Subject: Even more belated thoughts.
Author:
Posted on: 2017-05-10 03:08:00 UTC

Disrespecting Your Betas

Like so many others in this thread have said, this is simple courtesy. Your betas not your employees; they are doing you a favor. It is therefore on you, as the author, to listen to their thoughts with an open mind. And if you disagree with their suggestions? Then discuss it with them! Explain your position and why you think something should be done in a specific way. Have a conversation with them. Who knows? Maybe one of you will change your mind. Maybe you'll both come away with a greater understanding of how the other person thinks.

Bad Conduct as a Beta

Once again: simple courtesy and communication. If you feel the beta is trying to overwrite your entire story or step outside what you asked them to do, tell them.

I also agree with Ix and Nesh here regarding weak betas. Volunteering to be a editor should be like how beta-testing a video game used to be. If you're going into it thinking 'Ooh, I'm getting to look at this cool thing first!' then you're doing it wrong. Being a beta is a responsibility. You have to find the parts that work and the parts that don't, then tell the creator about everything that you found.

Not Taking Concrit

Both of these are extreme reactions, and both are bad. If someone has legitimate points about your story, then ignoring them is arrogance. Plus, "it's published now" is ultimately meaningless when we're talking about the medium we work in. You can literally edit your stories at any time! Goodness knows I've gone back and made a few corrections and additions post-publishing.

That being said, don't go the other route and just take the story down. Obviously you should make sure that your work is as polished as possible before you publish it, but once it is? Defend its merits. Get into a conversation. Exchange views with the person providing criticism. If you come away from that still convinced that you erred, only then should you take the story down.

I'm going end this section by being completely blunt. Like Nesh said, if you can't take constructive criticism, then Don't. Write. Being a writer is hard. It's something you have to work at, to improve at, every time you put pen to paper or fingers to keyboard. If you're unwilling to improve yourself, or you don't think there's anything left to improve, then you need to reconsider what you are doing. There's always another lesson to learn. Concrit is often a vector for those lessons.

Falling Short of PPC Standards Elsewhere

I don't we as a community can stop our members from writing badfic. Obviously they shouldn't, because (as many have said) it's rather hypocritical for them to do so while sporking the badfics of others. I feel like if you join this community if you like good writing and want to make good writing, not just because you want to be a snarky wiseacre on the Internet. There are plenty of places you can do that which aren't here.

As for RPs? Whatever. RPs are goofy and ephemeral things. Go nuts! But not literally.

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