Grammar and spelling are important elements to get write right. How would you feel if the first comment on your book referenced a grammatical error or misuse of the word “affect”. Don’t risk negative feedback by skimping on proofreading services.
Customer feedback is a huge driver in generating sales of your book on Amazon and other online bookstores. Eliminating spelling and grammatical errors will help ensure it’s your storytelling, not your spelling, that customers are commenting on.
With this in mind, WriterMotive offers two levels of proofreading to best meet the needs of all authors –
With the Standard level of editing, we will correct spelling and misused words. We will also correct grammar that does not require rewriting.
Grammar errors that require rewording to correct are covered with our Premium proofreading package. In addition, a more thorough review will be done correcting spacing issues for quoted passages and splitting extensive paragraphs to improve the flow. We will also correct run-on sentences with punctuation and/or rewriting.
We will submit the completed document for approval and allow you to make any final changes before we finalize your book.
- Automatic Spell Check
- Full Grammar Check
- Check for consistency of spelling
- x
- x
- x
- Automatic Spell Check
- Manual Spell Check
- Full grammar check and rewording
- Check for spacing errors
- Check for consistency of spelling
- Check for run on sentences
*or less when purchasing one of our packages
Proofreading Terms Explained
- Automatic Spell Check: Your document will be spell-checked using a word processor spell checker
- Manual Spell Check: A human spell check to pick up correctly spelled errors that automatic spell checkers miss e.g. affect instead of effect
- Grammar Check: A comprehensive check of your document’s grammar
- Spacing Check: Your document will be checked for inconstant paragraph spacing, accidental double spaces etc.
- Spelling Consistency Check: Your document will be checked for consistency of spelling e.g. if you used the US spelling ‘color’ in one spot but the UK spelling ‘flavour’ in another

