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Self-Editing Checklist

Version 2.0 Standard: Premium

Every draft you submit reflects your professional standard. A draft riddled with inconsistencies, unsourced claims, and formatting gaps forces the editor to do your job — and erodes trust in your work. Self-editing is the final quality gate you own before anyone else reviews your content. This lesson provides the complete checklist and a systematic process to catch what you'd otherwise miss.


Part 1 — The Self-Editing Process

Why You Can't Edit Immediately After Writing

Your brain fills in gaps, auto-corrects errors, and smooths over awkward phrasing when you re-read text you just wrote. You need distance — either time or a format change — before editing.

Distance MethodHow to Do ItWhy It Works
Time gapWait 2–24 hours before editingYour brain "forgets" the draft and reads it fresh
Format changeRead in a different font, screen size, or printedVisual novelty forces closer attention
Text-to-speechHave the draft read aloud to youEars catch rhythm problems eyes miss
Reverse readingRead sections in reverse order (last to first)Breaks narrative flow — forces you to evaluate each section independently

Part 2 — The Master Checklist

  • H1 contains the primary keyword and a clear outcome promise
  • H2 headings pass the skim test — reading only H2s tells the full story
  • No "Introduction" or "Conclusion" as heading text
  • Section order is logical — each section builds on the previous
  • No sections that drift off-topic from their H2 promise
  • No redundant sections covering the same ground

Part 3 — The Quick-Pass Routine

When time is short, prioritize these 5 checks:

#Quick CheckTimeWhat to Look For
1Skim-test H2s30 secRead only H2 headings — does the story make sense?
2Spot-check sources2 minPick 3 statistics — can you find the source?
3Read intro aloud1 minDoes it sound human and hook the reader?
4Scan formatting1 minAny walls of text? Any missing visual elements?
5Check first/last sentence30 secStrong open? Actionable close?

Part 4 — Bad vs. Good Examples

  • H2s include "Introduction" and "Conclusion"
  • 3 statistics, 0 sources
  • 600-word section with no visual breaks
  • "In today's digital landscape..." opening
  • Closes with "In summary, SEO is important for businesses of all sizes"

Part 5 — Output Checklist

Apply this checklist to every draft before submitting.
  • Distance taken: You waited at least 2 hours (or changed format) before editing.
  • Master checklist applied: All 5 categories (Structure, Depth, SEO, Format, Voice) passed.
  • Quick-pass routine: If time-constrained, the 5 quick checks were completed.
  • Zero known issues: You are not submitting a draft with problems you're aware of.

Internal use only. Do not distribute externally. For questions or suggested updates, raise with the content lead.