Showing posts with label last-minute tasks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label last-minute tasks. Show all posts

Monday, July 27, 2015

You Can’t Rush a Rush Job

So it’s 4pm and you’ve still got one hour of mind-dulling media research to go before you switch of your screen and head home. You’ve just settled your brain into stand-by mode for the next 55 minutes, when out of the blue, your supervisor realizes that no-one has been on the job of scripting speaking points for the Global GM and National GM of an international company, who are in the middle of an acquisition. Suddenly your up and you have two (yes TWO) high-profile speeches due by next morning.


For the next 45 minutes you’re struggle to kick-start your creativity writing into gear, but it seems to have run out of mileage an hour too early.


6pm is ticking closer and now you have to make the critical decision: Stay late or smash it out in the 2 hours you have before its due tomorrow morning. 

You suddenly get the feeling like your back in university, making the all-important choice between watching one more episode of Orange is the New Black or breaking out that assignment you have due in the next 24hrs. Now that you’re actually working for a client and representing your company, the pressure is higher than ever and you have to truly weigh up the quality of work you can produce in limited time. Dusting your assignment with colour-coded graphs or intelligent articulations isn't going to impress your boss or your client, as it may have done your 2nd year professors.



When it comes down to it you can’t rush an important task, even when your client only gives it to you last-minute. Even as an unpaid intern you have a responsibility to produce quality work, especially when you’re handed a job that would otherwise be completed by an account manager. You need to show up and deliver, on time. 

As much as you try, you can’t always stick to your perfectly scripted timeline, because clients don’t really like to be bossed around by someone they are employing (i.e. you, the PR consultancy).


 For a career in PR, be prepared to arrive early, work late, and even put in hours on the weekends if you’re running events. 

Let’s be real, it’s not going to 7am-10pm every day, but PR work usually comes in ebbs and flows so there are definitely going to be days where you’ll have to put in the extra effort, and you probably won’t be paid for it. It is a sacrifice we make to do we work we love.


Don’t believe me? Have a look at these facts from the Bureau of Labour Statistics, USA:
 http://www.bls.gov/ooh/media-and-communication/public-relations-specialists.htm

How has your experience with PR been so far? Is there the same expectation to work over-time doing in-house PR vs. Consultancy? Do you think this expectation fits into Australia's Gen. Y ideal of the work-life balance? Let's discuss in the comments.