Okay, you've got your draft. You're happy with your paragraphs, your organization, your message. You've honed it down to 750 words exactly. Now it's time to proofread. Why do you proofread? You make a mistake in that first sentence and no one's going to take your work seriously. They're going to think, this person did not have the care or forethought to put the time in to proofread this and they are a sloppy worker and they are going to give this to me and waste my time with a typo in the first sentence. So it really reflects poorly on you and it's going to just tinge how the decision maker reads the rest of the memo if you have mistakes there or anywhere. So 750 words, let's make them all perfect. Let's make every sentence perfect, let's make your grammar, your punctuation, capitalization, all of those things that seem that you learned many years ago in your schooling. It's time to bring that all to the forefront and proofread and make it perfect. It's really hard to proofread your own work sometimes. You've been with it for too many hours, you've been spending too much time with it. Things have been stuck in there since the beginning, your eyes are glazing over. Get somebody else to help you proofread that thing that you just read. If you can't get somebody else to do it, at least after you finish drafting and revising, put it aside for an hour. Go have a meal, go do something else, and then come back to it, the mistakes will leap out at you. All right, you've proofread your material, you hit the send button, time to hand it in, relax, go do something different and have some fun. Hope this has been helpful for the assignments you're going to do in this course, but also any time you write something in your job or for fun in the future. Good luck.