep in mind the following principles .

Know your audience. Find out who they are, what they need and want to know. Determine their level of technical understanding. Some may not know the difference between an extruder and a die, or a browser and a hard drive. You need to be able to talk to them at their level – not down to them. You need to help them follow your train of thought, and use real examples that they can understand.

Talk about the benefits of features. As a subject matter expert, you know your product better than anyone but sometimes you see all the features and are blind to the benefits of your product. The benefits are what interests potential buyers and it’s what sells the product.

When talking to your sales staff or to a customer about design issues, talk about the benefits of the features. Describe how a feature will contribute to efficiencies, cost savings, or ease of use. Use practical examples from the field, not from the lab.

Beware, the devil is  in the details. Techies are often frustrated because they want to talk about every detail such as the thickness and type of plating on a particular part. But the audience only needs to be assured that the part will stand up to the rigours of use. You may have spent months testing various plating materials to come up with the right one. So what? You now have the part that works effectively and won’t wear out like the one competition uses. When a savvy customer asks about the type of plating then you can provide the justification for the type of plating.

Image by Idea go.

As a techie, you have a detailed knowledge about the products you design, and we hope you demonstrate that enthusiasm for the product. Be cautious about delivering a brain dump. Not only will you intimidate the technically challenged and but you will fail to impress the knowledgeable members of the audience. It is a fine balance. You need to provide enough information without overwhelming.

A techie with well-developed communication skills can be a powerful partner to sales staff and the marketing team, including outsourced suppliers (such as buzz4biz). You can provide great support when you are able to communicate with customers and provide in-depth and understandable answers to customer questions.

*For the purposes of this article “techies” is an all-encompassing and endearing term to describe engineers, engineering technologist and IT professionals of all kinds. It is not a term of derision, but a term of convenience.

All images from www.FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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Critique my work, please.

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

As a freelance writer, I strive to meet my customers’ expectations, deadlines and budget. Who would say anything else? It would be self-defeating to say that I try to miss deadlines, go over budget and deliver sloppy copy. How do you persuade customers to provide feedback that you can use to improve your writing assignments? Generally speaking, the corporate world does not have editors who tell you why your story does not work. I think that most freelancers would appreciate receiving constructive customer feedback – feedback that helps identify strengths and weaknesses.

Work comes to me in various forms. Ideally, I want to receive a creative brief that

  • outlines the goal of the project
  • describes a product or service
  • provides insight into the target audience
  • explains the desired style and tone
  • provides lots of background information and resources
  • details the project schedule.

It’s not an ideal world, so most of my assignments come to me as the result of a phone call or an email. I get requests to write media releases,  white papers, some web pages, brochures or  corporate video scripts.  I ask questions until I have enough information to create my own creative brief for each project. Based on that information I do the necessary research, create an outline and start writing. Asking follow-up questions early in the process (before submitting the first draft) is a huge time saver for the client and for me.

If my submission is not acceptable, I’ll hear about it. The phone will ring or there will be a quick reply to my email, with questions and requests for revisions, etc. When this happens it gives me more insight into the client and what they need and like. This valuable information contributes to on-target messaging for the current project and gives useful background for future assignments with this client. I consider it really helpful to know where my writing missed its mark.

Satisfied customers seldom respond with anything more than an acknowledgement that they received the file with a brief comment such as, “Great work,” “thanks, got the file now we’ll be able to meet our deadline.” So what did they like about it? What created the satisfaction? What was it that worked especially well? How will I know the best way to handle their next writing assignment?

As a freelance writer, I appreciate receiving feedback on what was especially good about the submission, or what strayed from desired result. I encourage managers who are outsourcing writing assignments to provide specific and detailed feedback to their writers. It’s the only way we can improve our services to meet your expectations, deadlines and budget.

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