So it has been almost 9 months since I took over from Gromet to run the Plaza, and generally I think it's going fairly well. However what is very clear to me is that, thanks to the wonderful contributors to the site, the queue of submitted stories waiting for editing and publishing is pretty much never going to go away. In the last month alone the submissions have averaged more than 10,000 words per day, and those are just the recent ones; I've also a backlog of older stories from authors wanting to put up their previous work here.
That is great, no doubt, but servicing the queue of stories isn't the only thing that needs done; I want to tackle style issues across the sites so things are more readable, more consistent, and more easily maintained; I want the site to work even better on mobile and tablet devices; I want to clean up the affiliate banners and refresh them; I want to work on the links page so that readers can find other great kinky sites out there; and I want to work on the site structure itself so that we're in a position that, if something happens to me, the site can continue on and not evaporate as so many good story sites have done.
None of that stuff can reasonably be tackled right now, my time is sadly limited, and the backlog of stories is starting to creep up; the 3 weeks between submission and publishing is already longer than I would like it to be. As I've mentioned elsewhere on the forums, editing the stories to bring them up to a quality bar I'm happy with is the biggest time cost. Folks have suggested that a) I should simply refuse the stories that take the most work, b) I should lower the quality bar I set and just publish them as is. Neither of those are acceptable to me, for a variety of long complicated reasons that are not on topic here. The only reasonable option I have is to call upon the wonderful community we have for assistance, to help make the site all the things we'd like it to be.
That's a long way round of saying this:
I'm looking for one or two people to be copy editors for the Plaza.
You may have something in your mind about what an editor does; collaborating with authors to make their stories better, a back and forth on ideas, polishing their work.
That's not what this is. Would some of our authors like to work with editors like that? Yes, but that's a separate conversation. What I need are
copy editors. People to sort out the readability of the stories, to correct obvious writing mistakes, and prepare them for publishing on the site. The goal is to alter the story as little as possible, whether it's written the way you would write it or not. It is not about critiquing their work, it is simply about taking away the simple errors that all of us writers make as we work, so that the readers can enjoy the story, and not get distracted or confused by easily corrected mistakes.
Personally, I find it to be satisfying, simple work, and often quite rewarding; as someone whose day job often involves fuzzy tasks which are hard to satisfactorily complete, copy editing gives me something I can do for 30-60m in an evening and see tangible progress and know I've done a good job. With a good command of written English, it's relatively easy to do. But it is unavoidably time consuming.
What would you need to have:
- A Google account: I use Google Sheets and Google Docs to manage and edit the submissions.
- A good command of English. Either a native speaker or fluency.
- At least 1 or 2 hours free most weeks to devote to this. The more the better, but no more than 4 hours.
- Respect for other authors and their work.
That's it. There is a simple spreadsheet with all the un-edited stories listed on it, and links to each story in Google Docs. All you have to do is edit the story, and note at the top of it:
- Your name
- How long you spent editing
- The story codes you think are appropriate
- Any notes or concerns you have about the story (e.g. if it breaches submission guidelines
I'll follow on from this post with a more detailed set of points about how I go about the editing that I'd expect potential editors to work to. If you're interested in giving it a shot, please email me at teann@grometsplaza.net.
I'd want to try out prospective editors on a few stories to begin with, reviewing your work and feeding back on how well it's going. I may have to say no to people if they're not getting things to the same quality bar I need; otherwise I'm simply trading time spent copy-editing for time spent reviewing copy-editing I can't rely on. Please don't be offended if that turns out to be the case, this work isn't for everyone. But I'm hopeful that some of the great folks out there will be in a position to help, and that they may find it rewarding. If things work out really well it may even be feasible to arrange some sort of compensation for the effort, direct monetary compensation will not be possible but there may be other ways we can reward copy-editors for their work.