- Reading and responding to 25 equeries: 1 1/2 hours on a Sunday morning
- Reading and editing the first 100 pages of a client’s next project, including sending it back with a letter: 3 hours
- Reading and editing a client’s proposal (synopsis for three books only): 1 hour
- Attending the BookEnds weekly meeting: 45 minutes
- Reading daily publishing news that comes to me through email: 10 to 20 minutes (depending on how many links I click through)
- Breakfast with a client: 4 hours (including travel time)
- Introductory phone call with an editor newly assigned to my client: 15 minutes
- Receiving a phone call from an editor with an offer: 10 minutes
- Calling and telling a client that she’s just made her first deal: 15 very excited minutes
- Read Publishers Weekly: 20 minutes
- Writing a blog post: 20 minutes
- Brainstorming phone call/career discussion with client: 1 hour, 20 minutes
- Reviewing a contract from a publisher: 1 hour, 30 minutes
- Lunch with an editor: 3 hours, 30 minutes (including travel time)
- Career planning conversation with client: 40 minutes
Jessica
Oh how exciting for both you and your client! Congratulations on that sale.
ReplyDeleteAnd, thanks for sharing this peek into your business life. As always very interesting.
Only fifteen minutes of the excitement? She let you off the phone after that? LOL.
ReplyDeleteI love seeing how you spend your day. I don't know HOW you edit stuff so fast. Considering how long it takes ME I'm envious.
Very cool. Thanks for the insight as always.
You should have a total at the bottom. None of us can add up 3's and 1's without a calculator, and we're all too lazy to pull one out.
ReplyDeleteHm. I think I'll keep to myself on how my day goes! Don't forget to catch you a breather every now and then.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteI applaud that your staff meetings only last 45 minutes. In my experience back in the real world, staff meetings were the biggest time-suck since campaign finance legislation. It's amazing how some people can drone on for 20 minutes about nothing if someone doesn't rein them in.
ReplyDeleteWhenever I complain to my wife that there aren't enough hours in the day, she always reminds me that I have the same number as Donald Trump.
ReplyDeleteGood lord. No time for bathroom breaks?
ReplyDeleteIt's like a season of "24."
Very insightful. It's amazing how much you can do with your time if you plan it. And 3 hours for editing? You must have that down to an art form. I take much longer than that :)
ReplyDeleteHow much of your work would you say is done outside of the standard 40 hours?
ReplyDeleteLOL...I want to know how you stay so skinny after those client and editor lunches!
ReplyDeleteNow I see how an agent has little time to deal with all those querys.
ReplyDeleteHow nice it would be to be the "client" on your list..*sigh*
You really are organized. Thanks for the glimpse. I found when I retired from my day job I wrote less. I truly believe the busier you are the more you manage to get done.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure my brain says, "What's the rush, you've got all day." Only problem is, it comes time to walk the dog in the evening and I wonder where the day went. I have to trick my lazy brain and make long lists and then check them off, just so I can look busy. Ha ha.
Thanks for this peak into your day. You're certainly busy!
ReplyDeleteCongrats to you and your writer on the recent sale!
So how much time do you spend on newly requested partials, especially short ones? One agent replied to my e query within 15 minutes, then requested a partial, and asked for the full ms. two weeks later (one week ago). Why are some established agents faster than others, assuming everyone has an assistant? Just curious!
ReplyDeleteAN AUTHOR'S TIME...
ReplyDeleteFeeling like you have homework for the rest of your life - FOREVER!
Haste yee back ;-)
Question: if an agent has had a revised manuscript (i.e. one I revised for him/her) for five months and hasn't been in touch, should I write him/her off?
ReplyDeleteYou are a busy woman!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the sneak-peak.
Reading and editing 100 pages in 3 hours?! That is amazing. You're not an agent you're a super hero!
ReplyDeleteThose 15 very excited minutes is what we all live for.
ReplyDeleteEnduring drudgery to achieve the dream!
Thanks for all your hard work to help writers' dreams come true.
Peek, not peak. Sheesh! Yes, this is an informal posting format, but if careless mistakes are made here...
ReplyDeleteCheck your spelling all of the time you're writing what others will read. It's a good habit to get into.