More on “Does a writer need a staff?”
As a follow-up to yesterday’s question, Jim wants to know, “How did you find the right person to work with? And how did you justify the expense?”
I asked around, found candidates, then I asked them hard questions. Most of us want to hire someone because we LIKE them — and, unfortunately, we end up hiring someone just like ourselves. So that individual always feels frustrated and they never quite have the skills to fill in the remaining gaps. So let me make a suggestion: BEFORE you start interviewing anyone for the job, create a simple position description that describes what it is you need done.
It will look like this:
Job Title:
Here’s What I Need Done:
Here are the on-going responsibilities:
Here are the hours I’d like:
Here’s my definition of success:
Skills required:
Experience I’d prefer:
Additional thoughts:
Pay:
If you do something like this ahead of time, you can evaluate a candidate against your expectations and their skills. It’ll keep you from hiring that nice, perky assistant who, unfortunately, doesn’t know how to read.
As for the additional expense, I make my living representing authors. Any help I can get to take away other responsibilities and work more effectively with authors is generally worth it. In the long run, I make MORE money paying somebody else to do my taxes and mow my lawn and copy-edit my manuscript and double-check all the citations than if I were to do it myself. Does that makes sense?
1 Comment
Oh what a dream to have a staff. 8^) I can’t even bribe volunteers with food! 8^) (dark chocolate and coffee included) I so agree with this. My husband peeked into my office the other day and said, “All I see is office work being done. When do you have time to write?” What a guy.