FIVE PROOFREADING TIPS FOR BUSINESSES
By Alex Painter
Would you trust a five star hotel offering 'luxry accommodation'? Or an online
retailer who asked for your 'adress' in a contact form? I wouldn't. And I'm not
alone. However, even if you believe that most of your customers don't care about
spelling errors, ignoring those who do is terrible business practice.
Of course, it's not just spelling. Inconsistencies and poor grammar can be just
as off-putting. In reality, most organizations appreciate their importance. When
mistakes do occur, it's rarely because people don't care. More often than not,
it's a combination of a lack of skills and inadequate processes that gets in the
way.
So here are five tips that will help you to avoid those embarrassing errors.
1. Use House Style
If you don't have one, create a house style for your organization. What do I
mean by that? Well, this is really about consistency, and it's especially important
in larger organizations, where brochures, catalogues, websites and ads may be
written by teams of different people, some from external organizations, such as
advertising or PR agencies.
The point is that, by and large, all these communications should share a single
'voice'. They should read pretty much as though they were all written by the same
person.
Don't get me wrong – I'm not saying that your corporate brochure copy should look
just like the copy on your 48-sheet poster. Much depends on the audience and the
medium. But there are some basic things that should always be consistent.
If you're unsure how to get started, there's a
useful guide to building your house style here.
2. Watch for Errors That Are Hiding in Plain Sight
This is a simple but important point. People often check the fine details
meticulously, while missing mistakes that, on the face of it, should be obvious.
So, for example, when you're proofreading advertising copy, pay particular
attention to headlines. It's all too easy to skip over them, assuming that there
can't be a mistake in the headline because someone would have noticed. That someone
should be you!
3. Understand the Difference Between Proofreading and Copy-editing
This distinction is essential to making sure you don't end up in an endless
cycle of writing and rewriting.
Very broadly, proofreading is mainly about checking for mistakes that might have
crept in between the editing stage and the design / typesetting stage. The proofreader
is also expected to pick up clear errors that were missed during editing.
Copy-editing is also about picking up errors, but in addition it can involve
rewriting parts of the text (e.g. to make it clearer).
Why is it so important to know the difference? It's partly to do with drawing a
line under the editing process (see point 4, below), but it's also to ensure that
each task is done by the person best suited to it. For example, advertising copy is
often carefully crafted to have a certain effect on the reader, and you need to make
sure that that work is not undone in the proofreading process. People can be excellent
proofreaders without being great writers, and writing for marketing purposes is a
separate skill in itself.
4. A Good Sign-off Process Reduces Cost
It's important to understand that changes late in document production are likely
to be more costly than those made early on.
What does this mean?
Well, imagine you're producing a brochure. You start by writing the copy, perhaps
in MS Word. At this point, if you have to make changes to the copy, it's as simple as
editing that Word document.
Now consider the next stage. You send your document to a designer who inputs the
text into their design using desktop publishing software. If you make a change now,
depending on its extent, you have to bear in mind its impact on the design. Will the
text now spill over onto another page? Is there enough room to accommodate it? Do
you also apply the same change(s) to your original Word document, just in case you
need to re-use the text? Generally speaking, changes at this point take longer, cost
more and raise the risk that further errors will be introduced.
One lesson to draw from this is that it's worth getting copy and design signed off
separately. Most organizations require a sign-off from a senior member of staff, such
as a director. Often this happens only right at the end of the process, when a
printer's proof is available. If that director then decides to make sweeping changes,
it can create terrible headaches, as well as risk missing deadlines and exceeding
budgets.
5. Make Sure the Proofreader Is Not the Same Person as the Writer
When you read back something you wrote, you tend to see what you intended to write,
not what is actually on the page. It's therefore easy to miss errors in your own
writing, no matter how careful you are. If at all possible, find somebody else to
check your writing.
Getting it right 100% of the time is impossible. But with good processes and great
tools, you can save money and keep errors to a minimum.
Alex Painter has worked in marketing for fifteen years and has
been involved in training in publishing skills for the last ten. He works for
Editorial Training, an
organization that runs courses in proofreading editing and grammar, including
a course
dedicated to proofreading for business.