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What's
Wrong With Proofreading? |
by:
Elaine
Currie |
More
Tips For New Writers (Part III)
Writing for your home based business just
as important as any other kind of business
writing. When you have an online business,
you will be judged by the quality of your
emails, advertisements, articles etc as
well as by the textual content of your website.
I recently read an article in which the
author encouraged people to write articles
in order to promote their home based internet
business. The writer of this article was
of the opinion that punctuation, spelling
etc, were not particularly important. His
advice was to give your article a quick
once-over with your PC's spellchecker and
then submit it without spending too much
time on it or worrying unduly about the
finer details. To him, the important thing
was that you should write whether or not
you had reached the appropriate educational
standard to be able to write correctly.
In an effort to keep up with modern trends,
I considered this premise and attempted
to embrace it. Maybe I am totally old-fashioned
but, I couldn't do it. I simply cannot accept
this idea that we should treat business
writing as a casual pastime, where articles
are to be carelessly and quickly executed
because they are of limited importance.
Of course I believe that people should be
free to express themselves in writing even
if they lack formal education but I don't
believe we are helping them or ourselves
by lowering our standards.
Although I applaud him for encouraging people
to write, I simply cannot agree with this
author's notion that correct grammar and
punctuation are unimportant. Even slightly
faulty grammar can render a written work
incomprehensible. The phrase "Content is
king" is overused nowadays. Although content
is often high in a list of important elements,
I cannot agree that content alone will make
up for poor craftsmanship when it comes
to writing. Offering slapdash work is an
insult to the reader; the implication is
that the reader either will not know any
better, or is not sufficiently important
to bother about. I would like to make it
clear that I am not referring to the unfortunate
mistake that slips through the proofreading
net. There is nobody on this planet who
has never made a mistake. Publishing an
error takes a bit of living down but the
only sure way of avoiding mistakes is by
doing absolutely nothing. The thing that
offends me is the "doesn't matter", "It'll
do" sloppy attitude.
I have seen emails and web pages written
by people for whom English is obviously
not their first language. While I greatly
admire these people for learning a second
language to a standard where they can write
it fluently (not something I can do), I
cannot overlook the errors. Some made me
laugh whilst others were embarrassing. Publication
of these errors could, with proper editing,
have been avoided without losing the fresh
content and individuality of the writing.
Proofreading, copywriting and editing services
are not hard to find, they are widely advertised
on the Internet. A little money spent on
these services can make a life or death
difference to an email campaign or website.
Although I try to make allowances, be more
modern in outlook, take a more relaxed attitude,
and so on, I keep coming back to the fact
that writing is about communication. In
order to communicate effectively, writing
must be performed correctly and there is
nothing wrong in employing a professional
to add the final polish.
If all else fails, I will rely on the old
adage that if a job is worth doing, it is
worth doing well.
About the author:
Elaine Currie, BA (Hons), is a writer and
internet marketer. She came to the internet
after a 25 year career at a London law firm,
seeking a new career path. Knowing only
that she wanted the opportunity to spend
more time writing and to be her own boss,
Elaine discovered the concept of the "pluginprofitsite"
(details can be seen at http://www.huntingvenus.com/pips.htmland
at Elaine's website http://www.huntingvenus.com).
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