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From Lead Copy Curator Richard Lally: The Importance of In-Text Citations
Hello Writers –

As many of you know, Demand Studios recently has invested additional resources to improve the quality of your articles. Our efforts have produced new, more efficient product features, higher standards for writers and copy editors, and an increased emphasis on sourcing and fact-checking.

In continuing our focus on quality, we want to reemphasize the importance of in-text citations. These citations expedite fact-checking and review times and enhance the quality and credibility of your articles. Including detailed in-text citations (such as “According to the American Diabetes Association ... ”) tells your readers that you are a seasoned professional who extensively researches subjects before composing content. Citations create trust between you and your audience. And, as a bonus, they raise your ratings and article limits while reducing your rewrite requests.
 
Specificity is the key to citing sources. When making claims about your subject, don’t resort to the shoddy journalistic practice of writing, “Experts claim,” “Many people say,” or “According to a study.” Leave those vague, empty passages to the amateurs. Instead, identify the experts by their first and last names and note their credentials. Detail which organization or individual conducted the study, supply the date when it was conducted or published, and name the publication in which the study or article appeared. Apply the standards of a professional journalist to all sources.
 
We already value the work you create, and we're setting these quality standards to help you attain our common goal of producing superior content that will enhance your reputation as well as ours.

Best,
Richard Lally

2 Comments

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MBMagee
Sep 7, 10:38 AM

Thank you for the timely reminder. I hark back to my college days and research papers - prove it exists by citing it. Without documentation, everything you write is just opinion.

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76haller
Oct 8, 11:28 AM

What about fact sheets that havea limited word count?