Plenty has been written about quoting for editing jobs. There is no need to say more here except to advise being clear about the time required (after checking a sample), what you need to charge for the level of edit required and to cover expenses, your planned approach to the job and what the client can expect and when. The quote is a definitive document: the EOI is indicative. There’s much more to writing quotes – please refer to Chats 14 and 15, respectively ‘Quoting: broad aspects’ and ‘The proposal and quote’.
Sin No 2: Not owning and using standard reference books
An editor needs to have at least the following immediately available:
a good, up-to-date dictionary – in Australia, generally the Macquarie (latest edition or the online version), which gives Australian-preferred spellings first; in-house editors may need other dictionaries as dictated by house style 21
Style manual: for authors, editors and printers (latest edition); editors of academic material may also need the Chicago manual of style or the Publication manual of the American Psychological Association for material to be published in the United States
a thesaurus such as Roget’s thesaurus of English words and phrases
a good grammar book – nobody can ‘know it all’ and everyone can be confused by ‘creative’ grammar in a manuscript.
In addition, my bookshelves contain classics by authors including Strunk and White, Gowers, Fowler and the like; editing handbooks (such as those by Butcher; Flann, Hill and Wang; Mackenzie; and others – see ‘References’); and grammar and style books. This doesn’t mean that the beginning editor should go on a shopping spree, but do own the essentials and do refer to them while editing. The best editors are meticulous about grammar and keep up to date with stylistic and idiomatic changes.
Sin No 3: Losing your copy of the Standards
You aren’t meant to commit the Australian standards for editing practice (Standards) to memory, but have a copy handy. Print it out from the Canberra Society of Editors website http://www.editorscanberra.org or the Institute of Professional Editors Limited (IPEd) website http://www.iped-editors.org. You do need to know what your role as an editor is and what a client expects of an editor. It’s all set out in the Standards. Print out the Commissioning checklist at the same time.
Sin No 4: Thinking you can compete in a highly technological world with antique technology
Computers date very quickly. If your editing is all hard copy, you won’t have this problem, but on-screen editors need to be able to offer quick turnaround, editing with Track Changes, formatting that is acceptable to printers and so on. If you need to get broadband to cope more speedily with large downloads, do it. There are no prizes for second best – only the best will do in editing. Build the costs into your quotes over a period.
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Sin No 5: Resting on your laurels
Editing, like anything to do with language, moves on. Qualifications acquired years ago are probably not sufficient anymore – get up to date with postgraduate courses and with training provided by the branches of IPEd and other associations of editors. Read The Canberra editor, and read other journals, manuals and handbooks on editing and style.
Learn what’s available on your computer and use it. Grab any opportunity to network with other editors. This is where you learn more about editing than almost anywhere else, and all associations of editors welcome visitors from other similar groups to their meetings, training sessions, conferences, and other gatherings.
Learn something about our allied professions – indexing, technical writing, graphic design, publishing. There are often joint events, and these are wonderful opportunities for updating knowledge of the whole publishing industry.
Sin No 6: Not being meticulous and crystal clear in your editing work
The client has every right to expect pernickety editing – that’s what you’re supposed to be good at. Manual mark-ups should follow standard guidelines and symbols for proof correction; electronic mark-ups (whether or not using Track Changes) should include comment notes where explanation is necessary.
I was once asked to re-edit another editor’s work because the client wasn’t satisfied. The first editor had done a ‘broad brush’ edit which was not what the client had asked for, not what the document needed, and not clear in its recommendations. The client had every right to expect more from a competent editor. This was a little embarrassing, but it was good to be asked to do it because the reputation of our profession was at stake.
And the seventh deadly sin? Sloth
Sitting back and doing nothing. With accreditation here to stay, we all need to lift our game. Very broadly, accreditation of editors means telling the world that such editors have met stringent criteria set by our professional association in Australia, IPEd, in much the same way that accountants, doctors and other professionals are accredited by their professional bodies. In Australia, accreditation examinations seek to find out whether the candidate is competent 23 according to the Australian standards for editing practice. The Standards are revised periodically to bring them up to date, and accreditation management will develop to accommodate the needs of the profession.
But there’s no point in any of the hard work being put into all this progress towards greater professionalism and recognition for our profession if we don’t take advantage of it and indulge in some self-improvement. Many will prefer not to seek accreditation – that is their choice. We all, however, do need to hone our skills and keep learning how we can do better. For some, this may mean first looking at what we’re typing in an expression of interest and making sure that our ‘first impression’ is our best impression.
7. Getting on with clients
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My former hairdresser was complaining that new young hairdressers often have no idea how to communicate with their clients – ‘client relations’ isn’t taught in their courses, and they apparently don’t learn these basic human skills at home. The result is that she won’t take on an apprentice. She feels she can’t be there every minute of the day to supervise and to make sure that apprentices have the communication skills to provide the niceties that her clients expect. What’s it like in other trades and professions?
In the editing profession, we have to deal with clients all the time, and it isn’t just a matter of dealing with text – it includes dealing with people, of all ages and all walks of life and all levels of education. This chat is addressed directly to new editors.
You’ve got your first client – what next? Much has been written about client relations, and the late Janet Mackenzie’s book The editor’s companion, second edition, is a good place to start learning about some of the more technical aspects, including contracts – you do have a written agreement with your client, don’t you?
Here are a few of the strategies for getting on with clients that have helped me over the years and that seem to have paid off – you’ll develop your own, but here are my ‘starter’ thoughts.
Listen
Listening