Brenda Ulrich, an intellectual property attorney with Archstone Law, defined a statement of work as the details of a project: the work you’re going to be doing, including the timeline of events, the deliverables, whether there’s approval back and forth, whether some work is being done by somebody else, etc. That type of information often doesn’t readily fit into the body of the basic agreement, so it is instead included as an exhibit or amendment to the contract. It is also something that the non-lawyers involved in the negotiation can work on without getting tripped up on the legalese of the main agreement.
Estate Planning for Authors: How to Set Your Heirs Up for Success
By Sierra Pawlak
In her October 2025 Webinar, “Copyright in the Afterlife: Estate Planning Tips for Authors”, Brenda Ulrich, an intellectual property attorney with Archstone Law, shared how authors can set up their heirs for success. She detailed how copyright differs from other assets in an estate plan, how best to divide up your literary works, and how to appoint a literary trustee or executor. For more, you can listen to her presentation here.
Writing Groups for Academics (Faculty and ABDs)
By Mary Beth Averill
For the past few months, I have been attending a writing group that grew out of a TAA writing retreat. I would categorize our group, which started out meeting weekly and now has meetings three times a week, as a “shut up and write” group. We start with a brief check in on Zoom, saying what we each want to accomplish in the coming hour. At the end of the hour, we meet again briefly to say what progress we made. Group members who want to keep going that day state their goals for the next hour.
