Hiring an Editor: Hacks to Save You $$ (at least with me)

Hiring an Editor: Hacks to Save You $$ (at least with me)

So, look at you! You’re officially a blogger / author / writer! However you label yourself, you’re writing for others to see.

How did that happen? Why are you doing it?

You want to share your passion for something with the world.

You want to help others learn valuable lessons.

Friends and colleagues keep telling you that you should be writing / blogging.

So, you decide to try it out, scared but excited. You write 700 or 800 words and send them out into the cold, hard world that’s full of trolls, some of whom are quick to point out goofs in your piece. In public. So everyone can see.

You goofed right in the title!

You used the wrong your/you’re!

You used the wrong it’s/its!

You left out three words in the second paragraph!

And on and on it goes.

Given enough pain, you might quit writing altogether, which would be a shame. You still have great ideas, so what to do?

Someone suggests hiring an editor to polish your writing -- to look at your words, punctuation, sentence structure, spacing, formatting -- to make sure you’re presenting your best self.

But editors, like most others, charge $$ to help writers. And you’re not sure how it all works, right?

Let’s clear that part up here.

My fee is based 100% on time. I have an hourly rate for long stuff and a per-piece rate for typical blog posts, up to about 800 words.

Some editors charge by the number of words when working on long pieces (typically 2,000 or more words), but I cannot possibly know how much time YOUR piece will take just based on the number of words you write.

If there are lots of errors, it will clearly take me more time to read, correct, and reread to make sure I find everything than if I only find a very few errors.

If those 5,000 words should be really only 2,500 words, it’ll take time for us (yup, you and me, kid) to figure out which ones go and which ones stay. And why.

That said, there are some easy ways you can prepare your draft for my eyes, which will save you money.

  1. Know who your audience is. Use words and terms your readers will likely understand, especially if you’re writing any sort of industry-specific or technical piece. Outsiders may read the first paragraph and move on to the next article if yours is just a mystery to them. (If I don’t recognize a word as being one in common usage, I’ll challenge it.)
  2. Use whatever grammar checker comes with your writing program. While not one of them is perfect, they’re still good at catching obvious (to them) goofs, which will cut down on what I have to do manually. And although spellcheck isn’t perfect either (it does NOT help with homophones -- see #3, below), it does know whether the word you’ve used is spelled correctly. If it “flags” a word for any reason, take the time to check it out.
  3. Use the search function to check on homophones like affect/effect, it’s/its, you’re/your, to/too/two -- whatever words you often mistype (or just aren’t sure of). Ask the search function to find them one by one, and look carefully to see if you’ve used the right one. Then do it with the other one in the pair (or triplet, like they’re/there/their). And if you sometimes use the word public, search for pubic, which is a perfectly good word but probably not the one you meant, to make sure it’s not hiding out somewhere (always check for the word you DON’T want in those circumstances).
  4. Look at any different sections, and check to see if the headers for each are the same type of sentence, the same font, the same bold or italics, the same whatever. Especially with bullet points, start each with the same type of word for smooth reading: If the first one starts with a verb, the subsequent ones should, too, and it should be the same style of verb.
  5. Check all the spacing. There is only supposed to be one space between sentences, between words, and after a colon that introduces a list within a sentence. Yes. ONE. Not two, three, or four. There should be white space between paragraphs, one line of nothing to rest the reader’s eyes and to clearly signal a new paragraph.
  6. Check your use of bold, italics, or underlining. Have you been consistent? Have you used way too many capital letters? Too much bold? All that will likely draw a reader’s eyes and mind away from your ideas.
  7. Be sure you have closed all punctuation marks that come in pairs: parentheses ( ), brackets [ ], braces { }, and quotation marks “”. Sometimes we don’t close them, or we do but in the wrong place.
  8. Make sure the apostrophes and quotation marks are the same style. A mix of straight (" ") and curly (“ ”) marks will look very odd. I don’t know why some writing programs mix them, but I do know it happens.
  9. Reread carefully if you’ve changed anything.

These are all mechanical things that you can look for and correct yourself. If I do it, you’ll pay more.

So, what exactly will I be left with?

Your words. Your thoughts. The connections you make. The order of your sections, paragraphs, and sentences. The segues between the paragraphs. The flow of information: Is there a beginning, a middle, and an end? The sense of your piece: Does it make sense to anyone besides you? Did you wrap up your thought(s) in the last sentence or paragraph?

Your visuals: Are they compelling? Are they necessary? Right/wrong size? Do the links you included actually work (yes, I do check those). Are your citations correct? Are the proper nouns correctly spelled (I do check any I’m not familiar with)?

Punctuation: apostrophes, commas, colons, dashes, hyphens, quotation marks, and any other random ones you might have used. I look to see if you have followed the basic rules (I absolutely do push hard for the Oxford comma), and if you haven’t -- can you get away with it? What will the likely impact be for most readers, either way?

You will always know what I suggest for changes because I work with Word’s Track Changes program (much preferred), and I send my clients both the red marked-up copy (so they can learn) and the black good-to-go copy they can use immediately if they agree with my changes.

All this may sound simple, but it isn’t. Editors work hard to both respect and preserve an author’s “voice” and still deliver a well-written piece. I know when a rule can be broken (because I know what the rules are and how they function) and when the rule is necessary for clarity.

Of course, I’m always open to conversations about a client’s ideas, because at the end of the day, it’s not my project. It’s my client’s.

Remember: My only goal is to help my clients look and sound as smart as they are.

If you’re not sure about hiring an editor, send me one page of anything you’ve written. I’m happy to look at any ONE page for free -- one time per person, please. No $$.

*****

For more articles or help with other writing topics, visit my website: GrammarGoddess.com.

Jenette Clay

I design websites to help customers find your business.

6 年

Great to see you still at it. :) You give great advise with a spoonful of sugar. :)

  • 该图片无替代文字
Sarah Elkins

International Speaker | Workshop Facilitator | Storyteller | Musician | Gallup StrengthsFinder Coach | 360+Episodes Podcast Host | Author | Job Interview Coach

7 年

What great reminders here, Susan Rooks (The Grammar Goddess)! Not only did you list all the things that catch my attention when they're wrong (or when they're completely correct and I cheer in my head), you reminded readers how important it is to have an editor review your piece for the not-so-obvious things a copy editor can clarify. My suggestion is always to read the piece out loud to yourself, every single word enunciated, to catch double words and sentences that don't flow well.

Donna-Luisa Eversley

Business Opportunity Creator - New World New Business

7 年

Excellent advice with a spoonful of humour!

Donna-Luisa Eversley

Business Opportunity Creator - New World New Business

7 年

Hahaha..i needed this tonight. You might get that one page from me Susan Rooks (The Grammar Goddess). Just finished writing and just left my article totally miffed with myself. Thanks for such a funny and motivational piece. Can count on you to correct what you have not seen ??

要查看或添加评论,请登录

?? Susan Rooks ?? The Grammar Goddess的更多文章

  • Thursday Thought: A Four-Letter Word I Want You to Use!

    Thursday Thought: A Four-Letter Word I Want You to Use!

    I was at a networking event a while back, and a man used a four-letter word I wasn’t expecting. I was surprised —…

    23 条评论
  • The Real Problem with Swearing

    The Real Problem with Swearing

    Thanks to Bob Burg, who published a post today (10/1/22) on “staying in our anger,” which reminded me of this article I…

    3 条评论
  • Last February Friday Funday Article 2022!

    Last February Friday Funday Article 2022!

    ??CLICK ON THE PICTURE ABOVE TO SEE ALL THE JOKES IN THIS ARTICLE! ?? Ah, February, the month many of us love to hate…

    65 条评论
  • Fab. Feb. Fri. Fun. Short mo., right?

    Fab. Feb. Fri. Fun. Short mo., right?

    Good morning, friends! For some it's already midday. For some, the sun's just rising.

    57 条评论
  • ?? Fond of Friends Friday Funday ??

    ?? Fond of Friends Friday Funday ??

    ?????? Click on the top picture to see all the fun stuff here! ?????? *** So, friends -- today is February 11, 2022…

    56 条评论
  • Freezing February Friday Funday!

    Freezing February Friday Funday!

    ???? REMEMBER TO CLICK ABOVE FOR THE WHOLE FUN ARTICLE! ???? It's Friday, February 4, 2022. In parts of the U.

    50 条评论
  • Friday Funday Before the Flakes Fall

    Friday Funday Before the Flakes Fall

    ??CLICK ON THE TOP PICTURE TO SEE ALL THE JOKES HERE!?? Thank goodness the storm (Snowmageddon, likely enough) that…

    73 条评论
  • Frozen Friday Funday

    Frozen Friday Funday

    ?????????????? Click the top picture to see the whole article! ?????????????? Is the cover photo an example irony or…

    47 条评论
  • Friday Feathers, Felines, and Fur

    Friday Feathers, Felines, and Fur

    Good morning, friends! It's Friday again -- whoohoo! Second Friday of 2022, and another chance to have some fun, create…

    50 条评论
  • It's the First Friday Funday of 2022!

    It's the First Friday Funday of 2022!

    Good Friday morning, everyone! The first Friday in January 2022 -- boy, time sure does fly! Winter for some of us;…

    51 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了