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What I learned about content review in less than 1 year

Posted: Wed Dec 18, 2024 7:03 am
by Abdur9
I want to share with you some things I've learned as a proofreader on the community blog for almost a year!

If someone told me a few years ago that I would work with content production and review, copywriting, freelancers and content marketing , I probably wouldn't believe it and would think it was a joke. Well, that's exactly what I do here at Rock Content .

My routine working on the Community blog is basically to review, produce, schedule, analyze, update, resolve, change, etc.

Among so many actions, proofreading is the part of luxembourg email list 206480 contact leads the job that I never thought I would like or that I would be (more or less) good at — but it is one of the activities that I like the most.

However, proofreading for marketing is not the same as what a book proofreader does, for example. Proofreading content for the web is much more than looking for spelling mistakes, it is also about helping to build the best content to deliver information in the most interesting and clear way possible for the reader.

In this post, I thought I would summarize some of the things I have learned working here that involve not only revision, but also racing and teamwork. Shall we?

Communication and marketing
Before anything else, I think it's worth explaining how I ended up in content production and Rock.

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I ended up in the Advertising course by parachute, I didn't know much about the area, the possibilities, what the job market was like. I didn't know anything.

My story with Rock began in mid-2016. I became interested in the Marketing area and, with that, I found Rock as one of the greatest Brazilian references on the subject.

By the end of the same year, I needed a job and Rock had a few options open to me. On the impulse and with the encouragement of a friend who worked at the company, I sent my resume.

But the position was for journalism producing web content — and I had zero experience in the field. I did everything I needed to do — the Content Production and Content Marketing certification, the technical test — and when I saw that I was already in the final stages.

I joined the advanced content team, did interviews, wrote (a lot), reviewed some of my colleagues' content, but always missed a lot of mistakes in the content I wrote. Later, I joined the Marketing team and started to take care of the Community's blog and social media.