toivo99 said:For those who put out a section with no safety net, how do you reduce the number of mistakes made, especially on deadline?
Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:For those who put out a section with no safety net, how do you reduce the number of mistakes made, especially on deadline?
You don't.
When the bosses complain, blame them for taking away your safety net.
toivo99 said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:For those who put out a section with no safety net, how do you reduce the number of mistakes made, especially on deadline?
You don't.
When the bosses complain, blame them for taking away your safety net.
A nice suggestion, but when it's my job on the line, it's still me that gets fired.
Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:For those who put out a section with no safety net, how do you reduce the number of mistakes made, especially on deadline?
You don't.
When the bosses complain, blame them for taking away your safety net.
A nice suggestion, but when it's my job on the line, it's still me that gets fired.
They're the bosses. Since they make the big bucks, see what great ideas they have for eliminating mistakes, since they're the ones who eliminated your safety net.
playthrough said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:For those who put out a section with no safety net, how do you reduce the number of mistakes made, especially on deadline?
You don't.
When the bosses complain, blame them for taking away your safety net.
A nice suggestion, but when it's my job on the line, it's still me that gets fired.
They're the bosses. Since they make the big bucks, see what great ideas they have for eliminating mistakes, since they're the ones who eliminated your safety net.
We had a run of mistakes at an old shop across all sections and the bosses instituted an internal form that had to be filled out if a correction needed to be published. You would have to list the correction, how it happened, how you'd prevent it in the future, blah blah, signed by you and your editor. Sometimes all you could say was "I screwed up" and "Will try harder in the future not to screw up."
I think the form was phased out after about a month.
Kolchak said:Our SE has been known to go into stories to proof them and ends up creating new mistakes. Sometimes this is done after the desk has already proofed and set the story.
So who would the SE blame for any of those mistakes getting through? The copy desk, of course.
we had something like that only we were never allowed to put down "I just screwed up." There had to be a reason. Lasted a year.playthrough said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:For those who put out a section with no safety net, how do you reduce the number of mistakes made, especially on deadline?
You don't.
When the bosses complain, blame them for taking away your safety net.
A nice suggestion, but when it's my job on the line, it's still me that gets fired.
They're the bosses. Since they make the big bucks, see what great ideas they have for eliminating mistakes, since they're the ones who eliminated your safety net.
We had a run of mistakes at an old shop across all sections and the bosses instituted an internal form that had to be filled out if a correction needed to be published. You would have to list the correction, how it happened, how you'd prevent it in the future, blah blah, signed by you and your editor. Sometimes all you could say was "I screwed up" and "Will try harder in the future not to screw up."
I think the form was phased out after about a month.
hondo said:we had something like that gonly we were never allowed to put down "I just screwed up." There had to be a reason. Lasted a year.playthrough said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:Baron Scicluna said:toivo99 said:For those who put out a section with no safety net, how do you reduce the number of mistakes made, especially on deadline?
You don't.
When the bosses complain, blame them for taking away your safety net.
A nice suggestion, but when it's my job on the line, it's still me that gets fired.
They're the bosses. Since they make the big bucks, see what great ideas they have for eliminating mistakes, since they're the ones who eliminated your safety net.
We had a run of mistakes at an old shop across all sections and the bosses instituted an internal form that had to be filled out if a correction needed to be published. You would have to list the correction, how it happened, how you'd prevent it in the future, blah blah, signed by you and your editor. Sometimes all you could say was "I screwed up" and "Will try harder in the future not to screw up."
I think the form was phased out after about a month.
babyjay newsignon said:As a copy editor, I know the whole "I made the mistake because you cut staff and there's no one else to edit me" reasoning sounds good, but it means NOTHING to a boss to hear that. Because you still made a mistake, and their point in the whole how-are-we-going-to-do-this-better-next-time exercise is to figure out how to avoid that.
Like someone said, triage the story. Double check the headline. Check it against the facts in the story. Check names in heads and cutlines against the story. Do the math any time there is numbers. A few years back, after a run of bad errors at our shop, the editor had reporters print out every story they wrote and underline every fact as they double-checked it, and turn that in to their editor. Time-consuming but effective if you're having a string of errors.