|
tranfree issue 41 - 18 October 2001
Nobody's PerfectBy Alex Eames Just before we went on holiday we did a small job for a client and basically rushed it because we shouldn't have taken it on when we were already busy. You know the situation...
It was only a little job. A couple of hundred words. But this client has a rigid Quality Assurance procedure. They get every job checked. So a couple of rather messy sentences got totally...
HAHAHAHA But you show me a translator who has never fallen into this kind of self-inflicted trap. Sometimes it just happens that you get busy and before you know it you're overloaded. Something has to give. But it is very important to try to maintain a high level of quality because that is what brings the clients back to you again and again. If you want to charge top-dollar, you have to deliver quality and speed these days.
Even More InterestingBut the second half of the story is even more interesting... This week, the same client sent us the same file again under a different job number, with some other little bits and pieces we hadn't done before. We told them that we'd done this file before and they said... "No problem it must be from a different
So basically we're going to get paid for the same text again.
Happy Days But here's the funny part. This same file, which we sent in before, got through their quality check before. But it was not until this time - the second time - that the quality check proved to be negative. So either...
...which goes to show that even if, as we admit, a couple of
sentences were a little shoddy, nobody's perfect!
So How Did We Resolve It?I phoned the project manager and acknowledged that the work could have been better and apologised. She asked us to be more careful in future and said that it would not affect their allocation of work to us. After all it was not a deadly serious quality issue, but just something to keep an eye on. So, it all worked out OK in the end. But it's a good wake-up call to keep an eye on the quality of our output. Idiots make the same mistakes over and over again. Bright people learn the first time.
Really bright people (that's YOU) learn from the mistakes of
others.
Alex Eames is the founder of translatortips.com, |