Asking for Notes Etiquette

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Asking for Notes Etiquette

    I wrote this a long time ago on Artful Writer, but I think it is worth repeating here:

    One of the things we crave as writers is feedback on our screenplays. And we know that we should get tough criticism from impartial readers, definitely not our friends or loved ones who will just tell us how genius we are.

    But I think we should keep these things in mind when we ask someone to give us notes:

    1. If the person says "no," we don't get mad.

    2. If the person says "yes," and then never gets back to us, we don't get mad. In fact, we should swallow our pride and expectations, and never bring up the script again.

    3. If the person agrees to read it, we shouldn't say, "don't forget that it is registered with the guild."

    4. If the person finally gives us notes, we shouldn't argue on why his or her notes are wrong.

    5. If the person tells us to work on something, we shouldn't keep on defending the choice that we made. We should try to understand the thinking behind the note and try to come at what we wrote from a different angle.

    6. If we disagree with the note, instead of arguing, we can always just choose to ignore the note.

    7. If the person gives us a few non-specific critiques, we can probably guess that he or she didn't like the script and just didn't want to get into specifics. So we shouldn't ask them to be more specific unless we are willing to get the hell beat out of us. And REALLY willing not just partially willing.

    8. If the script is more than 120 pages, we shouldn't expect the reader to read them all unless he or she really wants to... because at 120+ pages, there is definitely some fat that we should have trimmed.

    9. If the person is not a professional screenwriter, reader, producer, agent, agent's assistent, studio exec, or someone in the business, we should know that the notes we are receiving may not be any better than if we had gotten them from our friends or loved ones. And yet, if we hear the same notes over and over and over, even from the biggest beginner, we should probably realize that there is a major problem in that part of the script.

    10. If the person says "yes," actually reads the script, and gives us thoughtful, carefully considered notes... we should thank that person profusely.
Working...
X