recipe for disaster
Dec. 27th, 2007 08:08 amGo to bed with the news story of a tiger attack in a zoo in San Francisco.
Wake up with an oversized marmalade cat grooming your ear, one paw firmly placed on your scalp, the other on your neck.
Yes, awake. wide awake. Thank you, Boomerang.
Much to do today, homahgawd.
I've been noticing a lot of folk toting up their word count for the year. Interesting. I never thought to do that -- to be honest, it feels like adding work onto an already full plate. But people do seem to get satisfaction out of the number.
Do you writer-folk here keep track, or no? Why? What's the payoff if you do, or the reason why you don't? And do you keep non-fiction and fictions separate, or is it all Words? Your host is curious.
Wake up with an oversized marmalade cat grooming your ear, one paw firmly placed on your scalp, the other on your neck.
Yes, awake. wide awake. Thank you, Boomerang.
Much to do today, homahgawd.
I've been noticing a lot of folk toting up their word count for the year. Interesting. I never thought to do that -- to be honest, it feels like adding work onto an already full plate. But people do seem to get satisfaction out of the number.
Do you writer-folk here keep track, or no? Why? What's the payoff if you do, or the reason why you don't? And do you keep non-fiction and fictions separate, or is it all Words? Your host is curious.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 01:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 01:25 pm (UTC)Re: the word count-- no. Not overall, at any rate. I keep track for specific projects, but not cumulative. Mostly because between first drafts and rewrites and the like, it seems like there would be a fair amount of overlap, creating a false, or at the very least, inaccurate number. I prefer thinking in terms of actual projects.
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Date: 2007-12-27 02:20 pm (UTC)Where counting words is a trap, speaking specifically from the business process perspective, is that it doesn't properly account for rewriting.
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Date: 2007-12-27 02:21 pm (UTC)Even when it feels like it.
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Date: 2007-12-27 02:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 02:47 pm (UTC)Eek. (Yet another reason to be glad I get to pay tax to HMRC rather than having to deal with the IRS.)
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Date: 2007-12-27 02:55 pm (UTC)I don't know -- I never kept one, at least, not in that sense. I track my expenditures, sure [a spreadsheet of work-related income/outlay, etc], and a record of where I've submitted what work, but never anything specific to the actual writing thereof...
[considering a chunk of my income comes from writing marketing copy, where less is the goal, that could require some interesting explainations... "It says here you wrote 200 words in one day, and were paid $X? How do you account for that?" "Well, I wrote 300, but had to cut it down to 110.... why are you looking at me like that?"]
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Date: 2007-12-27 03:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 03:37 pm (UTC)1). It is a measure of progress, though by no means the only measure (who can tell whether the 100,000+ words I've written this year are actually "better" or not than the 200,000+ of two years ago?)
2). When I sell stuff, I get paid by the word (10 out of 12 sales to date, anyway) so it makes sense to count them :)
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Date: 2007-12-27 03:45 pm (UTC)Well, yes. :-) But I was specifically asking about the year-end count-up of total words, not on a per-project basis. The "this is what Project A came out to, wordwise" count-up is part and parcel of the writer's toolbox, business-wise.
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Date: 2007-12-27 04:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 04:12 pm (UTC)No problem here -- I sold my first short story before I left university, so I've effectively always had a literary footprint to point to. And if HMRC ever audit me, I'm prepared to drop a shelf-metre of wood pulp on the auditor's desk if they even dream of querying what I do for a living. But I get the point. Although I'm not sure why they'd query your production; about all they could productively do is see if you're hiding additional sales from them, right? In which case, a diary asserting that on June the umpty-fifth you wrote 1100 words isn't going to cut much ice because they'll be investigating the possibility that you actually wrote 1150 and sold the other 50 without telling them.
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Date: 2007-12-27 04:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 04:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 04:20 pm (UTC):: ducks and covers ::
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Date: 2007-12-27 04:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 04:38 pm (UTC)I made each of my deadlines and made some money this year. That's what I track.
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Date: 2007-12-27 04:39 pm (UTC)The one time I've done the totalling for the "OMG NUMBERS" thing was because someone demanded to know when I slept, or ate, are did anything but write, and it didn't seem to me that I did all that much. So I totalled up the past (at the time) 2.4 years or so, and came up with nearly 750K worth of original fiction: five Kinkaids, two Haunted Ballads, a few short pieces, Truth in the Middle for "For Keeps".
I gather that a lot of writers do the "I wrote this many words in X time" thing as a self-disciplinary tool: it's the butt-in-chair thing. I don't have any trouble keeping the butt in the chair, so I don't bother, usually.
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Date: 2007-12-27 04:46 pm (UTC)I'm only tempted to do it again this year because I'm curious as to how '07 compares to '06.....
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Date: 2007-12-27 04:53 pm (UTC)Word count is a metric of how much raw material I've generated before I can begin to create stories. If the ore is of especially low quality, I need to ask why and see where I need to take my mining operation (what experiences I need to have, what stories I need to read) to generate better quality, but the very first step is to generate the raw material of a story (as opposed to a blog entry, anecdote, stream of consciousness ramble, or whatever).
Besides, being a Linux geek, wordcount is a simple process. I could probably do it in one line, if I were so inclined.
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Date: 2007-12-27 05:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 05:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 05:56 pm (UTC)Actually, the average IRS employee (if by that you mean an auditor) seems to have a pretty decent grasp of what a freelance writer can deduct. All they want to see is the paper trail that supports the fact that you did indeed pay thus for this, to be used for that, and it all ties back into the writing [or the research prior to the writing].
The IRS doesn't care how many trees die, so long as you can document it.
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Date: 2007-12-27 06:52 pm (UTC)Then I can work some more.
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Date: 2007-12-27 08:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 09:06 pm (UTC)I have the problem of writing about twenty different stories throughout the year. I'm constantly picking up new snatches of inspiration, throwing it down on whatever is handy at the time, playing with it until I feel like I've gotten everything out of it, and then moving onto something else.
It would just be a hassle to find every text document, every notebook, every loose leaf page and count them all up just so I could post it on my blog and say "THERE WORLD! HERE IS WHAT I'VE GIVEN UNTO THEE!".
Unless it was Robert Jordan, somehow writing from the grave. Now, I'd find THAT impressive.
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Date: 2007-12-27 09:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-28 02:28 am (UTC)(actually, the brat has a deep fondness for foie gras, thanks to
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Date: 2007-12-28 02:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-28 02:36 am (UTC)You can have your insulin now.
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Date: 2007-12-28 03:54 am (UTC)(no actual sitting on cat needed, although they will attempt to sit on you...)
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Date: 2007-12-28 11:44 am (UTC)That's the only time I do work out my total in numbers of words: normally, I just count the number of new stories published.