Our online persona
The VA forum I participate in regularly has had a spate of threads regarding VAs and other professional’s online appearance, most notably that involving grammar, spelling and punctuation. Most agree that if your website, blog, professional correspondence and forum postings are poorly written, it reflects badly upon you and your abilities.
Too many newbie VAs come bouncing onto the forums full of questions that are riddled with poorly-written text and spelling errors. While I agree that it simply isn’t possible to write perfect text all the time, I believe a genuine effort needs to be made in every instance. If your writing includes a link or a signature to your business, it must reflect the image of that business that you are striving to achieve. If you want to look ill-educated and lazy and you don’t care, then, by all means, don’t bother. But, if you want your clients and potential clients to respect your abilities and view you as an expert in your field, then care must be taken.
I can’t emphasize it enough, proofread, proofread and proofread again. There are some tricks that can make it easier. If you use Firefox, it has a built-in proofreader and can catch some of the more obvious typos when making forum responses. Copy and paste your text into a Word document and spell check it. Read it backwards. And if it’s a really important document, ask someone else to proof it. If you can’t be bothered to take the time to put your best written-self forward, then why should your clients think you would do any different for their businesses?
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Here! Here! Well put Kate!
I’m the first to admit that my grammar isn’t perfect, and I can’t begin to tell you how many spelling tests I failed in high school, but all of that taught me to proofread my little heart out.
Unfortunately, try as I do, I’m not perfect, and I still miss an occasional misspelling or typo, but when it comes to client work, I check it thrice.
Donna Caissie, Virtual Assistant
http://www.extra-assist.com
http://www.dcaissie.wordpress.com
I completely agree Kate. First impressions are most important and I wouldn’t want a potential client’s first impression of me to be that I can’t spell. I wouldn’t get hired!
Well said Kate, I couldn’t agree more! If only we could instill this value in our society as a whole…
Unfortunately, try as I might to catch all of my own typos, with the sheer multitude of posts that need to be replied to in such a short amount of time each day I fail often enough to proof my own forum replies effectively. (Thank goodness for the ‘edit’ button!
)
Thank you Kate. I agree with your posting.
I am guilty. I’m afraid I am one of those “newbies” that shared my flawed draft website to get feedback from people on the forum.
I did attempt to put my best foot forward when I prepared my first draft and I knew there were some mistakes. Before posting the draft on the forum, I now realize I probably should have put the website aside and came back to it myself for further review. I believe I was a little anxious to get feedback so I could hurry up and get my website online for the world to see!
I have come to realize how humbling it is to start a business. I need to slow down and go through my process. I have so much to learn and I plan to grow from each and every mistake that I make. Thank you for your honesty.
Stacee