Subject: Re: Some thoughts about beta reading.
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Posted on: 2017-05-05 21:54:00 UTC

Something that has been briefly mentioned is that there are different types of beta reading. Some authors want nothing more than a SPaG check. They might be upset with a beta for suggestions regarding a clunky sentence or sticky plot point, because they only want the SPaG help in minimal words. Other authors want to have long chats regarding plots, the wording of sentences, canon points, characterization, fan theories, almost anything via the comments on the Gdoc. (I wouldn't know anyone like that /sarcasm).

Both of those situations are valid beta/author relationships. If you are a SPaG only author and you get a chatty beta, you aren't going to be happy. If are a chatty author and get a minimalist beta you aren't going to be happy.

Being more specific about what you want when posting the request should help with getting the right match. Being honest about your abilities is important, too. Me, personally, I will never be a SPaG beta. My grammar is shaky at best. It's improved over the years, but I still make a lot of mistakes and wouldn't want someone else to think that my reading means they are good on the grammar front. However, I like to think I am pretty good at some other aspects of beta reading like the overall voice of the piece.

The suggestion for feedback to your betas is a good one. Allowing people to be apprentice beta readers is a good idea. Having demo Gdocs of good beta work available is a good idea, too.

I don't know if everyone is totally familiar with Gdocs, but it allows you to set what level of access people have to the document. I like to set it to comment only for the beta process. The beta can highlight and add a comment, but cannot change the text. I like having documents I am beta reading set like this, too. It avoids having a cat walk across the keyboard and change things without my knowledge when I leave the computer for a bit. The comments appear on the side of the document as near to the highlighted text as possible, and have the added bonus of allowing you to reply to them.

Suggest is another level it offers where the beta can type in your document, but it is highlighted and asks the author if they want to accept the change or not. I prefer comments myself even for, "you missed the word 'a' here." type stuff.

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