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Getting Ready To Review?

If you want to be an effective professional reviewer, these tips can help. These reviewing tips will ensure your comments are as honest and professional as possible.

 

 

Quick Tips For Reviewing:

1. Be Wise!

Nothing appears as bad as a person reviewing a piece when it’s evident they didn’t pay attention to any part of it. The reviewer appears pompous, ignorant, and careless. No amount of good grammar can cover a lack of content. A reader can easily see they didn’t review or study their subject matter at all.

If it’s a book you just can’t sit through, don’t review it. Your audience will see that you didn’t bother paying attention and they most likely will not pay attention to you.

2. Be Professional!

Remember: if you want to be read as a professional, remark as a professional. Don’t use such words as, "stupid," or, "sucks." If you want the respect of being a worthy source of information, remember your audience. They will be your peers, most likely avid readers themselves, and your inappropriate vocabulary may follow your reputation.

3. Be Constructive!

Don’t fill the internet with more mindless static than it already has. Let your words have some form of knowledge and encouragement rather than simple negative comments. Even if you adored the work, remember you are a reviewer. You have a job to do. Look for any mistakes, anything you can offer that may help someone.

4. Be Prompt!

Follow your deadlines! If someone needs a review by _______, see that it gets there.

5. Be Considerate!

You can state your disapproval or dislike of the book in a constructive way. Don’t "bash," the entire spectrum of fans, author, and publisher simply because you felt it lacked everything. Your offensive remarks may come back to haunt you if you want to review again. You won’t be respected for your, "refreshing candor," you’ll be remembered for your aggression and arrogance.

6. Be Aware!

Even if you loved the piece, if it has inaccuracies or inconsistencies, point them out. That’s your job. You can create a review that notes negative qualities without insulting your reader or the author.

7. Be Serious!

Don’t use jokes or clichés in your review unless they are rare and transitional. It's a review, not a stand-up routine. Sarcasm may make you feel better, but you may alienate your audience by using too much.

8. Be A Reviewer!

If you aren’t the biggest fan of the work, you shouldn’t fill your entire review with nothing but, "fluff." Your job isn’t to heckle the author or publisher. You read a book, state what you enjoyed or didn’t enjoy about it, note the flaws, perhaps a brief paragarph on how to improve or what to keep, and that’s all.

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