drafting Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/drafting/ Writing workshops, communication consulting and writing services Mon, 01 Jan 2024 13:01:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.wyliecomm.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-wci-favico-1-32x32.gif drafting Archives - Wylie Communications, Inc. https://www.wyliecomm.com/tag/drafting/ 32 32 65624304 How to proofread like a pro https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/10/how-to-proofread/ https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/10/how-to-proofread/#respond Mon, 03 Oct 2022 15:05:00 +0000 https://www.wyliecomm.com/?p=30601 Rest, reformat, read aloud and review common errors

By Chris Smith

You spell-checked it, but that story still appeared with a grammar fail or typo. D’oh!Read the full article

The post How to proofread like a pro appeared first on Wylie Communications, Inc..

]]>
Rest, reformat, read aloud and review common errors

By Chris Smith

You spell-checked it, but that story still appeared with a grammar fail or typo. D’oh!

How to proofread
Catch stubborn mistakes with these four hacks from Chris Smith, proofreader to the stars (and to Wylie Communications!) Image by PanuddaN

It happens. But to avoid the next awkward FYI email from the boss or a reader (the real boss), try these four proofing techniques.

1. Rest the copy.

Some dishes have to “rest” before cooking proceeds. Your words may benefit, too. Once your copy is ready to publish — you think — set it aside long enough to write or read something else.

Anything else.

Even if it’s just a fresh email or two. Then, let your better self go back and read the supposedly finished copy. Amazing how often you catch something your lame hour-ago-self missed.

2. Reformat the text.

Whatever typeface and page norms you use for drafting or posting copy, take five minutes to select all and then change the typeface you stare at all day to something different (serif or sans-serif, whichever is opposite your standard).

Make the font size larger. Change the margins. Now re-proof what looks like a different draft, with different line breaks. See if a typo jumps out at you.

3. Read it aloud.

Even if you’re one of those excellent writers who mouths the words you are typing, try this related proofreading step: Read the entire piece out loud. Take a breath between sentences to consider each one independently.

You may need to apologize to your office mates or your cat, who may become annoyed.

4. Review common errors.

Keep a written list of your common glitches that a software spell-checker may not detect. Then, with your document open, use the Find feature in Word to step through that list one at a time. If you follow AP style, for example, you might use Ctrl-F to search for:

, and
, or
-ezine, e-mail, Internet

If your industry refers to “public” a lot in writing, search for “pubic.” You’ll thank me later.

Rely on another set of eyes.

Finally, a fifth and even better way to publish clean prose is to have somebody other than yourself read it first. If you don’t have a paid editor for that, find out what coffee or candy your friend, colleague or roommate likes, and proceed accordingly.

____

Chris Smith is a freelance writer, editor and corporate communications consultant in New Orleans. He’s the author of a biography of Twitter’s founders, how-to books on technology, a children’s book on music and an unofficial census of the United States. Chris has edited, fact-checked or proofread dozens of nonfiction books including biographies of Clara Schuman and Alexander the Great, and histories of World War II, Irish Americans and the John Deere company.

He has written across multiple channels for employees of a large electric and gas utility, for schools and colleges, and for health care organizations. Chris has won awards for publication and advertising content, and for Three Things, a column for communications professionals on writing and editing.

You can find Chris at chris@cswriter.com, on Twitter or on LinkedIn.

  • Clear-writing workshop, a mini master class

    Reach more readers with tight writing

    Would your piece be twice as good if it were half as long? Yes, say readability experts.

    So how long should your message be? Your paragraphs? Your sentences? Your words? What reading ease level should you hit?

    Learn how to write clearer, more concise messages at our clear-writing course.

The post How to proofread like a pro appeared first on Wylie Communications, Inc..

]]>
https://www.wyliecomm.com/2022/10/how-to-proofread/feed/ 0 30601