Best Practices for Writers to Use Proofing? | Community
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Level 3
March 7, 2023
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Best Practices for Writers to Use Proofing?

  • March 7, 2023
  • 2 replies
  • 1257 views

Hi, 

 

Can anyone share in this thread the best practices that your client / organization uses when it comes to writer using proofing? 

 

Our client prefers to use sharepoint separately from the proofing tools since the tool will only capture a picture of the word document and the document will not be editable. 

 

I know that we can share a sharepoint url inside the proof and make it interactive. However the whole thing seems not feasible since the system is quite laggy when it comes to the interactive url and it won't allow us to keep track of the changes especially when we wanna use the compare version feature. 

 

I appreciate any input from anyone. Let's make this thread a sharing space on how do u use proofing for writers. 

 

Thanks!

Taufiq

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Best answer by Madalyn_Destafney

Hi there, I've worked with a client that had the Sharepoint document integration, which I recommend if you use Sharepoint. Then you can upload a Word doc from SP directly into a WF project and have it associated with the project while still being able to edit in real time/easier editing to Word in SP than in Proof. If it's something you want a formal/documented approval on, you can use the document approval function (not approval via a Proof) for that on the SP file...
Here is more info on document approvals - https://experienceleague.adobe.com/docs/workfront/using/review-and-approve-work/work-approvals/request-document-approvals.html?lang=en

If you found this helpful, please mark correct to help others : )

2 replies

Richard__Carlson
Community Advisor
Community Advisor
March 7, 2023

Our proofing consists largely of multi-page PDF files

Madalyn_Destafney
Community Advisor
Madalyn_DestafneyCommunity AdvisorAccepted solution
Community Advisor
March 7, 2023

Hi there, I've worked with a client that had the Sharepoint document integration, which I recommend if you use Sharepoint. Then you can upload a Word doc from SP directly into a WF project and have it associated with the project while still being able to edit in real time/easier editing to Word in SP than in Proof. If it's something you want a formal/documented approval on, you can use the document approval function (not approval via a Proof) for that on the SP file...
Here is more info on document approvals - https://experienceleague.adobe.com/docs/workfront/using/review-and-approve-work/work-approvals/request-document-approvals.html?lang=en

If you found this helpful, please mark correct to help others : )

If this helped you, please mark correct to help others : )
Level 3
March 8, 2023

Hi @madalyn_destafney 

 

Thanks for your input! Just wanna get your further opinion, do you think proofing tools alone is feasible for writers to upload and have the word document reviewed?

 

We might be integrating WF with onedrive to solve this issue. I just wanna tie loose ends to ensure that we're providing the best solutions we can to our client. 

 

Thanks!

Madalyn_Destafney
Community Advisor
Community Advisor
March 8, 2023

I don’t recommend word docs for proofs unless they are short copy files or files that don’t anticipate a high amount of edits. Once you have a lot of edits it can be hard for people to review in a proof. HOWEVER, if you don’t want anyone changing text in-line or touching the file at all, proofs may not be a bad idea. So I think it’s just considering your use case, how much copy, how touched you want your files, etc. We had good experience with using proofs only for video and creative assets, and Sharepoint for word files with a document approval associated.

If this helped you, please mark correct to help others : )