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Poll: Do you find it difficult at times to coordinate across time zones with your clients? Autor de la hebra: ProZ.com Staff
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This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Do you find it difficult at times to coordinate across time zones with your clients?".
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Michael Harris Alemania Local time: 08:32 Miembro 2006 alemán al inglés
They are pretty much all around the corner | | |
I'm in the same time zone as most of my clients | Apr 13, 2017 |
If need be I’ll modify my working hours accordingly. As I work at home, my schedule is extremely flexible; I change it as I please…. | | |
They just have to fit in around me. | |
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Very much so | Apr 13, 2017 |
I have several clients in Japan, where today is yesterday. I almost never have work in my own time zone. The closest is three hours away (New York and Washington, DC, where the bulk of my work goes), followed by Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. in that order.
Because of my clients in Japan, I may find myself working as late as 4:00 a.m.
After several mix-ups, I started keeping a time zone map on my computer desktop.
[Edited at 2017-04-13 09:28 GMT] | | |
Erik ERIKSEN Dinamarca Local time: 08:32 inglés al danés + ... One client in Hong Kong | Apr 13, 2017 |
... insists on sending work early in the morning and would like to have it returned at 2 am the following day. Approx. 18 hrs for the jobs (small ones, though). | | |
Emily Plank Australia Local time: 15:32 Miembro 2010 alemán al inglés + ...
Being based in Australia with virtually 100% of my clients in Europe/UK, I'm used to it. Being so far ahead, I have most of the day without interruption and can have translations ready by the time they come to work. The slight downside is that I still have emails coming in all throughout my evening, which I have to respond to even though I have finished working. And sometimes work comes in overnight which I cannot respond to in time. But after almost 11 years, I've got a good routine and most of... See more Being based in Australia with virtually 100% of my clients in Europe/UK, I'm used to it. Being so far ahead, I have most of the day without interruption and can have translations ready by the time they come to work. The slight downside is that I still have emails coming in all throughout my evening, which I have to respond to even though I have finished working. And sometimes work comes in overnight which I cannot respond to in time. But after almost 11 years, I've got a good routine and most of my clients have got their head around the time difference (although there is still the odd stray call in the middle of the night..). ▲ Collapse | | |
Most of my clients are in the UK, France and USA (both west and east coast).
But it can sometimes be confusing, especially since some agencies have PMs located in different places on the globe.
[Edited at 2017-04-13 11:47 GMT] | |
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Thayenga Alemania Local time: 08:32 inglés al alemán + ...
Due to extensive travel around the globe in my younger days, people refer to me at times as a "walking world clock". Thus far, there never were any problems, neither in Asia nor in the US. | | |
Julian Holmes Japón Local time: 16:32 Miembro 2011 japonés al inglés
With one exception - that client in Alpha Centauri
They're always very fussy and want everything done a couple of parsecs ago. I can only think in light years. And, they always send me stuff in funny disparate blips and squiggles. It's hard even trying to think in five dimensions, let alone seven.
All in a day in the life of a translator, I suppose. | | |
Allen Harris Estados Unidos Local time: 01:32 francés al inglés + ... Three little letters: UTC | Apr 13, 2017 |
Universal Time Coordinated. Also known as Greenwich Mean Time.
UTC is not a local time zone. The clock time is the same for me and my client wherever we are. Universal. Time. Coordinated.
No, I never find it difficult to coordinate across time zones with my clients. | | |
Ricki Farn Alemania Local time: 08:32 inglés al alemán I have my own timezone | Apr 13, 2017 |
I'm more flexible adjusting my times to my clients than to the guy next door. | |
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Muriel Vasconcellos wrote:
I started keeping a time zone map on my computer desktop.
That's a great idea and I'm doing so, too.
Working with clients around the world made me have instant notifications of incoming emails to my phone, so I'm ready to answer any time.
[Edited at 2017-04-13 15:07 GMT] | | |
It's not me, it's them | Apr 13, 2017 |
I don't have a problem with it, but some of my clients seem to be completely oblivious to the existence of different time zones. So I may receive 4 increasingly urgent emails about a job they've sent me while I was sleeping. Some agencies even call me at 4 in the morning. However, that happens only once, as I decline to work for anyone who doesn't respect my sleep. | | |
Laura Nagle (X) Estados Unidos Local time: 02:32 francés al inglés + ...
I'm in the U.S. (Eastern time zone), and a number of my clients are in Europe. Deadlines rarely pose any problem for me, but like Hege, I sometimes wake up to e-mails offering me a project (great!), with follow-up messages fretting that I haven't replied yet. Fortunately, clients and PMs with whom I've worked repeatedly don't expect me to read e-mail when it's 3 a.m. where I live. I'm perplexed by agencies that approach me specifically because I'm based in the U.S., yet don't take the time diffe... See more I'm in the U.S. (Eastern time zone), and a number of my clients are in Europe. Deadlines rarely pose any problem for me, but like Hege, I sometimes wake up to e-mails offering me a project (great!), with follow-up messages fretting that I haven't replied yet. Fortunately, clients and PMs with whom I've worked repeatedly don't expect me to read e-mail when it's 3 a.m. where I live. I'm perplexed by agencies that approach me specifically because I'm based in the U.S., yet don't take the time difference into account. ▲ Collapse | | |
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