Poll: Have you noticed harsher competition among colleagues over the last 2-3 months? Лице кое објавува дискусија: ProZ.com Staff
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This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Have you noticed harsher competition among colleagues over the last 2-3 months?".
This poll was originally submitted by Carla Sordina
View the poll here
A forum topic will appear each time a new poll is run. For ... See more This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Have you noticed harsher competition among colleagues over the last 2-3 months?".
This poll was originally submitted by Carla Sordina
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 | | | | neilmac Шпанија Local time: 11:18 шпански на англиски + ...
Going by my definition of colleague, "competition" among us is precluded by collaboration, caring and sharing.
My initial response was "get a life"... | | | | Amy Duncan (X) Бразил Local time: 06:18 португалски на англиски + ... | Just a thought... | Jan 7, 2009 |
I've noticed that the competition has stepped up (although I don't think I'd use the word "harsh") and it occurred to me that people may be wanting to get BrowniZ to help pay for their membership renewal, or that they want to be more visible in general to be considered for Pro certification. As I said, just a thought... | | | | Lia Fail (X) Шпанија Local time: 11:18 шпански на англиски + ... | competition: price or quality? | Jan 7, 2009 |
neilmac wrote:
Going by my definition of colleague, "competition" among us is precluded by collaboration, caring and sharing.
My initial response was "get a life"...
Like Neilmac and unlike Amy, I'm assuming you are referring to the market, not to KudoZ.
I don't view the market as competitive or my colleagues as competitors. I have my niche and my customers, my colleagues have theirs. We simply don't compete, becuase we each have developed a "unique" product/service for each of our customers who are now repeat customers.
So when you refer to competition being harsher, it can really only refer to competition among people who compete on price.
I just visited a website where someone referred to offering quality at "economic" prices (and they really were "economic"!) - as if translated words were widgets coming off a production line. Someone who offers cheap is simply competing with all the other cheap translators, making a commodity of translation. In our business, expensive doesn't always mean good, but cheap almost always means bad. If you charge cheap you have to output more - and logically that affects quality.
Ultimately unfair competition, undercutting prices and dumping doesn't affect me, but it is very damaging for the profession. | | |
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neilmac Шпанија Local time: 11:18 шпански на англиски + ... | Totally agree with Lia on this. | Jan 8, 2009 |
Lia Fail wrote:
Ultimately unfair competition, undercutting prices and dumping doesn't affect me, but it is very damaging for the profession.
PS: as my old boss used to say, "if you pay peanuts - you get monkeys!" | | | | | could not agree more... | Jan 8, 2009 |
neilmac wrote:
Lia Fail wrote:
Ultimately unfair competition, undercutting prices and dumping doesn't affect me, but it is very damaging for the profession.
PS: as my old boss used to say, "if you pay peanuts - you get monkeys!" | | | | | Competition is bound to exist but cooperation can increase too | Jan 8, 2009 |
There's bound to be some amount of competition among colleagues in this as in any other profession. While many colleagues have specialised and found niches, there's likely that competition exists within these niches too. While I haven't noticed it myself, it is possible that competition can be harsher in tougher times. I agree with Lia and others that undercutting and dumping is damaging to the profession.
Not all competiotion needs to be bad or 'harsh' though. It can also spur one ... See more There's bound to be some amount of competition among colleagues in this as in any other profession. While many colleagues have specialised and found niches, there's likely that competition exists within these niches too. While I haven't noticed it myself, it is possible that competition can be harsher in tougher times. I agree with Lia and others that undercutting and dumping is damaging to the profession.
Not all competiotion needs to be bad or 'harsh' though. It can also spur one to improve in certain aspects. As for myself, I believe I've gained considerably by emulating some of the good practices followed by certain colleagues - and this means of course that they shared these with other colleagues in the first place. I believe cooperation can increase too, and Proz can play a postive role in this. ▲ 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: Have you noticed harsher competition among colleagues over the last 2-3 months? | LinguaCore | AI Translation at Your Fingertips
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