
Danny Evarts checking out Freddy statute

Patrick Rahall and Scott Goudsward at the NEHW table at Rock and Shock
Author Kristi Petersen Schoonover’s short story “Vanity,” which was inspired by Poe’s “The Oval Portrait” is now available in Dark Opus Press’ In Poe’s Shadow.
In this anthology, which should be part of any Poe-lover’s collection, each piece is inspired by one of Poe’s, and they’re grouped as such. If you’re a fan of “The Fall of the House of Usher,” there’s Sorrel Wood’s “De’Atherton House;” if you’re a fan of “The Masque of the Red Death” there’s S.S. Hampton, Sr.’s “The Mumbai Malaise;” if you’re a fan of “The Premature Burial,” there’s Dorian Dawes’ “Loving the Dead.”
You can order your copy of In Poe’s Shadow here: http://amzn.to/InPoesShadow.
The Poe inspired collection will be available at the NEHW table at Rock and Shock (www.rockandshock.com) this weekend and at the Middletown, Connecticut Open Air Market on Oct. 23. Schoonover will be at both events to sign her story.
Information compiled by Doug Rinaldi from www.morvenwestfield.com.
Author Morven Westfield has a number of appearances this month and in November. This first one is this weekend at Rock and Shock.
2011 Events
Rock N’ Shock
October 16, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
DCU Convention Center
50 Foster St.
Worcester, MA 01608
www.rockandshock.com/
Going to Rock N’Shock? Stop by the NEHW table in the vending area. I’ll be there from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sunday, but members of NEHW will be on hand all weekend while the vending area is open.
Other NEHW members present include Jack Haringa, L.L. Soares,
NECON E-Books, Ken Wood (Shock Totem), Tracy Carbone, T.J. May, Danny Evarts,
Jason Harris, Stacey Longo. For more information, see the NEHW website at www.newenglandhorror.org.
Intro to National Novel Writing Month
(presented by
members of the New England Chapter of Broad Universe)
October 20, 7 p.m.
NPL Theater
Nashua Public Library
2 Court Street
Nashua, NH 03060-3475
www.nashualibrary.org
From the Nashua Public Library Calendar:
“November is National Novel Writing Month, a fun,
seat-of-your-pants approach to writing. Participants begin writing on Nov. 1
with the aim of completing a 50,000-word novel by Nov. 30.
Four NaNoWriMo veterans, all members of Broad Universe, a group that celebrates female sci-fi, fantasy, and horror authors, help you make the most of the challenge—and tell you what to do when you finish.”
Anthocon
November 11-13, 2011
Anthology 2011 Conference
Best Western Wynwood Hotel & Suites
580 US Route 1
Portsmouth, NH 03801
www.anthocon.wordpress.com
This is the first year for this con, but they’ve got some really good guests including authors Jackie Gamber, Catherynne M. Valente, Jennifer Pellan, Christopher Golden, Rick Hautala, and Jonathan Maberry and artist Ogmios.
I’m available for interviews, signings, readings, panel discussions, and podcasts. I can speak on the writing life, tech tools for writers, vampires, and the supernatural. Interested? Contact her at morven@morvenwestfield.com.
The information for the Haunted Salem Village was incorrectly reported as being open to ages 21 and older.
Haunted Salem Village on Oct. 22, 29, and 30 at Pioneer Village is open for people of all ages. For more information about this event, check out the website, http://pioneervillagesalem.com
Nick Cato’s book review of
Impossibly Funky: A Cashiers Du Cinemart Collection by Mike White
(2010 Bear Manor Media / 377 pages / trade paperback) from Cinema Knife Fight (www.cinemaknifefight.com)
From 1994-2008, Cashiers Du Cinemart was a fanzine featuring wildly opinionated movie reviews and retrospects, as well as interviews, with everyone from Crispin Glover to cast members of seldom-seen 70s blaxploitation films. Impossibly Funky collects some of the fanzine’s finest moments, and features introductions from exploitation film guru Herschell Gordon Lewis to the founder of Film Threat, Chris Gore.
Author Mike White is perhaps best known for calling Quentin Tarantino out for certain “similarities” between the 1989 Hong Kong movie, City on Fire, and his own film, Reservoir Dogs. White even made a short feature, Who Do You Think You’re Fooling?, which shows (side-by-side) shots from both films, calling Tarantino’s motives into question. The opening chapters of the book deal with this whole saga, and while I had seen White’s film online, there’s plenty more here for those interested in this on-going celluloid grapple.
Among my favorite sections were Mike Thompson’s look at the original script for the Nicolas Cage film 8mm, Mike White’s section on Alien 3, White’s interview with Canadian cult film director Guy Maddin, and of course, the huge section dedicated to the 1975 blaxploitation classic, Black Shampoo, which features an overview of the cast, interviews with the director and a few stars, and an interesting story on how Mike and his friends became addicted to it (and still hold annual viewings).
While I haven’t mentioned even half of what’s on display here (Star Wars fans will get a kick out of the small section dedicated to it), Impossibly Funky looks at films through the eyes of super-geek film fans, and while (at times) things get a bit obsessive (I mean, what film geek doesn’t get obsessive when talking films?), film fans will not be bored, even if a topic being discussed isn’t of particular interest.
A fun. informative, and smart book to garnish any film freaks’ book shelf.
© Copyright 2011 by Nick Cato
Here are the NEHW members and the panels they will be on throughout the Rock and Shock convention
Friday 6 p.m.
Small Press and Magazines
Moderator: Danny Evarts
Panelists:
Jack Haringa
T.J. May
Trisha Wooldridge
Scott Goudsward
Stacey Longo
K. Allen Wood
Saturday 12 p.m.
The Writers Studio
Moderator: Geoffrey Goodwin
Panelists:
T.J. May
Jen Yarter-Polmatier
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Tracy Carbone
Bob Booth
Saturday 1 p.m.
Women in Horror
Moderator: Trisha Wooldridge
Panelists:
Tracy Carbone
Morven Westfield
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Stacey Longo
Kelli Jones
Sunday 1 p.m.
E-Publishing Workshop
Moderator: Bob Booth
Panelists:
Kelli Jones
Matt Bechtel
Jack Haringa
TBA
TBA
The weekend after the convention, Longo and Schoonover will be appearing at the Middletown Open Air Market on Sunday, Oct. 23, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
How to Meaningfully Grow Traffic to Your Site/Blog by Jane Friedman (an article from http://www.writersdigest.com/editor-blogs/there-are-no-rules/digitization-new-technology/how-to-meaningfully-grow-traffic-to-your-siteblog)
It’s a problem that every new blog or website faces in its early days—or every day (!): How to get readers (also called traffic).
There are a few well-worn pieces of advice in this area, such as:
Your mileage will vary on No. 7 depending on your social media presence, how savvy you are, and if you’re reaching out in the right areas.
But I’m a strong believer in the breadcrumb method, where you have accounts on multiple community sites. That’s because you never know how people might find you, and the more doorways you have leading to your site, the more traffic you will get over time.
Even if you’re not active or devoted to a particular community site or social media channel, you can still appear to be active if you adjust the settings in your favor.
To help explain, let me show you where my site or blog traffic comes from, then explain how that traffic happens.
Here are 5 key, continuing sources of traffic for this blog (No Rules) in the past year—aside from search engines and direct traffic.
1. TWITTER
Both Writer’s Digest and I have active presences on Twitter (130K and 50K followers, respectively). When a link is broadcast that a new post is up, it reaches thousands of people initially, and then thousands more through retweets and mentions.
2. FACEBOOK
New blog posts are automatically fed onto my Facebook personal page, as well as the Writer’s Digest fan page (without any help from me, because it works through NetworkedBlogs). Other people also commonly post links to my blog content on their own Facebook walls.
3. WRITERSDIGEST.COM
There’s a permanent link to all Writer’s Digest blogs on the homepage, and it’s a consistent driver of traffic to No Rules.
4. BLOGGER MENTIONS (and permanent bloggers’ links)
When taken individually, one person’s blog or site may send just a handful of visits per day or week. But when you multiply that effect by dozens or hundreds of bloggers, that’s a huge impact. But you only get to enjoy this dynamic if you’re blogging for the long haul. It rarely happens overnight.
5. STUMBLEUPON
To tell the truth, this is one site where I am not active, and only recently did I even start an account. But over time, this site has started sending MORE traffic my way as my most popular posts are tagged and catalogued. (Right now, this controversial post that’s tagged is sending me a few dozen visits a day from StumbleUpon.)
Some other important sources of traffic this past year have been Writer Unboxed (where I offer guest posts) and Alltop, where this blog is catalogued as part of the writing and publishing pages.
–
Here are the top 5 sources of traffic for my personal site (JaneFriedman.com) in the past month. They constitute about 80% of my traffic.
1. THERE ARE NO RULES (this blog)
This make sense since NO RULES is where I focus most of my time and energy in producing new content. I rarely link to my personal site in my posts. Instead, it’s a static link on the lefthand sidebar if people want to know more about me.
2. GOOGLE (organic search)
The No. 1 search term that brings people to my site is “Jane Friedman.” I am probably attracting a considerable number of visits from people looking for The Other Jane Friedman.
3. TWITTER
Traffic from Twittercomes from 3 areas:
4. DIRECT VISITS
These visits are from people who have bookmarked my page, click on direct links from e-mail notifications, or otherwise type in “JaneFriedman.com.”
5. FACEBOOK
Traffic from Facebookcomes from 3 areas:
Some of my biggest traffic bumps happen when a major Facebook group posts a link to my series, When Mom Was My Age—which shows you the value of consistent series or features on your site/blog.
–
If you look at the long tail of my site traffic—on this blog as well as my personal site—I’m getting a significant number of visitors, over a year’s span, from:
Does it take me any effort to get this traffic?
No. I simply make sure that I use all settings and opportunities for auto-updating, when applicable.
Take my LinkedIn profile as an example. I don’t spend time on this site. But I’m “active.” See below; the top red arrow points to my Twitter updates, which are automatically fed into my profile and provide constantly refreshed information about what I’m doing. I don’t lift a finger.
The bottom arrow points to a mash-up of things I’ve told LinkedIn to report, based on my other activity online.
On LinkedIn, I also feed in my blogs, which appear under my profile summary.
This keeps me active on the site without requiring my time. Look for these types of feeds and settings on every site you use!
This is why I give the appearance of being everywhere at once, while really just focusing my energy on a few things: my professional blog, Twitter, Facebook.
Why those 3?
Because those places give me the most return on my investment of time and energy. Everyone’s results will be different, though, which is why you absolutely must find out where your site traffic comes from. (Use Google Analytics to get started.)
People will find you in a hundred different ways, and it’s more important than ever to have your own site—so you can direct people to your “home,” where readers and community influencers have an opportunity to find out where you’re most active, and choose their preferred means of staying updated.
I can guarantee that after this post, I’ll have a lot of people joining me on Facebook or LinkedIn because they didn’t realize I was there!
And that’s a good thing.
There will be something new at Rock and Shock this year. The convention has added discussion panels to the convention. There will be four panels including NEHW members during the weekend.
The first panel, “Small Press/ Magazines Workshop,” will be held Friday at 6 p.m. It will be moderated by Danny Evarts.
The second panel, “The Writer’s Studio,” will be held on Saturday at 12 p.m. It will be moderated by Geoffrey Goodwin.
The third panel, “Women in Horror,” will be held Saturday at 1 p.m. and will be moderated by Trisha Wooldridge.
The fourth and final panel, “NECON E-Books & E-Publishing,” will be on Sunday at 1 p.m. It will be moderated by Bob Booth.
Here is the line-up of the authors who will be at the convention throughout the weekend.
Friday
3pm – 10 p.m.
T.J. May
Bob Booth
NECON E-Books
Scott Goudsward
Stacey Longo
Geoffrey Goodwin
Danny Evarts
Trisha Wooldridge
Jack Haringa
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Saturday
11:00 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Trisha Wooldridge
Jennifer Yarter
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Stacey Longo
12:00 p.m. to 1 p.m.
Trisha Wooldridge
Jennifer Yarter
Geoffrey Goodwin
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Stacey Longo
1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
NECON E-Books
Geoffrey Goodwin
Nathan Wrann
John M. McIlveen
2 p.m. to 3 p.m.
NECON E-Books
LL Soares
Peter Dudar
Rob Watts
Nathan Wrann
John M. McIlveen
3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Stacey Longo
Jason Harris
LL Soares
Peter Dudar
Rob Watts
Anthony Laquerre
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
T.J. May
Scott Goudsward
Tracy Carbone
Stacey Longo
Jason Harris
Anthony Laquerre
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
T.J. May
Scott Goudsward
Tracy Carbone
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
T.J. May
Jason Harris
Stacy Longo
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Jason Harris
Stacy Longo
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Tracy Carbone
8 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Jason Harris
Stacy Longo
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Tracy Carbone
Sunday
11 a.m.to 12 p.m.
T.J. May
Trisha Wooldridge
Morven Westfield
12 p.m. to 1 p.m.
T.J. May
Trisha Wooldridge
Morven Westfield
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Stacey Longo
Jason Harris
1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
NECON E-Books
Larissa Glasser
Stacey Longo
Jason Harris
2 p.m. to 3 p.m.
NECON E-Books
Larissa Glasser
Ken Wood
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Geoffrey Goodwin
3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Ken Wood
Kristi Petersen Schoonover
Geoffrey Goodwin
Stacey Longo
Jason Harris
4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Trisha Wooldridge
Stacey Longo
Jason Harris
T.J. May
This list is subject to change.
This article appeared on www.comicbookmovie.com.
Interview With Ghost Rider And Dark Wolverine Writer, Rob Williams!
movies and more, hit the jump to read this fascinating interview…
Despite being insanely busy writing countless titles for Marvel, writer Rob Williams was kind enough to take the time to talk to me about the many comic books he’s been working on as of late. As you may notice, some of the questions below focus on titles which have already come out, but that is simply down to Rob only just now having managed to find the time to answer them! If you’ve missed any of the comics, I strongly advise hunting down the back issue or trades when they’re available. To keep up to date with all of his work, you can find Rob on Twitter (@Robwilliams71).How exactly did you get into writing comic books for a living?
I was writing and directing for a small video production company and that taught me to write with visuals in mind, albeit very dull visuals. It made me think maybe I could try my hand at a comic script. This was back in ’99/2000, I think. I wrote issue one of Cla$$war without a clue what to do with it. Luckily for me I heard that a new comic company called Com.X was starting up in the UK and I gave them my script at the Bristol comic convention. A few months later they rang one evening, said they loved it and wanted to publish it. That was my break. After Cla$$war gained some positive reviews 2000AD asked me if I’d like to write for them. My comic work then grew gradually over the years. But I was a professional journalist throughout my comics career. It wasn’t my sole source of income. I was already writing for a living.
Not too long ago, it was revealed that you’ve signed an exclusive contract with Marvel. It must be a pretty exciting time for you, right?
It’s been an exciting year. I’ve been a Marvel fan since I was a child, so getting a chance to tell stories within their universe, writing some of my favourite characters, has been an absolute blast. It’s been very busy and very challenging, but I’m enjoying it hugely. Marvel editorial really do push you to create the best stories you can. It’s a different level.
One of your first ongoing series’ with Marvel was of course Daken: Dark Wolverine. What would you to say to anyone who’s not yet picked up the title, and what can current readers expect to see in store for the son of Wolverine in the coming months?
Well, we’re a good way into the run now. I took Daken to Los Angeles in order to try and become its kingpin of crime, but he hasn’t found that as straightforward as he thought it would be. There’s a serial killer in Hollywood called The Claws Killer, and all signs point towards that being Daken. The thing is, he’s become addicted to a new drug called HEAT, and that is not only giving him blackouts but it’s shutting down his healing factor. We’ve had some fun guest starring moments from Taskmaster and Moon Knight and we’ve got an arc coming up co-starring The Runaways. So, it’s been fun. Nasty, violent, psychotic fun. I wanted the book to be a ‘Kingpin Of Crime: Year One’ type book. The villain as the protagonist.
Your run on Skaar: King of the Savage Land is also well under way. How’s it been working on that character in such a setting?
Skaar was a lot of over the top fun. How can it not be in a setting like The Savage Land? Devil Dinosaur and Moon Boy were the highlight. Every time they were in the script it seemed to lift the series due to the enormous silliness of the concept. That lends itself to comedy and crazy visuals. King Of The Savage Land was a hoot to write. Dinosaurs, aliens, pulp characters like Kid Colt and The Phantom Eagle, giant robots. You could really go for it.
What can you tell us about your upcoming work on the new Ghost Rider series? The recent #0.1 issue seemed to hint at a somewhat different status quo for the character.
By now you’ll have seen that Johnny Blaze is no longer the Ghost Rider. It’s passed on to a new character called Alejandra. An 18-year-old warrior girl who’s been trained her entire life to become the Ghost Rider. But there’s a huge amount of rage inside her and that’s bad news for the world. Johnny’s going to be forced into a mentor role that he’s really not best suited for. #5 & #6 focus on Alejandra and then #7 & #8 co-star Hawkeye in a crazed bike chase adventure. Like Skaar, it’s a fun series to write. The core concept begs for OTT action. #4 takes the Ghost Rider into space, which just seems perfect.
And how about Fear Itself: Uncanny X-Force with Simon Bianchi?
We finished up FI: Uncanny X-Force recently. Yeah, Simone was great to work with. There was some beautiful imagery that he was able to capture and the storyline was one which, hopefully, went to the heart of what X-Force is as a group. A kill crew. I wanted to write a story about the moral question of the group’s existence. What did that say about superheroes in general. Plus lots of action and explodo, obviously.
The Iron Age recently kicked off with something of an explosive and shocking start to say the least. What can you tell us about the series and where things are going from here?
Well, due to my being appallingly late with these answers the series has now finished. But it was a huge amount of fun for several reasons. Being able to play with so many Marvel characters in classic storylines, getting to collaborate with so many top talents. Art-wise, I had Rebbekah Isaacs, Ben Oliver and Roberto De La Torre drawing my issues, and as a writing team there was people like Christos Gage, Jan Van Meter, Louise Simonson. I got to write Iron Man, Captain Britain, the classic ‘new’ Uncanny X-Men lineup – characters like Nightcrawler and Dark Phoenix. It was a bit of a dream job. The type of storyline that spoke to my inner Marvel fanboy from years gone past. Hopefully that sense of fun translated to the end product.
Did delving into the past of so many Marvel characters leave you feeling pretty pressurised to live up to the expectations of long-time fans?
Not really. I was aware of it, of course, but I weirdly felt a bit naive about that kind of pressure. I just wanted to tell the best story I could. If you let yourself get bogged down by the pressures of writing classic characters you’d never get anything done.
Talking of Captain Britain, is that a character you’d like the chance to work with again? I know a lot of people really enjoyed your work with him in Deadpool Team Up, not to mention the excitement of seeing him in The Iron Age!
Definitely. The Alan Moore/Alan Davis Cap Britain run is one of my favourite comics and I’ve got a huge soft spot for the character and his look as a result. I’d jump at the chance to write more Cap. I’m not sure there’s currently a market for a Cap Britain title right now. Paul Cornell’s MI:13 was highly praised but, despite that, the sales just weren’t there. There’s a line of thinking that U.S. comic fans aren’t interested in buying a book about British characters. That’s a shame. But maybe I can crowbar Cap in somewhere down the road.
One other thing you’ve got coming up outside of Marvel is a Robocop/Terminator series. What can you tell us about that exactly?
It’s called Kill Human and is drawn by 2000AD and Battlefield’s PJ Holden. I’m really pleased with the storyline. It starts in the far future where mankind is wiped out and Robocop finds himself re-awakened in a museum. From there he travels back to the time of T2 in an effort to try and save history. So it’s Robocop vs. the T1000. And then the timeline does change and we go in a completely new direction. I was working on the proof of the final issue last week and it’s a really strong comic, I think. The type of thing that would make a great movie.
Although you’re working on a pretty diverse range of characters right now, is there anyone else in particular you’d like to write you’ve not yet had chance to?
Got to say, I’ve written an awful lot of Marvel characters in the last year and a half and I’m pretty happy with who I’ve had the chance to get my mits on. I supposed I’ve not written Daredevil yet. That might be fun. I’m such a fan of the classic Frank Miller run.
Have you had a chance to check out any of this years big comic book movies yet? Any in particular that you’re looking forward to seeing in future?
I saw Thor and really enjoyed it. Thought it was a fun, nicely handled movie that could’ve easily been something camp. The tone was great, and the Asgard stuff, which was a difficult line to tread, was really good. Plus, the core of the story was two brothers fighting over their father’s love. That’s pretty brave for a summer blockbuster.
Didn’t get to see Cap, which was a shame. I was looking forward to it. I’ve got two young kids so cinema visits are pretty infrequent. Green Lantern, I must admit, the trailers put me off. Maybe I’ll see it on DVD.
I’m ridiculously excited about The Avengers and I’m sure Nolan’s next Batman movie will be great. Man Of Steel is an intriguing one. The casting choices have been great and Nolan’s involvement is reassuring. I can’t help but think that Zach Snyder’s a very odd choice for director. Just the wrong tone for a Superman movie. But, we’ll see. I hope I’m proved wrong. I’d love to see a bloody great Superman movie.
The 4 Pet Peeves of Freelancers (and How to Tackle Them) by Brian A. Klems (via www.writersdigest.com)
We freelance writers tend to think of editors as the ones having all the pet peeves, but we also have plenty of things that drive us crazy. We’ve all dealt with editors who neglect to respond to pitches, sources who don’t show for scheduled interviews, markets that take forever to pay—or all of the above, and then some.
Every business, including writing, has its challenges. But these challenges needn’t hurt your productivity or income—if you know how to handle them. Here’s how to beat four of the most common pitfalls of the freelance life.
PET PEEVE NO. 1: THE AWOL EDITOR
You researched the market, came up with a timely, compelling idea and sent a stellar query. Now weeks have passed and you still haven’t heard from the editor. What do you do next—you know, besides check your e-mail every five minutes?
Follow up. If you hear nothing after a reasonable time (say, four to eight weeks), send a brief e-mail that includes your original pitch, and ask if the editor is interested in the idea. Let her know (politely) that if you don’t hear from her in, say, two weeks, you may market the idea elsewhere. That often triggers a response, and shows you’re serious about your business. But if you don’t hear anything, do cut bait and pitch the
idea elsewhere.
PET PEEVE NO. 2: WRITING IN THE DARK
Sometimes an editor will provide you with a detailed assignment. But what happens when you’re not given much direction at all for your story?
“I’m not interested in hearing, ‘Just start researching and writing and I’ll let you know if you’re on track when I see it,’ ” says freelance writer Kathy Sena, who has written for USA Today, Newsweek and Woman’s Day. “Like every writer, I love a concise, clear assignment letter that spells out exactly what is to be covered, the approximate number and type of sources, word count, etc. If an editor doesn’t provide that, it makes me wonder if he really knows what he wants.”
Her solution to a vague assignment? “If we’ve just talked on the phone or had a brief e-mail or two, and there doesn’t seem to be a detailed assignment letter forthcoming, I’ll write a draft assignment letter myself.” Sena then asks the editor to confirm the details so she can get to work. While expediting the process, this also helps avoid another pet peeve—multiple revision requests—by clarifying the editor’s needs ahead of time.
PET PEEVE NO. 3: THE AWOL SOURCE
You found the perfect source for your piece and arranged a telephone interview a few days before your deadline. But when you called at the scheduled time, the source wasn’t there! Several voice mails and
e-mails later, you still haven’t been able to connect. Now what?
The key is to identify multiple source options from the outset, says freelancer Polly Campbell, a blogger for Psychology Today and ImperfectSpirituality.com. “In most cases, during the preliminary research I come up with two or three sources that could be ideal for the piece, and I always contact at least two,” Campbell says. “Then, if one doesn’t work out, you just keep going down your list.”
Another way to keep this problem from putting dents in your deadline is to pursue interviews as soon as you can (and avoid relying on a single method of contact—always obtain or request both an e-mail address and a phone number). In other words, never wait until right before the piece is due. That will give you some breathing room if something takes longer than expected or falls through.
PET PEEVE NO. 4: CLIENTS THAT PAY LATE
You wrote the story and turned it in on time. You answered a few follow-up questions from your editor and submitted backup material for fact checking. Your work is done—so where’s your check? Not getting paid on time (or at all!) ranks high on the freelance pet-peeve list.
“It’s hard enough to manage a variety of publication styles, editorial personalities, invoice requirements and multiple deadlines, but when you have to put on the account collections hat, things really get difficult,” says freelancer Sharon Miller Cindrich, author of A Smart Girl’s Guide to the Internet and other books.
To stay on top of accounts receivable, Cindrich recommends providing every client with a detailed invoice that includes the pay rate, publication date (if known), due date, projected payment due and contact information. Then follow up as often as necessary.
“If I don’t get paid, I send e-mail reminders with the attached invoice to help the publication’s staff save the time of looking for old e-mails or piles of paperwork for the original,” she says. “I might also pop a hard copy in the mail—sometimes it is easier to drive your point home when someone … has it in their hand.”
Sure, you’ll always face some obstacles as a freelancer. But in many cases, planning ahead and following up (whether on a query or invoice) will help you overcome them, meet your deadlines, and, of course, collect your checks.