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A little sneak peek from the course ✍️
Hello everyone, and a warm welcome to our new members 💛 I thought I’d share a small idea from the course today. When we edit our own writing, it’s easy to jump straight to spelling, punctuation, and small corrections. This can mean we spend a lot of time polishing writing that may not have a place in the final piece. Good editing often starts much earlier than that. Before polishing a sentence, it can help to ask four simple questions: 🔸Is the meaning clear? 🔸Is this in the right place? 🔸Does the tone sound like me? 🔸Is there anything here that the reader does not need? Only after that do we need to worry about grammar, punctuation, and final proofreading. So, here’s a gentle writing/editing prompt for today: Choose one paragraph, post, email, scene, article, or piece of writing you are working on, and ask yourself: What does this piece really need from me today — clarity, structure, voice, or polish? You don’t need to share the writing itself unless you want to. But I’d love to know: ➡️Which of those four areas do you usually struggle with most?
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Top Tips for Authors Sending Work to an Editor or Proofreader
1. Know what service you need. Editing and proofreading are not the same thing. Editing looks more deeply at clarity, structure, wording, and consistency. Proofreading is the final check before publication. 2. Send the cleanest version you can. Do not send a messy first draft unless you are asking for developmental help. Fix obvious mistakes, remove notes to yourself, and make the manuscript as complete as possible. 3. Be honest about your budget and deadline. Good editing takes time. A rushed job may cost more, and a low budget may limit what can realistically be done. 4. Choose the right professional. Look for someone with suitable experience, training, or subject knowledge. Once you choose them, trust their expertise. 5. Give a clear brief. Explain what kind of help you want. Do you want a light polish, detailed copyediting, proofreading, formatting checks, or feedback on structure and flow? 6. Send all the necessary files.Include the manuscript, style sheet if you have one, brief, deadline, publishing plans, and any specific instructions. 7. Mention your preferences. Tell the editor about spelling choices, tone, audience, formatting requirements, or words and phrases you want to keep. 8. Be available for questions.Your editor may need to query unclear wording, missing information, or inconsistencies. Try to respond in good time. 9. Do not create artificial urgency. Editors and proofreaders usually have other projects booked. Give as much notice as possible and avoid last-minute deadlines unless absolutely necessary. 10. Respect the professional relationship. Treat your editor or proofreader as part of the team helping you make the book better, not as someone simply “fixing mistakes”. 11. Be open to feedback.Comments and tracked changes are not personal criticism. They are there to help the work become clearer, stronger, and more professional. 12. Understand that not every suggestion is compulsory. You remain the author. But if your editor raises the same issue several times, it is worth taking seriously.
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Top Tips for Authors Sending Work to an Editor or Proofreader
FRIDAY 10th April — Small wins still deserve celebrating 🎉
Before we head into the weekend, let’s take a moment to notice what did happen this week. Maybe you: ✨ opened your document ✨ wrote a few lines ✨ edited one paragraph ✨ made notes for later ✨ realised what has been blocking you ✨ gave yourself permission to go gently That all counts. Progress does not have to be dramatic to be real. ✳️ What is one small win from your week? And if you’d like, share one gentle next step for next week too ✨ #FridayWins #SmallWinsStillCount #WritingCommunity #WritersSupport #WritingLife #ProgressNotPerfection #GentleProgress #CreativePractice #KeepGoing #CelebrateSmallWins
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THURSDAY 9th April — Soft check-in 🌿
A lot of us think that if we are not being very productive, we are somehow failing. But sometimes the real work is simply staying connected — even lightly — during busy or difficult weeks. So today’s check-in is this: No pressure. No judgement. Just an honest check-in. #WritersCheckIn #WritingCommunity #WritersSupport #GentleProgress #SmallStepsStillCount #ProgressNotPerfection #WritingLife #CreativeCommunity #KeepGoing #OneStepAtATime ✳️ Which of these sounds most like you right now?
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WEDNESDAY 8th April — Gentle writing prompt ✍️
Today’s prompt is a simple one: Write about something you have been meaning to return to. It could be: ✴️a piece of writing ✴️a habit ✴️a project ✴️a conversation ✴️a place ✴️a version of yourself Don’t worry about making it polished. Just write for 10 minutes and see what comes. You do not need to share the whole thing, but if you’d like to, post a line or two below 💛 #WritingPrompt #PromptAndShare #WritingCommunity #AmWriting #WritersSupport #BackToWriting #GentleWriting #SmallStepsStillCount #WritingLife #CreativePractice
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