Just About Every Day Brings an Offer of Translation Work for Me that I Ignore




Greater than 7 minutes, my friend!

Just about every day brings an e-mail from a translation agency that either has a job for me, or wants to know more about me for its files about translators.

Two days ago it was a small but insistent translation agency in California that proposed the following deal to me:

PROJECT INFO:
The subject: Medical – Gynecological
Languages: Japanese into English
Description: [I prefer not mention the name of the project due to possible confidentiality issues] Wordcount: 1260 English words total
Turnaround: tomorrow 10 am pacific time
TRADOS: not necessary
Format: ms word – track changes

This agency has been e-mailing me similar proposals for at least a year about every other month. I ignore them because I still remember that in their initial work proposals, they themselves determined how much they were going to pay me for the translations instead of asking what my rate for the project would be. Which to me means that I simply can’t take these people seriously.

If I went to a restaurant and said that I was willing to spend no more than 6 dollars for a dinner that costs 15 dollars, they would not take me seriously either. They would probably think that I was a slow and confused person and the owner would most likely kick me off the premises. It’s not good for business when your restaurant is frequented by people who have no money to spend and on top of that are unsure about how the business works.

But because in this particular proposal two days ago, the translation agency actually wanted to know my rate, I figured that they must be really desperate. And how did they come up with the number of words if it’s not translated yet? I wondered. So I Googled the name of the project – and voilà, I found the gynecological tool manual online in Japanese in MS Word. So they must have just pasted the short document into GoogleTranslate and that gave them the likely word count in English.

But still, I had to ignore their e-mails because a while ago, they offered me a ridiculous sum for my expert work, which is something I am unlikely to forgive easily and I am sure that they still pay extremely low rates, even when desperate. Plus I received the e-mail at 5 PM, and they wanted my translation by 7 AM next day.

Gynecological tools are not really my cup of tea – although I prefer them to patents about dentistry. I remember a Japanese patent about gum surgery that I translated a long time ago because I had no other work. Man, it was a scary job! Then, more recently, I translated a few patents in the field of dentistry from French, but they were not nearly as scary because they were about new materials for tooth fillings. It was mostly chemistry, physics and mechanical engineering on a very small scale.
But to translate a gynecological tool manual as a rush job at a low rate for an agency that deeply offended me about a year ago … no way José.

I know how to carry a grudge, for years or decades if need be.

Yesterday’s offer of work from the translation agency to be ignored came, of all places, from Thailand. It said:

Dear sir,

We are looking for a translator who can handle below patents documents now.
We would really appreciate if you provide us your quote. We would like to know quote per EN word.(We hope to get not higher than 0.09USD per English word this acceptable price)
We would like to obtain Patent documents translation From English to Japanese (/EN word) and Japanese to English (/EN word)and We would like to check translation quality so could you trial translation document without any fee ? I will send simple documents to you. Thank you very much.

We are looking forwards to hearing from you soon.

They’re still looking forwards (rather than backwards) to hearing from me, I guess. I’m sure 9 cents a word is pretty good money in Thailand, but that’s because a dinner in a nice Thai restaurant that would cost at least 15 dollars here in Virginia would probably cost 6 dollars or less in a nice Thai restaurant in Thailand.

So I ignored the e-mail from Thailand yesterday as well. But if I ever move to Thailand, I’ll be sure to look up the agency!

I usually receive e-mails with proposals of work, but at very low rates, a few times a week from agencies even right here in Virginia, as well as from outfits based in various other countries, such as Egypt, Israel, India, China, Romania, United Kingdom … the list goes on and on. Most translators who have been in business for a while probably receive similar e-mails from the low price leaders of our beloved translation industry as well.

And several of them keep e-mailing me for months or years even though I never respond. I remember that one such agency is in Israel, while another one competing with the Israeli agency is in Palestine. But even if it could solve the problems in Middle East, I wouldn’t work for these agencies.

And then there are also agencies that pretend to be based in a place like London, while in reality they or at least most of the people working in the agency are based in a place where the cost of living and labor is very low, like Moldova. Some of these agencies in fact work as sub-sub-subcontractors for translation agencies based in Western countries. One of them, based in Moldova, sent me a list of their translation rates a while ago. The next day, a guy who spoke good English but with a slight Russian accent called me to see if I would bite.

Although I’m constantly looking for new translators myself, especially for certain languages, mostly those that I can’t translate myself, I would never work with the sub-sub-sub-contracting type of agency that is very popular now with large translation agencies.

These sub-sub-subcontractors from Moldova, China and India all offer to work for me for about 9 cents per word, but that must mean that they only pay about 4 or 5 cent to translators who work for them, which must mean that these translators are not very good.

The e-mail to be ignored (except for the purposes of my silly blog) received today came from an agency here in United States. The agency did not actually have work at this point, they just wanted to know more about me for their files.

They were looking for a translator of chemical patents from Russian, which I do occasionally, because they found my listing in the ATA (American Translators Association) directory. They had numerous requirements right off the bat:

“In addition, we are also interested in receiving referrals from your professional network. Please forward this message along to any of your contacts who may be interested in working with us.
Our minimum application requirement are as follows:
• Native-level proficiency in English [whatever that means] • At least 5 years of professional translation experience in the subject above (I have more like a quarter century)
• Bachelors degree or equivalent (I have a master’s degree)
• Contact with target-language speakers on a very frequent and regular basis (busted – the only contact with Russian speakers that I have now is in English).
• Use of Trados Studio 2014 or compatible tool – able to receive and return .sdlppx/.sdlrpx files (busted again, I would not touch Trados with a ten foot pole).
Please submit the following:
• A CV
• A brief description of your specific experience with translation in the subject above
• Your most competitive per word and hourly rates in USD
• What CAT tool do you use?
• Your available capacity for us in words per day.

They must have submitted a proposal to translate a lot of Russian patents in the field of chemistry at a very low rate, their bid was accepted and now they are looking for translators who would do it for half of their very low rate.

The coordinator who found my information in the ATA directory is probably a recent college graduate who doesn’t really know anything about anything and who is willing to work for a miserable salary for this translation agency.

I actually know, or used to know this agency, because I used to translate Japanese patents for them for several years, mostly dealing with chemistry. But they don’t remember me because the last time I worked for them was about 10 years ago, and in any case, to them I am only one entry among hundreds of entries in a database of translators, or people who say that they are translators.

After people like me, namely highly experienced but not necessarily cheap patent translators, secured their initial supply of patent work for the agency from patent law firms and corporate patent law departments, the agency started cutting the rates that it was willing to pay to translators and requiring its translators to use a specific, proprietary CAT tool in order to cheat the translators on the word count to keep more money for itself.

So I dropped the agency like a hot potato, as I said, about 10 years ago.

The problem with the e-mail offers of work that I have been receiving for the last three days is that they all came from the red ocean or from the yellow ocean areas of markets where the supply greatly exceeds the demand and service providers thus must fight for available work like sharks fighting over food so that the blood from the vicious fights of the sharks has turned the ocean red. If you want to know what I mean by the yellow ocean, read this post on my silly blog.

But since tomorrow is another day, I will wait until I get an offer of work coming from the pristine blue waters of the unspoiled ocean regions where the waters have not been turned red yet by the many hungry sharks fighting for any food that they can find in the ocean.

Steve Vitek

About Steve Vitek

Translation of patents from Japanese, German, French, Russian, Czech Slovak and Polish since 1987. Blogs at www.patenttranslators.com, website at www.patenttranslators.com

One thought on “Just About Every Day Brings an Offer of Translation Work for Me that I Ignore

  1. As a newbie, I always feel torn when turning down projects – I’m trying to really stick to my guns by not accepting low rates (some amount to almost a minimum wage, which is stupid), but when the alternative is no work at all, I have flashes of doubt where I think I’m being too picky.

    I know deep down, though, that if I accept these I’ll get stuck in the low-rates spiral and end up fuelling this bottom-feeding culture. So, your post was very encouraging and reminded me that I’m doing the right thing for the long run! 🙂

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