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Added for You - Designing and Editing Publications: 6 Ways to Avoid the Editing Vortex
Picking a Tax Accountant - Seven Things You Should Know yone involved. A well-organized project can be completed in three rounds of edits with the final round simply being a once-over before the project goes to press or is published online. Here are six tips to help avoid the editing vortex.Introduction. Accountants come in all shapes and sizes. Some work with businesses, some work with individuals. Some do taxes, while others never do taxes. Many are CPA's, but you don't have to be a CPA to be a good tax accountant. Some are bookkeepers with little or no formal training. Some are authorized to work directly with the IRS, and to file your return electronically. Finding the right tax preparer can ease your burden at tax time. While finding a tax preparer isn't too hard, finding a good one can be a challenge. Here are seven steps to consider, when looking for a good tax accountant.1. Is the Candidate Authorized by the IRS? There are three types of accountants. First, there are bookkeepers who have little or no formal training in accounting. Second, there are enrolled agents who ha Get everyone involved from the beginning. You know there will be a copywriter and a designer. Who will you have to answer to? Make sure your supervisor is involved at the first meeting you schedule. Ask your supervisor if he will have to show the report to anyone. If yes, make sure that person is at the meeting. Tell that person to bring her kids if she plans to ask them for input. Anyone with any say needs to be at the initial meeting. That will get everyone headed in the same direction from the s Is Stalin Stuck in Your Head? The definition of vortex is a spiral motion of fluid or air that sucks everything near it toward its center. All marketing and communications professionals have been sucked into an editing vortex like a dust bunny into a power vacuum at some point during their careers. It's a rite of passage.Are you a duo citizen, residing in the Stalinist Soviet Union during the day, the United States evenings and weekends? Your days are filled with intrigues and the threat of intrigues. Paranoia and purges are the order of the day. You hope your name isn’t on the List. Others disappear, increasing your fear, but at least it wasn’t you this time. To paraphrase an astute commentary of the Third Reich’s rise and maintenance of power, when they came for them I did nothing. I continued in my indifference as they came for more and more thems. Finally I became a them. When they came for me, those left were as silent as I had been. But this has nothing to do with you. You would have stood up to Nazi Germany. Hell, everyone who wasn’t there would have, just ask them. But that 2 bit Stalin you have to answer Here's the scenario: You're working on a new, exciting project. It's an annual report. You have all the players in place: copywriter, designer, photographer, editor, your supervisor (or board member or company president) and you, the communications director/project manager. You discuss the project's direction, the schedule and the parameters. Everyone is clear. The copywriter outlines the project and you get initial approval from your supervisor. The photographs are taken. The copywriter writes copy, you get copy approval from your supervisor and approve the design direction. The designer then lays out the report. You get the First proof and it looks great. You leave it with your supervisor to review. A few days later your supervisor hands you a stack of annual reports. Somehow your proof has reproduced itself. There are now four of them. There's red ink everywhere as if each cloned proof is bleeding out. You take a deep breath and face the daunting task of assembling the edits on the only clean copy you have. The task is like trying to make sense of four babbling toddlers. You ask the copywriter for rewrites and then hand it back to the designer for edits. You receive the next proof from the designer and present it to your supervisor. Two days produces four more copies. It's like black magic. Try as you may, compiling the edits becomes impossible. Editor A completely disagrees with Editor B, Editor C may as well be reviewing the report for the First time, and Editor D could really use a grammatical intervention and rehab. You bring a new proof to your supervisor and discuss the problem, but it is too late. You're stuck in the editing vortex. Your supervisor admits that she didn't really have time to review the report so she passed it off to several board members and the accounting director. She's tells you the new proof will only be seen by her eyes. Great. Her eyes have never read the report in the first place so the edited proof she returns is, once again, bleeding out. By now the copywriter and designer are talking at a bar about you behind your back and getting closer to needing an intervention and rehab themselves. The quality of their work declines, the edits reduce in number but you still don't see the finish line. You're past deadline and over budget. This may sound extreme, but it's not. It actually happened. The more seasoned a professional you are, the easier it is to steer clear of the editing vortex, but sometimes you just get sucked in. The problem with the editing vortex is that it leads to an inferior outcome. It is exhausting. By the end no one cares about the quality of the project anymore, they just want it to go away. It stops being a priority for everyone involved. A well-organized project can be completed in three rounds of edits with the final round simply being a once-over before the project goes to press or is published online. Here are six tips to help avoid the editing vortex. Get everyone involved from the beginning. You know there will be a copywriter and a designer. Who will you have to answer to? Make sure your supervisor is involved at the first meeting you schedule. Ask your supervisor if he will have to show the report to anyone. If yes, make sure that person is at the meeting. Tell that person to bring her kids if she plans to ask them for input. Anyone with any say needs to be at the initial meeting. That will get everyone headed in the same direction from the st Three Tips for Successful Networking graphs are taken. The copywriter writes copy, you get copy approval from your supervisor and approve the design direction. The designer then lays out the report. You get the First proof and it looks great.I generally shy away from using the word “networking” when it comes to our business. As professional “headhunters”, we are constantly practicing and performing the art of networking in our daily operations. Many only consider the subject of networking when they are either seeking a new job or seeking new business opportunities. From our perspective, networking should be a daily event in your life. Networking is the art of building relationships that create benefit for yourself. Here are three tips to becoming a top notch “networker”.1. Develop an “Elevator Speech”: The theory goes that if you were to get into an elevator with a key decision maker and they asked you what you did, you should be able to respond in a concise and articulate statement that would conclude before you reached the bottom floor. You leave it with your supervisor to review. A few days later your supervisor hands you a stack of annual reports. Somehow your proof has reproduced itself. There are now four of them. There's red ink everywhere as if each cloned proof is bleeding out. You take a deep breath and face the daunting task of assembling the edits on the only clean copy you have. The task is like trying to make sense of four babbling toddlers. You ask the copywriter for rewrites and then hand it back to the designer for edits. You receive the next proof from the designer and present it to your supervisor. Two days produces four more copies. It's like black magic. Try as you may, compiling the edits becomes impossible. Editor A completely disagrees with Editor B, Editor C may as well be reviewing the report for the First time, and Editor D could really use a grammatical intervention and rehab. You bring a new proof to your supervisor and discuss the problem, but it is too late. You're stuck in the editing vortex. Your supervisor admits that she didn't really have time to review the report so she passed it off to several board members and the accounting director. She's tells you the new proof will only be seen by her eyes. Great. Her eyes have never read the report in the first place so the edited proof she returns is, once again, bleeding out. By now the copywriter and designer are talking at a bar about you behind your back and getting closer to needing an intervention and rehab themselves. The quality of their work declines, the edits reduce in number but you still don't see the finish line. You're past deadline and over budget. This may sound extreme, but it's not. It actually happened. The more seasoned a professional you are, the easier it is to steer clear of the editing vortex, but sometimes you just get sucked in. The problem with the editing vortex is that it leads to an inferior outcome. It is exhausting. By the end no one cares about the quality of the project anymore, they just want it to go away. It stops being a priority for everyone involved. A well-organized project can be completed in three rounds of edits with the final round simply being a once-over before the project goes to press or is published online. Here are six tips to help avoid the editing vortex. Get everyone involved from the beginning. You know there will be a copywriter and a designer. Who will you have to answer to? Make sure your supervisor is involved at the first meeting you schedule. Ask your supervisor if he will have to show the report to anyone. If yes, make sure that person is at the meeting. Tell that person to bring her kids if she plans to ask them for input. Anyone with any say needs to be at the initial meeting. That will get everyone headed in the same direction from the s Starting a Tanning Salon-If Done Right, Can Be Very Profitable the designer and present it to your supervisor. Two days produces four more copies. It's like black magic. Try as you may, compiling the edits becomes impossible. Editor A completely disagrees with Editor B, Editor C may as well be reviewing the report for the First time, and Editor D could really use a grammatical intervention and rehab. You bring a new proof to your supervisor and discuss the problem, but it is too late. You're stuck in the editing vortex. Your supervisor admits that she didn't really have time to review the report so she passed it off to several board members and the accounting director. She's tells you the new proof will only be seen by her eyes. Great. Her eyes have never read the report in the first place so the edited proof she returns is, once again, bleeding out. By now the copywriter and designer are talking at a bar about you behind your back and getting closer to needing an intervention and rehab themselves. The quality of their work declines, the edits reduce in number but you still don't see the finish line. You're past deadline and over budget.If you choose the right location, starting up a tanning salon can be an extremely profitable venture. Start up capital is usually the number one concern with entrepreneurs, but if you prepare a decent business plan, financing should not be too hard to get. As long as you have something to back up the risk such as a home or enough of a down payment in the business.Now depending on how many beds you are going to need, it can be quite expensive. If you are planning on purchasing a franchise, then the prices will range from $135,000 - $399,000. The price all will depend on the size, and which company you are representing.The opportunity is still out there is this market if you are able to get enough money to start one up in an area that has not already been taken over. Many places throughout the This may sound extreme, but it's not. It actually happened. The more seasoned a professional you are, the easier it is to steer clear of the editing vortex, but sometimes you just get sucked in. The problem with the editing vortex is that it leads to an inferior outcome. It is exhausting. By the end no one cares about the quality of the project anymore, they just want it to go away. It stops being a priority for everyone involved. A well-organized project can be completed in three rounds of edits with the final round simply being a once-over before the project goes to press or is published online. Here are six tips to help avoid the editing vortex. Get everyone involved from the beginning. You know there will be a copywriter and a designer. Who will you have to answer to? Make sure your supervisor is involved at the first meeting you schedule. Ask your supervisor if he will have to show the report to anyone. If yes, make sure that person is at the meeting. Tell that person to bring her kids if she plans to ask them for input. Anyone with any say needs to be at the initial meeting. That will get everyone headed in the same direction from the s Pricing Strategies, Revenues, Costs And Profits: How Does Profit Connect To Your Sales Price he returns is, once again, bleeding out. By now the copywriter and designer are talking at a bar about you behind your back and getting closer to needing an intervention and rehab themselves. The quality of their work declines, the edits reduce in number but you still don't see the finish line. You're past deadline and over budget.When I ask my accountant, he tells me that Profit equals Revenue minus Costs. He then spoils this simple equation with two caveats: Revenue is the cash flowing into your bank - this is sales without the bad debts, returns or shrinkage. Costs include your materials, labour and energy bills as well as everything else needed for long-term trading such as your contingencies, investments, replacements, training, and insurances. So how do you determine your price?If you were my client and I was helping you to calculate your sales price, does that mean that can you simply take the cost of the goods or services that you are selling and add on the Profit you choose?No - though you are in business for profit, y This may sound extreme, but it's not. It actually happened. The more seasoned a professional you are, the easier it is to steer clear of the editing vortex, but sometimes you just get sucked in. The problem with the editing vortex is that it leads to an inferior outcome. It is exhausting. By the end no one cares about the quality of the project anymore, they just want it to go away. It stops being a priority for everyone involved. A well-organized project can be completed in three rounds of edits with the final round simply being a once-over before the project goes to press or is published online. Here are six tips to help avoid the editing vortex. Get everyone involved from the beginning. You know there will be a copywriter and a designer. Who will you have to answer to? Make sure your supervisor is involved at the first meeting you schedule. Ask your supervisor if he will have to show the report to anyone. If yes, make sure that person is at the meeting. Tell that person to bring her kids if she plans to ask them for input. Anyone with any say needs to be at the initial meeting. That will get everyone headed in the same direction from the s Is Competition Really the Problem? yone involved. A well-organized project can be completed in three rounds of edits with the final round simply being a once-over before the project goes to press or is published online. Here are six tips to help avoid the editing vortex.The undercurrent in U.S. business today may well be one of fear and even desperation. It would be easy to make such an assessment based on the number of words that have been written on the subject of competition. Businesses in the United States have lost their edge, if the flood of articles and reports on the subject are to be believed.But is the problem really competition for customers or a share of the marketplace? Or is it something else?A Focus on ScarcityWe could make a case that the real enemy of any business today is the focus on scarcity driven by fear. Fear of losing "the edge," of losing perceived global leadership, of losing profits.Of losing the business entirely.When fear is our focus and scarcity our attitude, our perceptions of the world around us are s Get everyone involved from the beginning. You know there will be a copywriter and a designer. Who will you have to answer to? Make sure your supervisor is involved at the first meeting you schedule. Ask your supervisor if he will have to show the report to anyone. If yes, make sure that person is at the meeting. Tell that person to bring her kids if she plans to ask them for input. Anyone with any say needs to be at the initial meeting. That will get everyone headed in the same direction from the start. If it is not possible to get everyone at the first meeting, reschedule the meeting. If you show a proof to someone who is not familiar with the agreed direction of the project, they will make changes according to their own assumptions and often their own ego. Limit the number of people involved. If you have any power to do so, limit the number of editors to just you (or you and your supervisor). If you need to show the copy to several department heads, avoid showing them copy in layout, and only give them one chance to review the copy. Also, if you require input on the design direction, make sure that everyone you ask understands that they have input, but not final say. You have final say. That's your job. That way, the copywriter can rework the text without being concerned if it will fit in layout, and the designer can finalize a design direction that is not tied to keeping copy in place. After that initial round of eyeballs, only one or two people should be responsible for editing. Create a schedule and budget and stick to it. Projects that continue on and on become boring, stale and expensive. Create a schedule at your initial meeting and stick to it. Solidify the budget. Approve copy before layout. Reading a Word file is different from seeing copy in layout. The black and white words have no personality. This is the time to change it. Once the copy goes into layout, even adding a sentence can have a domino effect on the rest of the layout. There will always be minor changes at layout, but any major rewrites should occur before the designer even sees the copy. Let the professionals do their jobs. Hire people who are good at what they do and appropriate for your project. Create a collection of copywriters, designers and photographers who you can call when you need work done. Trust their judgment. You will have a much more pleasant experience working with creative professionals who you like and trust. They will listen to you and do their job, leaving you to do yours. Hire a professional editor for the final proof. At the end of a project, give an outside copy editor your final proof. Copy editors do not change content, they simply cross all your T's and dot all your I's. They are obsessive compulsives who take pride in their almost alien ability to find the slightest deviation from perfect grammar and formatting. They refine and polish the world of communications. You may need to become a bit of a tyrant to get a project to run smoothly and avoid the editing vortex, but I guarantee that your next project will run more smoothly and give you better results if you take control of the process from the beginning.
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