• Today's Verse

  • Emma Bird and Joanna Young at Absorbing Writing: Writing Workshops In Italy are soliciting input in planning their next writing workshop.

    Tell us about the ingredients of your ideal writing weekend. That might be a weekend you’ve already enjoyed, one that you’ve got planned, or one that you’re hoping to take part in, some day.

    My ideal writing weekend is one that I’ve already spent. It actually wasn’t a weekend (but it could have been), and my time was spent editing rather than writing. I had written and revised the novel Dream or Destiny, and it was ready for the final round of editing. However, my freelance workload had increased to the point that I couldn’t seem to find time for fiction, and the manuscript had been waiting for attention for a very long time.

    EPIC, the Electronically Published Internet Connection held a weekend event in Las Vegas. I traveled and shared a suite with friends - a delightful husband and wife romance writing team. Billie and Herb have been happily married for more than half a century and write under the name of Barri Bryan. We decided to stay in Vegas a few extra days.

    After the conference, Billie and Herb spent the days having fun. I holed up in the hotel room and edited. My story and I were alone all day with no distractions. At night, I joined Billie and Herb for dinner and a show or a visit to the casino. Frankly, I’m not much of a gambler, and Las Vegas isn’t my favorite place in the world. Perhaps that contributed to the ideal writing experience. I wan’t tempted to spend all day in the casino - a few hours in the evenings were plenty. What made the experience ideal were the days totally focused on writing interspersed with good times with good friends. By the time we returned to San Antonio, Dream or Destiny was ready to submit to a publisher.

    Of course, when the novel was accepted by GASLight Publishing, LLC, there were several more rounds of editing. Publication has been delayed because of the publisher’s health issues, and it wasn’t released in June as anticipated. However, things are back on track now, and I hope to announce a release date soon.


    Self-LoveLook at me …
    Listen to me …
    Give to me …
    Help me …
    How did it become about loving yourself instead of loving your neighbor as yourself?
     

    This was intended to be an entry in Liz Strauss’ 25 Words of Work / Life Wisdom Writing Project but I got tied up on a project and lost track of time. I decided to post it even though it’s late.

    Added 7/21: Liz included my late entry. Take a look at a slide show of all the amazing entries in 25 Words of Wisdom.


    Writing a ResumeJob-seekers often think they need a resume that will get them the job. However, the purpose of the resume isn’t to get you the job. The purpose of the resume is to get you the interview.

    For most positions, hiring managers are faced with a formidable stack of resumes. Just like editors reviewing writers’ query letters, they look for any excuse NOT to consider a resume. Often they glance at each one for only a few seconds before deciding to reject it or to put it aside for review in more depth.

    Your first goal, then, is for your resume to make the cut so the hiring manager takes a closer look at it. Your second goal is for you to be called for an interview after the review of your resume.

    Following these tips will give you a much better chance that both of those goals will be achieved. 

    • Assemble all your information. Review old job descriptions and performance evaluations, school transcripts, awards and compliments you have received, and other documents related to your work history, education, and community activities.
    • Don’t give the hiring manager any reason to reject your resume out of hand. Provide the information the employer needs and make it simple to find. Be sure your complete contact information is at the top of the first page and your name and phone number and/or e-mail address is in a header on the second page.
    • Format the resume so it is easy to read. Use a clean, simple font, preferably in 12 pt but no smaller than 11 pt, on plain white or cream-colored paper. Make margins at least .5 inch all around; 1 inch is better. Reduce the line spacing between paragraphs rather than the margins or font size. Use bold, italics, and underlining to make headings stand out. Ensure that the formatting is consistent throughout the document, and present information in bulleted lists so the resume is scannable. Keep the document to no more than two pages.
    • Begin with a profile or summary of qualifications. ”Objective” is passe - emphasize what you have to offer an employer, not what you want. Many people don’t like to toot their own horn, but if you don’t tell the hiring manager what you will contribute to the company, your resume will land in the Rejected pile. If you’re too modest to brag on yourself, review evaluations from previous employers, recall compliments you’ve received from customers and coworkers, and ask associates what they think your strongest attributes are.
    • Include keywords. Often employers are looking for specific attributes and experience and will scan the resume for those words. If your job title (such as Vice President for Southern Region) did not readily identify what you did, include a more descriptive noun (Regional Sales Manager) in the profile or job description.
    • Focus on your accomplishments, not job descriptions. Use short sentence fragments beginning with a strong action verb. Describe what you did (without using “I”) and what the results were: “Handled customer service calls, resolving complaints and building customer loyalty.” Quantify your accomplishments and results whenever possible: “Administered $2 million construction budget and brought project in under budget” or “Increased sales by 31% in a 2-year period.”
    • Be completely honest but position yourself in the best way possible. If you normally supervised 12 employees but supervised 30 people for six months during a special project, say “Supervised up to 30 people.” If you have related volunteer or hobby experience, include it as well as paid work experience: “Managed 3 fundraisers for Local Charity, raising over $500,000″ or “Coordinated summer reading program for Children’s Club; 75 children read 10 or more books during the summer.” List continuing education and seminars, if applicable to the job you seek, as well as formal education.
    • Consider a functional resume if your work history is less than stable. Employers generally prefer chronological resumes, in which jobs are listed in reverse chronological order. However, if your experience is limited or if you have gaps in employment, a functional resume, in which accomplishments are broken down by function rather than by employer, may be more effective. However, a blended resume may be better yet - list your accomplishments by function, then list your employers and dates of employment. The hiring manager isn’t left wondering where you worked and when, but your accomplishments may capture her attention before she reads far enough to see the gaps in your work history.
    • Proofread thoroughly and have another person review the resume. If you can, get input from a coworker or someone who knows your accomplishments. Another person may recall something you’ve overlooked or point out the significance of an accomplishment that you took from granted.
    • Create a text-only resume. When you apply for jobs online, you will often be asked to submit a text-only resume. Many employers want a scannable resume so they can search for keywords without taking the time of a live person. Be prepared by saving your resume as a text document and removing all formatting. Left-align everything; use capital letters instead of bold, italics, and underlining for emphasis; and add terminal punctuation at the end of every bullet point and statement. Otherwise, everything might run together.
    • Remember: it’s all about what you can do for the employer. Ask yourself if you would want to interview the person who submitted your resume. If not … start revising.

    For more information about what to include in a resume and how to gather the information, see my Information for Resume Clients.

    This post is an entry in An Island Life’s How-To Group Writing Contest.

    Note (added 7/15/08): Be sure to read the comments for some great advice from our community.


    Thank youThe second quarter of the year brought almost 300 comments from 192 commenters - about the same number of comments from more commenters than the first quarter of the year. The number of comments continues to amaze me since this blog doesn’t get a lot of traffic.

    The comments have encouraged and educated my readers and me. I invite you to read the comments and add your own. You’ll find the conversation much more interesting and informative than just reading the posts.

    While I appreciate every comment, I prefer to respond to “John, the Philadelphia Lawyer” rather than to “Philadelphia Lawyer” or to “Susie Smith, Beauty Consultant” rather than to “Chicago Beauty.” Replying to “Best Cooking School” just doesn’t feel like I’m talking to a real person. I will reply, but I won’t address you by “name” when your “name” is a keyword phrase.

    As the About page says, first time commenters are moderated. Once a comment has been approved, future comments are not moderated as long as you use the same e-mail address and name. (Added 7/13/08: Also you must use the same URL; if you linked to your homepage on one comment and to a specific post on another, the second comment will be moderated.) I use moderation to try to avoid spam. Akismet has caught more than 78,000 spam comments, but several questionable comments appear in the moderation queue every day. If the comment relates in any way to the post, I approve it. If the comment is so generic that it looks like spam (”Nice post. Thanks.”), I delete it rather than mark it spam so if it’s a legimate comment, the person’s next comment will appear in moderation rather than go to spam. Of course, if it’s porn or other obvious spam, I mark it spam. I do NOT review all the comments in spam before deleting them. If you’ve left a comment and it didn’t appear, comment again or e-mail me. If you’re a real person leaving a real comment, I want to be sure your comment is posted.  

    I hope this list is accurate, but there is lots of room for errors in gathering this information and transferring it to a post. Please let me know about any errors or omissions.

    Now … thanks to all commenters, especially to those who left many comments.

    Top Contributor (21 comments)

    Renae Brumbaugh Morning Coffee

    Major Contributor (11 comments)

    Jeanne Dininni Writers’ Notes

    Outstanding Contributors (8 Comments) 

    Diane Brunner Her SCA Blog

    Yvonne Russell Grow Your Writing Business

    Significant Contributors (2 to 7 comments):

    A-1 Medical Supplies 

    Alina Popescu Words of a Broken Mirror   

    angelawd Pearl Writing Services     

    Bapefan       

    biorhythm Bio Trends

    Cath Lawson 

    Chad ProFreelancing 

    Cristian Nouveau Riche University   

    Dana Prince The Writer’s Blog       

    Deb Punctuality Rules

    Faraz Ahmed Ram Valley    

    isabella mori change therapy         

    Jackie Cameron  Consult Cameron     

    Jacob Share Job Mob and Group Writing Projects

    Jasia Creative Gene

    Joanna Young Confident Writing     

    JuLia This Heart of Mine      

    Karen Putz A Deaf Mom Shares Her World

    Karen Swim Words for Hire 

    Kerrie The Writing Bug       

    Laura Spencer Writing Thoughts     

    Lisa Vella Getting It Write for You   

    Lori Widmer  Words on the Page    

    Marc Klein Rate Surfer       

    Matt Keegan The Article Writer      

    Mihaela (Mig) Lica Online Public Relations   

    Mobile Blog Varalogic

    Monavie On the Move Monavievo and Monavie Mall        

    Monika Mundell Writer’s Manifesto  

    Paul Raven Futurismic        

    Raise Capital  Tiber Creek Corporation      

    Robert Hruzek Middle Zone Musings

    Ronny7        

    Sharon Hurley Hall Get Paid to Write Online

    Steve Bannister Mind the Gap        

    Thomma Lynn Tennessee Text Wrestling   

    Tiger Tom Tiger Tom Insurance Tips         

    Travelinoma  TravelinOma’s Library

    Uptake in OH Uptake

    Writing Content Nice, Smile 

    Important Contributors:

    Abaculus

    akshay Silicon Web Solutions

    Alex Alex Wise Photography

    AndyW Press Release 001

    Application Development Net Prophets Global

    Asia’h Epperson Asia’h Epperson

    Brad Shorr Word Sell, Inc.

    BrandName.com

    Brandon Satrom Words of Redemption

    Buy Roseville Pottery

    California Car Insurance Quotes

    Celebrity Forum Gossip Check

    Cheap Scuba Gear

    Chi Hair Straightener

    Christie Harper        

    Christine Duncan Book Babes and Him

    Chris All Fishing Books

    Chris Foolish Mumbles

    Cohnsey Repo Lift

    Copywriter Profit Convergence Inc

    Cosmetic Dentist London Sparkle Dental

    Craig UK Holiday Trips Blog

    Dan ACS Calibration

    Daniel Jones Student News and Events

    Dave’s Place  Just Another Blog

    David Bowman Precise Edit

    David Leonhardt Writer SEO-Writer

    Dallas Web Design Dallas Web Design

    Dean Cairns SEO

    Design Browse Design

    Dog Parvo Dog Parvo Symptoms

    Drug Rehab Facility Drug Rehab

    Ecard Lover 123 Greetings

    Edith Brown Jeteak Press Writer Blog

    Ernesto Live and Learn Online

    Forex Mania

    Fringe TV Show Guide

    Gene Universal Mortgage

    Genesis At Home Mom Blog

    Georganna Hancock A Writer’s Edge

    Gillian Plastic Surgery

    Graham US Movie Guide

    Green  Eco-Business Links

    Greenville NC Events Blog Greenville

    Greg Roy Only Knives

    Gus Direct Direct Buy

    Helen Ginger Straight from Hel

    Highest CD Rates Highest CD Rates Info

    Holly Self-Employed Insurance

    Homer Middle East Opinion

    How to earn online Money Bites

    Invoice Factoring Service Ozarks Capital Funding

    Irene Abendkleid 4 You

    Jack Sports Psychology Degree

    Jack J. Ammann Jr. aka Mr.Lillie    

    Jacob Top Soccer Tournaments

    Jak Doberman’s Den

    James Pharma Savings

    James Chartrand Men with Pens

    James Doughty Some Monument to Last

    Jayden Best Mattress Reviews

    Jennifer Mattern All Freelance Writing

    Jenny  Agentur Vergin

    Joe Takkle Takkle.com

    Johanna       

    John Election 2008 News

    John Jefferson The Culinary Arts

    Julio Equila

    Justin Briggs Seo Zombie

    Hakan Se Fresh Market News

    Kredite ohne Schufa

    Laminate Furniture Modecore

    Lance Gargus Lance’s Soul Searching

    Lighting Fixtures The Lot Is On

    Lilly outdoorkleidung-24.de

    Lisa  Big Food Web Marketing

    Lisa Got No Dough

    Lou Bortone Book Writing Coach

    Low Calorie Beverages

    Luca Govoni Nienteansia

    M. S. Phillips Getting Rid of Cellulite

    Manchild When Least Expected

    Marie Life to Max

    Mark Real Deal Docs

    Mark Goodyear Good Word Editing

    Mary My Shiny Things

    Matt (Project Management)  Projen

    Matt Keegan Word Journey

    Matthew  Blog About Your Blog

    Melissa Donovan Writing Forward

    Michael Image Frog

    Michael Kwan Beyond the Rhetoric

    Michele Tune Writing the Cyber Highway

    Mike Guitar Lesson Reviews

    Misty Agentur Vergin

    moneysmart  Personal Finance Growth

    Monica Benut Malaysia Adventure

    Mother Earth Best Wellness Consultant

    My Finance Butler

    Natasha Kaufhelfer

    Nicki Abendkleid 4 You

    NYC Beauty Cosmetic Surgeons Review

    Okinawa HDR Japan

    Patrick My U Search

    Paula Traumhafte Damanschhe

    pearlwriting   

    Peter All About Car Hire

    PC Sport Live PC Sport Live

    Porch Lifts Vertical Platform Lifts

    psi guy Pookie 808

    rentenversicherung  

    Reverse Mergers Tiber Creek Corporation

    Riese Last Minute Reiseangebote

    Riza Pinoy Food Taste

    Roberto  Third Law Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu

    Ronni 

    RT Cunningham Untwisted Vortex

    Rugs Done Right

    Ruth Chatlein  Ruth’s Visions and Revisions

    Safety Protection Technology

    Sally  

    Samantha  Kaufhelfer

    Sanctus  Agentur Vergin

    Schufafrei

    Sean  Argentina Soccer

    seo masta Bluesand Design

    Simon Pingable

    Sleep Aid Snooze Ease

    Stefan SKR Service

    STUD  Bouncerland

    Susan The Urban Muse

    Tess   

    Theo Consumer Review

    Top Rated Foolish Mumbles

    Travel SEO

    Trucker Jake New Hampshire Truck Driving Schools

    Trucker Mary New Hampshire Truck Driving Schools

    TV Brackets dekomount

    Uk Graphic Design Essence Design

    Unsecured Credit

    Vaughn Hayden Recommended Book Inc

    versicherungen Versicherungen’s Angebote

    Vlad Professional Soccer Drills

    website design Ask Graphics

    Wolfgang Puck Cookware Cookware Please

    Work at Home Jobs Day Job Nuker

    wuyi tea Tea and Weight Loss

    Thank you again to everyone who has commented. If you haven’t commented before, I invite you to join the conversation. I think you’ll enjoy and benefit from your participation, and I know we’ll enjoy and benefit.


    Filed Under (Lillie's News) by Lillie on 07-08-2008

    At the beginning of June, I let you know that I had written a guest post at John Hewitt’s Poewar: Writer’s Resource Center.

    Today, I learned I had won the prize in John’s guest post contest.

     In his announcement at  John wrote:

     … we had a very clear winner for the contest. The average article received about 500 direct page views in the seven days that followed publication. Almost every article stayed within 100 hits of that figure, one way or the other. Lillie Ammann’s article, however, received almost 14,000 hits the first week. That same article went on to rack up 29,000 hits after 30 days.

    How did that happen? StumbleUpon. The article was well-reviewed by the people on StumbleUpon, and good reviews translate into page views. That is the power of social media.

    There were many excellent guest posts during the month of June, and I’m amazed and thrilled that my post got so much traffic. Thanks to everyone who reviewed the article on StumbleUpon (even the negative reviews!), to everyone who commented, and to everyone who read the post.

    Now if I can just figure out how to get that many page views on this blog!




    Copyright
    Now that we’ve covered the basics of copyright and fair use, let’s talk about what you can do to protect your copyright and defend your rights if your copyright is infringed.

    Note that I have never had copyright infringed, so I am not writing from personal experience. I hope you never have to use this advice, but if you are in the position of having your rights violated, I hope these suggestions from others who have been victimized will be helpful.

    • To reduce the risks of having your content stolen, be proactive. Although the copyright symbol is not required, you may want to use it on your Web site, blog, individual posts, and feeds. The notice won’t stop determined content thieves, but it may stop unauthorized use of your content by people who don’t realize that just because it’s on the Internet doesn’t mean it’s in the public domain.
    • Be prepared to prove that you are the original author of the work. Since blog posts can be back-dated, the post date is not necessarily proof of when the post was written. Even the dates of comments can be changed, so the dates of comments might not be sufficient evidence in court, either. However, your database file should have the actual date the post was made. If you create posts in your word processor rather than directly in your blog platform, the file on your hard drive will have the date it was created as well as the last date it wa