Three of the most popular writing services available today are known as proofreading, editing, and rewriting services. The most unfamiliar to you among these is likely to be rewriting, also known as “paraphrasing”, which is not the focus of this article. Instead, proofreading and editing is the focus, and – in particular – the question of why to hire proofreaders or editors.
Good writing relies on strong
proofreading and editing services, and receiving a rewriting service where necessary can
also be beneficial. The general case for hiring a proofreader or editor arises
from clients – whether students, businesses, authors, or scientists – who are
interested in working with an expert to optimise their chance of publication.
Five other, more specific, reasons
why you should hire a proofreader or editor are given below:
1. Save yourself some time
Having a proofreader or editor check
over your work will save you around 30-60 minutes for every 1,000 words
included in your manuscript. If you are a researcher, businessperson, or
student who wants to maximise your productivity, avoiding spending 5 hours (or
more) proofreading or editing your 5,000-word journal can prove definitive in
advancing your standing.
2. Save yourself the frustration
Editors and proofreaders have
streamlined and perfected the process of checking documents for accuracy, flow,
spelling, referencing (in-text and end-of-text), grammar, punctuation,
readability, concision, general English language editing, and all other areas
relevant to publication. They can execute the task quickly, systematically, and
effectively, whereas you – working alone on your document – are not as
well-positioned to improve your manuscript.
3. Enhance academic and scientific
writing
To ensure you write with the
concision, clarity, and matter-of-factness required in academic, technical, and
scientific writing, working with an experienced editor is essential. Many
experienced proofreaders are available who can assist you with this task, but
if your document is currently in very bad shape, contacting an editor rather
than a proofreader is strongly recommended.
4. A new look
When you work with an editor, you
don’t just get a fresh pair of eyes; at the same time, your manuscript receives
an overhaul. The editor’s role is to ensure that your document is as strong as
it can be, and unlike a friend or colleague – who might hesitate to suggest
that you should delete a section or change some content in your written work –
a qualified and experienced editor is ideally positioned to look at your
document with a critical and constructive perspective.
5. Develop other projects
If you are a busy researcher, student,
or professional, balancing several projects at a time can be challenging. For
this reason, working with a proofreader or editor can lighten your workload,
allowing you to focus on multiple long-term tasks simultaneously. For example,
if you are publishing a book, you can recruit an editor to work with you on the
proposal, editing, and formatting phases; and you can work with other editors
and proofreaders at the same time to prepare job or university applications, to
write letters, or to create marketing or research materials.