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Ask the Publisher-Every Writer Needs An Editor

Season 13 Episode 1 Published 4 hours ago
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You can be a great writer and still publish a book that looks rushed. That’s the uncomfortable truth we dig into, starting with a simple question: do you really need an editor if you already know how to write? We say yes, and we explain why without sugarcoating it. When you read your own manuscript, your brain auto-corrects what’s on the page into what you meant to say, which is exactly how missing words, repeated sentences, plot holes, confusing timelines, and inconsistency slip through. 

We also talk about the part people don’t want to hear: readers can be unforgiving. Typos, formatting issues, sloppy chapter titles, and clunky flow don’t stay private anymore. A single bad reading experience can stop someone from recommending your book and can turn into an Amazon review or a social media post fast. Editing isn’t an attack on your intelligence. It’s the polish that protects your message and your author credibility, the same way coaching supports athletes and producers sharpen artists. 

Then we get practical about professional book editing. “Editing” isn’t just running Grammarly. We break down developmental editing (structure, clarity, story flow), copyediting (grammar, punctuation, consistency), and proofreading (final error catch before publishing). We also address cost head-on: editors are trained professionals doing skilled labor, and while you don’t need the most expensive option on earth, you do need trained eyes before you release your work publicly. 

If you care about self-publishing the right way, manuscript quality, and building long-term reader trust, hit play. Subscribe, share this with an author friend, and leave a review, then drop your next question so we can tackle it next.

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