Newsletter Articles

Treasurer’s Letter

I CAN take it with me

by Ira Pilchen, National Treasurer; Editor, Student Lawyer


Photo: Ira PilchenHi, I’m Ira Pilchen, and I just died.

Actually, I’m alive and well, but I was — ahem — dying to emulate humorist Art Buchwald after viewing his self-delivered video obituary on the New York Times Web site. I may not be dead, but I am taking stock of things as I move from my magazine editing job at the American Bar Association to become a speechwriter and adviser in the ABA president’s office.

After eight good years at Student Lawyer, this career change can feel a bit funereal. There are the misty farewells and accolades from colleagues, the need to focus on issues of succession, and the occasional “deathbed regrets” over missions unaccomplished.

One thing I’ll never regret is being active in ASBPE. Here are the most valuable things the organization has taught me:

  • Always determine an article’s “RA factor” and express it early and often. Of all the advice I’ve learned from ASBPE, this has been the most memorable. As workshop presenter Don Ranly explained, RA stands for “rat’s ass,” as in “Why should anyone give a rat’s ass about this story?” If an article (or any written communication) has a low RA factor, it needs a good rewrite.
  • Magazine articles should clearly be about “you,” the reader. This is a central tenet of service journalism and a hallmark of ASBPE’s teachings. As I learned at several workshops, it can even be good to use the word “you” in a headline. Recall the impact of “I Want YOU” in Uncle Sam’s Army recruitment posters.
  • Ethics matter. Our profession depends on our integrity with readers. ASBPE’s attention to publishing ethics has guided my work in publishing. I am proud to have collaborated on our revised Guide to Preferred Editorial Practices and am thankful for its insights on editorial-advertising separation, dealings with PR agents, attention to proper sourcing, and other integrity-related issues.
  • Design matters. At ASBPE workshops and awards banquets, I’ve viewed many examples of magazine design work, both good and bad. By evaluating them, I’ve developed great ideas for my own publication.
  • If you want ASBPE to do something, do it yourself. Years ago, I wished the Chicago Chapter’s awards banquet could be held at my favorite downtown restaurant, so I volunteered to organize it. Soon, the chapter appointed me its treasurer. A few years later, I was recruited to be ASBPE’s national treasurer. Far from distracting me from my full-time job, my leadership positions have taught me skills and exposed me to issues and mentors that have made me a better editor and employee.

Though I’ll be leaving ASBPE later this year — at least while I’m out of the editing business—its guidance will never leave me. So long, everyone, and thanks.

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