Legal aid
November 22nd, 2006
The impending tryptophan-fest has me reminiscing about turkeys of yesteryear. And I do not mean Thanksgiving dinners passed. I mean the crappier project contracts I was stupid enough to sign during my early days as a freelancer.
At some point it dawned on me that if I couldn’t make heads or tails of the legalese I was agreeing to, I should ask someone who could. (Duh.) Last year I joined the National Writers Union so that I could take advantage of their peer contract advisor service. Basically the NWU trains veteran authors to walk newbie authors (yours truly, for instance) through their contracts. Since I wasn’t working with an agent, I found this service invaluable and used it to negotiate three book contracts — an anthology I contributed to, a single-author book, and a ghostwriting project. Worth the price of admission (sliding scale based on income) right there.
And last week I had an appointment with an advisor at the Washington Lawyers for the Arts, a nearly free legal clinic for artsy-fartsy folks who can’t afford the $500 it would cost to clear their throat in an attorney’s office (ahem). I met with my WLA advisor (a bona fide lawyer!) to review a co-author agreement I’m putting together with another writer. Again, I walked away with far more knowledge about copyright law than I walked in with — and I didn’t even have to empty my wee savings account to do so.
Over the years, I’ve also found these other industry/legal resources helpful:
- Authors Guild: Offers contract assistance similar to that of the NWU, but annual membership fees are lower. Now that my NWU membership has expired, I will likely join the AG.
- Society of Professional Journalists: Often hosts copyright and legal workshops for we writer folk. So, so helpful, especially when it comes to those elusive electronic rights.
- Graphic Artists Guild: Offers this groovy book about managing the business end of your design enterprise.
- Nolo.com: Legalese for dummies, online and in book format.
Now that I’ve become more hip to contract matters and copyright law, I can see the merits of having a steady contract advocate. Thirty minutes here and sixty minutes there from some free or sliding-scale advisor just ain’t cutting it anymore. I guess that’s why the publishing gods invented agents.
Entry Filed under: This freelance life, Toolbox


2 Comments Add your own
1. The Anti 9-to-5 Guide &ra&hellip | February 13th, 2007 at 6:35 am
[...] When I’m weighing a decision like this, I always talk to my accountant first. Yes, he’s a numbers guy, but he also knows a thing or two about business structures — particularly how changing mine will affect my taxes (and how much said change will cost me). And since I don’t have a lawyer to help me weigh such decisions, I’m likely to ring up one recommended by a writer pal and try to glean as much information as I can on the phone before s/he starts the meter (and I have to fork over $200+ an hour). Or I turn to my favorite free(ish) legal resources for creative types. Or I pester those kind folks at SCORE, who are so good at handing out free and sliding-scale business advice. [...]
2. The Anti 9-to-5 Guide &ra&hellip | October 25th, 2007 at 12:31 am
[...] Lesson for freelancers: You may be the peon now, but you still deserve the best possible contracts. If others get rich off your work, you’d damn well better do so too. Don’t get your contracts? Get legal help. [...]
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