In addition to all that, English isn't the same everywhere. A writer who can write fluently and well for an Indian audience may not be able to write something acceptible for an American audience, at least judging by articles in English-language Indian papers. The language is much more flowery, formal, and indirect. And because I've spent the last year in South East Asia, where most English-language books are published in the UK, I've had the rather jarring experience of reading a book by an American author that has been 'Anglicized' by the UK editors. Imagine my surprise to have an American detective 'Hoover' her apartment. We vacuum in America, but that wouldn't mean anything to an English audience, so it was changed. So some of those people who respond to ads may be quite articulate in the English spoken in their home country, but don't satisfy the requirements for something that sounds right to an American, UK resident, or Australian. All this on top of those who think that posting "i can write good english4 u" is going to get them the job, and those who can't follow instructions, such as 'no PMs, please'.
Hear, hear! Write with gusto!!! It's the way to "dress to impress" for us writers. Nicely said...er...written!
I could not agree more! I have posted several threads looking for writers and editors and received many responses filled with poor grammar, incorrect capitalization, missing punctuation, and even text messaging shortcuts. "i am a great writer. i will write content 4 u." Those people are seriously damaging their own professional development and you are doing them a favor by letting them know.
Great post! You are definitely what you write, even if you don't realize it. Even though it's "only" a forum, I always use proper spelling, punctuation, etc. in my posts. I think it gives us writers more credibility later on down the road if buyers are deciding which writers to work with and need to narrow down their choices.