I'm curious. Which of those categories is giving editors notes? I.E: "This approach isn't working. You need to go into more detail here less here. Your tone is too serious/not serious enough." I'm guessing "developmental".
Wash ,'War Stories'
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My take is that developmental editing is anything that is shaping the text. (My McGraw-Hill title was developmental editor.)
If you are providing notes/queries it could also be considered heavy copyediting. Line editing would be if you are diving in and rewriting. This happens quite a bit with textbooks, but less so with fiction or academic/narrative non-fiction.
I find that for tasks such as the one mentioned above, what people generally mean is heavy copyediting (proofreading, identifying awkward word choices/suggesting alternatives, minor rewriting of sentences to clarify, style consistency, etc.) This is what I do for California History or other academic articles.
I would not recommend charging less than $40 an hour for that but that can add up quickly so many people that do personal (not publisher) gigs end up charging less.
So, I might have a contract training opportunity coming up. A company that I worked for back in the 90s asked if I'd be interested in developing two training sessions and a job aid. I could do all of these, but I have no idea how to price it. It would probably take me a week or two to to pull together, plus a few hours for the actual training. If anyone has any suggestions, please, that would be very helpful.
I mentioned an amazing new opportunity on my horizon in Bitches, but I'm hoping to get some advice here.
It would be a government contract to consult at the highest level of an agency.
I'm humbled by their trust and energized to take on something I am uniquely qualified to do.
I need two things, references from people who understand what I do and some guidance on how to price this service. It's been a long time since I have consulted to the government and, the last time, I was sponsored by an organization.
Anyone have advice on where to look for resources on pricing consultation services at a high level?
I think I will check with SCORE, but I don't know how current their advice might be.
I ended up sending 6 enthusiastic references today...that should be enough, right?
I got some good advice on pricing from an old friend with whom I have also served as a consultant. She confirmed that the initial number I threw out was good and that, when it comes time to write up the scope of work, I can increase the hourly rate for functions like analysis and interpretation.
Phew. This thing might just work!
Go bonny go!!
I'm so excited to see this opportunity come your way! I have no experience whatsoever with government contracts to offer though.
Has anyone got any recs for good CRM out there? I need something where I can pull in lots of contact info, complete with photos and links, and differentiate between prospects and contacts, and then keep records of any interactions. Integration with Evernote would be awesome. Oh, yeah, and mail chimp. It should integrate with mail chimp.
Liese, I just started looking at CoachAccountable today. I have no idea how good it will end up being, And, I suspect it has a lot of stuff you won't need, but the interface is terrific and you can use it free with no ccard for 30 days.
coachaccountable dot com
I have tried several other CRMs and failed miserably.
On another note, I'm working on integrating Slack: slack dot com, into the petcare company's team and communication functions. It looks promising.
eta: Slack integrates with mailshrimp and pretty much every other app in the world.
etaa: because mailshrimp is way funnier. And now, I've got a picture of this guy working in the mail room, stuck in my head.
(Of course, I meant 'mailchimp')
I read bonny's last line as "mailshrimp" and LOVED IT.
Mail...keemp?