The Question
Eternal
Okay, I've stumbled on a new system (new to me, at least) that I've found helpful, over the last week or so. There's some information in my example that's a little personal, but there's nothing in it that I'd be upset about people knowing, so here it is:
LEDGER -- 2006.01.25
Rent: $585.00
Cable: $116.00
Phone: $40.00
Hard expenses (total): $741.00
Groceries: $200.00
Soft expenses (total): $200.00
Total expenses (monthly): $941.00
SSD Income: $694.00
Writing income (regular): $700.00
Total income (monthly): $1,394.00
Income minus expenses: $453.00 (monthly)
Writing schedule:
Request story: 1xweek, biweekly income -- $350.00
Project (feature-length): "The Big One"
Treatment: 3 scenes x day
Script: 10p x day, total p = 100,
First draft completion = 10 days
Project (feature-length): "Stormfront"
Treatment: 3 scenes x day
Script: 10p x day, total p = 120
First draft completion = 12 days
Oh -- "p" = "pages."
As you can see, it's a very simple, straightforward document. It does one thing that, for me, is very important -- it establishes deadlines, and rates of progress that make those deadlines easily attainable.
I think deadlines, for some of us, can be instrumental in helping us observe the rule that Sardy pointed out in Lesson 1 -- get it on the page. See, editors and deadlines aren't a curse, they're a gift. Without them, unfinished projects remain unfinished for lack of that cattle prod in the butt-cheek to drive us onward to publication.
So! Let's see some of your ledgers!
LEDGER -- 2006.01.25
Rent: $585.00
Cable: $116.00
Phone: $40.00
Hard expenses (total): $741.00
Groceries: $200.00
Soft expenses (total): $200.00
Total expenses (monthly): $941.00
SSD Income: $694.00
Writing income (regular): $700.00
Total income (monthly): $1,394.00
Income minus expenses: $453.00 (monthly)
Writing schedule:
Request story: 1xweek, biweekly income -- $350.00
Project (feature-length): "The Big One"
Treatment: 3 scenes x day
Script: 10p x day, total p = 100,
First draft completion = 10 days
Project (feature-length): "Stormfront"
Treatment: 3 scenes x day
Script: 10p x day, total p = 120
First draft completion = 12 days
Oh -- "p" = "pages."
As you can see, it's a very simple, straightforward document. It does one thing that, for me, is very important -- it establishes deadlines, and rates of progress that make those deadlines easily attainable.
I think deadlines, for some of us, can be instrumental in helping us observe the rule that Sardy pointed out in Lesson 1 -- get it on the page. See, editors and deadlines aren't a curse, they're a gift. Without them, unfinished projects remain unfinished for lack of that cattle prod in the butt-cheek to drive us onward to publication.
So! Let's see some of your ledgers!