Spatial Requirements for an Effective Translation Agency
By Fester Leenstra,
Metamorfose Vertalingen,
Catharijnesingel 85,
3511 GP UTRECHT,
THE NETHERLANDS
metamorfose.vertalingen@gmail.com
www.metamorfosevertalingen.nl
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In
principle, translation, like mathematics, is an abstract
art that requires no more than a pencil and a piece
of paper. However, rather more in the way of equipment
and space is required for a modern commercial translation
agency to function properly. In this article we will
direct our focus towards the spatial facilities that
will need to be in place to ensure the proper separation
and cooperation between the various functions
that make up your translation business.
Any
independent translation agency that employs more than
one or two persons should have an office plan that
allows for the segregation of the three basic operations:
translation, marketing and sales. Anyone who plans
to combine these three functions in a single space
– or indeed within a single person – will soon discover
his mistake. The concentration required for high-quality
translation work is such that it needs to be performed
in a space that is free from ambient interference.
At the same time, the marketing and sales functions
– or departments if you like – by their nature involve
a great deal of verbal communication, telephone calls,
consultation and discussion. Clearly, the three operations
do not go together, and the basic spatial layout of
a translation agency should reflect this simple fact.
Below we will describe each of these three spheres
in some more detail.
More
than anything else, the people in the translation
department will require silence. They cannot work,
or at least not properly, if they are unable to concentrate.
So positioning your translation area at the front
of a building with windows opening on to a major thoroughfare
is obviously not a good idea. Despite fashionable
trends in office design, moreover, it is our strong
conviction that the translation department should
have a spatial structure that effectively discourages
people from physically communicating with one another.
Ideally speaking, each translator should have his
or her own room where they can work in peace and quiet.
If that is not feasible, at least make sure to provide
an environment where people can work quietly and independently,
rather like a library reading room. We are not suggesting
that there should not be any communication at all;
obviously, professionals need to consult with each
other to improve their knowledge and skills. The important
point, however, is that the translators should be
able to communicate on their own initiative, rather
than being disturbed at random and distracted, unpredictably,
from the constant attention that the translation process
requires.Â
Something
rather like the opposite applies to the marketing
& sales department – or at least to its marketing
section. This is a far more dynamic part of the translation
agency. The basic function of the marketing department
is to fuel a constant flow of ideas to attract business,
and of techniques to put those ideas into practice.
This calls for a great deal of consultation and planning,
either internally or externally over the phone. The
people working there should obviously not be bothered
with calls for silence and reproachful glances, but
should be able to chat and telephone as they please.
The marketing department should be positioned and
equipped to reflect its dynamic nature.
The
sales department is again a different story. In terms
of spatial demands, it hovers somewhere between the
pristine silence in the translation rooms and the
dynamism of the marketing section. This has to do
with the dichotomy between the verbal and written
client contacts comprised within the sales function.
On the one hand, sales employees will have to be able
to answer client calls, canvass prospects and follow
up quotations, amongst the myriad of other sales-related
duties. As a result, this part of your business will
look – and sound – rather like a call centre. On the
other hand, sales employees need to be able to study
client requests (especially the more complicated ones),
calculate offers and draw up quotations, operations
that are at least as error-sensitive as the translation
process itself and require the same type of concentration.
To
sum up, the design of your office will have to recognise
the three basic functions which any professional translation
agency, however small, should be able to accommodate:
translation, marketing and sales. Ideally speaking,
each of these functions should be granted a space
of its own that does justice to the nature of its
operations and provides an optimal environment for
the associated work processes. In other words, the
translation department should have as many rooms as
there are translators, or otherwise consist of a communal
working space with facilities, rules and customs similar
to those in a library reading room. The marketing
department should be equipped and designed to promote
optimum internal and external communication, whereas
the sales department also requires a separate space,
if only to accommodate the non-verbal aspects of its
processes.
Segregation
is of the essence, and if you cherish any wish to
use an open plan office design for your translation
business you are well advised either to abandon that
wish or move to a different profession.
About the author
Fester Leenstra is co-owner of Metamorfose
Vertalingen, a translation agency in Utrecht (The
Netherlands). After having worked for several translation
firms in paid employment, he took the plunge in 2004
and incorporated his own company.
For further details about Metamorfose
Vertalingen, visit:
http://www.metamorfosevertalingen.nl
http://www.beedigd-vertaalbureau.nl
http://www.vertaalbureau-engels.nl
http://www.vertaalsite.eu
http://www.oost-europavertalingen.nl
http://www.scandinavie-vertalingen.nl
http://www.medisch-vertaalbureau.nl
http://www.technisch-vertaalbureau.nl
http://www.juridisch-vertaalbureau.nl
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