Frequently Asked Questions

  • What's the difference between editing and ghostwriting services?

    Editing refines your existing manuscript—improving structure, grammar, clarity, and flow while preserving your voice. Ghostwriting creates the manuscript from scratch through interviews and collaboration, transforming your ideas or rough notes into a complete book. Choose editing if you've written a draft; choose ghostwriting if you need someone to write it for you.
  • How does Braille proofreading work for educational textbooks?

    Blind proofreaders review Braille materials for readability, accuracy, and formatting consistency before distribution. This process catches transcription errors, formatting issues, and content flow problems that affect student comprehension. Proofreading supports accessibility-focused projects, including prison programs where incarcerated individuals help produce textbook content for visually impaired students.
  • How are ghostwriting services priced?

    Ghostwriting costs depend on total word count, project scope, and complexity. A 50,000-word memoir requires different effort than a 20,000-word inspirational story, and projects with extensive interviews or research add to the scope. Pricing reflects the collaborative interviews, planning sessions, writing drafts, and revisions needed to capture your voice and message.
  • What happens during the ghostwriting consultation?

    The consultation explores your book concept, target message, and existing materials like notes or rough drafts. This planning session identifies the story structure, determines word count goals, and establishes the interview schedule needed to capture your experiences. It's where the project scope gets defined and the collaboration approach is tailored to your storytelling style.
  • Can you edit a manuscript if I've never published before?

    First-time authors often need structure and readability support alongside grammar corrections. Editing services address content flow, chapter organization, pacing issues, and clarity problems common in debut manuscripts. The process preserves your voice while making the book publication-ready, whether you're self-publishing or submitting to agents.
  • What types of books work best for ghostwriting support?

    Memoirs, inspirational stories, personal experiences, and concept-driven books benefit most from ghostwriting collaboration. These projects require capturing individual voice, organizing life events into narrative structure, and translating spoken stories into readable prose. Ghostwriting works when you have the story or message but need professional writing assistance to create the manuscript.
  • How is confidentiality handled in ghostwriting projects?

    Ghostwriting emphasizes confidentiality throughout the project—your story, personal details, and manuscript content remain private. Interview recordings, drafts, and planning documents are protected, and you retain full ownership of the finished work. Confidentiality matters especially for memoirs and personal experience books containing sensitive family or professional details.
  • What does a manuscript review include before editing starts?

    The review assesses manuscript length, identifies structural issues, evaluates clarity and flow, and determines the editing level needed. This process reveals whether you need developmental editing for major revisions or copyediting for grammar and polish. The review generates a quote based on word count and the scope of improvements required.
  • Who benefits from Braille proofreading services?

    Educational publishers, accessibility organizations, prison education programs, and schools distributing Braille textbooks need proofreading to ensure materials meet readability standards. Blind proofreaders catch errors sighted transcribers miss, improving accuracy for students relying on Braille. Programs producing high-volume educational content benefit most from systematic proofreading before distribution.
  • What topics are covered in public speaking engagements?

    Speaking presentations focus on resilience, storytelling, leadership, and overcoming challenges, customized for schools, women's leadership summits, conferences, and community events. Topics are tailored to audience type—educational settings emphasize different themes than leadership organizations. Presentations draw from personal experiences to motivate and connect with audiences throughout Colorado communities.