TechWhirl (TECHWR-L) is a resource for technical writing and technical communications professionals of all experience levels and in all industries to share their experiences and acquire information.
For two decades, technical communicators have turned to TechWhirl to ask and answer questions about the always-changing world of technical communications, such as tools, skills, career paths, methodologies, and emerging industries. The TechWhirl Archives and magazine, created for, by and about technical writers, offer a wealth of knowledge to everyone with an interest in any aspect of technical communications.
Re: Online and/or Printed for HARDWARE docs (was Printed vs. Onl
Subject:Re: Online and/or Printed for HARDWARE docs (was Printed vs. Onl From:Steve Pope <spope -at- vnet -dot- net> From:"CJMURRAY.US.ORACLE.COM" <CJMURRAY -at- US -dot- ORACLE -dot- COM> To:Rick_Sapir -at- grotto -dot- mux -dot- eng -dot- gilbarco -dot- com Date:Wed, 4 Oct 1995 09:57:00 -0500 (EST) Date:Thu, 5 Oct 1995 06:27:37 -0700
Richard Foley writes [I've reformatted it a bit]:
>In my case people/potential clients (?) are viewing my web site, _they_
>then contact _me_, with a view to discussing illustration work. Fine so
>far. Then we get into some email exchange and, after perhaps a week or
>two, the prospect fizzles.
>:-(
>Remember, THEY contacted ME, & THEN changed their minds.
>Now then, why is this? Perhaps they:
>a. Find my "email-party-talk" not quite what they expected?
>b. Don't like the ".uk" at the end of my email address?
>c. Decide not to use the Internet after all?
>d. Any other suggestions? (polite please) :-)
I suspect that while people find Web-surfing and the idea of Internet commerce
exciting, they're much more reluctant when it comes to doing any actual
buying, particularly of professional services from someone "remote." If they
needed some follow-up or had a dispute, they would want to be able to meet
with you in person. They would also want to be able to seek recourse through
local police and courts, the Better Business Bureau, state Attorney General,
and so forth. These options are not very practical if they're in, say, the
U.S. and you're in the U.K.
So, I'd recommend that you be prepared for a lot of not-very-serious inquiries
and attempts to get free advice and samples, and that you protect your own
interests by being polite to all inquiries but being sure you get paid at
least something before giving professional advice or other services.
- Chuck Murray (speaking just for myself, not for my employer)