Professional book editors are an author’s secret weapon. A great editor can transform a manuscript, catching errors, poor organization, and sloppy writing while helping to bring out the strongest ideas that are sometimes left hiding between the pages.
But that’s only true of great editors. So the question is obvious: how do you choose a book editor who can help you make your book the best it can be? Unfortunately, there are so many manuscript editing services out there—including numerous self-publishing editing services—that it’s easy to get overwhelmed or make the wrong choice.
To avoid that, here’s a quick guide to help you understand what professional book editors can do for you and how to choose the editing service that’s right for your book.
Professional book editors can perform many different functions for your manuscript, depending on your needs. We have a whole article that goes over the types of editing more extensively, but briefly, there are six ways an editor can improve your manuscript:
One of Scribe’s strongest editing options is the guided author service. Here, a book coach can offer an evaluation edit and content editing full of editing tips for the author that can transform their book. You’ll also get proofreading services, along with an incredible cover, marketing, and publication of your book—all in one product.
Other Scribe services, such as Scribe Professional and Scribe Elite include what is essentially a developmental edit early in the process.
Scribe has worked with thousands of authors and seen dozens of our books reach the New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller lists. Whatever self-publishing editing you need, if you’re writing a nonfiction book or a memoir, Scribe has everything at the highest possible level.
That doesn’t mean Scribe is right for everyone. Editor World offers services based on a quick turnaround model. The company has been around since 2010 and, like Scribe, has worked with thousands of authors. However, it can offer its speedy services with limited delay because the company specializes in proofreading manuscripts. The big-picture types of editing that can improve the organization of your ideas are off the table.
On the plus side, Editor World offers its services on a wider variety of writing than Scribe, including fiction, academic writing, and editing for nonnative English speakers.
BookBaby has a slightly more extensive set of editing options than Editor World and similarly quick (though slightly longer) deadlines. It also claims to have worked with an eye-watering fifty thousand authors. Unlike Editor World, BookBaby offers line editing. The company also does some marketing and will help you put your book out. However, once again, if you need more extensive, high-level editing for your book, that’s not really on the table here.
Also like Editor World, BookBaby works with both fiction and nonfiction manuscripts. So if you need a little help on pacing in your novel, this is a great option for you.
For you students and academics out there, Scribbr deserves real consideration for your editing. Its focus is on copyediting and proofreading for academic writing, and its services include help with citations and avoiding plagiarism. Scribbr also offers an AI detection tool, so if you’ve been using ChatGPT in early drafts, this can help you scrub any content that isn’t yours before you submit.
If you’re working on your dissertation, you might want to make a stopover at Scribbr before you submit it to your school.
From there, think about the kind of editing you need, as well as the costs and timelines you’re working on. Scribe offers deeper, more extensive editing services, but for that reason, it is also more expensive than some editing services and can take a little longer. BookBaby and Editor World offer faster service at lower prices, but you sacrifice the expert advice you may need on those more complex issues.
Consider the story of Nikki Barua, who didn’t know how to get her book started. Through some excellent developmental editing at Scribe, she published a book that reached thousands of readers and increased the inbound leads at her business by 2,500 percent. Or look at Brian Reese, who really needed an expert to help him through the process of writing his book that showed veterans how to get the state and federal support they’re entitled to. This wasn’t just a passion project; it could change lives. Thanks to the editors and writers at Scribe, his book has now reached more than sixty thousand veterans.
Your book could be next. With the right editor, your manuscript could go from a jumble of thoughts and words to a book that could have almost unimaginable impact. All it takes is the right expert to help you bring it all together.