A good editor changes the trajectory of your book. A bad one wastes months and leaves you exactly where you started — but tireder.
Five signs you've found one
- They ask about your reader, not just your manuscript.
- They send a sample edit on a real chapter before they ask for money.
- They distinguish clearly between developmental edit, copyedit, and proofread.
- They give you a timeline with a hard end date.
- They tell you what they will NOT do — what is out of scope.
Three signs to walk away
- "We'll handle everything" — vague scope, predictable disappointment.
- "We can't share samples — confidentiality" — references and anonymized samples should always be possible.
- "Pay 100% upfront" — milestone-based payment protects both sides.
If you want a real sample edit on your manuscript, send us a chapter. We'll return it with tracked changes inside one business week.