Too frequently marketing content gets edited in a single pass. The writer reads the draft, fixes a few typos, tightens a sentence or two, and ships it. That works for a tweet. It fails for anything longer.
Never publish a claim you couldn’t defend in a meeting tomorrow.
A single read-through can’t catch every layer of what’s wrong with a draft because the layers compete for your attention. If you’re hunting for typos, you stop noticing whether the argument actually holds together. If you’re hunting for the argument, you miss that the H2s are out of order.
The fix is to edit in passes. Each pass focuses on one layer. Five passes in order catch more than one pass ever will.
This workflow gets used by content editors at agencies, in-house teams editing each other’s drafts, and freelance writers editing their own work before it goes to the client. Here is how it works.
Why one-pass content editing fails
Editing is at least five tasks crammed into the same name. Asking your brain to do all five at once is asking it to multitask under pressure, and the result is the same as any other multitasking exercise: you do every task a little worse.
When you read a draft once and try to catch everything, your attention defaults to the lowest-cost thing it can fix. Usually that means typos and small word swaps. The structural issues, the unsupported claims, and the dead opening paragraph stay in the draft because you never gave them a turn.
Splitting the work into five sequential passes solves the multitasking problem. Each pass gets your full attention. You edit better in less total time because every pass is faster than a generalized one would be.
The 5-Pass Content Editing Workflow
| Pass | What to check | Common fixes |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Structure | • Headline + H2s out loud • Read first paragraph under each H2 • Check each section delivers on its heading • Mark sections that don’t earn their place | • Rewrite vague headings • Move misplaced sections • Cut sections that don’t earn their place • Do structural rewrites before moving on |
| 2. Substance | • Highlight every number, stat, and claim • Verify each one • Confirm every recommendation has a linked source • Prefer primary sources over summaries • Check named examples for accuracy | • Add sources to unsupported stats (or cut) • Name the study behind “studies show” • Cut numbers that sound made up |
| 3. Style | • Read out loud or use text-to-speech • Mark every stumble • Cut filler phrases (“it’s important to note that”) • Cut vague modifiers (“very,” “quite”) • Cut corporate puff (“leverage,” “synergy”) • Vary sentence length • Move strongest line up if buried | • Cut throat-clearing intros • Break up identical sentence structures • Flip passive voice to active |
| 4. SEO | • Confirm title tag <60 chars, leads with primary keyword • Confirm meta description <160 chars, sounds human • Confirm one H1 only • Check H2/H3 hierarchy reflects content • Add 3–7 internal links with descriptive anchors • Add alt text describing each image • Place keyword in H1, first 100 words, ≥1 H2 (cut if forced) | • Shorten overlong title tags • Rewrite keyword-stuffed alt text • Replace “click here” anchors with descriptive text |
| 5. Final polish | • Run a grammar tool, but trust your eye more • Click every external link • Click every internal link • Scroll the rendered preview • Confirm images load and headings render correctly • Check byline, publish date, category tags | • Replace or remove broken outbound links • Re-upload failed images • Standardize mixed bullet styles |
Pass 1: Structure
This pass answers: does the argument actually work?
You’re looking at the skeleton like the headline, section headers, flow from one idea to the next, and whether the structure delivers what the headline promised. If your structure feels shaky, the problem probably started in the planning phase. A tighter content ideation process makes Pass 1 dramatically easier.
What you’re ignoring: sentence-level writing. Typos. Word choice.
How to run it:
- Read just the headline and the H2s. Out loud if it helps. Does the structure tell a coherent story? Could a reader skim those headlines and get the gist of the piece?
- Read the first paragraph under each H2. Does each section deliver what its heading promised?
- If a section doesn’t earn its heading, mark it. Either rewrite the section or rewrite the heading to match what the section actually says.
Common Pass 1 fixes:
- A heading that hides the actual point. Rewrite for clarity.
- A section that belongs earlier in the piece. Move it.
- A section that doesn’t earn its place. Cut it.
If Pass 1 forces a structural rewrite, do that rewrite before moving on. Don’t waste your time proofreading a piece that’s about to lose two sections.
Pass 2: Substance
This pass answers: are the claims defensible? Are the facts right? Are the sources cited?
You’re looking at every factual claim, every statistic, every named example, and whether you could defend each one if someone challenged you in a meeting.
What you’re ignoring: style. You’re a fact-checker on this pass, not a writer.
How to run it:
- Highlight every number, statistic, or claim that could be wrong. Verify each one. If you can’no’t verify, either remove the claim or hedge it honestly.
- Confirm that every claim driving a recommendation has a source linked.
- Confirm the sources are primary where possible, not third-hand summaries of someone else’s research.
- Check named examples for accuracy. If you said “Google did this in 2019,” confirm Google actually did that in 2019.
Common Pass 2 fixes:
- A statistic with no source. Add the source or remove the statistic.
- A claim that “studies show” without naming a study. Either name one or remove the framing.
- A number that sounds made up. If it sounds made up, it probably is.
The Pass 2 rule: never publish a claim you couldn’t defend in a meeting tomorrow.
Pass 3: Style
This pass answers: does this sound like the brand, and is it readable?
You’re looking at voice, tone, rhythm, whether the writing actually feels like the publication it’ i’s appearing in, and whether the sentences move or stall.
What you’re ignoring: typos and grammar mechanics. Still not those.
How to run it:
- Read the piece out loud, or use a text-to-speech tool. Mark anywhere you stumble.
- Watch for filler phrases: “it’s important to note that,” “studies have shown,” “when it comes to,” “in today’s fast-paced world.” Cut them.
- Watch for vague modifiers (“very,” “quite,” “essentially”) and corporate puff phrases (“leverage,” “synergy,” “best-in-class”). Cut them too.
- Check sentence rhythm. Too many sentences of the same length in a row creates a monotone. Vary them.
- Check the opening. Most marketing pieces bury the lede. If your strongest line is in paragraph three, move it up.
Common Pass 3 fixes:
- The first paragraph is throat-clearing. Cut it.
- A run of identical sentence structures. Break one up.
- Passive voice where active would land harder. Flip it.
Pass 4: SEO and scannability
This pass answers: is this page set up to rank, and can a skimmer get the value without reading every word?
You’re looking at title tag, meta description, H1, H2 hierarchy, image alt text, internal links, primary keyword usage, and scannability.
What you’re ignoring: the body prose. That was locked in Pass 3.
How to run it:
- Confirm the title tag is under 60 characters and leads with the primary keyword or concept.
- Confirm the meta description is under 160 characters and reads like a person wrote it, not a robot.
- Confirm one clear H1. Multiple H1s break the hierarchy.
- Confirm H2s and H3s reflect actual content hierarchy.
- Add three to seven internal links to relevant pages on the site. Use descriptive anchor text.
- Add alt text to every image. Describe what the image shows, not what the SEO copy wishes the image showed.
- Make sure the primary keyword appears in the H1, the first 100 words, and at least one H2. If it feels forced anywhere, opt for helpful content users would want and remove the keyword.
Common Pass 4 fixes:
- A title tag that runs 72 characters. Shorten it.
- Alt text that is just the keyword stuffed into a noun phrase. Rewrite to describe the image.
- Generic internal link anchors (“click here,” “this article”). Replace with descriptive anchor text.
Pass 5: Final polish
This pass answers: is this ready to publish?
You’re looking at: typos, grammar, formatting consistency, broken links, and image rendering. Anything that would embarrass you if a reader caught it.
What you’re ignoring: nothing. This is the last pass.
How to run it:
- Run the piece through a grammar tool, but trust your own eye more than the tool. Tools miss context.
- Click every external link. Confirm each one works and points where you expect.
- Click every internal link. Confirm they point to the right page on the right domain.
- Scroll through the rendered preview. Confirm images load, headings render at the right size, and lists are formatted consistently.
- Check the byline, the publish date, and the category tags.
Common Pass 5 fixes:
- A broken outbound link. Replace or remove.
- An image that didn’t upload. Re-upload.
- A list with mixed bullet styles. Standardize.
When to skip passes
You can skip a pass when you genuinely don’t need it.
When skipping is fine:
- The piece is under 400 words. Combine Passes 1 and 2.
- You’re republishing an evergreen post with light updates. Pass 2 is still mandatory because facts age.
- You’re editing a guest post whose facts you already verified separately. Pass 2 is partial.
When skipping isn’t fine:
- The piece is over 1,500 words. Run all five passes.
- The piece will be picked up by AI search or pitched to a journalist. Run all five.
- The piece will sit on a cornerstone page. Run all five.
How to run this workflow on a team
The five-pass workflow scales to teams. Assign passes by skill:
- Pass 1 (Structure): the most senior content person on the team.
- Pass 2 (Substance): the strongest researcher, or a junior writer running it as a fact-check exercise.
- Pass 3 (Style): the team’s strongest writer or the editor who owns brand voice.
- Pass 4 (SEO): the SEO lead or the content marketer.
- Pass 5 (Final polish): anyone, as long as they are a fresh set of eyes.
For a solo writer or a freelancer, run all five yourself. Leave at least an hour between passes so you can come back with fresh eyes for each one.
The takeaway
Most editing problems are attention problems. One pass can’t hold all five layers of a piece in focus at the same time, so something always falls through. Content editing with five passes, each focused on one layer, fixes the problem at the root.
Try it on the next thing you publish. Even just running Pass 1 (structure) and Pass 2 (substance) as separate steps before everything else will catch issues you would’ve shipped otherwise.
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