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OH, THE PAPERWORK!
These days, people I know who are in
professional occupations often tell me that paperwork is the bane of their
lives. It's not just the form-filling, though that's bad enough. It's the sheer
amount of communicating they have to do: writing reports and letters,
negotiating with managers, keeping everyone with an interest in their current
client, case or project informed and up to date, and responding to all the
enquiries and requests that come flooding in. It's all too easy to get behind.
Papers stack up on your desk and in your in-tray, and you feel under more and
more pressure. Work never stops at 5 or 5.30. Email has been a mixed blessing:
it's quicker than letter-writing, but emails come flooding in and the temptation
is to dash a message off without giving it the care that you would give to a
letter or report.
As a professional person yourself,
you are - I'm sure - reasonably literate and familiar with the business of
writing. You're a graduate, I expect, so the written word is a familiar medium
to you. You're accustomed to reading books and journals, looking things up in
reference books and on the web, and putting words on paper yourself. Do you
remember writing essays, or reports on projects or lab work - and sitting exams?
So how might the justwrite
service be able to help you? If you've read
my Introduction, you know by now who I am, what
experience I have, and how I work. If you're finding the pressure to write is
getting onerous - it's taking too much of your time, you can't switch off from
it, you just feel hard-pressed - I think I may be able to help.
The
method I would suggest we use is a four-stage one:
1
Reviewing your present working methods
2 Analysing how you prioritize and how you use your time
3 Developing proposals for doing things differently
4 Trying out those proposals in practice.
1.
Reviewing your present working methods. This amounts to simply observing and
recording what you actually do in dealing with your paperwork, and when you
actually do it. You may be able to do this for yourself, by keeping a detailed
minute-by-minute diary, but many people find the diary-keeping a distraction and
prefer to have someone else monitoring them on a typical day. They are
frequently surprised by what the observer notices - which confirms, I think,
that the spectator does indeed 'see more of the game'.
2.
Analysing how you prioritize and how you use your time. This involves
seeing how you place writing tasks in sequence - how you decide to tackle one
task before another - and, for example, whether you use deadlines in a helpful
way, whether you frequently move from one uncompleted task to another, and
whether you have a systematic drafting technique.
3.
Developing proposals for doing things differently. All four stages are
collaborative ones, but this one most of all. Proposals are worthless unless you
are committed to doing your best to make them succeed. So we have to work
together to build on the Stage 2 analysis. Proposals would probably cover
prioritizing, your use of deadlines, and being more systematic in your working
methods. They have to be very specific, so you know exactly what you are going
to do.
4.
Trying out those proposals in practice. This stage is very much down to
you, but I won't abandon you at this point. All proposals have to be tested in
action, and almost certainly ours will require some refinement, some
fine-tuning. If you keep me posted about how you're getting on we can work on
this fine-tuning together.
GET IN TOUCH!
If
you've read my Introduction, you know something of who
I am as well as how I work. If you're interested, you should have some idea how
I might be able to help you. If you would like more information on anything,
including fees (reasonable!), please send me
an email: CLICK
HERE.
As
I said earlier, I'll be happy to discuss your needs. If you include your phone
number (landline preferred, please) in your email, I'll be happy to give you a
call and we can talk over the phone. There's no charge for an
exploratory discussion, of course. I look forward to hearing from you.
GUARANTEE OF CONFIDENTIALITY
I
appreciate the need for complete confidentiality in the work I do for you. I
treat everything that passes between me and my clients in complete confidence. I
do not and will not disclose any information about clients, or any information
that would enable a client to be identified.
Peter
Levin
'Helping
you get from
first thoughts to polished paragraphs'
To contact me at justwrite.biz,
CLICK HERE
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