Poll: Which is your most productive season of the year? Auteur du fil: ProZ.com Staff
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This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Which is your most productive season of the year?".
This poll was originally submitted by Dimitrios Kte
View the poll here
A forum topic will appear each time a new poll is run. For more infor... See more This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Which is your most productive season of the year?".
This poll was originally submitted by Dimitrios Kte
View the poll here
A forum topic will appear each time a new poll is run. For more information, see: http://proz.com/topic/33629 ▲ Collapse | | | Beatriz Galiano (X) Argentine Local time: 00:04 anglais vers espagnol + ... Fall, winter, spring and summer | Oct 24, 2007 |
In that order, fall is nice, cool while summer is too warm, hot, here in Argentina. I prefer cool weather, then days are a lot better, more productive, because I feel fine. | | | JaneTranslates Porto Rico Local time: 23:04 espagnol vers anglais + ... Fall and spring | Oct 25, 2007 |
I get much of my work from universities and/or professors, who live by the semester here. Summer is too hot, as Beatriz says; I don't feel like working, and besides, all my potential clients are traveling. And in the winter, Puerto Rico virtually shuts down for the extended Christmas season (at least from Thanksgiving through the "Octavitas," eight days after Epiphany; often longer). I don't get nearly as much work then. | | |
My (client-dependent) productivity goes by month rather than season. April and May are fairly dead, due to too many bank holidays and their corresponding ponti, as are the two weeks around the 15th of August. February and July tend to be totally manic. | |
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John Cutler Espagne Local time: 04:04 espagnol vers anglais + ... Hibernate and work | Oct 25, 2007 |
My most productive season is definitely winter. The days are short and, once it’s dark and cold out, there’s not much more to do than settle in for a long spell of work. That means working 7 days a week nearly every week. (Just an aside for Northern Europeans: Yes, it really does get dark and cold down here in “sunny” Spain, in spite of what the tourism agencies might have you believe.)
I always say that I wor... See more My most productive season is definitely winter. The days are short and, once it’s dark and cold out, there’s not much more to do than settle in for a long spell of work. That means working 7 days a week nearly every week. (Just an aside for Northern Europeans: Yes, it really does get dark and cold down here in “sunny” Spain, in spite of what the tourism agencies might have you believe.)
I always say that I work in the opposite way to ants, bears and squirrels. I store up in the winter so I can be lazy in the summer. “Lazy” generally means I take every Friday off in the summer and enjoy a long weekend. As they say here, “Summer is for living”. ▲ Collapse | | |
In the last times, we have seen a random variation of the amount of work we get. It used to slow down during Northern summer season (and also Christmas, of course), but not anymore.
For example, this year July was our record, whereas July 2006 was very poor, and January and February were excellent, reverting last year's tendency.
So we just work hard when we have to, and relax a little when we can (doing some marketing and paperwork), and close for our own holiday time... See more In the last times, we have seen a random variation of the amount of work we get. It used to slow down during Northern summer season (and also Christmas, of course), but not anymore.
For example, this year July was our record, whereas July 2006 was very poor, and January and February were excellent, reverting last year's tendency.
So we just work hard when we have to, and relax a little when we can (doing some marketing and paperwork), and close for our own holiday time when we decide to, no matter how many words come our way.
Take care,
Andrés ▲ Collapse | | | Parrot Espagne Local time: 04:04 espagnol vers anglais + ... This probably depends on a lot of variables | Oct 25, 2007 |
such as specialization, main client country, language combinations, etc.. For example, annual management reports are predictable, depending on how the business year is organized. Then, here in Spain things are expected to be quiet in January, but that's about the time the traffic from abroad jumps up for me. I've tried monitoring by language combination, but other factors incide in that. After so many years at it I still can't figure if there IS a general seasonal pattern that applies universall... See more such as specialization, main client country, language combinations, etc.. For example, annual management reports are predictable, depending on how the business year is organized. Then, here in Spain things are expected to be quiet in January, but that's about the time the traffic from abroad jumps up for me. I've tried monitoring by language combination, but other factors incide in that. After so many years at it I still can't figure if there IS a general seasonal pattern that applies universally. All I see are the little reasons, the local reasons, the circumstantial reasons.... ▲ Collapse | | | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Poll: Which is your most productive season of the year? CafeTran Espresso | You've never met a CAT tool this clever!
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