Expertise is valuable, and the results are worth every penny invested.

I love to read a book that is noticeably edited well. In contrast, content that has grammatical issues, formatting flaws and communication blunders derails me from the author’s well-intended message. Granted, most editors likely have a keener sensitivity to such details than the average reader, but I believe that all readers are less distracted — even subconsciously — if the copy is clean of errors, pleasant to the eye and effective. Clean copy gives readers the assurance that the message itself is accurate, excellent and valuable — worth their investment of time to read.

If I am cooking a steak dinner for my husband on Father’s Day, would I go to all of the work to buy and prepare the food and then serve it on paper plates with plastic knives? No, I would serve hot dogs and chips that way if I were in a rush. Likewise, if a manuscript is polished well, it will reflect the value or worth of what it communicates. In other words, only hot dogs belong on paper plates . . . and even a hot dog could seem special if it were served in a warmed bun, neatly displayed with embellishments on a glass plate. If the information is valuable, authors should not stop short of excellence in the delivery.

If we determine that the information is valuable — a steak dinner so to speak — then it deserves to be delivered with excellence. Chances are, if it was important enough for the author to write, it is important enough for the author to seek the expert touch of an editor as well. For example, if someone is excited about a job interview, they will dress up and present themselves well rather than show up in jeans and forget to brush their teeth or clean under their fingernails. While that seems so obvious, authors will sometimes disadvantage themselves by not wanting to invest time and money into a professional editor. The editor’s special touch might surpass any other effort to get the manuscript noticed, published and sold!

We can conclude that the details of a manuscript speak volumes and that editors “do” details. And those details comprise an endless list: grammar, punctuation, spelling, syntax, pace, clarity, word choice and variety, antecedents, subject/verb agreement and misplaced modifiers. Not to mention incorporating the specific rules and formatting guidelines found in the thousand pages of Chicago Manual of Style, as expected by all publishers. Hiring an editor is not an option for a serious author.

I remember the day that I did not want to pay my dog’s groomer anymore. “It can’t be that hard,” I figured. After a trip to the store for the grooming set, I began cutting away. Several hours later, I was exhausted and bewildered while the dog feared for its life and looked like an electrocuted lion. I now give my dog’s groomer a big tip every time! Expertise is valuable, and the results are worth every penny invested.

This article is also posted at The Christian PEN, you can find it here.

Sarah is a contributing gold member of The Christian PEN and Christian Editor Connection with whom she passed tests and demonstrated expertise in the proofreading, copy editing, and content editing (substantive) of both fiction and nonfiction manuscripts and content. As a skilled and conscientious editor and writer with over twenty-five years of experience, Sarah offers professional services for projects of all sizes. Clients can be confident in the quality of their polished manuscripts, knowing that her editorial knowledge and skills developed over many years will be applied to their projects.