• Teachers
  • Publishers
  • Download/Purchase
  • News
  • Support

The Importance Of Proofing

Posted by: admin In: Uncategorized 18 Aug 2014 Comments: 0 Tags: 2013, 2014, 2015, PDF, proof, proofing, student, students, year, yearbook, yearbooks

Yearbook printers are always pushing the importance of proofing to the folks in charge of authoring the yearbook that they print.  We push proofing too, to avoid the heartbreaking possibility of students being accidentally left out of their yearbook.

That’s exactly what happened to students and parents of Maize South High School in Wichita, KS.  This article outlines the disappointment they Maize Photo Resizedfaced when the last page of their seniors class not included in their yearbook slipped past the proofing team.  (Don’t worry, these folks didn’t use our program!)

So, how can you prevent this type of thing from happening to you?  We have a few best practices that we like to share with our yearbook partners:

1.)  Nobody knows a class quite as well as their teacher.  We strongly recommend that when you get to the proofing stage, send a copy of each teacher’s class directly to them, and ask them to verify that all of their students are represented, and that their names are spelled correctly.  It’s much simpler for a teacher to verify a group of students that they see every day, than it is for a yearbook coordinator to verify an entire school.

2.)  Utilize software that has some sort of built in proofing ability.  One benefit to using software specifically designed to build a yearbook is that it will likely have some sort of built in check to ensure that everybody who was imported into the program is actually placed on a page.  Make sure that your program has this feature, and that you know how to use it.

3.)  Always double check on a printed copy before you sign off.  Most printing companies will provide a physically printed proof copy of the book before they mass print the hundreds of copies of your yearbook for distribution.  A lot of folks don’t understand that this final proof is the absolute last chance you’ll have to notice an error in the book.  Once you sign off on this final proof, it’s too late, so don’t hesitate to employ our next suggestion:

4.)  Two heads are better than one!  After you have personally approved of the proof, get a second or third set of eyes to do the same thing.  After editing your schools yearbook for the whole year, it’ll be easier and easier for the pages to blur together and for you to miss something.  Ask someone who hasn’t been involved in the project to have a look through as well.  Worried about grammatical errors?  Utilize a couple of English students, or if your able, utilize a whole English class for an afternoon, and let the students compete to find potential issues.

By following these tips, your school can avoid the embarrassing situation that so many others have encountered.

High School Spells Own Name Wrong on Yearbook Cover

Posted by: admin In: Covers, Help and Tips, proofing, Yearbook Blunders, Yearbooks Desktop 19 Sep 2013 Comments: 2 Tags: cover, proofing, proofreading, reprint, spelling mistake, video, yearbook blunders

Here’s some commentary from vlogger Richard Fowler, of The Richard Fowler Show, on a school in Moorhead, MN that has discovered a quite unfortunate spelling mistake on the front cover of their 2013 Yearbook. They have spelled the school name wrong. The cost to reprint the book is over $19,000 dollars, which means that the 2013 edition of the Yearbook will remain the way it is, misspellings and all.

The front cover of Moorhead HS's 2013 Yearbook.

The front cover of Moorhead HS’s 2013 Yearbook.

This is a perfect example of why the proofreading stage must not be rushed, and your yearbook design project should always be proofread by at least one other person. Often times you can make a simple mistake, like this school, and not notice the error until it is too late. A printing error, especially on the cover, can run into the thousands of dollars to correct and as such, most schools would choose to not reprint the book.  We have written a large number of articles for our Yearbooks Desktop help guide to help you through the proofing stage, which you can browse here.  Unfortunately, no software or article is going to be able to detect when you spell a name incorrectly, so our best practice is once again to take as much time as you can in the proofing stage.

As Mr. Fowler says, “Always proofread.  When you’re done proofreading, PROOFREAD AGAIN!”

 

Recent Posts

  • Trouble Downloading?
  • Yearbook with Steve Jobs’ photo is on eBay
  • Facts About Yearbooks
  • Student outraged by unwanted yearbook photo editing
  • Movember at Yearbooks Desktop

Recent Comments

  • admin on Video: The Crop Tool – Yearbooks Desktop
  • admin on Video: The Crop Tool – Yearbooks Desktop
  • chwilowki on Video: The Crop Tool – Yearbooks Desktop
  • Nintendo Ds Xl on Video: The Crop Tool – Yearbooks Desktop
  • admin on High School Spells Own Name Wrong on Yearbook Cover

Archives

  • February 2016
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • May 2014
  • December 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • February 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012

Categories

  • Backgrounds
  • Celebrities
  • Covers
  • Downloads
  • Flashback
  • Help and Tips
  • Media Library
  • Press Release
  • proofing
  • Sales
  • Tech Support
  • Tutorials
  • Uncategorized
  • Updates
  • Videos
  • Yearbook Blunders
  • Yearbook Photos
  • Yearbook Samples
  • Yearbooks Desktop

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
© 2013 Northwestern Support Professionals Inc. Toll Free: +1 877 661 9990
  • Teachers
  • Publishers
  • Download/Purchase
  • News
  • Support