Why Hire an Editor

Having had many conversations about what I do for a living, I thought it’s time to answer a very important two-part question: “What does an editor actually do? Why hire one?”

Your initial answer to this question may be that an editor fixes grammar. You think to yourself: “An editor is someone who puts periods at the end of sentences and corrects the spelling of misspelled words.”

Well, you are right . . . to some extent.

However, with our advanced technology, a grammar check will correct most basic grammatical errors. Yes, all those red squiggly lines are there for a reason. Right click, and voila, the change is made! 

Wait a minute. You may still be asking: “What is the point of an editor then?”

Editors don’t just fix grammar. They help you become a better writer. 

“But how,” you may ask? 

Well, when I look at someone’s writing, I critique way more than just their grammar. Questions I ask myself:

  • Does the writer make sense? Are they able to communicate their ideas clearly? Do I know what they’re talking about? If their thoughts and ideas are confusing, those need fixing first. Structural changes need to be made.

  • Does the writer use the same type of sentence over and over again? If every sentence is structured the same, I jazz it up so that there is variety. (sentence structures: simple, compound, complex, compound-complex)

  • Does the writer type the same adjective or verb 10 times over? (This is incredibly common for a writer to do; it happens to me too.) Pulling out my thesaurus, I change that word to many of its creative fellow synonyms.

  • Does the writer use transitions well or at all? (probably the most common writer issue) It’s all about the flow: one thought needs to flow into the next. I add in transition words to fix this issue, trying not to use the same one twice.

  • Does the writer make their paragraphs too long or too short? Is the spacing off between paragraphs, subtitles, block quotations, lists, etc.? Does everything look uniform? I don’t just work on the individual words and sentences but also the formatting, which constitutes the bigger picture.

  • Does the writer understand how to use punctuation correctly? So yes, I correct grammar. If I see that a writer doesn’t know how to use a semicolon, comma, or a colon correctly, I’ll change that for them. I’ll find the fragments, run-ons, and the missing words too.

I could add many more questions to the above list, but I think you get the point.

“So is it worth it to hire an editor?”

(I’m nodding my head vigorously.) Judging by what I read a lot of the time, I’d say an editor is definitely needed: if anything for me to be the second pair of eyes for you as you write . . .

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