Tag: Toggl

  • My Editing Checklist

    My Editing Checklist

    When used by doctors and air-traffic controllers, checklists save lives by ensuring that critical steps aren’t missed during high-stress situations.

    Editing doesn’t involve life-or-death stakes (usually), but checklists are still helpful for reducing complexity and lessening the burden on memory for routine tasks. Even after spending forty or more hours on a manuscript, it’s easy, for example, to send off a final package to the client and forget the invoice.

    Unlike a style sheet, which goes to the client, the checklist is just for me. There is some overlap, but the checklist simply helps me roll through the steps in my editing process without forgetting anything, whereas the style sheet records such things as proper nouns, variant spellings, and unusual usages. (For more information on style sheets, click here.)

    The following is a typical checklist I’d use for a manuscript to be edited in accordance with the Chicago Manual of Style (17th edition) and Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate, but it’s easily adapted for other styles or editing requirements I’m charged with.

    Prework

     Create contract (Word exported to PDF)
     Create invoice (Word exported to PDF)
     Set up style sheet (Google Docs)
     Set up chapter-breakdown sheet (Google Docs)
     Rename author’s file
     Set up Toggl for job

    Formatting

     Double space lines of text
     Set automatic indents and delete extraneous tabs with Editor’s Toolkit
     Delete extra returns (Editor’s Toolkit)
     Delete spaces around returns (Editor’s Toolkit)
     Remove double spaces (Editor’s Toolkit)
     Close space around em dashes and ens (editor’s Toolkit)
     Check heading styles
     Check page breaks
     Format ellipses (Editor’s Toolkit)
     Turn straight quotes to curly (Editor’s Toolkit)
     Check TOC

    Editing

     Start Toggl
     Turn on Track Changes
     Delete commas before “too” and “either” at end of sentence or clause
     Watch for towards, backwards, etc.
     Check for close quotes after em dashes in dialogue
     Ensure US stylings
     Use serial commas
     Insert comments questioning logic, continuity, etc.
     Insert comments praising author’s craft
     Run PerfectIt before second pass
     Read through comments and check tone

    Postediting

     Send edited manuscript with tracked changes
     Send clean PDF
     Send style sheet
     Send chapter breakdown
     Send cover letter
     Send invoice
     Thank them!
     Send follow-up with info on referral fee

    In the above, Toggl is a time-tracking application, Editor’s Toolkit is a collection of macros, and PerfectIt is a consistency checker, all of which I find highly useful. I also talk about the tools I use in my editing business in my post “Five Tools That Help My Editing Business.”

    Do you use checklists in your work?

    About James Gallagher

    James Gallagher is a copyeditor and the owner of Castle Walls Editing. For more information about how he can help with your writing projects, email James@castlewallsediting.com.

    References:

    Gawande, Atul. The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right. New York: Henry Holt, 2009.

  • Five Tools That Help My Editing Business

    Five Tools That Help My Editing Business

    No electronic tool can match the mind of an editor when it comes to making judgments informed by training, widespread reading, on-the-job experience, and lessons shared by peers and mentors.

    Searching the #spellcheckcantsaveyou hashtag on Twitter, for example, will give you tweet after (often-humorous) tweet of spellchecker fails.

    But that doesn’t mean spellcheckers aren’t useful (if limited) tools. You just have to know the limitations of your tools so you can let them help you without relying on them in areas where they fall short.

    I regularly use the following five tools and am happy to have them at my disposal.

    PerfectIt

    PerfectIt from Intelligent Editing is essentially a consistency checker that looks at such areas as spelling, abbreviations, capitalization, hyphenation, house style, and bullets and lists.

    You run PerfectIt from within Word and can set customized styles for clients. I run it on every document I edit, and if it occasionally turns up something I might have missed otherwise, then I’m thankful for the assist.

    Editor’s Toolkit Plus 2018

    Editor’s Toolkit Plus 2018 from the Editorium is a Word add-on that collects easy-to-use macros for doing such things as fixing ellipses, finding and replacing multiple items, cleaning up common editorial problems, and extracting embedded footnotes.

    The 2018 version includes Editor’s ToolKit, FileCleaner, QuarkConverter, NoteStripper, ListFixer, MegaReplacer, QuarkConverter, InDesignConverter, Puller, and WordCounter. Many of these features are great time savers (and editors can always benefit from making their processes more efficient).

    Toggl

    Tracking time spent editing is essential for estimating editing fees and managing your schedule. Toggl is a time tracker with handy reporting features for generating client reports.

    I haven’t compared Toggl to other time-tracking tools, but I find it easy to use and am happy with it. (My only complaint is that I occasionally forget to turn it on or off, but I can only blame myself for that!)

    Google Docs

    I use Google Docs for my style sheets and small writing jobs. I wrote this post, for example, on Google Docs before copying it to WordPress. (I find writing on WordPress a bit maddening, and my experience has been that you’re much less likely to lose your work when writing with Docs.)

    DropTask

    I proofread for a publisher that uses DropTask to move covers through the proofing process.

    DropTask uses lively visuals so workflow can be managed by dragging and dropping jobs (and all their accompanying files) through stages represented by circles and icons. DropTask is easy to use and is even quite a bit of fun (if you’re into that kind of thing).

    Special Mentions:

    In addition to the above, I’ve been using the following with various clients: Miro (an online whiteboard and collaboration tool), Basecamp (project and document management and team communication), Paymo (project management and time tracking), and PayPal (payments).

    Poor carpenters may blame their tools, but I’d say that poorer ones refuse to use the tools at their disposal. What tools do you use?

    About James Gallagher

    Copyeditor James Gallagher serves clients through his business, Castle Walls Editing. Email James at James@castlewallsediting.com to find out how he can help with your writing projects.